Richardson v. White ( 2020 )


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  •                     THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
    In The Court of Appeals
    Jimmy A. Richardson, II, Solicitor for the Fifteenth
    Judicial Circuit, on Behalf of the 15th Circuit Drug
    Enforcement Unit, Respondent,
    v.
    Twenty-One Thousand and no/100 Dollars ($21,000.00)
    U.S. Currency and Various Jewelry, Defendant Property,
    and Marvin Joshua White, Appellant.
    Appellate Case No. 2017-002365
    Appeal From Horry County
    Cynthia Graham Howe, Master-in-Equity
    Opinion No. 5732
    Submitted May 8, 2020 – Filed June 17, 2020
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Ralph James Wilson, Jr., of Ralph Wilson Law PC, of
    Conway, for Appellant.
    James Richard Battle, II, of Battle Law Firm, LLC, of
    Conway, for Respondent.
    HILL, J.: After receiving information alleging Marvin Joshua White stored cash
    he made from selling cocaine in a Wells Fargo safe deposit box, the Drug
    Enforcement Unit (DEU) of the Fifteenth Circuit Solicitor's Office (Solicitor)
    obtained a search warrant for the box. Upon searching the box, the DEU discovered,
    among other items, $21,000.00 in cash and some jewelry. The Solicitor initiated this
    civil forfeiture action pursuant to sections 44-53-520 to- 40 of the South Carolina
    Code (2017). Following a bench trial, the trial court issued an order forfeiting the
    cash and jewelry. White now appeals, asserting the trial court abused its discretion
    in failing to sanction the Solicitor for not responding to White's discovery requests.
    We reverse the trial court's order and remand for a new trial after adequate
    opportunity for discovery.
    I. FACTS
    The Solicitor brought this forfeiture action on May 19, 2015. White answered on
    June 18, 2015. According to a certificate of service, White served the Solicitor with
    interrogatories and a request for production on August 3, 2015. White's first four
    interrogatories mirrored standard ones authorized by Rule 33(b) of the South
    Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, which in essence ask the other side to list their
    proposed fact and expert witnesses, list documents that relate to the claim or defense,
    provide any witness statements, and provide a summary of the witnesses' expected
    testimony. White also asked five additional interrogatories tailored to the forfeiture
    claim. White's request for production asked for disclosure of any photographs,
    videos, witness statements, and documents related to the Solicitor’s allegations.
    White never received a formal discovery response from the Solicitor. The case was
    referred by consent to the master-in-equity, and a bench trial was held December 6,
    2016. When the trial began, White asked for a continuance and to substitute his
    current counsel, Ralph Wilson, Jr., with Thurmond Brooker. The trial court
    explained it would grant White's motion to substitute counsel but would not continue
    the trial. Brooker, however, did not feel comfortable representing White in the
    absence of a continuance to allow him to prepare for trial. In light of the
    circumstances, White chose to keep Wilson.
    White then asked the trial court to exclude the Solicitor's witnesses and exhibits
    because the Solicitor had not disclosed them in response to White's discovery
    requests. White explained the only documents he had received from the Solicitor
    consisted of three documents related to White's federal charges the Solicitor had
    emailed him the week before trial. The Solicitor explained he had never seen White's
    discovery requests and was not aware of them until the day of the trial. After
    listening to both sides, the trial court stated, "I believe [White's counsel's] paralegal
    that she mailed [the discovery request]. I believe [the Solicitor] when he says he
    didn't get it. I don't disbelieve either one of you." The trial court asked White why
    he did not file a Rule 37, SCRCP, motion to compel or otherwise inform the Solicitor
    he had not received discovery. White replied he had no obligation to file a motion
    to compel as the burden was on the Solicitor to respond, and the correct remedy for
    failure to respond to discovery was to exclude the evidence.           The trial court
    disagreed:
    I'm going to go ahead and allow the case to go
    forward. . . . I don't know what to do in a case like this
    when [the Solicitor] has, as an officer of the court, said he
    never received the discovery request. . . . [A]nd I've got a
    certificate of mailing that says that [White] sent the
    document request. Then no motion to compel was ever
    made where this could have been straightened out. I don't
    know what else to do but allow the case to go forward.
    The trial proceeded. During its case-in-chief, the Solicitor presented photographs,
    warrants, cell-phone videos, and the testimony of a DEU agent—none of which had
    been disclosed in discovery. At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court took the
    case under advisement and later filed an order forfeiting the $21,000 and jewelry.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. Rule 37, SCRCP
    The text of Rule 37, SCRCP, tells us a party does not need to file a motion to compel
    to request a sanction for another party's failure to answer a properly served discovery
    request. A party served with written discovery has a duty to answer it, unless the
    party objects based on a stated reason or moves for a protective order. See Rules
    26(c), 33(a), and 34, SCRCP; CFRE, LLC v. Greenville Cty. Assessor, 
    395 S.C. 67
    ,
    83, 
    716 S.E.2d 877
    , 885 (2011) ("An affirmative duty does exist to answer
    interrogatories and respond to requests to produce."). If no answer, objection, or
    motion is received, the discovering party may—but is not required to—move for a
    court order compelling discovery. Rule 37(a)(2), SCRCP. The discovering party
    may also make such a motion if it believes, in good faith, the answers it has received
    are incomplete or the objections improper. Id.; Rule 37(a)(3), SCRCP. The court
    may then issue an order compelling discovery; if the order is not obeyed, the court
    may take appropriate action, including imposing sanctions pursuant to Rule 37(a)
    and (b), SCRCP. But if a party simply fails to respond to discovery, the discovering
    party need not proceed under Rule 37(a) and (b); instead a remedy awaits in Rule
    37(d), which allows "the court . . . on motion" to "make such orders in regard to the
    failure as are just." Rule 37(d), SCRCP. The sanctions authorized by Rule 37(d)
    are therefore available even to a discovering party who has not spoken up about his
    adversary's silence. As we explained in Downey v. Dixon:
    Rule 37(b) provides sanctions for the violation of an order
    of the Court to provide or permit discovery. Rule 37(d),
    on the other hand, provides for sanctions against a party
    who fails to answer interrogatories or attend his own
    deposition. The distinction between the two subdivisions
    is that there must be an order of the Court before sanctions
    are imposed under subdivision (b), while under
    subdivision (d) a party may move directly for the
    imposition of sanctions. See H. Lightsey & J. Flanagan,
    South Carolina Civil Procedure 316 (1985) ("[Under Rule
    37(d) ] sanctions may be imposed without obtaining an
    order compelling discovery . . . ."); 4A J. Moore, J. Lucas
    & D. Epstein, Moore's Federal Practice § 37.05 at 37–100
    (2d ed. 1984) (addressing the comparable Federal Rule:
    "In short, if the party from whom discovery is sought
    complies with the rule in question by making the initial
    response, he has a right to refuse discovery until
    compelled by court order, subject to the expenses of
    determining the justification of his refusal; but if he does
    not comply with the rule, he is subject to the sanctions set
    forth in Rule 37(d)."); 8 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal
    Practice and Procedure § 2291 at 807 (1970) (addressing
    the comparable Federal Rule: "No court order is required
    to bring Rule 37(d) into play.").
    
    294 S.C. 42
    , 44 n.1, 
    362 S.E.2d 317
    , 318 n.1 (Ct. App. 1987) (alterations in original).
    Rule 37(d), SCRCP, therefore empowered White with the right to request sanctions
    against the Solicitor for failing to respond to White's discovery requests without first
    filing a motion to compel.
    Id. at 44,
    362 S.E.2d at 318; Callen v. Callen, 
    365 S.C. 618
    , 627, 
    620 S.E.2d 59
    , 63–64 (2005) (finding trial court has duty to delay trial to
    determine whether exclusion of an undisclosed witness is appropriate, "regardless
    whether the proponent of the testimony is allegedly in violation of a pre-trial order
    or a court rule").
    B.   Discovery Remedies
    Having decided White had the right to request sanctions, we next address whether
    the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to impose them and allowing the trial
    to proceed. A court must consider four factors when determining the appropriate
    discovery sanction: the nature of discovery sought, the discovery stage of the case,
    willfulness, and the degree of prejudice. CFRE, 
    LLC, 395 S.C. at 82
    , 716 S.E.2d at
    885. If the court does not consider these factors, an abuse of discretion occurs.
    Teseniar v. Prof'l Plastering & Stucco, Inc., 
    407 S.C. 83
    , 94, 
    754 S.E.2d 267
    , 273
    (Ct. App. 2014).
    In Downey, we examined the prejudice prong of a discovery sanction:
    An abiding maxim of the successful trial lawyer, like the
    motto of the Boy Scouts, is "Be Prepared" . . . . The rights
    of discovery provided by the Rules give the trial lawyer
    the means to be prepared for trial. Where these rights are
    not accorded, prejudice must be presumed and, unless the
    party who has failed to submit to discovery can show a
    lack of prejudice, reversal is 
    required. 294 S.C. at 46
    , 362 S.E.2d at 319 (citations omitted). White argued the Solicitor's
    failure to respond to discovery was prejudicial, amounting to a trial by ambush. The
    Solicitor countered it was ambushed by White's failure to file a motion to compel.
    The trial court agreed with the Solicitor, characterizing White's position as "not
    exactly how it works in circuit court." The trial court denied White's motion for
    sanctions and allowed the trial to proceed without examining the prejudice to White.
    We appreciate the trial court's dilemma. The trial court (no doubt feeling ambushed
    itself) may have believed it had only two choices: grant White's motion to exclude
    the Solicitor's evidence, which would have rewarded White's strategic silence, or
    deny it, rewarding the Solicitor's alleged discovery violation. But there was a third
    way: calling a cease fire to give the Solicitor time to reveal evidence responsive to
    White's discovery, thereby allowing White to assess its strength and, if necessary,
    reconsider his trial strategy. Discovery can spark settlement, and parties often
    cannot fully explore settlement without a chance for full discovery. A continuance
    would have been a rational way out of the dilemma, particularly given the dispute
    over whether the Solicitor had received White's discovery request.
    The use of a continuance as a remedy in similar discovery situations has long been
    endorsed. See 
    Callen, 365 S.C. at 627
    , 620 S.E.2d at 63–64 (holding trial court has
    duty to delay trial to determine whether exclusion of undisclosed witness is
    appropriate); Jumper v. Hawkins, 
    348 S.C. 142
    , 149, 
    558 S.E.2d 911
    , 915 (Ct. App.
    2001) ("[T]he trial court is under a duty, when the situation arises, to delay the trial
    for the purpose of ascertaining the type of [undisclosed] witness involved and the
    content of his evidence, the nature of the failure or neglect or refusal to furnish the
    witness' name, and the degree of surprise to the other party, including prior
    knowledge of the name by said party." (quoting Laney v. Hefley, 
    262 S.C. 54
    , 59–
    60, 
    202 S.E.2d 12
    , 14 (1974))). The trial court abused its discretion by not delaying
    the trial to scrutinize the nature of the undisclosed discovery, the prejudice to White,
    and the need to stay the trial until discovery could finish. A court that does not use
    discretion—or recognize it has discretion—when discretion exists commits an error
    of law. See 
    Callen, 365 S.C. at 627
    , 620 S.E.2d at 64. The prejudice to White is
    presumed, and the Solicitor has not overcome the presumption. Downey, 294 S.C at
    
    46, 362 S.E.2d at 319
    .
    We reverse the trial court's forfeiture order and remand to allow discovery to be
    completed before a new trial. On remand, the trial court may also revisit White's
    sanction motion if necessary. See 
    Callen, 365 S.C. at 627
    , 620 S.E.2d at 64 ("We
    do not mean to imply that the family court is precluded from admitting the same
    testimony at the new hearing. We hold only that the court's failure to exercise
    discretion below requires the new hearing."); 
    Downey, 294 S.C. at 46
    n.4, 362 S.E.2d
    at 319 
    n.4.
    Because our holding regarding discovery sanctions is dispositive and grants a new
    trial, we have no need to address White's remaining issues. We decide this case
    without oral argument. Rule 215, SCACR.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    WILLIAMS and KONDUROS, JJ., concur.