letourneau v. claffey ( 2024 )


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  •                                                                                                     Vermont Superior Court
    Filed 12/12 23
    Caledonia nit
    VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT                                        1
    fl4                       CIVIL DIVISION
    Caledonia Unit                                                                   Case No. 289-12-19 CaCV
    1126 Main Street Suite 1
    St. JohnsburyVT 05819
    802-748-6600                                            fifi
    wwwvermontjudiciaryorg
    Letourneau et a1 vs. Claffey
    ENTRY REGARDING MOTION
    Title:        Motion to Amend; Motion to Compel; Motion to Strike Case Discovery Deadlines; ;
    Defendant's Expert Disclosures and to Exclude Defendant's Experts (Motion: 14; 15; 16)
    Filer:        Sara—Ellen M. A. Moran; Sara-Ellen M. A. Moran; Celeste E. Laramie
    Filed Date:   October 24, 2023; October 24, 2023; November 03, 2023
    The motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
    The pending three motions to amend, compel, and strike all deal with unfinished discovery
    in this matter. Despite the fact that this action was filed four years ago, Defendant seeks to re-open
    the window for discovery in significant ways, despite the fact that the most recent amended
    discovery schedule in this matter expired seven months before Defendant’s present motions. While
    Defendant Claffey points to several places where she claims Plaintiffs failed to respond or provide
    necessary information. Claffey’s histories in this matter, however, are not particularly compelling and
    do not explain why Claffey did not seek an earlier extension of these deadlines, which were
    established by her injuly 1, 2022 filing.
    Standard ofRew'ew forMotz'ofl to Amend
    When a party seeks additional time after a deadline has passed, the standard changes from
    “good cause” for the extension to “excusable neglect.” V.R.C.P. 6(b) (1) (B). The Vermont Supreme
    Court has instructed that the standard for excusable neglect is high. E.g., In re Tau/n (fKi/lz‘ngton, 2003
    VT 87A 1] 16. At the same time, this determination lies within the broad discretion of the trial court,
    and is ultimately an equitable one that should take account of all relevant circumstances surrounding
    the omission. C/cmé v. Baker, 
    2016 VT 42
    , 111118—23 (citing Pioneer Innertnzent Services C0. n. Brunswick
    Associate: Ud. Pafinerrb'm 
    507 U.S. 380
    , 395 (1993)). The Vermont Supreme Court has noted that
    these factors can include (1) the danger of prejudice to the non-moving party; (2) length of delay and
    its potential impact on judicial proceedings; (3) the reason for the delay; and (4) whether the movant
    Entry Regarding Motion                                                                      Page 1 of 6
    289—12—19 Cacv Letourneau et al vs. Claffey
    acted in good faith. Killington, 2003 VT 87A, at ¶16 (quoting Pioneer, 507 U.S. at 395); see also In re
    von Turkovich, 
    2018 VT 57
    , ¶ 5 Yet, as Killington and its progeny make clear, there must also be (5) a
    compelling reason to extend a deadline and (6) the reason for the extension may not be premised on
    reasons within the party’s control. Clark, 
    2016 VT 42
    , at ¶ 19.
    In this case, there are a mixture of deadlines that Defendant Claffey seeks to alter that
    invoke different factors.
    Extension of Time to Depose Sharon Lamb
    Defendant Claffey’s first request seeks an extension of the time for her to take the
    deposition of the Letourneaus’ expert, Sharon Lamb. Claffey’s motion comes 11 months after the
    expiration of the deadline for such a deposition and ten months after the period in which the
    Letourneaus were willing to extend the window for this deposition to be scheduled. Claffey cites a
    few reasons why this deposition has not occurred. First, she notes the delay in the Letourneau’s
    amended complaint, which was not accepted until the end of November 2022, but this reason is
    unavailing as it concerned a claim for consumer fraud, which is outside of both Lamb’s opinion and
    the substance of her deposition. The other event cited is the amount of time Claffey’s counsel had
    to invest at the time to respond to a separate case involving Claffey and similar allegations. This
    reason is equally unavailing and is the type of issue under the control of the party or their counsel.
    Clark, 
    2016 VT 42
    , at ¶ 22.
    Beyond these reasons, the Court considers the issue of prejudice in this case. The deposition
    of Lamb is not a singular and self-contained discovery event in and of itself. It is, as Claffey admits,
    one step in a series of events that may require Claffey’s expert to revise their disclosure and
    opinions, which may I turn trigger a need to re-depose this expert and supplement with additional
    information from the expert. Such process is perfectly acceptable within the deadlines of discovery,
    but discovery has concluded, and it would be prejudicial to Plaintiffs and threaten the time for
    setting this matter for trial to extend and effectively re-open this portion of the discovery process.
    For these reasons, Defendant’s request to extend the time for discovery for Sharon Lamb’s
    deposition is Denied.
    Entry Regarding Motion                                                                       Page 2 of 6
    289-12-19 Cacv Letourneau et al vs. Claffey
    Responses to Second Set of Interrogatories
    When the Court permitted the Letourneaus to amend their complaint to include a claim of
    consumer fraud, it also gave Claffey a new opportunity to serve discovery on these issues. In
    allowing this amendment, the Court granted this right to extend beyond the established discovery
    deadlines. The Letourneaus interpreted this decision to extend the discovery beyond the deadline
    for written discovery but not beyond the time for discovery under the then-existing discovery
    schedule, which ended all discovery in March of 2023. This interpretation by the Letourneaus is
    incorrect. The language and intent of the Court’s order was to allow an extended window for this
    limited area of discovery, and the Letournaeaus’ refusal to provide answers is inconsistent with this
    order.
    Therefore, the Court Grants Claffey’s motion to amend the discovery schedule to allow time
    for their discovery requests concerning the consumer fraud claims. The Letourneaus are also
    directed to provide answers and responses to these previously served interrogatories and requests to
    produce.
    Additional Discovery
    In her Motion to Amend, Claffey also seeks a general re-opening and extension of deadlines
    to conduct additional discovery based on supplemental responses from the Letourneaus. This
    request is not accompanied by any explanation as to why it is being made seven months after the
    close of discovery and in an open-ended manner. None of the issues arising in Claffey’s motion to
    compel involve new or newly emerging issues. The defects in discovery are at least a year or more
    old, and nearly every one of them could have been raised before the close of discovery. Without a
    basis to establish excusable neglect, the Court cannot extend and re-open discovery at this late a date
    in the broad manner proposed. For this reason, the remainder of Claffey’s Motion to Amend is
    Denied.
    Claffey’s Expert Disclosures
    In their Motion to Strike, the Letourneaus seek to block the October 2023 expert witness
    disclosure from Claffey’s expert witness as untimely. While these disclosures do fall outside of the
    window for expert disclosures, the question to strike is slightly different than the previous analysis
    concerning motions to re-open and extend discovery. In this respect, the Court’s discretion is
    Entry Regarding Motion                                                                      Page 3 of 6
    289-12-19 Cacv Letourneau et al vs. Claffey
    broader. Ley v. Dall, 
    150 Vt. 383
    , 386 (1988) (noting the trial court’s broad discretion to handle
    discovery matters). In this instance, the issue is not an extension of a deadline or a re-opening of
    discovery but the late filing of a previously promised and anticipated discovery disclosure. In this
    case, the disclosures go to the heart of Claffey’s defense. These disclosures are not ancillary, and it
    would significantly impact her ability to defend herself if these disclosures were banned. Moreover,
    the Court will not be able to schedule this matter for trial for at least the next five months. Allowing
    these disclosures will not prejudice the Letourneaus as the Court will allow the Letourneaus an
    opportunity to depose Claffey’s witness. Such deposition shall occur before March 31, 2024.
    For these reasons, the Letourneaus’ Motion to Strike is Denied.
    Motion to Compel
    Claffey seeks to compel the production of several pieces of discovery. Given the
    Letourneaus’ supplemental production that have satisfied these requests, and their promised
    production of other material, the Court will review what is being requested.
    First, Claffey seeks texts and communications between Jason Letourneau and Joel Pierce
    sharing statements that each child had given them regarding the abuse allegations at Claffey’s
    daycare. Defendant points to a specific section in Jason Letourneau’s deposition where he identified
    the exchange and notes that none of the communications produced by Plaintiffs matches the
    exchange. Claffey also identifies a similar admission in Fawn Letourneau’s deposition. Claffey also
    notes that she has requested all relevant communication, including those that may have been
    exchanged before 2017. In their opposition, Plaintiffs do not strictly deny these facts. Therefore,
    the Court grants this portion of Claffey’s motion and compels Plaintiff to produce any and all
    responsive communications pre-2017 and any text or communication that matches the
    communication described by Jason Letourneau in his deposition and Fawn Letourneau in her. If
    such communications truly do not exist or have been deleted or lost, then Plaintiffs must certify this
    fact and whether the communications never existed, were deleted, or were lost and how.
    Claffey also seeks to compel the Letourneaus to create an index of all redacted material
    based on this missing information. This argument conflates two separate issues. The Letourneaus
    state that they have redacted communications that do not contain relevant information but instead
    deal with more pedestrian exchange—sharing recipes, small talk, etc. Nothing in Claffey’s motion
    indicates that these redactions have been done in error or bad faith but are simply a way of
    Entry Regarding Motion                                                                      Page 4 of 6
    289-12-19 Cacv Letourneau et al vs. Claffey
    preserving some modicum of privacy amidst a very invasive discovery process by removing
    irrelevant information. While Claffey is entitled to all relevant communications, she is not entitled to
    large swaths of private or personal conversations that have no bearing on the matter at hand.
    Without evidence of any abuse of this redaction, there is no basis to compel an index or require in
    camera review. This portion of the motion is denied.
    The Court has already addressed Claffey’s second written interrogatories and the deposition
    of Sharon Lamb.
    Next Claffey seeks discovery from the Letourneaus regarding their claims in the form of
    interrogatories and requests to produce that the Letourneaus objected to producing based on the
    elimination of their negligent infliction of emotional distress claims. Given, however, that that
    Court recently re-affirmed the Letourneaus’ right to bring a loss of consortium claims, this
    information remains relevant and discoverable. This portion of Claffey’s motion is granted. The
    Letourneaus shall provide responses to these outstanding interrogatories within 30 days of this
    Order.
    The parties indicate that they have come to agreement and understanding about the
    production of LL’s updated educational and medical records, the recordings of LL’s sessions with
    Dr. Lamb, and certain sections of the material produced for discovery. The Court makes no ruling
    on these matters to the extent that they have been resolved and are addressed on a timely basis.
    The remaining two issues in Claffey’s Motion to Compel are Dr. Lamb’s bills for her
    treatment of LL and any counseling session notes, billing, records, correspondence, or other
    documents. As to the bills, the Court grants Claffey’s motion to compel. Plaintiffs shall produce
    these records. The Court understands that the Letourneaus do not presently plan to seek
    compensation for these bills, but Claffey makes a compelling argument that these documents
    represent relevant and discoverable material as they have the potential to have medical codes and
    other information that will indicate how Dr. Lamb saw and treated LL.
    As to other counseling records, the issue is a question of existence. In at least one
    circumstance, it appears that LL received some counseling services through the school. If LL did
    receive such services, any notes or other documents are relevant to this matter and should be
    produced. The Court grants Defendant the right to receive and review these files to the extent that
    they exist. To the extent that any other mental health providers have treated LL, these records are
    Entry Regarding Motion                                                                      Page 5 of 6
    289-12-19 Cacv Letourneau et al vs. Claffey
    relevant and should be disclosed. Plaintiffs shall provide any and all records associated with LL’s
    medical and mental health treatment dating to the beginning of his enrollment in the Claffey
    daycare. If such information has been produced in full, Plaintiffs shall certify to Defendant that they
    have made inquiries for these records with good faith and due diligence and that such records do
    not exist.
    All discovery responses ordered in this decision shall be due on or before January 31, 2024,
    unless otherwise noted.
    Mediation and Sanctions
    Both sides seek sanctions in this matter based on the other side’s alleged failure to comply.
    The Court does not find that one side is the prevailing party in this discovery dispute. Both sides
    have made meritorious arguments. That said, the Court would remind the parties that both sides
    must act in good faith for the remainder of this pre-trial period, and the purpose of the remaining
    discovery is to give each side the information necessary to complete their preparation for trial.
    To that end, the Court directs the parties to schedule and complete mediation in this matter
    no later than April 1, 2024. If this deadline proves impossible due to the mediator’s schedule, the
    parties may file a stipulated motion for an extension of time. Upon completion of mediation and
    the remaining discovery, the Court will set this matter for a pre-trial conference to set dates for trial.
    ORDER
    Based on the foregoing, Defendant Claffey’s Motion to Amend is Denied, except to allow
    additional time for Plaintiff Letourneaus to complete the consumer fraud discovery. Plaintiff
    Letourneaus’ Motion to Strike is Denied. Defendant Claffey’s Motion to compel is Granted in
    part consistent with the analysis above, and Plaintiffs shall produce the additional discovery ordered
    within the time frames laid out. The Court Denies sanctions to either side, and the Court directs
    the parties to complete mediation in this matter on or before April 1, 2024.
    Electronically signed on 12/12/2023 2:02 PM pursuant to V.R.E.F. 9(d)
    __________________________________
    Daniel Richardson
    Superior Court Judge
    Entry Regarding Motion                                                                        Page 6 of 6
    289-12-19 Cacv Letourneau et al vs. Claffey
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 289-12-19 cacv

Filed Date: 1/11/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/11/2024