Mealey's Discovery

  • January 18, 2024

    Man Says Asbestos-Talc Case Doesn’t Require Inquiry Into His Company

    BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — No grounds exist for subpoenaing a man’s business records in a case alleging exposure to asbestos in talc where there is no allegation or evidence of workplace exposures and where other courts previously rejected a similar request by another defendant, the man tells a Connecticut judge in a reply seeking a protective order and quashing of the subpoena.

  • January 18, 2024

    Montana Asbestos Plaintiffs: Railroad’s Late Subpoena Of CARD Doctor Is Personal

    GREAT FALLS, Mont. — Post-discovery attempts at deposing the retired medical director of a facility where a plaintiff last sought care five years ago and which has no connection to current mesothelioma diagnoses or treatments appear to be personal rather than legitimate efforts at producing evidence, two plaintiffs tell a federal judge in Montana in a Jan. 17 motion to quash a railroad’s subpoena.

  • January 17, 2024

    Government Says Release Of Camp Lejeune Water Report Would Be Premature

    RALEIGH, N.C. — The U.S. government on Jan. 16 filed a brief in North Carolina federal court arguing that a magistrate judge properly denied the plaintiffs’ motion to compel the government to produce documents related to a federal agency’s draft study examining human health effects associated with exposure to the drinking water at the U.S. Marine Corps Base at Camp Lejeune.  The government says the need to avoid damage from the premature release of the report outweighs the plaintiffs’ need.

  • January 17, 2024

    Oregon Granted Extension For Rehearing Petition In Prisoner Vaccine Case

    SEATTLE — The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in a Jan. 16 docket entry granted a motion by Oregon for an extension of time to file a petition for rehearing or rehearing en banc; the motion was filed after a panel denied the state’s petition for a writ of mandamus seeking to quash a trial court’s order compelling the deposition of the former governor in a class lawsuit by prisoners suing over the distribution of COVID-19 vaccinations and deaths due to the virus.

  • January 12, 2024

    Hospital Personnel Must Produce Some Documents In Surveillance Lawsuit

    SAN DIEGO — A couple who successfully defended themselves against a hospital’s reports of child abuse and neglect are entitled to records of their daughter’s treatment and communications related to the purportedly invasive surveillance of the family undertaken by the hospital, a California federal magistrate judge found, partly granting the plaintiffs’ motion to compel additional responses from two of the hospital’s personnel who were involved in the surveillance.

  • January 12, 2024

    Judge Grants Ex Parte Bid For Discovery On Reinsurers’ Identity In Breach Case

    NEW ORLEANS — Companies that own and operate an offshore supply vessel have won approval of an ex parte motion in Louisiana federal court for leave to conduct expedited discovery regarding the identity of reinsurers in a breach of contract and bad faith suit.

  • January 10, 2024

    Judge Affirms Partial Sanctions Denial In Bitcoin Ownership Suit

    WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — Overruling a bitcoin mining firm’s objections to a magistrate judge’s partial denial of a motion to impose post-trial discovery sanctions on the defendant in a cryptocurrency ownership dispute, a Florida federal judge deemed the magistrate’s ruling “to be well-reasoned and correct” related to required disclosures and compliance with court deadlines in completing a judgment debtor fact form.

  • January 09, 2024

    Panel Affirms $7,000 Costs Award To Manufacturer For Depositions That Didn’t Happen

    RIVERSIDE, Calif. — A California appellate court panel on Jan. 8 affirmed a trial court’s post-dismissal award to a mattress manufacturer of more than $7,000 in costs incurred seeking depositions from doctors to defend against claims that it sold a sagging mattress that worsened a consumer’s injuries, even though some depositions never occurred and the costs included service to a dead doctor.

  • January 09, 2024

    Illinois Court Reverses Live Witness Testimony Requirement After Asbestos Verdict

    CHICAGO — A trial court improperly required in-person testimony from a witness whose testimony regarding work conditions at a facility appears crucial to the case when a remote appearance could just as easily have been accommodated, an Illinois appeals court said in partly reversing and granting a new trial.

  • January 08, 2024

    Magistrate: Summary Judgment Not ‘Ideal Vehicle’ For Insurer’s Damages Argument

    FORT MYERS, Fla. —A federal magistrate judge in Florida on Jan. 5 denied an insurer’s motion for partial summary judgment in a condominium insured’s bad faith lawsuit seeking coverage for property damage caused by Hurricane Irma, finding that “summary judgment is not the ideal vehicle” for addressing the insurer’s arguments against the insured’s claim for damages.

  • January 08, 2024

    Pet Brush Maker May Subpoena Meta To Obtain Online Counterfeiters’ Identities

    SAN FRANCISCO — A group of website operators accused of selling and advertising counterfeit goods lost their bid to quash a discovery subpoena on Meta Platforms Inc., with a California federal judge finding that the plaintiff demonstrated that good cause exists to obtain the defendants’ identifying information for the purpose of serving them with its complaint for intellectual property infringement and unfair competition.

  • January 04, 2024

    Judge Affirms Quashing Of Asbestos Media Subpoenas, Certifies Stock Class

    TRENTON, N.J. — Johnson & Johnson’s motion seeking reconsideration of a ruling quashing subpoenas to lawyers, law firms and experts over their media contacts is untimely but would fail anyway because it offers no new information, and even supplemental information produced in opposition does not require denying a motion to certify a securities class action, a federal judge in New Jersey said in denying reconsideration and certifying the class.

  • January 03, 2024

    Magistrate Judge: List Of Litigation Suffices, No Corporate Deposition Needed

    NEW ORLEANS — A shipyard need not produce a corporate representative to identify the types and number of asbestos claims it faces because producing a list it likely already has will provide the same information in a less burdensome manner, a federal magistrate judge in Louisiana said Jan. 2 in partly denying plaintiffs’ motion to compel.

  • January 03, 2024

    Company Seeks To Compel Insurers To Produce Documents In AFFF Litigation

    CHARLESTON, S.C. — A company that makes firefighting products filed a motion on Jan. 2 in South Carolina federal court seeking to compel insurance companies to produce documents in a coverage dispute related to injuries from the firefighting substance aqueous film forming foam (AFFF) in the multidistrict litigation for AFFF, arguing that the insurers have refused to produce basic categories of documents that are directly related to the issues in dispute and are “plainly subject to discovery.”  The company contends that the insurers’ objections to discovery requests are not valid, especially considering that the insurers are “seeking to escape up to $1 billion in coverage.”

  • January 03, 2024

    11th Circuit Upholds Denial Of Vacation In ERISA Row With Recusal Violation

    MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Saying in part that “we see no risk of injustice to the parties absent vacatur” despite a recusal violation, an 11th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals panel issued an unpublished per curiam opinion upholding denial of a motion to vacate final judgment in a dispute over termination of retiree life insurance benefits.

  • January 02, 2024

    Judge Says Cosmetics Companies Must Produce Foreign Materials In Hair Relaxer Case

    CHICAGO — A federal judge in Illinois has partially granted plaintiffs’ request for the production of numerous items in discovery in a lawsuit against Revlon Inc. and its affiliates regarding allegations that their hair relaxer products increase the risk of uterine and ovarian cancer because they contain phthalates, ruling that all of the defendants must produce foreign regulatory materials, product labels and usage instructions, scientific studies articles in scientific journals related to hair relaxer products sold outside the United States.

  • January 02, 2024

    Committee Gets OK For Vote On Liquidation Plan In Vesttoo Chapter 11 Cases

    WILMINGTON, Del. — A Delaware federal bankruptcy judge who is allowing the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors to put its Chapter 11 plan of liquidation for Vesttoo Ltd. and 48 affiliates to a vote also granted its motions for leave to conduct discovery against two banking organizations.

  • December 22, 2023

    Former Governor, Others Sever, Transfer, Dismiss Portions Of AI Copyright Suit

    NEW YORK — Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and other copyright holders who filed suit over the use of their works to train artificial intelligence told a federal judge in New York that they reached an agreement to dismiss one defendant and sever and transfer their claims against Microsoft Corp. and Meta Platforms Inc. to a federal court in California and said they would not oppose a fourth defendant’s motion to stay discovery while the court resolves pending motions.

  • December 21, 2023

    Reinsurer Wins Summary Judgment In Securities Suit Involving Loss Ratios

    CAMDEN, N.J. — Citing findings including evidence of “a complex actuarial process to set loss reserves,” a New Jersey federal judge granted summary judgment to a reinsurer and some of its former executives after finding that shareholders used a “falsity-by-omission” theory of liability in alleging that the defendants violated federal securities laws.

  • December 21, 2023

    Group:  Government’s Bid To Compel Disclosure Of Personal Data Is ‘Baseless’

    RALEIGH, N.C. — The Plaintiffs’ Leadership Group (PLG) in the Camp Lejeune Water crisis litigation has filed a response brief in North Carolina federal court arguing that the court should deny as “premature and baseless” the government’s motion to compel disclosure of plaintiffs’ dates of birth and Social Security numbers.

  • December 20, 2023

    Magistrate: Fracking Operators Must Produce Documents In Royalty Dispute

    COLUMBUS, Ohio — A federal magistrate judge in Ohio has granted leaseholders’ motion to compel hydraulic fracturing companies to produce documents in a long-running royalty dispute, ruling that the leaseholders’ requests were “technically timely” and that the information sought is “relevant to damages” and is not unduly burdensome for the fracking companies to produce.

  • December 19, 2023

    Magistrate Judge Finds Motion For Protective Order Over Talc Bottles Moot

    NEW YORK — A federal magistrate judge in New York denied as moot a motion seeking a protective order governing the return and use of talc bottles submitted as evidence in a pair of asbestos cases after a state court plaintiff asked the judge in his case to modify an order mandating that the defendants return the bottles to the plaintiffs.

  • December 19, 2023

    Unsecured Creditors Update Proposed Liquidation Plan In Vesttoo Chapter 11 Cases

    WILMINGTON, Del. — The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors on Dec. 18 filed an amended proposed combined disclosure statement and Chapter 11 plan of liquidation for the jointly administered cases of Vesttoo Ltd. and 48 affiliates in Delaware federal bankruptcy court.

  • December 15, 2023

    Vice Chancellor Issues Final Order In Hedge Fund’s Suit Over Nonpublic Info

    WILMINGTON, Del. — A vice chancellor of the Delaware Chancery Court has issued a final order specifying the circumstances under which a public holding company would be required to produce certain nonpublic information to a hedge fund regarding a captive reinsurer that issued dividends totaling approximately $1.2 billion.

  • December 15, 2023

    Presiding Arbitrator Dissents From Production Order In ICSID Claim Against Qatar

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — The International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) published a split tribunal’s order on document production issued in a French-Algerian investor’s pending claim against the state of Qatar, with the presiding arbitrator dissenting from the denial of the claimant’s requests for business records he says were seized from him when he was detained by Qatar for six months.

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