                           UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                           FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA


SCOTT A. McNAMARA, M.D.,

       Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant,

               v.                                          Civil Action No. 11-1051 (ESH/JMF)

CATHERINE A. PICKEN, M.D., et al.,

       Defendants/Counter-Plaintiffs.


                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

       In my Memorandum Order of August 29, 2012 I granted in part and denied in part

Defendants/Counter-Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant to Produce

Documents and Hard Drives in Response to Defendants/Counter-Plaintiffs’ Rule 34 Request for

Production of Documents [#37]. Memorandum Order [#52]. Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant

(“Picken”) seeks attorney fees for having filed that motion. Motion for Fees in Accordance with

August 29, 2012 Order [#76].

                                     LEGAL STANDARDS

       Rule 37(a)(5) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires a court that has granted a

motion to compel discovery to award the moving party’s reasonable expenses, including

attorneys’ fees, unless 1) the movant filed the motion before attempting in good faith to obtain

the disclosure or discovery without court action; 2) the opposing party’s “nondisclosure,

response, or objection was substantially justified;” or 3) other circumstances make an award of

expenses unjust. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5).
                                           ANALYSIS

       In opposing the motion for fees, plaintiff/counter-defendant (“McNamara”) frequently

argues that he opposed the discovery and the motion to compel in “good faith.” Opposition to

Motion for Fees [#81]. That is, of course, not the standard for objecting to discovery requests,

for it would justify objections made with a good heart but an empty head. Instead, the court must

be convinced that, viewed objectively, there was legal support for the objection. See Pierce v.

Underwood, 487 U.S. 552, 565 (1988) (a party meets the “substantially justified” standard where

there is a “genuine dispute” or “if reasonable people could differ” as to the appropriateness of the

motion to compel). If there was no legal support given for the objection, then the objection is not

justified. Covad Commc’ns Co. v. Revonet, Inc., 262 F.R.D. 1, 4 (D.D.C. 2009).

       Moreover, there is another problem with McNamara’s approach to objecting to Picken’s

discovery requests: the objections seem to evolve over time. In many instances, McNamara

makes one objection at first, but then supplements that objection or adds a new objection in later

pleadings. For example, regarding Document Request No. 5, at first McNamara objected on the

grounds that disclosing his personal bank account exceeded permissible discovery.

Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant’s Response to Request for Production of Documents [#37-3] at 3.

In response to the motion to compel, he argued that Picken’s counterclaim did not allege that

McNamara received payments from any source other than the Eagle Bank account, and

statements from that checking account were already turned over. Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant’s

Opposition to Defendant/Counter-Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel [#41] at 2. Finally, in opposition

to the motion for fees, McNamara argues that he “had a good faith belief that his personal bank

accounts would not provide any information which would be probative to any issue in this case,

and would constitute a gross invasion of his privacy.” [#81] at 1 (emphasis added). It is clear



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that with each bite at the apple, McNamara tweaked his objection or raised new objections, such

as the invasion of privacy argument.

        This manner of proceeding is intolerable. Rule 34 requires the producing party to either

permit the requesting party to make the requested copies of the documents demanded, or “state

an objection to the request, stating the reasons.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(C). The requesting

party must decide whether to move to compel only on the basis of that objection. It is pernicious

and unfair to the requesting party to force it to make a motion to compel on the basis of the

actual objection made, and then hold it to the new objections provided later on. The situation

only gets worse when the producing party prevails on its motion to compel, only to confront

additional reasons for not producing the documents raised for the first time in opposition to a fee

petition. When those objections were neither asserted in response to the original document

request, nor asserted in opposition to the motion to compel, they cannot be used to defeat an

award of reasonable attorneys’ fees. Conversely, when the producing party provides the most

fulsome and complete objection initially, the requesting party can make the best judgment

possible as to whether to move to compel.

        I will not, therefore, condone McNamara’s “making it up as he goes along” approach, but

instead will consider only the initial objection made and determine whether it and it alone was

substantially justified.

        With that understanding, I will now turn to each request and the original objection made.

I will then address two categories of objections that apply to multiple document requests.




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I.      Document Requests and the Corresponding Original Objections

        A.      Bank Accounts

        As noted above, McNamara’s original objection to Picken’s demand that he produce

documents relating to his bank accounts was that doing so “exceeds permissible discovery.”

[#37-3] at 3.

        First, that barely meets the requirement of Rule 34(2)(B) that the responding party state

the reasons for its objections. In analogous cases, this Court has persistently held that objections

to interrogatories that merely parrot the language of the pertinent rule or claim that a request is

“burdensome,” without a specific explanation why, are insufficient. See, e.g., Tequila Centinela,

S.A. de C.V. v. Bacardi & Co, Ltd., 242 F.R.D. 1, 10 (D.D.C. 2007) (“The responding party

cannot just merely state in a conclusory fashion that the requests are burdensome” (internal

quotations omitted)); Miller v. Holzmann, 240 F.R.D. 1, 3 (D.D.C. 2006) (“I will not consider

the objection that an interrogatory is overbroad and burdensome without a showing by affidavit

why it is overbroad and burdensome”); Athridge v. Aetna Cas. and Sur. Co., 184 F.R.D. 181,

191 (D.D.C. 1998) (“The party opposing discovery must show specifically how an interrogatory

is overly broad, burdensome or oppressive” (internal quotations omitted)). The objection that a

particular demand “exceeds the scope of permissible discovery” is not much better. Moreover,

as Picken correctly points out, she specifically alleged that McNamara took patient revenues that

should have been paid into the account that Picken and McNamara shared, and placed them in

his own bank accounts. Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion for Fees in Accordance with

August 29, 2012 Order [#86] at 4. Surely, that allegation made the records of McNamara’s bank

account relevant to Picken’s claims, and the only objection made was meritless and hardly

substantially justified.



                                                  4
       B.      Tax Returns

       McNamara’s initial objection to producing his tax returns is that, since Picken objected to

producing her tax returns, McNamara would object to producing his. [#37-3] at 3. The Federal

Rules, however, do not create some kind of mutuality that renders any objection made by one

side ispo facto legitimate when made by the other side. Discovery is a process whereby parties

obtain information from each other. Saying that “since she did not show me hers, I will not show

her mine” sounds like fourth graders quarreling in the school yard, and not like legal

professionals making legitimate objections to a party’s discovery demands. It is, after all, easy to

conjure a case where a request that is illegitimate when made to one party is nevertheless

legitimate when made to the other. Indeed, in this case, whether or not Picken should have had

to produce her tax returns has nothing to do with whether McNamara has to produce his. As

Picken correctly points out, McNamara claimed that his income was impacted negatively by the

termination of his relationship with Picken and the company called “WENT.” [#86] at 5. Tax

returns which, of course, are made under penalty of perjury, are vital admissions of the amount

of income earned in a period of time and bear directly on McNamara’s allegation of a loss of

income. The “tit for tat” objection is juvenile, and hardly substantially justified.

       C.      Agreements to Provide Services

       McNamara’s original “objection” to produce agreements to provide services between

McNamara and any of his patients or a patient of WENT was actually a refusal to produce on the

grounds that Picken supposedly already had what she was demanding. [#37-3] at 4. As Picken

points out, however, the courts have rejected as illegitimate any objection based on the

supposition that the other party already has what it is demanding. [#86] at 6. A moment’s

thought shows how impractical such an objection can be. The demanding party cannot possibly



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know whether it has, in fact, all of the documents it is requesting, because neither side can know

to a certainty what the other side has. It is preferable, easier, and more efficient to the producing

party to produce what it has, so the demanding party can determine, with all the records in front

of it, whether it has all the information it needs and wants. On the other hand, a response such as

the one given by McNamara will most often create an immediate and irreconcilable squabble

over what the demanding party actually has. That, of course, only postpones the quarrel and

renders an expensive and time consuming motion to compel nearly inevitable—precisely what

happened in this case. Because such a response makes further discovery motion practice nearly

inevitable, it cannot possibly be described as “substantially justified.”

       D.      Payments Received

       McNamara’s only objection to producing documents pertaining to payments he received

was that he had no such documents. [#37-3] at 4. This in itself appears to be a legitimate

objection since, as I understand it, he was saying that he had no documents, not that Picken

already had what she was demanding.

       E.      Evidence of Payments

       McNamara produced a spreadsheet listing payments received. He did not, however,

produce the documents upon which that spreadsheet was based, as requested by Picken. [#37-3]

at 4. Thus, the objection—that McNamara already produced a spreadsheet—did not meet the

demand, which sought all documentary evidence of payments McNamara received, including the

checks he received from patients and reimbursements from insurers. Id. Since the objection did

not actually speak to the demand made, the objection was not substantially justified.




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        F.      Documents Pertaining to Interference with Business Relationship

        In his complaint, McNamara charged that Picken has frustrated his efforts to obtain his

patients’ medical records and instructed her employees at WENT to refuse to provide

McNamara’s telephone number or address to a person who came to the M Street Office to see

him or called the office about him. Complaint [#1-1] at 10, ¶¶ 37-40. He also charged that

Picken 1) instructed WENT employees to offer treatment to McNamara’s patients by Picken or

another WENT physician; and 2) removed McNamara’s name from the Washington Physician’s

Directory without telling him, thereby depriving McNamara of referrals from other physicians.

Id. at 11, ¶ 43. These allegations supported Count Three of his complaint, premised on the tort

of Interference with Business Relationship. Id. at 10.

        In her opinion of January 11, 2012, however, Judge Huvelle dismissed this count because

of McNamara’s failure to “allege any actual loss of business, time, or money as a result of the

alleged interference.” Memorandum Opinion [#33] at 5.

        Picken sought documents that identified the business relationships in the caption of Count

Three, i.e., “Interference with Business Relationship.” [#37-3] at 5. McNamara’s objection was

that Count Three had been dismissed. Id.

        The request (No. 13) is specifically addressed to “the business relationships that

McNamara alleged in Count Three of this Complaint.” Id. That appears to be a direct demand

for those relationships that McNamara was claiming Picken interfered with in that count. His

objection—that that count had been dismissed, rendering academic his identifying the

relationships with which Picken had interfered—therefore appears to me a reasonable one and

substantially justified.




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        G.      Communications with Garrin

        The original objection made to the request for documents relating to communications

between McNamara and Garrin was that McNamara was unaware of any such relevant

documents, and that, in any event, any such communications were beyond the scope of

discovery. [#37-3] at 5. First, the objection that the communications were “beyond the scope of

discovery” does not provide any reasons why this is so. Second, McNamara admitted that such

communications did exist, and McNamara claimed that three of them were produced. 1

        If they were in fact produced, McNamara may not have complied with his obligation

under Rule 26(g), which notes that, by signing the discovery response, the producing party

certifies that the disclosure is “complete and correct as of the time it is made.” Fed. R. Civ. P.

26(g). The initial objection—that McNamara was unaware of any such communications—is, of

course, contradicted by his later representation and disclosure of some documents relating to that

request. Whatever the truth that emerges from this tangled web, McNamara’s original

objection—a lack of awareness—has been disproven by his own actions, and therefore does not

qualify as a substantial justification.

        H.      Documents Relating to Discharge

        This objection regarding documents relating to McNamara’s discharge under Chapter 7 is

based upon McNamara’s argument that the bankruptcy discharge occurred many years before

McNamara interacted with Picken and the company called WENT. [#37-3] at 5. But, as Picken

points out, her counterclaim charges that McNamara kept from her that he had been declared

bankrupt, and thereby defrauded her into entering whatever relationship they had. See

Defendants/Counter-Plaintiffs’ Answer, Affirmative Defenses, and Counterclaims to

1
  Picken insists that she got them not from McNamara but from McNamara’s former counsel.
[#86] at 10.
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Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant’s Amended Complaint [#74] at 27-28. That she may not ultimately

be able to show sufficient causality between that failure to disclose and the fraud she charges

does not render evidence of the alleged fraud beyond the scope of the discovery permitted by

Rule 26(b)(1). To the contrary, evidence of the bankruptcy is, of course, relevant to the claim

that it should have disclosed; the merits (or lack thereof) of such a claim do not bear, at the

discovery stage, on the relevance of the information pertaining to that claim.


        I.      Net Worth

      The original objection made to this discovery request was that evidence of McNamara’s net

worth was beyond the scope of permissible discovery. [#37-3] at 8. Again, that statement is

insufficient because it does not provide a reason for that conclusion. McNamara’s assertion that

he lost income because of his relationship with Picken and WENT renders relevant the financial

information bearing on that assertion. Perhaps an argument could have been made that

McNamara’s current net worth did not sufficiently bear on his earnings during the period in

question, and the request should have been limited to his net worth during that period. But, that

argument was not made, and the one sentence objection to all such information was not

substantially justified.

II.     Objections Applying to Multiple Document Requests

        A.      Privileged Material

        McNamara challenged Requests Nos. 10 and 21 on the grounds that they sought

information protected by the attorney-client privilege. [#37-3] at 4, 6. McNamara, however,

never filed a privilege log, and this Court ordered him to do so. [#52] at 2; [#86] at 8. Merely

claiming privilege as a defense to production is insufficient. The controlling rule is unequivocal:

the party who “withholds information. . . by claiming that the information is privileged. . . must


                                                  9
(1) expressly make the claim; and (2) describe the nature of the documents . . . in a manner that,

without revealing information itself privileged or protected, will enable other parties to assess the

claim.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(5). Thus, claiming privilege without complying with subsection

(2), by submitting with the Rule 34 (b)(2) response a so-called “privilege log” required by Rule

26(b)(5), is an insufficient and illegitimate response. Indeed, when a litigant, like McNamara,

claims privilege but does not produce a log, his opponent must move to compel compliance with

the rule with which McNamara should have complied in the first place. Far from being

“substantially justified,” claiming privilege without complying with the applicable rule is an

inexcusable violation of that rule.

        B.      Excessive Fees

        According to the declaration of Picken’s counsel, Tracy D. Rezvani, she and her

colleague, Mitchell J. Rotbert, spent 23.57 hours 1) drafting a letter to McNamara’s counsel; 2)

meeting with their client and staff to prepare the motion to compel; and 3) researching, drafting

and editing it. Declaration of Tracy D. Rezvan [sic] in Support of Motion for Fees in Accordance

with August 29, 2012 Order [#76-1] at 1-2. They also incurred $48.63 for using electronic legal

research. Id. at 2.

        In response to this detailed showing, McNamara contents himself with two words: the

billing “appears excessive.” [#81] at 2. He does not provide any analysis whatsoever of why the

hours or the hourly rate charged by Rotbert and Rezvani are unreasonable. Thus, he makes no

legitimate objection to what is sought. In any event, I have reviewed the submission and find it

reasonable.

        The two lawyers spent 23.57 hours, or just about three days, collecting the record of a

series of protracted discovery disputes, creating the narrative of what happened, researching the



                                                 10
legal issues, and preparing a comprehensive motion that was well-written, researched, and

argued. Three working days to do that is about right. I will allow what they seek, $7,311.25, but

will discount it by $1,000 to allow for my finding that two objections (documents related to

“payments received” and to the ultimately-dismissed Count Three, the substantial interference

with business relationship) were substantially justified. Picken also seeks $2,984.56 in legal fees

for the 6.32 hours it took to prepare her motion for fees and the supporting documentation. [#76-

1] at 2. This is also reasonable, and I will award the full amount. Finally, Picken seeks $48.63

in fees associated with legal research. I will allow this as well. In total, I will award Picken

$9,364.44 in fees ($7,311.25 + $2,984.56 + $48.63 - $1,000 for two substantially justified

objections = $9,364.44).

                                          CONCLUSION

     For the above-stated reasons, defendant/counter plaintiffs’ Motion for Fees in Accordance

with August 29, 2012 Order [#76] will be granted in part. A separate Order accompanies this

Memorandum Opinion.
                                                                           Digitally signed by John M.
                                                                           Facciola
                                                                           DN: c=US, st=DC, l=Washington,
                                                                           email=john_m._facciola@dcd.us
                                                                           courts.gov, o=United States
                                                                           District Court for the District of
                                                                           Columbia, cn=John M. Facciola
                                                                           Date: 2013.06.04 16:15:18 -04'00'
                                                      ___________________________________
                                                      JOHM M. FACCIOLA
                                                      UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE




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