F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
October 19, 2005
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
Clerk of Court
TENTH CIRCUIT
THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY,
and THE PROCTER & GAMBLE
DISTRIBUTING COMPANY,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v. No. 03-4234
RANDY L. HAUGEN, FREEDOM TOOLS
INCORPORATED, FREEDOM
ASSOCIATES, INC., STEVEN E. BRADY,
STEPHEN L. BYBEE, EAGLE BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT, INC., TED RANDALL
WALKER, and WALKER
INTERNATIONAL NETWORK,
Defendants-Appellees.
MICROSOFT CORPORATION,
EXXONMOBIL CORPORATION, NIKE,
INC., and LAWYERS FOR CIVIL
JUSTICE,
Amici Curiae.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
(D.C. No. 1:95-CV-0094 K)
Arthur R. Miller, Cambridge, MA (Tracy H. Fowler, Michael D. Zimmerman, and
James D. Gardner, Snell & Wilmer, Salt Lake City, UT, and Stanley M. Chesley
and Paul M. DeMarco, Waite Schneider Bayless & Chesley Co., LPA, Cincinnati,
OH, with him on the briefs), for plaintiffs-appellants.
Joseph J. Joyce (Kristin A. VanOrman and James D. Franckowiak with him on the
briefs), Strong & Hanni, Salt Lake City, UT, for defendants-appellees.
David H. Remes, Covington & Burling, Washington, DC, for Microsoft
Corporation, ExxonMobil Corporation, Nike, Inc., and Lawyers for Civil Justice,
as Amici Curiae.
Before KELLY, BRISCOE, and LUCERO , Circuit Judges.
BRISCOE , Circuit Judge.
In 1995, the Procter & Gamble Company and the Procter & Gamble
Distributing Company (hereinafter jointly referred to in the singular as P&G) filed
this action against the Amway Corporation (Amway) and certain of its distributors
asserting claims under Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a), and
Utah common law. The district court’s subject matter jurisdiction was based on
28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1332, and 1367. In March 1999, the district court granted
summary judgment to defendants on some of P&G’s claims and dismissed the
remaining claims. P&G appealed and, in August 2000, this court reinstated the
Lanham Act and tortious interference claims and remanded the case for further
proceedings. Procter & Gamble Co. v. Haugen, 222 F.3d 1262, 1280 (10th Cir.
2000). In June 2001, the district court dismissed all claims against Amway and
granted partial summary judgment in favor of the distributor defendants with
2
respect to P&G’s tortious interference claim. P&G again appealed, and this court
affirmed the district court’s dispositive rulings, thereby leaving only P&G’s
Lanham Act claim against the distributor defendants to be litigated. Procter &
Gamble Co. v. Haugen, 317 F.3d 1121 (10th Cir. 2003).
In the present appeal, P&G now challenges the district court’s dismissal of
that remaining Lanham Act claim on the grounds that (1) P&G failed to preserve
and produce to defendants relevant electronic data and (2) P&G’s expert
testimony was inadmissible at trial. P&G also appeals two discovery-related
rulings issued by the district court prior to dismissal. Lastly, P&G seeks
reassignment of the case to a different district court judge on remand. We
exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, affirm two discovery-related
rulings, reverse the order of dismissal, remand for further proceedings, and deny
P&G’s request for a reassignment of the case on remand.
I.
P&G is the manufacturer and distributor of numerous products for personal
care, household use, and consumption. On August 28, 1995, P&G filed its
complaint in this case against, among others, defendant Randy Haugen, a Utah
citizen and distributor of Amway consumer products, and two Utah corporations,
Freedom Associates, Inc., and Freedom Tools Incorporated, utilized by Haugen in
his Amway distribution business. P&G’s complaint alleged that in 1995, Haugen
3
disseminated a voice-mail message to thousands of other Amway distributors
falsely stating that the president of P&G had recently appeared on television,
announced that he (the president of P&G) was associated with the Church of
Satan, and stated that a large portion of the profits from forty-three different P&G
products were used to support the Church of Satan. P&G’s complaint further
alleged that, as a result of Haugen’s message and its dissemination, P&G lost
customers concerned about supporting Satan through their purchase of P&G
products. P&G’s complaint asserted claims against Haugen and his corporations
under the Lanham Act and Utah state law. 1
In its initial post-complaint efforts at assessing damages, P&G assigned one
of its own employees, Steven McDonald, who worked as a financial analyst and
profit forecaster, to analyze whether, and if so, how much, the Satanism rumors
had impacted the sales and market share of the forty-three P&G products referred
to in Haugen’s voice-mail message. In his effort to do so, McDonald turned to
“market share information” that was available to P&G from an unrelated,
Chicago-based company called Information Resources Incorporated (IRI). App.
at 571, 575. IRI regularly gathered “scanner data of consumer purchases” from
“grocery stores, drug stores and mass market merchandisers (e.g., Wal-Mart)
1
P&G’s complaint also asserted claims against other defendants, including
Amway. Those claims have since been decided against P&G and are not at issue
in this appeal.
4
throughout the United States,” and, pursuant to a contract with P&G, in turn
compiled and maintained various “electronic market share database[s]” for P&G’s
use. Id. at 571. These databases “contain[ed] market share[] [information] for a
given product type (e.g., detergent powder) and . . . correlate[d] sales to factors
such as price, advertising, coupons, and display.” Id. Notably, the databases
were maintained on a rolling basis meaning that “[a]t any given time,” they
“contain[ed] monthly data for the prior 30 months and weekly data for the prior
65 weeks,” and as IRI added new data to the databases, it simultaneously deleted
old data from the databases. Id. P&G, primarily for marketing purposes,
contracted with IRI for production of and access to databases pertaining to P&G’s
consumer products. In turn, P&G’s employees regularly accessed the databases,
via on-line terminals at P&G’s facilities, and incorporated some of the
information into reports.
After McDonald allegedly concluded that the IRI data available to him was
inconclusive regarding the effects of the Satanism rumor on the sales of P&G’s
products, P&G hired two expert witnesses, Dr. Robert Hall and Dr. Harvey Rosen,
to investigate and testify regarding this issue. Like McDonald, both Hall and
Rosen turned to the IRI data to conduct their analyses. According to the record,
Hall focused his analysis on “ten P&G products for sixty markets covering
December 1994 through May 1997.” Id. at 576. Rosen, using “archival data
5
specially purchased from IRI” by P&G for an approximate cost of $75,000.00 (as
opposed to the on-line data regularly made available by IRI to P&G), focused his
analysis on five P&G products (Tide, Crest, Pampers, Downy and Charmin). 2 Id.
at 577; see id. at 396.
At issue in this appeal is the extent to which defendants requested
production of the IRI market share data from P&G and, in turn, the extent to
which P&G complied with those requests. According to defendants, they made
three requests pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34 for production of,
or access to, the IRI market-share data. The first such discovery request pointed
to by defendants occurred on November 27, 1995, when defendants asked P&G to
produce for inspection and copying “[a]ny documents which [P&G] believe[d]
evidence[d] . . . loss of sales or revenues [resulting from defendants’ conduct],
including summaries of product sales during and immediately prior to the time in
question (in the geographic areas which [P&G] believe[d] were impacted),” as
well as, “[f]or comparison purposes, similar documents evidencing sales and
revenue for all other areas in the United States, during the same time periods . . .
.” Id. at 131.
The second request pointed to by defendants occurred approximately five
2
IRI’s on-line data was organized by cities. In contrast, the archival data
purchased from IRI for Rosen’s use was organized by zip code.
6
months later, on April 22, 1996, when defendants asked P&G to produce “for
inspection and copying” the following categories of documents: (1) “[s]ummaries
of product sales at the retail level in the states of Utah, Nevada, and Texas from
April 1994, to the present”; (2) “[f]or comparison purposes, similar documents
evidencing sales and revenues for all other areas in the United States during the
same time period”; (3) “[m]emoranda, correspondence, or other documents
indicating sales strategies and plans which were implemented during the same
time period”; (4) “[a]ny market forecasts or analyses within your possession
which express an opinion, a forecast, or an analysis as to whether the sales of any
products produced by [P&G] and marketed in the United States [we]re expected
to increase or decrease in the next five years”; (5) “[a]ny document which
refer[red] to Amway Corporation or competition with Amway products from
April, 1993, until April, 1995”; and (6) “[a] computation of any category of
damages claimed by [P&G] and all documents or other evidentiary material, not
privileged or protected from disclosure, on which such computation [wa]s based,
including materials bearing on the nature and extent of injuries suffered.” Id. at
135-36.
The third and final request pointed to by defendants occurred on October
22, 1996, when Amway, while still a defendant in the case, requested from P&G a
host of documents pertaining to the “[a]lleged harm to P&G’s reputation and
7
purported damages,” including “[a]ll documents explaining or analyzing changes
in P&G’s market share, by region, product, and any other classification, since
1980.” Id. at 145.
In addition to these three discovery requests, defendants contend the district
court issued four separate orders directing P&G to produce the IRI data before it
ultimately sanctioned P&G for failing to comply. The first of those orders was
issued on January 31, 1997, by the magistrate judge in response to defendants’
motion to compel discovery. Id. at 152-54. It directed P&G to “provide a
description of the nature of injuries and losses it ha[d] sustained and, to the extent
that it . . . ha[d] sufficient information to do so, . . . provide a computation of
each category of damages within the meaning of Rule 26(a)(1)(C) by February 20,
1997.” 3 Id. at 153.
The second court order cited by defendants was issued on July 27, 1998, by
the magistrate judge in response to defendants’ motion to compel production of
documents related to P&G’s damage claim. That order directed P&G to produce,
within thirty days, “at least 24 boxes of responsive documents for Tide laundry
3
On February 20, 1997, P&G filed supplemental responses to Amway’s
October 22, 1996 request for production of documents. Therein, P&G indicated
that it might be in possession of “information on electronic databases” that was
responsive to Amway’s requests for documents, including information “explaining
or analyzing changes in P&G’s market share, by region, product, and any other
classification, since 1980.” App. at 159.
8
detergent and documents responsive to Request Nos. 1, 6-21 and 23 of Defendant
Haugen’s Third Request for Production of Documents, which concern[ed] P&G’s
alleged damage to its reputation.” Id. at 176. The order further stated:
After defendants have inspected the Tide documents, they will
provide P&G with a list of responsive documents. For each P&G
brand that competes with an Amway product, P&G will then produce
all the responsive documents within a reasonable time, but efforts
should be made to complete the production within 30 days of service
of Amway’s list.
Id. at 176-77.
The third court order cited by defendants was issued on December 8, 1998,
by the magistrate judge. On that date, the magistrate judge conducted a hearing
on various discovery-related motions. During the course of the hearing, the
magistrate judge instructed P&G to produce to Amway (and presumably the other
defendants) within forty-five days from the date of the hearing “the IRI data
relating to the competing products from which [P&G] ma[d]e [its] claim of loss.”
Id. at 225. In making this order, the magistrate judge clarified the scope of what
P&G was required to produce: “if you [P&G] have it in usable electronic data
base format, so that that electronic data base could be programed [sic] to draw
down the material in a variety of constructs, that then that ought to be produced in
that form. If it is not available in that form but is only available in a reproduction
format, then the reproduction format would be what you need to produce.” Id. at
222-23. The magistrate judge further stated: “I’m not going to require you [P&G]
9
to construct a whole new system to provide the information, but you must provide
the data you have, and if you have a system that will allow for an analytical
assessment of the information within that system, then they ought to have an
opportunity to access that in its electronic form.” Id. at 223. Notably, the
magistrate judge acknowledged, after making his ruling, that Amway had not
previously requested this information (i.e., information on products other than
Tide) from P&G. The magistrate judge also indicated that he would not be
imposing any sanctions on P&G for any alleged failure to produce evidence.
On February 8, 1999, the magistrate judge issued an order memorializing
his ruling during the December 8, 1998, hearing. In particular, the order stated
that “by January 22, 1999,” P&G was required to produce “IRI data for P&G
products that compete with Amway products.” Id. at 293. “If P&G has this
information in a usable electronic data base format, so that the data could be
programmed to draw down the material in a variety of constructs, it should be
produced in that form. If P&G has a system that will allow for an analytical
assessment of the information within that system, defendants must be provided an
opportunity to access it. If the IRI data is not available in an electronic form but
is only available in a reproduction format, then the reproduction format should be
produced . . . .” Id. at 293-94. Notably, the order again implied that P&G had not
10
previously been required to produce such information to defendants. 4 Id. at 293
(“In addition to production governed by prior orders, P&G must produce the
following . . . .”).
The fourth and final order cited by defendants was issued by the district
court during a hearing held on February 26, 2003, regarding discovery-related
motions. During that hearing, the district court heard arguments regarding the
distributor defendants’ motion to compel “documents going to damages.” Id. at
370. In support of their motion, defendants argued, as they do now on appeal,
that they began seeking IRI data in November of 1995. Although defendants
acknowledged that the document requests they served on P&G in November 1995
did not “specifically name[]” the IRI data, they argued that the document requests
effectively encompassed that data. Id. at 373 (“It wasn’t specifically named, but
it would encompass it.”). Defendants also acknowledged that the December 8,
1998 order issued by the magistrate judge was the first time that P&G had been
4
As previously noted, the district court on March 29, 1999, granted
summary judgment in favor of defendants on certain of P&G’s claims, and
dismissed with prejudice P&G’s remaining claims against defendants. App. at 74
(docket sheet). P&G appealed that ruling. On August 23, 2000, this court
reinstated P&G’s Lanham Act and tortious interference claims and remanded
those claims to the district court for further proceedings. On June 7, 2001, the
district court issued an order dismissing Amway from the case, and granting
partial summary judgment in favor of the remaining defendants with respect to
P&G’s tortious interference claim. That left only P&G’s Lanham Act claim
against the distributor defendants to be litigated.
11
directly instructed to produce IRI-related data. Id. at 376 (“Then December 8,
finally, the Court orders P&G to produce IRI data.”). Although defendants
admitted P&G had provided them with the IRI data used by Dr. Rosen in
analyzing damages, they argued they were entitled to all of the IRI data that P&G
had access to during the course of the litigation, and that, due to P&G’s alleged
failure to produce such data, they were entitled to dismissal of P&G’s claims for
lost profits.
In response to defendants’ arguments, P&G noted that defendants had been
provided with access to all of the IRI data that Dr. Rosen had access to in
preparing his expert report, and that this data was sufficient to allow them to
adequately challenge Rosen’s testimony at trial. 5 In this regard, P&G clarified
that it was “not interested in pursuing loss of profits for any products but the
three” consumer products that Rosen had focused on in his expert report. Id. at
405. P&G further noted that, in a similar case being litigated between the parties
in Texas, IRI had “offered to provide to counsel for defendants all or any data in
the possession of IRI that the defendants wanted, which was all of the [data
regarding the] competing products,” but that IRI was going to charge a large fee
for doing so. Id. at 395. Thus, P&G argued, defendants were effectively
By the time of this hearing, P&G had apparently decided not to use the
5
testimony of Dr. Hall, and instead was relying solely on the testimony of Dr.
Rosen to support its claim for lost profits/market share.
12
attempting to persuade the court to pass this cost on to P&G.
In reply, defendants asserted they were entitled to production of all the IRI
data available to P&G from November 1995, when P&G employee McDonald first
began looking at the data to assess lost sales/profits, through December 1998.
Defendants further asserted that, during the time P&G subscribed to the IRI
database, P&G “could have downloaded that information and maintained it, [but]
they failed to do that.” Id. at 407. Lastly, defendants acknowledged that the
magistrate judge, in ordering P&G to produce IRI-related data, had limited that
production to the data previously provided to P&G’s own experts.
Ultimately, the district court ruled: “Well, on the IRI [data], it seems to me
the only question is – I mean, you [P&G] can look and see if you’ve got
something you may have that you didn’t think you had, and if you do, produce it.
And then you [P&G] can say what you don’t have. And then you [defendants] can
decide what you want to ask me to do about it. And you [P&G] can respond to
that, all right?” Id. In other words, the district court did not order P&G to
purchase any additional archival data from IRI for defendants’ benefit. Instead,
the district court limited its order of production to only that IRI data in the
possession of P&G.
On April 18, 2003, defendants filed a motion for sanctions as a result of
P&G’s alleged “spoliation of electronic market share data.” Id. at 568. In
13
support of their motion, defendants first asserted that the IRI data available to
P&G employees from November 1995 through December 1998 was “critical to the
defense.” Id. at 571. More specifically, defendants argued that their “economic
expert, Dr. Finis Welch, “need[ed] access to all the IRI data to determine whether
the repeating of the Satanism message by the Defendants had any economic
impact (i.e., lost sales) on P&G’s business.” Id. at 572. According to defendants,
“[a]lthough Dr. Welch agree[d] that IRI data constitute[d] the best information for
studying any economic effect of the rumor message, he believe[d] that Dr.
Rosen’s use of highly selective data provide[d] no scientific basis for his
conclusions.” Id. As a second basis for their motion, defendants argued that
P&G had wilfully failed to preserve the IRI data. Id. at 573. According to
defendants, “P&G did nothing to preserve the data, not only after it had been
requested several times, but even after production had been ordered by the Court
on four separate occasions.” Id. As a third basis for their motion, defendants
argued that P&G was well aware of the importance of the IRI market share data to
the case. Id. at 574. In support of this assertion, defendants argued that P&G
provided its own experts with access to the IRI database, but “then saved only the
carefully-selected material that it provided to Rosen,” i.e., the archival
information it purchased from IRI for purposes of the case. Id. at 577. As a
fourth basis for their motion, defendants argued that P&G, by failing to produce
14
all of the IRI data, “violated several court orders.” Id. at 578. Lastly, defendants
argued that the entry of a default judgment in their favor was the appropriate
sanction for P&G’s alleged wrongful conduct.
P&G filed a response opposing defendants’ motion for sanctions. In that
response, P&G first noted that it had simply been an online subscriber to the data
provided by IRI, and that its subscription contract did not allow it to download all
of the information contained in IRI’s databases. Second, P&G noted that, even if
had sought to download all of the information in IRI’s databases, it would have
been required to purchase a mainframe computer like the one owned and used by
IRI. In other words, P&G asserted that “IRI’s data was so massive that P&G’s
computer system could not handle a download of the IRI databases.” Id. at 919.
Third, P&G asserted that it had produced to defendants all documents in its
possession that incorporated or referenced the IRI data accessed by its employees.
Fourth, P&G asserted that the IRI data, in the form regularly accessed online by
P&G employees for marketing purposes, would not have been helpful in assessing
damages in this case. In support of this assertion, P&G noted that it had to
purchase $75,000.00 worth of archival data from IRI in a special format (i.e.,
grouped by zip-code) for its expert, Dr. Rosen, and that such data had already
been provided to defendants. Fifth, P&G noted that IRI had offered to make the
sought-after databases available to defendants, but that defendants had refused to
15
pay for the information. Lastly, P&G argued that it had not violated any
discovery-related orders issued by the magistrate judge or the district court. To
the contrary, P&G asserted that it had “complied with the discovery orders of
January 31, 1997, July 21, 1998, and December 8, 1998,” and that it was
“accumulat[ing], and w[ould] shortly be producing, the . . . 1999 documentation
requested by defendants in 2003.” Id. at 924.
On July 15, 2003, the district court held a hearing on defendants’ motion
for sanctions. Defendants argued, in pertinent part, that “P&G could have
provided a terminal to the defense to access the IRI data at no cost,” and that the
magistrate judge had, in fact, directed P&G to do so “in December of ‘98. Get
access. Let the defendants have access to the information at no cost.” Id. at
1021. Defendants further argued that “[t]he problem [wa]s they [P&G] never
preserved what they should have preserved in the first place.” Id. at 1036. In
other words, defendants argued that, beginning in 1995 or 1996, P&G should have
preserved all of the IRI online data it had access to. P&G, in response, asserted
that it had preserved and provided defendants with “[w]hatever data was
downloaded [from IRI’s database] through [P&G’s normal business practices] and
used in any way, shape or form for business purposes . . . .” Id. at 1025. P&G
emphasized, however, that at no time did it ever own, or have authority to
download, all of the information contained in the IRI database. Lastly, P&G
16
noted that IRI was willing to sell any archival data to defendants that they might
want. At the conclusion of the hearing, the district court made no ruling, but
instead took the matter under advisement.
On August 19, 2003, the district court issued a two-page order granting
defendants’ motion for sanctions. The order stated, in full:
Defendants’ Motion for Sanctions was heard by the Court on July
15, 2003. * * *
The Court has reviewed the file, considered the arguments of
counsel, reviewed the memoranda supporting and opposing the
motion, and has reviewed governing authority. After due
consideration of the foregoing, the Court grants Defendants’ Motion
and dismisses this case with prejudice for each of the following three
reasons (in other words, each reason standing alone would be
sufficient for the Court’s ruling in this matter):
1. Based on the reasons and arguments set forth by
Defendants in support of their motion, the Court is
convinced that Plaintiffs have failed to preserve relevant
electronic data that Plaintiffs knew was critical to their
case and to the defense. The Court is also persuaded
that Plaintiffs have violated four (4) separate discovery
orders requiring production of said data.
2. Based on the reasons and arguments set forth in
Defendants’ motion and supporting memoranda, the
Court finds that it would be basically impossible for
Defendants to defend this case without the electronic
data that has not been produced and apparently is no
longer available. Defendants would need access to all
relevant IRI data to determine whether the Satanism
message produced lost sales with respect to all of the
products included in said Satanism message.
3. The Court finds that damages testimony and studies
17
based on five or fewer of the more than forty products at
issue here would not be admitted in evidence under Rule
702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence and the Daubert
line of cases regarding the admissibility of expert
testimony. Such testimony clearly would not be based
upon sufficient facts or data to be admissible in this
Court. Since Plaintiffs’ damages evidence would not be
admissible, Plaintiffs’ claims must fail.
Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss this case with prejudice is
granted for each of the foregoing three reasons discussed. All other
outstanding motions in this case are moot. Each party shall bear its
own costs.
Id. at 1057-58.
II.
The primary focus of P&G’s appeal is on the district court’s August 19,
2003 order dismissing the case. Although that order cited “three reasons” for
dismissing the case, P&G argues, and we agree, that the order was actually
grounded on two separate bases: (1) P&G’s alleged wrongful conduct and the
prejudice allegedly suffered by defendants as a result thereof, and (2) the
purported inadmissibility of P&G’s expert testimony. P&G challenges both. As
outlined in greater detail below, we agree with P&G that neither of these bases
justify dismissal and we therefore reverse the order of dismissal and remand the
case to the district court for further proceedings.
Sanction of dismissal
P&G asserts several challenges to the portion of the district court’s August
18
19, 2003 order dismissing P&G’s action as a sanction for P&G’s “F]AILURE] to
preserve relevant electronic data . . . .” Before addressing the specific arguments
made by P&G, we must first resolve the threshold question of what standard of
review to apply to that portion of the district court’s decision.
The district court did not cite to any rule or authority in its order granting
defendants’ motion for sanctions. Because, however, defendants’ motion relied
largely upon Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2), we presume the district
court likewise relied on that same rule in dismissing the action based on P&G’s
alleged failure to preserve electronic data and the resulting prejudice allegedly
suffered by defendants. Rule 37(b)(2) authorizes a district court to sanction a
party who “fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery . . . .” Included
among the available sanctions is “[a]n order . . . dismissing the action or
proceeding or any part thereof . . . .” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(C). In reviewing a
district court’s decision to dismiss an action under Rule 37(b)(2), we generally
apply an abuse of discretion standard. See Creative Gifts, Inc. v. UFO, 235 F.3d
540, 549 (10th Cir. 2000).
Although a district court is afforded discretion in choosing an appropriate
sanction, that discretion “is limited in that the chosen sanction must be both just
and related to the particular claim which was at issue in the order to provide
discovery.” Ehrenhaus v. Reynolds, 965 F.2d 916, 920 (10th Cir. 1992) (internal
19
quotation marks omitted). Dismissal with prejudice “represents an extreme
sanction,” id., and thus is considered appropriate only in cases involving
“willfulness, bad faith, or [some] fault” on the part of the party to be sanctioned.
Chavez v. City of Albuquerque, 402 F.3d 1039, 1044 (10th Cir. 2005) (internal
quotation marks omitted). “In many cases, a lesser sanction will deter the errant
party from further misconduct.” Ehrenhaus, 965 F.2d at 920. “Because dismissal
with prejudice defeats altogether a litigant’s right of access to the courts, it
should be used as a weapon of last, rather than first, resort.” Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted).
“Before imposing dismissal as a sanction, a district court should ordinarily
evaluate the following factors on the record: ‘(1) the degree of actual prejudice to
the [other party]; (2) the amount of interference with the judicial process; . . . (3)
the culpability of the litigant; (4) whether the court warned the party in advance
that dismissal of the action would be a likely sanction for noncompliance; and (5)
the efficacy of lesser sanctions.’” Gripe v. City of Enid, 312 F.3d 1184, 1187
(10th Cir. 2002) (quoting Ehrenhaus, 965 F.2d at 921). “This list,” hereinafter
referred to as the Ehrenhaus factors, “is not exhaustive, nor are the factors
necessarily” of equal weight. Chavez, 402 F.3d at 1044. “Only when the
aggravating factors outweigh the judicial system’s strong predisposition to resolve
cases on their merits is dismissal an appropriate sanction.” Ehrenhaus, 965 F.2d
20
at 921 (internal quotation marks omitted).
As discussed in greater detail below, we conclude in this case that the
district court erred in imposing dismissal as a sanction for P&G’s alleged
misconduct. Not only did the district court fail to consider the Ehrenhaus factors
on the record, our own independent review of the record on appeal suggests that
several of the Ehrenhaus factors weighed in favor of P&G, and that, in any event,
the extreme sanction of dismissal was clearly inappropriate under the
circumstances presented here.
a. Failure to consider Ehrenhaus factors on the record
P&G argues that the district court’s order of dismissal must, at a minimum,
be reversed due to the district court’s failure to address on the record any of the
Ehrenhaus factors. We agree. As we have said in the past under similar
circumstances, the district court’s failure to provide “a detailed evaluation of
these factors on the record” makes “it . . . impossible for us to “engag[e] in any
meaningful review of the trial court’s decision.” Mobley v. McCormick, 40 F.3d
337, 341 (10th Cir. 1994). Although defendants assert that the district court’s
order of dismissal incorporated by reference the arguments asserted in their
motion for sanction, which in turn addressed the Ehrenhaus factors, it is unclear
from the record whether the district court agreed with the defendants’ assessment
of each of those factors. Moreover, as discussed in greater detail below, our
21
independent review of the record refutes many of the arguments made by
defendants in their motion. Thus, “we must hold” that the district court’s failure
to address the Ehrenhaus factors on the record “amounts to an abuse of
discretion.” Id.
b. Culpability of P&G
P&G argues that, even aside from the district court’s failure to address the
Ehrenhaus factors on the record, the sanction of dismissal was inappropriate
because there was no basis for concluding that it acted willfully, in bad faith, or
with culpability. More specifically, P&G argues that the only action it
conceivably failed to take was “to create a computerized database out of all the
online IRI data that ever had been available to [it] from 1995 through 1998, even
though [it] never actually had accessed, much less downloaded, the vast majority
of the data, which were being deleted and replaced continuously by IRI.” Aplt.
Br. at 23.
Our independent review of the record on appeal persuades us that P&G was
indeed faced with a dilemma regarding preservation and production of the IRI
data. As noted, P&G did not possess nor own that data. Rather, the record
indicates that the data was compiled, possessed, and owned by IRI, which in turn
provided P&G with access to that data for a fee. Although the IRI data in general
could be deemed to have fallen within certain of defendants’ broadly-worded
22
discovery requests, it is unclear precisely how P&G was to produce that data to
defendants. The most reasonable alternatives appear to have been (a) providing
defendants with regular online access to the information, (b) attempting to
download and archive the information at P&G’s facilities, or (c) paying IRI to
provide the archived data to defendants. 6 That said, each of these alternatives
involved a considerable downside. The first option, providing defendants with
regular online access to the information, would not necessarily have satisfied
defendants’ discovery requests due to the “rolling” nature of the IRI database. In
other words, it appears from the record that defendants were interested in
obtaining a concrete set of IRI-related data (i.e., a set of data with established
beginning and ending dates) rather than merely access to the rolling database. As
for the second option, P&G downloading and archiving the data at its own
facilities, the record appears to be uncontroverted that P&G did not have the
computer capacity to do so and would, in fact, have had to purchase a mainframe
computer to do so. 7 The third option, purchasing archival data from IRI, bore a
6
There also appear to have been two other alternatives: (1) P&G arguably
could have asked IRI to make back-up copies of its data at certain points in time
(although this likely would have cost P&G additional money beyond the price of
its subscription agreement with IRI); and (2) defendants could arguably have used
Rule 45 to subpoena information directly from IRI.
7
The evidence in the record suggests that P&G would have had the right,
under its contract with IRI, to download all of the data from the rolling databases
had it wanted to. Aplee. App. at 352.
23
considerable economic expense. According to P&G, the cost of obtaining the
requested archival data from IRI would have been somewhere in the
neighborhood of thirty million dollars. 8
Although the district court’s order of dismissal makes reference to P&G
“fail[ing] to preserve relevant electronic data,” the district court offered no
explanation of what it meant by “relevant electronic data,” and what steps it
believed P&G could and should have taken to preserve such data. App. at 1057.
Moreover, at no time during the litigation did the district court or the magistrate
judge ever address either of these issues. As noted in P&G’s opening brief, the
first court order expressly mentioning IRI data was the magistrate judge’s
December 8, 1998 order. That order directed P&G to provide defendants with IRI
data “possessed” by P&G, and thus arguably failed to clarify P&G’s duties
regarding preservation and/or production of the IRI data available to P&G online
(as opposed to the IRI data that was actually downloaded by P&G employees and
incorporated into reports, etc.). To be sure, the December 8, 1998 order
mentioned the possibility of P&G providing defendants with access to any
computer systems that allowed for analysis of the IRI data. However, that order
8
The district court was obligated to take into account Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 26(b)(2)(iii), which provides: “The frequency or extent of . . .
discovery . . . shall be limited by the court if it determines that . . . the burden or
expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit . . . .”
24
was again framed in terms of IRI data “possessed” by P&G, and thus arguably
failed to address the unique circumstances of this case.
Similarly, the district court expressly addressed the IRI data on only one
occasion before entertaining defendants’ motion for sanctions and dismissing
P&G’s case. Specifically, on February 26, 2003, after hearing oral arguments
regarding defendants’ motion to compel damage-related evidence, the district
court simply directed P&G to ensure that it had produced all IRI-related data in
its possession. In other words, the district court did not order P&G to purchase
any additional archival data from IRI for defendants’ benefit.
Given these circumstances, it is simply unclear what the district court
considered P&G’s duties to have been regarding preservation and production of
the IRI-related data. In turn, it is impossible to conclude that P&G acted with the
requisite culpability to justify the sanction of dismissal.
c. Prejudice to defendants
In its order of dismissal, the district court found “that it would be basically
impossible for Defendants to defend this case without the electronic data that has
not been produced and apparently is no longer available.” App. at 1058. More
specifically, the district court stated: “Defendants would need access to all
relevant IRI data to determine whether the Satanism message produced lost sales
with respect to all the products included in said Satanism message.” Id.
25
P&G challenges this finding as “groundless.” Aplt. Br. at 41. According
to P&G, defendants “defended themselves without” all of the IRI-related data “in
a parallel Texas action brought by P&G.” Id. at 42. Indeed, P&G alleges, the
court in that Texas case “rejected defendants’ argument that they would be unable
to defend themselves unless they could get all of the IRI data to which P&G had
temporary access in prior years.” Id. In the instant case, P&G notes, defendants
“have received all of the information, documents and materials in the possession,
custody, or control of P&G and its experts,” and defendants also had the
opportunity to “purchase[] directly from IRI any additional data they believed was
necessary . . . .” Id.
We conclude, after examining the record on appeal, that the district court’s
finding of prejudice, unsupported by any detailed explanation, is clearly
erroneous. See generally Olcott v. Delaware Flood Co., 76 F.3d 1538, 1557 (10th
Cir. 1996) (“We accept the district court’s factual findings underpinning its
sanctions order unless clearly erroneous.”). As noted in the background section,
P&G paid IRI to compile and offer it access to the data for marketing purposes.
When this litigation began, P&G initially attempted to use the IRI data available
to it online for purposes of assessing the damages, if any, that resulted from the
Satanism rumors. According to P&G, however, the online data was not organized
in a way that allowed for such analysis. Accordingly, its sole remaining expert on
26
damages, Dr. Rosen, requested that P&G purchase archival data from IRI that was
formatted in a different fashion than the online data, i.e., by zip code. P&G
complied with this request, and Dr. Rosen in turn based his damages analysis on
the archival data. Although defendants now assert that it was necessary for them
to have had access to all of the IRI online data in order to rebut Dr. Rosen’s
testimony, this assertion is supported by little, if any, evidence in the record on
appeal. In other words, although it certainly would have been preferable if
defendants had somehow been afforded access to the IRI data, it is far from clear
that such data would have been useful for rebutting Dr. Rosen’s testimony, since
it was formatted in a different fashion than the data utilized by Dr. Rosen. Thus,
we conclude that genuine issues of material fact remain concerning whether
defendants were in fact prejudiced by their lack of access to all the IRI-related
data, and if so, how much they were prejudiced.
d. Other Ehrenhaus factors
P&G asserts that none of the remaining Ehrenhaus factors “could possibly
justify dismissal” either. Aplt. Br. at 42. In particular, P&G asserts that
“[n]either the district judge nor the magistrate judge ever gave P&G any advance
warning that dismissal would be a likely sanction if it failed to retrieve, preserve,
and produce all of the IRI data to which it had temporary access from 1995 to
1998 – including the data that P&G never downloaded and that long since had
27
been deleted by IRI.” Id. at 42-43. Further, P&G argues that the district court
“never considered the[] efficacy” of “lesser sanctions” “as alternatives to
dismissal.” Id. at 43.
We again agree. As asserted by P&G, there is no indication in the record
on appeal that the magistrate judge or the district court ever warned P&G that its
suit was subject to dismissal if all of the IRI-related data was not made available
to defendants. For example, at the February 26, 2003 hearing before the district
court concerning defendants’ motion to compel, the district court simply
instructed P&G to ensure that it had produced to defendants all of the IRI-related
data in its possession. No mention was made by the district court of dismissal as
a possible sanction. Further, as asserted by P&G, there is no indication in the
district court’s order of dismissal that it gave any consideration to lesser
sanctions.
e. Conclusion
In summary, we conclude the district court’s order of dismissal, to the
extent it was intended as a sanction for P&G’s alleged failure to preserve
electronic data and the alleged resulting prejudice, was improper and must be
reversed.
Inadmissibility of P&G’s expert testimony
P&G also challenges the second basis for dismissal cited by the district
28
court, i.e., the purported inadmissibility of P&G’s expert testimony regarding
damages. P&G notes that at the time of dismissal, it “had not submitted any
expert reports to the district court, the district court had not heard any expert
testimony, and no motion to limit or exclude P&G’s expert was before the court.”
Aplt. Br. at 17. Thus, P&G argues, “[b]y [its] ruling the district court improperly
entered a sua sponte summary judgment without following the mandatory Rule 56
procedures.” Id.
It is beyond dispute that “Federal Rule of Evidence 702 imposes a special
obligation upon a trial judge to ‘ensure that any and all [expert] testimony ... is
not only relevant, but reliable.’” Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137,
147 (1999) (quoting Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 589
(1993)). Although a district court “has no discretion to avoid performing the
gatekeeper function,” it “has discretion in how it conducts [this] function . . . .”
Dodge v. Cotter Corp., 328 F.3d 1212, 1223 (10th Cir. 2003). This “broad
discretion applies both in deciding how to assess an expert’s reliability, including
what procedures to utilize in making that assessment, as well as in making the
ultimate determination of reliability.” Id. We “will not disturb the district court’s
ruling unless it is ‘arbitrary, capricious, whimsical or manifestly unreasonable’ or
when we are convinced that the district court ‘made a clear error of judgment or
exceeded the bounds of permissible choice in the circumstances.’” Id. (quoting
29
Atlantic Richfield Co. v. Farm Credit Bank of Wichita, 226 F.3d 1138, 1163-64
(10th Cir. 2000)).
Applying those principles here, it is without question that the district court
would have had to, at some point, determine the admissibility of Dr. Rosen’s
testimony regarding damages. That said, we conclude there are at least two major
problems with the district court’s ruling that Dr. Rosen’s testimony was
inadmissible. First, a review of the record on appeal confirms P&G’s contention
that it had absolutely no warning prior to the district court’s order of dismissal
that the district court would be considering, let alone ruling on, the admissibility
of Dr. Rosen’s testimony. Second, and relatedly, the district court failed to
“creat[e] . . . ‘a sufficiently developed record in order to allow a determination of
whether [it] properly applied the relevant law.” Id. Undoubtedly due to the lack
of prior notice, neither side in this case provided the district court with detailed
briefing regarding the admissibility of P&G’s expert’s testimony. In turn, there
were no “detailed” or “specific” findings by the district court on the record
regarding why it concluded the testimony was inadmissible. Id. To the contrary,
the circumstances of the district court’s ruling (i.e., its surprise nature and its lack
of specificity) strongly suggest that the district court “‘simply made an off-the-
cuff decision to [exclude] the expert testimony.’” Id. (quoting Goebel v. Denver
& Rio Grande Western R.R. Co., 215 F.3d 1083, 1088 (10th Cir. 2000)). For
30
these reasons, we conclude the district court abused its discretion in ruling that
Dr. Rosen’s testimony was inadmissible and in dismissing P&G’s claims on that
basis.
III.
In addition to challenging the district court’s order of dismissal, P&G also
challenges two discovery-related rulings issued by the district court prior to its
order of dismissal. First, P&G contends the district court erred in “denying
protection to P&G’s confidential commercial information by allowing the
Distributor Defendants to disclose it to Amway,” even though Amway “was no
longer a party to this action” at the time of the production of the documents.
Aplt. Br. at 17. Second, P&G contends the district court erred “by requiring P&G
to produce five documents that were subject to work product protection and the
attorney-client privilege.” Id. We review discovery-related rulings for an abuse
of discretion. Ridenour v. Kaiser-Hill Co., L.L.C., 397 F.3d 925, 938 (10th Cir.
2005).
Disclosure of information to Amway
During much of the litigation, the district court imposed a protective order
that prevented the disclosure of confidential documents to non-parties. On April
28, 2003, P&G filed a motion asking the district court to “enforce or modify” that
protective order so as to prohibit the distributor defendants from disclosing
31
P&G’s “confidential information to former defendants or their counsel or
consultants in this litigation.” App. at 556. In support of the request, P&G
argued that: (1) “the former defendants . . . ha[d] no right to current confidential
information”; (2) “the former defendants [we]re direct competitors of [P&G] and
disclosure of confidential information could put [P&G] at a competitive
disadvantage”; and (3) “allowing disclosure of confidential information to the
former defendants would defeat the purpose of” the previously imposed protective
order. Id.
The district court heard arguments on P&G’s motion on July 15, 2003 (at
the same time it heard arguments on defendants’ motion for sanctions). Defense
counsel argued that they were “using Amway [and its counsel] as a consultant” in
this litigation. Id. at 1043. Defense counsel further argued that there was no risk
to the confidentiality of the documents because all persons associated with
Amway had signed confidentiality agreements and were bound by the court’s
previously issued protective order. Id. at 1044.
On July 16, 2003, the district court issued a written order denying P&G’s
motion. In its order, the district court stated:
Because Amway’s counsel previously took the laboring oar in this
case and in the Texas case, and because Defendants had different
counsel in the Texas litigation and were not even parties in the
Michigan litigation [a case filed by Amway against P&G], limiting
Defendants’ ability to consult with Amway’s counsel would severely
prejudice Defendants in this case. P&G’s alleged concerns are
32
unwarranted and unsubstantiated. There is no allegation that
Amway’s counsel have violated the Protective Order, and Amway’s
counsel remain bound by the Protective Order.
Id. at 1053.
On appeal, P&G essentially rehashes the arguments it made to the district
court. We conclude, however, that the district court properly rejected those
arguments. Moreover, P&G has failed to rebut the district court’s findings that
defendants would be “severely prejudice[d]” if the district court limited their
ability to consult with Amway’s counsel, and that Amway’s counsel has not
violated and indeed remains bound by the previously issued protective order.
Thus, we conclude there was no abuse of discretion on the part of the district
court.
Production of privileged documents
On December 8, 1998, the magistrate judge ordered P&G to produce to
defendants five documents that allegedly were memoranda to and from P&G’s in-
house counsel regarding investigation of Satanism rumors and the thoughts and
impressions of counsel regarding litigation over these rumors.” P&G objected to
the magistrate judge’s ruling, arguing that the documents were subject to work-
product protection and the attorney client-privilege, but the district court
dismissed the action before addressing P&G’s objection. After this court reversed
and remanded the case for further proceedings, the district court entertained
33
P&G’s objections to the magistrate judge’s order and ultimately overruled those
objections.
On appeal, P&G contends the district court erred in ordering production of
the five documents. Notably, however, P&G has not submitted any of these
documents to us for review. Instead, P&G’s sole argument is that, even though it
submitted the five documents to the district court for in camera review, the
district court failed to conduct such a review before ordering them to be
produced.
After carefully reviewing the record on appeal, we reject P&G’s assertion.
To begin with, it is uncontroverted that the five documents were submitted to the
district court for in camera review on what appears to have been two separate
occasions (before a February 26, 2003 hearing on P&G’s objections, and again in
April 2003). Further, the district court issued a written order on May 21, 2003,
expressly overruling P&G’s objections to the magistrate judge’s December 8,
1998 order directing P&G to produce the documents. App. at 992. Finally, at a
July 10, 2003 hearing on various motions, the district court reiterated that it
intended for the five documents to be produced. Id. at 1047-48. Notably, the
court made no mention of not having had an opportunity to review the documents
in camera before ruling on them. In light of all these circumstances, we conclude
there is no basis for finding that the district court failed to conduct an in camera
34
review of the five documents.
IV.
Finally, P&G contends that the “interests of justice demand” that the case
be reassigned to another district court judge on remand. Aplt. Br. at 56. In
support of its contention, P&G asserts that “the bizarre, plainly deficient rulings
challenged in this appeal” demonstrate “that the district judge harbors such
serious antipathy toward” P&G’s “claims that reassignment to a different judge is
necessary to ensure a fair and impartial trial on remand.” Id.
It is well established that we have authority, apart from the judicial
disqualification statutes, to reassign a case to a different district judge on remand.
Mitchell v. Maynard, 80 F.3d 1433, 1448 (10th Cir. 1996) (discussing sources of
authority). Because of “the extraordinary nature” of such an order, however, we
“will remand with instructions for assignment of a different judge only when
there is proof of personal bias or under extreme circumstances.” Id.
In our view, P&G has failed to satisfy these difficult standards. To begin
with, P&G has not asserted, nor is there any evidence in the record, that the
district court has a personal bias against P&G or its counsel. In the absence of
personal bias, that leaves only what we have referred to as “extreme
circumstances.” Id. Although P&G suggests that the district court’s rulings at
issue in this appeal were so “plainly deficient” as to demonstrate “serious
35
antipathy” on the part of the district court towards P&G’s claims, we have held
“that prior adverse rulings cannot in themselves create grounds for
disqualification.” Id. at 1449. Further, although P&G asserts that the district
court’s “track record” in this case would case a reasonable person to question
whether justice was being done in this case, all P&G can point to in support of
this assertion is the district court’s legal rulings, some of which have been
affirmed by this court in prior appeals. In other words, unlike the circumstances
at issue in Mitchell, the record contains no expressions of disapproval by the
district court regarding P&G, its counsel, or its claims. Id. at 1450 (reassigning
case where first judge overseeing case stated on the record that the plaintiff’s
claims were “frivolous” and a “waste of the jury’s time . . . .”).
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED
in part and the case REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings.
Plaintiffs’ request for a reassignment of the case on remand is DENIED.
36