ATTORNEYS FOR PETITIONER: ATTORNEYS FOR RESPONDENT:
RANDAL J. KALTENMARK CURTIS T. HILL, JR.
ZIAADDIN MOLLABASHY ATTORNEY GENERAL OF INDIANA
BARNES & THORNBURG LLP JESSICA R. GASTINEAU
Indianapolis, IN WINSTON LIN
PAVINDER K. NIJJAR
THEODORE R. BOTS DEPUTY ATTORNEYS GENERAL
JENNY A. AUSTIN Indianapolis, IN
BAKER & MCKENZIE LLP
Chicago, IL FILED
Feb 06 2017, 10:52 am
SCOTT L. BRANDMAN
CLERK
BAKER & MCKENZIE LLP Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
New York, NY
IN THE
INDIANA TAX COURT
THE UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX, INC., )
)
Petitioner, )
)
v. ) Cause No. 49T10-1411-TA-00065
)
INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF )
STATE REVENUE, )
)
Respondent. )
ORDER ON PETITIONER’S MOTION TO COMPEL
RESPONSES TO DISCOVERY REQUESTS
FOR PUBLICATION
February 6, 2017
WENTWORTH, J.
The University of Phoenix, Inc. has moved to compel the Indiana Department of
State Revenue to produce information and documents regarding 1) Section 14 of House
Bill 1349 (“H.B. 1349”), 2) the Tax Competitiveness and Simplification Report of
September 2014 (the “Report”), and 3) a presentation on the Report (the “Presentation”)
as well as to compel the designation of a proper 30(B)(6) witness. Upon review, the
Court grants the University’s motion in part and denies it in part.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In November of 2014, the University filed an original tax appeal challenging the
Department’s decision to source some of its online tuition revenue for the 2009 through
2011 tax years using a market-based or customer-based method rather than the
income-producing activity (i.e., costs of performance) method required under Indiana
Code § 6-3-2-2(f). During discovery, the University served the Department with its First
Set of Interrogatories, First Request for Production of Documents, Supplemental
Request for Production of Documents, and deposed the Department’s three designated
30(B)(6) witnesses. (See generally Pet’r Mot. Compel Resp. Discovery Requests (“Pet’r
Br.”) ¶¶ 12, 22, 46-48, Exs. A-C.) The Department’s responses to the University’s
Interrogatory Number 26, Request for Production Number 17, Supplemental Request
for Production Numbers 1 and 2, and its 30(B)(6) witness designations are the subjects
of this motion to compel.
Interrogatory Number 26 and Request for Production Number 17
Interrogatory Number 26 asked the Department to:
Identify all documents that the Department obtained or has in its
possession relating to the proposed amendment of Ind. Code § 6-3-
2-2(f) as contained in the original version of [H.B. 1349], § 14
introduced on January 13, 2015 in the State of Indiana General
Assembly (Exhibit A).
(Pet’r Br., Ex. A at 14-15.) Request for Production Number 17 sought:
All Documents and Communications relating to the proposed
amendment of Ind. Code § 6-3-2-2(f) as contained in the original
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version of [H.B. 1349], § 14 introduced on January 13, 2015 in the
State of Indiana General Assembly.
(Pet’r Br., Ex. B at 116.) On June 22, 2016, after having received a five-month
extension of time to answer the University’s written discovery requests, the Department
objected to Interrogatory Number 26 explaining that:
[t]he Department objects to Interrogatory No. 26 as vague and
ambiguous in its use of the terms “obtained,” “proposed
amendment,” and “original version.” The Department also objects
that this Interrogatory is oppressive and unduly burdensome by
requesting “all documents” without any limitation, including
timeframe and subject matter. The Department further objects that
[] the information apparently sought by this [I]nterrogatory is
irrelevant and is not reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery
of admissible evidence, as the Tax Court reviews appeals from the
Department de novo, the original version of [H.B. 1349] was not
enacted, and this case regards the assessment of tax against [the
University] during a tax year prior to [H.B. 1349’s] introduction.
Moreover, the Department objects to this Interrogatory because it
appears to seek information regarding documents that are not
authored by, kept in the regular course of business by, or issued
under the authority of the Department. Furthermore, the
Department objects that this Interrogatory appears to seek
privileged information, including attorney-client communications
and internal deliberations regarding state policy and proposed
legislation. The Department also objects on the grounds that the
Interrogatory is impossible to answer without disclosing confidential
taxpayer information, and the Department and taxpayer(s) will be
irreparably harmed if required to disclose this information to [the
University].
(See Pet’r Br. ¶ 15, Ex. F at 272-73.) The Department provided a similar objection in
response to Request for Production Number 17. (See Pet’r Br., Ex. E at 245-46.)
On July 20, 2016, the parties held a Trial Rule 26(F) conference during which the
Department admitted that it had withheld certain H.B. 1349 documentation because it
did not specifically reference the University and, thus, was not relevant. (Pet’r Br. ¶ 19.)
In response, the University explained that its H.B. 1349 discovery requests were not
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premised on specific references to the University, and therefore, the Department should
have disclosed the H.B. 1349 documentation. (See Pet’r Br. ¶ 20, Ex. H at 283-84.)
Supplemental Request for Production Numbers 1 and 2
On July 25, 2016, the University served the Department with a Supplemental
Request for Production of Documents that consisted of only two additional requests for
production. (See Pet’r Br. ¶ 22, Ex. C.) Specifically, the first supplemental request
sought documentation regarding the Report:
All Documents and Communications referred to, reviewed[,]
created, consulted, examined, searched, used, and/or issued to or
by employees or representatives of the Department relating to the
drafting of Section II(B)(2) of the [Report] dated September 2014
(pages 38 and 39) (“Adopt Market-Based Sourcing of Service
Receipts Section”), attached hereto as Exhibit A. This Request . . .
includes, but is not limited to, all Documents and Communications
relating to the Adopt Market-Based Sourcing of Service Receipts
Section in the possession of the following employees or
representatives of the Department: former Commissioner Michael
Alley; Asheesh Agarwal; Doug Klitzke; Timothy Shultz; Jeff Raney;
Lena Snethen[;] April Bruce; Collin Davis; Larry Molnar; Robert
Dittmer; Kelsey Kotnik; and Daniel Perry.
(Pet’r Br. ¶ 22, Ex. C at 134-35.) The second supplemental request used similar
wording to seek additional documentation related to the Presentation. (See Pet’r Br.,
Ex. C at 135.) On August 29, 2016, the Department objected to these discovery
requests as follows:
The Department objects to the [Requests] as oppressive,
overbroad, and unduly burdensome in seeking all documents
“referred to, reviewed[,] created, consulted, examined, searched,
used, and/or issued to or by employees or representatives of the
Department,” as [they] include[] documents which are not within the
Department’s knowledge, possession, or control, as well as
information not retained by the Department. Further, th[e Requests
are] irrelevant and not reasonably calculated to lead to the
discovery of admissible evidence, as the . . . [Report and
Presentation both] post-date[] the [2009 through 2011] tax years
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and the audit. Moreover, the Department speaks not through the
isolated statements of its employees, but through its publications in
the Indiana Register. . . . Additionally, th[e Requests] appear[] to
improperly seek matters protected by the work-product or attorney
client privileges, or to probe the hearing officers’ decision-making
processes, which are protected by the “general bar against probing
the mental processes involved in administrative decision-makers’
deliberations when the decision-maker is acting in a quasi-judicial
capacity.” . . . Finally, th[e Requests] seek[] confidential taxpayer
information, and the Department and taxpayer(s) will be irreparably
harmed if required to disclose this information to [the University].
(See Pet’r Br., Ex. J at 311-14 (citations omitted).) In spite of its objection, the
Department did provide some documents in response to the University’s supplemental
production requests. (See Pet’r Br., Ex. J at 312, 314.) The University claimed,
however, that the Department’s response was “incomplete” because the documents
provided were primarily undated excerpts of the Report and the Presentation that did
not reveal their authors. (See Pet’r Br. ¶¶ 24-25.) Thereafter, the parties held two more
Trial Rule 26(F) conferences in an attempt to resolve their evolving discovery dispute
informally. (See Pet’r Br. ¶¶ 26, 28.)
The Department’s 30(B)(6) Witnesses
On September 8, 2016, the University issued a notice to the Department
requesting that it designate a 30(B)(6) witness that could provide testimony on H.B.
1349, the Report, the Presentation, and “[t]he documents that the Department has
produced in response to [the University’s] Requests for Production.” (See Pet’r Br., Ex.
D at 225 ¶¶ 9-12, 227.) In October 2016, the University deposed the Department’s
designated 30(B)(6) witnesses: Steven Chang, the Department’s auditor who
conducted the audit of the University; Mandi Shawarira, the Department’s Deputy
Director of Enforcement who supervises Mr. Chang and the Department’s out-of-state
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auditors; and LuAnn Pelsor, the Department’s Technical Manager for the Enforcement
Division who supervises the Department’s Audit Review and Computer Audit Team.
(See Pet’r Br. ¶ 49, Ex. O at 369 ¶¶ 2-3.)
During their depositions, two of the witnesses explained that they were generally
aware of the contents of H.B. 1349, the Report, or the Presentation, but that they did not
know any specific details regarding the extent of the Department’s involvement with
drafting, editing, or providing the data that appeared within the documents. (See, e.g.,
Pet’r Br. ¶¶ 46-51, Ex. P at 393-396, Ex. R at 454-55.) After completing the depositions,
the University contacted the Department to express its “concerns regarding the
discovery produced to date and [the] overall integrity of the discovery process[.]” (See
Pet’r Br., Ex. L at 359.) In particular, the University asserted that the Department
haphazardly responded to its written discovery requests, inadequately prepared its
30(B)(6) witnesses, and inexplicably produced 30(B)(6) witnesses that offered no
meaningful testimony on the deposition topics. (See generally Pet’r Br., Ex. L.)
On November 18, 2016, after having several additional communications with the
Department, the University filed its Motion to Compel Responses to Discovery Requests
with the Court. (See Pet’r Br. ¶¶ 30-34.) Meanwhile, on November 29, 2016, in an
attempt to better ascertain the contours of the Department’s involvement with H.B.
1349, the Report, and the Presentation, the University deposed a non-party, the former
Commissioner of the Indiana Department of State Revenue, Michael Alley.1 (See Pet’r
Reply Supp. Mot. Compel Resp. Discovery Requests (“Pet’r Reply Br.”) ¶ 7, Ex. C.) On
1
The Department unsuccessfully sought a protective order to preclude the former
Commissioner’s deposition on two separate occasions. (See Pet’r Reply Supp. Mot. Compel
Resp. Discovery Requests, Ex. A (order denying the Department’s first motion for protective
order), Ex. B (order denying the Department’s second motion for protective order).)
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January 17, 2017, the Court conducted a hearing on the Motion.
The University’s Motion claims that the Department’s refusal to disclose
requested information and documentation on H.B. 1349, the Report, the Presentation,
and to designate a proper 30(B)(6) witness impairs the University’s ability to prepare for
the Court-ordered March trial date. (See, e.g., Pet’r Br. ¶¶ 42, 63.) The Department, on
the other hand, asserts that it need not disclose anything further because the
University’s discovery requests simply are not reasonably calculated to lead to the
discovery of any evidence admissible at trial. (See, e.g., Resp’t Mot. Leave File Sur-
Reply Inc. Herein ¶ 9.) Additional facts will be supplied as necessary.
LAW
Discovery, the process by which litigants freely exchange information to ascertain
the existence of previously unknown facts, is designed to be self-executing and require
little, if any, court intervention. Popovich v. Indiana Dep’t of State Revenue, 7 N.E.3d
406, 411 (Ind. Tax Ct. 2014). In the event the discovery process breaks down or is
inadequate, however, Indiana’s trial rules provide that the parties may request court
intervention to resolve their disputes. Specifically, Indiana Trial Rule 37(A) allows a
party to ask the Court for an order compelling discovery when: 1) a deponent fails to
answer a question submitted under Trial Rule 30(B)(6), 2) a party fails to answer an
interrogatory submitted under Trial Rule 33, or 3) a party fails to produce documents
requested under Trial Rule 34. See Ind. Trial Rule 37(A)(2). For purposes of this Rule,
an evasive or incomplete answer is deemed a failure to answer. T.R. 37(A)(3).
The precepts of Trial Rule 37(A) are governed by the general discovery
provisions under Indiana Trial Rule 26, which states that the “[p]arties may obtain
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discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, which is relevant to the subject-matter
involved in the pending action[.]” Ind. Trial Rule 26(B)(1) (emphases added).
Relevancy for purposes of discovery is not the same as relevancy at trial. See
Popovich, 7 N.E.3d at 413. For purposes of discovery, information may be relevant to
the subject-matter of a case - even if deemed inadmissible at trial - as long as the
information sought appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible
evidence. T.R. 26(B)(1). Consequently, discovery requests need not be limited to
requests for evidence that may be admissible at trial; indeed, if the discovery requests
are germane and there is some reasonable possibility that the answers will lead to the
discovery of admissible evidence, the discovery requests generally are not
objectionable. See Ellis v. Pub. Serv. Co. of Indiana, 342 N.E.2d 921, 925-26 (Ind. Ct.
App. 1976).
ANALYSIS
The University uncontrovertibly seeks information, documents, and testimony
regarding H.B. 1349, the Report, and the Presentation. The events specific to these
discovery requests occurred at some point in 2014, several years after the 2009 through
2011 tax years that are at issue here. The University nonetheless claims that this time
differential is of no import because 1) the Court previously acknowledged the relevance
of the University’s discovery requests, 2) Indiana Code § 6-3-2-2(f) has remained the
same during the 2009 through 2011 tax years, and 3) H.B. 1349, the Report, and the
Presentation may reveal “highly probative” information that has a tendency to make the
inaccuracy of the Department’s assessments more probable under Indiana Evidence
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Rule 401.2 (See Hr’g Tr. at 15-20, 67-71.) (See also Pet’r Br. ¶ 42; Pet’r Reply Br. ¶ 1.)
The Court finds the University’s claims unpersuasive for two reasons.
First, although this Court previously determined that deposing the former
Commissioner regarding H.B. 1349, the Report, and the Presentation were relevant to
the subject-matter of this case for purposes of discovery, that relevancy determination
was made for the sole purpose of deciding whether to allow the former Commissioner to
be deposed. (See Pet’r Reply Br., Ex. B at 8-9 (noting that the ruling “does not mean
that any information Mr. Alley provides will be automatically admissible at trial”) (citation
omitted).) Accordingly, the Court rejects the University’s attempt to expand its prior
ruling to control this determination of the relevancy of H.B. 1349, the Report, and the
Presentation under the specific factual circumstances presented in the University’s
Motion.
Second, despite the University’s claims that the information related to its
discovery requests and 30(B)(6) witness request would tend to make the Department’s
alleged sourcing errors more probable, the University failed to explain how the
probability increased given the remoteness of the events from the 2009 through 2011
tax years. Moreover, the University failed to explain how this remote information would
be of any consequence in deciding whether the Department had the authority to use a
market-based or customer-based sourcing method under Indiana Code § 6-3-2-2(f)
during the tax years at issue. Having already deposed the Department’s 30(B)(6)
witnesses and the former Commissioner to find that the information hoped for was
probably not in the Department’s possession or did not exist at all, the University has
2
Indiana Evidence Rule 401 provides that “[e]vidence is relevant if: (a) it has any tendency to
make a fact more or less probable than it would be without the evidence; and (b) the fact is of
consequence in determining the action.” Ind. Evidence Rule 401.
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uncovered no smoking gun. The additional discovery requests regarding events
subsequent to the 2009 through 2011 tax years therefore are unlikely to reveal
admissible evidence. Accordingly, the University’s failure to reveal how information
about H.B. 1349, the Report, and the Presentation could lead to the discovery of
evidence admissible at trial brings discovery on those matters to an end.
That said – the Court does not excuse the apparent lack of true cooperation
shown by the parties during discovery. The evidence before the Court shows that both
parties participated in numerous phone calls, meetings, and exchanged
correspondence that look on the surface like attempts to cooperate, but the sporadic
vitriol of written submissions, the narrow interpretations of requests, and the failure to
work things out without court intervention all indicate that neither party engaged in real
compromise. This Court insists that litigants hold the purposes of discovery to avoid
ignorance of the facts and to prevent trial by ambush paramount. See, e.g., Popovich, 7
N.E.3d at 414-15.
As an example of the lack of cooperation, the Department stated that it had
obtained documents that were responsive to Request for Production Number 17, but
admitted it withheld documents on the portion of H.B. 1349 that concerned the proposed
amendment of Indiana Code § 6-3-2-2(f) because Request for Production Number 17
asked for the “original version[.]” (See Pet’r Br. ¶ 19, Ex. B at 116; Hr’g Tr. at 43-45.)
This is particularly troubling given that the University also requested:
All Documents and Communications issued by or to
representatives of the Department including, but not limited to, [the
former Commissioner] relating to the amendment of Ind. Code § 6-
3-2-2(f).
(Pet’r Br., Ex. B at 116.) This obstinacy, however, was not confined to the Department.
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Indeed, during the hearing on its Motion, the University suggested that the Department
failed to disclose an Audit-Gram that was responsive to its Request for Production
Number 7 despite the sworn statements of the Department’s 30(B)(6) witnesses. (See
Hr’g Tr. at 78.) Specifically, during the course of their depositions, each of the
witnesses stated that while Audit-Grams are periodically issued to Department
employees as guidance on a variety of tax issues, an Audit-Gram was not used in the
University’s audit and no Audit-Gram exists that is specific to either Indiana Code § 6-3-
2-2(f) or its related regulation. (See Pet’r Br., Ex. P at 383-85, Ex. Q at 415-16 and 426-
27, Ex. R at 449-51.) Furthermore, the Department reiterated that no such document
existed in the motion to compel hearing. (See Hr’g Tr. at 53-57.) Given the level of
cooperation to date, the Court reminds the parties that zealously defending one’s client
in our adversarial system does not include a rope-a-dope attitude toward discovery nor
should it come at the expense of true cooperation.
CONCLUSION
For the above-stated reasons, the Court GRANTS the University’s Motion with
respect to the previously withheld documentation regarding H.B. 1349 and ORDERS
the Department to provide the documentation to the University within seven (7) days of
the issuance of this Order. The Court, however, DENIES the University’s Motion with
respect to all other matters regarding H.B. 1349, the Report, the Presentation, and the
designation of another 30(B)6) witness.
SO ORDERED this 6th day of February 2017.
Martha Blood Wentworth
Judge, Indiana Tax Court
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Distribution: Randal J. Kaltenmark, Ziaaddin Mollabashy, Theodore R. Bots, Jenny A.
Austin, Scott L. Brandman, Jessica R. Gastineau, Winston Lin, Pavinder K. Nijjar.
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