IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
2022-NCCOA-125
No. COA20-384
Filed 1 March 2022
Durham County, No. 17 CVS 3710
DUNHILL HOLDINGS, LLC, Plaintiff/ Counterclaim Defendant,
v.
TISHA L. LINDBERG, Defendant/ Counterclaim Plaintiff,
TISHA L. LINDBERG, Third-Party Plaintiff,
v.
GREG LINDBERG, Third- Party Defendant.
Appeal by plaintiff/ counterclaim defendant and third-party defendant from
order entered 1 August 20201 by Judge Orlando F. Hudson, Jr. in Superior Court,
Durham County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 27 April 2021.
Fox Rothschild LLP, by Matthew Nis Leerberg and Kip D. Nelson, for
plaintiff/counterclaim defendant-appellant and third-party defendant-
appellant.
1 This 2020 date reflects the file stamp on the order on appeal, but the order was actually
rendered in 2019. No party disputes this. We know the date of the order’s rendering was
2019 because the original and amended notices of appeal from the order are all from August
2019.
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Opinion of the Court
Zaytoun Ballew & Taylor, PLLC, by Matthew D. Ballew, Robert E. Zaytoun,
John R. Taylor, and N. Cole Williams for defendant/ counterclaim plaintiff,
third-party plaintiff-appellee.
STROUD, Chief Judge.
¶1 Appellants, Dunhill Holdings, LLC (“Dunhill”) and Greg Lindberg, appeal from
an order imposing sanctions on them for discovery violations and, pursuant to a
previous opinion from this Court in this case, from a discovery order requiring them
to submit their electronic devices for forensic examination. Because we find the trial
court did not abuse its discretion in imposing sanctions and did not err in its choice
of sanctions in most respects, we affirm in part. We vacate in part and remand
because two paragraphs of the ordered sanctions are inconsistent with the remainder
of the order or improperly bar objections, including objections for attorney-client
privilege. Finally, since we affirm the relevant parts of the sanctions order, we
dismiss the forensic examination issue as moot.
I. Background
¶2 This is the second appeal to this Court in this case. The first appeal concerned
an order from 27 June 2018 (“June 2018 Order”) that, inter alia, ordered Appellants
to make certain electronic devices available for a forensic examination to determine
if any relevant emails were deleted. Dunhill Holdings, LLC v. Lindberg, No. COA18-
1112, 270 N.C. App. 820, *7, *10–11 [hereinafter “Dunhill I”] (unpublished). The
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prior appeal dismissed the case “without deciding whether the appeal [was] an
interlocutory appeal that does not affect a substantial right” and “refer[red the
forensic examination issue] to the panel of this Court that will decide Dunhill and
Greg E. Lindberg’s appeals of the discovery order and the sanctions order together.”
Dunhill I at *12. Based upon the prior opinion, this panel must address the sanctions
order, and we will also address the discovery order at issue in the prior appeal. 2 Id.
The prior ruling from this Court is the law of the case and thus binds us. See, e.g.,
North Carolina Nat. Bank v. Virginia Carolina Builders, 307 N.C. 563, 567, 299
S.E.2d 629, 631 (“[O]nce a panel of the Court of Appeals has decided a question in a
given case that decision becomes the law of the case and governs other panels which
may thereafter consider the case.”). We therefore recount the facts and procedural
history from Dunhill I and only include additional details where necessary to
understand the sanctions order that was not before this Court in the prior appeal.
¶3 Dunhill I summarizes the initiation and pre-discovery occurrences in this
lawsuit:
Dunhill Holdings, LLC (“Dunhill”) filed a complaint
against Tisha L. Lindberg, as well as four former
2We also note that both Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg specifically incorporated the arguments
made in their prior appeal through footnotes in their briefs in this appeal, thereby avoiding
any potential preservation issue.
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employees of Dunhill on 24 July 2017.[3] According to
Dunhill, the company is owned by Greg E. Lindberg, who
is “the founder and sole manager and member of Dunhill.”
Greg E. Lindberg and Tisha L. Lindberg married on 19
September 2003 and separated on 22 May 2017. In its
amended complaint filed 24 August 2017, Dunhill
described Tisha L. Lindberg as Dunhill’s “Chief Executive
Officer”; however, she denied this characterization in her
answer, saying that “while [Mr.] Lindberg purported to call
[her] the ‘C.E.O.’ of [Dunhill] on occasion, [Dunhill] never
employed [Tisha L.] Lindberg in any capacity and [Dunhill]
was merely a vehicle through which [Greg E.] Lindberg
funded the personal lifestyle of the parties and their family
. . . .”
Dunhill described itself as a “real estate holding
company” in its amended complaint and the primary asset
owned by Dunhill was the family home of Greg E. Lindberg
and Tisha L. Lindberg on Stagecoach Drive in Durham,
North Carolina. In its amended complaint, Dunhill claimed
Tisha L. Lindberg took funds from Dunhill and it asserted
claims against her for breach of fiduciary duty,
constructive fraud, civil liability for theft and
embezzlement, civil conspiracy, conversion and an action
for accounting, in addition to claims for unjust enrichment,
disgorgement, and civil conspiracy against the other
Defendants.
In her answer, Tisha L. Lindberg moved to dismiss
Dunhill’s complaint for failure to state a claim for which
relief may be granted under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule
12(b)(6), denying various allegations of Dunhill and
asserting affirmative defenses of breach of fiduciary duty
by Greg E. Lindberg, fraud, constructive fraud, equitable
estoppel, waiver, ratification, actual authority, and laches.
She also filed a third-party complaint against Greg
E. Lindberg and counterclaim against Dunhill, seeking “all
3 In November 2017, the trial court granted each of the four employees’ motions to dismiss
for failure to state a claim pursuant to Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-
1, Rule 12(b)(6) (2017).
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right, title, and interest in the Key West House” and “all
right, title, and interest in the tennis complex” Greg E.
Lindberg allegedly promised to give her. Tisha L. Lindberg
subsequently filed an amended third-party complaint
against Greg E. Lindberg and a counterclaim against
Dunhill, asserting breach of fiduciary duty, constructive
fraud, indemnity, declaratory relief, abuse of process,
malicious prosecution, intentional infliction of emotional
distress, spoliation of material evidence, and for a
constructive trust over the tennis court.
In her amended third-party complaint and
counterclaim, Tisha L. Lindberg alleged Dunhill was
merely an “alter-ego” of Greg E. Lindberg and was
therefore liable for his actions. Dunhill and Greg E.
Lindberg did not file an answer to Tisha L. Lindberg’s
counterclaim and third-party complaint or her amended
counterclaim and third-party complaint, instead filing a
motion to dismiss each complaint.
Dunhill I at *2–4. These motions to dismiss were later denied.
¶4 Before Appellants’ motions to dismiss had been ruled on, Dunhill and Ms.
Lindberg proceeded with discovery:
Dunhill served Tisha L. Lindberg with its first request for
production of documents on 24 October 2017 and she
replied with objections and responses on 22 December
2017. On 26 February 2018, Tisha L. Lindberg submitted
her first set of interrogatories and request for production of
documents to Greg E. Lindberg and Dunhill. Dunhill
moved to compel discovery on 9 March 2018. Tisha L.
Lindberg filed a motion to compel discovery and request for
attorney’s fees on 21 May 2018.
Dunhill I at *4. In relevant part, Ms. Lindberg’s discovery requests included
interrogatories, requests for document production, and a request for production for
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forensic inspection of all electronic storage devices owned by Appellants “that [are]
the repository for electronic messaging and communication.” Appellants made a
series of objections to the discovery requests. In response to the forensic examination
request specifically, both parties objected:
In his responses, Greg E. Lindberg responded as follows to
this request:
Third Party Defendant objects to Request No. 23 on
the ground that it is harassing, overly broad, unduly
burdensome, not proportional to the needs of this
case, not reasonably calculated to lead to the
discovery of admissible evidence, and seeks
information that is not relevant to the subject
matter of the pending action.
Third-Party Defendant further objects to Request
No. 23 on the ground that, on its face it seeks
production of records that are confidential or
privileged, including records that are protected by
the work product and attorney-client privileges, and
violates the privacy rights of third persons who are
not parties to this lawsuit.
Dunhill made an identical response to this request.
Dunhill I at *5.
¶5 Ms. Lindberg’s motion to compel discovery argued the court should reject the
objections proffered by Mr. Lindberg and Dunhill. In response to objections to the
forensic examination, Ms. Lindberg argued she needed the examination to support
her spoliation of evidence claim:
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Upon information and belief, Mr. Lindberg and Dunhill
have intentionally attempted to destroy evidence from
computers and electronic devices that is relevant to this
matter. The spoliation of evidence by Mr. Lindberg and
Dunhill was set out in the pleadings in this matter in Mrs.
Lindberg’s[4] Amended Counterclaims and Third-Party
Complaint. For example, upon information and belief, Mr.
Lindberg and Dunhill destroyed emails and computer files
maintained by Mr. Lindberg’s companies soon after Mr.
Lindberg took out the Ex Parte Domestic Violence
Protective Order and restricted her access to email servers.
Requests for Inspection 23 and 24 to Dunhill and Requests
for Inspection 23 and 24 to Greg Lindberg seek to inspect
the computers, drives and devices of Mr. Lindberg and
Dunhill, but they have refused to allow for this inspection.
Mrs. Lindberg respectfully requests that the Court order
such a forensic computer inspection.
Ms. Lindberg’s spoliation claim in turn argued, inter alia, that Mr. Lindberg had
deleted emails showing he gifted the tennis complex to Ms. Lindberg, thereby
supporting her third-party claim for a constructive trust over the tennis complex.
¶6 The trial court heard the motions to compel from Ms. Lindberg and from
Dunhill on 25 June 2018. As of the time of the hearing, neither Dunhill nor Mr.
Lindberg had produced “a single document in discovery.” Much of the hearing focused
on the forensic examination issue, and Ms. Lindberg continued to argue that the
forensic examination would support her spoliation claim as well as her claim the
4This document and many of the documents from this litigation refer to Appellee Tisha
Lindberg as Mrs. Lindberg whereas throughout this opinion we refer to her as Ms. Lindberg.
We refer to Tisha Lindberg as Ms. Lindberg because the briefing in this case referred to her
with that title.
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tennis complex was a personal gift.
¶7 Ms. Lindberg also argued the forensic examination would support her on two
other liability issues. First, she argued the forensic examination would uncover
deleted emails that would prove she did not improperly take funds from Dunhill.
Second, Ms. Lindberg argued the deleted emails would support her claim for
indemnification from Mr. Lindberg as to a deposit for a yacht vacation that Ms.
Lindberg claims she made on behalf of Mr. Lindberg.
¶8 On 27 June 2018, the court entered orders compelling discovery by Ms.
Lindberg and Appellants, awarding attorney’s fees to each side, and ordering the
forensic examination. In the order granting relief to Ms. Lindberg, i.e. the June 2018
Order, the trial court rejected all but one of Appellants’ objections to Ms. Lindberg’s
discovery requests, and the one sustained objection is not relevant here. The trial
court specifically concluded that, other than the one objection it sustained and the
forensic examination objection, “all of the objections raised by Dunhill Holdings LLC
and Greg Lindberg lack merit, fail to justify the refusal and failure to produce a single
discoverable document as of the date of this hearing, and were interposed for an
improper purpose of delay and avoiding any meaningful response.” As a result the
June 2018 Order required Appellants to “fully and completely reply to each and every
Interrogatory and discovery request for production of documents,” with the exception
of the one for which an objection was sustained, by 1 August 2018. To make clear
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which documents were covered, the June 2018 Order fully incorporated by reference
the requests for discovery and Appellants’ responses.
¶9 The June 2018 Order also granted Ms. Lindberg’s request for a forensic
examination with certain limitations:
In the order, the trial court found as follows:
As to the request for a forensic examination of
certain electronic devices, the Court . . . finds that
there are circumstances whereby a forensic
examination of the server housing the outlook email
accounts used by the parties to this action during the
time frame reaching back to the [] period when
contested contentions of gifts of real estate valued in
excess of one million dollars arose, would be
beneficial in the ascertainment of truth. Such a
forensic examination would disclose or shed light
upon the question of whether or not there exists or
existed crucial and relevant documentation that one
party contends existed but was “scrubbed” and the
other party conten[d]s never existed. . . . The Court
further finds that considering the resources of the
parties, a forensic examination of the server itself
would not unduly burden or obstruct Dunhill
Holdings LLC in its operations, nor has any credible
evidence been presented that it would unduly
interrupt or interfere with operations of any of the
other LLC entities connected to Dunhill that may
have possession of the server used by the parties to
this litigation. There is some evidence that the
server may be “owned” by a subsidiary, but all of the
evidence shows that any other entity having such an
interest exists under the control of Mr. Lindberg. . .
. The concern about disclosing any confidential or
privileged information is unsupported by any
credible evidence or argument, and the inquiry in
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the forensic analysis can be conducted to [sic] a[s] to
obviate any prejudice to Dunhill or to Mr. Lindberg
should any such attorney-client privileged data be
present.
The trial court concluded that:
The objection to the request for a forensic
examination should be overruled for the reasons set
forth in the findings [] above. The Court is
authorized to order a forensic examination after
weighing and balancing the burdens and rights of
the parties and the Court finds that the balancing as
to those findings clearly show in this case that such
an examination is justified, will serve the best
interests of both parties, and not pose an undue
burden on any party.
The trial court ordered that Dunhill and Greg E. Lindberg
“shall make the server or any electronic device housing,
hosting, or storing the outlook email account used by the
parties available for a forensic examination,” limited to the
following purposes: (1) whether any emails or text
messages between Greg E. Lindberg and Tisha L. Lindberg
ever existed, and producing copies of them; (2) whether
emails or text messages “dealing with real estate holdings
subject to dispute in this lawsuit exist or ever existed, and
producing copies of the same for the parties;” and (3)
whether any of those messages “if there were any, have
been intentionally deleted, and, if deleted, the
circumstances of any deletion and whether or not they can
be recovered.” In its order, the trial court further provided
for the protection of arguably privileged communications
as follows:
Out of an abundance of caution, if there is a
contention that a document or communication is a
communication exclusively between Greg E.
Lindberg and an attorney actually representing him,
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and the communication does not include any third
person for whom the privilege is unavailable, that
objection may be renewed provided the specific
communication is specifically identified and the
basis for the objection and assertion of the privilege
is clearly articulated.
Dunhill I at *5–7 (alterations in original).
¶ 10 Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg appealed the June 2018 Order. Dunhill I recounts
most of the appellate history:
Dunhill and Greg E. Lindberg filed notice of appeal
of the order on 17 July 2018. They also filed a motion for
stay with the trial court. Tisha L. Lindberg filed a motion
to disregard the notice of appeal and to continue case
proceedings with the trial court, along with a response to
the motion for stay. The trial court granted Tisha L.
Lindberg’s motion to disregard notice of appeal and denied
Dunhill and Greg E. Lindberg’s motion for stay on 24
August 2018. Dunhill and Greg E. Lindberg filed a petition
for writ of supersedeas with this Court on 4 September
2018, that was denied in part with certain exceptions on 12
September 2018.
Dunhill I at *7–8.
¶ 11 Following this Court’s denial of a petition for writ of supersedeas, Mr. Lindberg
and Dunhill filed a Petition for Writ of Supersedeas and Motion for Temporary Stay
in the Supreme Court of North Carolina. While that Petition was pending, Ms.
Lindberg filed two motions to dismiss the appeal with this Court:
Tisha L. Lindberg filed a motion to dismiss the
appeal on 7 November 2018, arguing the appeal was
interlocutory and did not affect a substantial right, and
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therefore should be dismissed. Dunhill filed a response to
the motion arguing the order did affect a substantial right
to private information stored on the servers.
Tisha L. Lindberg subsequently filed a “New Motion
to Dismiss Based on Withdrawal of Underlying Appellate
Issue” (“second motion to dismiss”) on 7 December 2018. In
the second motion to dismiss, Tisha L. Lindberg argued the
appeal should be dismissed as moot because she entered a
“Notice of Withdrawal of Forensic Search Request” with
the trial court. Dunhill and Greg E. Lindberg filed a
response to Tisha L. Lindberg’s motion to dismiss the
appeal with this Court arguing the appeal was not moot
because the withdrawal did not unilaterally dissolve the
challenged portion of the order, because Tisha L. Lindberg
remained free to seek further forensic examinations and,
alternatively, because several exceptions to the mootness
doctrine applied.
Dunhill I at *8.
¶ 12 Prior to this Court ruling on those motions, the Supreme Court issued an order
denying Mr. Lindberg’s and Dunhill’s Petition for Writ of Supersedeas and Motion for
Temporary Stay on 5 February 2019.
¶ 13 Dunhill’s and Mr. Lindberg’s first appeal from the forensic order was addressed
in this Court’s 7 April 2020 opinion in Dunhill I. As discussed above, Dunhill I did
not resolve the forensic examination issue. See Dunhill I at *12 (referring to this
panel the issues in that appeal). The Dunhill I court noted issues surrounding
whether the appeal before it was interlocutory or moot:
Before we can reach the merits of Dunhill and Greg E.
Lindberg’s arguments in this appeal, however, we note that
Tisha L. Lindberg has filed two motions to dismiss the
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appeal because (1) the appeal is an interlocutory appeal
which does not affect a substantial right and (2) the appeal
is moot because she has filed a “Notice of Withdrawal of
Forensic Search Request” with the trial court, removing
the underlying motion to compel discovery. In Tisha L.
Lindberg’s “Objection and Reply in Opposition to
Appellants’ ‘Supplemental Response to New Motion to
Dismiss Appeal,’” she also argues that the trial court’s
imposition of a final sanctions order on 1 August 2019
moots the present appeal because the discovery order will
have no further force or effect.
Dunhill I at *11. Given those concerns and “[i]n the interests of judicial economy and
efficiency,” this Court in Dunhill I “refer[red the forensic examination issue] to the
panel of this Court that will decide Dunhill and Greg E. Lindberg’s appeals of the
discovery order and the sanctions order together.” Dunhill I at *12.
¶ 14 The sanctions order to which Dunhill I refers was entered after further
proceedings in the trial court. Following the Supreme Court’s denial of Mr. Lindberg
and Dunhill’s Petition for Writ of Supersedeas and Motion for Temporary Stay on 5
February 2019, the trial-level proceedings were no longer stayed. As a result,
discovery continued with Mr. Lindberg and Dunhill serving Objections and Second
Amended Responses to Ms. Lindberg’s discovery requests on 11 February 2019.
Finding those responses “woefully lacking,” Ms. Lindberg filed a Motion to Compel
Compliance with the June 2018 Order on 22 February 2019. Specifically, Ms.
Lindberg argued Appellants violated the June 2018 Order by:
1. Improperly asserting objections that have already been
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expressly overruled by the Court;
2. Engaging in an improper “document dump” in a way that
makes it impossible to determine which documents have
been produced in response to any particular Requests for
Production (In fact, Mr. Lindberg and Dunhill have
indicated that every page of every document is being
produced in response to every Request for Production.);
3. Continuing to withhold documents and not respond to
certain discovery requests by Mrs. Lindberg, to which they
have been expressly Ordered by the Court to respond
without objection; and
4. Continuing to refuse to answer interrogatories and
continuing to refuse to verify interrogatory responses.
Ms. Lindberg also raised the specter of Rule of Civil Procedure 37 issues, saying
“[t]hese proceedings have now progressed to the point that an appropriate Rule 37
inquiry is necessary by the court to address” Appellants’ failures to comply with
earlier discovery orders. Appellants filed a response to Ms. Lindberg’s Motion to
Compel on or around 7 March 2019.
¶ 15 The trial court held a hearing on Ms. Lindberg’s Motion to Compel on 11 March
2019. At that hearing, Appellants’ counsel admitted they had not fully complied with
the June 2018 Order. Specifically, Appellants’ counsel said, “We have gone a long
way in complying with that [the June 2018 Order]. I am not arguing that we are
there, Judge.” (Emphasis added). At another point, Appellants’ counsel agreed with
the trial court that they had not been following the June 2018 Order.
¶ 16 On 26 March 2019, the trial court entered an order granting Ms. Lindberg’s
Motion to Compel Compliance with Court Order (“March 2019 Order”). The March
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2019 Order started by summarizing the June 2018 Order, including a verbatim quote
of Appellants’ obligations under the June 2018 order. The March 2019 Order then
summarized the history of Dunhill’s and Mr. Lindberg’s appeal from the June 2018
Order and specifically noted the appeal only concerned the issue of the forensic
examination ordered therein.
¶ 17 After determining the February 2019 Supreme Court order denying Mr.
Lindberg’s and Dunhill’s petition for Writ of Supersedeas and Motion for Temporary
Stay meant “there is no stay over the enforcement” of the June 2018 Order as it
relates to document requests and interrogatories, the March 2019 Order proceeded
to analyze Appellants’ discovery actions. First, the March 2019 Order explained the
June 2018 Order required Appellants to respond to the discovery requests without
objection and that Appellants had violated the June 2018 Order by improperly
reasserting all objections. Then, the March 2019 Order faulted Appellants for failing
to organize the 7,000 pages of documents they had produced at that point. The March
2019 Order proceeded to recount all of Appellants’ failures to respond to Ms.
Lindberg’s requests for production and interrogatories in violation of the June 2018
Order. As part of that process, the trial court listed the specific document productions
and interrogatories to which Appellants had failed to respond. Relying in part on
counsel’s admissions at the hearing on the motion to compel included above, the
March 2019 Order found Appellants were in violation of the June 2018 Order for the
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reasons already discussed.
¶ 18 The trial court then concluded, in the March 2019 Order, that Appellants had
violated the June 2018 Order and laid out its Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2), N.C.
Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b)(2), authority for actions it could take to compel
compliance. The trial court ordered that by 26 March 2019 Appellants had to “answer
fully and completely, and without objection” all of Ms. Lindberg’s interrogatories and
“produce all documents that are being withheld from the document requests
identified above.” The March 2019 Order further required Appellants to “specifically
identify which Request for Production” all of their documents corresponded to,
whether the documents were produced before or after the Order. Finally, the March
2019 Order awarded attorney’s fees to Ms. Lindberg.
¶ 19 Pursuant to the March 2019 Order, Appellants produced additional documents
on 26 March 2019. They also organized the documents based upon the discovery
requests to which they were responsive.
¶ 20 As discovery proceeded, Ms. Lindberg noticed a deposition for Dunhill, via Rule
of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6), for early May 2019. Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg sought a
protective order against the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition in mid-April 2019. Pending a
hearing on the protective order, Ms. Lindberg re-noticed the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition
to early June 2019. After a hearing on the motion, the trial court entered an order
denying the protective order because it concluded “in its discretion, that each
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deposition topic at issue is proper . . . .” The court’s order then required Dunhill to
appear for the noticed deposition “and be prepared to testify, through an appropriate
company designee, as to all ‘matters known or reasonably available to’ Dunhill
regarding each topic in the notice of deposition.” (Quoting N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1,
Rule 30(b)(6)).
¶ 21 On the same day that Appellants sought a protective order for Dunhill’s
deposition, Mr. Lindberg filed a motion for a temporary stay of proceedings until
federal criminal charges against him were resolved. On the same day as the trial
court denied Dunhill’s motion for a protective order, it also issued an order denying
Mr. Lindberg’s motion for a temporary stay. The trial court found that “none of the
claims, counterclaims, or causes of action” in the current case were connected to the
then-pending criminal proceedings against Mr. Lindberg. Concurrently, the trial
court found neither Mr. Lindberg nor Dunhill would be prejudiced by its order and
said Mr. Lindberg could assert, in this suit, his Fifth Amendment privilege against
self-incrimination if he believed it was in his best interest. To further protect Mr.
Lindberg, the trial court ordered Ms. Lindberg’s counsel “shall not be allowed to
question Mr. Lindberg at his upcoming deposition in this action regarding the facts
contained in the Bill of Indictment . . . .” The trial court’s order denying Appellants’
motion for a protective order also made it clear that because it was denying Mr.
Lindberg’s motion for a stay, the trial court would not entertain the issues in the stay
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as a basis for granting the protective order.
¶ 22 Based upon those orders, the next discovery proceeding was Dunhill’s Rule
30(b)(6) deposition. Days before that deposition, Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg produced
another 129,000 pages of documents. At the deposition, Dunhill’s designated
corporate representatives were “completely unprepared” to address many of the
designated topics according to the trial court’s later unchallenged Findings of Fact.
The document production and deposition led Ms. Lindberg to file a motion, which was
subsequently corrected, for sanctions under Rule 37(b). After summarizing the
history of the dispute, Ms. Lindberg argued Dunhill’s and Mr. Lindberg’s actions in
producing 129,000 pages of documents mere days before the deposition as well as
Dunhill’s failure to present prepared designees for its deposition justified sanctions.
As a result of that misconduct, Ms. Lindberg requested as sanctions, specifically: that
certain facts be established in the action; that Dunhill be barred from supporting its
claims; that Dunhill’s designees be required to sit again for depositions and fully
answer on the noticed topics; and “any further relief [the court] deems just and proper
pursuant to Rule 37(b) for violating this Court’s prior discovery orders.” Dunhill later
filed a verified response to Ms. Lindberg’s corrected motion for sanctions.
¶ 23 While that motion for sanctions was pending, Ms. Lindberg deposed Mr.
Lindberg. Mr. Lindberg, according to unchallenged Findings of Fact made later by
the trial court, committed numerous forms of misconduct at his deposition including:
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repeatedly refusing to answer questions by saying he could not comment; repeatedly
refusing to review or answer questions about documents, even ones he or Dunhill
produced; making personal attacks on Ms. Lindberg’s counsel; extreme time wasting;
and improperly asserting attorney-client privilege when there was clearly no
communication between lawyer and client. As a result of the deposition, Ms.
Lindberg filed, under seal, a supplemental motion for sanctions under Rules 37(a),
37(b), and 41(b). After laying out the facts and law supporting sanctions, Ms.
Lindberg requested as sanctions that: all pleadings by Mr. Lindberg and by Dunhill
be stricken; all claims asserted by Dunhill be dismissed with prejudice; Ms. Lindberg
be allowed to conduct all discovery relevant to her counterclaims; the attorney-client
objections asserted at Mr. Lindberg’s deposition be overruled; Mr. Lindberg be
required to sit for another deposition and answer, without objection, all questions
posed that are relevant to Ms. Lindberg’s counterclaims and damages claims; neither
Mr. Lindberg nor Dunhill be allowed to use any documents in their 129,000 page
production on the eve of Dunhill’s deposition; and the trial court grant any further
relief it deems just and proper under Rule 37(b) for violating the court’s prior
discovery orders.
¶ 24 The trial court held a hearing on the motions for sanctions on 15 July 2019. At
the hearing, Appellants delineated where the 129,000 pages they produced on the eve
of Dunhill’s deposition came from as they tried to argue the documents were
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supplemental rather than a violation of past discovery orders. Specifically 100,000
pages were bank and credit card statements and the remaining were emails from
individuals who worked at Dunhill during the relevant time period. The hearing led
to an order granting Ms. Lindberg’s motions for sanctions on 1 August 2019 (“August
2019 Order”).
¶ 25 The August 2019 Order started by summarizing the procedural history and
background of the case as we have already laid out. Characterizing the 129,000 page
document production on the eve of Dunhill’s deposition as a “document dump,” the
August 2019 Order laid out how the production violated the March 2019 Order
because that order had “unequivocally required Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg to produce
all discovery materials in its possession by no later than the March 26, 2019
deadline.” (Emphasis in original.) The August 2019 Order also recounted “Dunhill’s
failure to present prepared witnesses for [its] 30(b)(6) deposition in violation of th[e]
court’s order.” (Capitalization altered). Specifically, the August 2019 Order detailed
how Dunhill’s designees were completely unprepared—and in some cases had not
even inquired to try to prepare—to address certain noticed topics including: electronic
devices used by Mr. Lindberg at the relevant times; the location of servers that
housed relevant emails; and the factual bases for Dunhill’s allegations against Ms.
Lindberg. Dunhill’s designees further quibbled with the meanings of ordinary words
in English and indicated Ms. Lindberg’s attorneys should find answers by
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“search[ing] through vague categories of documents” while intentionally not
identifying any specific documents. The trial court also made extensive Findings of
Fact about the “multiple forms of intentional obstruction and delay repeatedly
employed by Greg Lindberg at his deposition,” as summarized above. (Capitalization
altered.)
¶ 26 After those Findings, the August 2019 Order explained how Dunhill and Mr.
Lindberg had jointly violated the court’s prior orders and worked together to
“intentionally evade” discovery obligations. After summarizing all those factual
bases for potential sanctions, the August 2019 Order included a section entitled
“Consideration of Lesser Sanctions” where the trial court recounted how it had
considered lesser sanctions, including requiring Appellants to sit for new depositions,
but did not think they would deter Appellants from continuing to evade discovery
obligations and violate discovery orders.
¶ 27 The August 2019 Order then included pertinent Conclusions of Law. First, the
trial court laid out its Conclusions regarding sanctions for Dunhill’s and Mr.
Lindberg’s 129,000 page “document dump” and Dunhill’s deposition. (Capitalization
altered.) The trial court then justified its sanctions for Mr. Lindberg’s deposition
misconduct under Rules of Civil Procedure 37(b) and 41(b). The trial court concluded
the discussion of sanctions for Mr. Lindberg’s deposition misconduct by again
justifying harsh sanctions here and, further, overruled all of Mr. Lindberg’s
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assertions of attorney-client privilege from his deposition.
¶ 28 Finally, the August 2019 Order granted both of Ms. Lindberg’s motions for
sanctions. As sanctions, the trial court first struck all pleadings from Mr. Lindberg
and Dunhill. The trial court then ruled in favor of Ms. Lindberg on all liability issues
by dismissing Dunhill’s claims with prejudice and granting default judgment against
Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg on all of Ms. Lindberg’s claims; it reserved the issue of
damages for trial. To support those sanctions, the trial court barred Dunhill and Mr.
Lindberg from opposing any liability issues at trial and designated certain facts be
established in Ms. Lindberg’s favor. The trial court further allowed Ms. Lindberg to
proceed with all discovery relevant to the issue of damages. As part of that process,
the trial court allowed Ms. Lindberg to depose Dunhill on “all previously-noticed
topics.” (Emphasis in original.) The trial court also permitted Ms. Lindberg to depose
Mr. Lindberg again and required him “to answer, without objection, all questions
posed by Mrs. Lindberg’s counsel that are relevant to any of her counterclaims or
damages claims,” although the trial court confirmed all Mr. Lindberg’s previous
attorney-client privilege objections had been overruled. Lastly, the August 2019
Order sanctioned Appellants by barring them from using any documents in the
129,000 page production and awarding Ms. Lindberg attorney’s fees. Dunhill and
Mr. Lindberg both filed written notices of appeal, which they then amended.
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II. Grounds for Appellate Review
¶ 29 Appellants provide a “Statement of the Grounds for Appellate Review,” as
provided for in North Carolina Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(b)(4) and argue the
sanctions issues are interlocutory but that discovery orders imposing sanctions
impact a substantial right and are thus immediately appealable. (Capitalization
altered.) We agree that the sanctions orders are immediately appealable, although
for slightly different reasons. While Appellants rely on statutes allowing appeals
from interlocutory orders that “[a]ffect[] a substantial right,” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-
27(a) (2021); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-277 (2021), “an order imposing sanctions
under Rule 37(b) is appealable as a final judgment.”5 Batesville Casket Co., Inc. v.
Wings Aviation, Inc., 214 N.C. App. 447, 457, 716 S.E.2d 13, 20 (2011) (quoting
Smitheman v. Nat’l Presto Indus., 109 N.C. App. 636, 640, 428 S.E.2d 465, 468
(1993)); see also Walker v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 84 N.C. App. 552, 554–55, 353 S.E.2d
5 Appellants’ position—i.e. that sanctions affect a substantial right and are therefore
immediately appealable despite being interlocutory—also finds support in certain cases from
this Court. See, e.g., Feeassco, LLC v. Steel Network, Inc., 264 N.C. App. 327, 331, 826 S.E.2d
202, 206–07 (2019) (“[W]hen a discovery order is enforced by sanctions pursuant to N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b), the order affects a substantial right and is immediately appealable.”
(citing In re Pedestrian Walkway Failure, 173 N.C. App. 254, 262, 618 S.E.2d 796, 802
(2005))). We believe an order imposing sanctions is best described as a final judgment, but
ultimately this difference does not impact the case at hand because either route allows for an
immediate appeal of the sanctions order. See Alan D. Woodlief, Jr., Statutory exceptions to
the finality requirement, generally, 1 Shuford N.C. Civil Prac. And Pro. With Appellate
Advocacy § 86:5 (6th ed. 2020) (“Since the statutory provisions discussed above [N.C. Gen.
Stat. §§ 7A-27(d) and 1-277] allow certain interlocutory orders to be appealed immediately,
for their purposes the distinction between final and interim orders is less significant.”).
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425, 426 (1987) (“[W]hen the order is enforced by sanctions pursuant to N.C.R. Civ.P.,
Rule 37(b), the order is appealable as a final judgment.”); Ross v. Ross, 215 N.C. App.
546, 547, 715 S.E.2d 859, 861 (2011) (citing Walker in support of proposition that an
order compelling discovery is not a final judgment and does not affect a substantial
right and therefore is not immediately appealable, unless it imposes sanctions).
¶ 30 Here, the trial court sanctioned both parties under Rule 37(b). Therefore, the
sanctions order is “appealable as a final judgment.” Batesville Casket Co., 214 N.C.
App. at 457, 716 S.E.2d at 20.6
¶ 31 To the extent Appellants present arguments concerning the underlying
discovery orders on which the sanctions are based, see N.C. R. App. P. 28(a) (“Issues
not presented and discussed in a party’s brief are deemed abandoned.”), “the appeal
tests the validity of both the discovery order and the sanctions imposed.” In re
Pedestrian Walkway Failure, 173 N.C. App. at 262, 618 S.E.2d at 802. With one
exception, Appellants’ arguments only challenge the sanctions imposed, not the
validity of the underlying discovery orders. As for the exception, Appellants both
incorporate the argument from their prior appeal that, in the words of Appellants,
focused on the June 2018 Order’s ruling requiring a “forensic examination of all
6 Our determination that the August 2019 Order was a final judgment aligns with Dunhill
I’s description of this appeal as one in which “each party appeals not only the final judgment
of the trial court imposing sanctions, but also again specifically appeals the discovery order
at issue in the present [first] appeal.” Dunhill I at *11 (emphasis added).
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electronic devices that might have relevant information,” regardless of party
ownership. Therefore, we also review the June 2018 Order’s section on the forensic
examination of electronic devices as argued in Appellants’ previous appeal.
¶ 32 Notably, even if we could not reach that argument under In re Pedestrian
Walkway Failure, we would still address Appellants’ arguments in their prior appeal
due to the law of the case. Specifically, the Dunhill I Court “refer[red the forensic
examination issue] to the panel of this Court that will decide Dunhill and Greg E.
Lindberg’s appeals of the discovery order and the sanctions order together.” Dunhill
I at *12. As that panel, we are bound by the law of the case to consider Dunhill’s and
Greg Lindberg’s prior appeal as well. See North Carolina Nat. Bank, 307 N.C. at 567,
299 S.E.2d at 631–32 (explaining how law-of-the-case doctrine requires a subsequent
Court of Appeals panel to follow the decisions of a previous panel in a given case).
III. Standard of Review
¶ 33 Because all the issues between the parties are discovery issues and sanctions
stemming therefrom, the same standard of review applies throughout our analysis.
¶ 34 As this Court has previously explained:
As a general rule, we review the trial court’s rulings
regarding discovery for abuse of discretion. [Citation] “An
abuse of discretion is a decision manifestly unsupported by
reason or one so arbitrary that it could not have been the
result of a reasoned decision.” Briley v. Farabow, 348 N.C.
537, 547, 501 S.E.2d 649, 656 (1998). However, if the trial
court makes a discretionary ruling based upon a
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misapprehension of the applicable law, this is also an
abuse of discretion. See State v. Rhodes, 366 N.C. 532, 536,
743 S.E.2d 37, 39 (2013) (“[A]n abuse-of-discretion
standard does not mean a mistake of law is beyond
appellate correction. A [trial] court by definition abuses its
discretion when it makes an error of law.” (alterations in
original) (quoting Koon v. United States, 518 U.S. 81, 100,
116 S. Ct. 2035, 2047), 135 L.Ed.2d 392 (1996))). And if the
trial court’s ruling depends upon interpretation of a
statute, we review the ruling de novo. Moore v. Proper, 366
N.C. 25, 30, 726 S.E.2d 812, 817 (2012) (“[W]hen a trial
court’s determination relies on statutory interpretation,
our review is de novo because those matters of statutory
interpretation necessarily present questions of law.”).
Myers v. Myers, 269 N.C. App. 237, 240–41, 837 S.E.2d 443, 447–48 (2020) (citation
omitted as indicated; all other alterations in original).
¶ 35 The same abuse-of-discretion standard applies in the context of sanctions. See
Feeassco, 264 N.C. App. at 337, 826 S.E.2d at 210 (“According to well-established
North Carolina law, a broad discretion must be given to the trial judge with regard
to sanctions.”) (quoting Batlle v. Sabates, 198 N.C. App. 407, 417, 681 S.E.2d 788, 795
(2009)). Applying that standard in the sanctions context specifically, “[a] trial court
does not abuse its discretion by imposing a severe sanction so long as that sanction is
among those expressly authorized by statute and there is no specific evidence of
injustice.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted). While trial courts “must
consider the appropriateness of less severe sanctions” before “imposing a severe
sanction,” id., the ultimate choice of sanctions is still within their discretion. See In
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re Pedestrian Walkway Failure, 173 N.C. App. at 247, 618 S.E.2d at 826 (“[T]he choice
of sanctions under Rule 37 is within the trial court’s discretion . . . .” (citation and
quotations omitted)).
¶ 36 In reviewing the trial court’s order under the abuse of discretion standard, any
unchallenged findings of fact are binding on appeal. Feeassco, 264 N.C. App. at 340,
826 S.E.2d at 211 (citing Koufman v. Koufman, 330 N.C. 93, 97, 408 S.E.2d 729, 731
(1991) (“Where no exception is taken to a finding of fact by the trial court, the finding
is presumed to be supported by competent evidence and is binding on appeal.”)). Any
challenged findings of fact “are conclusive on appeal if supported by competent
evidence, even if the evidence is conflicting.” Baker v. Rosner, 197 N.C. App. 604, 608,
677 S.E.2d 887, 890 (2009) (quoting State v. Haislip, 362 N.C. 499, 500, 666 S.E.2d
757, 758 (2008)). We review each of Appellants’ arguments under an abuse of
discretion standard.
IV. Sanctions for Document Productions
¶ 37 Both Appellants argue the court erred in sanctioning them for their document
productions. After setting out law requiring a “predicate violation” of a prior court
order to compel discovery, Appellants contend “the fundamental problem with these
orders [the sanctions order on appeal] is that there was no predicate violation of a
court order.” Specifically, Appellants argue “the March 2019 Order failed to identify
any violation of the June 2018 Order,” and that the August 2019 Order failed to show
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a violation of the March 2019 Order. Within each of those arguments, Appellants
take issue with certain Findings of Fact in the March and August 2019 Orders and
detail why no predicate orders existed. After reviewing the relevant law, we address
the alleged issues with the March 2019 and August 2019 Orders in turn.
¶ 38 North Carolina Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2) authorizes “sanctions by [a]
court in which action is pending” when a party or certain representatives of a party,
inter alia, “fail[] to obey an order to provide or permit discovery.” N.C. Gen. Stat. §
1A-1, Rule 37(b)(2) (2021) (capitalization altered). The statute authorizes sanctions
“as are just” and explicitly allows, as relevant here:
a. An order that the matters regarding which the order was
made or any other designated facts shall be taken to be
established for the purposes of the action in accordance
with the claim of the party obtaining the order;
b. An order refusing to allow the disobedient party to
support or oppose designated claims or defenses, or
prohibiting the party from introducing designated matters
in evidence;
c. An order striking out pleadings or parts thereof, or
staying further proceedings until the order is obeyed, or
dismissing the action or proceeding or any part thereof, or
rendering a judgment by default against the disobedient
party;
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b)(2)(a)–(c).
¶ 39 “Generally sanctions under Rule 37 are imposed only for the failure to comply
with a court order.” Myers, 269 N.C. App. at 252, 837 S.E.2d at 454 (quoting Pugh v.
Pugh, 113 N.C. App. 375, 379, 438 S.E.2d 214, 217 (1994)). Thus, “a party seeking
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sanctions must first demonstrate a violation of a substantive rule of discovery, based
upon Rules 26 through 36, obtain a court order to compel discovery, and then Rule 37
sanctions may be imposed.” Id. (emphasis in original; footnote omitted). This
requirement for a violation of a court order compelling discovery is what Appellants
term as a requirement for a “predicate violation.” Because a sanctions order requires
an underlying violation of a court order compelling discovery, the trial court abuses
its discretion “if there is no record evidence which indicates that [a party] acted
improperly, or if the law will not support the conclusion that a discovery violation has
occurred.” Baker, 197 N.C. App. at 607, 677 S.E.2d at 890 (quotation and citation
omitted).
¶ 40 Here, the parties’ dispute does not center on the law requiring an underlying
order compelling discovery and a violation of that order. We review the specifics of
each of those arguments.
A. March 2019 Order Finding Violations of June 2018 Order
¶ 41 Appellants’ argue “[t]here was no violation of the June 2018 Order” and thus
the March 2019 Order erred in awarding sanctions under Rule 37(b). Their parallel
arguments begin by asserting the March 2019 Order never addressed the key
question of “which documents and where designated.” (Citing Willis v. Duke Power
Co., 291 N.C. 19, 31, 229 S.E.2d 191, 198 (1976)). Then, Appellants contend, “[r]ather
than answering that question, in the March 2019 Order the trial court created new
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requirements and obligations not found in the June 2018 Order.” Each Appellant
then alleges “there is no evidence to support” certain, listed Findings of Fact from the
March 2019 Order. We address Appellants’ argument that the trial court did not
answer the question of which documents and where designated before turning to their
arguments about the challenged Findings of Fact.
¶ 42 Appellants’ argument that the trial court did not answer the question of which
documents and where designated is misplaced because that question had already
been answered. Appellants rely on Willis v. Duke Power Co. Appellants’ quote from
Willis v. Duke Power Co. is taken out of context, as the language immediately after
the quote on which Appellants rely shows that case is distinguishable. The predicate
order in that case required “the defendant to answer the plaintiff's interrogatories
and to produce ‘the documents therein designated . . . .’ The question is which
documents and where designated. At the time of this order no documents had been
identified or designated by either party.” Willis, 291 N.C. at 31, 229 S.E.2d at 198–
99.
¶ 43 Here, the June 2018 Order required Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg to “fully and
completely reply to each and every Interrogatory and discovery request for production
of documents” with exceptions not relevant here. (Emphasis added.) The June 2018
Order also specifically “fully incorporated herein by reference” the “requests for
discovery” that Ms. Lindberg had filed on 26 February 2018. Thus, unlike in Willis,
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291 N.C. at 31, 229 S.E.2d at 198–99, Ms. Lindberg had designated documents in her
discovery requests from February 2018 and the trial court indicated those documents
were the ones Appellants needed to provide to comply with the June 2018 Order. The
trial court highlighted that part of the June 2018 Order again for Appellants in its
March 2019 Order by specifically reproducing the documents designated. Therefore,
the March 2019 Order highlighted the part of the June 2018 Order that answered the
very question Appellants now claim the March 2019 Order failed to answer.
¶ 44 Turning to the challenged Findings of Fact from the March 2019 Order,
Appellants’ arguments fit into three categories: (1) the June 2018 Order did not
require them to respond to Tisha Lindberg’s requests without objection (challenges
to Findings of Fact 18, 19, 22, 28, 31, 32, 34, 37, 38, 42, 43); (2) the June 2018 Order
did not require production of documents in a manner that indicated to which
discovery request they responded (challenges to Findings of Fact 24, 25); (3) other
topics that are not properly argued before us (challenges to Findings of Fact 7, 17, 28,
29, 33, 35, 39, 48).
¶ 45 Taking the categories in order, Appellants first argue the June 2018 Order did
not require them to respond to Ms. Lindberg’s requests without objection and thus it
was an error for the March 2019 Order to find the June 2018 Order did just that.
While the June 2018 Order did not specifically state Appellants had to respond to Ms.
Lindberg’s requests “without objection,” the June 2018 Order in its entirety supports
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this reading. First, the June 2018 Order addressed the specific objections Appellants
had raised and then overruled nearly all of them concluding they lacked merit—other
than attorney-client privilege, which we address below—and determining they “were
interposed for an improper purpose of delay and avoiding any meaningful response.”
In the June 2018 Order, the trial court had already ruled upon the particular
objections Appellants attempted to raise again. This argument, like Appellants
repeated attempts to raise the same objections again after the trial court had already
rejected them, is without merit.
¶ 46 Further, the June 2018 Order provided a specific procedure for Appellants to
renew objections based on a claim of attorney-client privilege. A common canon of
statutory construction says “when a statute lists the situations to which it applies, it
implies the exclusion of situations not contained in the list.” E.g. Cooper v. Berger,
371 N.C. 799, 810, 822 S.E.2d 286, 296 (2018) (quotations and citations omitted).
Applying similar logic here, by listing that Appellants could renew objections based
on a claim of attorney-client privilege, the June 2018 Order implied Appellants could
not renew their other objections. Under the June 2018 Order, Appellants were
supposed to respond to the outstanding discovery requests without raising the same
objections the trial court had already rejected, so the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in the March 2019 Order by finding Appellants violated the June 2018
Order for reasserting overruled objections.
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¶ 47 Appellants also argue they could have reasserted their previously overruled
objections because “failure to reassert the objections could be construed as waiver.”
Both cases upon which Appellants rely involve rules and situations where waiver
might follow when a party failed to properly object even once. See Adams v. Lovette,
105 N.C. App. 23, 28–29, 411 S.E.2d 620, 623–24 (1992) (laying out rule for implied
waiver on an issue where defendant had never stated an objection on the ground
argued on appeal); Golding v. Taylor, 19 N.C. App. 245, 246, 248, 198 S.E.2d 478,
479–80 (1973) (stating that there is ordinarily a rule that a failure to object to
interrogatories within a fixed time constitutes waiver before explaining the party had
objected at the first time of asking but just not within the appropriate timeframe).
Thus, those cases provide no support for a party needing to reassert meritless
objections a second time. Further, Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(a) only requires a
party to assert its objection and obtain a ruling from the trial court in order to
preserve the issue. Therefore, we reject Appellants’ argument that they would have
waived their objections to Ms. Lindberg’s discovery requests if they failed to reassert
them after the June 2018 Order denied nearly all of them.
¶ 48 Turning to the next category, Appellants assert the March 2019 Order erred
when it “stated that it was ‘improper and in violation of’ the June 2018 Order to
produce documents without indicating to which particular discovery requests the
documents responded.” While the June 2018 Order does not specifically say
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Appellants must indicate to which particular discovery requests the documents
respond, reading the Order in its entirety once again supports that requirement. The
June 2018 Order mandated Appellants “fully and completely reply to each and every
Interrogatory and discovery request for production of documents” with one exception
not relevant here. (Emphasis added.) The March 2019 Order explicitly quoted that
language when summarizing the June 2018 Order. Given that language, we cannot
say the March 2019 Order’s determination that the June 2018 Order required
Appellants to indicate which particular discovery request documents responded to
was “manifestly unsupported by reason” or “so arbitrary that it could not have been
the result of a reasoned decision.” Myers, 269 N.C. App. at 240, 837 S.E.2d at 447–
48. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by finding it was a violation
of the June 2018 Order to produce documents without indicating to which request
they responded.
¶ 49 Appellants also argue Rule of Civil Procedure 34(b)(1) allows parties to produce
documents as they are kept in the usual course of business rather than labeling them
in response to a particular document request. Appellants omit the prefatory clause
of the rule. The full sentence reads:
Unless otherwise stipulated by the parties or ordered by the
court, the following procedures apply to producing
documents or electronically stored information:
(1) A party must produce documents as they are kept
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in the usual course of business or must organize and
label them to correspond to the categories in the
request;
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 34(b)(2021) (emphasis added). Appellants may have
originally had the choice to produce documents in the ordinary course of business,
but the June 2018 Order removed that choice by requiring them to label the
documents by request.
¶ 50 Turning to the final category, Appellants list many other Findings of Fact they
claim “there is no evidence to support” without making any further argument. North
Carolina Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a) requires parties to present and discuss
issues or they are deemed abandoned. N.C. R. App. P. 28(a); see also N.C. R. App. P.
28(b)(6) (requiring a party to support issues by reason or argument). Failure to follow
Rule 28 makes it “difficult if not impossible to properly determine the appeal.”
Steingress v. Steingress, 350 N.C. 64, 66, 511 S.E.2d 298, 299 (1999). Furthermore,
“[i]t is not the duty of this Court to peruse through the record, constructing an
argument for appellant.” Person Earth Movers, Inc. v. Thomas, 182 N.C. App. 329,
333, 641 S.E.2d 751, 754 (2007).
¶ 51 Here, Appellants abandon any argument of the remaining Findings of Fact
they challenge, and it is not our duty to “peruse through the record” to construct their
argument for them. Id. For example, both Appellants challenge Finding of Fact 48
awarding attorney’s fees and making eight specific sub-Findings of Fact, some of
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which span multiple sentences. Despite that listed challenge, neither Appellant
further mentions in their argument the two pages of the record Finding 48 covers,
apparently leaving for this Court to determine the specific portions of the Finding
Appellants challenge.
¶ 52 As another example, Appellants challenge Findings of Fact 27 and 33, each of
which lists approximately twenty five requests for document production Appellants
still had not responded to in violation of the June 2018 Order. Appellants provide no
evidence or record citations to support their compliance with those requests. It is not
our duty to search the 7,000 pages of documents Appellants produced between the
June 2018 and March 2019 Orders—which also do not appear to be in the record—to
determine Appellants’ compliance with those requests. Person Earth Movers, 182
N.C. App. at 333, 641 S.E.2d at 754. Because Appellants have failed to present an
argument as to these remaining challenged Findings of Fact, we deem those
challenges abandoned. N.C. R. App. P. 28(a), (b)(6).
¶ 53 Finally, Appellants argue the March 2019 Order “failed to even acknowledge
that [Appellants] had appealed from the June 2018 Order” and “effectively sought to
punish [Appellants] for obtaining stay relief from the appellate courts” because
Appellants “promptly served the responses and produced the documents required by
the June 2018 Order” once the stay was denied. We cannot reconcile this argument
with the record before us. The March 2019 Order acknowledged the initial appeal
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from the June 2018 Order and the history of that appeal in multiple unchallenged
Findings of Fact. The March 2019 Order then specifically found in unchallenged
Finding of Fact 15: “As a result of the Supreme Court’s February 5, 2019 Order, this
matter is not stayed in any way and proceedings at the trial court level must move
forward.” Thus, contrary to Appellants’ argument, the March 2019 Order
acknowledged their appeals and the stays involved.
¶ 54 The record also does not support Appellants’ argument that they complied with
the June 2018 Order once the stay was denied. At the 11 March 2019 hearing that
led to the March 2019 Order, Appellants’ counsel admitted they had not fully
complied with the June 2018 Order. At one point, Appellants’ counsel said, “We have
gone a long way in complying with that [June 2018 Order]. I am not arguing that we
are there, Judge.” (Emphasis added.) At another point, the following exchange
occurred:
THE COURT: . . . what is before me is you now have an
order, after all of this, that Judge Smith entered on June
27th of 2018 that’s not being followed.
MR. PACE [Appellants’ counsel]: You’re exact – you’re
correct. We agree 100 percent it is time to comply with the
order.
(Emphasis added.) Thus, a month and six days after the final stay was denied,
Appellants still admitted they were not in compliance. Notably, this was roughly the
same amount of time the June 2018 Order originally gave them to comply.
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¶ 55 Reviewing for abuse of discretion, we reject all of Appellants’ arguments that
the March 2019 Order improperly found violations of the June 2018 Order. The
parties must comply with the order actually entered, regardless of what a party
wishes the order had required. See Becker v. Pierce, 168 N.C. App. 671, 678–79, 608
S.E.2d 825, 830 (2005) (finding no error when defendant produced three letters as
required by the previous court order but did not produce a fourth that plaintiffs
claimed was covered). What Appellants wish the June 2018 Order required is not
relevant. What matters is the June 2018 Order actually identified the documents to
be produced, ordered Appellants to respond without objection, and required
Appellants to indicate to which discovery request each document responded. The
March 2019 Order further properly took into account Appellants’ appeal from the
June 2018 Order. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by finding, in
the March 2019 Order, that Appellants violated the June 2018 Order.
B. August 2019 Order Finding Violations of the March 2019 Order
¶ 56 Similar to their first argument, Appellants contend “[t]here was no violation of
the March 2019 Order” and thus the August 2019 Order erred in awarding sanctions
under Rule 37(b). As with the previous argument, Appellants challenge listed
Findings of Fact and then have arguments, some of which are unconnected to the
challenged Findings. We first address the challenges to the Findings before turning
to the unconnected arguments.
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¶ 57 Appellants both challenge the same Findings of Fact in the August 2019 Order.
As with their previous argument, Appellants list certain Findings of Fact that they
claim “there is no evidence to support” without making any further argument
(Findings 10, 22, 101, 110). Because Appellants have failed to present an argument
as to these challenged Findings of Fact, we again deem those challenges abandoned.
N.C. R. App. P. 28(a), (b)(6).
¶ 58 The next Finding of Fact Appellants challenge (Finding 21) summarizes the
ways in which Appellants, after the final stay was lifted in February 2019, “continued
purposefully to withhold discovery and violate the Court’s June 27, 2018 Discovery
Order . . . .” Of the listed violations in that Finding, Appellants only specifically argue
“there was no prohibition against reasserting objections,” so we only address that
argument. See N.C. R. App. P. 28(a), (b)(6) (deeming challenges to be abandoned if
not specifically argued). We have already determined above that the June 2018 Order
prohibited Appellants from reasserting their objections, and we reject this challenge
for the same reason.
¶ 59 The final challenged Finding of Fact (Finding 32) determined Appellants
violated the March 2019 Order through their 129,000 page document production in
May 2019 because that was after the March 2019 Order’s deadline “to produce all
discovery materials” in Appellants’ possession. (Emphasis in original.) Appellants
argue the March 2019 Order did not require producing all discovery materials but
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rather all documents that were being withheld, which Appellants argue they did.
Appellants then argue this later production permissibly supplemented their earlier
production with “documents [that] were received from third parties and computer
servers . . . .” This supplementation argument therefore also contends none of the
documents in the 129,000 page production from May 2019 were documents that had
previously been withheld.
¶ 60 The record here cannot support Appellants’ argument. The March 2019 Order
listed numerous requests for document production with which Appellants entirely
failed to comply. The March 2019 Order then required Appellants to “produce all
documents that are being withheld from the document requests identified above.”
Thus, the term withholding referred to all documents Appellants had related to those
discovery requests.
¶ 61 Despite the fact that Appellants had to provide all documents related to those
requests by the 26 March 2019 deadline set in the March 2019 Order, they failed to
comply. Instead, Appellants had still not complied by May 2019 because the May
2019 production included many documents responsive to those requests. While we
do not have the entire batch of discovery documents before us, Appellants’ own
admission that these documents were responsive to prior requests puts them in
violation of the March 2019 Order, unless all of the documents produced were
supplemental.
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¶ 62 The record here belies Appellants’ contention that all 129,000 pages produced
in May 2019 were supplemental. At the July 2019 hearing on Ms. Lindberg’s motion
for sanctions, Appellants’ counsel identified the sources of the 129,000 pages. About
a quarter of the documents (29,000 pages) were emails from the accounts of
individuals who worked at Dunhill during the relevant time period. Rule of Civil
Procedure 34(a) allows a party to obtain production of documents “which are in the
possession, custody or control of the party upon whom the request is served.” N.C.
Gen. Stat. §1A-1, Rule 34(a). Dunhill clearly had possession, custody, or control over
the email accounts of its own employees. Thus, the 29,000 pages of emails cannot all
be supplemental.
¶ 63 The remaining 100,000 pages were bank and credit card statements, of which
we presume at least some were for accounts held by either Dunhill or Mr. Lindberg
given the underlying requests focused on those accounts. Appellants do not show
these documents were all supplemental. As the terms are used in Rule of Civil
Procedure 34(a), “possession, custody, or control of the party” includes documents a
party has “the legal right to obtain . . . on demand.” See Pugh, 113 N.C. App. at 380,
438 S.E.2d at 218 (describing that test as the federal standard then applying it in the
case at hand) (quotations and citation omitted).
¶ 64 Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg certainly had the legal right to obtain on demand
their own bank and credit card statements. Therefore, they had possession, custody,
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or control of at least some of those 100,000 pages of records before the March 2019
Order’s deadline. To characterize all 129,000 pages in the May 2019 production as
supplemental per Appellants’ arguments the August 2019 Order faulted them for
supplementing their production is incredulous. The trial court did not abuse its
discretion in finding, in the August 2019 Order, that the 129,000 page production in
May 2019 violated the March 2019 Order.
¶ 65 Finally, Appellants argue they “[a]t the very least . . . made good faith efforts
to comply with the trial court’s orders,” and therefore they should not have been
sanctioned. Appellants are correct that Rule 37 requires “a good faith effort at
compliance with the court order.” Laing v. Liberty Loan Co. of Smithfield and
Albemarle, 46 N.C. App. 67, 71, 264 S.E.2d 381, 384 (1980). While a party’s willful
violation of a court order will defeat a finding of good faith, see Willis, 291 N.C. at 32–
33, 229 S.E.2d at 199 (finding defendant acted in good faith and that there was no
evidence of a willful refusal), North Carolina law does not require a party to have
willfully violated a court order to justify an award of Rule 37 sanctions. Henderson
v. Wachovia Bank of North Carolina, N.A., 145 N.C. App. 621, 629, 551 S.E.2d 464,
470 (2001) (“[T]he plain language of Rule 37 does not require a showing of
willfullness. The order of default judgment may be entered against a defendant
pursuant to Rule 37(b)(2) for failure to obey a court order whether the failure was
willful or not.”); see also N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37, Comment to the 1975
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Amendment (recounting how shift of language to “failure” from “refusal” aimed to
make clear that courts do not have to find a willful failure to impose sanctions).
Rather, the good faith standard eliminates the threat of sanctions “[i]f a party’s
failure to produce is shown to be due to inability fostered neither by its own conduct
nor by circumstances within its control . . . .” Laing, 46 N.C. App. at 71, 264 S.E.2d
at 384.
¶ 66 Here, Appellants’ failures to comply with the March 2019 Order were due to
their own conduct and circumstances within their control. Considering the entire
history of this discovery dispute, the multiple orders addressing Appellants’
objections and late and deficient responses, as well as Dunhill’s and Mr. Lindberg’s
deposition testimony, Appellants have not shown good faith in Appellants’ responses
to the discovery requests. As explained above, Appellants had in their possession,
control, or custody or had the legal right to demand all the documents they admitted
were part of the May 2019 production. Therefore, Appellants did not act with good
faith and were subject to Rule 37 sanctions.
¶ 67 We find the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling, in its August 2019
Order, Appellants violated the March 2019 Order. Combined with our previous
conclusion about violations of the June 2018 Order, we hold the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in sanctioning Appellants for their document production actions
and inactions.
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V. Sanctions for Depositions
¶ 68 In addition to arguing they should not have been sanctioned for their actions
and inactions around document production, both Appellants assert the trial court
erred in sanctioning them for their depositions. Similar to the document production
issue, Appellants both argue “without a predicate order in place, the sanctions” based
on their depositions “were inappropriate.” Dunhill then presents an additional
argument that the trial court “misconstrued Rule 30(b)(6),” the basis for its
deposition. We first address the predicate order issue for each Appellant before
turning to Dunhill’s argument about Rule 30(b)(6).
A. Predicate Order Issue
¶ 69 Both Appellants argue the trial court erred by sanctioning them for their
depositions “without a predicate order in place.” This argument closely resembles the
contentions Appellants had regarding document productions.
¶ 70 Given the similarities in the argument, much of the law governing Appellants’
contention is the same here, so we briefly recite it. Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2)
permits sanctions when “a party fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery
. . . .” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-1A, Rule 37(b)(2). Thus, “[i]n general, ‘sanctions under Rule
37 are imposed only for the failure to comply with a court order,’” i.e. failure to comply
with a predicate order borrowing Appellants’ term. Lovendahl v. Wicker, 208 N.C.
App. 193, 200, 702 S.E.2d 529, 534 (2010) (quoting Pugh, 113 N.C. App. at 379, 438
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S.E.2d at 217). Additionally, “[a] motion for a protective order under Rule 26(c) that
is denied . . . may end in the same result as a motion to compel discovery under Rule
37(a): an order compelling discovery.” Id. This similar result arises directly from the
language of Rule 26(c) providing “[i]f the motion for a protective order is denied in
whole or in part, the court may, on such terms and conditions as are just, order that
any party or person provide or permit discovery.” Id. (quoting N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-
1, Rule 26(c)) (alteration in original). As a result, “violation of an order compelling
discovery that results from a motion for a protective order may [also] be the basis for
sanctions under Rule 37(b).” Id. We review the trial court’s actions challenged in the
predicate order arguments for abuse of discretion. See Myers, 269 N.C. App. at 240,
837 S.E.2d at 447 (“As a general rule, we review the trial court’s rulings regarding
discovery for abuse of discretion.”); Feeassco, 264 N.C. App. at 336, 826 S.E.2d at 209
(reviewing order granting motion for sanctions for abuse of discretion).
1. Dunhill’s Predicate Order Argument
¶ 71 Dunhill argues “without a predicate order in place, the sanctions based on the
30(b)(6) deposition of Dunhill were inappropriate.” It also asserts the August 2019
Order “did not even purport to identify a predicate order regarding Dunhill’s
deposition.” While Dunhill acknowledges the order denying its motion for a protective
order, it argues that order was not specific enough for Dunhill to be required “to do
anything other than provide prepared witnesses.” Finally, Dunhill argues the August
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2019 Order erred by sanctioning Dunhill for previous misconduct by both it and by
Mr. Lindberg.
¶ 72 Taking Dunhill’s arguments in turn, it is simply wrong to argue the August
2019 Order failed to identify a predicate order. We have identified four examples of
times the August 2019 Order referred to the trial court’s previous order denying
Dunhill’s and Mr. Lindberg’s Motion for a Protective Order and said Dunhill violated
that previous order by failing to present prepared witnesses at its Rule 30(b)(6)
deposition:
30. On June 5, 2019, the Court entered a written
order denying Dunhill’s Motion for Protective Order, and
expressly ordered that Dunhill make available for its Rule
30(b)(6) deposition an appropriate company designee for all
noticed topics who was prepared to testify “as to ‘all
matters known and reasonably available to’ Dunhill
regarding each topic in the notice of deposition.” See this
Court’s 6/5/2019 Order on Dunhill Holdings, LLC and Greg
Lindberg’s Motion for Protective Order (citing N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 30(b)(6)).
...
42. Dunhill’s failure to prepare for its deposition,
as it was required to do under Rule 30(b)(6) and this
Court’s 5 June 2019 Order . . . .
...
47. Brenda Lynch was designated as Dunhill’s
corporate representative to testify pursuant to Rule
30(b)(6) as to Dunhill’s specific knowledge of Topics 1 and
2. Moreover, and as previously discussed above, pursuant
to this Court’s June 5, 2019 Order on Dunhill Holdings,
LLC and Greg Lindberg’s Motion for Protective Order,
Dunhill was ordered by the Court to produce at the
deposition an appropriate company designee who is
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prepared to testify “as to ‘all matters known and
reasonably available to’ Dunhill regarding each topic in the
notice of deposition.” (citing N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule
30(b)(6)).
...
51. The Court finds that Ms. Lynch’s deposition
testimony, given on behalf of Dunhill, represents a failure
of Dunhill to adequately testify in response to Topics 1-43,
in direct violation of this Court’s 5 June 2019 Order on
Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg’s Motion for Protective Order
described above.
(Emphasis in original.) Dunhill does not challenge any of those Findings of Fact, so
they are binding on appeal. See Feeassco, 264 N.C. App. at 340, 826 S.E.2d at 211
(determining unchallenged findings of fact in a sanctions order were binding on
appeal). Based on these binding Findings of Fact, the trial court identified its order
denying Appellants’ motion for a protective order as the predicate order compelling
discovery, which is allowed under Lovendahl. 208 N.C. App. at 200, 702 S.E.2d at
534.
¶ 73 Dunhill’s failure to recognize the predicate order, upon which the trial court
relied, might stem from its related argument that the order denying its motion for a
protective order was not specific enough. Dunhill cites no binding precedent to
support that argument.7 However, in Lovendahl, this Court ruled an order denying
7In fact, Dunhill primarily cites unpublished federal district court opinions. Citation to this
Court’s own unpublished opinions is “disfavored,” N.C. R. App. P. 30(e)(3), so citation to other
courts’ unpublished opinions at least warrants the same treatment. The citations here are
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a motion for a protective order was sufficient to justify Rule 37(b) sanctions when the
order merely required the defendant to “‘submit to deposition within forty-five days
of the date of this Order.’” 208 N.C. App. at 200–02, 702 S.E.2d at 534–35. Here, the
trial court’s order denying the motion for a protective order said:
Accordingly, and pursuant to Rule 30(b)(6) of the North
Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, Dunhill Holdings, LLC
shall appear as noticed on June 5 and 6, 2019 for its
deposition and be prepared to testify, through an
appropriate company designee, as to all “matters known or
reasonably available to” Dunhill regarding each topic in
the notice of deposition. N.C. Gen. Stat. § lA-1, Rule
30(b)(6).
The trial court’s order, specifically directing Dunhill’s designee to be prepared to
testify to all matters known or reasonably available on each noticed topic, is more
specific than the language this Court found acceptable in Lovendahl. Therefore, we
find the language here was specific enough that a violation of the order denying the
motion for the protective order could support sanctions under Rule 37(b).
¶ 74 Turning to its final argument, Dunhill asserts “[t]he trial court erred by
assuming it could enter sanctions based on the history of the parties’ discovery
disputes,” especially since Mr. Lindberg is a separate individual according to Dunhill.
particularly inapposite because, as explained above, this Court has issued binding precedent
on the issue. See N.C. R. App. P. 30(e)(3) (“If a party believes, nevertheless, that an
unpublished opinion has precedential value to a material issue in the case and that there is
no published opinion that would serve as well, the party may cite the unpublished opinion . .
. .”) (emphasis added).
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Dunhill’s arguments are unpersuasive. Dunhill quotes a portion of Conclusion of Law
141 that references a long pattern of violations of discovery orders, but that
Conclusion appears under the heading “Sanctions Arising from Misconduct During
Mr. Lindberg’s Deposition.” Dunhill seemingly ignores Conclusions of Law 114–28,
which recount the basis for sanctions against Dunhill based on its Rule 30(b)(6)
“Deposition Misconduct.” Those Conclusions and the facts we recounted above detail
how Dunhill was sanctioned not for its past misconduct but rather for its new failure
to comply with the order compelling discovery that came out of the order denying
Dunhill’s motion for a protective order. Thus, Dunhill was sanctioned not for its
previous misconduct—which was extensive as recounted in our analysis of the
document production sanctions above—but rather for its new misconduct in
depositions.
¶ 75 Dunhill also contends the trial court improperly conflated it with Mr. Lindberg,
arguing “accusations of misconduct against a separate individual (like Mr. Lindberg)
should not be part of the analysis.” As recounted more fully above, Dunhill was
sanctioned for its own failures. For example, unchallenged Finding of Fact 51 faulted
Dunhill for failing “to adequately testify in response to Topics 1-43, in direct violation
of this Court’s 5 June 2019 Order on Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg’s Motion for Protective
Order described above.” The underlying premise that Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg are
separate is questionable. In unchallenged Findings of Fact, the trial court noted
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evidence that Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg are not separate in general and specifically
“collu[ded]” in their deposition misconduct:
100. . . . . In fact, on numerous occasions, the corporate
representatives at Dunhill’s Rule 30(b)(6) deposition
testified that they were not knowledgeable persons to
testify regarding the noticed topics, and instead Mr.
Lindberg, the sole owner and manager of Dunhill, was in
fact the more knowledgeable individual about the noticed
topics. [footnote] Counsel for Mrs. Lindberg thereafter
reasonably proceeded to ask Mr. Lindberg about many of
these same topics at his deposition, only to be met with his
repeated refusals to answer relevant questions.
101. The Court finds that Greg Lindberg’s refusal to
answer relevant deposition questions, when combined with
his sole ownership and control over Dunhill as a corporate
entity, amounts to collusion between Dunhill and Greg
Lindberg at their respective depositions to intentionally
evade their discovery obligations in this matter and to
purposefully withhold relevant information from Mrs.
Lindberg and her counsel. The Court finds the same is true
with respect to Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg’s repeated
violations of this Court’s prior orders compelling them to
produce documents and materials in discovery.
(Footnote omitted.) Given Dunhill’s own misconduct warranted sanctions and its
connection to and collusion with Mr. Lindberg, we also reject this argument.
¶ 76 Thus, reviewing for abuse of discretion, we reject all of Dunhill’s arguments
about the lack of a predicate order and its related objections.
2. Mr. Lindberg’s Predicate Order Argument
¶ 77 Mr. Lindberg’s predicate violations argument resembles Dunhill’s argument,
but Mr. Lindberg also contends he was inappropriately sanctioned for invoking his
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Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Mr. Lindberg first mirrors
Dunhill’s arguments that no predicate order existed to justify sanctions and that the
trial court erred by sanctioning Mr. Lindberg for past misconduct by both him and
Dunhill. Then, Mr. Lindberg argues his “reluctance or refusal to answer some
questions is not surprising” given that depositions in other litigation between him
and Ms. Lindberg resulted in him “obtaining a protective order . . . that required Ms.
Lindberg’s counsel to remain six feet away from Mr. Lindberg.”
¶ 78 Finally, Mr. Lindberg argues that despite the trial court acknowledging his
deposition “could be affected by invocation of the Fifth Amendment privilege against
self-incrimination” based on a then-pending criminal case, the trial court “[i]ronically
. . . then sanctioned Mr. Lindberg for refusing to answer questions at his deposition.”
(Emphasis in original.) Mr. Lindberg contends “the right to discovery must yield to
the privilege against compulsory self-incrimination” such that the trial court “erred
in sanctioning Mr. Lindberg based on his deposition testimony.” We address each of
those arguments in turn.
¶ 79 First, Mr. Lindberg’s argument that there was no predicate order in place is
inaccurate. The trial court’s order denying Dunhill’s motion for a protective order
also denied Mr. Lindberg’s motion for a protective order. The trial court clearly
denied Mr. Lindberg’s motion for a protective order because it separately denied Mr.
Lindberg’s motion for a stay of proceedings. Thus, the order denying the motion for
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a protective order in practice relies on the denial of the motion for a stay of
proceedings. Since the denial of a motion for a protective order can have the same
effect as an order compelling discovery, i.e. creating the requisite predicate order,
Lovendahl, 208 N.C. App. at 200, 702 S.E.2d at 534, we look to the trial court’s denial
of the motion for a stay as well to evaluate the adequacy of any predicate order.
¶ 80 The trial court’s order denying Mr. Lindberg’s motion for a stay indicates Mr.
Lindberg sought the stay because of pending criminal charges against him. The trial
court’s unchallenged Findings of Fact, however, highlight that “none of the claims,
counterclaims, or causes of action alleged by the parties in this matter require them
to prove facts that share a nexus with, or are substantially similar to, the allegations
made against Mr. Lindberg in the separate criminal proceedings against him.” Based
on that fact and its subsequent analysis of Mr. Lindberg’s prejudice arguments, the
trial court denied Mr. Lindberg’s motion for a temporary stay of proceedings.
¶ 81 The trial court’s unchallenged Findings of Fact indicate it expressly considered
Mr. Lindberg’s upcoming deposition and rejected Mr. Lindberg’s arguments about
prejudice caused by allowing that deposition to proceed:
9. There is no unfair prejudice to Mr. Lindberg or
Dunhill by denying Mr. Lindberg’s Motion for Temporary
Stay. To the extent Mr. Lindberg believes it in his best
interest, he has a right in this civil action to assert his Fifth
Amendment rights to not answer questions propounded to
him in discovery. Moreover, during the hearing of this
motion, Mrs. Lindberg’s counsel voluntarily agreed that
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they would not ask Mr. Lindberg questions at his upcoming
deposition about the facts contained in the Bill of
lndictment attached as Exhibit 1 to Mr. Lindberg’s motion.
10. Mr. Lindberg argues that he would be prejudiced
by potentially having to invoke his Fifth Amendment right
to refuse to answer questions at his upcoming deposition.
However, the Court finds that no unfair prejudice would
occur given the fact that Mr. Lindberg has failed to
demonstrate a nexus of substantially similar facts or issues
between his criminal proceeding and this civil action. . . .
¶ 82 The trial court also, as Mr. Lindberg highlights, converted into a binding court
order the voluntary agreement of Ms. Lindberg’s counsel not “to question Mr.
Lindberg at his upcoming deposition in this action regarding the facts contained in
the Bill of Indictment . . . .” Thus, the trial court knew Mr. Lindberg’s deposition
would go ahead when it ordered the denial of his motion for a temporary stay and
motion for a protective order. It is reasonable to read that sequence of events as the
trial court ordering Mr. Lindberg to attend his deposition, so we cannot find the trial
court abused its discretion in viewing the denial of the motions for a temporary stay
and for a protective order as the equivalent of an order compelling discovery and in
sanctioning Mr. Lindberg for violating that order. See Myers, 269 N.C. App. 240, 837
S.E.2d at 447–48 (“An abuse of discretion is a decision manifestly unsupported by
reason or one so arbitrary that it could not have been the result of a reasoned
decision.”).
¶ 83 Having determined the trial court did not abuse its discretion by treating the
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denial of Mr. Lindberg’s motions for a protective order and temporary stay as a
predicate order, we address Mr. Lindberg’s argument he was improperly sanctioned
for previous conduct by both him and Dunhill. As with Dunhill’s similar argument,
Mr. Lindberg’s argument fails because he was sanctioned for his own new conduct.
Looking just at Conclusion of Law 141 that Mr. Lindberg takes issue with in his brief,
the trial court made it clear in the parts Mr. Lindberg omits that his own misconduct
during the deposition justified its sanctions:
141. The Court further concludes that Mr. Lindberg
personally is subject to sanctions as a result of the many
forms of misconduct he repeatedly employed during his
personal deposition as described hereinabove. Mr. Lindberg
and Dunhill have engaged in a long pattern of violating the
discovery orders of this Court as well as the Rules of Civil
Procedure. Mr. Lindberg’s personal deposition obstruction
and misconduct is but the most recent in the long line of
both his Dunhill’s [sic] repeated prior violations of this
Court’s discovery orders and the discovery rules.
(Emphasis added.) Unchallenged Findings of Fact 59–98 recount in great detail,
across five different subsections of misconduct, the “multiple forms of intentional
obstruction and delay repeatedly employed by Greg Lindberg at his deposition.”
(Capitalization altered.) As just one example, the trial court included a table
calculating the “5 HOURS 47 MINS” of deposition time “wasted due to Greg
Lindberg’s repeated tardiness” over two days. (Emphasis in original in first
quotation; capitalization altered in second quotation.) Thus, the court sanctioned Mr.
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Lindberg for his deposition misconduct alone and had ample support for its decision
to do so.
¶ 84 Mr. Lindberg’s next argument is about his “reluctance or refusal to answer
some questions” because of the prior protective order requiring Ms. Lindberg’s
counsel to remain six feet away from him. Without reaching the issue of whether a
protective order about physical distancing from another case could justify refusing to
answer any questions in a deposition from this case where the trial court in this case
had already denied a substantive motion for a protective order, we note that Mr.
Lindberg’s deposition here did not even involve the attorney whose actions were the
basis for the prior protective order. While the prior protective order covered “Counsel
for Plaintiff,” which included one of Ms. Lindberg’s attorneys who deposed Mr.
Lindberg in this case, it is clear from the prior protective order that the conflict that
led to the protective order involved another attorney who was not present at Mr.
Lindberg’s depositions in this case. Given the relevant attorney from the past conflict
was not even present at this deposition, we reject any argument by Mr. Lindberg that
this past history in any way impacts how we should view his “reluctance or refusal to
answer some questions . . . .”
¶ 85 Finally, we reject Mr. Lindberg’s argument that the trial court erred by
sanctioning him for refusing to answer questions at his deposition after
acknowledging Mr. Lindberg’s deposition could be impacted by assertions of his Fifth
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Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. The key issue with Mr. Lindberg’s
argument is that he never invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege during his
deposition. “The Fifth Amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination is
not self-executing.” Roberts v. U.S., 445 U.S. 552, 559, 100 S. Ct. 1358, 1364 (1980).
In the case of “the ordinary witness at a trial or before a grand jury who is
subpoenaed, sworn to tell the truth, and obligated to answer on the pain of contempt,”
that person must “appear and answer questions truthfully . . . unless he invokes the
privilege and shows that he faces a realistic threat of self-incrimination.” Minnesota
v. Murphy, 465 U.S. 420, 427, 104 S. Ct. 1136, 1142 (1984). A person’s invocation of
the Fifth Amendment privilege must be express. Communist Party of U.S. v.
Subversive Activities Control Bd., 367 U.S. 1, 108, 81 S. Ct. 1357, 1416 (1961)
(“Nevertheless, it is not and has never been the law that the privilege disallows the
asking of potentially incriminatory questions or authorizes the person of whom they
are asked to evade them without expressly asserting that his answers may tend to
incriminate him.” (emphasis added)). While “no ritualistic formula or talismanic
phrase is essential in order to invoke the privilege against self-incrimination,” the
language of invocation at least needs to be such that a person “may reasonably be
expected to understand [it] as an attempt to invoke the privilege.” Emspak v. U.S.,
349 U.S. 190, 194, 75 S. Ct. 687, 690 (1955). For example, the United States Supreme
Court has held language with references to the Fifth Amendment, even without
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identifying the privilege specifically, is sufficient to invoke the privilege. Id.
¶ 86 Here, Mr. Lindberg never expressly invoked the privilege in the required
manner. With one exception explained below, nothing related to the Fifth
Amendment privilege against self-incrimination even came up in the transcript of
Mr. Lindberg’s deposition.8 Rather, Mr. Lindberg instead decided to repeatedly—
over 100 times according to the unchallenged Findings of Facts—say he “can’t
comment on that.” The use of the phrase, “I can’t comment on that” was not language
that a person could “reasonably be expected to understand as an attempt to invoke
the privilege” because it does not reference the privilege or even the Fifth
Amendment. Id. As such, none of those instances can be considered invocations of
Mr. Lindberg’s Fifth Amendment privilege.
¶ 87 The one time the Fifth Amendment came up in the transcript of Mr. Lindberg’s
deposition—in response to one of Mr. Lindberg’s “I can’t comment” answers—, Ms.
Lindberg’s counsel expressly asked Mr. Lindberg if he was intending to invoke his
privilege and Mr. Lindberg’s counsel specifically told him he did not have to answer
if he was intending to invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege:
8We searched the transcript for the following words “fifth”; “5th”; “amendment”; “privilege”;
and “incrimination” and found no responses that discussed the Fifth Amendment privilege
against self-incrimination other than the instance discussed in the main text. The search for
the word “privilege” revealed numerous references to attorney-client privilege as well as a
couple of references to professional-patient privilege, but Mr. Lindberg does not make any
arguments about those privileges.
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Q. Refuse to answer. Did you not authorize Tisha
Lindberg to sign your name on multiple documents?
A. I can’t comment on that.
Q. Refuse to answer that question?
A. I can’t comment on it.
Q. Well, if you can’t comment, that to me means
you are refusing to comment or answer.
A. No. Saying I can’t comment is a comment.
Q. Why can’t you comment? Mr. Lindberg, is the
reason – one of the reasons you can’t comment on many of
these questions is because you intend to plead the Fifth
Amendment?
Mr. Pace: Objection. You don’t have to answer
that.
Mr. Zaytoun: This is a civil case.
Mr. Pace: Yes. And you’ve already represented to
a judge that you wouldn’t ask him any questions about
that.
By Mr. Zaytoun:
Q. Mr. Lindberg, is it – is it your intention to
plead the Fifth Amendment to any of these questions that
I’ve asked you where you said you can’t comment?
Mr. Pace: You don’t have to answer that. I’ll
instruct you not to answer.
Mr. Zaytoun: All right. Certify that. On what
– would you state for the record the basis upon which you’re
instructing him not to answer that question.
Mr. Pace: Because you represented to the judge
that you would not use this case for discovery of any of the
criminal proceedings.
Mr. Zaytoun: No. This has nothing to do with
the North Carolina indictment, my question.
Mr. Pace: Oh, you’re –
Mr. Zaytoun: It has no- -- has – this has to do
with Dunhill.[ ]
9
9In unchallenged Findings of Fact, the trial court found the indictment in question did not
mention Dunhill or Ms. Lindberg and did “not refer to facts or issues that create a nexus
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Mr. Pace: We disagree.
In this case, Ms. Lindberg’s counsel, rather than Mr. Lindberg or his counsel, made
the reference to the Fifth Amendment privilege. The language Mr. Lindberg and his
counsel used cannot be reasonably interpreted as an invocation. Unsurprisingly, as
a result, Ms. Lindberg’s counsel had to follow-up to clarify if Mr. Lindberg was
invoking the privilege only for Mr. Lindberg’s counsel to direct Mr. Lindberg not to
answer whether he was invoking or not. Thus, Mr. Lindberg, through actions of his
counsel, made a choice to not clarify he was expressly invoking his Fifth Amendment
privilege as he was required to do to gain the privilege’s protection. Emspak, 349
U.S. at 194, 75 S. Ct. at 690.
¶ 88 Since Mr. Lindberg never invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-
incrimination, the trial court could not have sanctioned him for such invocation, as
he now argues. We therefore reject that argument and find the trial court did not
abuse its discretion in sanctioning Mr. Lindberg for his deposition conduct.
B. Dunhill’s 30(b)(6) argument
¶ 89 In the final argument against the sanctions for deposition conduct, Dunhill
contends “the trial court misconstrued Rule 30(b)(6).” (Capitalization altered.) Rule
with, or are substantially similar to, the facts or issues involved in this civil action.” Thus,
by asking about Ms. Lindberg and Dunhill, Ms. Lindberg’s attorney did not run afoul of the
court order to not question Mr. Lindberg “regarding facts contained in” the indictment.
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of Civil Procedure 30(b)(6) provides:
A party may in his notice and in a subpoena name as the
deponent a public or private corporation or a partnership
or association or governmental agency and describe with
reasonable particularity the matters on which examination
is requested. In that event, the organization so named shall
designate one or more officers, directors, or managing
agents, or other persons who consent to testify on its
behalf, and may set forth, for each person designated, the
matters on which he will testify. A subpoena shall advise a
nonparty organization of its duty to make such a
designation. It shall not be necessary to serve a subpoena
on an organization which is a party, but the notice, served
on a party without an accompanying subpoena shall clearly
advise such of its duty to make the required designation.
The persons so designated shall testify as to matters known
or reasonably available to the organization. This subsection
(b)(6) does not preclude taking a deposition by any other
procedure authorized in these rules.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 30(b)(6) (emphasis added). Dunhill’s argument focuses
on the meaning of the phrase “known or reasonably available” in the second to last
sentence. Since this argument involves a review of the trial court’s interpretation of
a statute, we review it de novo. Myers, 269 N.C. App. at 240–41, 837 S.E.2d at 447–
48.
¶ 90 After saying “[t]here are no North Carolina appellate opinions regarding the
scope of Rule 30(b)(6),” Dunhill proceeds to make five arguments based primarily on
analogies to federal law. We reject all of Dunhill’s arguments without addressing the
scope of Rule 30(b)(6) under North Carolina law. Rather, Dunhill’s arguments all fail
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based on the unchallenged, and therefore binding, Findings of Fact even when
applying the law with which it argues. See Feeassco, 264 N.C. App. at 340, 826 S.E.2d
at 211 (holding unchallenged Findings of Fact are binding on appeal). As a result for
each of Dunhill’s five arguments, we first present the law on which Dunhill relies
directly from its brief and then explain why the facts here do not conform to that law’s
requirements.
¶ 91 Dunhill’s first argument focuses on the preparation of deponents:
When it comes to preparation for the deposition, the
touchstone of this Rule is reasonableness. See, e.g., Brazos
River Auth. v. GE Ionics, Inc., 469 F.3d 416, 432-33 (5th
Cir. 2006).[footnote omitted] Recognizing that “an
individual cannot be expected to know every possible
aspect of the organization’s inner workings,” courts have
invariably acknowledged that the “standard for sanctions
in this context is high.” Runnels v. Norcold, Inc., No. 1:16-
cv-713, 2017 WL 3026915, at *1 (E.D. Va. Mar. 30, 2017)
(unpublished) [Add. 84] (citing cases). A designee is not
expected to present “a fully reliable and sufficiently
complete account of all the bases for the contentions made
and positions taken by the corporate party.” Stoneeagle
Servs., Inc. v. Pay-Plus Sols., Inc., No. 8:13-CV-2240-
T33MAP, 2015 WL 12843846, at *2 (M.D. Fla. Apr. 29,
2015) (unpublished) [Add. 88].
(All alterations in original exception noting omission of footnote.) Dunhill then
recounts how its witnesses were “well prepared” and “testified for two entire days
regarding the requested topics creating more than 700 pages of testimony.”
¶ 92 The cases Dunhill presents indicate that reasonableness means that the
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designated individuals do not have to know everything completely but rather must
know a reasonable amount and be reasonably prepared to answer questions. While
Dunhill’s designees may have testified to some topics, they seemingly lacked any
preparation or knowledge as to certain other topics. For example, the unchallenged
Findings of Fact indicate one of Dunhill’s designees, Mr. Neal, was unable to answer
any questions about electronic devices used by Mr. Lindberg and had not even
attempted to learn that information prior to his deposition:
38. During the questioning of Mr. Neal, he was completely
unprepared to address many of his designated topics. Most
notably, Mr. Neal was unable to address Topic 49
regarding Mr. Lindberg’s electronic devices and computers,
which stated:
All Computers and electronic devices used by Greg
Lindberg from January 1, 2014 to the present,
including:
a. Number, types and locations
b. Operating systems with versions, dates of
use and upgrade history
c. Application software with versions, dates of
use and upgrade history.
39. Mr. Neal testified at deposition, on behalf of Dunhill,
that he did not know this information, he did not learn this
information prior to the deposition, nor had he ever
attempted to ask Mr. Lindberg personally to identify Mr.
Lindberg’s computers and devices. Instead, Mr. Neal
merely sent an email to two people who work for Mr.
Lindberg about Mr. Lindberg’s electronic devices, but
never received a response to his email and did not follow
up. This represents a clear and total failure of Dunhill to
testify in response to Topic 49 during its deposition, in
direct violation of this Court’s 5 June 2019 Order on
Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg’s Motion for Protective Order
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described above.
40. Mr. Neal was also unable to identify the location of the
servers that house the parties’ emails, which Dunhill was
required to be prepared to identify under deposition Topics
44, 60, 67 and 71. Mr. Neal could only identify the third-
party email hosting service provider that Dunhill utilizes,
but he could not identify the location of any of the servers.
When pressed on his inability to provide the location of the
email servers, Mr. Neal testified that he was confused
about the meaning of the word “location” and thought that
it meant something other than its plain English meaning.
This, too, represents a failure of Dunhill to adequately
testify in response to Topics 44, 60, 67 and 71, in direct
violation of this Court’s 5 June 2019 Order on Dunhill and
Mr. Lindberg’s Motion for Protective Order described
above.
¶ 93 As the portion about Mr. Neal believing the word “location” had something
other than its ordinary meaning indicates, Dunhill also cannot claim the two days
and 700 pages of testimony from its witnesses all shows its compliance either.
Further to that point, the trial court specifically found Dunhill’s other designee, Ms.
Lynch, “intentionally and repeatedly gave evasive and longwinded responses to
interfere with the deposition time available . . . .” Given these Findings alone, Dunhill
cannot credibly claim that its designees were even reasonably prepared to testify as
to the designated topics.
¶ 94 Dunhill’s second argument is not based on any new law; instead, Dunhill
argues that the trial court “summarily found that Dunhill ‘did not provide a witness
prepared to testify as to the Rule 30(b)(6) designated deposition topics’—apparently
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all 73 of them.” In making this contention, Dunhill omits the critical opening part of
the quote indicating that the trial court was referring to the specific topics it had
already discussed:
As articulated above, Dunhill (necessarily acting by and
through its sole owner, member, and manager, Mr.
Lindberg) did not provide a witness prepared to testify as
to the Rule 30(b)(6) designated deposition topics and
provide the responsive information known or reasonably
available to the organization. Dunhill (and by necessary
extension Mr. Lindberg) has, therefore, violated the
Court’s 5 June 2019 discovery Order and is subject to
sanctions for failing to comply with the same pursuant to
Rule 37(b).
(Emphasis added.) With the full quote, it is clear the trial court was not saying
Dunhill had failed to provide a prepared witness for all 73 topics. The trial court was
saying it had not provided a prepared witness for the topics it already discussed,
including those it incorporated by reference to the corrected motion for sanctions,
above in its Findings of Fact. Thus to the extent Dunhill argues the trial court erred
by finding it did not present a prepared witness for all 73 topics, we reject that
argument.
¶ 95 Dunhill’s final three arguments all are responding to the basis for the trial
court’s above conclusion, as they “appear[]” to Dunhill. With each of these arguments,
Dunhill presents more law justifying its position, and as with the first argument, we
reject Dunhill’s contentions as their proffered law applies to the facts here.
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¶ 96 Dunhill first claims the basis for the sanctions for failure to present a prepared
witness was “that the witness referred to documents produced in litigation.” For its
supporting law, Dunhill stated:
Referring to documents was proper because “Rule 30(b)(6)
is not designed to be a memory contest.” Risinger v. SOC,
LLC, 306 F.R.D. 655, 663 (D. Nev. 2015); see also Runnels,
2017 WL 3026915, at *1 [Add. 84] (explaining that
organizational representatives “are not expected to be a
corporate encyclopedia”). There is no requirement “that a
Rule 30(b)(6) witness be able to testify at a deposition
without referencing documentation to supplement the
testimony.” BreathableBaby, LLC v. Crown Crafts, Inc.,
No. 12-cv-94 (PJS/TNL), 2013 WL 3350594, at *8 (D. Minn.
May 31, 2013) (unpublished) [Add. 25], adopted by 2013
WL 3349999 (D. Minn. July 1, 2013). Thus, the fact that a
witness has to review documents before answering
questions does not make the witness unfit. Baker v. St.
Paul Travelers Ins. Co., 670 F.3d 119, 125 (1st Cir. 2012).
Dunhill then argues its witnesses acted properly because they “repeatedly stated that
answers could be found in the documents that had been produced.”
¶ 97 Without even relying on our above conclusion affirming the sanctions against
Dunhill for its document production on the eve of this deposition, the law Dunhill
cites does not help it here. As seen in the last case Dunhill cites, that law is about
whether a witness can review documents before answering questions, not whether
they can use documents in place of their answer. The latter—i.e. using documents in
place of their answer—appears to be what happened here even in the examples
Dunhill provides. For example, it cites to a portion of Ms. Lynch’s deposition where
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she indicates a produced document might exist that answers the question:
Here, the witnesses repeatedly stated that answers could
be found in the documents that had been produced. (See,
e.g., Lynch Depo.(II) 283 (“Q. What specific facts support
that . . . allegation? A. There would be bank statements,
bank ledgers that would show when the withdrawals were
– were made, when items were paid and for what.”)).
Here, in addition to the fact that Ms. Lynch is using a document instead of answering,
she is not even citing to a specific document but rather says there “would be,” i.e.
without certainty, support in some documents that presumably were produced. This
non-answer does not in any way resemble the acceptable means laid out by Dunhill’s
proffered law above. Underlining the inadequacy of using a vague reference to
potential documents in place of answers, the trial court specifically found that Ms.
Lynch “could not identify any specific document or email from the hundreds of
thousands of pages of the discovery” to support Dunhill’s allegations. For these
reasons, we reject this argument.
¶ 98 Turning to its fourth argument, Dunhill contends the trial court improperly
concluded its witnesses were not prepared because “the witnesses could not recall
certain information, such as the exact date of events.” To support this argument,
Dunhill provides the following law and argument:
Likewise, the witnesses properly testified to the best of
their recollection. A witness “cannot be expected to have
predicted the exact questions she would face in deposition.”
BreathableBaby, 2013 WL 3350594, at *8 [Add. 25]. Thus,
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the fact that a witness does not have all information at her
fingertips is not surprising. Even an imperfect deposition
is not subject to sanctions. Runnels, 2017 WL 3026915, at
*3 [Add. 85]. This is particularly true when the questions
relate to conduct by individuals. (See, e.g., Lynch Depo.(II)
370-71 (asking Ms. Lynch about Ms. Lindberg’s allegations
regarding promises made by Mr. Lindberg)).
Again, Dunhill overlooks the extent to which its designees were completely
unprepared as to certain topics. The case law it cites is about whether a witness
should be expected to predict the exact questions in a deposition and to have all the
information at its fingertips. Here, Dunhill’s deponents did not have any information
on certain topics, as laid about above. Put another way, this was not an imperfect
deposition; as to certain topics on which the designees provided no answers, this
deposition in effect did not happen at all.
¶ 99 Dunhill’s final argument is that the trial court erred by faulting Dunhill’s
designees when they “could not comprehensively explain Dunhill’s legal theories.” To
support this contention, Dunhill included the following law and argument:
Finally, the designees could not have been expected to
testify about legal theories beyond their basis for the
allegations. (See Lynch Depo.(II) 236-38, 246-47, 328-30,
458-59). As the Business Court has recognized, it is
“impracticable” for a company “to prepare one or more
witnesses to testify about ‘all facts’ and ‘all evidence’ that
support more than half a dozen claims and defenses.”
Addison Whitney, LLC v. Cashion, 2020 NCBC 48 ¶ 112,
2020 WL 3096793, at *19 (June 10, 2020) (unpublished)
[Add. 16]. Yet, that is precisely what Ms. Lindberg’s
counsel expected.
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The 30(b)(6) designees appropriately limited their
testimony to facts rather than legal theories. Sanctions are
improper when the deponent was “able to testify regarding
the evidence and facts underlying the allegations.” FTC v.
Vylah Tec LLC, No. 2:17-cv-228-FtM-PAM-MRM, 2018 WL
7361111, at *3 (M.D. Fla. Dec. 18, 2018) (unpublished)
[Add. 46]. Indeed, this Court has indicated that a 30(b)(6)
witness is not expected to testify about the law at all.
Bullard v. Wake Cty., 221 N.C. App. 522, 535, 729 S.E.2d
686, 694 (2012); see also Snapp v. United Transp. Union,
889 F.3d 1088, 1104 (9th Cir. 2018) (similar), cert. denied,
139 S. Ct. 817 (2019). Thus, Ms. Lindberg’s counsel had no
basis to complain when he asked “You’re really not a very
knowledgeable corporate designee, are you . . . about
Dunhill if you can’t even tell me the basics of what Dunhill
is, what an LLC is versus a corporation”? (Lynch Depo.(II)
424).
¶ 100 Dunhill’s arguments can be broken down into two. First, as the cite to the
North Carolina business court indicates, Dunhill is arguing that a designee cannot
be expected to know all facts or evidence to support a number of claims. The problem
with that argument, as with similar arguments above, is that Dunhill’s designees did
not provide any evidence. The trial court’s unchallenged Finding of Facts indicate
that Ms. Lynch “was completely unprepared to provide any specific information or
knowledge to explain the basis for any of Dunhill’s claims or allegation categories
listed in topics 1 or 2” (emphasis added), which were the two topics that related to the
basis for Dunhill’s claims against Ms. Lindberg.
¶ 101 The second piece of Dunhill’s argument is that the sanctions improperly
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faulted its designees for not providing legal theories. Again, this argument does not
comport with the August 2019 Order, which specifically faulted the designees for not
being able to provide evidence rather than legal theories. For example, the trial court
found Ms. Lynch could not identify evidence to support any of the claims in the
Dunhill lawsuit:
Importantly, Ms. Lynch was never able to identify a single
document, communication, or other piece of evidence that
Dunhill knew of or contended was supportive of any of the
claims or allegations in the Dunhill lawsuit.
As the trial court noted:
This is especially troubling given that Dunhill has
represented to this Court, through its counsel, that it
possesses specific emails, text messages, photographs, and
other materials it contends supports Dunhill’s claims and
allegations against Mrs. Lindberg. See e.g. Dunhill’s 11
July 2019 Verified Response to [Corrected] Tisha L.
Lindberg’s Motion for Sanctions Regarding Deposition of
Dunhill Holdings, LLC, at page 2, in which Dunhill’s
counsel describes specific “emails,” “text messages,”
“pictures,” “bank records,” as well as Mrs. Lindberg’s
“written assurance” and “admissions,” all of which Dunhill
claims are in its possession and knowledge as supportive of
its claims against Mrs. Lindberg in this action.
These findings make it clear Dunhill was sanctioned because its designees could not
provide evidence rather than because they failed to supply legal theories.
¶ 102 As we have rejected each of Dunhill’s Rule 30(b)(6) arguments, we find the trial
court did not err here either. Thus, we find no error by the trial court with regard to
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any of its sanctions for Appellants’ deposition misconduct and failures.
VI. Choice of Sanctions
¶ 103 Appellants’ final arguments that take issue with the August 2019 Order
present a series of alleged errors under the heading, “Even if the court had the
authority, the choice of sanctions was improper.” (Capitalization altered.) First, both
Appellants argue “[t]here is a disconnect between the purported violations and the
sanctions imposed.” (Capitalization altered.) Both Appellants also contend the
August 2019 Order “is internally inconsistent.” Finally, Mr. Lindberg presents two
arguments on his own that the August 2019 Order “impermissibly allows for
disclosure of privileged information” and that “[t]here was not proper notice” as to the
basis of sanctions against him. We address each of those arguments in turn.
A. Disconnect Argument
¶ 104 Appellants’ first argument about the disconnect between the violations and the
sanctions is really a series of arguments that amounts to the contention that the
choice of sanctions was improper. First, Appellants argue the trial court improperly
believed that it had “unfettered discretion.” Then, Appellants argue discovery
sanctions under Rule 37 “must be equitable.” As part of this argument, Appellants
contend, by relying on federal court cases, default judgment and taking a party’s
allegations as established are powerful and should only be used in the most extreme
circumstances. Appellants further support their equity argument by indicating
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North Carolina has a policy favoring deciding cases on the merits rather than entry
of default judgment. Finally, Dunhill argues the August 2019 Order “is especially
problematic because it deemed certain facts ‘established’ even though they are
contrary to the record evidence,” particularly on the allegation that Mr. Lindberg is
the alter ego of Dunhill.
¶ 105 Appellants’ first argument omits a key portion of the sentence that shows the
trial court understood its discretion was subject to limits. Specifically, the full
sentence in the trial court order says, “[T]he tailoring of sanctions in a particular case
is limited only by the judge’s imagination and the possibility of appellate review.”
(Emphasis added to show the part omitted by the parties.) Thus, the trial judge knew
he did not have unfettered discretion and was subject to appellate review. In fact,
looking at the surrounding Conclusions of Law, the trial court explained in detail how
it was subject to the abuse of discretion standard on appeal and how “North Carolina
appellate courts have routinely affirmed the trial court’s decision to impose severe
sanctions for discovery abuses and violations of court orders including dismissing
actions and claims, and striking pleadings.”
¶ 106 The trial court further acted within the discretion described by Turner v. Duke
University, the case which Appellants highlight as being applied in error, in imposing
sanctions. 101 N.C. App. 276, 399 S.E.2d 402 (1991). As Appellants note, Turner
differentiates between the discretion offered by statutes that do not authorize specific
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types of sanctions (Rules of Civil Procedure 11 and 26) and statutes that do, such as
Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2). Id., 101 N.C. App. at 279–80, 399 S.E.2d at 405.
The trial court here followed the strictures of Rule 37. As relevant here, Rule 37(b)(2)
authorizes the following types of sanctions:
a. An order that the matters regarding which the order was
made or any other designated facts shall be taken to be
established for the purposes of the action in accordance
with the claim of the party obtaining the order;
b. An order refusing to allow the disobedient party to
support or oppose designated claims or defenses, or
prohibiting the party from introducing designated matters
in evidence;
c. An order striking out pleadings or parts thereof, or
staying further proceedings until the order is obeyed, or
dismissing the action or proceeding or any part thereof, or
rendering a judgment by default against the disobedient
party;
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b)(2)(a)–(c). Rule 37 also authorizes the trial court to
order the party failing to obey a court order “to pay reasonable expenses, including
attorney’s fees” in certain situations. Id., Rule 37(b)(2). Here, all the trial court’s
sanctions under Rule 37(b)(2) adhered to those categories. The remainder of the
sanctions all related to ordering discovery to continue or rejecting certain objections
made in discovery, so they fit within Rule 37(a)(2)’s allowance of an order compelling
discovery. N.C. Gen. Stat. §1A-1, Rule 37(a)(2). Thus, Appellants incorrectly assert
the trial court believed it had unfettered discretion; the trial court understood its
discretion was subject to limits, and it stayed within those limits. The trial court did
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not abuse its discretion.
¶ 107 Turning to Appellants’ next argument, both misinterpret what our courts
mean when they say sanctions must be just. While the “as just” language comes
directly from Rule 37(b)(2), see N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b)(2) (authorizing the
court to “make such orders in regard to the failure [to comply with a discovery order]
as are just”), our courts have indicated the language refers to the grant of discretion
to the trial court. See Stone v. Martin, 69 N.C. App. 650, 652, 318 S.E.2d 108, 110
(1984) (citing the language about justness immediately before saying, “The matter
thus is within the trial courts discretion.” (emphasis added)); Global Furniture, Inc.
v. Proctor, 165 N.C. App. 229, 232, 598 S.E2d 232, 234 (2004) (“The trial court is given
broad discretion to ‘make such orders in regard to the failure as are just’ . . . .”
(quoting N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b))). As a result, the trial court has only
failed to impose sanctions as are just if it has abused its discretion.
¶ 108 As noted above, the trial court only imposed those sanctions specifically
authorized by Rule 37(b)(2) and did not abuse its discretion in that manner. Beyond
that, generally “[t]he choice of sanction under Rule 37 lies within the court’s
discretion and will not be overturned on appeal absent a showing of abuse of that
discretion.” Routh v. Weaver, 67 N.C. App. 426, 429, 313 S.E.2d 793, 795 (1984).
Before a court imposes severe sanctions, such as dismissing an action with prejudice,
it “must consider less severe sanctions.” See Hursey v. Homes by Design, Inc., 121
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N.C. App. 175, 179, 464 S.E.2d 504, 507 (1995) (“[B]efore dismissing a party’s claim
with prejudice pursuant to Rule 37, the trial court must consider less severe
sanctions.”) (citing Goss v. Battle, 111 N.C. App. 173, 177, 432 S.E.2d 156, 159 (1993)).
Critically, “[t]he trial court is not required to impose lesser sanctions, but only to
consider lesser sanctions.” Global Furniture, 165 N.C. App. at 233, 598 S.E.2d at 235
(emphasis in original) (citing Goss, 111 N.C. App. at 177, 432 S.E.2d at 159).
¶ 109 In determining whether the trial court properly considered lesser sanctions,
this Court has noted, “the trial court is not required to list and specifically reject each
possible lesser sanctions prior to determining that dismissal is appropriate.” Batlle,
198 N.C. App. at 421, 681 S.E.2d at 798 (quoting Badillo v. Cunningham, 177 N.C.
App. 732, 735, 629 S.E.2d 909, 911 (2006)). Language stating the trial court
considered lesser sanction but had reason to impose the more severe sanctions is
sufficient. In Batlle, this Court found the following statements sufficient to determine
the trial court had not abused its discretion by failing to consider less severe
sanctions:
The trial court found in the 21 September 2007 order that:
The Court has considered lesser discovery sanctions,
and dismissal of Plaintiff’s lawsuit with prejudice is
the only just and appropriate sanction in view of the
totality of the circumstances of the case, which
demonstrate the severity of Plaintiff’s disobedience
in failing to make discovery in a lawsuit she
instituted and her unjustified noncompliance with
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the mandatory North Carolina Rules of Civil
Procedure.
Based upon this finding, the trial court concluded in the 21
September 2007 order that:
The Court has considered lesser sanctions than
dismissal of Plaintiff’s lawsuit with prejudice.
Lesser sanctions would be unjust and inappropriate
in view of the totality of the circumstances of the
case, which demonstrate the severity of the
disobedience of Plaintiff in refusing to make
discovery in a lawsuit she instituted, her unjustified
noncompliance with the mandatory North Carolina
Rules of Civil Procedure, and untimely response on
the day of the hearing.
Id., 198 N.C. App. at 421–22, 681 S.E.2d at 798–99. This Court reached that
conclusion because that language was similar to language this Court had previously
found acceptable in both In Re Pedestrian Walkway Failure and Cunningham. Id.,
198 N.C. App. at 422, 681 S.E.2d at 798–99; see also Baker v. Charlotte Motor
Speedway, Inc., 180 N.C. App. 296, 301, 636 S.E.2d 829, 833 (2006) (finding no abuse
of discretion when similar language was used). By contrast, the trial court abuses its
discretion when it only considers one option and even admits it did not consider lesser
sanctions. See Global Furniture, 165 N.C. App. at 234, 598 S.E.2d at 235 (finding
abuse of discretion on those facts).
¶ 110 Here, the trial court properly considered lesser sanctions. In a heading entitled
“Consideration of Lesser Sanctions,” the trial court made nine Findings of Fact
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recounting how it considered the arguments of Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg for lesser
sanctions and ultimately rejected them. Before laying out the fact-specific reasons
why lesser sanctions would not be effective here, including the past failures of lesser
sanctions to ensure compliance, the trial court said:
The Court, in its discretion, has considered all available
sanctions in light of Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg’s actions
described herein, including specifically whether sanctions
lesser than those requested in Mrs. Lindberg’s Motions
would be appropriate. The Court, in its discretion, finds
that the evidence before it shows that that [sic] lesser
sanctions would not be appropriate based on the conduct
and repeated discovery abuses of Dunhill and Mr.
Lindberg, nor would lesser sanctions achieve the desired
effect of correcting and/ or deterring the misconduct of
Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg described herein.
This paragraph alone is similar to the paragraph this Court previously found was
sufficient in Batlle. 198 N.C. App. at 421–22, 681 S.E.2d at 798–99.
¶ 111 In addition to sufficient analysis in the Findings of Fact alone, the trial court
included a similarly detailed analysis in its Conclusions of Law under the heading,
“Harsh Sanctions are Warranted Here.” After recounting the previous misconduct
by Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg as well as its discretionary authority to impose harsh
sanctions, the trial court indicated again that it had considered all sanctions and gave
its reasoning for why lesser sanctions were not enough:
162. The Court, in its discretion, has considered all
available sanctions in light of Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg’s
actions described herein, including specifically whether
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sanctions lesser than those requested in Mrs. Lindberg’s
Motions would be appropriate. The Court, in its discretion,
finds that the evidence before it shows that that [sic] lesser
sanctions would not be appropriate nor would they achieve
the desired effect of correcting and/ or deterring the
misconduct of Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg described herein.
163. The Court concludes that monetary sanctions are not
likely to have any beneficial effect on either Mr. Lindberg
or Dunhill in deterring either from furthering their efforts
to evade their discovery obligations or from future conduct
in clear violation of this Court’s discovery orders.
164. The Court likewise concludes that lesser discovery
sanctions such as requiring Dunhill or Mr. Lindberg to sit
for additional deposition sessions, or provide additional
discovery by a date certain, are not likely to have any
beneficial effect on either Mr. Lindberg or Dunhill in
deterring either from furthering their efforts to evade their
discovery obligations or from future conduct in clear
violation of this Court’s discovery orders.
165. In summary, Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg have made it
clear that they believe the litigation process is a game, one
where they make all the rules, regardless of what this
Court orders or the rules of discovery say to the contrary,
and, therefore, striking pleadings is the only appropriate
remedy to redress their misconduct.
Based on Batlle, Conclusion 162 alone was enough for us to conclude that the trial
court did not abuse its discretion. 198 N.C. App. at 421–22, 681 S.E.2d at 798–99.
Here, the trial court went above and beyond what was required, laying out in detail
its reasoning why lesser sanctions were not enough. Given this explanation, the trial
court did not abuse its discretion in its choice of sanction.
¶ 112 In their reply briefs, Appellants argue the caselaw requiring a court to consider
lesser sanctions misses the point of their argument. They explain their argument is
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that even if the trial court “had the authority to enter sanctions, the sanctions
imposed were excessive.” This argument seemingly relates back to Appellants’
arguments that (1) default judgment and taking a party’s allegations as established
are powerful and should only be used in the most extreme circumstances and (2)
North Carolina has a policy favoring deciding cases on the merits rather than
entering default judgment. Both of these arguments, while generally true and
persuasive, are not controlling here.
¶ 113 The first argument about default judgment only being used in the most
extreme circumstances is not persuasive in part because of the authority Appellants
use to support it. In making the argument, Appellants rely exclusively on federal
caselaw, rather than North Carolina precedents. Federal cases may be persuasive in
other areas of interpreting our Rules of Civil Procedure given some overlap in design.
See Harvey Fertilizer & Gas Co. v. Pitt County, 153 N.C. App. 81, 87, 568 S.E.2d 923,
927 (2002) (looking to federal court decisions for guidance because Rule 24 of the
North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure was “virtually identical” to the federal rule
before stating “we are not bound by the interpretation of any particular federal court
as to the interpretation of our own rules of civil procedure) (citing, inter alia, Turner
v. Duke University, 325 N.C. 152, 164, 381 S.E.2d 706, 713 (1989) for the first point
of looking to federal courts for guidance and State ex rel. Martin v. Preston, 325 N.C.
438, 449–50, 385 S.E.2d 473, 479 (1989) for the second point of not being bound by
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the federal courts).
¶ 114 On the issue of choice of sanctions, however, our precedents have explicitly
rejected the federal approach. See Hursey, 121 N.C. App. at 179, 464 S.E.2d at 507
(summarizing Fulton v. East Carolina Trucks, Inc., 88 N.C. App. 274, 275, 362 S.E.2d
868, 869 as “specifically rejecting plaintiff’s argument that North Carolina courts
should adhere to the rule adopted in the federal courts that dismissal with prejudice
is a last resort and is generally proper only where less drastic sanctions are
unavailable”). As this Court explained in Fulton:
Although the federal rule is laudable and best serves the
judicial preference in favor of deciding cases on the merits,
our courts have not adopted the federal rule. Indeed, this
court’s precedent all but expressly rejects the notion of
progressive sanctions. This court has upheld dismissals in
several cases when no previous less stringent sanction was
ordered.
88 N.C. App. at 275, 362 S.E.2d at 869 (collection of cases omitted). Thus, we reject
Appellants’ argument that we should follow federal caselaw indicating default
judgment should only be used in the most extreme case.
¶ 115 While Appellants rely upon North Carolina caselaw in arguing this state has
a policy favoring deciding cases on the merits rather than entering default judgment,
they misunderstand that precedent, which works hand-in-hand with the requirement
that courts consider lesser sanctions. By considering lesser sanctions, the trial court
is doing the very thing for which Appellants press, ensuring that this case is one
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where it should impose a harsh penalty in spite of the general policies disfavoring
default judgment and favoring trial on the merits. See Stone, 69 N.C. App. at 653–
54, 318 S.E.2d at 111 (highlighting the law disfavors default judgments so as to allow
as many cases as possible to reach trial on the merits); American Imports, Inc. v. G.E.
Emp. Western Region Federal Credit Union, 37 N.C. App. 121, 124, 245 S.E.2d 798,
800 (1978) (explaining the general purpose of the Rules of Civil Procedure is “to
encourage trial on the merits” (quotations and citation omitted)). Here, the trial court
did just that; as explained more fully above, the trial court recounted in detail why
harsh sanctions were necessary in this case, thereby showing why otherwise
disfavored sanctions such as default judgment and dismissal were warranted.
¶ 116 Finally, under the disconnect sub-heading, Dunhill argues the August 2019
Order “is especially problematic because it deemed certain facts ‘established’ even
though they are contrary to the record evidence,” particularly on the allegation that
Mr. Lindberg is the alter ego of Dunhill. As part of this argument, Dunhill took issue
with two facts the trial court ruled established: (1) “that Ms. Lindberg never
misappropriated funds from Dunhill and never took advantage of her position,” and
(2) “that Mr. Lindberg is the alter ego of Dunhill.” The problem with both these
arguments is that Dunhill provides no support for its claim that the trial court could
not deem certain facts established even though they were contrary to some evidence
in the record. Rule 37(b)(2) explicitly authorizes a trial court to make an order that
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“any other designated facts shall be taken to be established for the purposes of the
action” without any caveat that those facts must not be contradicted by at least some
of the evidence in the record. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b)(2)(a). Given the clear
statutory authorization of these sanctions, we do not accept Dunhill’s argument that
the trial court erred because some of the facts it established might conflict with some
evidence in the record.
¶ 117 Further, the mere presence of contrary evidence in the record is not surprising
because our courts exist to resolve disputes about, among other things, evidence.
Rule 37(b)(2)(a) allows certain facts to be designated as a sanction for disrupting
discovery, which is part of the process of resolving such disputes. See King v.
Koucouliotes, 108 N.C. App. 751, 755, 425 S.E.2d 462, 464 (1993) (“The recognized
primary purpose of discovery ‘is to facilitate the disclosure prior to trial of any
unprivileged information that is relevant and material to the lawsuit so as to permit
the narrowing and sharpening of the basic issues and facts that will require trial.’”
(quoting Bumgarner v. Reneau, 332 N.C. 624, 628, 422 S.E.2d 686, 688–89(1992))
(emphasis added)). Thus, parties can comply with discovery and resolve their
disputes through the regular mechanisms of our courts; but, if they fail to comply
with discovery and are thus subject to Rule 37(b)(2) sanctions, the court can resolve
those disputes for the parties by establishing certain facts against the party who
failed to follow the normal process. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 37(b)(2)(a)
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(providing that a court can designate certain facts as established as a discovery
sanction). As laid out above, the existence of and choice of discovery sanction fell to
the trial court because of Dunhill’s repeated, significant discovery violations. If
Dunhill wanted to argue that the facts in the record supported its contentions, it
should have complied with the discovery rules and court orders and thereby
participated in the normal methods of dispute resolution our courts offer. As with
the other arguments, we reject Dunhill’s argument that the trial court abused its
discretion by deeming certain facts established when there was some evidence to the
contrary in the record.
B. Internal Consistency of the Order
¶ 118 Appellants’ other joint argument is that the August 2019 Order “is internally
inconsistent.” Specifically, Appellants contend the Order is inconsistent because it
struck their pleadings, entered default judgment against them, and took facts alleged
by Ms. Lindberg as true but then still required them to sit for another deposition.
Appellants also each point to the trial court’s Finding of Fact that additional
deposition sessions are unlikely to deter them from evading discovery obligations.
¶ 119 “Inconsistent judgments are erroneous.” Graham v. Mid-State Oil Co., 79 N.C.
App. 716, 720, 340 S.E.2d 521, 524 (1986). As such a judgment cannot be supported
when it is “actually antagonistic, inconsistent, or contradictory as to material
matters.” Lackey v. Hamlet City Bd. Of Ed., 257 N.C. 78, 84, 125 S.E.2d 343, 347
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(1962). However, courts “endeavor to reconcile” such inconsistencies when it is
possible, i.e. when the material matters are not “really inconsistent with each other.”
Id., 257 N.C. at 84, 125 S.E.2d at 347–48. As such, reviewing courts should first try
to “harmonize” the “apparently conflicting” portions of a judgment. See Spencer v.
Spencer, 70 N.C. App. 159, 168, 319 S.E.2d 636, 644 (1984) (harmonizing apparently
conflicting findings of fact by determining they “clearly reflect[ed]” the trial court’s
conclusion when read in context). If the reviewing court cannot harmonize the
conflicting portions, those portions must be vacated and remanded for the trial court
to cure the inconsistency. See Lackey, 257 N.C. App. at 84, 125 S.E.2d at 348
(vacating and remanding judgment for inconsistent findings of fact and directing on
remand that the facts be corrected).
¶ 120 Here, we reject Appellants’ argument that ordering them to sit for new
depositions after the court found additional deposition sessions would not deter them
from evading discovery obligations was inconsistent because that Finding of Fact can
be harmonized with the rest of the judgment. Spencer, 70 N.C. App. at 168, 319
S.E.2d at 644. Finding 113 about the lack of benefit from additional deposition
sessions is part of the trial court’s section considering lesser sanctions. Thus, when
the trial court was saying additional depositions would not be helpful, it was
justifying its imposition of default judgment as to issues of liability. As a compliment
to only imposing default judgment as to liability, the trial court “reserved for trial”
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the damages issue as to both Appellants. The order of additional depositions
therefore applied to damages issues rather than liability. Further, given the purpose
of sanctions is to “prevent or eliminate dilatory tactics on the part of unscrupulous
attorneys or litigants,” Essex Group, Inc. v. Express Wire Services, Inc., 157 N.C. App.
360, 363, 578 S.E.2d 705, 707 (2003), the trial court’s goal in imposing harsh sanctions
here was to ensure that the depositions on damages do not include such tactics.
Therefore, any additional depositions are consistent as long as they are limited to the
issue of damages.
¶ 121 The additional deposition of Mr. Lindberg is appropriately limited to the issue
of damages. Paragraph 16 of the August 2019 Order requires Mr. Lindberg to sit for
another deposition and answer questions “that are relevant to any of her [Ms.
Lindberg’s] counterclaims or damages claims.” Beyond the damages claims, the
counterclaims also related to damages, specifically compensatory damages from
Dunhill and imposing a constructive trust over the tennis complex. While the
counterclaims also involve Ms. Lindberg’s allegation that Mr. Lindberg is an alter ego
of Dunhill, which would have been covered by the default judgment, we can
harmonize that portion of the order by reading the word “any” in relation to Ms.
Lindberg’s counterclaims to mean any counterclaims on the issue of damages. That
harmonization is similar to Spencer where this Court reconciled apparently
inconsistent findings by avoiding “unduly literal stress” on a word. 70 N.C. App. at
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168, 319 S.E.2d at 644. Therefore, we find no internal inconsistency as to the
additional deposition of Mr. Lindberg.
¶ 122 We find, however, internal inconsistency with the order for an additional
deposition for Dunhill. The August 2019 Order requires Dunhill to sit again for its
Rule 30(b)(6) “deposition and designate ten days in advance persons for all
previously-noticed topics who are prepared to testify as to all matters known and
reasonably available to[] Dunhill regarding each topic in the notice of deposition.”
(Emphasis in original.) The previously-noticed topics included issues relevant to
liability alone. For example, Topic 1, as summarized in the same August 2019 Order,
asked for “[t]he basis for any claims or allegations made by Dunhill against” Ms.
Lindberg in the lawsuit. Given that the August 2019 Order explicitly dismissed, with
prejudice, “[a]ll claims for relief asserted by Dunhill in this action,” not all previously-
noticed topics need to be covered at another deposition. We cannot reconcile this
inconsistency because the emphasis on “all” in the order makes it clear the trial
court’s intention to include topics unrelated to damages such as Topic 1. See Lackey,
257 N.C. at 84, 125 S.E.2d at 347–48 (directing courts to reconcile inconsistencies if
possible). Therefore, we vacate the paragraph ordering Dunhill to sit for another
deposition and remand for clarification that Dunhill’s new deposition only cover
damages.
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C. Order and Privileged Information
¶ 123 Turing to Mr. Lindberg’s individual arguments, he contends the August 2019
Order erred by ordering him to sit for another deposition and answer all questions
from Ms. Lindberg’s counsel without objection. Specifically, Mr. Lindberg argues this
language would require him to answer questions even on topics that should be
protected by privileges such as attorney-client privilege or the Fifth Amendment’s
privilege against self-incrimination.
¶ 124 The language of the Order requiring Mr. Lindberg to sit for another deposition
is as expansive as he claims. Specifically it erroneously requires him “to answer,
without objection, all questions posed by Mrs. Lindberg’s counsel that are relevant to
any of her counterclaims or damages claims.” As Mr. Lindberg correctly argues, this
order could require him to answer questions that are otherwise subject to at least
attorney-client privilege.10
¶ 125 A court cannot pre-determine that a person cannot claim attorney-client
privilege as doing so would amount to a forced waiver by the trial court rather than
the client. See Crosmun v. Trustees of Fayetteville Technical Community College, 266
10Mr. Lindberg also argues his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination might
apply, but Ms. Lindberg points out that the criminal charges Mr. Lindberg previously faced
resulted in his conviction in 2020. Because the possibility of a Fifth Amendment privilege is
not dispositive based on our analysis of attorney-client privilege, we do not analyze the Fifth
Amendment privilege issue.
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N.C. App. 424, 439–40, 832 S.E.2d 223, 236 (2019) (“Critically, it [the attorney-client
privilege] is the client’s alone to waive, for ‘[i]t is not the privilege of the court or any
third party.’”) (emphasis and second alteration in original) (quoting In re Miller, 357
N.C. 316, 338, 584 S.E.2d 722, 788 (2003)). Rather, once the privilege is asserted,
and only then, the trial court can step in and determine whether the attorney-client
privilege applies. See In re Miller, 357 N.C. at 336, 584 S.E.2d at 787 (noting “a trial
court is not required to rely solely on an attorney’s assertion that a particular
communication falls within the scope of the attorney-client privilege”). Thus, the trial
court erred to the extent its order bars Mr. Lindberg from asserting his attorney-
client privilege.
¶ 126 Ms. Lindberg highlights the trial court previously overruled many of Mr.
Lindberg’s attorney-client privilege objections from his first deposition in its August
2019 Order. Ms. Lindberg is correct in that the order separately bars Mr. Lindberg
from reasserting attorney-client privilege with respect to those documents, and Mr.
Lindberg does not challenge that paragraph. The trial court’s error was that it barred
Mr. Lindberg from asserting new attorney-client privilege objections. Therefore, we
vacate the paragraph ordering Mr. Lindberg to sit for a new deposition on damages
and answer all questions without objection. On remand, the trial court will clarify
that, in his deposition on damages, Mr. Lindberg can assert objections, including
privileges, that have not been previously overruled.
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D. Proper Notice
¶ 127 Mr. Lindberg’s final solo argument under the choice of sanctions issue heading
is that he “was not on proper notice.” Specifically, he contends that he only had notice
for sanctions as to his deposition conduct, not as to the document production issues.
He also argues that he was not on notice that the sanctions imposed may include
being precluded from introducing evidence or arguments or that default judgment
might be entered against him.
¶ 128 Taking Mr. Lindberg’s second argument first, he presents no authority for his
contention that the trial court can only impose the exact sanctions requested by the
other party. Both of the cases he cites involve situations where a party was
sanctioned for conduct for which it was not on notice. See Griffin v. Griffin, 348 N.C.
278, 280, 500 S.E.2d 437, 438–39 (1998) (finding party did not have proper notice
because he was put on notice he was subject to sanctions for one filing but was
actually sanctioned for a different filing); OSI Restaurant Partners, LLC v. Oscoda
Plastics, Inc., 266 N.C. App. 310, 315, 831 S.E.2d 386, 390 (2019) (finding party did
not have proper notice any sanctions would be imposed).
¶ 129 Mr. Lindberg had proper notice of the conduct for which sanctions were sought
and that these sanctions were under Rule 37(b)(2); there was no need for any specific
notice that he may be sanctioned by preclusion from introducing evidence and entry
of default judgment. First, OSI Restaurant Partners explains the notice required is
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“(1) of the fact that sanctions may be imposed, and (2) the alleged grounds for the
imposition of sanctions.” 266 N.C. App. at 315, 831 S.E.2d at 390 (quoting Megremis
v. Megremis, 179 N.C. App. 174, 179, 633 S.E.2d 117, 121 (2006)). Notably, OSI
Restaurant Partners says nothing about the choice of sanctions. Further, the
sanctions imposed were specifically authorized by Rule 37(b)(2), N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-
1, Rule 37(b)(2), and Ms. Lindberg’s supplemental motion for sanctions indicated she
was moving for sanctions pursuant to, inter alia, Rule 37(b). The supplemental
motion also explicitly requested “[t]hat the court enter any further relief it deems just
and proper pursuant to Rule 37(b) . . . .” Based on that language, Mr. Lindberg was
on notice that any Rule 37(b) sanction could be imposed. For all these reasons, we
reject Mr. Lindberg’s argument that he did not have proper notice of the type of
sanctions to be imposed.
¶ 130 Turning to his other argument, Mr. Lindberg contends he did not receive
proper notice that he could be sanctioned for the document production. As explained
above, a person subject to sanctions must have notice “(1) of the fact that sanctions
may be imposed, and (2) the alleged grounds for the imposition of sanctions” as a
matter of due process. OSI Restaurant Partners, 266 N.C. App. at 315, 831 S.E.2d at
390; Griffin, 348 N.C. at 280, 500 S.E.2d at 438 (linking this notice to Fourteenth
Amendment due process). “Our Court has held that a party sanctioned under Rule
37 ha[s] [constitutionally adequate] notice of sanctions where the moving party’s
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written discovery motion clearly indicate[s] the party [is] seeking sanctions under
Rule 37.” OSI Restaurant Partners, 266 N.C. App. at 315, 831 S.E.2d at 390
(alterations in original) (quoting Megremis, 179 N.C. App. at 179, 633 S.E.2d at 121).
¶ 131 Here, Mr. Lindberg received the notice required by due process via Ms.
Lindberg’s supplemental motion for sanctions against him. The written
supplemental motion for sanctions indicated Ms. Lindberg was moving for sanctions
under, inter alia, Rule 37(b), thereby satisfying OSI Restaurant Partners’s first
requirement of notice that sanctions may be imposed under Rule 37. Id.
The supplemental motion also satisfied the second requirement because it
indicated Mr. Lindberg could be subject to sanctions for the document production.
See id. (requiring notice of “the alleged grounds for the imposition of sanctions”). The
supplemental motion for sanctions specifically moved for entry of sanctions against
Mr. Lindberg and Dunhill “for their repeated and willful violations of the Court’s
prior discovery orders and the Rules of Civil Procedure.” In the corrected motion for
sanctions, which Ms. Lindberg specifically “incorporated by reference herein [in the
supplemental motion] as if fully restated,” Ms. Lindberg included four paragraphs
detailing how the 129,000 page document production by Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg
days before Dunhill’s deposition was part of the reasons she was moving for sanctions.
Further, the supplemental motion requested, among other sanctions, that “neither
Mr. Lindberg nor Dunhill” be allowed to use any of the documents in the 129,000 page
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document production. (Emphasis added.) Logically, a sanction barring Mr. Lindberg
from using documents in a certain production would be based on misconduct related
to that production. Given all this information in the supplemental motion for
sanctions against Mr. Lindberg, we determine Mr. Lindberg received proper notice
as to the conduct subject to sanctions. As a result, we reject Mr. Lindberg’s final
argument under the heading choice of sanctions as well.
VII. Forensic Examination
¶ 132 Finally, Appellants both incorporate the arguments made in their prior appeal
that challenged the “ordered forensic examination” on the basis that it “was an
inappropriate invasion of privacy.” As Appellants note and as we explained more
fully above, the ruling in the prior appeal directed us to consider the issues in that
appeal when we decided the sanctions issues in this appeal. Dunhill I at *12.
Therefore, we address the issue.
¶ 133 Before potentially reaching the merits of the discovery issues raised in the
prior appeal, we note the prior appeal carried mootness concerns. As the prior panel’s
opinion summarized, Ms. Lindberg filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, arguing “the
appeal is moot because she has filed a ‘Notice of Withdrawal of Forensic Search
Request’ with the trial court, removing the underlying motion to compel discovery.”
Dunhill I at *11. Ms. Lindberg also filed a document in the prior appeal arguing “that
the trial court’s imposition of a final sanctions order on 1 August 2019,” i.e. the
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sanctions order on appeal here, mooted the dispute over the forensic examination
discovery order. Dunhill I at *11. Based on these arguments and the concerns of the
prior panel,11 we examine mootness and ultimately conclude the forensic examination
issue is moot.
¶ 134 “A case is ‘moot’ when a determination is sought on a matter which, when
rendered, cannot have any practical effect on the existing controversy.” Roberts v.
Madison County Realtors Ass’n, Inc., 344 N.C. 394, 398–99, 474 S.E.2d 783, 787
(1996). Put another way, “[w]henever, during the course of litigation it develops that
the relief sought has been granted or that the questions originally in controversy
between the parties are no longer at issue, the case should be dismissed, for courts
will not entertain or proceed with a cause merely to determine abstract propositions
of law.” In re Peoples, 296 N.C. 109, 147, 250 S.E.2d 890, 912 (1978). In our state
courts, mootness is not a jurisdictional issue “but rather represents a form of judicial
restraint.” Id. Thus, unlike jurisdiction, “the issue of mootness is not determined
solely by examining facts in existence at the commencement of the action. If the
issues before a court or administrative body become moot at any time during the
course of the proceedings, the usual response should be to dismiss the action.” Id.,
11Even if this history of mootness concerns did not exist, we could have addressed the issue
ex mero motu. See State ex rel. Rhodes v. Gaskill, 325 N.C. 424, 426, 383 S.E.2d 923, 925
(1989) (dismissing appeal ex mero motu for mootness).
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296 N.C. at 148, 250 S.E.2d at 912; see also Comer v. Ammons, 135 N.C. App. 531,
536, 522 S.E.2d 77, 80 (1999) (“An appeal which presents a moot question should be
dismissed.”).
¶ 135 Applying the mootness doctrine here, the August 2019 Order mooted the
forensic examination issue because it granted all the relief sought via the forensic
examination. In re Peoples, 296 N.C. at 147, 250 S.E.2d at 912. To understand how
the August 2019 Order granted all the relief requested without actually granting a
forensic examination, we review the original reasoning behind the request, as limited
by the June 2018 Order, for a forensic examination.
¶ 136 Appellee sought the forensic examination for purposes of discovering
documents relevant to liability issues. First, the motion to compel discovery that led
to the forensic inspection order indicated the forensic examination would help prove
the spoliation claim as laid out in Ms. Lindberg’s Amended Counterclaims and Third-
Party Complaint:
Upon information and belief, Mr. Lindberg and Dunhill
have intentionally attempted to destroy evidence from
computers and electronic devices that is relevant to this
matter. The spoliation of evidence by Mr. Lindberg and
Dunhill was set out in the pleadings in this matter in Mrs.
Lindberg’s Amended Counterclaims and Third-Party
Complaint. For example, upon information and belief, Mr.
Lindberg and Dunhill destroyed emails and computer files
maintained by Mr. Lindberg’s companies soon after Mr.
Lindberg took out the Ex Parte Domestic Violence
Protective Order and restricted her access to email servers.
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Requests for Inspection 23 and 24 to Dunhill and Requests
for Inspection 23 and 24 to Greg Lindberg seek to inspect
the computers, drives and devices of Mr. Lindberg and
Dunhill, but they have refused to allow for this inspection.
Mrs. Lindberg respectfully requests that the Court order
such a forensic computer inspection.
¶ 137 Looking in turn at Ms. Lindberg’s Amended Counterclaims and Third-Party
Complaint, the spoliation claim related to the deletion of emails that corroborated
Ms. Lindberg’s claim that two pieces of real estate were gifted to her as her sole
property:
164. Mrs. Lindberg is informed and believes that Mr.
Lindberg has spoliated critical material evidence,
including many emails exchanged between them,
corroborating that he gifted both the Key West House and
tennis complex to her as her sole property. Specifically,
Mrs. Lindberg’s email account in 2017 was maintained on
a server controlled exclusively by Mr. Lindberg. Mr. and
Mrs. Lindberg exchanged numerous emails regarding the
acquisition of the Key West House as her birthday gift and
the gift of the tennis complex to her.
...
166. Mr. Lindberg deleted Mrs. Lindberg’s emails at some
time following his involuntary commitment of Mrs.
Lindberg in May or June, 2017. This purposeful deletion of
Plaintiffs emails constitutes spoliation of material evidence
which Mr. Lindberg has deleted to avoid confirmation that
the Key West House and the Tennis complex were gifted to
Mrs. Lindberg.
As part of her prayer for relief, Ms. Lindberg sought constructive trust over one of
those pieces of property, the tennis complex. While Ms. Lindberg’s pleading mentions
a Key West house, that property was not at issue in this lawsuit. Rather, as clarified
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at the June 2018 hearing on the motion to compel, the Key West house was, at least
at that time, part of a separate lawsuit in Florida.12 Because the June 2018 Order
limited the forensic examination to, inter alia, “[a] determination as to whether
emails or text messages dealing with real estate holdings subject to dispute in this
lawsuit exist or ever existed, and producing copies of the same for the parties,”
(emphasis added), the trial court implicitly denied the request as to the Key West
house, so we need not further examine that portion of the request. Based on the
motion to compel and its references to the pleadings, the forensic examination sought
to advance Ms. Lindberg’s spoliation argument and provide evidence to support her
claim the tennis complex was gifted to her and should be placed in a constructive
trust.
¶ 138 The purposes for the forensic examination advanced by Ms. Lindberg at the
hearing on the motion to compel are broadly similar. At the hearing, Ms. Lindberg’s
counsel repeatedly emphasized the forensic examination sought to uncover emails
that would support her spoliation claim and show the Florida house and the tennis
complex were gifts to her personally. Ms. Lindberg also raised two new purposes for
the forensic examination at the hearing. First, she said the emails she believed the
12An earlier version of Ms. Lindberg’s third-party complaint and counterclaim also sought
control of the Florida house, but that was not included in the amended version of that
document that we discuss above. See Dunhill I at *3 (summarizing the claims in the original
and amended third-party complaint and counterclaim pleadings).
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forensic examination would uncover would also prove the allegation “on the money
being her money.” This appears to relate to Ms. Lindberg’s denial of Dunhill’s claims
that she took funds from Dunhill, which was the animating claim in this suit. See
Dunhill I at *3 (Dunill claiming Ms. Lindberg took funds from it and Ms. Lindberg
“denying various allegations of Dunhill”).
¶ 139 The second new purpose for the forensic examination was that it would uncover
emails “specifically related to the yacht claim.” This purpose relates to Ms. Lindberg’s
claim for indemnity as to a deposit on a yacht vacation that Ms. Lindberg claims she
made on behalf of Mr. Lindberg.
¶ 140 With the exception of the Florida house, the June 2018 Order’s grant of the
forensic examination confined its scope to those purposes:
5. Dunhill Holdings LLC and Greg Lindberg shall make the
server or any electronic device housing, hosting, or storing
the outlook email account used by the parties available for
a forensic examination, but that inspection and
examination is limited to:
a. A determination as to whether emails or text
messages between Mr. Lindberg and Mrs. Lindberg
exist or ever existed, and producing copies of the
same for the parties;
b. A determination as to whether emails or text
messages dealing with real estate holdings subject
to dispute in this lawsuit exist or ever existed, and
producing copies of the same for the parties;
c. Whether any of those email or text messages, if
there were any, have been intentionally deleted and,
if deleted, the circumstances of any deletion and
whether or not they can be recovered.
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¶ 141 The first paragraph granting the forensic examination appears to encompass
all the listed purposes. The second paragraph relates to the tennis complex as the
real estate holding subject to dispute in this lawsuit. The final paragraph relates to
spoliation, i.e. “a party’s intentional destruction of evidence in its control before it is
made available to the adverse party . . . .” Holloway v. Tyson Foods, Inc., 193 N.C.
App. 542, 547, 668 S.E.2d 72, 75 (2008) (quoting Red Hill Hosiery Mill, Inc. v.
MagneTek, Inc., 138 N.C. App. 70, 78, 530 S.E.2d 321, 328 (2000)).
¶ 142 All these purposes, as defined by the June 2018 Order, related to issues of
liability between the parties. The money, tennis complex, and yacht purposes all
relate directly to proving claims or defenses made by the parties. Specifically, the
emails that would be uncovered by the forensic examination “would prove every
single allegation about these promises [Mr. Lindberg] made to [Ms. Lindberg]” on the
tennis complex and the money Dunhill claims Ms. Lindberg improperly took. The
lost emails could help prove the yacht claim according to Ms. Lindberg’s counsel.
Notably, all three of those claims featured a dispute on liability, i.e. whether promises
were made, etc., rather than the amount of money the claim would be worth. The
money issue was a defense against Dunhill’s claim Ms. Lindberg took its funds, so
Dunhill would know the amount.
¶ 143 As to the tennis complex, Ms. Lindberg seeks a constructive trust rather than
monetary damages. And as to the yacht claim, Ms. Lindberg seeks indemnity “for all
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amounts she is required to pay” if found liable for the yacht rental. Thus, none of
these claims feature a dispute as to damages. Ms. Lindberg either wins on liability
and keeps the money she received from Dunhill and receives a constructive trust and
indemnification, or she loses and does not.
¶ 144 Finally, the spoliation claim could only possibly relate to liability, not damages,
because “the spoliation of evidence principle is an evidentiary matter” that “can give
rise to an inference that the evidence destroyed would injure its (the party who
destroyed the evidence) case.” Holloway, 193 N.C. App. at 547, 668 S.E.2d at 75–76
(in the second part of the quote, quoting Red Hill Hosiery Mill, 138 N.C. App. at 78,
530 S.E.2d at 328). In other words, spoliation is not a claim that allows for recovery
of damages. Thus, the spoliation could only go to liability when the evidence allegedly
spoliated would prove Ms. Lindberg’s arguments on liability. Because the forensic
examination would only provide evidence relevant to questions of liability, it would
only have a practical effect on the controversy if liability were still at issue. Roberts,
344 N.C. at 398–99, 474 S.E.2d at 787.
¶ 145 The August 2019 sanctions order renders the forensic examination request and
order moot because it resolves all liability issues in favor of Ms. Lindberg.
Specifically, it dismisses with prejudice “[a]ll claims for relief asserted by Dunhill in
this action” and it enters judgment by default against both Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg,
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and in favor of Ms. Lindberg, “on the issue of liability for each of” Ms. Lindberg’s
claims in the action.
¶ 146 It also established as true all facts related to Dunhill’s claim against Ms.
Lindberg for improperly taking funds. Finally, the August 2019 Order specifically
bars Dunhill and Mr. Lindberg from opposing at trial the issue of liability in Ms.
Lindberg’s favor on her claims against them. Since the August 2019 Order has
already determined all issues on liability, the relief Ms. Lindberg sought via the
forensic examination has been granted, and the provisions regarding forensic
examination are moot. In re Peoples, 296 N.C. at 147, 250 S.E.2d at 912.
¶ 147 Appellants’ only response to Ms. Lindberg’s argument in the prior appeal that
the sanctions order mooted the forensic examination issue was that “the referenced
order has been appealed.” As explained above, we have now upheld the relevant parts
of the sanctions order, i.e. the parts on liability, against all of Appellants’ arguments,
so Appellants’ prior response has no persuasive force. The merits of the forensic
examination issue are not addressed and are dismissed as moot.
VIII. Conclusion
¶ 148 The trial court did not abuse its discretion in (1) sanctioning Appellants for
their document production behavior, (2) sanctioning Appellants for their deposition
misconduct, and (3) choosing sanctions, except as to two sanctions as described below
Those portions of the sanctions order are affirmed.
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¶ 149 We vacate the August 2019 Order’s sanctions in paragraphs 13 and 16 and
remand to the trial court to ensure any new depositions ordered in those paragraphs
are limited to the issue of damages only and do not bar a party from asserting
objections, particularly asserting attorney-client or other rights and privileges, not
previously ruled upon. Finally, because we affirm the sanctions deciding all issues of
liability in favor of Ms. Lindberg, we hold the provisions regarding forensic
examinations are moot.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Judges TYSON and ZACHARY concur.