ORDER & REASONS
Before the Court is Plaintiff Richard Raiser’s Motion for Sanctions Based on the Spoliation of Evidence (Rec.Doe. 74). Having reviewed the parties’ briefs and the applicable law, and having heard oral argument on the motion, the Court now issues this Order & Reasons.
I. BACKGROUND
This case involves a claim made by Plaintiff Richard Raiser against Winn Dixie under the Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), 29 U.S.C. § 2601. According to Raiser’s complaint, filed on May 8, 2013, Raiser was hired by Winn Dixie in April 2011. (Rec. Docs. 1 at 2). Raiser claims that on April 30, 2012, he informed his supervisors that he needed to take a medical leave of absence because his treating orthopedic specialist recommended that he undergo a hip replacement surgery. (Rec. Doe. 1 at 2). Raiser claims that he followed the Winn Dixie leave policy and contacted the Human Resources department in order to obtain an FMLA leave package. Raiser claims that his “Leave of Absence Request form” satisfied the FMLA serious health condition requirement. (Rec. Doc. 1 at 3). According to Raiser, he provided his physician’s notice to Winn Dixie on May 7, 2012 and on May 8, 2012 he was terminated. (Rec. Doc. 1 at 3). Raiser alleges that Winn Dixie “knowingly, willfully, and recklessly violated the FMLA and its own company policy by terminating Raiser for attempting to take a personal medical leave of absence.” (Rec. Doc. 1 at 3).
Following the Court’s denial of Winn Dixie’s Motion for Summary Judgment, Winn Dixie filed an Answer to Raiser’s Complaint. (Rec.Doe. 46). Winn Dixie asserts a number of affirmative defenses. Winn Dixie contends that Raiser fails to state a claim under which relief can be granted and contends that the actions alleged are against corporate policy and upper management did not ratify those actions. (Rec. Doc. 46 at 5). Winn Dixie also contends that it would have taken the same action against Raiser absent a request for FMLA. (Rec. Doc. 46 at 5).
II. PRESENT MOTION
A brief recantation of facts is necessary for this motion. On April 30, 2012, Raiser emailed Karena Niblett, Raiser’s supervisor, and requested FMLA leave for necessary hip
On February 2, 2015, Raiser requested the Executive Summary in its native format, but Winn-Dixie responded that it was unable to produce the original Word document. (Rec. Doc. 74-9). During Darby’s deposition, however, Winn-Dixie represented that Darby was able to retrieve a copy of the Executive Summary as emailed to Darby from Niblett. Winn-Dixie forwarded Raiser’s counsel the email sent to Darby with the Executive Summary as an attachment, entitled “Executive Summary — RRalser(2).doc.” But as noted by Winn-Dixie’s counsel, this attachment is not the Executive Summary in its native format. Rather, the email included a copy of the Executive Summary and not the original document in its native format. (Rec.Doc. 74-10). Thus, from the copy, the parties were unable to ascertain when Niblett began drafting the Executive Summary. (Rec.Doc. 74-10). Winn-Dixie explained it could not produce the original Executive Summary because Niblett no longer had the computer she used in 2012. (Rec. Doc. 74-8 at 1).
In response, Raiser requested on February 17, 2015 that Winn-Dixie identify a corporate representative to respond to a 30(b)(6) deposition “about Winn-Dixie’s email system, data storage (drives) system, and document retention policies in late April and early May of 2012.” (Rec. Doc. 74-11 at 1). On March 16, 2015, Winn-Dixie’s counsel emailed Raiser’s counsel and stated:
Winn-Dixie’s IT team was able to find the [Executive Summary] file on the backup of Ms. Niblett’s N: drive. Attached below is a snapshot of the screen from the backup file, showing that the original creation date of the document was February 3, 2012. This is consistent with Ms. Niblett’s testimony that .to prepare Mr. Raiser’s Executive Summary, she modified an earlier-created Executive Summary that her boss, VP Joey Medina, provided her.
(Rec. Doc. 74-13 at 1).
Raiser took the corporate deposition of Gary Klingerman, Winn-Dixie’s Senior Director of IT Architecture, on May 13, 2015 and questioned him about the Executive Summary “screenshot.” (Rec.Doc. 74-11). Klingerman testified that the screen shot of “Executive Summary — RRalser(2)” shows that the document was created on February 3, 2012, was modified on April 30, 2012 at 11:20 p.m., and was last accessed on August 1, 2014 at 7:50 p.m. (Rec. Doc. 74-11 at 2). Klingerman further testified that he could forensically image the document and produce it to Raiser. (Rec. Doc. 74-11 at 4).
Raiser filed a motion to compel discovery, which was referred to Magistrate Judge Shushan, and sought (1) production of Winn-Dixie’s servers to permit the data imaging of Niblett and Darby’s network drives; (2) for Raiser’s digital forensic experts to perform the imaging; (3) payment by Winn-Dixie for fees incurred for the imaging; and (4) document production related to certain requests. (Rec. Doc. 69 at 1). Magistrate Judge
The third-party vendor delivered a zip file to Raiser on August 3, 2015 containing the servers’ images. Raiser’s digital forensic experts conducted a preliminary analysis and concluded that there was no evidence that “Executive Summary — RRalser(2)” file was created before April 30, 2012 at 11:31 p.m. (Rec. Doc. 74-17 at 1).
A. Raiser’s Spoliation Motion for Sanctions (Rec.Doc. 74)
Raiser now moves the Court to find that Winn-Dixie intentionally altered, destroyed, or failed to preserve the Executive Summary prepared by Niblett resulting in prejudice to Raiser’s claim and asks the Court to sanction Winn-Dixie “in the form of a finding of fact that [Winn-Dixie] never contemplated terminating Raiser prior to his request for leave under the Family Medical Leave Act.” (Rec. Doc. 74 at 1). Raiser argues that Winn-Dixie “has continuously attempted to discourage Raiser from exploring confirmation of its management’s testimony and accounts about the timing of Raiser’s termination through verification of the originating Word document and email exchanges of it.” (Rec. Doc. 74-3 at 13). Raiser highlights that the screenshot of “Executive Summary — RRal-ser(2).doc” purports to show a creation date of February 3, 2012, but the forensic experts concluded that the creation date was April 30, 2012, and Winn-Dixie offers no credible explanation for this discrepancy. (Rec. Doc. 74-1 at 13). Raiser contends that there are two possible explanations: (1) the “Executive Summary — RRalser(2)” was created on April 30, 2012, or (2) Winn-Dixie has failed to comply with the its own litigation hold and preserve evidence. (Rec. Doc. 74-1 at 13).
Raiser avers that “[o]nce a party reasonably anticipates litigation, it must suspend its routine document retention/destruction policy and put in place a ‘litigation hold’ to ensure the preservation of relevant documents.” (Rec. Doc. 74-3 at 14) (citing Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, LLC,
B. Winn-Dixie’s Opposition (Rec.Doc. 77)
Winn-Dixie opposes the motion. Winn-Dixie provides a summary of its document
Winn-Dixie avers there is no evidence that Ms. Niblett engaged in bad faith or destroyed any electronic documents. Rather, Winn-Dixie maintains that Niblett was under the impression that only the most recent version remained accessible to her on the N: drive, and Niblett thus produced the most recent version of “Executive Summary— RRalser(2).doc” to Winn-Dixie’s legal department. (Rec. Doc. 77 at 6). Even if Winn-Dixie negligently failed to preserve an electronic copy of that document, Winn-Dixie maintains there is an “insufficient basis” for the Court to conclude that Winn-Dixie engaged in intentional, bad-faith conduct. (Ree. Doc. 77 at 6).
If this Court finds Winn-Dixie acted in bad faith, Winn-Dixie argues that the evidence at issue would not support the inference Raiser seeks, that Winn-Dixie never contemplated discharging him before he requested FMLA leave. (Rec. Doc. 77 at 7). Winn-Dixie emphasizes that the missing electronic versions may have supported Winn-Dixie’s position that it contemplated Raiser’s termination pri- or to his FMLA leave request. (Rec. Doe. 77 at 7). Winn-Dixie thus argues that the “adverse inference plaintiff seeks [] is much broader than simply challenging when Ms. Niblett began preparing the Executive Summary.” Winn-Dixie argues this is further evidenced by the fact that after Magistrate Judge Shushan’s order, Winn-Dixie offered to stipulate, in exchange for not having to undertake the costly imaging project, that Winn-Dixie would not offer the timing of when Ms. Niblett began the Executive Summary as evidence of when the decision was made to discharge Raiser. (Rec. Doc. 77 at 8). Raiser rejected this offer, and Winn-Dixie argues that Raiser now seeks a broad finding that goes beyond what the evidence in question would show.
C. Raiser’s Reply (Rec.Doc, 81)
Raiser replies with leave of Court. Raiser argues that Winn-Dixie created the present issue of when Winn-Dixie resolved to terminate Ralser because Winn-Dixie admitted in its discovery responses, dated January 16, 2015, that Winn-Dixie reached this decision on April 30, 2012. (Rec. Doc. 81-1 at 1-2). Two weeks later, Raiser contends, Niblett and Darby contradicted this response and testified that they reached this decision prior to April 30, 2012. (Rec. Doc. 81-1 at 2). Raiser thus argues “[t]hat claimed testimony inspired the necessary investigation to trace the true genesis of the file, leading to repeated misrepresentations and obfuscations by Defendant----” (Rec. Doc. 81-1 at 2).
Raiser next argues that there is no evidence that Niblett complied with the discovery hold because Winn-Dixie fails to identify when Niblett handed over those documents. (Rec. Doc. 811 at 3). Rather, Raiser contends that Niblett handed over the documents in response to Winn-Dixie’s investigation of Raiser’s claim. (Rec. Doc. 81-1 at 2). Raiser further argues that Niblett made no effort to preserve her electronic records, as required by Winn-Dixie’s own policies. (Rec. Doe. 81-1 at 3).
Raiser argues that the evidence could have affirmatively proven the falsehood of the February 3, 2012 creation date and proven evidence tampering. (Rec. Doc. 81-2 at 6). Raiser also avers that Winn-Dixie’s proposed stipulation would not cure the prejudice ere-
III. LAW AND ANALYSIS
Since this case is before the Court pursuant to this court’s diversity jurisdiction, the Court applies federal evidentiary rules rather than state spoliation laws. Condrey v. SunTrust Bank of Georgia,
For the spoliation of evidence doctrine to apply, the movant must prove two elements: (1) that the party having control over the evidence had a duty to preserve the evidence at the time it was destroyed; and (2) that the destruction of evidence was intentional. Garnett v. Pugh,
Winn-Dixie concedes that it was aware that Raiser intended to pursue a wrongful termination suit no later than May 31, 2012 and instituted a litigation hold on that date. (Rec. Doc. 77 at 2). The Court thus finds that Winn-Dixie had a duty to preserve the document in question, so the thrust of the Court’s analysis will focus on whether this destruction occurred in bad faith, and the facts do not support such a finding. Niblett turned over all paper documents, and she forwarded an electronic version of the “Executive Summary — RRalser(2).doc” to the Winn-Dixie legal department. Such action would seemingly fulfill her duties under the litigation hold, and it was not obvious that she would need to preserve, or that she even had access to, prior versions of the document. Further, it was Winn-Dixie’s IT Department, and not Niblett, who was charged with implementing any change to the electronic document retention system.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, IT IS ORDERED that Plaintiff Raiser’s Spoliation Motion for Sanctions (Rec.Doe. 74) is hereby DENIED.
