ORDER DENYING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION
This is a personal injury case involving an eight-year-old child who was allegedly severely burned while wearing a garment purchased at a Wal-Mart store. On December 4, 2000, the Court came to hear Plaintiffs’ Motion for Sanctions against Defendant WalMart Stores, Inc. (“Wal-Mart”). At that hearing, only one of several held in this ease over a period of several months, it became apparent that Wal-Mart’s approach to discovery throughout this case has been, at best, grossly inappropriate. Therefore, the Court ORDERED that: (1) Wal-Mart is deemed to be the manufacturer of the garment at issue in this case; (2) the jury will be instructed that it may infer bad faith from Wal-Mart’s repeated and protracted concealment of relevant documents and witnesses; (3) several recently disclosed witnesses are stricken; (4) Wal-Mart’s liability expert is
At the outset, the Court notes that this is not the first time Wal-Mart has engaged in patently duplicitous behavior before this Court. Within just the past two years, for example, the Court had before it a case in which a television set fell from a shelf in the video department of a Wal-Mart store and landed upon a customer’s head. The video department was operated by a lessee. WalMart had the unmitigated gall to inform this Court that it could not determine the identity of the lessee — a party who leased space within Wal-Mart’s very own store!
Unfortunately, nefarious conduct is all too common in lawsuits in which Wal-Mart is a party. See Wdlr-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Lynch,
Wal-Mart is an enormous company with an ubiquitous presence throughout the nation. However, simply because Wal-Mart is large does not mean that it can conduct itself in any manner that it pleases without there being consequences. There is a gross disparity in resources between Wal-Mart and little children who are forced to sue when they are injured by a Wal-Mart product. There is, of course, nothing that the Court can do about this, and the Court does not begrudge Wal-Mart’s size, which comes through success. However, when WalMart’s discovery abuses cause the playing field itself to become unlevel the Court must both promptly and adequately act.
Thus, the Court is left with two alternatives in situations like this: (1) To do nothing and allow abuses to go unchecked or (2) To pick up the pieces and try to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. Here, the Court has endeavored to accomplish the latter option. Wal-Mart has unabashedly abused the Plaintiff in this lawsuit. And now, having had its hand called, it whines. The sanctions imposed do no more than is needed to remedy the disadvantage at which Plaintiff has been placed. Defendant’s Motion for Reconsideration is emphatically DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
