Opinion
NOT FOR PUBLICATION
MEMORANDUM DECISION
ROBERT S. BARDWIL, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
On July 16, 2008, defendant Washington Mutual Bank filed a Motion to Compel Further Answers to Interrogatories, Set No. 1, as Docket Control No. HM-1 ("the WAMU Motion"). On August 5, 2008, plaintiffs Rafael Sanchez and Berthalisa Sanchez filed opposition, and on August 11, 2008, WAMU filed a reply.
Also on August 5, 2008, the plaintiffs filed Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Responses to Discovery and For Sanctions for Failure to Comply With Discovery Requests, as Docket Control No. WW-10 ("the plaintiffs' Motion"). WAMU did not file opposition, but instead, on August 14, 2008, filed a motion to reschedule, in essence seeking a continuance of the hearing on the plaintiffs' Motion (among other things). At a hearing held August 26, 2008, the court denied WAMU's motion to reschedule, to the extent it sought a continuance of the plaintiffs' Motion. Having determined that oral argument would not aid the court in rendering a decision on either the WAMU Motion or the plaintiffs' Motion, the court has taken both motions as submitted.
For the reasons set forth below, the court will deny both the WAMU Motion and the plaintiffs' Motion.
I. Standards for Meet and Confer Certification
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(a)(1), made applicable in bankruptcy adversary proceedings by Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7037, requires that a motion to compel discovery "include a certification that the movant has in good faith conferred or attempted to confer with the person or party failing to make . . . discovery in an effort to obtain it without court action."
The certification requirement was described in Shuffle Master v. Progressive Games, 170 F.R.D. 166 (D. Nev. 1996) as comprising two elements:
[T]wo components are necessary to constitute a facially valid motion to compel. First is the actual certification document. The certification must accurately and specifically convey to the court who, where, how, and when the respective parties attempted to personally resolve the discovery dispute. Second is the performance, which also has two elements. The moving party performs, according to the federal rule, by certifying that he or she has (1) in good faith (2) conferred or attempted to confer. Each of these two subcomponents must be manifested by the facts of a particular case in order for a certification to have efficacy and for the discovery motion to be considered.
Shuffle Master, 170 F.R.D. at 170 (emphasis in original).
The court went further: "[A] moving party must include more than a cursory recitation that counsel have been 'unable to resolve the matter.'" 170 F.R.D. at 171. Instead, counsel must set forth
essential facts sufficient to enable the court to pass a preliminary judgment on the adequacy and sincerity of the good faith conferment between the parties. That is, a certificate must include, inter alia, the names of the parties who conferred or attempted to confer, the manner by which they communicated, the dispute at issue, as well as the dates, times, and results of their discussions, if any.
Id.
"[G]ood faith cannot be shown merely through the perfunctory parroting of statutory language on the certificate to secure court intervention; rather [the rule] mandates a genuine attempt to resolve the discovery dispute through non-judicial means." Shuffle Master, 170 F.R.D. at 171.
The Shuffle Master court went on to hold that the rule requires "a personal or telephonic consultation during which the parties engage in meaningful negotiations or otherwise provide legal support for their position." 170 F.R.D. at 172. The court found that the series of facsimile letters transmitted in that case did not satisfy the requirement. Id.
These principles were adopted and applied in the bankruptcy context in Leimbach v. Lane (In re Lane), 302 B.R. 75, 78-79 (Bankr.D.Idaho 2003), in which the court concluded that the motion to compel in that case, supported only by a letter from the moving party's counsel to his opponent, "[did] not comply with the requirements of the Rule, or meet its policy and purpose." 302 B.R. at 79, citing Shuffle Master and Ross v. Citifinancial, Inc., 203 F.R.D. 239, 240 (S.D. Miss. 2001) ["the requirement of a [meet and confer] certificate cannot be satisfied by including with the motion copies of correspondence that discuss the discovery at issue. . . . The Court is unwilling to decipher letters between counsel to conclude that the requirement has been met."].
The court adopts the standards set forth in Shuffle Master, and as applied in this case, finds that neither WAMU's Motion nor the plaintiffs' Motion satisfies Rule 37(a)(1).
II. The WAMU Motion
The WAMU motion is supported by a declaration of David F. Anderson identifying as true and correct copies of a series of letters between Mr. Anderson, as counsel for WAMU, and Mark Wolff, as counsel for the plaintiffs. Copies of the letters are filed as exhibits. The WAMU Motion itself contains this perfunctory statement: "Meet and confer letters were thereafter exchanged. A final meet and confer option was given by [Mr. Anderson's] letter of June 13, 2008. No further response was received." WAMU Motion, ¶ 8.
As stated by the court in Shuffle Master, there must be an "actual certification document" that "accurately and specifically convey[s] to the court who, where, how, and when the respective parties attempted to personally resolve the discovery dispute." The court finds no such "actual certification document" in or in support of the WAMU Motion. There is nothing in Mr. Anderson's declaration or elsewhere that constitutes a certification that WAMU, as the moving party, in good faith conferred or attempted to confer with the plaintiffs in an effort to obtain the requested discovery without court action. The court will not wade through a lengthy series of letters in order to determine whether the parties in good faith attempted to resolve their differences. Because the WAMU Motion does not contain the necessary Rule 37(a)(1) certification, it will be denied.
III. The Plaintiffs' Motion
The plaintiffs' Motion contains what on its face appears to be an actual certification document, in the form of a declaration of Mark A. Wolff. Mr. Wolff testifies (1) that he has "in good faith conferred and attempted to confer with WAMU, . . . through its attorneys Lawrence W. Stevens and David Anderson," (2) that a particular exhibit is a true and correct copy of his letter to those gentlemen "confirming and memorializing [their] meet and confer session held January 29, 2008," (3) that another exhibit is a true and correct copy of a letter to Mr. Anderson, described as "the last in a series of correspondence and communications with WAMU and its attorneys in attempts to obtain discovery requested," and (4) that after the plaintiffs' earlier motion to compel, "Plaintiffs and WAMU met at a lengthy meet and confer session for the purpose of resolving the then pending discovery disputes."
The first of these statements is nothing more than the "perfunctory parroting of the statutory language." The second statement refers to a meet and confer session held on January 29, 2008, well in advance of the service of many of the discovery requests that are the subject of the plaintiffs' present Motion. The third statement merely refers the court to a series of otherwise unidentified "correspondence and communications." The fourth statement refers to a meet and confer session pertaining to a prior discovery motion.
These statements do not "accurately and specifically convey to the court who, where, how, and when the respective parties attempted to personally resolve the discovery dispute." Shuffle Master, 170 F.R.D. at 170. On the contrary, the declaration is entirely insufficient to "enable the court to pass a preliminary judgment on the adequacy and sincerity of the good faith conferment." Id. at 171. Thus, the plaintiffs' Motion does not contain a sufficient Rule 37(a)(1) certification, and it too will be denied.
The court notes that it has previously admonished the parties in this case that it takes the meet and confer requirement seriously. Although the decision on the present motions turns on the inadequacy of the information contained in the purported certifications, in the event a more detailed certification is provided in connection with a future motion, the court will look carefully to determine whether the "performance" aspect of the requirement has been satisfied. In other words, the court will look to the certification to determine whether the moving party in good faith engaged in meaningful negotiations in a genuine effort to resolve the discovery dispute. It will not suffice that the parties may have engaged in yet more letter-writing if it appears that the goal was to further harden the parties' respective positions rather than to resolve the issues without the need for court intervention.
In short, the court intends to put teeth into the meet and confer requirement, and will not countenance game-playing or hiding the ball. The court expects that a truly good faith meet-and-confer will resolve most of the issues that would otherwise give rise to a motion to compel. If the court finds that a party has failed to attempt in good faith to resolve its issues, that party may expect that sanctions will be imposed. On the other hand, if a party makes a good faith effort to obtain discovery, but without success, and if the court grants that party's motion to compel, the parties may expect that sanctions will be imposed against the party resisting the discovery.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that neither the WAMU Motion nor the plaintiffs' Motion contains the requisite Rule 37(a)(1) certification, and accordingly, both motions will be denied. The court will issue separate orders.
Finally, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(a)(5)(B), incorporated herein by Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 7037, the court considers whether to award costs to either party. Because the court will deny the motions of both parties, the court concludes that awards of attorney's fees would simply offset each other. Thus, no such awards will be made.