SAC 181 |
1 |
Admit 181 Gordon is sole real property asset (material times) |
“Vague/ambiguous” then denies but “admits” in 2025 only property is 181 Gordon |
Plaintiffs argue the phrase “sole real property asset” is ordinary English and SAC 181 proved it understood by immediately giving the exact information sought; objection is “pretextual” and hedge-building. |
SAC 181 |
2 |
Admit SAC authorized Meridian to act as agent for leasing/management/tenant relations |
Objects “compound,” “vague” then denies but admits management agreement exists |
Plaintiffs argue every management agreement creates agency; SAC’s hedge is “evasion wrapped in legal sophistry” to avoid admitting the relationship it created. |
SAC 181 |
3 |
Admit did not review or object to public advertising materials displaying Plaintiffs/property |
Objects “disjunctive,” “vague” (“public advertising materials,” “rental listing websites”) |
Plaintiffs argue the request is about common rental platforms and SAC either reviewed the listings or didn’t; if SAC claims it didn’t, it should say so cleanly under oath (or the matter should be deemed admitted). |
SAC 181 |
6 |
Admit showings occurred while Plaintiffs still occupied in July 2025 |
Objects to meaning of “showings” and “occupied,” then denies but admits tour on July 15 and Plaintiffs were tenants in July |
Plaintiffs treat this as classic “deny, but admit” hedging; the requested admission can be made cleanly based on SAC’s own partial admissions. |
Meridian |
1 |
Admit Meridian had operational responsibility over 181 Gordon during 2025 |
“Vague,” “legal conclusion,” “year not over,” directs to management agreement, denies |
Plaintiffs argue “operational responsibility” means day-to-day control (leasing/maintenance/tenant relations) and directing Plaintiffs to the management agreement while refusing to answer “proves” deliberate evasion. |
Meridian |
3 |
Admit Meridian/agents involved in causing or permitting images to be published without consent |
Objects “vague” and “legal conclusion,” then denies |
Plaintiffs argue publishing images is a factual act (uploading/activating syndication) distinct from whether it violated rights; objection improperly conflates conduct with liability. |
Meridian |
5 |
Admit filename MeridianScanner20250905161321.pdf encodes timestamp (scan time/date) |
Objects to “encoded” as vague |
Plaintiffs call this “absurd,” noting YYYYMMDDHHMMSS is a standard timestamp format and “encoded” means embedded/contained; objection is “performative ignorance.” |
Meridian |
6 |
Admit Meridian lacked written, signed consent for publication when listing/Matterport published |
Objects “legal conclusion,” denies |
Plaintiffs argue possession of a signed consent document is a binary factual question: either it exists in Meridian’s files or it doesn’t; legal effect is separate. |
Meridian |
8 |
Admit used AppFolio/ShowMojo or similar to “syndicate” listing to third-party sites |
Objects “syndicate” as vague; admits only uses “third-party websites” |
Plaintiffs argue “syndicate” is standard property-management usage and Meridian is avoiding naming platforms/software that would reveal distribution scope and records. |
Tara Bayles |
1 |
Admit possessed or had access to photos of Plaintiff/belongings during/after tenancy |
Objects “possessed/had access” as vague; denies |
Plaintiffs argue timeframe is explicitly stated and Tara sent the photos and created the scan file, so the “vague” objection is pretextual. |
Tara Bayles |
2 |
Admit sent/caused to be sent the email with attached PDF bearing “disputed postmark” |
Objects; asserts “never a postmark”; describes “E‑MAILED 8/28/2025” stamp; then denies |
Plaintiffs argue this is “a confession masquerading as an objection” because it admits key mechanics (stamp added, internal documentation) while still denying the send/causation question. |
Tara Bayles |
5 |
Admit deposit refund checks drawn on “SAC 181 OP” account and bore Meridian office address |
Admit |
Plaintiffs highlight this as the clean admission—and also highly significant—because it supports commingling/enterprise themes and shows other “vague” objections are selective and pretextual. |
Tara Bayles |
6 |
Admit communications with Adam re June/July 2025 listing/images |
Invokes marital privilege; denies |
Plaintiffs argue marital privilege does not shield business communications made in corporate capacity (CEO/PMIC + co-owner) and the objection is baseless. |
Adam Bayles |
1 |
Admit decision-making authority as principal/managing member for Meridian in 2025 |
Objects “decision-making authority” vague; admits authority to make “some decisions” |
Plaintiffs argue this is semantic hairsplitting; admitting authority to make decisions is effectively admitting decision-making authority. |
Adam Bayles |
2 |
Admit did not object to publication of images |
Denies; claims unaware; claims unable to admit/deny |
Plaintiffs argue the response is internally contradictory (deny + unaware + unable) and reflects evasion rather than confusion. |
Adam Bayles |
4 |
Admit personally benefited from management/rental proceeds of 181 Gordon |
Objects “personally benefited” vague; admits benefit from owning Meridian but claims can’t identify portion tied to 181 Gordon |
Plaintiffs argue Meridian’s accounting records should permit identifying management fee streams by property, so the “no way to identify” position is implausible. |
Adam Bayles |
5–6 |
Admit communications/directives re listing/images; admit no takedown directive before 9/21/2025 |
Invokes marital privilege; denies |
Plaintiffs argue these are business/operational issues and the marital privilege assertion mirrors Tara’s objection pattern. |