- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 D.M., et al., Case No. 1:20-cv-00409-NONE-SAB 12 Plaintiffs, ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR SANCTIONS 13 v. (ECF Nos. 44, 45, 48, 49) 14 COUNTY OF MERCED, et al., 15 Defendants. 16 17 I. 18 INTRODUCTION 19 Currently before the Court is the Plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions. (ECF No. 45.)1 The 20 Court previously found this matter suitable for decision without oral argument pursuant to Local 21 Rule 230(g). Having considered the moving papers, the Defendants’ opposition, Plaintiffs’ 22 reply, the declarations and exhibits attached, as well as the Court’s file, the Court issues the 23 following order denying the Plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions. 24 / / / 25 / / / 26 / / / 27 1 All references to pagination of specific documents pertain to those as indicated on the upper right corners via the 1 II. 2 BACKGROUND 3 A. Factual Background and Allegations 4 This lawsuit arises from the death by suicide of Rene Snider (“Ms. Snider”) in the 5 Merced County Jail on March 23, 2019. (Joint Statement Mot. Compel (“JS”) at 5, ECF No. 6 40.)2 Ms. Snider, who had been out on bail for approximately two years while criminal charges 7 remained pending, entered the Merced County Jail after being found incompetent to stand trial 8 and remanded for restoration of competency. (Id.) Plaintiffs allege that Ms. Snider was at a 9 significantly increased risk of suicide, due to her mental illness, prior history of suicide attempts, 10 the abrupt cessation of her mental health medications, and the fact that the court itself found her 11 to be a danger to herself and others in its decision to remand her into custody. (Id.) Defendants 12 in this matter include Wellpath and California Forensic Medical Group, the third-party service 13 providers who provide mental and medical health care services at the Merced County Jail; the 14 County of Merced; and various employees and agents of each. (Id.) 15 Plaintiffs allege that Defendants knew, or recklessly disregarded, the fact that Ms. Snider 16 was at an increased risk of suicide and that Defendants did not adequately screen Ms. Snider for 17 being a suicide risk, even though she advised them of prior suicide attempts during an initial 18 screening. (Id.) Plaintiffs allege Defendants knew, or recklessly disregarded, the fact that Ms. 19 Snider had been found incompetent and ordered into custody specifically because of the risks her 20 mental health concerns posed; that Defendants knew Ms. Snider was taking mental health 21 medications, but withdrew those medications upon her admission to the facility; and additionally, 22 the Defendants failed to adequately monitor Ms. Snider once she was housed in the jail, thereby 23 violating their own policies on the frequency of cell checks. (Id. at 5-6.) Ms. Snider died on 24 March 23, 2019, her suicide having been discovered at approximately 6:00 p.m., after she had 25 hanged herself from a bed sheet tied to a bunk bed ladder. (JS at 6.) 26 The first amended complaint (“FAC”) alleges both state and federal claims related to Ms. 27 2 The Court utilizes the background information from the joint statement filed in relation to the underlying motion to compel, which the Court previously adjudicated ordering Defendants to produce documents, and which is the 1 Snider’s death in the custody of Defendants, both against the individual employees and officers, 2 and against the entity Defendants. (Id.) Plaintiffs are Ms. Snider’s minor children, and her 3 mother and father, who bring claims both on their own behalf and on behalf of her estate. (Id.) 4 Plaintiffs proffer the lawsuit involves substantial economic damages. (Id.) Specifically, 5 Ms. Snider, who was only 39 years old, was a member of the Pechanga Indian Tribe and 6 received substantial annual income through her membership in the tribe. (Id.) These payments, 7 which generally were between $200,000 and $300,000 per year, would have continued 8 throughout her life. (Id.) Plaintiffs additionally are seeking damages for pain, suffering, mental 9 distress, and the loss of both a daughter and a mother, as well as punitive damages. (Id.) 10 B. Relevant Procedural Background 11 Plaintiffs D.M., L.M., Denise Sawyer, and Doug Snider (“Plaintiffs”), filed this action on 12 March 19, 2020. A first amended complaint was filed on April 13, 2020. (ECF No. 11.) The 13 action proceeds against Defendants the County of Merced, Wellpath, LLC (“Wellpath”), 14 California Forensic Medical Group Inc. (“CFMG”), Amanpreet Atwal, Alicia Dunwoody, 15 Gianfranco Burdi, Keriann Quinn-Fitzpatrick, Dylan Fulcher, Shawn Autrey, and Adriana Kifan. 16 The scheduling order was issued on September 29, 2020, setting among other deadlines, a 17 nonexpert discovery deadline of September 21, 2020. (ECF No. 35.) 18 On July 30, 2021, the Court granted Plaintiffs’ motion to compel, and ordered 19 Defendants’ Wellpath and CFMG3 to further produce documents responsive to Plaintiffs’ 20 requests for production numbers 20 and 21, on or before August 13, 2021. (ECF No. 44 at 25- 21 26.) The Court also granted Plaintiffs’ request for sanctions in the form of attorneys’ fees. (Id. 22 at 26. ) 23 On August 18, 2021, Plaintiffs filed the motion for sanctions that is currently before the 24 Court. (ECF No. 45.) Plaintiffs seek sanctions for the alleged failure of Defendants to comply 25 with the Court’s July 30, 2021 order requiring Defendants to produce documents by August 13, 26 2021. (Id.) 27 3 The motion to compel only pertained, and this motion for sanctions only pertains to Defendants Wellpath and CFMG. Hereinafter the Court refers to Wellpath and CFMG generally as “Defendants” for purposes of this motion. 1 On August 30, 2021, the Court granted the parties’ stipulated request to amend the 2 scheduling order, and extended the discovery deadlines by approximately seven (7) months. 3 (ECF No. 47.) In the stipulated request, Plaintiffs’ counsel proffered that the parties were still 4 meeting and conferring on the document production that is the subject of this motion for 5 sanctions, and proffered that the volume of the production was one reason for the need to extend 6 the discovery deadlines. (ECF No. 46 at 3.) 7 On September 1, 2021, counsel for Defendants filed a declaration in opposition to the 8 motion for sanctions. (ECF No. 48.) On September 3, 2021, Plaintiffs filed a reply in support of 9 the motion for sanctions. (ECF No. 49.) On September 7, 2021, the Court vacated the hearing 10 on Plaintiff’s motion, finding the matter suitable for decision without oral argument pursuant to 11 Local Rule 230(g). (ECF No. 50.) 12 III. 13 LEGAL STANDARD 14 “The discovery process in theory should be cooperative and largely unsupervised by the 15 district court. But when required disclosures aren’t made or cooperation breaks down, Federal 16 Rule of Civil Procedure 37 allows a party to move for an order compelling disclosures or 17 discovery.” Sali v. Corona Reg’l Med. Ctr., 884 F.3d 1218, 1219 (9th Cir. 2018). “A party 18 seeking discovery may move for an order compelling an answer, designation, production, or 19 inspection” if: “(i) a deponent fails to answer a question asked under Rule 30 or 31; (ii) a 20 corporation or other entity fails to make a designation under Rule 30(b)(6) or 31(a)(4); (iii) a 21 party fails to answer an interrogatory submitted under Rule 33; or (iv) a party fails to produce 22 documents or fails to respond that inspection will be permitted -- or fails to permit inspection -- 23 as requested under Rule 34.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(3)(B). The party opposing the discovery 24 bears the burden of resisting disclosure. Bryant v. Armstrong, 285 F.R.D. 596, 600 (S.D. Cal. 25 2012). 26 If the motion is granted or the disclosure or requested discovery is provided after the 27 filing of the motion, the court must order the offending party “to pay the movant’s reasonable 1 the motion before attempting in good faith to obtain the disclosure or discovery without court 2 action; (ii) the opposing party’s nondisclosure, response, or objection was substantially justified; 3 or (iii) other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(A). 4 Rule 37(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that if a party fails to obey 5 an order to provide or permit discovery, the court may issue further just orders, which may 6 include: “(i) directing that the matters embraced in the order or other designated facts be taken as 7 established for purposes of the action, as the prevailing party claims; (ii) prohibiting the 8 disobedient party from supporting or opposing designated claims or defenses, or from 9 introducing designated matters in evidence; (iii) striking pleadings in whole or in part; (iv) 10 staying further proceedings until the order is obeyed; (v) dismissing the action or proceeding in 11 whole or in part; (vi) rendering a default judgment against the disobedient party; or (vii) treating 12 as contempt of court the failure to obey any order except an order to submit to a physical or 13 mental examination.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A). “Instead of or in addition to the [other 14 sanctions outlined in the Rule,] the court must order the disobedient party, the attorney advising 15 that party, or both to pay the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees, caused by the 16 failure, unless the failure was substantially justified or other circumstances make an award of 17 expenses unjust.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(C). 18 IV. 19 DISCUSSION 20 Plaintiffs submit that despite the Court’s July 30, 2021 order requiring Defendants to 21 produce documents responsive to request for production (“RFP”) No. 20 and RFP No. 21 on or 22 before August 13, 2021, Defendants failed to complete production by the deadline. (Mot. 4.) 23 A. Plaintiffs’ Moving Papers 24 Plaintiffs proffer that as of the date of the filing of the motion, August 18, 2021, 25 Defendants had produced four batches of documents, each represented to be part of a “rolling 26 production.” (Mot. 4.) When counsel conferred on August 12, 2021, Defendants had produced 27 three batches of discovery, and Defendants advised that at least two, and possibly three 1 of ESI already produced were related to RFP No. 20, and none of the ESI related to RFP No. 21. 2 Following correspondence by Plaintiffs’ counsel on August 17, 2021, Defendants advised 3 they would produce the final batch of documents on the morning of August 18, 2021. (Decl. 4 Christopher Lisieski Supp. Mot. Sanctions (“Lisieski Decl.”) ¶ 6, Ex. A, ECF Nos. 45-1, 45-2 at 5 1-5.) While a production was received on August 18, 2021, the correspondence associated with 6 that production again identified it as a “rolling production.” (Lisieski Decl. ¶ 7, Ex. B, ECF No. 7 45-2 at 6-8.) Plaintiffs state that Defendants’ lack of communication left it unclear whether or 8 how much production remained outstanding. (Mot. 4; Lisieski Decl. ¶ 7.) Plaintiffs proffer 9 Defendants failed to advise Plaintiffs they would not meet the deadline for production; did not 10 receive an extension of the deadline from the Court; and it appears Defendants simply ignored 11 the Court’s order. (Mot. 4.) 12 Plaintiffs submit that given the Defendants are large corporations represented by 13 sophisticated counsel, the standard evidentiary sanctions such as a stay of proceedings or an 14 order excluding evidence will only reward Defendants. Plaintiffs do not seek terminating 15 sanctions due to the preference of decisions on the merits, nor do they seek instruction sanctions, 16 as those would essentially equate to terminating sanctions. (Mot. 4-5.) 17 In addition to failing to produce, Plaintiffs argue it seems Defendants are now trying to 18 bury and overwhelm Plaintiffs with an excessively large document production. Prior to the 19 motion to compel, Defendants certified there were 23 documents responsive to RFP No. 20, and 20 2 documents responsive to RFP No. 21. Now, Defendants have produced approximately 60,000 21 documents, totaling 118,000 pages, it is unclear to Plaintiffs how many more documents are 22 coming, and Plaintiffs are left to assume the documents are responsive only to RFP No. 20, as 23 Plaintiffs have received no confirmation any document production has begun for RFP No. 21. 24 Plaintiffs argue the production demonstrates either: (1) Defendants were intentionally and 25 knowingly dishonest previously; or (2) Defendants are now producing exceedingly large 26 quantities of unresponsive documents. (Mot. 5.) Plaintiffs believe the truth lies in the middle, 27 and that the Defendants are trying to bury relevant documents in a mass of irrelevant documents. 1 violating Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 344. (Mot. 5-6.) Plaintiffs proffer they will meet and 2 confer with Defendants on these additional issues, but “none of this indicates Defendants are 3 proceeding in good faith.” (Mot. 6.) 4 Plaintiffs proffer the only appropriate remedy is additional monetary sanctions. (Mot. 5.) 5 Plaintiffs initially sought the imposition of contempt sanctions in the amount of $10,000 per day, 6 increasing by such amount each day, and imposed retroactively beginning on the first date of 7 non-compliance unless Defendants demonstrated substantial justification. However, Plaintiffs 8 have subsequently withdrawn the request in their reply brief. (Pls.’ Reply Supp. Mot. Sanctions 9 (“Reply”), ECF No. 49.) Plaintiffs move for: (1) attorneys’ fees related with the costs of 10 bringing the instant motion; and (2) sanctions for the time they will spend reviewing Defendants’ 11 production to ensure it complies with the Court’s order and Rule 34. (Mot. 12.) 12 Plaintiffs argue the previous potential intentional withholding, or current potential data 13 dump, are both unacceptable, citing Lexington Luminance LLC v. Feit Elec. Co., Inc., No. 18- 14 10513-PSG (KSx), 2020 WL 10052403, at *8 (C.D. Cal. July 8, 2020); Maki v. Bremerton Sch. 15 Dist., No. 19-cv-5901-RJB, 2020 WL 2494676, at *3 (W.D. Wash. May 14, 2020); Wilcox v. 16 Changala, No. CV-10-3048-RHW, 2012 WL 12844083, at *3 (E.D. Wash. Jan. 18, 2012). (Mot. 17 9.) Plaintiffs further argue data dumping and manner of production is not acceptable under Rule 18 34, citing Clientron Corp. v. Devon IT, Inc., 310 F.R.D. 262, 266 (E.D. Pa. 2015); Pass & 19 Seymour, Inc. v. Hubbell Inc., 255 F.R.D. 331, 334 (N.D.N.Y. 2008); Frontier-Kemper 20 Constructors, Inc. v. Elk Run Coal Co., Inc., 246 F.R.D. 522, 528 (S.D. W.Va. 2007). (Mot. 10.) 21 Plaintiffs submit that where a party has failed to adequately and timely respond to a document 22 production request, it is appropriate for a court to award monetary sanctions for time spent 23 reviewing documents to ensure they are in compliance with the Court’s order. See, e.g., DCD 24 Partners, LLC v. Transamerica Life Ins. Co., No. 2:15-cv-03238-CAS (GJSx), 2018 WL 25 6252450, at *2–3 (C.D. Cal. June 13, 2018); Green v. Baca, 225 F.R.D. 612, 615 (C.D. Cal. 26 2005) (deducting time spent reviewing discovery responses that had to be reviewed regardless as 27 4 The Rule provides that a “party must produce documents as they are kept in the usual course of business or must organize and label them to correspond to the categories in the request.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 34 (b)(2)(E)(i). 1 part of the discovery in the case). (Mot. 13.) 2 Plaintiffs submit that monetary sanctions are necessary given the extreme shift in scale of 3 document production, from Defendants representing there were only 25 responsive documents to 4 now representing that there are 60,000. 5 B. Defendants’ Declaration in Opposition 6 Counsel for Defendants (“Defense Counsel”) submitted a declaration in response to the 7 Plaintiffs’ motion, but no brief or memorandum of legal arguments and authorities. Defense 8 Counsel proffers that to comply with Plaintiffs’ time demands, the production was already 9 underway by the time the motion to compel was heard on July 28, 2021, and continued following 10 the Court’s July 30, 2021 order that allowed for 14 days to comply with the email document 11 production as to RFP Nos. 20 and 21. (Decl. Peter G. Bertling (“Bertling Decl.”) ¶ 2, ECF No. 12 48.) Defense Counsel states Plaintiffs and his office agreed to produce this documentation on a 13 rolling basis given the volume of production and the time constraints, which resulted in four 14 separate batches of production over the course of the two weeks allotted by the Court.5 (Id. at ¶ 15 3. ) The first three productions were made on August 4, 2021, August 5, 2021, and August 10, 16 2021. (Id.) 17 As to the volume and manner of production, Defense Counsel proffers the approximately 18 60,000 emails and attachments were produced as they were maintained in the Defendants’ email 19 system and were grouped by mailbox owners and custodians. (Id. at ¶ 4.) The documents were 20 not individually Bates-stamped given the desire to produce native documents as quickly as 21 possible, and Plaintiffs and Defendants have subsequently agreed to a method for reorganizing 22 the documents to be individually Bates-stamped on or before September 28, 2021. (Id.) 23 Defendants emphasize to the Court that the motion for sanctions is in reality only being 24 brought because the fourth batch was served two business days late, and while Defendants admit 25 this was outside the timeframe for production, the fourth production only consisted of thirteen 26 (13) documents out of the 60,000 total. (Id. at ¶ 5.) As to Plaintiffs’ claim that the production is 27 5 While phrased here as produced over the two weeks allotted, as stated immediately after in the declaration, the 1 too large and a data dump, Defense Counsel argues that Plaintiffs fail to take responsibility for 2 the overbreadth of the requests in the first instance, and had they issued more specifically 3 tailored requests, the production would not have been as large. (Id. at ¶ 6.) Defense Counsel 4 also submits that under no circumstances were the documents “dumped” to hide or otherwise 5 subterfuge the responding party’s production but were rather produced in the manner retained, 6 and if there are documents Plaintiffs deem more germane to their case than others, the 7 responding party did not attempt to sort them in that manner. (Id. at ¶ 7.) 8 Defense Counsel verified the production was complete on August 18, 2021, and in 9 conjunction with the re-labeling and reorganization scheduled for September 28, 2021, Plaintiffs 10 “would have been alerted to the documentation responsive to Request 20 and Request 21 11 separately[,] [h]owever, the Request 21 documents were produced in a consolidated manner as 12 originating from the mailbox of” one individual. (Id. at ¶ 8.) Defense Counsel argues that 13 Plaintiffs, at no time prior to the filing of their motion, met and conferred with Defense Counsel 14 regarding the production status, an additional request for sanctions, or anything related to the 15 production. (Id. at ¶ 9.) What Plaintiffs were advised of was, in the context of a discovery and 16 scheduling conference call, that one (or possibly two), more batches of documents would be 17 forthcoming. (Id.) At that time, Plaintiffs did not advise of this motion. (Id.) Finally, Defense 18 Counsel emphasizes that his office does not intentionally violate Court orders, “[s]imply put, we 19 did the best we could under extraordinary circumstances,” and since all discovery deadlines have 20 now been continued pursuant to the parties’ stipulation, there is no legitimate prejudice to any 21 party in the delay in producing the 13 emails. (Id. at ¶ 10.) 22 C. Plaintiffs’ Reply Briefing 23 Plaintiffs emphasize that Defendants do not dispute a failure to comply with the Court’s 24 order of production by a date certain, and do not dispute what was produced did not comply with 25 Rule 34. Plaintiffs argue Defendants did not even provide the most basic level of organization to 26 the produced files as they were not Bates-stamped, were not provided as kept in the normal 27 course of business, and were not labelled or organized in any way. Plaintiffs are unable to tell 1 wait until the end of September to discover.” (Reply 2.) 2 Plaintiffs argue that their admitted violation should not be taken lightly given the 3 sophistication of Defendants and their counsel, as they knew or should have known that if more 4 time was needed to comply, the proper procedure was to request an extension from the Court. 5 Plaintiffs state Defendants are not acting in good faith, should not be rewarded for slow-playing 6 production, and Defendants have now switch tactics producing 118,000 pages – thus either 7 Defendants’ certifications in June were not truthful, or they are simply trying a different tactic – 8 and the burden will ultimately fall on Plaintiffs to sort out the mess created by Defendants. 9 Plaintiffs implead the Court at least make Defendants bear the cost of Plaintiffs’ enforcement. 10 (Reply 2.) Specifically as to Defense Counsel’s declaration, Plaintiffs proffer this “sole 11 response” to the motion is from an attorney who has had no active role in this case to date and 12 has never communicated with Plaintiffs’ counsel about this case, seems to imply that because the 13 admitted failure was only a matter of days, it is excusable. (Suppl. Decl. Christopher A. Lisieski 14 Supp. Reply (“Lisieski Reply Decl.”) ¶ 2, ECF No. 49-1.) 15 Plaintiffs direct the Court to consider that in relation to the original motion to compel, 16 Defendants represented that the production in fact was going to be completed by July 30, 2021,6 17 and this previous representation was apparently also untrue, and nonetheless, the Court gave 18 Defendants an additional two weeks following the July 30, 2021 order to produce responsive 19 documents. 20 As for Defendants attempt to blame Plaintiffs for failing to advise them that the motion 21 for sanctions would be filed, Plaintiffs did not assume that Defendants would fail to comply with 22 the Court’s deadline; Defendants never advised Plaintiffs they were unable to comply; 23 Defendants never inquired whether Plaintiffs would oppose a request from Defendants to extend 24 the deadline; and had Defendants asked, Plaintiffs state they would not have opposed the request, 25 as Plaintiffs have yet to refuse any reasonable request for extension in this case. (Lisieski Reply 26 6 In the July 21, 2021 filing, Defendants had proffered that the only remaining search to be completed was that of custodial emails with agreed upon search terms that were received in final form on July 1, 2021. (ECF No. 40 at 27 16.) Defendants stated that they were diligently conducting such search among all possible custodians, and that the production would be given to Defendants’ counsel by July 28, 2021, and counsel would review and complete the 1 Decl. ¶ 3.) As for Defendants’ argument that Plaintiffs will suffer no prejudice because the 2 discovery deadlines have been extended by stipulation, Plaintiffs argue they did not stipulate to 3 modify the scheduling order because they wanted to delay this matter; they were forced to extend 4 the deadlines because of Defendants’ failure to comply with production request until a motion to 5 compel was granted. Further, Plaintiffs again emphasize that Defendants have still not complied 6 with the letter or spirit of Rule 34, and the data dump forced Plaintiffs to again meet and confer 7 and yet again give Defendants additional time to comply with their Rule 34 obligations. (Reply 8 4.) 9 Plaintiffs contend Defendants misstate Plaintiffs’ concern by asserting that Plaintiffs are 10 simply complaining the production is “too large.” Plaintiffs clarify they have no inherent 11 objection to the size of production, but are actually concerned about the change in size and scale 12 of the production, given the exponential growth between late June and early August. Plaintiffs 13 submit that either the previous certification was dishonest, or Defendants are now attempting to 14 bury relevant documents. (Reply 4-5.) Plaintiffs state Defendants attempt to blame Plaintiffs for 15 crafting the search terms, but Plaintiffs only crafted proposed search terms after Defendants told 16 Plaintiffs they could not craft them themselves. (Lisieski Reply Decl., Exs. A, B.) Plaintiffs 17 submit they tried discussing electronic search terms with Defendants numerous times over the 18 past several months and were met with silence – specifically, Plaintiffs asked numerous times to 19 identify what technology they use, how searches can be run on that technology, and how files are 20 stored, but Plaintiffs received no meaningful response. (Lisieski Reply Decl. ¶¶ 9, Ex. A-E.) 21 Plaintiffs proffer that Defendants even requested Plaintiffs provide a list of specific questions for 22 Defendants’’ IT department, which Plaintiffs did, which again went unanswered, and Plaintiffs 23 contend Defendants have not sought to facilitate e-discovery at any point. (Reply 5.) 24 Plaintiffs have withdrawn their request for contempt sanctions proffering that because 25 Defendants have complied, albeit tardily, the civil contempt sanction is meant be more 26 compliance-driven whereas now it would be more punitive, and would now sound more in 27 criminal contempt. (Reply 5-6.) While Plaintiffs withdraw their request for contempt sanctions, 1 with document production may result in evidentiary sanctions, up to and including judgment 2 being entered against them. (Reply 6.) Further, Plaintiffs still maintain their request for 3 monetary sanctions to compensate for the additional efforts Plaintiffs have expended and will 4 expend ensuring Defendants’’ compliance with the discovery rules – including costs of this 5 motion – and future costs ensuring compliance, including: (1) the time spent meeting-and 6 conferring on Defendants’ failure to Bates-stamp or organize the production; (2) the time spent 7 reviewing the actual production to determine whether the documents produced are responsive to 8 the Requests; and (3) the time spent preparing for and deposing witnesses about Defendants’ 9 document productions on RFP Nos. 20 and 21. Plaintiffs additionally request that the 10 depositions related to Defendants’ document productions not be counted toward the total number 11 of depositions Plaintiffs are permitted in this case. If granted, Plaintiffs will submit time records 12 via noticed motion, and clarify that this will not include time that Plaintiffs would have spent on 13 the case regardless of the Defendants’ actions, and will segregate their billing when submitted. 14 D. Plaintiffs’ Motion for Sanctions Shall be Denied 15 The Court finds the totality of the facts and records before it make the imposition of 16 further sanctions on Defendants to be unwarranted at this time and Plaintiffs’ motion shall be 17 denied. The Court further finds that the compensation of expenses, even limited to those for 18 bringing the instant motion, would be inappropriate as the Court finds any “failure was 19 substantially justified or other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 20 37(b)(2)(C). 21 The facts and findings that warrant this finding, as discussed in greater detail below, 22 include: that Defendants’ “rolling production” consisted of three separate batches provided prior 23 to the August 13, 2021 deadline, consisting of tens of thousands of pages of documents; that the 24 final fourth batch was provided on August 18, 2021, consisting of thirteen (13) total documents; 25 the course and tenor of the meet and confer that did occur consisted of adequate notice of the 26 status of the production from Defendants; there was a lack of sufficient directed meet and confer 27 regarding the final batch in relation to Plaintiffs’ intention to file a motion for sanctions, and a 1 unacceptable in that Plaintiffs would be filing prior to the filing of the motion; and a failure to 2 meet and confer to attempt to resolve the issues underlying the motion prior to filing. Further, 3 Plaintiffs have insufficiently demonstrated at this juncture and on this record, that an award of 4 future expenses for determining whether the electronic production complies with the substance 5 of the requests for production, particularly given the only clear failure of Defendants 6 demonstrated thus far is the late production of thirteen (13) documents, following a somewhat 7 vague notice from Defendants that such rolling production was forthcoming sometime after 8 conferring on August 12, 2021. 9 1. Insufficient Meet and Confer on the Subject of Motion for Sanctions 10 Although not dispositive to Plaintiffs’ issues raised in the motion, the Court finds 11 Plaintiffs did not adequately meet and confer prior to the filing of the instant motion and instead 12 attempted to utilize the Local Rule’s exception to a joint statement to propel into a motion for 13 sanctions when the production was in fact apparently completed by the time the motion for 14 sanctions was filed. While withdrawn in reply briefing, Plaintiffs’ request for contempt 15 sanctions appeared excessive in relation to the issues of compliance raised, and specifically the 16 fact that the August 18, 2021 production was in fact the final production, and only consisted of 17 the final thirteen (13) documents, produced two business days late. While Plaintiffs proffered 18 they were not completely aware of whether the final production was in fact final at the time of 19 filing due to Defendants’ continued reference to the term “rolling production,” such facts could 20 have been resolved through meeting and conferring on the issues that were raised in the motion 21 for sanctions, prior to filing. 22 Plaintiffs argue in reply briefing that as for the failure of Plaintiffs to advise Defendants 23 that the motion for sanctions would be filed, Plaintiffs argue they did not assume that Defendants 24 would fail to comply with the Court’s deadline; that Defendants never advised Plaintiffs they 25 were unable to comply; that Defendants never inquired whether Plaintiffs would oppose a 26 request from Defendants to extend the deadline; and that had Defendants asked, Plaintiffs would 27 not have opposed the request. (Lisieski Reply Decl. ¶ 3.) While Defendants did not specifically 1 of this motion did plaintiffs meet and confer with my office regarding the production status, an 2 additional request for sanctions or anything related to this production,” that “Plaintiffs were 3 advised in the context of a discovery and scheduling conference call that one (possibly two) 4 more batches of documents would be forthcoming,” and that “Plaintiffs did not advise of this 5 motion at that time.” (Bertling Decl. ¶ 9.) 6 a. Meet and Confer Requirements under the Local Rules 7 Plaintiffs initially filed this motion, proffering in a footnote that under Local Rule 251(e), 8 that because the only relief sought by the motion was sanctions, no Joint Statement was required. 9 (ECF No. 45 at 3 n.1.) Plaintiffs are correct that no Joint Statement is required – however, the 10 Court’s view of the Local Rules indicates that while the requirement for a Joint Statement may 11 be excused, the requirement to meet and confer specifically on the subject of the motion, may 12 not. 13 Plaintiffs’ motion was brought pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37. (ECF No. 14 45 at 3.) Local Rule 251(b) is entitled: “Requirement of Conferring.” L.R. 251(b) (emphasis 15 in original). The rule dictates that except as provided by the Local Rule’s express exceptions, 16 any motion brought pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 26 through 37, and 45, “shall not be heard unless 17 (1) the parties have conferred and attempted to resolve their differences, and (2) the parties have 18 set forth their differences and the bases therefor in a Joint Statement re Discovery Disagreement. 19 Counsel for all interested parties shall confer in advance of the filing of the motion or in advance 20 of the hearing of the motion in a good faith effort to resolve the differences that are the subject of 21 the motion.” L.R. 251(b) (emphasis added). The Local Rule then requires, if the moving party is 22 still dissatisfied after the conference, to draft a Joint Statement. L.R. 251(c). The exception for a 23 motion only seeking sanctions falls under the heading: “Exceptions from Required Joint 24 Statement re Discovery Disagreement.” L.R. 251(e) (emphasis in original). The section 25 contains no mention of the requirement to meet and confer. It states “[t]he foregoing 26 requirement for a Joint Statement re Discovery Disagreement shall not apply . . . when the only 27 relief sought by the motion is the imposition of sanctions,” and allows for the filing of the motion 1 Based on the text of the Local Rule, even though the motion only sought sanctions, the 2 parties were still required to meet and confer to resolve the differences that are the subject of this 3 motion. Acosta v. Gill, No. 117CV00262LJOSKO, 2018 WL 1806623, at *2 (E.D. Cal. Apr. 17, 4 2018) (“Plaintiff is not, however, absolved from Local Rule 251’s meet-and-confer requirement. 5 When there has been a complete and total failure to respond to a discovery request, as Plaintiff 6 indicates is the case here, Local Rule 251 excuses the aggrieved party only from submitting a 7 joint statement regarding the discovery disagreement; it does not excuse the aggrieved party 8 from meeting and conferring about the disagreement.”) (emphasis in original); Causey v. 9 Portfolio Acquisitions, LLC, No. 2:10-CV-2781-KJM-EFB, 2013 WL 5348101, at *3 (E.D. Cal. 10 Sept. 23, 2013) (stating Local Rule 251 exempts parties from filing a joint statement when the 11 only relief sought by the motion is the imposition of sanctions, but does not exempt the parties 12 from meeting and conferring); Elhouty v. Lincoln Benefit Life Co., No. 114CV00676LJOJLT, 13 2015 WL 13659308, at *2 n.2 (E.D. Cal. May 7, 2015) (“[T]he only relief Defendant sought was 14 the evidentiary sanction . . . [t]hus, the Court does not find that a joint statement was required . . 15 . [however] [t]he Court does find Defendant should have met and conferred with Plaintiff before 16 filing the motion . . . [h]owever, given Plaintiff failed to oppose the motion—which would have 17 been the proper vehicle for raising this objection—the Court finds Plaintiff has waived this 18 point.”), aff’d, 886 F.3d 752 (9th Cir. 2018); Martin v. Sysco Corp., No. 116CV00990DADSAB, 19 2017 WL 11493633, at *1 (E.D. Cal. Nov. 3, 2017) (The Court recognizes that Local Rule 20 251(e) provides for an exception to the required joint statement for motions to compel where 21 there has been a complete and total failure to respond to a discovery request or order. However, 22 here, the parties shall file a joint statement for both motions to compel . . . Pursuant to Rule 251 . 23 . . prior to having a discovery motion heard, the parties are required to meet and confer in an 24 attempt to resolve their differences.”); but see Nordyke v. Summit Receivables, No. 2:17-CV- 25 01705-WBS-AC, 2018 WL 558797, at *2 (E.D. Cal. Jan. 25, 2018) (“In light of this failure, 26 plaintiff is excused from the meet-and-confer and Joint Statement requirements that otherwise 27 apply to a motion to compel.”) (emphasis added); Brownfield v. Flowers Baking Co. of 1 2016) (“The court agrees with defendant that this matter is exempt from the Meet and Confer 2 and Joint Statement requirements of Local Rule 251.”) (emphasis added).7 3 b. Course and Tenor of Meet and Confer does not Justify Sanctions 4 It is likely that if Plaintiffs had expressly discussed the intention to file a motion to 5 compel at the August 12, 2021 discovery meeting when Defendants informed Plaintiffs that other 6 batches would be forthcoming, or if Plaintiffs expressed their position that a rolling production 7 as voluminous as this one at 60,000 documents was unacceptable even if largely began prior to 8 the August 13, 2021 deadline, and to be finished following the August 13, 2021 deadline with 9 the filing of 13 additional documents, Defendants would have obtained an express agreement 10 from Plaintiffs to extend the deadline, and/or filed a request or stipulated request with the Court 11 to extend the deadline along with the stipulation to continue the discovery deadlines. Plaintiffs 12 concede that a reasonable request would not have been opposed. While the Court does not deny 13 solely for a lack of meet and confer, the lack of notice during the discovery conferences that 14 were held, the lack of discussion of potential sanctions when Defendants did inform Plaintiffs 15 that further productions were forthcoming with no date certain discussed, and lack of specific 16 discussion of the forthcoming motion before or after the final production on August 18, 2021, the 17 date of the filing of the motion and final production, weighs in favor of the Court’s determination 18 that the requested sanctions and monetary reimbursement are not warranted. 19 While the communications prior to August 13, 2021 were concededly vague, the course 20 and tenor of the rolling production and communications reflect nearly an implied agreement, 21 through acquiescence or failure to discuss a potential motion for sanctions, to allow for the last 22 rolling production or productions to likely occur after the deadline. This is particularly true 23 given Plaintiffs’ contention that more than one batch was expected to be produced after the 24 August 12, 2021 communications. 25 One day prior to the deadline for production on August 12, 2021, the parties met and 26 conferred and Plaintiffs inquired about the status of the production and how many batches could 27 7 Plaintiffs are, at least in reply briefing, seeking that depositions relating to determining compliance with the discovery requests to not count toward the number of maximum depositions allowed. (Reply 6-7.) The Court notes 1 be expected. According to Plaintiffs, Defendants informed Plaintiffs that at least two, and 2 possibly three more batches would be forthcoming. Thus given Plaintiffs’ understanding of the 3 “rolling production” as described in the moving papers, it appears Plaintiffs understood that to 4 mean at least one of these batches would be provided after the deadline – but did not inform 5 Defendants at that time that if any of these rolling productions were in fact not produced until 6 after August 13, 2021, such rolling production would be unacceptable and that Plaintiffs would 7 then be filing a motion for sanctions, including contempt sanctions. (Mot. 4.) Plaintiffs’ counsel 8 did advise Defendants on August 17, 2021, that they would be filing a motion for sanctions 9 following the parties’ discussion on Thursday August 12, 2021, and following the expiration of 10 the deadline on August 13, 2021, and no further batches were received. (ECF No. 45-2 at 4.) 11 However, Plaintiffs did in fact then receive the final batch on August 18, 2021, prior to the filing 12 of the motion for sanctions. (Mot. 4.) Plaintiffs represented that as of the filing of the motion on 13 August 18, 2021, they were unaware whether the rolling production was still ongoing and 14 whether more batches were coming because of the identification of the final production as 15 “rolling,” however, Plaintiffs were advised on August 17, 2021, that the batch to be provided on 16 August 18, 2021, was the final batch. (Mot. 4.) 17 Specifically, in the email sent on the evening of August 17, 2021, Defendants’ counsel 18 expressly stated “[t]he last production batch is going out tomorrow.” (ECF No. 45-2 at 3.) 19 Defendants’ counsel’s email further stated “It is regrettable that you did not raise the issue of 20 moving for further judicial assistance when we spoke last Thursday. I plainly advised what the 21 situation was, and have been candid with you throughout this process and it is unfortunate you 22 have not done the same.” (Id.) Plaintiffs’ counsel responded that “[y]ou did not advise us on 23 Thursday that you would miss the Court’s deadline; you did not tell us when we would have the 24 productions; and you did not ask us if we would oppose you seeking an extension from the 25 Court. All you told us was that there would be two to three more batches coming. I assumed 26 you would comply with the Court’s order. We have been exceedingly patient with out – with 27 both sets of Defendants – throughout the course of this case out of professional courtesy, and 1 you need more time, and not wait until the deadline has passed.” (ECF No. 45-2 at 2-3.) 2 Defendants’ counsel responded that she disagreed with these representations and duty of 3 production as outlined by Plaintiffs’ counsel. (ECF No. 45-2 at 2.) 4 As for the organization or manner of production under Rule 34, Plaintiffs argue they bear 5 the costs of meeting and conferring regarding the organization, and again have to grant an 6 extension of time to comply with their Rule 34 obligations. (Reply 4.) It does not appear 7 Plaintiffs informed Defendants of their issues with the manner of production and compliance 8 with Rule 34, until after the motion was filed and final batch was received, as the moving papers 9 indicate that Plaintiffs would be meeting and conferring with the Defendants on such issues. 10 (Mot. 6.) Through meet and confer following the filing of the motion, Defendants agreed to 11 Bates-stamp the documents by September 28, 2021. Thus, it is not clear whether these issues 12 additionally could have been resolved or clarified without then need for including in the motion 13 if the Plaintiffs had sufficiently and specifically met and conferred on the subjects of the motion 14 prior to filing. 15 The Court does find it concerning that the Defendants previously represented to the Court 16 prior to adjudication of the motion to compel that the production of emails would be completed 17 by July 30, 2021. (ECF No. 40 at 16.) Defendants declare that “the production was already 18 underway by the time the motion to compel was heard on July 28, 2021, and that the parties 19 agreed to a rolling production given the volume and time constraints (Bertling Decl. ¶¶ 2-3). 20 Significantly, the rolling production of approximately 60,000 documents was began only three 21 business days after the Court’s order compelling production, with the first rolling production 22 occurring on August 4, 2021. (Bertling Decl. ¶ 4.) 23 Thus, for the reasons discussed above concerning the course of communication regarding 24 the rolling production, the lack of meet and confer on the subject of the motion for sanctions, and 25 substantial compliance shown on the current record, all weigh toward denying the motion for 26 sanctions, and denying an award of the payment of expenses for bring the motion, as any failure 27 was substantially justified or other circumstances make an award unjust. Fed. R. Civ. P. 1 2. Insufficient Record of Deficiencies in Electronic Production to Justify Sanctions at this Time 2 The Court now turns to a more specific discussion of the insufficient record concerning 3 the manner of electronic production here, as well as a review of the caselaw cited by Plaintiffs in 4 support of their motion. The cases cited by Plaintiffs in support of their arguments that there was 5 a data dump or violation of Fed. R. Civ. P. 34, or both, involved more extreme circumstances, 6 and comparably much greater fault by the responding party than demonstrated here. 7 Plaintiff cites Lexington for support that Defendants have either intentionally withheld 8 documents previously or are now performing a document dump. Therein, it was specifically 9 alleged that the responding party had “produced thousands of pages of non-responsive 10 documents, numerous documents that [were] unreadable, and [alleged] that the documents [had] 11 not been produced as kept in the ordinary course of business because the documents [were] 12 shuffled into no discernible order.” Lexington Luminance, 2020 WL 10052403, at *7 (“As 13 examples of the disorganized nature of the production, Lexington notes that ‘[m]arketing 14 materials are intermixed with emails, which are intermixed with unrelated spreadsheets, which 15 are, in turn mixed with unreadable junk files in .tmp formats.’ ”). The court ruled that “[o]n the 16 record presented here, there appears to be no organization of the Feit documents sufficient to 17 indicate how those documents were maintained in the ordinary course of business,” that “[o]n 18 that basis, Feit’s production [did] not comply with the requirements of Rule 34(b)(2)(E)(i),” and 19 ordered Feit to label its previous document production and any future productions to correspond 20 with the specific request to which the documents are responsive. Id. at *8. The Court further 21 ruled that “[t]o the extent Feit contends that the unreadable “.dat” and “.tmp” files are indeed 22 responsive to Lexington’s requests, Feit must re-produce those documents in a readable format 23 and identify to which document requests the documents are responsive.” Id. at *8. The Court 24 also awarded attorneys’ fees for the costs of bringing the motion, however, the responding party 25 was also compelled to complete its incomplete production, including to serve supplemental 26 responses to “all fifty” of the RFPs with clarified objections and statements of whether 27 documents were in fact withheld due to such objections, as well as to supplement requests for 1 interrogatories that were deficient. Id. at *12. 2 Plaintiffs cite Maki for support that Rule 34 was violated and that there was a document 3 dump. (Mot. 9.) In Maki, plaintiff demonstrated in moving to compel production in the first 4 instance, that at the time of filing the motion, following three extensions, the responses were 10 5 days overdue past the extended deadline; that when the responding party filed its opposition, the 6 responding party had still not completed its response though had partially produced various 7 emails; and the Court was “troubled by the apparently missing materials in BSD’s partial 8 production of email documents” as “Plaintiff indicate[d] that BSD’s allegedly partial production 9 of thousands of unorganized emails [was] non-responsive and [did] not even include emails from 10 April 2017 . . . [and Plaintiff alleged the production of] 10,000 pages of emails on the eve of this 11 motion is either not responsive at all or a blatant attempt to bury relevant evidence.’ ” Maki., 12 2020 WL 2494676, at *3. The court ultimately found that “[t]o the extent the[] thousands of 13 emails have no connection to GC and have not been organized or kept as they are in the usual 14 course of business, BSD’s response [was] inadequate,” and that the production should be tailored 15 to the requests, given this was not how they were kept in the normal course of business. Id. The 16 court granted the motion to compel, and granted leave to submit billing records for reasonable 17 attorneys’ fees, only for the costs of the motion to compel further and appropriate production. 18 2020 WL 2494676, at *5. 19 Plaintiffs cite Wilcox for the statement that “[r]esponding parties are not permitted to 20 mingle responsive documents with large numbers of unresponsive documents for the purpose of 21 overwhelming the opposing party.” Wilcox, 2012 WL 12844083, at *3. However, the Wilcox 22 court continued in the same paragraph stating “[w]hen, however, broad discovery requests lead 23 to relevant documents being mixed in with seemingly irrelevant documents, the fault lies just as 24 much with the party who made the request as with the party who produced documents in 25 response,” that the “requests for production simply mirror interrogatories that are exceedingly 26 broad,” and that there was “no quantitative evidence before the Court that the Plaintiffs [were] 27 obfuscating relevant discovery.” Wilcox, 2012 WL 12844083, at *3. Further, the Wilcox court 1 each request, are sufficient.” Id. 2 Plaintiffs cite Clientron for the proposition that a data dump is “not accepted in normal 3 discovery practice.” Clientron, 310 F.R.D. at 266. There, the responding party “admit[ted] that 4 it basically conducted a ‘data dump’ by making available to Clientron 93 boxes of irrelevant 5 documents, and did not at all detail the documents it produced into topics, categories, or other 6 subjects, which is not accepted in normal discovery practice by a party producing documents in 7 commercial litigation.” Id. The court further found that the responding party did “not 8 adequately detail, in its responses to [the] motion, any appropriate explanation for Clientron’s 9 demonstration that Devon IT’s discovery conduct, particularly of the chairman of its board of 10 directors, Dr. Bennett, was deficient.” Id. 11 Plaintiffs cite Pass & Seymour for the proposition that “[t]he provision authorizing 12 production in accordance with th[e] second option [ to produce as kept in normal course of 13 business] was born out of the disfavor shown by courts to the dumping of massive quantities of 14 documents, with no indexing or readily apparent organization, in response to a document request 15 from an adversary.” Pass & Seymour, 255 F.R.D. at 334 (“the underlying assumption [in 16 permitting the alternative of producing documents as they are maintained] was that production of 17 records as kept in the usual course of business ordinarily will make their significance pellucid. 18 That is the overarching purpose of the rule.”). The court also stated the “responding party clearly 19 controls the manner in which production will occur, and specifically which of the two prescribed 20 methods of production will be employed,” but the “party selecting the alternative method of 21 production bears the burden of demonstrating that the documents made available were in fact 22 produced consistent with that mandate . . . [and] must do more than merely represent to the court 23 and the requesting party that the documents have been produced as they are maintained.” Id. 24 (citations omitted). The court stated the responding party did not meet the burden because they 25 “only an attorney’s statement to the effect that the documents produced have been assembled as 26 they have been maintained in the usual course of the company's business, without further 27 elaboration,” and “[b]efore [the] motion was filed . . . provided literally no additional 1 were maintained, whether they came from a single source or file or from multiple points of 2 origin, the identity of the record custodians, and the manner in which they were organized. Id. 3 The court went on to conclude that while “[t]o its credit, since the filing of the motion P & S has 4 now identified, by Bates number ranges, the custodians of the respective records produced,” 5 :”n]o further information is provided, however, and many of the individuals identified are not 6 known to Hubbell [and] even with the addition of this information P & S has fallen far short of 7 satisfying its burden of demonstrating that the requirements of Rule 34(b)(2) have been met.” Id. 8 Here, the Defendants maintain that the documents were produced as kept in the normal 9 course of business, as separated by the email custodians, and most significant, whether or not 10 there was an actual violation of Rule 34, Defendants have already agreed to reorganize the 11 documents in some fashion and add Bates Stamps – something that Defendants may have agreed 12 to without the need for motion work if there had been sufficient meet and confer between the 13 parties. 14 The following excerpt from Pass and Seymour demonstrates the more extreme 15 circumstances of the responding party’s failure therein: 16 P & S protests that acceptance of Hubbell’s argument in essence effectively eliminates the option of producing documents as they 17 are ordinarily maintained despite the fact that this method is explicitly permitted by Rule 34(b). This not the case. I 18 fundamentally agree that a party responding to a document discovery request may, at its option, make production of the 19 documents as they are ordinarily maintained. The present controversy, while recognizing this alternative method, centers 20 upon what is meant by the portion of the rule permitting production of documents “as they are ordinarily maintained.” As 21 its plain language reflects, the rule contemplates that a party selecting this option disclose information to the requesting party 22 regarding how the documents are organized in the party’s ordinary course of business. 23 The facts of this case provide ample illustration of why plaintiff's 24 production does not comply with the requirement. As has previously been noted, the more than 400,000 documents produced 25 by P & S were placed in 220 unlabel[]ed files and produced in that format, initially without explanation. If P & S could sustain its 26 burden of showing that in fact the documents produced are maintained in that same fashion—that is, contained within the 27 same 220 unlabel[]ed folders—either digitally or in hard copy, then it clearly would have met the requirement of production of the 1 business. The court doubts, however, that this is the case, and P & S has not argued otherwise. P & S has therefore failed to fulfill its 2 obligation to produce the documents as they are maintained in the ordinary course of its business. 3 255 F.R.D. at 335 (“The production by P & S of 405,367 pages of documents devoid of any 4 index or table to help illuminate the organizational regime utilized by P & S falls short of 5 meeting the obligations imposed under Rule 34(b)(2).”). 6 Plaintiffs cite Frontier-Kemper, however, therein, the responding party “merely produced 7 a stack of documents to Elk Run.” Frontier-Kemper, 246 F.R.D. at 527. 8 In support of the argument that they should be compensated for time ensuring the 9 document production is in fact responsive to the Court’s order and Rule 34, Plaintiffs cite DCD 10 Partners. Therein, the court found the responding party had “discarded custodian files despite 11 the imposition of a litigation hold,” and the “production was still not compete for a variety of 12 reasons, principally including defendant's delay, obstruction, and mistakes.” DCD Partners, 13 2018 WL 6252450, at *1–2 (internal quotation marks omitted). 14 Plaintiffs cite Green v Baca, however, therein, the court found “plaintiff's efforts to 15 obtain discovery . . . were unduly complicated and extraordinarily delayed by the failure of the 16 County and/or its counsel to investigate promptly and effectively the records available, both in 17 hard-copy and computer-based formats, regarding such over-detentions.” Green v. Baca, 225 18 F.R.D. at 613. Specifically, the time frame extended “from August 26, 2003, the date of the first 19 hearing on plaintiff's motion to compel . . . through May 19, 2004,” during which time “the 20 Court and plaintiff's counsel were never specifically apprised of the availability of computer- 21 based records regarding over-detentions, despite extensive questioning by the Court and Court 22 orders that declarations be provided regarding the availability of such documents and the burden 23 associated with their production.” Id. Further, “[d]uring this prolonged period, [the] Court held 24 numerous hearings concerning plaintiff’s motion, i.e., on August 26, 2003, September 30, 2003, 25 October 2, 2003, October 20, 2003, February 18, 2004, June 30, 2004, and August 3, 2004, and 26 issued several additional minute orders related to this dispute, i.e., minute orders dated August 27 29, 2003, September 3, 2003, December 29, 2003, May 19, 2004, and May 28, 2004 [and] 1 [a]dditional proceedings regarding [the] discovery dispute were conducted before . . . [the] 2 District Judge.” Id. Despite the extensive amount of proceedings concerning the discovery 3 dispute, the Green court only “first became aware of the availability of highly-relevant, 4 computer-based records regarding over-detentions in reviewing documents produced for in 5 camera review, because four computer-generated documents were scattered among the 11,704 6 documents delivered to the Court.” Id. at 614. “The Court conclude[d] that the County’s failure 7 to provide relevant information and/or documents regarding over-detentions in response to 8 plaintiff’s discovery requests, and specifically to ascertain the existence of readily-accessible 9 computer-based information regarding over-detentions, for a period of months was not 10 ‘substantially justified’ and ‘necessitated the motion’ to compel and follow-up proceedings that 11 ultimately resulted in the identification and production of relevant, responsive documents” and 12 awarded reasonable attorneys’ fees for the extensive course of involvement during the prolonged 13 discovery dispute. Id. 14 At this stage, although there has been a dramatic increase in the amount of production 15 due to the fact that email searches have now been completed utilizing the agreed upon search 16 terms, as compared to the amount of documents that were certified as responsive prior to the 17 Court’s granting of the motion to compel, there has been an insufficient demonstration that 18 simply the volume of emails produced necessitates or allows for the Court to make a ruling that 19 time spent in the future to determine the responsiveness or adequacy with RFP Nos. 20 and 21 20 should be compensated by Defendants. See Wilcox, 2012 WL 12844083, at *3 (“When, 21 however, broad discovery requests lead to relevant documents being mixed in with seemingly 22 irrelevant documents, the fault lies just as much with the party who made the request as with the 23 party who produced documents in response.”). As noted in adjudicating the previous motion to 24 compel, Defendants’ counsel, on behalf of these and other Defendants not involved in the current 25 dispute, have apparently responded to hundreds of others requests for production without the 26 need for the Court to intervene. (ECF No. 44 at 14.) 27 As summarized above, the cases cited by Plaintiffs involved far more extreme 1 very least, a more developed record as to demonstrated deficiencies in the actual production. See 2 Lexington Luminance, 2020 WL 10052403, at *7; Maki., 2020 WL 2494676, at *3; Clientron, 3 310 F.R.D. at 266; Pass & Seymour, 255 F.R.D. at 334; Frontier-Kemper, 246 F.R.D. at 527; 4 DCD Partners, 2018 WL 6252450, at *1–2; Green v. Baca, 225 F.R.D. at 613. The Court has 5 already imposed monetary sanctions in the form of attorneys’ fees for Defendants’ actions 6 resulting in granting the motion to compel; Defendants have substantially complied with the 7 electronic production based on the record currently before the Court; and while voluminous 8 compared to the previous production, the previous production did not include documents 9 obtained through search of emails. Given the likelihood that email searches utilizing the search 10 terms agreed to by the parties and searched through the databases of these large companies 11 would result in a large production, the Court is unable to determine on the record before it that 12 the production is or may likely be unresponsive to the point that the Court can conclude that any 13 future expenses are warranted to be reimbursed. If after Plaintiffs complete a review and have a 14 reasonable belief that Defendants abused the discovery process in their production of emails as 15 produced subject to the search terms, the Court may entertain a further request from Plaintiff for 16 reasonable expenses or appropriate sanctions based on a demonstrable showing of discovery 17 violations or abuse.8 18 Further, whether or not there was in fact a violation of Rule 34 if the documents were not 19 produced as kept in the normal course of business, which the record on the motion is insufficient 20 to establish, the parties have apparently agreed to resolve such issues by September 28, 2021. 21 Again, the Rule 34 issues were apparently not discussed in meet and confer prior to the filing of 22 the motion. For now, if Defendants fail to sufficiently organize and Bates-Stamp the documents, 23 the issue may then be ripe for further Court intervention, following proper meet and confer and 24 an impasse between the parties. See Pass & Seymour, 255 F.R.D. at 334. 25 / / / 26 / / / 27 8 However, this would likely involve an in-person conference whereby the parties bring in the specific documents or provide the electronic documents and allow the Court to review with the parties to determine whether an abuse of 1 V. 2 ORDER 3 Based on the foregoing, Plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions (ECF No. 45) is DENIED. 4 5 IT IS SO ORDERED. FA. ee 6 | Dated: _ September 16, 2021 UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
Document Info
Docket Number: 1:20-cv-00409
Filed Date: 9/16/2021
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 6/19/2024