Ludlow v. Flowers Foods, Inc. ( 2020 )


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  • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 DANIEL LUDLOW, et al., Case No.: 18-cv-01190-JLS-JLB 12 Plaintiffs, ORDER GRANTING IN PART 13 v. PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR PROTECTIVE ORDER 14 FLOWERS FOODS, INC., et al., 15 Defendants. 16 [ECF No. 169] 17 18 Before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion for Protective Order. (ECF No. 169.) 19 Plaintiffs request that the Court issue a protective order limiting the amount of discovery 20 Defendants may propound on the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) collective action opt- 21 in plaintiffs. Defendants oppose Plaintiffs’ motion and argue that the Court should allow 22 them to conduct individualized discovery from all the 115 opt-in plaintiffs. (ECF No. 170.) 23 For the reasons set forth below, the Court GRANTS in part Plaintiffs’ Motion for 24 Protective Order. 25 I. BACKGROUND 26 This case centers around Plaintiffs’ challenge to their employment classification and 27 allegation that Defendants willfully misclassified them and their distributor co-workers as 28 independent contractors rather than employees. (ECF No. 56 ¶ 1.) Plaintiffs’ first cause 1 of action alleges that their improper classification has deprived them of overtime 2 compensation to which they are entitled under the FLSA. (Id. ¶¶ 63–68.) Plaintiffs bring 3 this cause of action as a collective action on behalf of themselves and all similarly situated 4 individuals. (Id. ¶ 42.) As stated, the parties dispute whether the Court should permit 5 Defendants to conduct individualized discovery from all individuals who opt in to the 6 collective action, as opposed to representative discovery, and the appropriate breadth of 7 that discovery. 8 On November 1, 2019, counsel for the parties left a joint voicemail message 9 requesting the Court’s assistance with the instant discovery dispute. (ECF No. 145.) On 10 November 15, 2019, the Court held a telephonic, counsel-only Discovery Conference with 11 counsel for the parties. (ECF No. 148.) During the Conference, the Court questioned 12 whether it was procedurally appropriate for Defendants to propound party discovery (as 13 opposed to third-party discovery) on the opt-in plaintiffs or depose them when the District 14 Judge had not yet conditionally certified the FLSA class.1 The Court directed the parties 15 to submit a supplemental joint discovery statement on the issue. (Id.) Additionally, the 16 Court cautioned Defendants that many of their discovery requests were overbroad and 17 urged Defendants to narrow them. The Court further directed Defendants to explain in the 18 supplemental statement the anticipated value of the 36 requests for production (“RFPs”) 19 and 16 interrogatories propounded to each of the 115 opt-in plaintiffs. 20 21 22 1 The Honorable Janis L. Sammartino denied Plaintiffs’ Motion for Conditional 23 Certification of the FLSA collective action as moot on March 22, 2019, after Plaintiffs filed an Amended Complaint that added a second named plaintiff and an additional cause of 24 action. (ECF No. 64.) Between June 26, 2019 and November 5, 2019, 111 additional 25 individuals submitted FLSA consent forms, bringing the size of the opt-in class to 115. (ECF Nos. 86; 96; 97; 114; 125; 146.) Plaintiffs filed a Motion for Class Certification on 26 June 28, 2019, but the motion was only as to class certification under Federal Rule of Civil 27 Procedure 23. (ECF No. 90.) Judge Sammartino denied Plaintiff’s Motion for Class Certification as moot on February 18, 2020, after granting Defendants’ Motion to Stay. 28 1 On December 11, 2019, the Court held a continued, telephonic, counsel-only 2 Discovery Conference. (ECF No. 161.) While continuing to express concern as to the 3 procedural propriety of Defendants propounding party discovery to the opt-in plaintiffs 4 before conditional certification, the Court also reiterated its concern that Defendants had 5 continued to request all of their discovery as initially drafted without narrowing any of their 6 requests or explaining in detail what their requests were meant to achieve. The Court 7 determined that the issues could not be resolved through an informal discovery process and 8 set a deadline for Plaintiffs to formally brief the issue in a motion for protective order. The 9 Court advised Defendants that it would not allow the scope of discovery as requested and 10 once again encouraged Defendants to narrow and limit their requests. The Court cautioned 11 Defendants that if they stood by their requests as drafted and made no effort to refine them, 12 the Court would not be inclined to rewrite any requests in the event Plaintiffs’ objections 13 were sustained. 14 On December 30, 2019, counsel for the parties left a joint voicemail message 15 requesting a two-week extension of all dates in the Briefing Schedule for Plaintiffs’ Motion 16 for Protective Order to allow the parties additional time to meet and confer regarding the 17 scope of Defendants’ discovery requests. (See ECF No. 165.) After the Court granted the 18 parties’ request (ECF No. 165), Plaintiffs filed the instant Motion for Protective Order on 19 January 14, 2020. (ECF No. 169.) Defendants filed an opposition (ECF No. 170) and an 20 amended opposition (ECF No. 171) on January 22, 2020. Plaintiffs filed a reply on January 21 27, 2020. 22 On February 18, 2020, Judge Sammartino granted Defendants’ Motion to Stay 23 pending the California Supreme Court’s determination of whether the “ABC” test as 24 announced in Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court, 4 Cal. 5th 903 (2018), 25 applies retroactively. (ECF No. 174.) Although this case is currently stayed, the Court 26 finds resolving the instant discovery dispute now to be appropriate, for whether the ABC 27 test applies retroactively does not impact this dispute. 28 /// 1 II. LEGAL STANDARD 2 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26 provides that parties: 3 may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to 4 any party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case, considering the importance of the issues at stake in the action, the amount in 5 controversy, the parties’ relative access to the information, the parties’ 6 resources, the importance of the discovery in resolving the issues, and whether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit. 7 8 Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). The December 2015 amendment to Rule 26 reinforced the 9 proportionality factors for defining the scope of discovery and, thus, under Rule 26, 10 relevancy alone is not sufficient to obtain discovery. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) advisory 11 committee’s note to 2015 amendment. Discovery must also be proportional to the needs 12 of the case. Doherty v. Comenity Capital Bank, No. 16cv1321-H-BGS, 2017 WL 1885677, 13 at *2 (S.D. Cal. May 9, 2017) (citing Mora v. Zeta Interactive Corp., No. 1:16-cv-00198- 14 DAD-SAB, 2017 WL 1187710, at *3 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 10, 2017)). Rule 26 requires that 15 courts “limit the frequency or extent of discovery otherwise allowed by these rules or by 16 local rule if it determines that . . . the proposed discovery is outside the scope permitted by 17 Rule 26(b)(1).” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(iii). 18 The relevance standard is commonly recognized as one that is necessarily broad in 19 scope in order “to encompass any matter that bears on, or that reasonably could lead to 20 other matter that could bear on, any issue that is or may be in the case.” Doherty, 2017 21 WL 1885677, at *2 (quoting Oppenheimer Fund, Inc. v. Sanders, 437 U.S. 340, 351 22 (1978)). Regardless of its broad nature, however, relevancy is not without “ultimate and 23 necessary boundaries.” Id. (quoting Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 501 (1947)). 24 Accordingly, district courts have broad discretion to determine relevancy for discovery 25 purposes. Id. (citing Hallett v. Morgan, 296 F.3d 732, 751 (9th Cir. 2002)). 26 Because “pretrial discovery by depositions and interrogatories has a significant 27 potential for abuse,” Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, 467 U.S. 20, 36 (1984), district courts 28 “may, for good cause, issue an order to protect a party or person from annoyance, 1 embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1). “Rule 2 26(c) confers broad discretion on the trial court to decide when a protective order is 3 appropriate and what degree of protection is required.” Robinson v. Chefs’ Warehouse, 4 No. 3:15-cv-05421-RS (KAW), 2017 WL 836944, at *1 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 3, 2017) (citing 5 Seattle Times Co., 467 U.S. at 36). District courts may, among other things, forbid 6 discovery, specify the terms for discovery, forbid inquiry into certain matters, or limit the 7 scope of discovery to certain matters. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1)(A), (B), and (D). “The 8 burden is upon the party seeking the [protective] order to ‘show good cause’ by 9 demonstrating harm or prejudice that will result from the discovery.” Rivera v. Nibco, Inc., 10 364 F.3d 1057, 1063 (9th Cir. 2004) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)). This burden may be 11 met by showing that the discovery requested “is irrelevant, overly broad, burdensome, or 12 oppressive.” Del Socorro Quintero Perez v. United States, No. 13cv1417-WQH-BGS, 13 2016 WL 705904, at *6 (S.D. Cal. Feb. 23, 2016). 14 III. DISCUSSION 15 A. Parties’ Arguments 16 1. Plaintiffs’ Arguments 17 Plaintiffs argue that the Court should grant their request for a protective order to save 18 them from the oppression, burden, and expense of responding to nearly 6,000 written 19 discovery requests and defending 115 depositions, which Plaintiffs estimate would take 20 anywhere from 13 to 18 months to complete. (ECF No. 169-1 at 2–3.) In addition to the 21 burden imposed simply by the volume of discovery Defendants seek, Plaintiffs argue that 22 a protective order is necessary because Defendants’ proposed discovery ignores the 23 efficiency aims of collective actions under the FLSA. (Id. at 5.) Plaintiffs contend that 24 “[m]any courts correctly recognize the tie between the FLSA’s purpose and discovery 25 permitted in collective actions,” often “limit[ing] defendants to a sampling of opt-in 26 discovery rather than full[-]scale[,] individualized discovery.” (Id.) 27 Plaintiffs further argue that Defendants already possess “over 20 distributor 28 declarations” that they used to oppose Plaintiffs’ Motion for Conditional Certification, and 1 Defendants filed 68 distributor declarations or deposition excerpts in support of Plaintiff’s 2 Rule 23 Motion for Class Certification. (Id. at 8.) Plaintiffs contend that, “[g]iven 3 [Defendants’] ability to obtain distributor testimony and the vast amount of distributor 4 testimony obtained to date going to analogous class certification issues, it is unclear why 5 [Defendants] need[] 115 more depositions to file a single motion for decertification.” (Id.) 6 Finally, Plaintiffs argue that Defendants’ discovery requests are overbroad and many 7 “seek[] to delve into Rule 23 state law claims unrelated to FLSA claims,” but class 8 discovery closed in May 2019. (Id. at 9; ECF No. 173 at 3–4.) Plaintiffs specifically object 9 to RFP Nos. 23, 24, 26–30 and Interrogatory Nos. 4–7 on the basis that they are irrelevant 10 to the FLSA overtime claim. (ECF No. 169-1 at 10.) Plaintiffs object to certain requests 11 on several grounds: (1) they call for information known and available to Defendants (RFP 12 Nos. 1, 15; Interrogatory No. 1); (2) they seek tax return information (RFP Nos. 12–16; 13 Interrogatory No. 3); and (3) they seek legal conclusions and/or premature disclosure of 14 expert testimony (RFP Nos. 20–31; Interrogatory Nos. 4–7, 14). (Id. at 10–11.) 15 Plaintiffs provide that they are, however, “amendable to a reasonable sampling of 16 opt-in discovery and/or allowing some limited, written discovery to each opt-in plaintiff 17 distilled down to the core information” Defendants need, and only relating to the FLSA 18 claim. (Id. at 7.) Plaintiffs propose that the Court limit opt-in discovery to a sampling of 19 about 15 of the 115 opt-in plaintiffs, with written discovery further limited to 5 RFPs and 20 5 interrogatories. (Id. at 11.) 21 2. Defendants’ Arguments 22 In their opposition, Defendants first argue that they are entitled to individualized 23 discovery from all the opt-in plaintiffs because the opt-in plaintiffs have party status, and 24 therefore, “should be subject to discovery accordingly.” (See ECF No. 171 at 5.) 25 Defendants contend that district courts in California routinely permit individualized 26 discovery from opt-in plaintiffs, citing first to Coldiron v. Pizza Hut, Inc., No. CV03– 27 05865TJHMCX, 2004 WL 2601180 (C.D. Cal. Oct. 25, 2004). (Id.) Defendants explain 28 that the court in Coldiron permitted individualized discovery from the 306 opt-in plaintiffs 1 because the defendants intended to move to decertify the conditionally-certified FLSA 2 class. (Id.) Defendants then cite to Abubakar v. City of Solano, No. CIV S-06-2268 LKK 3 EFB, 2008 WL 508911 (E.D. Cal. Feb. 22, 2008), wherein the court permitted 4 individualized discovery from the 160 opt-in plaintiffs. (Id. at 5–6.) Defendants urge this 5 Court to “follow” Coldiron and Abubakar and “permit Defendants to take individual 6 discovery of the 115 opt-in [p]laintiffs here.” (Id. at 6.) Defendants posit that the discovery 7 they seek is “not impossible or impractical” and “[w]ith just 115 opt-ins,” the Court should 8 not limit them to representative discovery. (Id. at 9.) 9 Defendants next argue that individualized discovery is necessary to support an 10 anticipated motion to decertify the collective class and “the only way to uncover factual 11 and legal differences to show that the opt-in [p]laintiffs are not able to proceed 12 collectively.” (Id. at 7.) Defendants contend generally, without defending each request 13 individually, that their “discovery requests aim to determine whether the opt-in [p]lainitffs 14 . . . are in fact similarly situated.” (Id. at 7–8.) Defendants argue that they propounded 15 “only 16 interrogatories” that “each target[] a discrete subject matter,” and their 36 RFPs 16 likewise cover “distinct subject matters.” (Id. at 8.) As to depositions, Defendants state 17 that they “believe” deposing “all the opt-ins will uncover further differences between” 18 them, such as “varying hours and schedules worked, timing of deliveries, number of stops, 19 vehicles used, use of uniforms, composition of customers, composition of territories, how 20 they price their products for different customers, the extent of which (if at all) they were 21 subjected to oversight from Defendants’ sales managers, and training and education 22 received.” (Id.) Defendants propose no alternative to propounding their discovery requests 23 as drafted2 on each of the 115 opt-in plaintiffs or to deposing each opt-in plaintiff. 24 25 2 Defendants did, however, amend each RFP and interrogatory to request only 26 documents that “reflect” certain things as opposed to documents that “constitute, evidence, 27 reflect or refer” to those things, with the exception of RFP No. 14. (ECF No. 171-3 at 6– 11.) Because Defendants’ failure to amend RFP No. 14 appears unintentional, the Court 28 1 B. Analysis 2 1. Considerations for Individualized Discovery 3 Plaintiffs here are not taking the position that any discovery directed to the opt-in 4 plaintiffs is improper. Rather, the parties dispute whether discovery should be 5 individualized and propounded to all opt-in plaintiffs or to a representative sample, and the 6 appropriate extent of such discovery. District courts in the Ninth Circuit have taken 7 different positions on whether individualized or representative discovery is appropriate in 8 FLSA collective actions and the extent of allowable discovery. See Slack v. Parball 9 NewCo, LLC, No. 2:16–cv–02324–KJD–CWH, 2018 WL 1472574, at *2–3 (D. Nev. Mar. 10 26, 2018) (collecting cases on different approaches); Cranney v. Carriage Servs., Inc., 11 2008 WL 2457921, at *2–3 (D. Nev. June 16, 2008) (same); see also Hoffman v. Constr. 12 Protective Servs., Inc., 541 F.3d 1175, 1179 (9th Cir. 2008) (recognizing in dicta that case 13 law is unsettled regarding individualized opt-in discovery in FLSA cases). This Court is 14 persuaded by the rationale of courts that have imposed reasonable limitations on discovery 15 from opt-in plaintiffs—whether individualized or representative—by recognizing the 16 purpose of collective actions3 and the potentially burdensome nature of individualized 17 discovery, and balancing those factors against the defendant’s need to conduct enough 18 19 and source of income earned or received). (Infra note 5.) Additionally, Defendants 20 withdrew RFP Nos. 23–30, which Plaintiffs objected to as irrelevant to their FLSA claims. 21 (ECF Nos. 169-1 at 10; 171-3 at 10–11.) 3 Collective actions serve to lower the cost of litigation for individual claimants and 22 promote efficiency in resolution of claims and judicial resources. See Hoffmann-La Roche 23 Inc., v. Sperling, 493 U.S. 165, 170 (1989) (“A collective action allows . . . plaintiffs the advantage of lower individual costs to vindicate rights by the pooling of resources.”); 24 Barker v. U.S. Bancorp., No.: 3:15-cv-1641-CAB-WVG, 2017 WL 4358116, at *6 (S.D. 25 Cal. Oct. 2, 2017) (“[T]he primary objectives of a collective action [are]: (1) to lower costs to the plaintiffs through the pooling of resources; and (2) to limit the controversy to one 26 proceeding which efficiently resolves common issues of law and fact that arose from the 27 same alleged activity.” (quoting Beauperthuy v. 24 Hour Fitness USA, Inc., 772 F. Supp. 2d 1111, 1127 (N.D. Cal. 2011), abrogated by Campbell v. City of Los Angeles, 903 F.3d 28 1 discovery to support a motion to decertify a conditionally-certified class. E.g., Cranney, 2 2008 WL 2457921, at *3. With a focus on Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1)’s 3 proportionality requirement, these courts tend to focus on the practicality of individualized 4 discovery. 5 Surveying the various decisions in this arena, one can discern a number of common 6 practical considerations. Of course, the determination of whether to allow individual or 7 representative discovery, and how much, is highly fact-specific. But the size of the opt-in 8 class and whether representative discovery would yield statistically significant information 9 must be important considerations. See, e.g., Page v. Grandview Mktg., Inc., No. 2:09-cv- 10 01150-RCJ-GWF, 2010 WL 11629668, at *6 (D. Nev. Oct. 6, 2010) (permitting 11 individualized discovery of approximately 80 opt-in plaintiffs and finding that a 10% 12 sampling, as proposed by the plaintiff, would not be statistically representative of the opt- 13 in class); Ingersoll v. Royal & Sunalliance USA, Inc., No. C05-1774-MAT, 2006 WL 14 2091097, at *3 (W.D. Wash. July 25, 2006) (permitting individualized discovery of 34 opt- 15 in plaintiffs and noting that the plaintiff’s request to allow “only a small representative 16 sample ignore[d] the fact that [the] matter involve[d] a relatively small” opt-in class). The 17 smaller the number of opt-in plaintiffs, the more likely courts are to find individualized 18 discovery to be reasonable, although this is not always the case. See, e.g., Kelsey v. Entm’t 19 U.S.A., Inc., No. CV–14–01105–PHX–NVW, 2015 WL 4064715, at *2 (D. Ariz. July 2, 20 2015) (finding that even with a class of 66 opt-in plaintiffs, “individual discovery of each 21 plaintiff would still impose a significant and unnecessary burden on [the] [p]laintiffs”). An 22 additional consideration is the type of discovery requested, with courts more frequently 23 permitting individualized discovery from opt-in plaintiffs when the discovery is limited 24 and targeted to probing the similarities between opt-in plaintiffs. 25 Here, Defendants’ arguments in favor of individualized discovery rely heavily on 26 the fact that there are “just” 115 opt-in plaintiffs currently in this case without consideration 27 as to the volume of the requested discovery. (See ECF No. 171 at 9.) Defendants argue 28 that compelling each of the 115 opt-in plaintiffs to respond to 52 discovery requests and sit 1 for a deposition is not “impractical” because there are cases that “permitted individual 2 discovery from far more opt-in plaintiffs.” (Id.) But Defendants cite to only two cases 3 from within the Ninth Circuit for support—Coldiron and Abubakar—and rely on these 4 cases solely because of the size of each opt-in class. 5 As previously stated, the court in Coldiron permitted individualized, written 6 discovery from each of the 306 opt-in plaintiffs. 2004 WL 2601180, at *2. However, the 7 court did not analyze in detail the merits of allowing individualized discovery from a class 8 of 306 opt-in plaintiffs, stating only that the defendant’s intention to decertify the class was 9 “reason alone” without further analysis. Id. The court also stated that in opposing the 10 defendants’ motion to compel, the plaintiffs did not specifically oppose each request and 11 took an “all or nothing position with respect to the requested discovery,” and therefore had 12 to “live with” their choice. Id. And notably, the defendant in Coldiron was not seeking to 13 depose each of the 306 opt-in plaintiffs, and the court did not comment on the number of 14 written requests at issue. 15 Defendants also rely on Abubakar, wherein the plaintiffs sought a protective order 16 limiting FLSA opt-in discovery to a “statistically significant[,] limited[,] representative 17 sampling” of the 160 opt-in plaintiffs. 2008 WL 508911, at *2. Relying on Colidron, the 18 court denied the plaintiffs’ request to limit “the number of plaintiffs defendant may depose 19 or seek discovery from.” Id. The court reasoned that individualized discovery was 20 appropriate because the defendant intended to challenge the conditional certification of the 21 opt-in class. Id. However, the court recognized that individualized discovery should be 22 limited and directed the defendant “to redraft its requests for production and interrogatories 23 [to be] more narrowly tailored to the issue of whether or not plaintiffs [were] ‘similarly 24 situated’ within the meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 216(b).” Id. at *3. The court added that it had 25 previously “admonished [the] defendant regarding the proper scope of discovery during 26 this phase of an action brought under the FLSA.” Id. 27 Although the courts in Colidron and Abubakar allowed individualized discovery 28 from larger collective classes than the class here, neither decision indicated the breadth of 1 discovery that was at issue. Without knowing the amount of discovery permitted, the Court 2 takes little guidance from these cases in determining whether it should permit Defendants 3 to propound 36 RFPs and 16 interrogatories on each of the 115 opt-in plaintiffs and conduct 4 115 depositions. Other cases from courts in the Ninth Circuit that have allowed 5 individualized discovery have permitted far less discovery than Defendants here request. 6 For example, in Slack v. Parball Newco, LLC, a relatively recent case, the defendant wished 7 to propound up to 5 interrogatories and 8 RFPs on each of the 80 opt-in plaintiffs. 2018 8 WL 1472574, at *1 (D. Nev. Mar. 26, 2018). The court permitted individualized discovery, 9 finding the 80-person opt-in class “relatively small.” Id. at *3. The court, however, was 10 “mindful of the efficiency considerations underlying collective actions,” and without 11 “expressing an opinion on the discovery requests at issue,” expected that in moving 12 forward: 13 the experienced and professional counsel on this case will be mindful of the 14 purpose of collective actions and will make every effort to avoid burdening counsel, the parties, and the court with excessive discovery. The court expects 15 that discovery requests will be limited in number and that the substance of the 16 requests will be targeted to the issues of whether the plaintiffs are similarly- situated and/or defendants’ defenses. The court expects counsel to work 17 collaboratively to propound written discovery on the opt-in plaintiffs in a 18 simple and direct fashion that reduces the burden on plaintiffs’ counsel to the greatest extent possible. 19 20 Id. (emphasis added); see also Page, 2010 WL 11629668 (allowing individualized 21 discovery from the 85 opt-in plaintiffs but limiting defendant to 7 requests for admission 22 from the entire class, 10 RFPs and 10 interrogatories from opt-ins who worked for the 23 defendant for more than 90-days (more than half the class), and 5 RFPs and 5 24 interrogatories for the remaining opt-ins). 25 2. Limitations on the Requested Discovery 26 Here, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have shown good cause for the issuance of a 27 protective order, for the amount of discovery Defendants have propounded is oppressive 28 and burdensome. Defendants have not convinced the Court that any need for the amount 1 of discovery currently propounded is sufficient to outweigh the burden on Plaintiffs in 2 responding to nearly 6,000 discovery requests and defending 115 depositions. Moreover, 3 Defendants make little attempt to show that their requests are narrowly tailored to target 4 either their FLSA defenses or issues of whether the opt-in plaintiffs are similarly situated. 5 Defendants contend that their discovery as propounded is “the only way” to support an 6 anticipated motion for decertification but then argue only generally about what their 7 requests aim to explore without defending specific requests. As Plaintiffs argue, 8 Defendants’ “surface level and conclusory analysis” does not justify the excessive amount 9 of discovery sought. 10 Plaintiffs, however, propose without justification that the Court limit opt-in 11 discovery to a sampling of around 15 opt-ins (approximately 13% of the class) and limit 12 Defendants to 5 RFPs and 5 interrogatories. (See ECF No. 169-1 at 11.) In response, 13 Defendants point out that Plaintiffs “provide no basis” for their suggested limitations. Yet 14 Defendants provide no convincing argument that the proposed limitations would not 15 provide them with adequate discovery. (ECF No. 171 at 10.) As neither party adequately 16 supports their respective position, the parties’ briefings are of limited help in determining 17 what reasonable limitations the Court should impose on opt-in plaintiff discovery. 18 With respect to the propriety of Defendants’ specific document requests, the Court 19 will look first to whether Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 20 proportionality of each request. See Starkey v. Hernandez, No.: 3:17-cv-01158-JLS-KSC, 21 2018 WL 6075809, at *2 (S.D. Cal. Nov. 28, 2018) (stating that the moving parting “has 22 the burden of informing the Court why the information he seeks is relevant and 23 proportional to the needs of the case”); Bryant v. Ochoa, No. 07cv200 JM (PCL), 2009 24 WL 1390794, at *1 (S.D. Cal. May 14, 2009) (“The party seeking to compel discovery has 25 the burden of establishing that his request satisfies the relevancy requirements of Rule 26 26(b)(1).” (citing Soto v. City of Concord, 162 F.R.D. 603, 610 (N.D. Cal. 1995))). 27 Because Defendants have not endeavored to educate the Court on the relevancy of each 28 request specifically, the Court is left to evaluate whether each request is relevant to 1 Plaintiffs’ FLSA claim for unpaid overtime wages in something of an information vacuum. 2 The Court finds relevant only those requests that appear on their face to target whether the 3 opt-in plaintiffs are similarly situated or relate to Defendants’ FLSA defenses. The Court 4 will then rule on Plaintiffs’ objections for requests that the Court finds both relevant and 5 proportional. Additionally, because the Court twice advised Defendants that many of its 6 requests were overboard, the Court declines to rewrite any requests it deems overbroad. 7 (See supra p. 2–3.) 8 As set forth below, the Court has determined that Defendants have met their burden 9 of showing the relevance and individual proportionality of 18 RFPs (Nos. 1, 4–7, 9, 10, 13, 10 14, 16, 20, 21, 31–36) and 8 Interrogatories (Nos. 1–3; 8, 9, 13, 15, 16). The Court, 11 however, sustains Plaintiffs’ objections to RFP Nos. 13, 14, 16, and 31 and Interrogatory 12 No. 3: 13 Requests for Production 14 RFP No. 1 15 All DOCUMENTS that YOU received from DEFENDANTS that reflect YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP, including, but not limited to, any agreements, training or 16 presentations, customer requirements, emails or other DOCUMENTS setting forth 17 expectations or requirements for YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP. 18 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 19 proportionality of RFP No. 1. Plaintiffs’ objection that RFP No. 1 calls for information equally available is OVERRULED. (ECF Nos. 169-1 at 10; 169-5 at 4.) 20 21 RFP No. 2 22 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any meetings between YOU and DEFENDANTS. 23 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 24 of RFP No. 2 and deems it overbroad. 25 RFP No. 3 26 All DOCUMENTS that reflect transactions or COMMUNICATIONS, including emails, advertisements, business cards, cash receipts or deposits, etc., with customers from June 27 6, 2014 to the present. 28 1 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 2 of RFP No. 3 and deems it overbroad. 3 RFP No. 4 4 All DOCUMENTS that reflect all advertising materials utilized by YOU, or that any 5 entity YOU formed in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP utilized, from June 6 6, 2014 to the present. 7 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 8 proportionality of RFP No. 4. 9 RFP No. 5 10 All DOCUMENTS that reflect all marketing or sales efforts that YOU engaged in, or that any entity YOU formed in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP engaged 11 in, from June 6, 2014 to the present. 12 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 13 proportionality of RFP No. 5. 14 RFP No. 6 15 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any delivery vehicle(s) that YOU utilized, or that any 16 entity YOU formed in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP utilized, in 17 connection with the delivery of goods since June 6, 2014. 18 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 19 proportionality of RFP No. 6. 20 RFP No. 7 21 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any other vehicle(s) that YOU utilized, or that any entity 22 YOU formed in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP utilized, in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP since June 6, 2014. 23 24 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and proportionality of RFP No. 7. 25 26 27 28 1 RFP No. 8 2 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any expenses that YOU incurred, or that any entity YOU 3 formed in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP incurred, from June 6, 2014 to the present, as a result of YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP. 4 5 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality of RFP No. 8 and deems it overbroad. 6 RFP No. 9 7 All DOCUMENTS that reflect YOUR engagement of a helper, employee, or assistant 8 to assist with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP, including, but not limited to, their identity, 9 any payment receipts, cancelled checks, W-2s, 1099s, schedules, and agreements from June 6, 2014 to the present. 10 11 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and proportionality of RFP No. 9. 12 13 RFP No. 10 14 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any efforts by YOU to sell YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP, distribution rights, business or “route” with DEFENDANTS, or any portion thereof, 15 including, but not limited to, any COMMUNICATIONS with another distributor, 16 potential buyer(s), route or territory broker or agent, or other source (i.e. Craig’s List, routesforsale.com. etc.), any purchase and sales agreement or contract, and any other 17 financial documents. 18 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 19 proportionality of RFP No. 10. 20 RFP No. 11 21 All DOCUMENTS that reflect YOUR relationship or work with DEFENDANTS, 22 including any resumes, applications, or other documents. 23 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 24 of RFP No. 11 and deems it overbroad. 25 26 27 28 1 RFP No. 12 2 All DOCUMENTS that reflect the financial performance of any entity YOU formed in 3 connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP, including, but not limited to, financial statements, profit and loss statements, budgets, income projections or statements, 4 financial audits, periodic reports or audits prepared by any accountant, and any back-up 5 supporting such reports or audits (such as receipts). 6 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 7 of RFP No. 12 and deems it overbroad. 8 RFP No. 13 9 All DOCUMENTS that reflect or refer to the amount and source of income earned or 10 received by YOU from June 6, 2014 to the present, including, but not limited to, monies received from employment, independent contract positions, and/or self-employment. 11 12 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and proportionality of RFP No. 13. However, Plaintiffs’ objection as to the production of 13 tax return information is SUSTAINED.4 (ECF Nos. 169-1 at 11; 169-5 at 12.) 14 15 16 17 18 4 Plaintiffs object to Defendants’ RFPs that request tax return information on the 19 ground that this Court has already determined in the related case, Goro et al. v. Flowers Foods, Inc., et al., 17-cv-02580-JLS-JLB, that tax return information is privileged and not 20 discoverable. (ECF No. 169-1 at 11.) The Court’s Order in Goro analyzed whether 21 Plaintiffs should be compelled to produce tax return information under California law, which governs the application of the tax return privilege in diversity cases. (See Goro ECF 22 No. 50 at 3–9.) As this case asserts a cause of action under the FLSA and is not a diversity 23 case, the same standard does not apply. Nevertheless, under federal law, production of tax returns is “only appropriate if they are relevant and there is a compelling need for them 24 because the information sought is not otherwise available.” Lindsey v. Elsevier Inc., 16- 25 cv-00959-GPC (DHB), 2017 WL 4518483, at *9 (S.D. Cal. Oct. 10, 2017) (citing Aliotti v. Vessel Senora, 217 F.R.D. 496, 497–98 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 2, 2003)). Here, the Court finds 26 that although the opt-in plaintiffs’ tax returns may be relevant in assessing lost earnings, 27 Defendants have not met their burden of establishing a compelling need for them. Defendants assert no defense to Plaintiffs’ objection in their opposition. Accordingly, 28 1 RFP No. 14 2 All DOCUMENTS that reflect5 the amount and source of income earned or received by 3 any entity YOU formed in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP from June 6, 2014 to the present. 4 5 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and proportionality of RFP No. 14. However, Plaintiffs’ objection as to the production of 6 tax return information is SUSTAINED. (ECF Nos. 169-1 at 11; 169-5 at 12.) 7 RFP No. 15 8 All DOCUMENTS that reflect YOUR state and federal income taxes paid for the 9 calendar years 2014 to the present, and all DOCUMENTS pertaining to such filings. 10 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance and 11 proportionality of RFP No. 15. 12 RFP No. 16 13 All DOCUMENTS that refer to the state and federal income taxes paid by any entity 14 YOU formed in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP for the calendar years 2014 to the present, and all DOCUMENTS pertaining to such filings. 15 16 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and proportionality of RFP No. 16. However, Plaintiffs’ objection as to the production of 17 tax return information is SUSTAINED. (ECF No. 169-1 at 11; 169-5 at 13–14.) 18 RFP No. 17 19 All DOCUMENTS that refer to any COMMUNICATIONS, including but not limited 20 to emails, memoranda, and notes, between YOU and DEFENDANTS. 21 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 22 of RFP No. 17 and deems it overbroad. 23 24 25 26 5 Defendants did not amend RFP No. 14 to request only documents that “reflect,” as 27 opposed to documents that “constitute, evidence, reflect or refer,” as they did with all other RFPs. (See ECF No. 171-3 at 6–11.) Because Defendants’ failure to amend appears 28 1 RFP No. 18 2 All DOCUMENTS that refer to any non-privileged COMMUNICATIONS, including 3 but not limited to emails, between YOU and Tony Russel, Jeff Belander, Dale North, William Lancaster, Albert E. Ludlow, Daniel Ludlow, and any other distributor that has 4 joined this action regarding YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIPS, the allegations in the 5 COMPLAINT, or any facts relevant to the allegations in the COMPLAINT. 6 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance or 7 proportionality of RFP No. 18 and deems it overbroad. 8 RFP No. 19 9 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any non-privileged COMMUNICATIONS, including 10 but not limited to emails, social media posts, wall comments, activity streams, blog entries, status updates, chat room posts, letters or memoranda between YOU and other 11 persons, distributors, entities, or organizations regarding any of the allegations in the 12 COMPLAINT, including, but not limited to, other distributors of DEFENDANTS. 13 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance or 14 proportionality of RFP No. 19 and deems it overbroad. 15 RFP No. 20 16 All DOCUMENTS that refer to the damages sought in the COMPLAINT. 17 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 18 proportionality of RFP No. 20. Plaintiffs’ objection that RFP No. 20 seeks a legal 19 conclusion and/or is a premature disclosure of expert testimony is OVERRULED. (ECF No. 169-1 at 11.) Plaintiffs did not reserve this objection in their responses. (See 20 ECF No. 169-5 at 16.) 21 RFP No. 21 22 All DOCUMENTS that support or refute the allegation that DEFENDANTS are, or 23 were, YOUR employer at any time since June 6, 2014, as alleged in the COMPLAINT. 24 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 25 proportionality of RFP No. 21. Plaintiffs’ objection that RFP No. 21 seeks a legal conclusion and/or is a premature disclosure of expert testimony is OVERRULED. 26 Plaintiffs did not reserve this objection in their responses. (See ECF No. 169-5 at 16– 27 17.) 28 1 RFP No. 22 2 All DOCUMENTS that support or refute each cause of action in the COMPLAINT. 3 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 4 of RFP No. 22 and deems it overbroad. 5 Defendants have withdrawn RFP Nos. 23–30. (ECF No. 171-3 at 10–11.) 6 RFP No. 31 7 All DOCUMENTS provided by YOU, received from, or relied upon, by any expert 8 whom YOU expect to call as a witness at trial. 9 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 10 proportionality of RFP No. 31. However, Plaintiffs’ objection that RFP No. 31 seeks a 11 legal conclusion and/or is a premature disclosure of expert testimony is SUSTAINED. (ECF Nos. 169-1 at 11; 169-2 at 22.) 12 RFP No. 32 13 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any or all time YOU worked for DEFENDANTS in 14 connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP. 15 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 16 proportionality of RFP No. 32. However, for clarification, the Court AMENDS RFP 17 No. 32 as follows: All DOCUMENTS that reflect the actual time YOU worked for DEFENDANTS in connection with YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP. 18 19 RFP No. 33 20 All DOCUMENTS that reflect the days or periods when YOU personally delivered merchandise to customers and/or personally visited customers in YOUR 21 DISTRIBUTORSHIP. 22 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 23 proportionality of RFP No. 33. 24 RFP No. 34 25 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any training YOU received from DEFENDANTS. 26 27 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and proportionality of RFP No. 34. 28 1 RFP No. 35 2 All DOCUMENTS that reflect any instructions YOU received from DEFENDANTS 3 regarding the operation of YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP. 4 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 5 proportionality of RFP No. 35. 6 RFP No. 36 7 All DOCUMENTS that support or refute the allegation that DEFENDANTS had “control over the relationship” with YOU, as stated in paragraph 34 of the 8 COMPLAINT. 9 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 10 proportionality of RFP No. 36. 11 Interrogatories 12 Interrogatory No. 1 13 Identify any business entity in existence from June 6, 2014 to present that YOU formed 14 for the purpose of delivering goods, including when YOU formed that entity, how long it was in operation, which companies YOU delivered goods or performed other services 15 for and during what time period(s), and the areas or “territory” where YOU delivered 16 goods or performed other services. 17 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 18 proportionality of Interrogatory No. 1. Plaintiffs’ objection that Interrogatory No. 1 calls for information equally available is OVERRULED. (ECF Nos. 169-1 at 11; 169-6 at 19 4.) 20 Interrogatory No. 2 21 Identify all vehicle(s) that YOU utilized in connection with YOUR 22 DISTRIBUTORSHIP, including year, make, model, and vehicle identification number 23 (“VIN”); the approximate time period during which YOU used each vehicle; what tasks YOU used each vehicle for; and the days and hours of each day of each week that YOU 24 used, in the regular course of YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP’s business, the vehicle(s) 25 YOU identified. 26 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 27 proportionality of Interrogatory No. 2. 28 1 Interrogatory No. 3 2 Identify any and all persons that YOU engaged and/or paid to assist YOU with YOUR 3 DISTRIBUTORSHIP or operate YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP on YOUR behalf, the time period(s) during which each individual assisted YOU, the amount of money paid 4 to such individual(s), the manner of payment (cash, check, etc.), and whether YOU took 5 a deduction on YOUR tax returns for such payment(s). 6 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 7 proportionality of Interrogatory No. 3. However, Plaintiffs’ objection as to the production of tax return information is SUSTAINED. (ECF Nos. 169-1 at 11; 169-6 at 8 6.) 9 Interrogatory No. 4 10 Identify any expenses incurred since June 6, 2014 by YOU and/or any entity that YOU 11 formed in connection with the performance of YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP, including the total amount of each category of alleged expenses that YOU are seeking to recover 12 through this lawsuit. 13 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 14 of Interrogatory No. 4 and deems it overbroad. 15 Interrogatory No. 5 16 For each expense that YOU identified in response to Interrogatory No. 4, identify how 17 YOU calculated that amount, including any mathematical formula used and any 18 DOCUMENTS that YOU relied upon in making or that support those calculations. 19 Because the Court finds that Interrogatory No. 4 is not a viable discovery request, the 20 Court strikes Interrogatory No. 5. 21 Interrogatory No. 6 22 Identify each of the alleged “Unlawful Deductions of Wages” that are referenced in the 23 fifth cause of action of the COMPLAINT, including the total amount of each category of allegedly unlawful deductions that YOU are seeking to recover through this lawsuit. 24 25 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance of Interrogatory No. 6. 26 27 28 1 Interrogatory No. 7 2 For each alleged unlawful deduction that YOU identified in response to Interrogatory 3 No. 6, identify how YOU calculated that deduction, including any mathematical formula used and any DOCUMENTS that YOU relied upon in making or that support those 4 calculations. 5 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance of 6 Interrogatory No. 7. 7 Interrogatory No. 8 8 Identify the amount and source of income earned or received by YOU for the calendar 9 years 2014 to the present, including, but not limited to, monies received from employment, independent contract positions, and/or self-employment. 10 11 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and proportionality of Interrogatory No. 8. 12 13 Interrogatory No. 9 14 Have YOU ever been a party to or filed bankruptcy, either personally or on behalf of an entity in which YOU had an ownership interest? If so, state the bankruptcy case number, 15 date of filing, nature of bankruptcy (i.e., Chapter 7, 11, 13, etc.), state in which YOU 16 filed bankruptcy, and status of bankruptcy. 17 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 18 proportionality of Interrogatory No. 9. 19 Interrogatory No. 10 20 Have YOU ever been a party to or filed any claims, complaints, lawsuits, or litigation from January 1, 2010 to the present, other than the instant lawsuit? If so, state the case 21 number, date of filing, nature of claims, and status of claims. 22 23 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance of Interrogatory No. 10. 24 25 26 27 28 1 Interrogatory No. 11 2 Since June 6, 2014, have YOU subscribed to, joined, participated in, or “liked” any 3 Internet newsgroup(s), chat group(s), Twitter page(s) or feed(s), or Facebook page(s) or group(s) wherein any of the allegations on this action were discussed or otherwise 4 COMMUNICATED? If so, list all such websites, newsgroups, chat pages, or services, 5 etc. and the name of any groups YOU subscribed to and/or participated in, including any applicable user names or group names YOU used or under which any comments or 6 “likes” from YOU were posted. 7 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance of 8 Interrogatory No. 11. 9 Interrogatory No. 12 10 Identify all accountant(s) and/or other persons from June 6, 2014 to the present, who 11 have assisted YOU with YOUR books for YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP (whether prepared in YOUR individual name or the name of a business), financial statements 12 and/or tax returns, including address and phone number. 13 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the relevance of 14 Interrogatory No. 12. 15 Interrogatory No. 13 16 Have YOU, at any time since June 6, 2014 to the present, discussed the possibility of 17 selling all or a portion of YOUR distribution rights (or territory or route) with any other 18 distributor or individual or entity (i.e. whether a sole proprietorship, business, or other corporation no matter what form) or advertised this potential sale? If so, identify the 19 individual(s) with whom YOU discussed this possibility, the approximate date(s), the 20 terms of sale (applicable area, cost, etc.), any DOCUMENTS that exist regarding these COMMUNICATIONS or the potential sale, and the ultimate resolution, including 21 whether those discussions remain ongoing. 22 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 23 proportionality of Interrogatory No. 13. 24 Interrogatory No. 14 25 Identify all persons who have any knowledge or information that evidences, supports, 26 or contradicts the claims that YOU have asserted on YOUR own behalf in this lawsuit, 27 including, but not limited to, as alleged in the COMPLAINT. 28 1 The Court finds that Defendants have not met their burden to show the proportionality 2 of Interrogatory No. 14 and deems it overboard. 3 Interrogatory No. 15 4 Identify all of Defendants’ warehouses from which YOU have delivered bakery 5 products to retail locations, as alleged in paragraph 22 of the Complaint. 6 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 7 proportionality of Interrogatory No. 15. 8 Interrogatory No. 16 9 State any USDOT Number that has been assigned to YOUR DISTRIBUTORSHIP. 10 The Court finds that Defendants have met their burden to show the relevance and 11 proportionality of Interrogatory No. 16. 12 13 Having determined which of Defendants’ discovery requests are relevant and 14 individually proportional and not vulnerable to Plaintiffs’ specific objections, the Court 15 turns next to whether it should limit any discovery, written or oral, to a representative 16 sample of the opt-in plaintiffs. Again, with respect to written discovery, Plaintiffs request 17 that the Court limit Defendants to 5 RFPs and 5 interrogatories for 15 of the 115 opt-in 18 Plaintiffs, or approximately 13% of the class. Plaintiffs, however, shed no light on how 19 they arrived at these limitations. But on the other hand, Defendants do not provide any 20 alternative besides conducting individualized, and extensive, discovery. 21 The Court finds that a 115-member opt-in class is not so large that the burden of 22 responding to some individualized written discovery propounded to each opt-in plaintiff 23 would be unmanageable or unreasonable. However, requiring each opt-in plaintiff to 24 respond to 17 RFPs and 8 interrogatories would impose a significant burden on Plaintiffs, 25 and the Court is unaware of any case that has allowed this volume of individualized 26 discovery from an opt-in class with at least 115 plaintiffs. Accordingly, the Court finds 27 that Defendants must further decrease their written discovery requests as follows: 28 /// 1 • Every opt-in plaintiff is to respond to 10 RFPs: RFP Nos. 1, 4–7, 10, 21, and 34–36. 2 • Fifteen randomly-selected opt-in plaintiffs are to additionally respond to 7 3 RFPs: RFP Nos. 9, 13, 14, 16, 20, 32, and 33. 4 • Every opt-in plaintiff is to respond to one set of 5 interrogatories. Defendants 5 must choose the 5 interrogatories from the 8 interrogatories the Court has 6 approved above. Defendants must propound the same 5 interrogatories on each opt-in plaintiff. 7 8 With respect to depositions, Defendants state only that they “believe” deposing of 9 “all the opt-in plaintiffs will uncover further differences between” them. (ECF No. 171 at 10 8.) Defendants’ belief that deposing each of the 115 opt-in plaintiffs will uncover further 11 differences between opt-ins does not establish proportionality. Any benefit from deposing 12 every opt-in plaintiff would not likely outweigh the burden and expense of conducting 115 13 depositions. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). The Court agrees with Plaintiffs that Defendants’ 14 request to depose all the opt-in plaintiffs appears to be “‘an entirely unreasonable’ proposal 15 ‘designed to overwhelm Plaintiffs’ counsel rather than to fairly obtain necessary 16 information.” (ECF No. 169-1 at 6 (quoting Scott v. Bimbo Bakeries USA, Inc., No. CIV.A. 17 10-3154, 2012 WL 6151734, at *3 (E.D. Pa. Dec. 11, 2012).) Plaintiffs provide no 18 authority supporting their request to limit Defendants to 15 depositions. Nevertheless, 19 Defendants do not propose any alternative to their all-or-nothing approach, and Plaintiffs’ 20 proposal of 15 depositions appears reasonable and consistent with cases the Court has 21 independently reviewed. See, e.g., Kress v. Price Waterhouse Coopers, No. CIV S–08– 22 0965 LKK GGH, 2012 WL 4465556, at *4 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 25, 2012) (permitting 25 23 depositions from a 75-member opt-in class); Hill v. R+L Carriers Shared Servs., LLC, No. 24 C 09–1997 CW (MEJ), 2010 WL 3769247, at *2 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 22, 2010) (permitting 15 25 depositions from a 52-member opt-in class). Accordingly, the Court limits Defendants to 26 deposing the same 15 randomly-selected opt-in plaintiffs who will be responding to the 27 additional 7 RFPs. 28 /// I IV. CONCLUSION 2 For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS in part Plaintiffs’ Motion for 3 || Protective Order. (ECF No. 169.) Every opt-in plaintiff is to respond to RFP Nos. 1, 4-7, 4 || 10, 21, and 34-36 and 5 of the Court-approved interrogatories already propounded. Fifteen 5 ||randomly-selected opt-in plaintiffs are to additionally respond to RFP Nos. 9, 13, 14, 16, 6 32, and 33, and Defendants may depose them. 7 IT IS SO ORDERED. 8 Dated: July 6, 2020 - n. Jill L. Burkhardt 10 ited States Magistrate Judge 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28

Document Info

Docket Number: 3:18-cv-01190-JO-JLB

Filed Date: 7/6/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/20/2024