Opinion
Case No. 20-cv-03642-EJD (VKD)
12-15-2020
ORDER RE NOVEMBER 17, 2020 DISCOVERY DISPUTES
Re: Dkt. Nos. 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73
The parties ask the Court to resolve eight different discovery disputes. Dkt. Nos. 66-72. The Court held a hearing on all disputes on December 8, 2020. Dkt. Nos. 79, 82.
For the reasons explained at the hearing, and as further explained below, the Court denies in part and grants in part plaintiffs' request for relief and orders the parties to confer further as directed below.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiffs are telescope distributors who purchase telescopes directly from defendant Celestron Acquisition LLC ("Celestron"). Dkt. No. 54 ¶ 2. On behalf of a putative class, plaintiffs claim that Celestron conspired with others to fix prices, divide the telescope market, and engage in other anti-competitive activities. Id. Celestron has moved to dismiss plaintiffs' claims. Dkt. No. 64.
On August 24, 2020, plaintiffs served document requests on Celestron. E.g., Dkt. No. 66 at 2. Although Celestron's responses were due on September 28, 2020, it did not respond by that date. Id. Celestron says it interpreted plaintiffs' demand for production within 60 days as permitting written responses to the requests also to be served within 60 days, rather than within 30 days as specified in Rule 34(b)(2)(A), and because it believed Judge Davila had directed the parties to coordinate discovery in this case with discovery in a related case. Id. at 7. Once alerted to plaintiffs' contrary view of the deadline, Celestron served written responses to plaintiffs' document requests on October 1, 2020 and served supplemental responses on October 22, 2020. Id. at 2.
Some the assertions and arguments on which the parties rely are the same across each of the eight discovery dispute letters submitted to the Court. For convenience, the Court cites only to Dkt. No. 66 with respect to these common assertions and arguments.
II. DISCUSSION
The Court understands that Celestron has agreed to produce documents responsive to many of plaintiffs' requests but objects on various grounds to other requests. For purposes of this proceeding, the parties raise disputes concerning the following document requests:
• RFPs Nos. 10-12
• RFPs Nos. 16 and 17
• RFP No. 86
• RFP No. 92
• RFPs Nos. 6, 9, 52 and 66
• RFPs Nos. 63, 64, 77 and 78
• RFPs Nos. 88 and 89
• RFP No. 46 Before considering the specifics of each set of disputed requests, the Court first considers plaintiffs' argument that Celestron has waived its objections to all of these requests and Celestron's argument that its failure to timely object should be excused.
A. Celestron's Untimely Responses
Plaintiffs argue that Celestron waived its objections by failing to timely respond to the disputed document requests. Dkt. No. 66 at 4. Celestron does not argue its objections were untimely but says that its few days' delay in serving written responses did not prejudice plaintiffs and should be excused for good cause. Id. at 7.
Unlike Rule 33 for responding to interrogatories, Rule 34 does not expressly provide that untimely objections are waived unless excused by the Court for good cause. Compare Fed. R. Civ. P. 33(b)(4) with Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(C). While plaintiffs are correct that as a general matter, a failure to timely object to document requests constitutes a waiver of any objection, see Richmark Corp. v. Timber Falling Consultants, 959 F.2d 1468, 1473 (9th Cir. 1992), federal district courts have discretion to grant relief from a waiver where there is good cause to do so. Karr v. Napolitano, Case No. C 11-02207 LB, 2012 WL 1965855 (N.D. Cal. May 31, 2012) (collecting cases). In considering whether to excuse Celestron's waiver, the Court considers several factors, including: the length of Celestron's delay, the reason given for the delay, any prejudice to plaintiffs, and the nature of the discovery requested.
Where such a waiver implicates attorney-client privilege or work product protections, however, the Court must conduct a "holistic reasonableness analysis," taking into account several factors, before finding a waiver. Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. U.S. Dist. Court for Dist. of Mont., 408 F.3d 1142, 1149 (9th Cir. 2005).
Celestron relies on objections that were not served until October 22, 2020—24 days after the due date for objections. This is more than a few days late, and Celestron does not have a good explanation for its delay. Experienced litigation counsel should understand that the date requested or agreed to for production of responsive documents is not the same as the date on which written responses are due to be served under Rule 34. In addition, the Court has reviewed the transcript of the parties' most recent proceeding before Judge Davila in the related case. See Case No. 20-3639, Dkt. No. 93. Nothing in that transcript reflects that Judge Davila directed coordination of specific discovery requests or responses between this and the related case, as Celestron suggests. Even crediting Celestron's explanation that it misunderstood when its responses were expected, the objections it first served on October 1, 2020 apparently were not the objections on which it now attempts to rely. Celestron does not explain the additional period of delay between October 1 and October 22.
On the other hand, the delay did not prejudice plaintiffs. Discovery commenced in mid-2020, and Judge Davila has not yet set a case management schedule. Celestron's 24-day delay does not impede plaintiffs' ability to develop their case, and plaintiffs have not relied to their detriment on Celestron's failure to timely object. Moreover, many of plaintiffs' document requests are not reasonably limited to documents that are relevant to a claim or defense or proportional to the needs of the case, and a finding that plaintiffs had waived all objections to such requests would permit plaintiffs to improperly expand the scope of discovery.
Accordingly, on balance, the Court concludes that there is good cause to excuse Celestron's delay and that the interests of justice are best served if the Court considers each of the parties' discrete discovery disputes on the merits.
B. RFPs Nos. 10-12: Celestron's "Executive Committee"
In RFP No. 10, plaintiffs ask for documents "sufficient to identify the individuals comprising Celestron's executive committee." RFPs Nos. 11 and 12 asks for all materials prepared for meetings of the executive committee since 2005 and all correspondence relating to such meetings.
For the reasons explained on the record at the hearing, the Court denies plaintiffs' motion to compel production of these documents on two grounds. First, the record reflects that while Celestron appears to have people performing "executive"-type functions, it is not clear whether that group is the "executive committee," the "executive management group," or the "executive team," or whether these labels refer to the same of different entities. RFP No. 10 is therefore ambiguous. The Court orders the parties to confer further regarding an appropriate means to identify the "executive" function for which plaintiffs seek discovery and the Celestron personnel who perform that function. Second, assuming the parties reach agreement as to the scope of RFP No. 10, the scope of RFP Nos. 11 and 12 is not reasonably limited to documents relevant to a claim or defense. The Court orders the parties to confer further regarding subject matter limitations that may be used to define the scope of production of documents responsive to RFPs Nos. 11 and 12.
C. RFPs Nos. 16 and 17: Proposed Celestron/Meade Merger in 1990s and 2002
In RFPs Nos. 16 and 17, plaintiffs ask for "all documents and communications relating to" the proposed merger of Celestron and Meade in the 1990s and in 2002.
As a general matter, the formulation "all documents relating to . . ." invites dispute and is generally disfavored precisely because the boundaries of the request are difficult to identify. See, e.g., Regan-Touhy v. Walgreen Co., 526 F.3d 641, 649-50 (10th Cir. 2008) (discussing requests phrased as "all documents" or "all emails" as overbroad, potentially burdensome and costly, and potentially non-compliant with Rule 34(b)(1)(A)'s requirement to state requests with "reasonable particularity"); Manual for Complex Litigation, Fourth, § 11.443 (2004) ("In overseeing document production, the court should . . . prevent indiscriminate, overly broad, or unduly burdensome demands-in general, forbid sweeping requests, such as those for 'all documents relating or referring to' an issue, party or claim . . . ."). However, as the Court explained at the hearing, plaintiffs reasonably seek production of documents reflecting Celestron's and its executives' attitudes about and responses to the FTC's actions to block the merger, and not merely the fact that the FTC took steps to block the merger. It is possible that there are documents that fall within the scope of these requests that are unrelated to any claim or defense, but as Celestron could not identify any categories of documents it felt would be both responsive and irrelevant, the Court is persuaded that the scope of these requests is sufficiently limited to relevant subject matter at this time. Accordingly, for the reasons stated on the record at the hearing, the Court grants plaintiffs' motion to compel.
D. RFP No. 86: Celestron Corporate Structure
In RFP No. 86, plaintiffs seek "[a]ll documents and communications relating to [Celestron's] corporate and ownership structure since 2005."
For the reasons stated at the hearing, the Courts finds that the request as drafted is unreasonably broad. However, the Court agrees with plaintiffs that discovery of Celestron's corporate structure and direct and indirect ownership is relevant to the claims asserted in the case. Accordingly, the Court orders Celestron to produce documents sufficient to show Celestron's corporate structure and direct and indirect ownership over time since 2005.
E. RFP No. 92: Celestron's Non-U.S. Customers
In RFP No. 92, plaintiffs ask for "[d]ocuments sufficient to disclose all of your customers outside of the United States since 2005."
Given that this case is limited to claims on behalf of a putative class of domestic purchasers, plaintiffs' discovery submission offers no justification for the requested discovery, apart from a conclusory assertion that such customers are "important witnesses" and that "foreign-price fixing is relevant evidence." See Dkt. No. 69 at 3. At the hearing, plaintiffs offered additional information regarding the basis for this document request. Dkt. No. 82 at 33:5-37:16. Celestron disputes the relevance of this discovery, and at the hearing, offered additional objections not addressed in the discovery submission. Id. at 38:8-40:2, 41:9-18.
The Court does not believe it has an adequate legal and factual record to resolve the parties' dispute concerning RFP No. 92, and denies plaintiffs' request for relief without prejudice on that basis. Unless the parties resolve the dispute by agreement, the Court invites plaintiffs to file a noticed motion to compel pursuant to Civil L.R. 7-2 on this matter so that the parties may make a more complete presentation to the Court.
F. RFPs Nos. 6, 9, 52 and 66: Communications Regarding Orion/Orion Action
In RFPs Nos. 6, 9, 52 and 66, plaintiffs ask Celestron to produce all documents and communications since 2005 with Synta, Ningbo Sunny, certain of their key personnel, or their respective counsel regarding Orion and Orion's prior action against Ningbo Sunny.
For the reasons explained on the record at the hearing, the Court denies plaintiffs' motion to compel production of these documents because the requests as drafted are not reasonably limited to documents relevant to a claim or defense. The Court orders the parties to confer further regarding subject matter limitations that may be used to define the scope of production of documents responsive to these RFPs. To the extent Celestron objects on grounds of privilege or other protection, such objections must be preserved in the manner specified in Rule 34(b)(2) and Rule 26(b)(5)(A).
G. RFPs Nos. 63, 64, 77 and 78: Communications Regarding Finances
In RFPs Nos. 63, 64, 77 and 78, plaintiffs ask Celestron to produce "all communications" with Synta and Ningbo Sunny regarding Celestron's, Synta's, and Ningbo Sunny's "finances" since 2005.
Although the parties' discovery submission cited some examples of "finances," the term is not defined and its scope is unclear. For the reasons explained on the record at the hearing, the Court denies plaintiffs' motion to compel production of these documents because the requests as drafted are not reasonably limited to documents relevant to a claim or defense. The Court orders the parties to confer further regarding the term "finances" and a more specific description of the documents responsive to these RFPs.
H. RFPs Nos. 88 and 89: Board/Executive Committee Meeting Minutes
In RFPs Nos. 88 and 89, plaintiffs ask Celestron to produce "[a]ll minutes, recordings, summaries, or reports of meetings, whether formal or informal," of members of Celestron's (i) "executive committee," (ii) board of directors, (iii) each committee or subgroup of the board, and (iv) each committee, group or subgroup of management employees, since 2005.
In these requests, the term "executive committee" is ambiguous (as noted above) as is the reference to "management employees." For the reasons explained on the record at the hearing, the Court denies plaintiffs' motion to compel production of these documents because the requests as drafted are not reasonably limited to documents relevant to a claim or defense. The Court orders the parties to confer further regarding the ambiguous terms used in these requests and subject matter limitations that may be used to define the scope of production of responsive documents.
I. RFP No. 46: Management Consultant Reports
In RFP No. 46, plaintiffs ask for "[a]ll reports of work product prepared by consultants for Celestron since. 2005." Plaintiffs clarify that "consultants" is limited to "management consultants," such as McKinsey, Bain & Co., and Boston Consulting Group.
In their discovery submission, plaintiffs explain that Celestron's business strategies and its consultants' contemporaneous assessments of the market are relevant to questions of liability and damages. The Court agrees that responsive documents concerning these matters are likely relevant, but RFP No. 46 is not limited to such documents. For the reasons explained on the record at the hearing, the Court denies plaintiffs' motion to compel production of documents response to RFP No. 46 because the request as drafted is not reasonably limited to documents relevant to a claim or defense. The Court orders the parties to confer further regarding subject matter limitations that may be used to define the scope of production of responsive documents.
III. CONCLUSION
The Court denies in part and grants in part plaintiffs' requests for relief. The parties must confer further regarding the matters addressed in this order, and if disputes remain, they may raise those matters with the Court using the expedited procedure set out in the Court's Standing Order (except as noted above).
IT IS SO ORDERED. Dated: December 15, 2020
/s/_________
VIRGINIA K. DEMARCHI
United States Magistrate Judge