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WRIGHT-JACKSON v. HIP HEALTH PLAN

United States District Court, S.D. New York
Apr 15, 2009
07 Civ. 1819 (DFE) (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 15, 2009)

Opinion

07 Civ. 1819 (DFE).

April 15, 2009


MEMORANDUM AND ORDER


In this job discrimination case, I am ruling on numerous discovery issues raised by the plaintiff (who has no attorney) and by the defendant ("HIP," which is represented by Seema Misra, Esq.). In making my rulings, I have considered the following documents:

From Plaintiff
1. Plaintiff's letter motion ("Pl. 1") dated August 4, 2008 but submitted to me October 16, 2008. It contains 31 pages plus Exhibits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5a.
2. Plaintiff's 10/17/08 e-mail to my law clerk. It contains:
(a) 2 e-mails from Ms. Misra to Plaintiff dated October 15, 2008, one at 1:37 p.m. and one at 2:12 p.m. ("Pl. 2(a)").
(b) Plaintiff's 10/17/08 letter to me "in response to the attached e-mail" ("Pl. 2(b)").
3. Plaintiff's letter to me ("Pl. 3") dated October 24, 2008. It responds to HIP's 10/17/08 motion to compel. It contains 3 pages plus Exhibits (Bl, B2, D1, D2, D3 and D4).
4. Plaintiff's 4-page letter to me ("Pl. 4") dated October 29, 2008. It contains 9 pages plus Exhibits Al through A9.
From Defendant HIP
1. Defendant's letter motion ("Def. 1") dated October 17, 2008 requesting an order to compel Plaintiff to complete outstanding discovery by a date certain. It contains 7 pages plus Exhibits 1 through 10.
2A. Amended version of Defendant's 10/24/08 letter to me ("Def. 2A"). It responds to Pl. 1 and Pl. 2, and it annexes Exhibits 1 through 30.
3. Defendant's letter to me ("Def. 3") dated October 29, 2008. It annexes Exhibits 1 through 9.
PLAINTIFF'S MOTION TO COMPEL MORE DISCOVERY (Pl. 1)

Plaintiff made her document requests in five installments: April 24, 2008 (Pl. 1, Exh. 1), June 1, 2008 (Pl. 1, Exh. 2), June 17, 2008 (Pl. 1, Exh. 3), "July 23, 2008 12:02 a.m." (Pl. 1, and Exh. 4) and July 24, 2008 (Pl. 1, Exh. 5).

On July 17, 2008, plaintiff deposed several HIP employees. She indicates that her fourth and fifth requests were prompted by testimony at those depositions. (Pl. 1, p. 9.)

For the most part, Plaintiff alleges that she thinks or knows that certain documents exist, or did exist, or should exist, and yet they were not produced in response to her requests. For the most part, HIP alleges that to the extent HIP had any documents responsive to plaintiff's requests, they have been produced. (See Def. 2A.)

HIP does make relevance objections to a few requests; I discuss them in the body of this memorandum.

Plaintiff's Document Request no. 1 (Pl. 1, Exh. 1) Among the "documents not produced" in response to the April 24, 2008 request, plaintiff mentions (Pl. 1, pp. 1-4):

documents from the "Employee's Health Department" regarding "incidents" with Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Cronin in September 2001 and December 2002 and "ongoing occurrences with Ms. Hagen during May 27, 2004 through December 6, 2004;"
documents relating to plaintiff's "educational and continuous training accomplishment through the Learning and Development department of `HIP University';"
documents relating to her requests to transfer jobs within HIP during 2001-2004, and relating to the transition period after her actual transfer from Mr. Kennedy's department to Ms. Hagen's, including emails from December 2002 to December 6, 2004;
"strings of central email communications" with nine named individuals;
a "telecommunications log on plaintiff's account;" and
"All in-house Voice-messages sent to and from Plaintiff's telecommunications Account for period 12/1/02-12/6/04."

In her October 24, 2008 response (Def. 2A, pp. 1-11), Ms. Misra details the efforts made and the documents produced by HIP in response to Plaintiff's first document request, and she provides a 5-page chart titled "Description of HIP's Document Production" (Ex. 16). In addition, she provides two Declarations of Diane McGuire, Assistant Director of Employee Relations in the Human Resources Department of HIP (Exhs. 20 and 23) describing document searches made or supervised by McGuire.

I turn first to Plaintiff's demand for copies of all her applications to transfer to other jobs within HIP, particularly during 2000-2002. Ms. Misra states as follows at Def. 2A, p. 7:

Plaintiff incorrectly contends that there is a discovery dispute regarding documents regarding her job applications. HIP does not dispute the relevance of this request and, has produced several responsive documents. These documents relate to Plaintiff's application to and transfer to the GAP department in April 2003, such as staff requisition paper work and related email communications. Ex. 22. HIP also has records that Plaintiff applied for four positions between 2000 and 2002, before being transferred to the GAP department. Ex. 23 ¶ 3. HIP has not been able to locate Plaintiff's applications for those positions.

Plaintiff states "this is just a fraction of my total applications for 2000-2002; I applied left right and center, both internally and externally." She gives a few specific examples. It is possible that she may be correct that she applied for more than four positions prior to April 2003. But HIP did not receive the Summons and Complaint until June 2007, and did not receive any document request until April 2008. Therefore, I do not discredit Ms. Misra's statement that HIP produced whatever documents it still possessed.

In her October 29, 2008 letter, Pl. 4, pp. 3-4, Plaintiff states:

All information I sought is available. The point is they were available up until my termination. HIP knew from my dismissal that litigation was imminent for I did not sign the separation document, I told them of the litigation, and two days after they were served with a summons from the Commissioner of Human Rights. That was enough to alert them of this day. Therefore, they should protect all my documents if they wanted to act in good faith.

But her 12/8/04 Charge of Discrimination did not give HIP fair notice that she wanted HIP to retain all documents from the period 2000 to 2002. It merely complained about incidents on April 26, May 27, November 1, and December 6, 2004.

Def. 2A, Exh. 24 is Declaration of Bernadine Lawson, a Forensic Investigator in the Information Security Department at HIP, in which Lawson describes her search for e-mails and voice mails and explains the HIP policies and procedures regarding retention of such information. She reports that many e-mails or voice mails that may have existed from 2002-2004 are long gone (with the exception of some e-mails retained by people who are still employed at HIP).

Plaintiff provided an affidavit from Christopher S. Cassar, a self-described "certified computer forensic specialist." However, his affidavit speaks in general terms about technology and business practices involving retention of electronic data. He does not specifically criticize HIP's procedure and policies. (See Pl. 1, Exh. lg; see also Def. 2A, Exh. 26.)

Ms. Misra states, at Def. 2A, p. 8:

Even though emails from Plaintiff's own account could not be retrieved, HIP searched for e-mails that referenced Plaintiff in any manner (either in the text of the message or as a sender or recipient) from all of the accounts of the individuals referenced in the Complaint. . . .

At Pl. 1, pp. 25-26, Plaintiff criticizes this approach as insufficient:

According to defendant, they chose the literal search approach where they select what the system should present. Even, so this doesn't satisfy the plaintiff's request, for the criteria used are partial. For example, defendant unilaterally determined their selections. In terms of names, Rob Cronin, Larry Minard, Colette Choute, Jasmine Thomas, Deborah Thompson, Wavel Bailey, and Viola Sykes are omitted from defendant's criteria list. That's not all, for those individuals whom defendant selected, half or all their information was omitted. For example, nothing was produced for John Kennedy even though John Kennedy testified and negated plaintiff's evaluation claiming that plaintiff resorted to email to avoid verbal communication with both Kennedy and Cronin. At least, where are those e-mails? Concerning the other individuals involved, as much as half of their emails are omitted. Ironically, the emails omitted are the core main material documents that will substantially prove plaintiff's claim without a doubt; thus reduce witness list and ultimately save time.

Certainly HIP's choice to search for e-mails in "user accounts of the supervisors that Plaintiff's Complaint identified as individuals who participated in discriminatory treatment and the HR individuals who received her complaints" (Def. 2A, p. 9) was rational and reasonable. As for Rob Cronin, Lawson's Declaration represents that Cronin's account had been eliminated after he departed from HIP in 2006. (Def. 2A, Exh. 24 ¶ 7.)

As to the other individuals, Ms. Misra argues:

This Court should reject Plaintiff's suggestion that HIP should have searched for email from individuals who she interacted with but who she has never alleged participated in discriminatory treatment of her — such as, Jasmin Thomas, Deborah Thompson, Wavel Bailey and Viola Sykes.

Plaintiff says, at Pl. 1, p. 3:

This email request is extremely paramount. These e-mails span the four corners of my claim. For example, these emails detailed from day one my daily activities in Ms. Hagen's department in a step-by-step fashion from assignment projects to delivery. In cases where I encountered barriers, that are imminent in project delay etc., the email system was fully utilized as a medium to broadcast this information to the relevant personnel and subsequent meetings were held in this regards. These broadcasts generally highlight authentic leads showing the type of issue, elements that are the driving force behind problems, request for reprioritization, step-by-step action to overcome obstacles. Only to find that these already settled obstacles where used to negate my evaluations and ultimately terminated my services in the name of performance.

These are generalities. Plaintiff doesn't explain how or why the emails of these additional persons would be relevant to her claims (or to HIP's defenses). For example, she does not say that any of these persons praised her, or criticized her unjustly. Absent a clear statement by Plaintiff justifying a search of the accounts of individuals other than those already produced — that is, explaining why such a search would be "reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence," Fed.R.Civ.Pr. 26(b)(1), I decline to require HIP to conduct that additional search.

The bottom line, as stated by Ms. Misra, is that "all of the documents Plaintiff's Motion seeks from her initial discovery demand have (i) been produced, (ii) do not exist, or (iii) are in the possession of third parties, whom Plaintiff knows must be subpoenaed." (Def. 2A, p. 3.) At p. 20 of her motion, Plaintiff states:

This is not a fishing expedition for plaintiff; this is a serious request for material documents that exist and are of vital importance to the case. Plaintiff physically came in contact with these documents where in [a] majority of times signed to most of them. [sic] This action appears to be [and?] is downright "hiding the ball."

I have no reason to doubt Plaintiff when she states that she saw or signed various documents, but that does not mean they still exist. Plaintiff has given no sound reason why I should discredit the declarations of McGuire and Lawson, or Ms. Misra's descriptions of documents that have been produced, or HIP's explanation of why certain documents do not exist (including documents that may have existed at some point but are not in existence now). Accordingly, I deny Plaintiff's motion to order further production in response to her Document Request no. 1. See, Jackson v. Edwards, 2000 WL 782947 (S.D.N.Y. June 16, 2000); Golden Trade, S.r.L. v. Lee Apparel Co., 143 F.R.D. 514, 525 n. 7 (S.D.N.Y. 1992) ("In the face of a denial by a party that it has possession, custody or control of documents, the discovering party must make an adequate showing to overcome this assertion.") Plaintiff's Document Request no. 2 (Pl. 1, Exh. 2)

Seven pages long in its original form, this request was definitely overbroad and burdensome. It sought "all" complaints against HIP, plus personnel records for several individuals. Plaintiff states:

For this particular request, both parties went through it at length. Plaintiff dissected each item to the lowest element. Plaintiff also narrowed the scope and requested all employment related cases against HIP during plaintiff's tenure. Defendant again selected a few cases and again omitted the key ones. Once more plaintiff reminded defendant's counsel of other existing employment cases that are omitted. Instead of ensuring the production of these documents, defendant's counsel emphatically added that only those received are related to plaintiff's case. In response, plaintiff identified employment-related cases by listing the guidelines set forth by the department of labor, but defendant's counsel continued refusal of production of those material documents.
During this conference, plaintiff also specifically requested all complaints against Ms. Hagen and Mr. Kennedy which should include both union and management issues. Again defendant's counsel claimed that nothing existed.

(Pl. 1, p. 28, emphasis added.) As to the last sentence, Ms. Misra represents that HIP did produce documents involving "employment related complaints against Mr. Kennedy and Ms. Hagen." (Def. 2A, p. 11 and Exh. 23.) Ms. Misra adds:

HIP has produced . . . charges of discrimination filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ("EEOC") or New York State Division of Human Rights ("NYSDHR"), and complaints against HIP filed in state or federal court . . ., from 1997 through the present, relating to a Health Insurance Plan of Greater New York employee's allegations of race, national origin, and disability discrimination. . . .
Ex. 27 16 at 1.13. HIP should not be required [to produce] any other information, because other types of complaints do not relate to Plaintiff's claims of discriminatory treatment based on race, national origin, and disability.

(Def. 2A, p. 12.) Plaintiff has not responded to the substance of this HIP argument. For example, plaintiff does not claim age discrimination; she does not explain the relevance of complaints about age discrimination, nor "the guidelines set forth by the department of labor." HIP has stated that it produced 11 years worth of complaints involving the same types of discrimination that plaintiff alleges. I find that HIP provided an adequate response to Document Request no. 2.

Plaintiff's Document Request no. 3 (Pl. 1, Exh. 3)

At Pl. 1, p. 5, Plaintiff complains that HIP has not produced documents in response to the following request:

1. Complete Evaluations for Shirley Atwood, Patricia Taylor, David Gates, Beatrice Reid, Rob Cronin, Bridget Harvey 2001 and 2002
2. Complete evaluations for Pamela Hinds 2003 and 2004
3. Complete evaluations for ( All Rob Cronin's staff) 2002, 2003 2004.

Plaintiff states (Pl. 1, p. 5):

Plaintiff's case is based on bias and from my global understanding, my evaluation for the period 2001-2004 was extremely unique and reflected biases; therefore I seek these documents to support my claim with a comparison of evaluations that were given by these managers in the same period.

Ms. Misra responds as follows (Def. 2A, pp. 12-13):

. . . HIP has produced Mr. Cronin's evaluations. . . . HIP disputes the relevance of Ms. Hinds' evaluations, because she was a union employee, and thus, not a similarly situated individual. In any case, HIP cannot produce any evaluations relating to Ms. Hinds because union employees did not receive evaluations. . . . Likewise, there is no dispute regarding the evaluations for "Rob Cronin's Staff" . . . [because] the only individual who reported to Mr. Cronin at the time Plaintiff was employed in that department was the Plaintiff. Thus, there are no similarly situated employees whose evaluations are relevant to Plaintiff's claims.
This Court should also deny Plaintiff's motion to compel "complete evaluations for" Shirley Atwood, Patricia Taylor, David Gates, Beatrice Reid and Bridget Harvey from 2001 2002. HIP understands that Plaintiff seeks to establish that these evaluations show that Mr. Kennedy's evaluations of these individuals (who are also Black) reflected race/color discrimination. HIP objected to this on various grounds including relevance. . . . These evaluations will not establish bias because "negative evaluations, standing alone without any accompanying adverse results, are not cognizable." Bennett v. Watson Wyatt Co., 136 F.Supp.2d 236, 247 (S.D.N.Y. 2001).
. . . The five individuals Plaintiff identifies — Atwood, Taylor, Gates, Reid and Harvey — cannot be likened to her; none of them reported to Cronin. . . .

Plaintiff replies (Pl. 1, p. 30):

Mr. Kennedy Mr. Cronin, and Ms. Hagen's retaliation practices revealed drastically in the evaluation of staff who reported their discriminatory actions and that's what I want to prove.

This is an unclear statement. One possible meaning would be that she thinks the evaluations of those people would evidence racially discriminatory conduct on the part of Kennedy, Cronin and Hagen. Or, if the evaluations of these people were to be fair and positive, she may seek to contrast them to her own, which she considers unfairly negative. But an employee who is not similarly situated to plaintiff would not be a relevant "comparator," and information regarding that employee's performance would rarely be meaningful. On the other hand, if the import of a requested evaluation had to do with its writer, then it might be relevant to show an attitude or a pattern or lack of a pattern.

Ms. Misra states (Def. 2A, pp. 13-14):

Alternatively it may be that Plaintiff is arguing that Mr. Kennedy, Mr. Cronin, and Ms. Hagen retaliated against her by giving her a negative evaluation but they did not retaliate against other African-American staff who did not report them for discriminatory actions. However, that argument relies on a false premise — that the other individuals she identifies (Atwood, Taylor, Gates, Reid, and Harvey) believed that Mr. Kennedy, Mr. Cronin, and Ms. Hagen discriminated against them. Plaintiff has produced absolutely no documentary evidence to suggest that any of the individuals believed that they received discriminatory treatment. None of these individuals have been identified as Plaintiff's trial witnesses. The evaluations of these non-parties are not relevant to Plaintiff's retaliation claim, and the Motion should be denied.

Regarding personnel records of third parties, courts have been careful to balance the privacy interests of the non-party employee against the party's need for information. See, e.g., Duck v. Port Jefferson School District, 2008 WL 2079916 at **3-4 (E.D.N.Y. May 14, 2008); Williams v. The Art Institute of Atlanta, 2006 WL 3694649, *10-11 (N.D.Ga. 2006); Cason v. Builders Firstsource-Southeast Group, Inc., 159 F.Supp.2d 242, 248-49 (W.D.N.C. 2001); Obiajulu v. City of Rochester Department of Law, 166 F.R.D. 293, 296 (W.D.N.Y. 1996).

I find that HIP provided an adequate response to Document Request no. 3.

Plaintiff's Document Request no. 4. (Pl. 1, Exh. 4 and Exh. 4a)

This request extends four pages and appears to be very broad and very burdensome. HIP objected to this document request on several grounds. (See Pl.1, Exh. 4e). First, HIP objected because this request, although dated July 23, 2008, was not served by mail until September 18, 2008, two months after the then-existing discovery deadline of July 24, 2008. Plaintiff did e-mail it to Ms. Misra on July 24 and/or 25 (See Def. 2A, Exh. 28), but Ms. Misra writes (Def. 2A, p. 14):

HIP made very clear that, while email was sufficient [for] routine correspondence, HIP expected Plaintiff to serve pleadings and discovery [by mail or by hand delivery]. This was due in part to the fact that Plaintiff repeatedly emailed attachments, which were incomplete (but due to the incomprehensible nature of Plaintiff's attachments, HIP could not always determine when an attachment was incomplete).

Under the Federal Rules, a party is entitled to effect service by electronic means only if there has been written consent by the party to be served. Fed.R.Civ.Pr. Rule 5. Ms. Misra states that HIP did not consent to be served electronically. Plaintiff does not allege that HIP or HIP's attorneys consented in writing. The Advisory Committees Notes Comments to the 2001 Amendments state:

Rule 5. Serving and Filing Pleadings and Other Papers

(a) Service: When Required.
(1) In General. Unless these rules provide otherwise, each of the following papers must be served on every party:
* * *
(C) a discovery paper required to be served on a party, unless the court orders otherwise;
(D) a written motion, except one that may be heard ex parte;. . . .
* * *
(b) Service: How Made.
* * *
(2) Service in General. A paper is served under this rule by:
* * *
(C) mailing it to the person's last known address — in which event service is complete upon mailing;
* * *
(E) sending it by electronic means if the person consented in writing — in which event service is complete upon transmission, but is not effective if the serving party learns that it did not reach the person to be served; or
(F) delivering it by any other means that the person consented to in writing. . . .

Subparagraph D [now E] of Rule 5(b)(2) is new. It authorizes service by electronic means or any other means, but only if consent is obtained from the person served. The consent must be express, and cannot be implied from conduct.

Accordingly, since Plaintiff has not shown that HIP expressly consented to receive service of discovery requests by email, HIP's objection is valid.

In any event, I do not see that this prejudices Plaintiff, since for the most part HIP's substantive objections would have merit, even if the Request had been timely served by mail. (See Def. 2A, pp. 14-19.)

Ms. Misra states that the Documents requested in Items 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 9 of Plaintiff's Document Request no. 4 have already been produced or do not exist.

Item 1 requests "June Hutchinson's response to Ali Hagen's email of 10/14/04." Ms. Misra reports, at Def. 2A, p. 15, that there was no response by Hutchinson to this e-mail from Hagen. Plaintiff either ignores or refuses to accept this fact. She states, at Pl. 1, p. 11: "Ms. Hutchinson's response that would include an attachment of my termination letter that they developed later is a very important document to my case." (Emphasis added.) The word "would" does not establish that there was a response, nor that it still existed in HIP's records when Plaintiff served her Rule 34 request.

Item 7 requests:
" All Procedure documentations [for 27 listed subcategories of] reports/projects completed in the GAP Dept. During 4/1/03-12/6/04. Please Note : All documents should be produced even if the project no longer active."

HIP states it "does not understand this request," that it "is incomprehensible" and that Plaintiff "also fails to establish relevance." I agree. Plaintiff states (Pl. 1, p. 14): "[T]he list of specific projects included is projects completed by plaintiff." As for searching for documents concerning 27 projects, I find that the burden and expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.

On the other hand, Plaintiff also writes, "A[s] [a] matter of fact, one of these procedure documentations, `FHP/Medicaid Enrollment Statistics,' was the basis on which plaintiff was given formal warning 5/27/04 and was also included in plaintiff's termination." (Pl. 1, p. 14.) It sounds as though Plaintiff already has a copy of this document. It is my understanding that HIP produced her personnel file and documents relating to her termination. If this "FHP/Medicaid Enrollment Statistics" document does exist, and it has not already been produced, then I direct HIP to produce it as soon as possible. Item 8 requests:

"produce . . . via the Computer Technology Department "
a. All emails between Plaintiff [and eight named individuals, Hagen, Minard, Hutchinson, Choute, Thomas, Thompson, Hinds and Bailey]".

In substance this is a repeat of some of Document Request no. 1. However, in Hagen's case, Plaintiff has added "unread emails from Plaintiff to Allie Hagen". Ms. Misra points out that the emails relating to Hagen and Hutchinson have already been produced. She argues that Minard, Choute, Thomas, Thompson, Hinds and Bailey are irrelevant because they have not been alleged to have been involved with any discriminatory conduct. "If none of these individuals participated in the allegedly discriminatory treatment Plaintiff received, then ordinary day-to-day communications between Plaintiff and those individuals has absolutely no relevance to her claims." (Def. 2A, pp. 17.) Plaintiff merely states:

This request is completely relevant. Every email sought, every person involved, and the time period played a vital role in the proof of my claim.

That statement is so general and conclusory that it conveys no information, and it does nothing to rebut Ms. Misra's argument.

Item 10 requests:

"All HR documents regarding Assistant Director's Position for the GAP department during October 2003 to December 31, 2003."

Ms. Misra contends that this information would be irrelevant because there is no record that Plaintiff applied for this position. (Def. 2A at 18.) Plaintiff argues (Pl. 1, p. 15):

This request is completely relevant to plaintiff's case. According to Ms. Hagen's testimony Ms. Hutchinson applied for the posted position via HR . . . Of course plaintiff did not apply for such position for she was not privy to this posting information. Thus, it becomes relevant to this case that intends to highlight all biases.

I do not understand what Plaintiff means when she alleges that she "was not privy to the posting information." I direct the parties to submit a joint letter to me as soon as possible, devoted solely to Items 10 and 11 of Plaintiff's Document Request no. 4. Item 11 rquests:

"All HR documents regarding Systems Administrator Manager's Position for the MP System in Marketing Department on or about January 2003 to February 28, 2003."

Ms. Misra repeats the same argument she made for Item 10. Plaintiff writes (Pl. 1, p. 15):

Your Honor this statement from defendant is extremely disingenuous and this kind of posture that defendant takes clearly punctuates why I am in court today. Plaintiff genuinely applied for this position and was also interviewed by both HR and Mr. Kennedy. This is the position that was initially signed off for plaintiff and was tweaked to promote 2 Caucasians. When the prior staff could not have handled the task, it was posted. And at that time I applied. Based on prior investigation on or about February 2003, it was revealed that only Kim and plaintiff applied for the position with Kim getting the edge. Therefore there is no confidentiality violation associated with the production of this request.

I direct HIP to respond in the single joint letter to be devoted to Items 10 and 11.

Item 12 requests:

"A copy of the first report on Age 65 and up that was generated by June Hutchinson and was emailed/delivered to Wanda Wareham and Plaintiff on or about January 2004 — April 2004"
Item 13 requests:

"A copy of the second report on Age 65 and up that was sent from June Hutchinson to Wanda Wareham on or about February 2004-April 2004."

Plaintiff states that "this is one of the reports in question that plaintiff completed," and that to "redact the columns with sensitive data . . . is fine with me, for I don't need sensitive data to conduct my analysis." Ms. Misra objects (Def. 2, p. 18):

HIP should not be compelled to produce this request — which is vague, ambiguous, irrelevant and burdensome. This request is vague and ambiguous because Plaintiff identifies "first report" and a "second report" but then clarifies only that these documents were delivered by Ms. Hutchinson some time during a 3-month time period from 4 years ago. Assuming the report was delivered by hand, Ms. Hutchinson did not keep a copy of every such report that was delivered 4 years ago, and the particular versions Plaintiff is referencing are incomprehensible. Assuming Plaintiff is seeking a document that was sent by email — HIP has already produced every retrievable e-mail Hutchinson sent to Plaintiff. Lawson Decl., Ex. 24 at ¶¶ 6-7. Thus, Plaintiff would already have the documents.

Plaintiff merely says (Pl. 1, p. 16):

This is another request that is completely relevant to plaintiff's case. This was one of the reports in question that plaintiff completed.

In connection with several of the items in this Fourth Request, plaintiff asks for a "screen shot" of the document (and also for screen shots of some documents already received by her in HIP's prior production); she gives an example of what she means by "screen shot" at Pl. 1, Exh. 4a. She states (Pl. 1, p. 11):

As outline[d] below general properties are used to provide information of a document/file. Therefore plaintiff requested this to ensure integrity of shared documents. There is absolutely no burden in accomplishing this task. It is easy as 1-2-3.

She then gives instructions that purport to explain how to pull up a screen shot. (Pl. 1, p. 12.) I disagree with her that it would not be burdensome to obtain (and presumably print) a screen shot for every document produced. Even if the steps to create a single screen shot are simple and quick, doing so for many screens and e-mails would be time consuming. More importantly, I do not see how the type of information given in her sample screen shot would be at all useful. I do not comprehend what she means by "ensure the integrity of shared documents." I decline to order HIP to accede to these requests.

Plaintiff's Document Request no. 5 (Pl. 1, Exh. 5)

Items 1 and 2 — "All report/printout from the Computer Technology Department that states the time I Log-in and Log-out in my computer/profile during the period January 1, 2004 to May 27, 2004 [and for] November 21, 2004, November 28, 2004 and December 5, 2004."

Plaintiff states (Pl. 1, p. 17) that this request is

completely relevant to plaintiff's case for it relates to Ms. Hagen's defense that plaintiff operated on a agreed schedule (more or less a flex schedule where "plaintiff goes and comes as she please"). This log in and log out printout will clearly prove plaintiff's schedule.

Ms. Misra says that this information is not available (see Lawson Decl., Exh. 24). In any event, I find that the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.

Item 3 requests:

Information on projects that John Kennedy Larry Minard worked together on during the period April 1, 2003 to May 27, 2004 . . . [including] all emails, meeting notes . . . and minutes . . . status . . ., everyone else involved if applicable

(Pl. 1, p. 9.) At Def. 2A, pp. 19-20, Ms. Misra objects that this is burdensome and "hardly relevant," and she adds:

Plaintiff's request appears to arise out of Mr. Kennedy's deposition testimony that he visited Mr. Minard to discuss projects:
Q. Okay, sir. I'll ask you some more questions. While I was in the GAP department at 34th Street, have you ever happened to be in Mr. Minard's office, Larry Minard?
A. I routinely go to Larry Minard's office, regularly, probably daily, to discuss issues related to [t]he products which I manage with him since he's the product manager for that product.

Plaintiff asserts, at Pl. 1, p. 17:

This request is certainly relevant to Plaintiff's case. It addresses Mr. Kennedy's frequent social visits to plaintiff's new department with Mr. Minard and Ms. Hagen where Mr. Kennedy openly conducted derogatory, condescending, and discriminatory conversations about plaintiff; then claimed these visits were with regards to their collaborative efforts with particular projects.

Pursuant to Rule 26(b)(2)(C)(iii), I find that "the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit." Rounding up all available documents about projects that those two men worked on during a 14-month period will not tend to prove or disprove the allegation that they spent time in oral conversations about Plaintiff.

HIP'S MOTION TO COMPEL MORE DISCOVERY (Def. 1)

By letter dated October 17, 2008, Ms. Misra requests "an Order compelling Plaintiff to complete outstanding discovery by responding to HIP's document requests and Interrogatories by a date certain." She also asks me to direct Plaintiff to sign and submit errata of her deposition transcript.

In response, Plaintiff submitted a 3-page letter with four exhibits (Pl. 3). She complains about HIP's conduct, but she does not deny that she has not completely responded to all HIP's document requests and interrogatories. Regarding her deposition transcript, she seems to be saying that she cannot review and sign the July 10, 2008 transcript until she gets a July 17, 2008 transcript. (Pl. 3, pp. 2-3.) In a 10/29/08 reply, Ms. Misra writes:

Until submitting her Opposition, Plaintiff never stated that she needed to review "the July 17, 2008 depositions of HIP witnesses in order to correct her own transcript . . ."

(Def. 3, p. 6.) Ms. Misra is correct that HIP is under no obligation to give Plaintiff a copy of transcripts of depositions whose testimony HIP does not intend to use. If Plaintiff wants transcripts of such witnesses, she must arrange to purchase them from the reporting company. In any event, Plaintiff has shown no good reason for delaying signing the transcript of her own testimony, with any errata sheet. She has exceeded the 30 days allowed by Rule 30(e), but I will give her until April 22, 2009 to serve a signed transcript, with any errata sheet. If she does not meet that deadline, the transcript will be deemed to be accurate.

At Pl. 3, p. 2, Plaintiff states:

Plaintiff's Response to C. Plaintiff's Failure to Respond to HIP's Interrogatories [the section of HIP's 10/17 motion]
This section contains several misstated statements that even derived from a deposition transcript that is in dispute. With reference to Item C page 6 ¶ 1 of defendant's motion, is incorrect. Based on defendant['s] overwhelming misrepresentations and misstatements that persist throughout this event, I was left with no other alternative but to record the minutes of the conferences. I humble ask Your Honor to grant me the opportunity to use these records as proof.

I do not have the faintest idea what "conferences" or "minutes" she is talking about or what she means by "use these records as proof." Later, she writes:

Currently I am awaiting a final recourse from TSG to provide me with the audio piece of the dictation equipment. If this audio assistance is not available to me, I respectfully ask Your Honor's guidance in this matter, for the discrepancies are numerous beyond repair.

My "guidance" is that she must obey Rule 30(d) and my deadline of April 20, 2009. I do not know what she means by "audio piece of dictation equipment," but even if there happens to be some audio recording of the testimony, that does not relieve her of her responsibility to deal with the written transcript.

I hereby direct Plaintiff to do following, if she has not already done so:

(1) Plaintiff must serve her signed deposition transcript, with any errata sheets, by April 22, 2009; if there are any changes in form or substance, she must separately state the reason for each such change.
(2) Plaintiff must search for all documents responsive to HIP's document requests, including those stored in email accounts and in storage facilities, and produce those documents by April 30, 2009.
(3) If Plaintiff cannot locate documents that were previously in her possession, then she must provide, by April 30, 2009, a statement which (a) describes those documents, (b) explains the last known location of the documents, and (c) describe the current custodian of the documents.
(4) Plaintiff must provide written responses to HIP's interrogatories by April 30, 2009.

I further direct that all discovery will close on May 29, 2009. Any dispositive motion must be served and filed by June 17, 2009.


Summaries of

WRIGHT-JACKSON v. HIP HEALTH PLAN

United States District Court, S.D. New York
Apr 15, 2009
07 Civ. 1819 (DFE) (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 15, 2009)
Case details for

WRIGHT-JACKSON v. HIP HEALTH PLAN

Case Details

Full title:MAUREEN WRIGHT-JACKSON, Plaintiff, v. HIP HEALTH PLAN, Defendants

Court:United States District Court, S.D. New York

Date published: Apr 15, 2009

Citations

07 Civ. 1819 (DFE) (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 15, 2009)

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