RICARDO S. MARTINEZ, Chief District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on Plaintiff's Motion to Compel. Dkt. #71. Plaintiff seeks an Order compelling Defendant to produce complete responses to several Interrogatories and Requests for Production, confirming that Defendant has waived any objections to his 30(b)(6) deposition notice, and compelling Defendant to designate 30(b)(6) witnesses on several topics. Id. Defendant opposes the motion. Dkt. #82. For the reasons set forth below, the Court DENIES Plaintiff's Motion.
On July 22, 2016, Plaintiff filed the instant employment matter, alleging that he suffered discrimination and retaliation by Defendant because of his race/national origin (Middle Eastern-Iranian), color, accent and ethnicity. Dkt. #1. Plaintiff alleges that he was an exemplary employee who worked for Defendant for over 29 years. Id. at ¶ 2. Plaintiff further alleges that toward the end of 2014, he was assigned a new manager from South Carolina, who almost immediately began discriminating and then retaliating against him, including but not limited to discriminating in the terms and conditions of his employment, unlawfully denying a pay raise, cash award, and promotion, and intentionally discriminating and retaliating against him with regard to his performance and competency evaluations, which directly led to and caused him to be laid off and then terminated from his employment as part of a Reduction In Force ("RIF"). Id. Plaintiff seeks monetary and injunctive relief, including pecuniary and nonpecuniary damages, compensatory damages, and punitive damages. Id. at ¶ 3. Defendant has denied Plaintiff's allegations. Dkt. #4.
Since the filing of the Complaint and Answer, this matter has proceeded through the normal course of litigation. Trial is currently scheduled for January 22, 2018, the discovery deadline was September 25, 2017, and dispositive motions are currently due by October 24, 2017. Dkt. #12.
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1):
If requested discovery is not answered, the requesting party may move for an order compelling such discovery. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(1). "The party who resists discovery has the burden to show that discovery should not be allowed, and has the burden of clarifying, explaining, and supporting its objections." Cable & Computer Tech., Inc. v. Lockheed Sanders, Inc., 175 F.R.D. 646, 650 (C.D. Cal. 1997).
On this motion, Plaintiff asks the Court to compel responses from Defendant to several Interrogatories and Requests for Production. Dkt. #71. Plaintiff has made it difficult for the Court to discern which specific requests he asserts are deficient, as he has not organized his brief by specific discovery request, but rather by a description of the types of information and documents he has been seeking. Thus, to the best of the Court's capabilities, it addresses Plaintiff's motion as follows.
Plaintiff first appears to seek further responses to his Interrogatory No. 5 and Requests for Production F and I. Dkt. #71 at 8. Plaintiff's Interrogatory No. 5, the corresponding Request for Production I, and Defendant's responses state:
Dkt. #72, Ex. 14 at 15-16.
Plaintiff's Request for Production F and Defendant's response state:
Dkt. #72, Ex. 14 at 12-13.
Plaintiff complains that Defendant's responses are deficient because Defendant did not include "Two Minute Drills." Dkt. #71 at 8. Plaintiff also complains that Defendant did not adequately answer the contention portion of the Interrogatory. Id. Defendant responds that Plaintiff has requested the "Two Minute Drills" for the first time in this motion, and that such documents are not contained in an employees' personnel records. Dkt. #82 at 4-5. Thus, Defendant asserts that this request is improper and this portion of the motion should be denied. Id.
The Court agrees with Defendant that the requests, as written, did not put Defendant on notice that Plaintiff was seeking the "Two Minute Drills," particularly because they are not part of the employees' personnel records. See Dkt. #82 at 5. Moreover, to the extent that Plaintiff argues the "Two Minute Drills" should be produced because they were requested as part of the 30(b)(6) notice, Plaintiff raises this argument for the first time on Reply. See Dkt. #85 at 3. "New arguments may not be introduced in a reply brief," United States v. Puerta, 982 F.2d 1297, 1300 n.1 (9th Cir. 1992), and a court "need not consider arguments raised for the first time in a reply brief," Zamani v. Carnes, 491 F.3d 990, 997 (9th Cir. 2007). If new facts or arguments are introduced in a reply, the nonmoving party may file a surreply requesting that the court strike the material. Local Rules W.D. Wash. LCR 7(g). In this case, Defendant so moved, and the Court will not consider Plaintiff's newly-raised arguments. See Dkt. #89.
With respect to the complaint that Defendant did not answer the contention portion of the Interrogatory, the Court will not compel a further response. As this Court has previously explained, a party is not required to state every factual allegation that may support its claims or defenses. See Dkt. #79 at 10-11.
Plaintiff next argues that Defendant did not sufficiently respond to Interrogatory No. 3 and Requests for Production C, D, F and S, which sought personnel records for Plaintiff's former supervisor and all of the employees who reported to that supervisor. Dkt. #71 at 8. Defendant asserts that this portion of the motion is moot because it has produced all of the responsive information and documents except for disciplinary records which are not part of an employee's personnel file. Dkt. #82 at 3. Plaintiff appears to seek the disciplinary records, which were not produced, as comparator evidence. See Dkt. #85 at 2-3. However, the Court agrees with Defendant that such records do not appear relevant based on the actions that Plaintiff challenges with respect to his RIF termination. See Dkt. #82 at 3. Indeed, Plaintiff alleges that Defendant relies entirely on Performance Management and Job-Related Competencies evaluations, conducted by an employee's supervising manager along with other recommendations from their manager, to rank employees and identify them for terminations by RIF. Dkt. #1 at ¶ 17. He does not make allegations about any disciplinary actions. See Dkt. #1. Defendant asserts that it has provided all requested personnel files, feedback requests and performance feedback documents for the comparator employees. Dkt. #82 at 3. Accordingly, the Court will not compel further responses.
To the extent that Plaintiff argues Defendant waived any Objections to the requests for these documents that were incorporated into his 30(b)(6) Deposition Notice, the Court rejects that portion of the motion as moot, as it has found that Defendant adequately responded as discussed above. Further, in response to the 30(b)(6) Notice, Defendant asserted that all responsive documents had already been produced. Moreover, while Plaintiff made a representation in the fact portion of his motion that Defendant did not timely respond, see dkt. #71 at 4, he does not actually make any legal argument in the body of his motion on that issue, see dkt. #71 at 11-12. The Court will not address legal arguments made for the first time in Plaintiff's Reply. See Dkt. #85 at 1-2.
Finally, Plaintiff asks this Court to compel Defendant to identify a 30(b)(6) witness with knowledge on all topics in his 30(b)(6) Notice. Dkt. #71 at 11-12. Specifically, Plaintiff argues that Defendant has improperly declined to designate a witness for Topics I.A.1, I.A.2, I.A.3, II.A.2, II.A.3, VI., VI.1, VI.2. VI.3, VI.4. VI.5. VI.6, VI.7, VIII.B, VII.B.1, VIII.C, VII.E, VIII.G.1, IX.D.3, and IX.5.g. Dkt. #71 at 5. Defendant objects that the Notice is overbroad and unduly burdensome, and is written in a way that makes it impossible to meaningfully designate witnesses. Dkt. #82 at 8-10. The Court agrees. As the Court has previously found, Plaintiff's proposed set of topics, "is not only enormously overbroad, it appears to be intentionally so." See Acton v. Target Corp., Case No. C08-1149RAJ at Dkt. #81. Accordingly, the Court will not compel Defendant to designate a specific witness or witnesses beyond what it has already designated.
Further, this Court provides the following additional guidance for any 30(b)(6) deposition. Plaintiff may conduct a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition of Defendant, and may use the list of topics attached to his deposition notice. The Court, however, expects the parties to rigorously enforce the 7-hour time limit under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 30. With the amount of topics and subtopics proposed by Plaintiff, such time limit may leave him with only seconds or minutes to inquire into each area. As Judge Jones stated in his prior Order directed at the same counsel representing Plaintiff in this case, "[t]his seems an extraordinarily unproductive use of [Plaintiff's] time, but he is welcome to use his time as he sees fit." Id. However, this Court finds that it would be unreasonable to expect Defendant to be able to fully prepare one or more deponents to respond to every topic. "Should [Plaintiff] discover at the deposition that [Defendant] is unprepared on one or more subjects, it is unlikely he will have anyone to blame but himself. Id. Defendant shall make all reasonable efforts to prepare for a productive deposition, but the Court recognizes the difficulty in doing so given Plaintiff's extremely overbroad Rule 30(b)(6) notice. Plaintiff would be well advised to limit the topics to those within the scope of discovery that can be reasonably covered in a 7-hour period.
Having reviewed the parties' motions, the oppositions thereto and replies in support thereof, along with the Declarations and Exhibits and the remainder of the record, the Court hereby finds and ORDERS that Plaintiff's Motion to Compel (Dkt. #71) is DENIED.