CHRISTOPHER J. BURKE, Magistrate Judge.
1. Before the Court in this patent infringement action is Plaintiff Princeton Digital Image Corp.'s ("Plaintiff') motion to compel Defendant Konami Digital Entertainment Inc. ("Konami US") to produce core technical documents regarding certain accused products in this case that are in the possession of certain of Konami US's foreign affiliates. (D.I. 139) The Court has considered the parties' letter submissions, (D.I. 143, 149, 169, 170), as well as the parties' arguments made during the August 25, 2016 teleconference with the Court, (D.I. 174 (hereinafter, "Tr.")).
2. More specifically, Plaintiff is requesting that Konami US be ordered to "supplement its core technical document production ... to include the technical documents describing the features of each accused [video] game title, including the functional requirements, technical specifications, test plans and other relevant technical documents" by producing records in the possession of Konami US non-party "affiliates" Konami Holdings Corp. (the "Holding Company") and Konami Digital Entertainment, Ltd. ("Konami Japan"). (D.I. 143 at 3-4; see also D.I. 169 at 1-2; Tr. at 15) The Holding Company is a publicly traded company that ultimately owns both Konami US and Konami Japan. (D.I. 151, Declaration of Nobuko Horii Minerd (hereinafter, "Minerd Decl."), at ¶ 5)
3. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34(a) requires the production of documents that are "in the responding party's possession, custody or control[.]" Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(a)(1). "In the absence of control by a litigating corporation over documents in the physical possession of another corporation, the litigating corporation has no dufy to produce." Gerling Int'l Ins. Co. v. Comm'r ofInternal Revenue, 839 F.2d 131, 140 (3d Cir. 1988). In the context of Rule 34(a), our Court has found that documents are in the "control" of a litigating party ifthat party has the "`legal right to obtain the documents required on demand'" from the non-party corporation. Inline Connection Corp. v. AOL Time Warner Inc., No.CA 02-272-MPT, CA 02-477-MPT, 2006 WL 2864586, at *1 (D. Del. Oct. 5, 2006) (quoting Power Integrations, Inc. v. Fairchild Semiconductor Int'l, Inc., 233 F.R.D. 143, 145 (D. Del. 2005)). The party seeking production of documents bears the burden of establishing the opposing party's control over those documents. Id.; Playboy Entm't Grp., Inc. v. United States, No. CIV.A. 96-94-JJF, 1997 WL 873550, at *3 (D. Del. Dec. 11, 1997).
4. In cases where a litigating company's sister corporation possesses the desired documents, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has set out two pathways for a finding of the requisite control under Rule 34(a). In Gerling Int'l Ins. Co. v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue, 839 F.2d 131 (3d Cir. 1988), the Third Circuit explained that in such situations, control has been found only where (1) "the sister corporation was found to be the alter ego of the litigating entity[;]" or (2) "the litigating corporation had acted with its sister in effecting the transaction giving rise to suit and is litigating on its behalf[.]" Gerling, 839 F.2d at 141.
5. In asserting here that Konami US has control over core technical documents in the possession of Konami Japan,
6. The Court notes up front that its decision here is not (and cannot) be based on what might possibly be or what one might assume to be the relationship between Konami US and Konami Japan with regard to the instant litigation. Instead, it has to be based on the current record before the Court, and what that record actually demonstrates. And it is on that front—as to the deficiencies in the current record with regard to the question of control—where Plaintiff's motion fails.
7. To that end, the Court notes Plaintiff has pointed to very little evidence with regard to the relationship between Konami US and Konami Japan.
8. The one additional relevant data point that Plaintiff cites, with regard to the control issue, is that Konami US has been able to "obtain [technical documents] in the past [from Konami Japan], for example, when it obtained copies of the source code for the accused games that it offered for inspection in lieu of producing documents." (D.I. 143 at 4 (citing id, ex. 4 at 1-3); see also D.I. 169 at 2) On that front, the Minerd Declaration reports only that "Konami US has requested on occasion that Konami Japan provide high-level materials such as source code to Konami US in connection with discovery requests in civil litigation[.]" (Minerd Decl. at ¶ 9; see also D.I. 149 at 4 ("Konami [US] may have, on occasion, sought selected high-level documents from Konami Japan to evaluate litigation[.]")) From these less-than-clear statements, the Court can infer that Konami US has asked for and obtained source code from Konami Japan relevant to this litigation. What other "materials" Konami US has obtained from its foreign affiliate (if any) is something that Plaintiff has not established, and remains unclear to the Court.
9. In light of this slim record, the Court cannot conclude that Konami US "has acted with its sister [Konami Japan] in effecting the transaction giving rise to suit[.]" Gerling, 839 F.2d at 141. Plaintiff has not offered an articulation as to what it would mean for Konami US, in this patent litigation matter, to have "acted with" Konami Japan to "effect" the relevant "transaction[s]." Even assuming that here, this would require an analysis of Konami Japan's connection with Konami US's infringing conduct at issue, the Court does not have a lot to go on. It knows only that Konami Japan developed the accused products. Perhaps that alone would be enough to meet this test, but Plaintiff provides no citation to caselaw suggesting that is so. And the Court has not been provided with any other information about Konami Japan's connection to the instant litigation. Does Konami Japan benefit financially from Konami US's U.S.—based use or sale of the accused games?
10. Similarly, the Court has no basis to conclude that Konami US "is litigating on
[Konami Japan's] behalf." Gerling, 839 F.2d at 141. There is no record here of, for example, Konami Japan employees directing the course of this litigation or making important strategic decisions in the matter for Konami US. That Konami Japan has, in at least one instance, made evidence (source, code) in its possession accessible to Konami US—simply in order to, according to the Minerd Declaration, "protect[] its employees from time-consuming work in connection with" this matter, (Minerd Decl. at ¶ 9)—cannot be enough to make this showing under Rule 34(a).
11. The caselaw (particularly that relied upon by the Third Circuit in Gerling) is in accord. As noted above, the Gerling Court cited to a case from this District, Afros S.P.A. v. Krauss-Maffei Corp., 113 F.R.D. 127 (D. Del. 1986), as the case best exemplifying a circumstance where a litigating entity "was an agent of the [other corporation] in the transaction giving rise to the suit and in litigating the suit on the [other corporation's] behalf." Gerling, 839 F.2d at 140-41.
12. In Afros, plaintiff Afros, S.p.A. ("Afros") alleged infringement of its patent, and defendant Krauss-Maffei Corp. ("KMC") counterclaimed for infringement of two of its own patents. Afros, 113 F.R.D. at 128-29. Afros later filed a motion to compel KMC to produce documents relating to the design and development of the products covered by KMC's patents, which were in the possession of non-party KMAG (KMC's parent corporation and the entity that originally developed and patented the products). Id. at 129. The Afros Court first noted that "[t]he control analysis for Rule 34 purposes ... [requires] that there be close coordination between" the litigating party and the non-party possessing the documents. Id. Next, the Afros Court explained that the "`nature of the relationship' between the party over whom the court has jurisdiction and the non-party with possession of the documents will determine whether a motion to compel discovery should be granted" and that there were three factors "of paramount importance" to this inquiry: "first, the corporate structure encompassing the different parties; second, the non-party's connection to the transaction at issue; third, to what degree will the non-party receive the benefit of any reward in the case." Id. at 130.
13. In ultimately granting Afros' motion to compel, the Court highlighted the following facts with respect to the nature ofKMC and KMAG's "very close" relationship: (1) KMC was KMAG's wholly owned subsidiary and was the exclusive seller ofKMAG's products in the United States; (2) the four members comprising KMC's Board of Directors were all KMAG employees, and two of these board members also "played prominent roles in the management ofKMC"; (3) every one of the four documents that KMC had produced in response to Afros' discovery request at issue "were obtained from KMAG's files," and the record demonstrated that KMAG provided these documents "in the interest of assisting KMC move this case toward trial" and "`with full cooperation"'; (4) "[k]ey decisions regarding [the] litigation, primarily the assignment of patent rights [from KMAG to KMC] and [the] decision to counterclaim, were made by a KMAG employee with no direct connection to KMC" and indeed, were made without even informing key KMC decision-makers beforehand; (5) "KMAG is responsible for the development" of the accused products, "and any question regarding infringement will necessarily reference acts it performed"; and (6) "KMAG would receive a direct benefit from a favorable judgment" because "KMAG's sales in the United States, through KMC, will be enhanced because it would be rid of a competitor or, if it chose, it could license Afros, thereby increasing the subsidiary's income through royalties." Id. at 131-32. All of these facts, taken together, led the Court to conclude that "KMC has the requisite control" of the documents in KMAG's possession. Id. at 132.
14. Also instructive is the decision in Alimenta (US.A.), Inc. v. Anheuser-Busch Cos, Inc., 99 F.R.D. 309 (N.D. Ga. 1983)—a case that the Gerling Court called out as one of the "few cases involving sister corporations under common control[.]" Gerling, 839 F.2d at 141. In Alimenta, a district court denied a motion to quash a subpoena to plaintiff that called for, inter alia, the production of documents in the possession of plaintiffs sister corporation. Alimenta, 99 F.R.D. at 310-14. In doing so, the Alimenta Court rejected plaintiff's argument that it could avoid production of the documents because it did not "control" them. Important to the Alimenta Court's decision was that the defendant had made a record demonstrating that: (1) there was a "close relationship between" the plaintiff and the non-party sister corporation; (2) the sister corporation was "intimately involved in the transaction at issue in this suit" in that the plaintiff had purchased certain peanuts at issue in the litigation from the sister corporation (and "sold" the peanuts to the defendant for the same price it had "paid" for them), the peanuts had been selected by the sister corporation's President before being shipped to the United States for re-sale to the defendant, and the plaintiff and the sister corporation were otherwise "in regular contact during the course of the transaction at issue" such that they had acted as "as one unit"; (3) the President of the sister corporation had been "`intimately involved in the discovery process'" in the instant litigation, including having participated in plaintiff's answers to interrogatories; and (4) the sister corporation's President had been deposed in the case and had been accompanied by plaintiff's counsel to that deposition. Id. at 310-13.
15. As compared, for example, to the robust fact patterns in Afros and Alimenta, Plaintiff's showing here is clearly wanting. While the Court is aware that Konami Japan developed the accused Dance Dance Revolution videogames sold by Konami US, the Court otherwise has little information (as compared to the more detailed showings in Afros and Alimenta) of the role Konami Japan can be said to have played in the transactions giving rise to this suit. And though the Court is aware that Konami Japan and Konami US are subsidiaries of the Holding Company, and that Konami US has on at least one occasion obtained materials from Konami Japan relating to litigation (i.e., source code), the record here does not nearly compare to the records in Afros or Alimenta in terms of a showing that the sister corporation is intimately involved in the advancement of this litigation. To find sufficient control here, the Court would need to engage in a healthy amount of speculation as to Konami Japan's relationship with Konami US and as to its role in this case. Rule 34(a) does not sanction such a path. Cf. Playboy Entm't Grp., Inc., 1997 WL 873550, at *3-4 (denying the defendants' motion to compel the plaintiff to produce documents in the possession of its parent company, where the defendants' "sparse submissions"—which demonstrated only that plaintiff is the wholly-owned subsidiary of the non-party company, that plaintiffs president is an executive vice president of the non-party company, and that the non-party company's Chief Executive Officer approves significant decisions regarding the operation of the plaintiffs business—coupled with defendants' "failure to demonstrate that [the plaintiff] can access these documents in the ordinary course of business upon demand," indicated an insufficiently close connection between the two companies to show the requisite "control" under Rule 34); Pennwalt Corp. v. Plough, Inc., 85 F.R.D. 257, 263 (D. Del. 1979) (denying the plaintiffs motion to compel the defendant to produce documents belonging to its sister corporation where "[t]here is no evidence ... that [the two companies] have identical Boards of Directors, or that their respective business operations are so intertwined as to render meaningless their separate corporate entities") (cited in Gerling, 839 F.2d at 142).
16. The Court notes that its decision in this regard does not necessarily foreclose Plaintiff from obtaining the documents at issue. For instance, Plaintiff may be able to make a better record in the future (via discovery from Konami US or otherwise) with respect to the relationship between Konami US and Konami Japan, in order to attempt to support a renewed request for Konami Japan's documents.
17. For the reasons set out above, Plaintiff has not carried its burden here, and, therefore, Plaintiffs motion to compel is DENIED.