KATHERINE A. ROBERTSON, Magistrate Judge.
Defendant Time Warner Cable, Inc. ("Defendant") has moved this court for the entry of a protective order pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c). Plaintiff Kristoffer Roberts ("Plaintiff") opposes entry of a protective order in the form proposed by Defendant. Because Defendant has not shown that its proposed order is necessary to protect it from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense, the motion is denied.
Eight plaintiffs — Walter Sicotte, Maurice Peoples, Nathaniel Brookman, James Kratka, Andrew Fudge, Kristoffer Roberts, Kevin Majors, and Jesse Polo — (collectively, "the Pittsfield Plaintiffs") filed separate cases against Defendant in the Berkshire County Superior Court for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, all asserting claims for violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 151, § 1B (the Massachusetts statute governing pay for overtime work), violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 148 (the Massachusetts Wage Act), breach of contract, and unjust enrichment for failing to pay them for time spent working both before and after their scheduled shifts and during their unpaid lunch periods. Defendant removed the cases (referred to collectively as "the Pittsfield Cases") to federal court based on diversity of citizenship.
Specifically, by its proposed protective order, Defendant seeks to divide discovery material that it produces into two categories.
Rule 26(b)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that, "[u]nless otherwise limited by court order, the scope of discovery is as follows: Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party's claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case. . . . Information within this scope of discovery need not be admissible in evidence to be discoverable." Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Pursuant to Rule 26(c)(1), "[t]he court may, for good cause, issue an order to protect a party or [any] person [from whom discovery is sought] from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense." Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1). The party or person seeking a protective order, including an order limiting another party's right to disseminate information obtained in discovery, has the burden of demonstrating the existence of good cause. Green v. Cosby, No. 14-cv-30211-MGM, 2015 WL 9594287, at *4-5 (D. Mass. Dec. 31, 2015); Baker v. Liggett Grp., Inc., 132 F.R.D. 123, 125 (D. Mass. 1990) (citing Anderson v. Cryovac, Inc., 805 F.2d 1, 6-7 (1st Cir. 1986)). "A finding of good cause must be based on a particular factual demonstration of potential harm, not on conclusory statements." Baker, 132 F.R.D. at 125 (quoting Anderson, 805 F.2d at 7).
Defendant asserts that good cause exists for entry of the protective order it seeks on two grounds. First, Defendant posits that the order is necessary to ensure that the Pittsfield Plaintiffs are bound by Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1)'s rule limiting discovery to relevant matters. Id. According to Defendant, some of the material that it will produce in discovery is relevant in all of the Pittsfield Cases. By way of example, Defendant refers to its policies governing payment of overtime or prohibiting off-the-clock work. Defendant proposes to designate such materials as Common Litigation Material; because Common Litigation Material would be discoverable in all of the Pittsfield Cases individually, all of the Pittsfield Plaintiffs should be able to review and utilize it in their individual cases.
Second, Defendant argues that good cause exists for entry of the order because some of the documents and information that it will produce are confidential in nature to the particular Pittsfield Plaintiff (or Pittsfield Plaintiffs) to whom Defendant will produce them. Based on this rationale, Defendant initially took the position that Common Litigation Material would not include "any individual or Plaintiff-specific information produced in any of the Pittsfield Cases" (Dkt. No. 28-2 at 3).
The court is not persuaded that Defendant has shown good cause for entry of a protective order on either relevancy or confidentiality grounds. "As a general matter, relevancy must be broadly construed at the discovery stage such that information is discoverable if there is any possibility it might be relevant to the subject matter of the action." Cherkaoui v. City of Quincy, No. 14-cv-10571-LTS, 2015 WL 4504937, at *1 (July 23, 2015) (quoting E.E.O.C. v. Electro-Term, Inc., 167 F.R.D. 344, 346 (D. Mass. 1996)). "[B]ecause discovery itself is designed to help define and clarify the issues, the limits set forth in Rule 26 must be construed broadly to encompass any matter that bears on, or that reasonably could lead to other matters that could bear on, any issue that is or may be in the case." Green, 2015 WL 9594287, at *2 (quoting In re New England Compounding Pharmacy, Inc. Products Liab. Litig., MDL No. 13-2419-FDS, 2013 WL 6058483, at *4 (D. Mass. Nov. 13, 2013)).
Here, in order for the Pittsfield Plaintiffs to prove their claims for unpaid overtime work against Defendant, each Pittsfield Plaintiff will have to prove both that he incurred unpaid overtime work and that Defendant "had actual or constructive knowledge that he was working overtime." Vitali v. Reit Mgmt. & Research, LLC, 36 N.E.3d 64, 69 (Mass. App. Ct. 2015) (quoting Prime Commc'ns, Inc., v. Sylvester, 615 N.E.2d 600, 601 (Mass. App. Ct. 1993)). "The knowledge inquiry requires an assessment of what the employer knew or should have known, and is to be made in view of the employer's `duty . . . to inquire into the conditions prevailing in his business.'" Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Gulf King Shrimp Co. v. Wirtz, 407 F.2d 508, 512 (5th Cir. 1969)).
Defendant takes the position that documents relating to one employee's pay and work hours are irrelevant, as a matter of law, to the defendant employer's actual or constructive knowledge of off-the-clock work by any other employee. This is inconsistent with the holding of the Massachusetts Appeals Court in Vitali that an employer's constructive knowledge can be based, at least in part, on the observable behavior of other employees with respect to off-theclock work. Id. at 75. Because of this commonsense proposition, the Vitali court determined that the trial court erred in granting summary judgement to the defendant-employer where the summary judgment record supported the reasonable inference that, "armed with at least constructive knowledge that employees were undertaking lunch time work that should have been credited toward overtime, the [defendant] company went ahead and assumed in its favor that employees were not performing any such work except where they separately reported it through a process that [plaintiff] was never trained in, or even told to use." Id. Defendant argues vehemently against this reading of Vitali, citing to decisions from other jurisdictions in Jones v. Z.O.E. Enters. of Jax, Inc., No. 3:11-cv-377-J-32MCR, 2012 WL 3065384, at *1 (M.D. Fla. July 27, 2012), Buckner v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., No. 5:09-CV-00411-BR, 2011 WL 6748522, at *1 (E.D.N.C. Dec. 22, 2011), and Glorioso v. Williams, 130 F.R.D. 664 (E.D. Wis. 1990), in which the courts denied the plaintiff-employees' motions to compel the defendant-employers to provide wage and time records regarding other non-party employees. These cases are neither controlling, nor persuasive. In contrast to the Vitali decision, which cogently addresses the potential relevance of evidence regarding other employees to the issue of the employer's constructive knowledge, none of the courts in the cases Defendant cites engage in any analysis, let alone one taking into account the liberal construction of relevancy that controls in the discovery stage, before simply declaring the sought-after wage and hour records not relevant. Jones, 2012 WL 3065384, at *2; Buckner, 2011 WL 6748522, at *4; Glorioso, 130 F.R.D. at 664-65. Defendant also cites to the subsequent decision of the Massachusetts Superior Court on remand in Vitali, No. SUCV2012-00588-BLS1, 2016 WL 1425725, at *7 (Mass. Super. Ct. Mar. 2, 2016), denying the plaintiff-employee's motion for class certification. Contrary to Defendant's argument, the trial court's conclusion that the claims of other hourly workers employed by the same defendant did not present common questions of law and fact sufficient for class treatment is not the same as a conclusion that what happened to those other workers was entirely irrelevant to the employer's actual or constructive knowledge regarding the plaintiff's alleged overtime work (and, indeed, the latter conclusion would be in conflict with the decision of the Massachusetts Appeals Court remanding the case).
Moreover, Defendant does not identify any harm cognizable under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c) relating to its relevancy concerns that its proposed protective order is necessary to prevent. Defendant makes vague references in its pleadings to "discovery abuse." At the hearing on its motion to dismiss, Defendant suggested that the "abuse and harm" that would result from "unfettered access . . . to all the documents across all the cases" would be that a Pittsfield Plaintiff could utilize a document produced to another Pittsfield Plaintiff during a deposition "to try and elicit admissions about the company's practice to establish . . . constructive knowledge" (Dkt. No. 52 at 9). This is not an abuse of the discovery process; this is a purpose of the discovery process. Defendant suggests that this could be improper because a Pittsfield Plaintiff could use documents that a deponent has no knowledge about — because they were produced in another Pittsfield case — to try to elicit the damaging admissions. A Rule 26(c) protective order is not an appropriate vehicle to address such a hypothetical concern. A deponent who has no knowledge about a document and is unable to answer questions relating to it can so respond during a deposition. And to the extent that Defendant might disagree that certain testimony from an employee amounts to an admission of its constructive knowledge about a particular Pittsfield Plaintiff's off-the-clock work, Defendant can make that case at summary judgment or trial. Contrary to Defendant's suggestion, having to do so is not an undue burden, but rather, part of the litigation process.
Defendant's supposed confidentiality concerns present an even weaker ground for entry of a protective order such as the one Defendant seeks. As discussed, in light of the Pittsfield Plaintiffs' consents, Defendant no longer maintains that it should be able to limit the Pittsfield Plaintiffs' ability to disseminate the contents of their personnel records to the other Pittsfield Plaintiffs. The material Defendant now wishes to limit the Pittsfield Plaintiffs' ability to disseminate is communications and emails among a particular Pittsfield Plaintiff, management, or any other employee that do not constitute employment applications, employee work evaluations, disciplinary documentation, and promotion, demotion, or termination information, and documents that implicate the privacy interests of employees other than the Pittsfield Plaintiffs.
As to any communications and emails that are not part of the Pittsfield Plaintiffs' personnel records, Defendant argues that the Pittsfield Plaintiffs cannot consent to, or demand that Defendant agree to, the sharing of the records.
Defendant's final argument concerns documents that implicate privacy interests of other non-party employees, and Defendant cites to the Massachusetts statute concerning personnel records for support. Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 149, § 52C. As an initial matter, it is unclear whether any of the Pittsfield Plaintiffs' discovery requests call for production of any non-parties' personnel records. To the extent that they do, however, preventing the Pittsfield Plaintiffs to whom such records are produced from disseminating them to other Pittsfield Plaintiffs to whom they are not produced does nothing to address the privacy concerns of any non-party employees in their personnel records. Thus, Defendant's proposed order is not tailored to address these privacy concerns which are supposedly at issue.
In sum, because Defendant has not shown good cause for entry of a protective order limiting the Pittsfield Plaintiffs' ability to disseminate information obtained in discovery to other Pittsfield Plaintiffs, Defendant's motion is denied.
The Pittsfield Plaintiffs have indicated willingness to enter into an agreement that would restrict them from disseminating beyond the Pittsfield Cases information produced by Defendant that amounts to proprietary or confidential information provided that such an agreement has a dedesignation procedure. The parties are encouraged to confer and execute a confidentiality agreement covering such materials, which they should then file with the court pursuant to the District Judge's Standing Order Regarding Confidentiality Agreements Between Parties, dated Aug. 12, 2014. Further, to the extent that the Pittsfield Plaintiffs' requests call for production of non-parties' personnel records, the parties are encouraged to include within the confidentiality agreement provisions tailored to fit the confidentiality interests involved, if any, such as an agreement to redact identifying information. The parties are strongly encouraged to reach an agreement on these issues without the need for further court intervention and to proceed expeditiously with discovery.
It is so ordered.