TERESA J. JAMES, Magistrate Judge.
Plaintiffs Melissa Stonebarger, individually and as representative of the estate of Veronica Hogle; Ruth Turner, as next friend of minor K.T.; and Therman Turner, Jr., filed this action seeking to recover damages for the deaths of Veronica Hogle and Therman Turner. Therman Turner was driving a truck in which Veronica Hogle was a passenger, and both died following a collision between the truck and a train that was traveling on Union Pacific's railroad tracks. This matter is before the Court on Defendants' Motion to Compel Discovery (ECF No. 42). Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 37, Defendants ask the Court to overrule Plaintiffs' objections and order Plaintiffs to produce all documents responsive to Request Numbers 44 and 45 of their First Requests for Production of Documents to Plaintiffs.
Defendants served their First Requests for Production of Documents to Plaintiffs on October 16, 2013.
Defendants request in their motion that the Court order Plaintiffs to produce documents responsive to their First Requests for Production Nos. 44 and 45.
Defendants seek to compel Plaintiffs to produce documents responsive to their First Requests for Production No. 44, which asks that Plaintiffs produce the account data for each Facebook.com account which Plaintiffs maintain, for the period of October 29, 2012 through the present. Each Plaintiff asserted the following objection:
Defendants also seek to compel Plaintiffs to produce documents responsive to their First Requests for Production No. 45, which asks that Plaintiffs produce all photographs posted, uploaded or otherwise added to any social networking sites or blogs, since the date of the accident alleged in the complaint, including photographs posted by others in which Plaintiff has been identified. Each Plaintiff asserted the following objection:
No party has discussed the type or number of photos that plaintiffs have produced pursuant to this Request.
Plaintiffs, who bring wrongful death claims, seek a variety of damages including damages for pecuniary loss; mental anguish; loss of companionship, education, and physical and moral training; and loss of protection, guidance, services, attention, care, advice, and support.
In their response to Defendants' motion, Plaintiffs assert that Defendants have not shown how Plaintiffs' private Facebook account information is relevant. Plaintiffs offer no argument in support of their objections that the Requests seek documents which are protected by the attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine, and the Court considers Plaintiffs to have abandoned those objections.
Defendants counter that the standard for relevancy in the context of discovery is broadly construed to include documents as to which there is any possibility that the information sought may be relevant to the subject matter of the action,
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1) sets out the general scope of discovery. It provides that the parties "may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party's claim or defense — including the existence, description, nature, custody, condition, and location of any documents or other tangible things and the identity and location of persons who know of any discoverable matter."
When the discovery sought appears relevant, the party resisting discovery has the burden to establish the lack of relevancy by demonstrating that the requested discovery (1) does not come within the scope of relevancy as defined under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1), or (2) is of such marginal relevancy that the potential harm occasioned by discovery would outweigh the ordinary presumption in favor of broad disclosure.
In this wrongful death action, the Court does not find that the relevancy of the documents called for by Request Nos. 44 and 45 is apparent on its face. Defendants offer a single sentence to describe the relevancy of all of Plaintiffs' Facebook data — whether public or private — from October 29, 2012 to the present:
Defendants' conclusory statement as to what the data "could" contain begs the question as to what irrelevant material could also be contained therein. Obviously, the latter category is of unlimited scope. On the other hand, the vagueness of Defendants' statement makes it difficult to dispute. At this point in the analysis, however, Defendants have the burden to show in a less conclusory fashion that the discovery sought is relevant and is not, as Plaintiffs suggest, "nothing more than a fishing expedition."
Plaintiffs represent that they have offered to provide their public Facebook postings, but that Defendants have continued to seek all of Plaintiffs' posting information, which would include "private messaging conversations between two individuals, private e-mails, and other postings only intended for private viewing by others and not in a public atmosphere."
Tompkins is a personal injury case in which defendant sought plaintiff's private Facebook postings. Although the opinion does not recite plaintiff's objection(s), it appears that she objected to the discovery on the grounds of privilege, privacy, relevancy, and overbreadth.
Although the decision supports Plaintiffs' position, Tompkins is of limited value in this case because it does not set forth the arguments of the movant and opponent and thus provides no means to determine whether it is sufficiently similar so as to offer persuasive authority. Defendants cite a number of cases from this District and others which address the discoverability of Facebook records, but Defendants' failure to offer a more detailed theory of relevancy in this case makes it difficult to conclude that any of the cases are more directly on point. The Court is aware that at least four cases in this District have overruled (in whole or in part) objections to discovery requests for social networking site data and compelled either full or limited production.
In the fourth case,
The Court concludes that, based on the issues in this case and the parties' arguments, such an approach is sound. Plaintiffs have offered to produce documents responsive to Request Nos. 44 and 45 insofar as they seek public postings on Plaintiffs' Facebook accounts, and the Court grants Defendants' motion to compel with respect to such documents. Insofar as Request Nos. 44 and 45 seek private postings on Plaintiffs' Facebook accounts, Plaintiffs need only produce documents which relate or refer to (1) their claims for damages for mental anguish, loss of companionship, loss of protection, guidance, services, attention, care, advice, and support, and (2) Defendants' defenses to those claims.
The Court finds that Plaintiffs' objections are substantially justified and thus declines to order payment of Defendants' reasonable expenses incurred in making this motion.
IT IS SO ORDERED.