KENNETH G. GALE, Magistrate Judge.
Before the Court is Defendants' Motion to Compel and supporting memorandum (Doc. 119, 120).
Plaintiff brings this lawsuit against her former employer, Defendant City of Hays, Kansas (Defendant City), as well as individual Defendants Toby Dougherty, the City Manager for Defendant City, and Donald Scheibler, Chief of Police for Defendant City. (See generally Doc. 1.) Plaintiff brings various claims against Defendants for the allegedly wrongful termination of her employment. Specifically, she contends that she was improperly fired after submitting an affidavit in a lawsuit (hereinafter "Dryden lawsuit") brought by former Hays, Kansas Police Department Officer Blaine Dryden against Defendant City, Defendant Dougherty, and the former Chief of Police "alleging interference with his constitutional rights . . . ." (Id., at 3-4.) Plaintiff contends, in part, that her termination constituted an unlawful interference with her right to testify at trial in violation of the First Amendment, an unlawful interference with her right to speak on a matter of public concern, and a violation of public policy. Defendants deny Plaintiff's claims and contend that her employment was terminated "because she could not maintain confidentiality . . . misused city computers . . . and could not effectively work with her superiors." (Doc. 42, at 1.)
At issue is Interrogatory No. 7, which seeks information regarding e-mail maintained by Plaintiff regarding this lawsuit and the efforts she undertook to search for such information.
A motion to compel "
The conference mandate of "reasonable efforts to confer" requires "more than mailing or faxing a letter to the opposing party." D. Kan. Rule. 37.2. It follows, then, that the rule also requires more than exchanging e-mail. Rather, the parties must "in good faith converse, confer, compare views, and consult and deliberate or in good faith attempt to do so." Id.; see also
Despite the unqualified language of the federal and local rules, the Court, in its discretion, may choose to determine a motion to compel on its merits even when the duty to confer has not been fulfilled under certain circumstances. Cf.
This interrogatory asks Plaintiff to "[i]dentify any efforts you have undertaken to search for electronic correspondence responsive" to Defendants' document request that sought "[a]ll e-mails maintained by Plaintiff regarding this lawsuit or the allegations made in this lawsuit." (Doc. 120, at 2; see also Doc. 120-1, at 11, Doc. 120-2, at 4.) The interrogatory continues by instructing that Plaintiff is to identify "the search conducted; the database, e-mail account, and/or device searched; the date the search was conducted; and the results of the search (i.e. — no electronic correspondence found)." In her April 18, 2014, supplemental response, Plaintiff stated that
(Doc. 120, at 3.)
Defense counsel subsequently sent an e-mail on April 24, 2014, indicating Defendants' position that Interrogatory No. 7 requires Plaintiff to provide detail about the search that was conducted, including, for instance, whether she searched for key words or reviewed each e-mail individually. (Doc. 120-4, at 2.) The April 24, 2014, responsive e-mail from Plaintiff's counsel states that the discovery request "doesn't ask what keywords [Plaintiff] used, and we won't be supplementing our response further." (Id., at 1.)
The Court finds that Plaintiff's initial response was sufficient given the verbiage used in Interrogatory No. 7. Even so, in subsequent communication, Defendants clarified their position as to the information at which the interrogatory was directed. Plaintiff's refusal to provide supplementation because that the interrogatory does not specifically ask "what keywords" were used, while technically correct, is counterproductive to the intentions of D. Kan. Rule 37.2. The purpose of the parties' communication was to converse, confer, compare views, consult and deliberate. Part of that conferral process was for Defendants to provide a better explanation to Plaintiff as to what they meant by "identify any efforts . . . to search for electronic correspondence." Defendants' expectation that this identification would include a description of the searches employed or a listing of keywords used is not unreasonable. Defendants' motion is