MARTIN C. CARLSON, Magistrate Judge.
In this action the plaintiff, Mark Kearney, has sued his former employer, JPC Equestrian, and its President, Varun Sharma, alleging that the defendants wrongfully terminated his employment, and breached sales agreements with Kearney by either failing to pay him sales commissions or by paying reduced commissions that did not satisfy contractual obligations. Kearney has also alleged that Sharma tortiously interfered with Kearney's sales representation agreement with JPC, and that he suffered damages as a result. Finally, Kearney has alleged that JPC discriminated against him on the basis of age and gender when it terminated the parties' relationship.
The procedural history of this litigation, which has been halting at times, is familiar to the parties and does not warrant extended discussion here. The discovery period has now closed and the defendants have filed a motion for summary judgment on Kearney's claims, and Kearney has filed a motion for partial summary judgment. (Docs. 103, 111.) Those motions are pending, and further litigation in this matter has been stayed pending the Court's resolution of the motions.
This matter now comes before the Court on the plaintiff's motion to compel the defendants to produce email, invoices and certain sales information, and Varun Sharma's individual tax returns, all of which the plaintiff claims the defendants have failed to provide despite his repeated requests.
For the reasons discussed briefly below, the plaintiff's motion will be granted in part and denied in part.
Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, parties are permitted to engage in a broad range of discovery as part of the litigation process. Rule 26(b)(1) of those Rules provides as follows:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Kearney's motion, and the defendants' response in opposition to this motion, call upon the Court to exercise its authority under Rule 26 of the Federal Rules of Civil procedure to regulate discovery in this case. Issues relating to the scope of discovery permitted under the Rules rest in the sound discretion of the Court.
This discretion is guided, however, by certain basic principles. Thus, at the outset, it is clear that Rule 26's broad definition of that which can be obtained through discovery reaches only "nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party's claim or defense". Therefore, valid claims of privilege still cabin and restrict the court's discretion in ruling on discovery issues. Furthermore, the scope of discovery permitted by Rule 26 embraces all "relevant information" a concept which is defined in the following terms: "Relevant information need not be admissible at trial if the discovery appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence."
Kearney first contends that the defendants have failed to produce what he generally calls "all relevant emails," which in his original discovery requests, were defined as "All emails that mention, or refer to the Plaintiff, however, marginally, in any way shape or form from 2002 through 2010." (Doc. 122, Ex. C.) The defendants have provided the plaintiff with approximately 250 pages of emails dating back to 2005, but the plaintiff believes there may be more that have not been produced. The defendants flatly dispute this assertion, and have explained the way in which they searched for responsive email in their initial disclosures and in response to Kearney's discovery request.
In order to cull responsive emails, the defendants searched the email boxes assigned to Varun Sharma and Richard Knapp, JPC's Comptroller, as the two employees who "reasonably could have had communications with or about Kearney regarding the subject matter of this litigation." (Doc. 124, at 10.) Kearney has suggested that other email must exist, and he argues that the defendants should scour the email accounts for since-departed employees to search for responsive email. The defendants have flatly represented that these emails "do not exist." Sharma has sworn under oath that his email box has been thoroughly searched, and that there are not further responsive emails. (Doc. 124, Ex. B.)
It is an obvious truism that a court should not enter an order compelling a party to produce documents where the documents do not exist.
Likewise, we find no basis to compel the production of other email that Kearney believes must exist on computers that were once used by former employees or other personnel whom Kearney believes may have been privy to email relevant to this litigation. The defendants have represented to the Court that JPC Equestrian does not maintain a central server for storing emails, and email retention for each employee is computer-specific. In layman's terms, this means that an employee's emails reside solely on an employee's respective computer, and not elsewhere within the company. The defendants have affirmatively represented that when an employee leaves JPC Equestrian, their computer is "scrubbed," and reassigned to another employee. Such is the case with two employees who Kearney believes may have had relevant emails: Nina Depetris (former Vice President), and Ron Valtos (former Comptroller). These employees left the company in 2009 and 2010 respectively, and their computers were "scrubbed" and reassigned shortly thereafter, and prior to this litigation being commenced. The defendants thus maintain that by the time this litigation commenced in February 2011, any emails residing on the computers used by Depetris or Valtos had long since been deleted from their computers, which had been reassigned.
Considering the defendants' representations regarding their initial disclosures to the plaintiff and their responses to the plaintiff's request for relevant emails, together with their explanation regarding the email retention system that JPC uses for its employees, we have no basis to conclude that the defendants have withheld responsive documents, or that there is any basis to compel a further response regarding potentially relevant email communication. Kearney's motion to compel further production of responsive email, which the defendants attest do not exist, will therefore be denied.
Kearney has also sought to compel production of invoices of any products sold by JPC's Indian operations, and has further requested that the defendants be required to create and furnish him with lists setting forth certain sales and commission information. The defendants have opposed this motion on the grounds that this request is improper because it seeks to require JPC to create documents that currently do not exist, or to provide the plaintiff with information in a format of his choosing but which is not the format the company uses to maintain the information being sought.
Whatever the merits to the defendants' initial opposition to the plaintiff's request for this information, because the defendants have affirmatively represented that they would be producing relevant invoices in the possession of JPC-India, and gross sales information and other documents that would be substantially responsive to Kearney's request for sales and commission figures, we find no basis to compel further production. Instead, we will require only that the defendants satisfy the representations made in their brief.
Lastly, the plaintiff has requested that the Court compel Varun Sharma to produce his tax returns, which the plaintiff believes may be relevant to the plaintiff's claims for punitive damages. The defendants have resisted producing these materials, in part because the information sought is sensitive, personal information of little relevance to this case, and apparently in part on the grounds that they anticipate prevailing on their pending motion for summary judgment. Alternatively, the defendants suggest that the Court defer ruling on this aspect of the plaintiff's motion until after the summary judgment motions have been resolved.
We believe that denying this particular request without prejudice to its renewal upon resolution of the pending summary judgment motions strikes the appropriate balance between Sharma's reasonable interest in guarding personal financial information from discovery, while at the same time preserving Kearney's opportunity to seek this information if the defendants' motion for summary judgment is ultimately denied, and the litigation proceeds on claims that may give rise to punitive damages.
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, the plaintiff's motion to compel will be granted in part and denied in part as follows: