OPINION & ORDER
[Resolving Doc. No. 4]
JAMES S. GWIN, District Judge.
In May, 2013, Plaintiff Killer Joe Nevada, LLC, filed this lawsuit against twelve unnamed defendants.1 Plaintiff alleges that the twelve John Doe defendants infringed Plaintiff's copyright by using the internet-based file sharing protocol BitTorrent to pirate Plaintiff's movie.2 For the following reasons, this Court finds sua sponte that Plaintiff improperly joined Defendants, and thus SEVERS the claims against all Defendants. By July 23, 2013, the Plaintiff is ORDERED to notify the Court as to which Defendant shall remain in the suit already filed. Plaintiff is directed to refile its claims against the other defendants separately and to pay the appropriate filing fees for each action. Finally, Plaintiff's motion for leave to take discovery is DENIED AS MOOT.
I. Background
A. Factual Background
Plaintiff alleges that Defendants violated U.S. copyright law by using BitTorrent to download the movie.3 BitTorrent is a program that enables users to share files via the internet.4 Unlike other "peer-to-peer" (P2P) file sharing networks that transfer files between users or between a user and a central computer server, BitTorrent allows for decentralized file sharing between individual users who exchange small segments of a file between one another until the entire file has been downloaded by each user.5 Each user that either uploads or downloads a file segment is known as a "peer."6 Peers that have the entire file are known as "seeds."7 Other peers, known as "leeches" can simultaneously download and upload the pieces of the shared file until they have downloaded the entire file to become seeds.8
Groups of peers that download and upload the same file during a given period are known as a "swarm," with each peer being identified by a unique series of alphanumeric characters known as a "hashtag" that is attached to each piece of the file.9 The swarm's members are relatively anonymous, as each participant is identifiable only by her Internet Provider (IP) address.10 Overseeing and coordinating the entire process is a computer or a server known as a "tracker" that maintains a record of which peers in a swarm have which files at a given time.11 In order to increase the likelihood of a successful download, any portion of the file downloaded by a peer is available to subsequent peers in the swarm so long as the peer remains online.12
But BitTorrent is not one large monolith. BitTorrent is a computer protocol, used by various software programs known as "clients" to engage in electronic file-sharing.13 Clients are software programs that connect peers to one another and distributes data among the peers.14 But a peer's involvement in a swarm does not end with a successful download. Instead, the BitTorrent client distributes data until the peer manually disconnects from the swarm.15 It is only then that a given peer no longer participates in a given BitTorrent swarm.
B. Procedural History
In May 2013, Plaintiff filed this lawsuit against 84 John Doe defendants.16 Plaintiff alleges that by acting in concert via BitTorrent, Defendants infringed on Plaintiff's intellectual property rights by downloading a movie entitled "6 Degrees of Hell."17 Plaintiff justifies joinder of the unnamed defendants because the defendants participated in their "swarm" in downloading the copyrighted material.18 On June 11, 2013, Plaintiff filed a motion for leave to take discovery prior to the Rule 26 conference in order to learn the identities of Defendants from various Internet Service Providers (ISPs).19 In that motion, Plaintiff again alleges that joinder is proper, arguing that the unnamed defendants all took part in the same series of factual transactions.20
C. Litigation Involving BitTorrent
Because IP addresses are the only identifiers of peers within a BitTorrent system, it is difficult, if not impossible, to learn of the true identities of the peers in a swarm.21 To pursue litigation, plaintiffs in BitTorrent suits must attempt to get early discovery to learn of the actual identities of the unnamed defendants.22 The requests have been the subject of much criticism, for the lawsuits are rarely litigated. Rather, plaintiffs seek to take advantage of the resources of federal courts to force small, individual settlements.23
II. Analysis
A. Legal Standard
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 20(a)(2) allows defendants to be joined together in an action if "any right to relief is asserted against them . . . arising out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions and occurrences and any question of law or fact common to all defendants will arise in the action."24 In considering joinder, the Court operates with considerable discretion, weighing the Rule 20 factors and the interests of fundamental fairness.25 In determining the propriety of joinder, the Court analyzes the complaint and then determines whether the plaintiff's allegations satisfy the requirements of Rule 20.26 Courts also consider whether severance would lessen confusion for the fact-finder or parties, an issue this Court would do well to consider given the number of unnamed defendants.27
B. Rule 20 Factors
Plaintiff has not alleged facts to support the joinder of the 84 John Doe Defendants based on the Rule 20 factors. As noted above, Rule 20 requires that the rights asserted against defendants arise out of the same factual transaction, and that any question of law or fact common to all defendants will arise in the action. Courts are split on the issue of joinder in BitTorrent copyright litigation, with some finding it proper in certain circumstances,28 and others not.29 For the reasons below, this Court adopts the latter approach.
Plaintiff's complaint says that "every John Doe infringer, in concert with its John Doe swarm members, is allowing others to steal" and that "each John Doe acts in an interactive manner with other John Does."30 Despite Plaintiff's statements, it is not at all clear that Defendants were part of the same transaction or occurrence. "Merely alleging that the Doe defendants all used the same file-sharing protocol, BitTorrent, to conduct copyright infringement of plaintiff's film without any indication that they acted in concert fails to satisfy the arising out of the . . . same series of transactions or occurrences requirement."31 Furthermore, a defendant's participation in a swarm does not mean that the defendant is always present and active in the swarm.32 Plaintiff's IP address exhibits indicate that Defendants accessed the swarm at different times, on different days, using different BitTorrent clients.33 This suggests that Defendants were not wrapped up in a single factual occurrence.34
Beyond the joinder analysis, this Court is unconvinced that Plaintiff has even pleaded a prima facie case of copyright infringement.35 Here, Plaintiff provided only an IP address snapshot, and seeks to use that information alone to justify their suit. Given the nature of BitTorrent protocols, an individual could access the swarm, download a small piece of the copyrighted material that could be useless, and then leave the swarm without ever completing the download. To this end, the mere indication of participation weakly supports Plaintiff's conclusions.
In sum, participation in a specific swarm is too imprecise a factor absent additional information relating to the alleged copyright infringement to support joinder under Rule 20(a).
C. Other factors
Even if Plaintiff could meet the Rule 20(a)(2) factors for permissive joinder, this Court would nevertheless sever Defendants because joinder would otherwise deprive the Court of a just result. As noted above, courts can exercise discretion in weighing the effect of joinder on fundamental fairness.36 Permitting joinder of the unnamed defendants violates a sense of fairness,37 as each unnamed defendant might have different defenses to the suit, necessitating a mini-trial to fully present each defendant's specific evidence.38 In addition, joinder of dozens of defendants would extend trial proceedings and could serve to confuse the fact-finder. It is hard to imagine how dozens of defendants, most likely unfamiliar with civil litigation, would be able to appreciate their procedural rights in such a trial.
But BitTorrent suits usually never reach the trial stage because most BitTorrent litigation ends in an out of court settlement. The controversial practice of coercing settlement in other BitTorrent cases necessitates caution by this Court. It is no secret that many of these suits end after discovery and are "resolved without so much as an appearance by the defendant, usually through default judgment or stipulated dismissal."39 Courts have been troubled by what amounts to be a new business model employed by production companies "misusing the subpoena powers of the court, seeking the identities of the Doe defendants solely to facilitate demand letters and coerce settlement, rather than ultimately serve process and litigate the claims."40 This unseemly practice is made worse by the frequent practice of joining hundreds or thousands of defendants in a suit, saving plaintiffs tens of thousands of dollars in filing fees. It is in this environment where courts must take every caution to ensure that the keys to the doors of discovery are not blithely given to parties with other intentions.
Regardless of the dubious practices of others, Plaintiff may have legitimate claims which deserve litigation. Nevertheless, unnamed Defendants are improperly joined, and in order to continue with its claims, Plaintiff will need to pay the requisite filing fee per suit.41 Otherwise, Plaintiff has saved over $33,000 by consolidating its claims into one action. If Plaintiff seeks to use the powers of this Court to vindicate its rights, it must pay the requisite fees like every other Plaintiff.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, this Court hereby SEVERS Plaintiff's claims. Further, the motion for leave to take discovery prior to the Rule 26 conference is DENIED AS MOOT. By July 23, 2013, the Plaintiff is ORDERED to notify the Court as to which Defendant shall remain in the suit already filed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.