SHARON L. GLEASON, District Judge.
Before the Court at Docket 57 is Defendant UNITE HERE! and Defendant UNITE HERE! Local 878's ("Defendants") Motion for an Order Limiting the Scope of Pending Depositions, or in the Alternative, for a Protective Order, and for Discovery Sanctions. Plaintiff CP Anchorage Hotel 2, LLC d/b/a Anchorage Hilton ("Anchorage Hilton") responded in opposition at Docket 64. Defendants replied at Docket 67. Oral argument was not requested and was not necessary to the Court's decision.
In the operative complaint, Plaintiff alleges that, since 2009, Defendants have staged a years-long boycott against it in response to a labor dispute.
As a result of Defendants' boycotting activities aimed at VCS and ASHRM, Plaintiff alleges two causes of action: (1) violation of Section 8(b)(4) of the National Labor Relations Act ("NLRA") and (2) defamation.
In the course of discovery, Plaintiff served deposition notices on Defendants, including a list of Rule 30(b)(6) topics, to which Defendants objected.
Plaintiff's Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice identifies eighteen topics that encompass, among other things, Defendants' boycotting of Plaintiff beyond their efforts directed at the VCS and ASHRM conferences (Topic Nos. 1-17), Defendants' boycotting of entities other than Plaintiff (Topic No. 18), and the amount of time and money spent on Defendants' boycotting of Plaintiff (Topic Nos. 11-12).
The Court evaluates Defendants' motion under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b), which provides that:
The parties dispute (1) whether Defendants' boycotting activities other than those directed at the VCS and ASHRM conferences are discoverable, (2) whether the time or money Defendants spent on boycotting of Plaintiff is discoverable, and (3) whether sanctions are warranted. The Court addresses each issue in turn.
Defendants maintain that discovery relating to their boycotting activities beyond those directed at the VCS and ASHRM conferences is irrelevant to either of Plaintiff's causes of action and, moreover, is disproportionate to the needs of the case given the low amount in controversy.
On the question of relevance, Defendants contend that the analysis for Plaintiff's cause of action under Section 8(b)(4) of the NLRA centers on "whether the union has strayed beyond First Amendment-protected communication intended to persuade people to cease doing business with the primary employer into non-protected conduct, analogous to secondary picketing."
On the question of proportionality, Defendants contend that the amount in controversy is low by either party's estimate—Defendants put the amount between zero and $10,000 and Plaintiff estimates $58,000 in damages.
For its part, Plaintiff contends that Defendants' other boycotting activities are relevant because "[c]omparing such other activity will likely shed additional light on whether the Defendants' conduct was reasonable and lawful or crossed the line," and will "help a fact finder evaluate whether the Defendants' conduct was intentional or inadvertent."
The Court finds that Defendants' other boycotting activities—whether of Plaintiff or of other entities—have little, if any, relevance to the issues in dispute. Plaintiff's allegations against Defendants are intimately tied to the two conferences described in the FAC and Plaintiff has failed to articulate a reasonable basis for relevance for the proposed discovery of Defendants' other boycotting activities. Furthermore, Plaintiff has not cited any authority for its contention that Defendants' baseline of activities is relevant to Plaintiff's claims and the Court will not find relevance based on the possibility of a future amended complaint. Particularly where, as here, there are important First Amendment association interests at stake, the Court will not risk chilling those rights by allowing unlimited exploration into Defendants' unrelated boycotting activities.
Moreover, even assuming that Defendants' other boycotting activities could prove relevant, the sought-after discovery is not proportional to the needs of the case. Given the amount in controversy, which apparently falls somewhere between zero and $58,000, and the breadth of the topics noticed by Plaintiff, the burden and expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.
In light of the foregoing, the Court will grant Defendants' motion for an order limiting the scope of questioning in Plaintiff's depositions of corporate and individual witnesses to Defendants' boycotting activities of Plaintiff directed at the VCS and ASHRM conferences.
With respect to Plaintiff's Rule 30(b)(6) Topic Nos. 11 and 12, Defendants contend that "[n]either the Section 8(b)(4) claim nor the defamation claim require any analysis as to how a labor organization may have funded or executed allegedly unlawful secondary activity or allegedly defamatory communications."
In light of the Court's order, supra, limiting the scope of questioning to Defendants' boycotting activities of Plaintiff relating to the VCS and ASHRM conferences, the remaining issue is whether Plaintiff may question Defendants about the time and/or resources spent on those two boycotts.
Defendants' boycotting of the VCS and ASHRM conferences at the Anchorage Hilton is at the heart of the parties' dispute, and the time and resources spent on those boycotts is relevant information. Defendants have not explained why this line of questioning is "unduly intrusive" and have not shown that the proposed discovery is unduly burdensome or expensive. Thus, the Court will allow questioning on Topic Nos. 11 and 12 insofar as it is limited to Defendants' boycott of Plaintiff directed at the VCS and ASHRM.
Finally, Defendants contend that the Court should sanction Plaintiff for "propounding clearly irrelevant and unduly burdensome discovery" and forcing Defendants to seek judicial intervention.
Plaintiff disagrees, and insists that the sought-after discovery is relevant to its claims, and not unduly burdensome.
The Court finds that with respect to this particular discovery dispute, the parties disagreed in good faith, and attempted to resolve their dispute without court intervention. Therefore, the Court will not award sanctions to either party.
In light of the foregoing, Defendants' Motion for an Order Limiting the Scope of Pending Depositions or, in the Alternative, For a Protective Order, and for Discovery Sanctions is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part.
The Court orders as follows:
1. Plaintiff shall restrict its questioning of corporate or individual deponents on Topic Nos. 1-17 solely to Defendants' boycotting activities of Plaintiff directed at the VCS and ASHRM, and shall not engage in questioning about any of Defendants' boycotting activities aimed at Plaintiff, or any other entities, that may have taken place at other times or in other locations.
2. Plaintiff shall restrict its questioning of corporate or individual deponents on Topic Nos. 11 and 12 solely to Defendants' boycotting activities directed at VCS and ASHRM.