DAVID G. CAMPBELL, District Judge.
Pursuant to the Court's directions during the discovery conference call held on October 22, 2014 (Doc. 236), the parties have provided the Court with a matrix setting forth their positions with respect to requests for production and subpoenas served by Plaintiffs. This order will set forth the Court's rulings.
The Court must say that when it directed the parties to confer and narrow issues, and then present their positions in a matrix, it did not anticipate 72 single-spaced pages. There is much duplication in the matrix. In the future, the parties should make their arguments more succinctly.
The Court is not persuaded by Defendants' predictive coding argument. The requested documents relate to a discrete time period and a specific subject — the departure of Robert Gillette. Defendants have not explained why a search for such documents requires the use of predictive coding to search 22 million pages of documents. Nor have Defendants provided any concrete information concerning the cost or effort to "retrain" the predictive coding tool even if it was to be used. The Court cannot accept the proposition that Defendants' use of predictive coding effectively confines Plaintiffs' document discovery to initial requests for production.
Nor can the Court conclude that the requested documents are irrelevant. Plaintiffs make a loss causation argument that appears to be something like this: "the fraud caused Gillette's ouster and the ouster caused a 25% market drop, therefore the fraud caused the market drop." Whether or not this is a viable loss causation theory is not sufficiently briefed for the Court to decide, but the Court does find that documents related to Gillette's ouster may be probative of his mental state (an issue because he is a Defendant in this case) and alleged false statements concerning what was happening within the company during the critical period when he departed.
Defendants shall produce the documents called for by this request.
Plaintiffs assert that Defendants' responses to their previous requests were subject to objections, but do not dispute Defendants' assertion that those objections were made in December of 2013 and have not been challenged by Plaintiffs in the intervening 11 months. Nor do Plaintiffs dispute Defendants' assertion that the parties met and conferred about the objections in 2013, or that Defendants' shared with Plaintiffs the sets of documents Defendants were using to train their predictive coding tool to locate documents responsive to Plaintiffs' previous requests and accepted input from Plaintiffs on how to code documents used to train the predictive coding software. These efforts were designed to ensure that the software would identify documents responsive to Plaintiffs' previous requests. See Doc. 196-1.
The Court concludes that Defendants took significant steps to produce all documents called for by Plaintiffs' previous requests, including the technology assisted review of 22 million pages of documents and the eventual production of 2.5 million pages. These efforts were made with input from Plaintiffs on how best to train the predictive coding software to locate relevant and responsive documents. Id. Although Defendants objected to some portions of the previous requests, more than 11 months have passed without a challenge to those objections. The Court will not require Defendants to produce additional documents in response to these requests.
RFP 60 seeks "[a]ll documents concerning any actual, potential or possible impact from any Defect on First Solar's revenues, sales, or other financial results or operations," a very broad request covered by Plaintiffs' previous requests.
RFP 62 seeks "[a]ll communications between Defendants and First Solar's customers or vendors regarding First Solar modules or any Defect, including documents concerning such communications," another very broad request covered by Plaintiffs' previous requests.
The complaint identifies specific categories of defects and manufacturing problems related to the alleged fraud. The Court is not persuaded that discovery into every possible defect can be said to be relevant to Plaintiffs' claims as required by Rule 26(b)(1).
Defendants assert that "any document that discusses a linkage between the relevant defects and selling price has already been produced." Doc. 244-1 at 30. If Defendants have made this statement in a formal Rule 34 response, no further action is needed. If they have not made this affirmative statement, they should by the date provided below. If Defendants are unable to make the statement, they must conduct a search for documents that will enable them to make the statement in a Rule 34 response.
The Court will require Defendants to respond to Request 1 for the same reasons described above with respect to RFP 52.
The Court will require Defendants to respond to Requests 2, 5, and 6 because they seek relevant information.
Request 3 is plainly overbroad and seeks much that would not be relevant to this case. Defendants shall produce documents and communications in the Directors' personal possession regarding CPW, First Solar's stock declines on the dates enumerated in the Third RFP, Request No. 63, stock sales by the responding director, compensation paid by First Solar to the responding director, First Solar's warranty accounting and reserving, and First Solar's compliance with GAAP.
Request 4 is plainly overbroad and seeks much that is not relevant to this case. Plaintiffs propose no narrowing of that request. Defendants need not respond to Request 4.
Defendants shall comply with this order on or before