PAUL S. GREWAL, Magistrate Judge.
Plaintiff Katherine Pohl—who brings this suit on behalf of herself and others—alleges that Defendant Facebook, Inc. sent data to advertising companies that could be used to find consumers' names and other personal details, despite Facebook's promises that it would not and did not share such information without user consent. Against a background of repeated attempts to find named plaintiffs with standing to act as the representative on behalf of the putative class, Facebook and Plaintiff have each brought motions to compel various discovery. The motions are GRANTED-IN-PART, as explained below.
This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1332(a). The undersigned was assigned discovery matters in this case pursuant to Rule 72(a).
Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26, a party "may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party's claim or defense."
If a party fails to answer an interrogatory under Rule 33 or fails to produce documents as requested under Rule 34, the party seeking discovery may move to compel.
Facebook moves to compel Plaintiff to produce information responsive to Requests for Production Nos. 1-2, 5, 9-11, 18-22 which seek documents related to Plaintiff's activity on Facebook, including documents concerning the creation of her Facebook account, her access to and review of Facebook's terms and conditions and the information publicly available on her Facebook page during the relevant time period, documents related to Plaintiff's non-privileged communications concerning this lawsuit and any documents relied upon by Plaintiff in responding to Facebook's interrogatories and documents related to particular allegations in the Second Amended Complaint, including Plaintiff's assertion that her personal and/or sensitive information was disclosed as a result of Facebook's action.
After Facebook filed its motion, Plaintiff proceeded to produce seven documents totaling 26 pages to Facebook—the only documents Facebook has received until now. As a result, Plaintiff argues that she has now produced all responsive information in her custody or control. The court recognizes that a party cannot be compelled to produce documents that the party does not have.
Nevertheless, it is less than clear that Plaintiff has conducted a diligent search in order to determine whether she may in fact have additional information. Notably, Plaintiff testified during deposition about two personal email accounts that she currently uses. According to Facebook, no emails from those accounts have been produced. But in Plaintiff's objections to Facebook's RFPs, she pleads that she cannot possibly produce any emails because three other email accounts have since been shut down, denying her access. Because it appears from the record before the court that some sources of information may have been excluded from Plaintiff's search, Facebook is entitled to clarification of Plaintiff's search methodology. To that end, within 14 days, Plaintiff shall submit a declaration explaining her search in detail, including, but not limited to, all sources searched and all search parameters used. To the extent that Plaintiff has withheld any documents on the basis of attorney-client privilege or attorney work product, Plaintiff shall serve a privilege log on Facebook or otherwise certify that any such documents need not be logged pursuant to the parties' Stipulated Protective Order, also within 14 days.
Plaintiff moves to compel responses to interrogatories 7-10, 14 and to Requests for Production Nos. 1, 2, 15, 18, 24-28, 36, 38-40, which seek production of names and contact information of putative class members, information regarding Facebook's advertising revenue and profit and information about the value to Facebook users of their personally-identifiable information.
While Plaintiff is not entitled to contact information for all alleged putative class members, Plaintiff certainly is entitled to such information for a random sample. Under California law, plaintiffs are allowed to take discovery about putative class members before filing a motion for class certification.
Here, Plaintiff argues that in order to effectively establish—for purposes of class certification—that the putative class satisfies the typicality and commonality requirements under Rule 23, she must be able to contact them to inquire whether the facts surrounding their claims are sufficiently similar to her own. Indeed, as part of Facebook's class certification discovery, Facebook noticed depositions of two putative class members. Facebook cannot on the one hand seek to deny Plaintiff access to the putative class members as irrelevant to class certification discovery and then on the other hand conduct its own discovery of those very individuals. Plaintiff also seeks class-wide ad-click data, through which her expert can show that any damages theories are provable on a class-wide basis. These inquiries are particular to the class certification stage and vital to Plaintiff's development of her case.
Facebook counters that Plaintiff improperly seeks this contact information to find potential named plaintiffs that can assist in prosecution and bolster Plaintiff's standing.
At the end of the day, Facebook has not shown that Plaintiff is trying to pull one over on the court.
Plaintiff is not entitled to information about Facebook's advertising revenue and profit because she failed to substantiate how such information is relevant to class certification. A party's "ipse dixit assertion of relevance" without more is insufficient to meet its burden on a motion to compel.
Plaintiff's requests regarding the value to Facebook users of their personally-identifiable information are unwarranted. Given Facebook's representation that it has already produced documents responsive to RFP Nos. 18 and 24 and that upon completion of a diligent search Facebook did not locate any non-privileged documents responsive to RFP Nos. 25-28, 38-39,