RYA W. ZOBEL, Senior District Judge.
Since its beginning, this case has been mired in motion practice, four dispositive motions by defendant and three by several groups of plaintiffs, and now that a trial date has been set, a plethora of discovery disputes submitted in the form of counsels' letters and by motions. The court anticipates that the parties will hereafter cooperate in all aspects of discovery, that motions pertaining thereto be a last resort, and that correspondence to the court cease.
The parties' latest correspondence and discovery motions are contained in Docket ## 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350. As a general matter, each party is limited to
First, plaintiffs ask the court to grant leave to re-depose Michael Stamatakos or order Ocean Spray to make him available for trial.
Second, plaintiffs seek to depose Bobby Chacko, CEO of Ocean Spray, regarding the discontinuation of Ocean Spray's B Pool and online concentrate auction. Although Ocean Spray has identified an alternative witness to testify on this topic, I am not persuaded by Ocean Spray's invocation of the "apex doctrine" and, therefore, decline to issue the requested protective order.
Third, plaintiffs move to compel the deposition of Dr. Bradley Miller as a fact witness. Although Dr. Miller is Ocean Spray's designated expert, he is the so-called "architect" of the challenged auction and thus may possess relevant information concerning those facts. Docket # 349 at 11. Accordingly, plaintiffs may depose him as a fact witness.
Ocean Spray seeks a protective order under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c) to prevent the depositions of Paul Stajduhar, Richard Poznysz, William Frantz, Dr. Richard Sexton, Kelly Rudd, Andrea Weiland, John Decas, and John Pierson, in addition to those of Bobby Chacko and Dr. Miller discussed above.
Ocean Spray argues that plaintiffs should have deposed these witnesses earlier in the case. But any delay resulted, at least in part, from the class certification briefing, the several rounds of summary judgment motions, and the stay of discovery during Ocean Spray's interlocutory appeal. The parties anticipated additional discovery prior to the May 2020 trial,
Finally, plaintiffs assert that Ocean Spray has frustrated their ability to litigate by labeling over 99% of its discovery "highly confidential." Material marked as such cannot be shared or used in depositions of third parties without the producing party's permission.
While cognizant of the reason for initially applying confidentiality designations on a "family-by-family" basis, Ocean Spray's serious over-designation of documents as "highly confidential" is troubling.
Plaintiffs' Motion for Discovery and to Compel Compliance with the Protective Order (Docket # 347) is ALLOWED in part and DENIED in part. Ocean Spray's Motion for a Protective Order and to Quash Subpoenas (Docket # 348) is DENIED.