THOMAS L. LUDINGTON, District Judge.
On July 7, 2016, Plaintiffs filed a complaint against General Motors LLC alleging violations of multiple state fraud and breach of contract statutes. ECF No. 1. On February 14, 2017, this Court denied in part and granted in part Defendant GM's motion to dismiss. ECF No. 21. On June 6, 2018, Plaintiffs motion for leave to file an amended complaint was granted and Plaintiffs were permitted to add Bosch LLC and Bosch GmbH as defendants. ECF No. 93; 94. Then, on February 25, 2020, Plaintiffs filed a notice of voluntary dismissal of Bosch GmbH. ECF No. 317.
The initial scheduling order provided that discovery would conclude by November 21, 2017. ECF No. 28. The parties developed a joint stipulated discovery plan and a stipulated protective order. ECF Nos. 39, 40, 41. There has been extensive motion practice regarding discovery, including multiple stipulations, motions to compel discovery, disputes concerning search terms, and motions regarding sealing. See e.g., ECF Nos. 30, 40, 41, 43, 47, 53, 70, 83, 93, 131, 141, 169. The discovery deadline has been amended multiple times. ECF Nos. 92, 125, 166. The discovery deadline was July 31, 2019.
On August 16, 2019, Plaintiffs filed a motion to reopen and permit limited discovery to address 195,000 pages
On September 13, 2019, Magistrate Judge Morris heard oral arguments on the motion, as well as several other discovery motions. Magistrate Judge Morris granted Plaintiffs' motion in part. Her order stated that "Plaintiffs may conduct a 30(b)(1) deposition of an individual of Plaintiff's choosing who can testify as to SCR online dosing. The deposition will occur for 2 hours regarding documents produced from July 30 and beyond only and the deposition should be held within 2 weeks of this Order." ECF No. 259 at PageID.16386.
On September 27, 2019 Plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration. ECF Nos. 269, 270. Plaintiffs explain that they sent an email to Defendants seeking to depose a specific Bosch LLC employee and that Bosch informed them that the employee is no longer employed at Bosch LLC. Id. Bosch LLC subsequently asked Plaintiffs to supply the name of another employee to be deposed. Id. In their motion, Plaintiffs explained that the individual they identified was the only person who could speak to the newly discovered information contained in the last discovery documents addressing SCOR online dosing. Accordingly, Plaintiffs argued the new information justified Magistrate Judge Morris reversing her earlier decision and permitting a 30(b)(6) deposition.
Magistrate Judge Morris denied the motion for reconsideration explaining that in her original order the "Court struck a compromise in allowing Plaintiffs to conduct a limited two-hour 30(b)(1) deposition of the employee of Plaintiffs' choice of Defendant Bosch, LLC." ECF No. 291 at PageID.17128. She stated that "it is clear that Plaintiffs were warned, before the deadline for the deposition had passed, that their chosen deponent was not available, and Defendant requested that Plaintiffs choose another person to depose as soon as possible. Instead, the instant motion was filed." Id. at PageID.17129. Magistrate Judge Morris explained that the "somewhat new" information Plaintiffs advanced as a justification for their preferred deponent did not meet the standard for a Rule 59 motion, especially when "there was a clear path to stay[] consistent with the Order: simply choosing a new deponent as Defendant Bosch, LLC suggested." Id. at PageID.12130.
On November 1, 2019, Plaintiffs filed an objection to Magistrate Judge Morris' Order denying their motion for reconsideration. ECF Nos. 297, 298.
The decision and order of a non-dispositive motion by a magistrate judge will be upheld unless it is clearly erroneous or contrary to law.
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide various avenues for discovery, including multiple types of depositions. FRCP 30(b)(1) states,
FRCP 30(b)(6) provides,
In their objection, Plaintiffs essentially argued that Magistrate Judge Morris' original decision that they "get to choose" who to depose meant they could select anyone within the universe of employees who ever worked at Bosch LLC. When Plaintiffs discovered the individual they selected was unavailable (he "left Bosch LLC's employment in February 2016" and now works for Bosch GmbH in Germany — a non-party to this litigation), Plaintiffs believed the purpose of Magistrate Judge Morris' original order was undermined ("Respectfully, under the specific circumstances here, the path set forth in the Corrected Order is neither justified nor practical. Requiring Plaintiffs to go back and pick a less qualified, substitute Rule 30(b)(1) witness who may or may not know or remember the relevant documents will not remedy the substantial prejudice of Bosch's late production—and will inevitably result in Plaintiffs coming back to request a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition to obtain the needed facts."). ECF No. 298 at PageID.17216; ECF No. 298-3 at PageID.17314; ECF No. 298-4 at PageID.17317. Plaintiffs explain that they chose the specific employee because he "offered the best shot at meaningful testimony on the late-produced SCR online dosing documents because most of them came from his custodial file and he was personally emailing back and forth on important details of how and why the online dosing was calibrated as it was for certification testing." ECF No. 298 at PageID.17222. Plaintiffs do not identify this individual as the author of the documents or explain that this individual was a supervisor of employees who wrote the documents. The individual's current job title is "Ingenieur" at Bosch GmbH. ECF No. 298-4 at PageID.17317. It is unknown what his job title was at Bosch LLC.
During oral argument before Magistrate Judge Morris, Plaintiffs struggled to explain any substantial reason for a need for a 30(b)(6) deposition. Magistrate Judge Morris stated that
Magistrate Judge Morris stated that Plaintiffs could select the person for the 30(b)(1) deposition, but she did not say that Plaintiffs could select any current or former Bosch LLC employee for the deposition. In their objection to Magistrate Judge Morris' order, Plaintiffs explain they
Plaintiffs identify the ten documents as
ECF No. 298-5. Plaintiffs also explain that "Plaintiffs identified these ten late-produced documents to counsel for Bosch on October 22, 2019. Bosch responded that two of the documents allegedly were (or were duplicates of others) produced even earlier in discovery. Plaintiffs are investigating and will identify two substitute documents if needed." ECF No. 298 at PageID.17216-17217. Copies of the documents have not been provided to the Court.
Plaintiffs' primary rationale for seeking a deposition after discovery has been completed is because "Bosch produc[ed] massive amounts of key information in the final weeks of discovery." Id. at PageID.17221. However, based on Plaintiff's own motion, the majority of the recent discovery production occurred before the close of discovery (in summer 2019), not after. Therefore, Plaintiff was on sufficient notice to file a motion to extend discovery (as has happened multiple previous times in this case) prior to the close of discovery. Additionally, the individual Plaintiffs originally hoped to depose no longer employed by Bosch LLC, but is employed by Bosch GmbH. Bosch GmbH is not a party to this litigation and in fact Plaintiffs recently voluntarily dismissed it after a show cause order. ECF Nos. 316, 317. When information about the former employee's employment situation surfaced in October 2019, Plaintiffs did not seek leave of the Court to serve Bosch GmbH (who at that time was still a named Defendant). ECF No. 298 at PageID.17219. In fact, in a related case, In re Duramax, where different plaintiffs are represented by the same attorneys, counsel successfully served Bosch GmbH utilizing Hague Service Convention protocols. See ECF No. 155 in 17-11661.
Finally, the only information in Plaintiffs' motion identifying what would prompt the need for the deposition is their comment that "Bosch's late productions revealed new records and details concerning precisely how and why Defendants carefully calibrated online dosing in the Class Vehicles." Id. at PageID.17218. Plaintiffs point the Court to their original August 16, 2019, motion for further discussion as to the necessity of the deposition. Id. n.3. That motion discussed how the late produced documents discussed a new alleged strategy to decrease NoX emissions— SCR dosing in the Chevrolet Cruze. ECF No. 225 at PageID.14664. However, the topic of SCR dosing was addressed in earlier discovery by Defendants. Even Plaintiffs admit that the topic of SCR dosing has been a part of the case from the beginning. ECF No. 298-2 at PageID.17269-17270 ("Ms. Scullion: Your, Honor, I think the point is, yes, SCR dosing's been part of the case, and so these documents should have been produced way earlier. These were produced at the very end of discovery, and they are about the core issue in the case.").
Plaintiff has not identified a new theory of the case that was solely included in the last delivery of discovery materials. Also, Magistrate Judge Morris did not deny Plaintiffs' request for an additional deposition to address the discovery materials. She permitted Plaintiffs to take a 30(b)(1) deposition with a (current) Bosch LLC employee of their choosing. Plaintiffs have not met their burden of demonstrating that Magistrate Judge Morris' decision was clearly erroneous or contrary to law. Plaintiffs' objection to Magistrate Judge Morris' order will be denied.
Accordingly, it is