LEGROME D. DAVIS, District Judge.
AND NOW, this 5th day of October 2011, upon consideration of Plaintiffs' Motion on Defendants' Bills of Cost Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d) (Doc. No. 210), Defendants' Joint Partial Opposition to Plaintiffs' Motion on Defendants' Bills of Costs Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d) (Doc. No. 211 and 212), Plaintiffs' Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion on Defendants' Bill of Costs Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d) (Doc. No. 216), and Defendants' Joint Surreply in Support of Defendants' Bills of Costs Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d) (Doc. No. 217), it is hereby ORDERED that the Motion is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part.
On April 25, 2006, various plaintiffs, including Nog, Inc. and Sorbee International Ltd., filed separate complaints on behalf of a class of all persons and entities that purchased Aspartame, an artificial sweetener, directly from defendants in the United States. (Doc. No. 1). Plaintiffs alleged that Defendants had engaged in a worldwide, horizontal antitrust conspiracy with the purpose of allocating the market for Aspartame and setting an artificially high price for the sweetener in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. The Court ordered these complaints consolidated.
On August 11, 2008, this Court issued an Order granting Certain Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment against Plaintiffs Nog and Sorbee only because plaintiffs' claims were time-barred by the four-year statute of limitations, which was not tolled by the fraudulent concealment doctrine. (Doc. No. 178). The judgment was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit on Feb. 22, 2011. In re Aspartame Antitrust Litig., 416 Fed.Appx. 208 (3d Cir.2011). On July 26, 2011, the Clerk of Court granted costs in the amount of $192,373.87 for the Holland defendants
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(d)(1) provides that "[u]nless a federal statute, these rules or a court order provides otherwise, costs—other than attorney's fees—should be allowed to the prevailing party." A court may tax "[f]ees for printed or electronically recorded transcripts necessarily obtained for use in the case" and "fees for exemplification and the costs of making copies of any materials where the copies are necessarily obtained for use in the case," as well as other specifically enumerated fees. 28 U.S.C. § 1920(2) and (4). A court can exercise its discretion in awarding costs within the categories set out in the statute. In re Paoli R.R. Yard PCB Litig., 221 F.3d 449, 458 (3d Cir.2000). A district court reviews a bill of costs de novo. Id. at 461. For purposes of convenience, we take as our starting point the values set forth by plaintiffs in their Motion on Defendants' Bills of Cost Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d) (Doc. No. 210), which categorizes the costs requested by defendants. We summarize the costs awarded in the table at the end of this document.
The largest portion of the disputed costs are costs associated with creating a litigation database, processing and hosting electronic data, conducting keyword and privilege screens on the documents in the database, making documents OCR searchable, extracting metadata, and related activities. Defendants request these costs under 28 U.S.C. § 1920(4), which allows a clerk to tax "[f]ees for exemplification and the costs of making copies of any materials where the copies are necessarily obtained for use in the case." Taxing e-discovery is a new area of law where courts have diverged in their approaches. Compare Fells v. Virginia Dept. of Transp., 605 F.Supp.2d 740, 743 (E.D.Va. 2009) (refusing to tax "electronic records initial processing, Metadata extraction, [and] file conversion") (internal quotation marks omitted) and Klayman v. Freedom's Watch, Inc., No. 07-22433, 2008 WL 5111293, at *2 (S.D.Fla. Dec. 4, 2008) (refusing to tax the cost of hiring "experts at a huge hourly cost to search for and retrieve discoverable electronic documents") with Race Tires America, Inc., v. Hoosier Racing Tire Corp., No. 07-1294, 2011 WL 1748620, at *8-10, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 48847, at *26-30 (W.D.Pa. May 6, 2011) (awarding costs for creating a litigation database, imaging hard drivers, scanning documents, processing and indexing data, extracting metadata, and enabling documents to be OCR searchable) and United States Bankr. v. Dorel Indus., Case No. A-08-CA-354-SS, 2010 WL 3064007, at *3-4, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 78096, at *11-14 (W.D.Tex. Aug. 2, 2010) (granting costs under § 1920(3) for the creation of an electronic database) and Lockheed Martin Idaho Techs. Co. v. Lockheed Martin Advanced Envtl. Sys., No. CV-98-316-E-BLW, 2006 WL 2095876, at *2, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 52242, at *8 (D.Idaho July 27, 2006) (awarding costs under § 1920(4) for a litigation database that "was necessary due to the extreme complexity of this case and the millions of documents that had to be organized").
The volume of discovery in this case was staggering. Defendant Ajinomoto was required to collect documents from over twenty-eight different document custodians, including documents relating to defendants' foreign activities and affiliates, that totaled 87.73 gigabytes of data—the equivalent to copying 4.4 to 6.1 million pages of documents. (Doc. No. 195 at 12). Ajinomoto spent $135,696.00 processing this data, which amounts to 2 or 3 cents per page. (Id.). Defendant NutraSweet collected over 1.05 terabytes of potentially responsive electronic documents—over 75 million pages—and 262,000 pages of hard-copy
The court is persuaded that in cases of this complexity, e-discovery saves costs overall by allowing discovery to be conducted in an efficient and cost-effective manner. We agree with defendants that electronic discovery allows parties to "save costs associated with manually producing, handling, storing, and delivering thousands (and often millions) of pages of hard-copy documents." (Doc. 212 at 11). See United States Bankr. v. Dorel Indus., No. A-08-CA-354, 2010 WL 3064007, at *4, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 78096, at *13-14 (W.D.Tex. Aug. 2, 2010) (holding that the creation of an electronic database in lieu of "printing out thousands of pages of documents which would have otherwise been required in response to Plaintiffs' discovery request" was an appropriate cost). In this case, defendants' use of third parties vendors to conduct keyword searches and remove duplicate documents allowed Holland Sweetener and NutraSweet to reduce their pool of potentially responsive documents by 87% and 38.5% respectively, at significant cost savings. (Doc. 197 at 12; Doc. 198 at 7). We therefore award costs for the creation of a litigation database, storage of data, imaging hard drives, keyword searches, deduplication, data extraction and processing.
We also side with the many courts that have taxed costs for optical character recognition (OCR), the process of making fixed images such as PDFs and TIFFs searchable. See, e.g., Race Tires Am., Inc. v. Hoosier Racing Tire Corp., No. 07-1294, 2011 WL 1748620, at *9-10, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 48847, at *28-31 (W.D.Pa. May 6, 2011); Comrie v. IPSCO Inc., No. 08 CV 3060, 2010 WL 5014380, at *3-4, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 128217, at *9-11 (N.D.Ill. Dec. 1, 2010); Business Sys. Eng'g, Inc. v. IBM, 249 F.R.D. 313, 315 (N.D.Ill.2008). Searchable documents are essential in a case of this complexity and benefit all parties.
We draw the line, however, at the sophisticated e-discovery program Attenex Document Mapper. The Ajinomoto defendants describe Document Mapper as "a document review tool with visual clustering of a document collection based on concepts extracted from those documents." (Doc. No. 205-3). This service, while undoubtedly helpful, exceeds necessary keyword search and filtering functions. Rather, it is advanced technology that falls squarely within the realm of costs that are not necessary for litigation but rather are acquired for the convenience of counsel. We accordingly deny Ajinomoto's $22,633.00 request for the Document Mapper service. For the same reasons, we will not tax plaintiffs with the $5,449.00 cost of a concept based review platform and document analytics, which defendants characterize as "related applications used to efficiently and accurately separate responsive and nonresponsive documents." (Id.).
The Court will also deny the Tech Usage fees associated with using Document Mapper and its related applications. According to defendants, "[T]he $21,120 in Tech Usage Fees was a related cost for access to these tools." (Doc. No. 205-3 at 6). However, this Court has carefully reviewed the invoices and concludes that Tech Usage is a general fee that covers the use of not only Document Mapper but also general data hosting and the program Attenex Workbench, both of which are taxable.
Plaintiffs specifically object to the costs of electronic data recovery and tape restoration, arguing that such work is typically done by an attorney or paralegal. (Doc. No. 210 at 19). That is not the case. Electronic data recovery is the process of opening and restoring password-protected and corrupted files. (Doc. No. 205-3 at ¶ 18). Tape restoration is the process of converting archived documents into a usable format. (Id. at ¶ 19). These are technical processes that would not be done by an attorney. Other courts have awarded
28 U.S.C. § 1920(2) allows the taxation of "[f]ees for printed or electronically recorded transcripts necessarily obtained for use in the case." However, defendants are not permitted to recover the costs of both transcripts and videotapes of depositions. See Stevens v. D.M. Bowman, Inc., No. 07-2603, 2009 WL 117847, at *4, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3065, at *12 (E.D.Pa. Jan. 15, 2009) ("[T]he costs of a videotape or a deposition transcript may be taxed, but not both."); Wesley v. Dombrowski, No. 03-4137, 2008 WL 2609720, at *2-3, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49544, at *10 (E.D.Pa. June 25, 2008) (same). A court will allow costs for a videotape but not a transcript if the videotape was necessarily obtained for use in the trial. Herbst v. General Acc. Ins. Co., No. 97-8085, 2000 WL 1185517, at *2, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11952, at *5 (E.D.Pa. Aug. 21, 2000). The test is not whether the videotape was actually used at trial, but merely whether the videotape appeared "reasonably necessary" to defendants at the time of the deposition. Stevens, 2009 WL 117847, at *3, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3065, at *10.
Here, the Ajinomoto defendants assert that they videotaped Bruce Ritenberg's deposition believing they may need to use it at trial given his age at the time of the deposition. (Doc. No. 205 at 15). Accordingly, the Court will allow this cost and deny the cost of the transcript. In contrast, NutraSweet has not made the requisite showing that videotaping the deposition of David Waxler was reasonably necessary. (Doc. No. 205 at 22). The Court will permit NutraSweet to recover the cost of the transcript only and will accordingly deduct $880.00 from NutraSweet's costs.
A party may not recover the shipping and handling costs associated with depositions. Neena S. v. Sch. Dist., No. 05-5404, 2009 WL 2245066, at *10-11, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65185, at *32 (E.D.Pa. July 27, 2009) (stating that the Third Circuit "disallows" costs for postage and courier fees) (quoting In re Penn Cent. Transp. Co., 630 F.2d 183, 191 (3d Cir.1980)); Wesley v. Dombrowski, No. 05-5404, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49544, at *10-11 (E.D.Pa. June 25, 2008) (refusing to grant costs for shipping and handling). A party may, however, recover the costs of copying exhibits for depositions that were necessarily obtained for use in the case as well as a the cost of a rough draft of the deposition. See 168th & Dodge, LP v. Rave Reviews Cinemas, LLC, 501 F.3d 945, 957 (8th Cir.2007) (affirming the district court's granting of costs for rough drafts of depositions); Service Employees Intern. Union v. Rosselli, No. C 09-00404, 2010 WL 4502176, at *3-4, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 122202, at *12-13 (N.D.Cal. Nov. 1, 2010) (allowing "rough disk" fees for a deposition); Gallagher v. Gallagher, No. 07-4196, 2010 WL 2610192, at *3, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64185, at *8 (N.D.Ill. June 24, 2010) (granting costs for photocopying deposition exhibits). We will accordingly allow NutraSweet to recover $1492.00 for the deposition of John Beyer, a sum that includes the costs of exhibits and a rough draft and omits shipping and handling and the request for a late fee that has been withdrawn by NutraSweet.
A majority of courts have held that the cost of bates labeling is not recoverable under § 1920. See, e.g., Powell v. Home Depot, U.S.A., Inc., No. 07-80435, 2010 WL 4116488, at *16, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 110301, at *46 (S.D.Fla. Sept. 14, 2010) ("[D]eductions for Bates labeling, notebooks, bindings, and tabs must be made because such costs are not permitted by section 1920. . . ."); J-Way Leasing, Ltd. v. American Bridge Co., No. 07-3031, 2010 WL 816439, at *4, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19390, at *11 (N.D.Ohio Mar. 4, 2010) (refusing to grants costs for Bates labeling because Bates labeling is similar to marking exhibits, which is not recoverable); Fairley v. Andrews, No. 03 C 5207, 2008 WL 961592, at *10, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 28325, at *27 (N.D.Ill. Apr. 8, 2008) ("Although both parties may have benefitted from the Bates labeling, costs associated with the parties' convenience are not recoverable."). We agree and believe the same rule applies to confidentiality labeling. We accordingly deny NutraSweet's $1215.34 request for costs for Bates labeling and $607.67 request for confidential designations.
NutraSweet also requests $4,100.00 in "Production Support Services," which it explains as technical work such as "capturing metadata fields, document branding, and Bates labeling" as well as time spent identifying which documents to produce and ensuring compliance with production requirements. (Doc. No. 211 at 23; Doc. No. 205-5 at ¶ 8). While the court believes that metadata extraction and compliance with production requirements are appropriate costs, document branding and Bates labeling are not. Compare Race Tires Am., Inc. v. Hoosier Racing Tire Corp., No. 07-1294, 2011 WL 1748620, at *9, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 48847, at *28 (W.D.Pa. May 6, 2011) (awarding costs for metadata extraction) with J-Way Leasing, 2010 WL 816439, at *4, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19390, at *11 (refusing to grants costs for Bates labeling). Because defendants have not offered a breakdown of "production support services" to show what portion accounts for Bates labeling and document branding, we deduct 50% of this cost and award $2050.00.
Plaintiffs argue that the scanning costs incurred by defendants were unreasonable and urge this court to apply a rate of $0.08/page instead of the $0.13-$0.15/page actually incurred by defendants. (Doc. No. 210 at 19). Courts in the Third Circuit have routinely held that copying costs of $0.25/page—nearly double the price incurred by defendants—were reasonable. See Yong Fang Lin v. Tsuru of Bernards, LLC, No. 10-2400, 2011 WL 2680577, at *5, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73674, at *12 (D.N.J. July 8, 2011) ("Defendants have not cited to any authority to show that $0.25 is excessive, and we could find none."); James v. Norton, 176 F.Supp.2d 385, 400 (E.D.Pa.2001) ("[C]harging $0.25 per page for photocopying costs is reasonable."); Churchill v. Star Enters., No. 97-3527, 1998 WL 254080, at *10, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6068, at *29-30 (E.D.Pa. Apr. 17, 1998) (finding photocopying costs in the amount of $0.25/page to be reasonable). We accordingly grant defendants' requests for
Plaintiffs next object to the color scanning costs incurred by Ajinomoto because plaintiffs never received any color copies. Defendants assert that color documents potentially responsive to plaintiffs' discovery requests were scanned in color "in order to preserve the integrity and legibility of the information." (Doc. No. 211 at 15). The court agrees that defendants may recover the cost of copying potentially responsive documents, regardless of whether they are ultimately produced in discovery. See Business Sys. Eng'g, Inc. v. IBM, 249 F.R.D. 313, 315 (N.D.Ill.2008) ("Identifying and copying documents that may be responsive to a document request are necessary steps in any document production."). However, defendants fail to demonstrate that all of the color scanning costs they incurred were necessary. The Ajinomoto defendants scanned all of their color hard-copy documents in color—a group that included some graphs and charts. (Doc. 211 at 20). While the court agrees that graphs and charts must necessarily be scanned in color to preserve the information contained within, graphs and charts comprised only a portion of the documents that were scanned in color. The Ajinomoto defendants have not demonstrated the necessity of scanning the remaining documents in color, and plaintiffs are not responsible for paying for defendants' "glitz." See BASF Corp. v. Old World Trading Co., No. 86-5602, 1992 WL 229473, at *3-4, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13691, at *12 (N.D.Ill. Sept. 11, 1992) (holding that unnecessary aesthetic costs are not taxable). Because defendants fail to account for what percentage of the color copying costs were necessarily incurred to scan charts and graphs, the court exercises its discretion and reduces the color copying costs by 50%. See Association of Minority Contrs. & Suppliers v. Halliday Props., No. 97-274, 1999 WL 551903, at *4-5, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10328, at *14 (E.D.Pa. June 24, 1999) (reducing defendants' costs by fifty percent for insufficient itemization).
Plaintiffs also object to NutraSweet's $3463.52 cost for "black and white copies" and "photocopies" as insufficiently itemized. (Doc. No. 210 at 20). The Court agrees. NutraSweet has not identified what documents it photocopied nor explained this cost was necessary. Rather, NutraSweet only points to affidavits where it explains the necessity of hard document conversion and a single line in its bill of costs referring to "hard copy production" without further explanation. (Doc. No. 211 at 20). Hard document conversion refers to scanning hard documents into electronic format, not photocopying, and therefore these references are irrelevant. (Dkt. 198-1, at ¶ 12). The line stating "hard copy production" does not explain what documents were copied. The court is unable to determine that these documents were necessary and denies this cost. See Yudenko v. Guarinni, 2010 WL 2490679, at *1-2, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59494, at *4-5 (E.D.Pa. June 14, 2010) (denying copying costs where defendants failed to provide a description of the copies).
Defendants may recover the full cost of creating CDs and DVDs of electronic documents in response to plaintiffs' requests. Plaintiff argues that these costs, ranging from $15-$35 per CD and $25-$50/DVD
This Court will not award costs for converting a TIFF document to a PDF document. The parties' stipulated discovery order provides that the parties can produce documents in PDF, TIFF, or native format. (Doc. No. 108 at 10). Defendants' decision to convert TIFF documents to PDF format was not a necessary cost for litigation but instead was incurred merely for the convenience of counsel. We deny this cost.
We will deny Holland Sweetener's $600.00 cost for hard drives as insufficiently itemized. Holland Sweetener does not offer any explanation of what these hard drives were used for. Instead, Holland Sweetener offers an affidavit from counsel affirming that all relevant costs in this case were necessarily incurred. (Doc. No. 211 at 9-10). An affidavit containing a "conclusory statement that copies were `reasonably necessary throughout the litigation' does not assist the Court in determining the nature, and the necessity, of the documents that were copied." Montgomery County v. Microvote Corp., No. 97-6331, 2004 WL 1087196, at *8, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8611, at *28 (E.D.Pa. May 13, 2004). We deny the $300.00 "Technical Support" fee associated with the hard drive cost for the same reason. We will, however, grant NutraSweet's $900.00 hard drive charge. NutraSweet has explained that this charge accounts for the cost of a third-party vendor intaking, cataloging and loading NutraSweet's hard drives into its processing system. (Doc. No. 205-5 at ¶ 5). We are satisfied that this was a necessary charge incurred in order to comply with discovery. We deny Holland Sweetener's $60.29 "Freight" charge because it covers shipping.
Plaintiffs additionally object to Holland Sweetener's $986.50 "Data management, folder title capture, and time and management cost" and $1250.00 "Media Processing Fee" cost as insufficiently documented. (Doc. No. 210 at 23 and 27). We have reviewed the record and are satisfied that these costs are sufficiently documented. We award these costs.
Our award of costs is contained in the following chart. For convenience purposes, we adopt the format created by plaintiffs which organizes costs by category and which was referenced by both parties in their motion and opposition. We include the amount requested and granted by this Court. We take note of the fact that the total in the "Amount Requested" column, which is the sum of the various categories, does not match the amount requested by each defendant in their bills of costs.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Amount Amount Party Charge Requested ($) Granted ($) ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto OCR 10.22 10.22 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Attenex Patterns Document Mapper 22.633.00 0 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Tech Usage fees (fees for hosting database 21,120.00 9,200.00 and allowing attorneys access) ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Concept based review platform document 5,449.00 0 filtering and document analytics ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Electronic Data Recovery 856.58 856.58 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Tape Restoration 600.00 600.00 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Data Management (tech time to capture post-it 37.50 37.50 notes, content and create index) ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Attenex Workbench (data extraction and 34,340.00 34,340.00 processing) ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Attenex Hosting 49,992.00 49,992.00 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Professional fees (stress test analysis, 3,800.00 3,800.00 compiling terms, compiling reports) ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Deposition of Bruce Ritenberg 1894.00 895.00 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Color Scanning 645.00 322.50 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Color Scanning 10,022.72 5011.36 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Scanning 270.79 270.79 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Master CD Replication 211.50 211.50 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Master DVD Replication 571.05 571.05 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Master CD/DVD Creation 50.00 50.00 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto DVD containing extracted data 35.00 35.00 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Deposition of David Waxier* 1,132.80 1,132.80 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Deposition of John Beyer* 675.00 675.00 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Pages scanned to TIFF* 9422.54 9422.54 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto Grade E Scanning* 2930.33 2930.33 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Ajinomoto TOTAL 166,699.03 120,364.17 ___________________________________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Amount Amount Party Charge Requested ($) Granted ($) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener OCR fees 1196.37 1196.37 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Ontrack Inview Native File Hosting 15,957.69 15,957.69 and Ontrack Inview TIFF Image Hosting (Data hosting) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Hard Drives 600.00 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Technical Support 300.00 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Convert from TIFF to PDF 7.58 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener data management, folder title capture, 986.5 986.5 time and management (scanning and processing costs); ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Custodian fee (adding documents to 4900.00 4900.0 database) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Ontrack Inview (assembling and 4720.00 4720.00 running of database) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Engineering Analysis 590.00 590.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Native File Processing Fee 100,000.00 100,000.00 (de-duplication and keyword searches) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Production Processing Fee-Load File 26,244.36 26,244.36 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Media Processing Fee (processing data) 1250.00 1250.00
Holland Sweetener Freight 60.29 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Deposition of Bruce Kitenberg 731.15 731.15 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Deposition of John Beyer 1077.00 1077.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Deposition of David Waxier 1216.80 1216.80 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Document Production 209.25 209.25 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Written discovery requests and 495.90 495.90 responses (copying costs) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Litigation Copies 231.56 231.56 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener IMG-Sr. Technical Time 540.00 540.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener CD Master; 400.00 400.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener DVD Duplication 2275.00 2275.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener CD Duplicate 105.00 105.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener CD Mastering 100.00 100.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener DVD Mastering 50.00 50.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Print Backs* 1640.50 1640.50 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Convert to TIFF* 114.62 114.62 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Document Imaging* 4,763.89 4,763.89 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Media-CD ROM and Media DVD-R* 120.00 120.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Holland Sweetener Ontrack Inview Document TIFF 31,593.36 31,593.36 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Production* TOTAL 202,476.82 195,398.82 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ *Undisputed cost ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Amount Amount Party Charge Requested ($) Granted ($) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Encase Image Extraction 8400.00 8400.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet OCR 5,809.00 5,809.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Privilege Review 4350.00 4350.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Data Hosting 566.61 566.61 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Search based filtering 18,320.00 18,320.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Concordance Load File Creation 1,200.00 1,200.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Back-up Tape Restoration 295.00 295.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Data Processing (de-duplication, 73,940.00 73,940.00 loading documents into database, and extracting text and metadata) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet User Access charges with Microsoft 13,500.00 13,500.00 Office Applications (access to database) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet FTP Transfer (data transfer) 45.00 45.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Consulting Services (native file 2025.00 2025.00 processing) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Production (converting native files to 4342.74 4342.74 TIFF, exporting data, and transferring onto media such as DVDs) ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Scanned/OCRed documents 17,437.32 17,437.32 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet TIF to PDF File Conversion 2179.63 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet TIF to PDF Conversion 13,310.94 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Deposition of John Beyer 1492.70 1492.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Deposition of David Waxier 2384.80 1504.80 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Endorsed Electronic Bates Labels 1215.34 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Production Support Services 4,100.00 2,050.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Confidential Designations 607.67 0
NutraSweet Black and White Copies 3444,32 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Photocopies 19.20 0 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet CD-ROM Mastering 1120.00 1120.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet CD Duplication 1440.00 1440.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet DVD Creation 240.00 240.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Hard Drives 900.00 900.00 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Image Capture* 35,358.24 35,358.24 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet Electronic Data Discovery Processing 39.48 39.48 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NutraSweet TOTAL 218,082.99 194,375.19
*Undisputed cost
For the reasons stated above, it is hereby ORDERED that plaintiffs' motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Costs are awarded in the amounts of $120,364.17 for Ajinomoto, $195,398.82 for Holland Sweetener, and $194,375.19 for NutraSweet.