Vanaskie, Thomas I., United States Circuit Judge
The 3rd Circuit's decision here in Race Tires is now looked to as the preeminent decision on what costs are taxable under 28 U.S.C. § 1920(4) and Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(d)(1) following entry of judgment in favor of a party or parties.
Race Tires sued a competitor and a motor sports sanctioning body for antitrust violations following the enactment of a rule that granted the competitor exclusive supply contracts. Damages before trebling were estimated to exceed $30 million. After extensive discovery governed by an agreed upon case management order, the district court granted summary judgment to both defendants on all claims, and the defendants sought to tax costs under FRCP 54. The defendants collectively sought more than $360,000 in costs, almost all of which was fees paid to electronic discovery vendors for the following services:
- Collecting and preserving ESI
- Processing and indexing ESI
- Keyword searching of ESI for responsive and privileged documents
- Converting native files to TIFF
- Scanning paper documents to create electronic images
This decision vacated the district court's decision allowing costs for ALL eDiscovery vendor services to be taxed, and held that of the services provided by eDiscovery vendors in this case, only three services were taxable under 28 U.S.C. § 1920(4):
- Scanning of hard copy documents
- Conversion of native files to TIFF images
- Transfer of VHS tapes to DVD
The question before the Court was "whether § 1920(4), authorizes the taxation of an electronic discovery consultant's charges for data collection, preservation, searching, culling, conversion, and production as either the 'exemplification [or] the . . . making [of] copies of any materials where the copies are necessarily obtained for use in the case.'" [emphasis added] FRCP 54(d)(1) states that "unless a federal statute, these rules, or court order provides otherwise, costs -- other than attorney's fees -- should be allowed to the prevailing party." Congress specified the litigation expenses that qualify as "taxable costs" in 20 U.S.C. § 1920. Because the vendor's work in this case did not produce illustrative evidence or the authentication of public records, the charges did not qualify as "exemplification" to be allowed under §1920(4).
The court then undertook a detailed analysis of the "making copies of any materials" language of § 1920(4) and found that the addition of "any materials" language to the statute "plainly" signified that copying costs are not limited to paper copies. Following that review and the analysis of the existing charges, the court held that the three items listed above qualified as "making copies".
In reviewing decisions that had allowed a much broader view of taxable costs, the court said this:
The decisions that allow taxation of all, or essentially all, electronic discovery consultant charges, such as the District Court's ruling in this case, are untethered from the statutory mooring. Section 1920(4) does not state that all steps that lead up to the production of copies of materials are taxable. It does not authorize taxation merely because today's technology requires technical expertise nor ordinarily possessed by the typical legal professional. It does not say that activities that encourage cost savings may be taxed. Section 1920(4) authorizes awarding only the cost of making copies.
Of note is the fact that Race Tires attempted to argue on appeal that the defendants had made no showing that the resulting copies (of either ESI or the DVDs) were obtained for use in the case per the language of § 1920(4). The 3rd Circuit held that both the question of whether the copies were used for the case was reviewed only under an abuse of discretion standard, and it had no basis to find any such abuse by the District Court.
The court also noted that "we do not think it is significant that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide for the discovery of ESI or that the parties agree to 'exchange responsive and discoverable ESI'" and reiterated the presumption that the responding party bears the expense of complying with discovery requests. According to the Court, if a party is faced with an undue burden or cost in responding, it needs to seek the protections of Rule 26(c) to attempt to reduce or shift the costs of complying. Neither of the defendants obtained such an order, and they were each required to bear their costs as provided under the Rules.
v.
HOOSIER RACING TIRE CORP.; Dirt Motor Sports, Inc. d/b/a World Racing Group
Counsel
Joseph Decker, Esq. (Argued), Mark D. Shepard, Esq., Mark K. Dausch, Esq., Babst, Calland, Clements and Zomnir, P.C., Pittsburgh, PA, for Appellants.Donald E. Knebel, Esq., Kendall Millard, Esq., Deborah Pollack–Milgate, Esq. (Argued), Aaron M. Staser, Esq., Barnes & Thornburg LLP, Indianapolis, IN, Donna M. Doblick, Esq., Reed Smith LLP, Pittsburgh, PA, for Appellee Hoosier Racing Tire Corp. d/b/a World Racing Group.
Theodore H. Jobes, Esq. (Argued), Christine Soares, Esq., Fox Rothschild LLP, Philadelphia, PA, John R. Gotaskie, Jr., Esq., Fox Rothschild LLP, Pittsburgh, PA, for Appellee Dirt Motor Sports, Inc.