Oberto, Sheila K., United States Magistrate Judge
In a copyright infringement action, the court granted plaintiff's motion to serve a third-party subpoena on an ISP after finding that plaintiff made a sufficient showing on all four good cause factors permitting it to pursue early discovery and learn the identity of Doe defendants prior to a Rule 26(f) conference.
Plaintiff was a limited liability company that produced copyrighted adult films. Defendant was alleged to have used a file distribution network to download adult pornographic films subject to copyrights held by plaintiff. Defendant was identified in this lawsuit only by an Internet Protocol address (‘IP Address‘) assigned to a customer on a specific date by an Internet Service Provider (‘ISP‘) and through which the copyrighted works were allegedly downloaded.
Plaintiff filed a motion for leave to serve a third-party subpoena prior to a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(f) discovery conference, requesting permission to initiate discovery to identify the account subscriber associated with the IP Address used to download plaintiff's copyrighted films. This motion was made notwithstanding the provision of Rule 26(d)(1) which "precludes a party from seeking discovery from any source before the parties have conferred as required by Rule 26(f)." Plaintiff argued:that a Rule 45 subpoena to the ISP must be permitted to obtain the identity of the customer assigned the IP Address on the dates in question to ascertain the identity of the person responsible for the unauthorized downloading of plaintiff's copyrighted works. Plaintiff further argued that there was no other way to obtain this information.The court evaluated the good cause factors which allow early discovery and found that plaintiff (1) identified defendant with sufficient specificity that the court can determine defendant is a real person who can be sued; (2) sufficiently recounted the steps it has taken to locate or identify the defendant; (3) stated a prima facie case that can withstand a motion to dismiss; and (4) the information plaintiff sought through the subpoena will likely lead to identifying information.
After balancing the privacy concerns of the defendant with plaintiff's need for discovery, the court granted plaintiff's motion subject to certain restrictions which were aimed at protecting the privacy and interests of the individuals whose identity was to be discovered pursuant to the subpoenas.
v.
John Doe, subscriber assigned IP address 98.255.92.230, Defendant