UAB “Planner5D” v. Meta Platforms, Inc.
UAB “Planner5D” v. Meta Platforms, Inc.
2024 WL 4190879 (N.D. Cal. 2024)
August 26, 2024
Kim, Sallie, United States Magistrate Judge
Summary
The Court denied Plaintiff's request to compel Defendant Meta Platforms, Inc. to produce documents identified as "hyperlinks" in response to requests for production of documents. While acknowledging that hyperlinked documents are not the same as attachments to emails and the burden of searching for and reviewing them is greater, the Court ultimately deferred to Meta's determination that the specific hyperlinked documents in question were not relevant or privileged.
Additional Decisions
UAB “PLANNER5D”, Plaintiff,
v.
META PLATFORMS, INC., et al., Defendants
v.
META PLATFORMS, INC., et al., Defendants
Case No. 19-cv-03132-WHO (SK)
United States District Court, N.D. California
Signed August 26, 2024
Counsel
Marc N. Bernstein, Christian Gabriel Andreu-von Euw, Richard A. De Liberty, Will Barnett Fitton, The Business Litigation Group, P.C., San Francisco, CA, for Plaintiff.Dale Cendali, Abbey Gauger, Pro Hac Vice, Emily Crawford Sheffield, Pro Hac Vice, Johanna Schmitt, Pro Hac Vice, Jonathan Drew Brit, Pro Hac Vice, Mary C. Mazzello, Pro Hac Vice, Miriam Kontoh, Pro Hac Vice, Kirkland Ellis LLP, New York, NY, Kristen Paulene Lantz Reichenbach, Yan-Xin Li, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, San Francisco, CA, for Defendant Meta Platforms, Inc.
David R. Singer, Jenner & Block, Los Angeles, CA, Andrew Harrison Bart, Pro Hac Vice, Cayman Mitchell, Pro Hac Vice, Jacob Lincoln Tracer, Pro Hac Vice, Andrew C. Elliott, Pro Hac Vice, Jenner & Block LLP, New York, NY, Dale Cendali, Kirkland Ellis LLP, New York, NY, Sarah L. Atkinson, Pro Hac Vice, Jenner & Block LLP, New York City, NY, for Defendant Trustees of Princeton University.
Dale Cendali, Abbey Gauger, Pro Hac Vice, Emily Crawford Sheffield, Pro Hac Vice, Jonathan Drew Brit, Pro Hac Vice, Mary C. Mazzello, Pro Hac Vice, Miriam Kontoh, Pro Hac Vice, Kirkland Ellis LLP, New York, NY, Yan-Xin Li, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, San Francisco, CA, for Defendant Meta Platforms Technologies, LLC.
Kim, Sallie, United States Magistrate Judge
ORDER REGARDING JOINT DISCOVERY LETTER BRIEF AND JOINT DISCOVERY LETTER BRIEF UPDATE
Regarding Docket Nos. 443, 472
*1 The parties dispute whether Defendant Meta Platforms, Inc. (“Meta”) should produce documents that are identified as “hyperlinks” in documents that Meta already produced in response to Plaintiff's requests for production of documents. Plaintiff argues that the hyperlinks to other documents in responsive documents are akin to attachments to emails that a party must produce. Meta responds that the hyperlinked documents are different from attachments to emails because searching for hyperlinked documents and reviewing them requires time and effort that is not required for producing an attachment to an email. Plaintiff argues that, by the title of the documents alone, it is obvious that the hyperlinked documents are relevant and responsive to its requests. Meta argues that it has reviewed the specific documents cited in Plaintiff's request and determined that the documents are not relevant or privileged.
Here, the Court agrees that hyperlinked documents are not the same as attachments to emails. Rather, the effort required to search for them is substantially greater than the effort required to produce attachments to emails. But here, Meta has reviewed the specific hyperlinked documents and assessed them for relevance and privilege, so the general burden is not an issue in this specific dispute. Plaintiffs argue that the documents are relevant and seek the Court's assistance in requiring Meta to produce them. Courts rarely get involved in assessing specific documents for relevance but rather make general orders about categories of documents that a party must produce. Courts in general rely upon parties to assess relevance, and the system of discovery is based on trust that a party produces documents after a review and assessment for relevance and responsiveness. Here, it is possible that Plaintiff is correct and that Meta is required to produce the documents, but the only way the Court can assess Plaintiff's theory is to review each of the documents in question. The Court cannot engage in that practice. For these reasons, the Court DENIES Plaintiff's request to compel Meta to produce the specific withheld documents identified in hyperlinks.
IT IS SO ORDERED.