De Lage Landen Financial Services, Inc. v. Spinal Technologies, LLC ( 2021 )


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  •                               SUPERIOR COURT
    OF THE
    STATE OF DELAWARE
    PAUL R. WALLACE                                              NEW CASTLE COUNTY COURTHOUSE
    JUDGE                                                        500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 10400
    WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801
    (302) 255-0660
    Date Submitted: August 4, 2021
    Date Decided: August 10, 2021
    Amy E. Evans, Esq.                           Jason C. Jowers, Esq.
    DLA PIPER LLP                                Sarah T. Andrade, Esq.
    1201 North Market Street                     BAYARD P.A.
    Suite 1200                                   600 North King Street
    Wilmington, Delaware 19801                   Suite 400
    Wilmington, Delaware 19801
    Amy L. Ruhland, Esq.
    DLA PIPER LLP                                R. Kyle Hawes, Esq.
    401 Congress Avenue                          Yliana E. Trevino-Hawkins, Esq.
    Suite 2500                                   CHAMBERLAIN, HRDLICKA, WHITE,
    Austin, Texas 78701                          WILLIAMS & AUGHTRY
    1200 Smith Street
    Suite 1400
    Houston, Texas 77002
    RE:   In re Delaware Subpoena Issued Pursuant to Letters Rogatory in
    De Lage Landen Financial Services, Inc. v. Spinal Technologies, LLC, et al.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    Dear Counsel:
    This Letter Order memorializes certain bench rulings made in this third-party
    discovery matter that governed the ensuing meet-and-confers on the scope of
    discovery before ultimate resolution of the underlying dispute.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 2 of 18
    This action came before the Court by way of Letters Rogatory granted by a
    Texas district court seeking a subpoena for and discovery from a non-party Delaware
    corporation. As the underlying litigation is currently before the issuing Texas trial
    court, this Court’s only involvement relates to the discovery requested of a Delaware
    corporate citizen. The Court’s authority and duties in this matter—as they were
    resolved in serial conferences and hearings—are now further detailed below.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. THE DELAWARE PARTIES
    The movant in this immediate action is Mazor Robotics, LLC, a Delaware
    Corporation.1
    The nonmovants in this action and the defendants in the underlying action are
    Spinal Technologies, LLC, a Texas limited liability company with its principal
    office in Harris County; Richard R.M. Francis and Juanitta Francis, individuals
    residing in Harris County, Texas; and Richard R.M. Francis M.D. P.A., a Texas
    professional association with its principal office in Harris County, Texas
    (collectively “Spinal Tech”).2
    1
    Spinal Tech’s Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex. 1, Spinal Tech’s First Am. Mot. for Letters
    Rogatory to Mazor at 2, Feb. 22, 2021 (D.I. 82).
    2
    Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex. D, Spinal Tech’s Original Third-Party Pet. ¶¶ 3-6, Feb. 11, 2021
    (D.I. 78).
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 3 of 18
    The plaintiff in the underlying action is De Lage Landen Financial Services,
    Inc., a Michigan corporation with its principal place of business in Wayne,
    Pennsylvania.3
    B. THE TEXAS LITIGATION
    The underlying dispute here concerns a lawsuit before a Harris County, Texas
    court between plaintiff De Lage Landen and defendants Spinal Tech.4
    Those parties had entered into a Master Lease Agreement where De Lage
    Landen leased Mazor equipment to Spinal Tech.5 Two and a half years into that
    Agreement, Spinal Tech allegedly defaulted on its payment to De Lage Landen, and
    in turn, De Lage Landen brought suit against Spinal Tech alleging Breach of
    Contract and Breach of Individual Guaranties.6
    In Spinal Tech’s response to De Lage Landen’s complaint, Spinal Tech
    brought a counterclaim for fraudulent inducement against De Lage Landen, arguing
    the fraud was perpetrated by De Lage Landen and also through its agent Mazor.7
    3
    Id. ¶ 7.
    4
    Mazor’s Suppl. Mot. to Quash ¶ 1, Mar. 12, 2021 (D.I. 90).
    5
    Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex. B, De Lage Landen’s original petition before the Texas Court ¶ 7
    (De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech., et al., Cause No. 201978823).
    6
    Id. ¶¶ 10, 13-17.
    7
    Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex. C, Spinal Tech’s First Am. Ans. and Countercl. ¶¶ 10-12.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 4 of 18
    Mazor’s involvement in the underlying dispute is as the manufacturer of the
    allegedly defective equipment.8 In addition to manufacturing the equipment, Spinal
    Tech alleges that Mazor worked together with De Lage Landen to induce Spinal
    Tech to enter into the Agreement for the allegedly defective equipment.9
    Spinal Tech then filed a Third-Party Petition against Mazor stating four causes
    of action—a Texas Deceptive Trade Practice Act violation, a Breach of Implied
    Warranty, a Breach of Contract, and Fraud; that petition was dismissed by the Texas
    Court.10 Thereafter, Spinal Tech filed an amended petition with only one cause of
    action—a Deceptive Trade Practice claim; that action is still pending before the
    Texas Court.11
    C. THE DELAWARE SUBPOENAS
    Spinal Tech, after filing an amended Third-Party Petition in the Texas Court,
    moved for that court to issue Letters Rogatory allowing Spinal Tech to subpoena and
    8
    Spinal Tech’s Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex. 1 at 2.
    9
    Id. at 3.
    10
    Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex. D ¶¶ 20-41; Spinal Tech’s Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex.
    1 at 2.
    11
    Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex. D ¶¶ 18-22; Spinal Tech’s Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash, Ex.
    1 at 2.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 5 of 18
    depose non-party Mazor.12 The Texas Court granted the Letters Rogatory and Spinal
    Tech served Delaware subpoenas on Mazor pursuant to those Letters Rogatory.13
    Upon being served with the subpoenas, Mazor asked for, and was granted by
    Spinal Tech, a ten-day extension to respond.14 Then, after a meet and confer, Mazor
    filed the instant application, a Motion to Quash/Protective Order seeking some
    shelter from Spinal Tech’s subpoenas and requests for production.15
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. THIS COURT’S AUTHORITY OVER DISCOVERY MATTERS IN THIS CASE.
    According to Spinal Tech, this Court is not the appropriate one to hear
    Mazor’s Motion to Quash/Protective Order.16 Instead, it says, the Texas court where
    the underlying litigation is pending is the appropriate one to hear Mazor’s
    complaints.17 This is so, Spinal Tech insists, because (1) the Texas Court is in a
    12
    Spinal Tech’s Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 2.
    13
    Id. ¶ 3.
    14
    Id. ¶ 3-4.
    15
    Id. ¶ 4.
    16
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 1, Mar. 12, 2021 (D.I. 89).
    17
    Id.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 6 of 18
    better position to hear the Motion to Quash, and (2) Mazor has already litigated the
    subpoena issue before the Texas Court.18
    There is some curb appeal to Spinal Tech’s arguments, but in the end, they
    fail. While Texas might be the easier forum to hear this Mazor’s motion, the
    Delaware precedent that Spinal Tech itself cites tells us that Delaware is the
    appropriate forum to hear it. And even if Mazor already litigated some propriety
    and scope issues in Texas (which Mazor says it really didn’t), Spinal Tech doesn’t
    show how that matters here.
    1. This Court is the appropriate one to hear Mazor’s Motion to Quash
    and Motion for Protective Order.
    Spinal Tech relies on Louisiana Municipal Police Employee’s Retirement
    System v. Fertitta for the proposition that the Texas court is the appropriate one to
    hear the present motion to quash.19 In Louisiana Municipal Police Employee’s
    Retirement System, the Vice Chancellor, after granting three Motions for
    Commissions to take depositions in North Carolina, issued a Dear Counsel letter
    addressing those motions and asking the parties to work together.20 While Spinal
    18
    Id. ¶¶ 1, 2, 6.
    19
    Id. ¶ 2; 
    2009 WL 3806216
     (Del. Ch. Oct. 27, 2009).
    20
    Louisiana Mun. Police Employees’ Ret. Sys., 
    2009 WL 3806216
    , at *1.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 7 of 18
    Tech cites to the Vice Chancellor’s observation that originating courts are in an
    easier position to hear issues regarding subpoenas and “miscellaneous actions[,]”
    Spinal Tech’s selective quotation misses his most relevant statement on the
    subject21—that “[a] third party of course has the right to object to the subpoena in
    the court from which it issues[,]” here Delaware.22
    So while the Vice Chancellor rightly noted that discovery courts could be
    “burden[ed] . . . with discovery disputes relating to matters in which the merits are
    not before them[,]” he also confirmed that it is the discovery court that has the
    authority to decide a motion to quash when called upon.23
    In response to Mazor’s citation to The Chemours Company TT, LLC v. ATI
    Titanium LLC, Spinal Tech again fails to account for the substance of the Court’s
    order.24 In Chemours, this Court found that, as the discovery state, Texas was the
    appropriate forum to hear the subject motion to quash a subpoena issued there in
    21
    See Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 2.
    22
    Louisiana Mun. Police Employees’ Ret. Sys., 
    2009 WL 3806216
    , at *1.
    23
    
    Id. 24
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 2. The Chemours Co. TT, LLC v. ATI
    Titanium LLC, Del. Super., C.A. N15C-03-083 WCC CCLD, Carpenter, J. (D.I. 79—Nov. 25,
    2015).
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 8 of 18
    support of a case pending here.25 This Court recognized that while Delaware might
    be the better forum to handle the dispute, the “Court is compelled to find the dispute
    involving a subpoena issued to a non-party” be heard in the subpoena-issuing
    discovery state (Texas) and governed by its law.26
    Spinal Tech says “Chemours is factually different from this matter for several
    reasons, including importantly that the Commission at issue was obtained ‘without
    any objection.’” 27 But that fact is of no consequence to Chemours’ utility here. And
    Spinal Tech’s assertion that it could prove “extraordinarily inefficient and wasteful
    for this Court, having no familiarity with this case, to resolve identical issues and
    arguments regarding this Subpoena that Mazor raised, and the Texas Court already
    ruled upon,” 28 while potentially true, is no statement of the controlling law and
    principles here. To be sure, the exercise of determining the propriety of a subpoena
    issued in support of a sister state’s case might prove burdensome and inefficient.
    25
    Chemours, at ¶ 8.
    26
    
    Id. 27
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 3 (quoting Chemours, at ¶ 2).
    28
    
    Id. ¶ 6
    .
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 9 of 18
    But that exercise is also proper and required.29
    Comity between states does not demand efficiency.30 Rather it demands
    proper relations between the sovereign states and protection of each one’s citizens
    from overreach by another and by the federal system.31
    2. Even if Mazor were prohibited from doing so, it’s not ‘relitigating’ an
    already-decided motion to quash.
    Whether it is true, or not, that Mazor had two bites of the proverbial apple,
    Spinal Tech can point to no statute or case instructing that a non-party (or any
    litigant) only has one opportunity to contest a subpoena in this context. And Mazor
    claims that it could only dispute the Letters Rogatory in Texas as a whole because
    the present subpoena had not been issued, and Texas law does not allow for
    non-parties “to object to specific requests attached to letters rogatory.” 32 If so, that
    29
    Chemours, at ¶ 8 (“[T]his Court is compelled to find the dispute involving a subpoena issued
    to a non-party who is not a resident of Delaware should be governed by Texas law and resolved
    by a ruling from the Texas Court.”).
    30
    See generally Myers v. United States, 
    272 U.S. 52
    , 85 (1926) (Brandeis, J., dissenting) (noting
    that certain bedrock tenets of American governance have been adopted and have developed “not
    to promote efficiency but to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power” by another authority).
    31
    So noted this Court in Mine Safety Appliances Co. v. AIU Ins. Co.—“a Delaware court should
    refrain from controlling the disposition of out-of-state subpoenas because, presumably, courts in
    other states would respect Delaware’s right under the [Uniform Interstate Depositions and
    Discovery Act] to adjudicate the matters concerning subpoenas issued to Delaware residents.” —
    
    2014 WL 4724843
    , at *1 (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 19, 2014); Mazor’s Suppl. Mot. to Quash ¶ 13.
    32
    
    Id. ¶ 14
    . See also 
    id. ¶ 15
     (“Further, the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure do not allow parties
    to move to quash or for protective order prior to the actual issuance of a subpoena.”).
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 10 of 18
    alone might defeat Spinal Tech’s argument that Mazor is relitigating the issues posed
    here.33
    But the Court need not simply take Mazor’s statement as true. The Court has
    the opposition to Spinal Tech’s Motion for Letters Rogatory that Mazor submitted
    before the Texas court.34 There, Mazor opposed Spinal Tech’s Motion for Letters
    Rogatory as a whole; Mazor didn’t litigate the substance or scope of the specific
    requests comprising the now-sought discovery.35 Unlike Spinal Tech’s claim that
    Mazor now has “a second chance to reargue the same issues[,]”36 Mazor is in fact
    litigating the now-specified and subpoena-enforced discovery requests for the first
    time in the very court that issued the specific process it seeks relief from. And this
    Court, no doubt, has both the authority over and interest in insuring that a Delaware
    citizen subject to a subpoena it, as a Delaware court, has issued is given the
    33
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 1 (“Mazor recognized that the Texas
    Court is the appropriate Court to hear the substantive issues regarding the Subpoena when it
    submitted an opposition in Texas, which the Texas Court reviewed and considered.”).
    34
    Spinal Tech’s Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash Spinal Tech, Ex. 2, Mazor’s Opp’n to Spinal
    Tech.’s Mot. for Letters Rogatory at 1-4.
    35
    
    Id. 36
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 3.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 11 of 18
    protections that might be available under its own rules and governing law.37
    B. THE COURT MAY ORDER SPINAL TECH                     TO   PAY MAZOR’S DISCOVERY
    COSTS.
    Spinal Tech says Mazor should cover any costs that Mazor might incur to
    answer Spinal Tech’s subpoenas and discovery requests.38 Unsurprisingly, Mazor
    wants Spinal Tech, the requesting party, to reimburse any of Mazor’s costs
    occasioned by Spinal Tech’s discovery demands.39
    Subpoenas issued by this Court in civil cases are governed by its Civil Rule
    45. That rule expressly allows the Court to “quash or modify the subpoena if it:
    (i)    fails to allow reasonable time for compliance,
    (ii)   requires disclosure of privileged or other protected matter and no
    exception or waiver applies, or
    (iii) subjects a person to undue burden.”40
    37
    See Del. Code Ann. tit. 10, § 4311(f) (2021) (“An application to the Superior Court for a
    protective order or to enforce, quash, or modify a subpoena issued by the prothonotary under [the
    Delaware Uniform Interstate Depositions and Discovery Act] must comply with the rules or
    statutes of this State . . .”); see also Mine Safety, 
    2014 WL 4724843
    , at *1; Chemours, at ¶ 8. The
    interests animating these principles are of no lesser import when—as here—the subject Delaware
    subpoena is issued pursuant to letters rogatory and our common law practice rather than process
    initiated by a foreign subpoena via the Uniform Interstate Depositions and Discovery Act. See 1
    WOOLEY ON DELAWARE PRACTICE § 614 (1906) (explaining letters rogatory and the procedure
    thereunder in Delaware).
    38
    Id. ¶ 7.
    39
    Mazor’s Suppl. Mot. to Quash ¶ 17.
    40
    Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 45(c)(3)(A).
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 12 of 18
    Too, the rule directs that “an order to compel production shall protect any person
    who is not a party or an officer of a party from significant expense resulting from
    the inspection and copying commanded.”41
    In support of its contentions that Mazor should foot its own discovery costs,
    Spinal Tech suggests that: (1) courts as a rule should not shift discovery costs from
    non-parties; (2) Mazor is not a traditionally disinterested non-party and should have
    reasonably anticipated litigation, thus it should pay for its discovery costs; and,
    (3) Mazor’s estimate for its discovery costs are miscalculated.42
    1. Courts do, when appropriate, shift discovery costs from non-parties.
    Spinal Tech’s first relies on Solow v. Aspect Resources, LLC, to conclude that
    Delaware Courts do not shift discovery costs from non-parties.43            There, the
    Chancery Court denied the reimbursement of non-party discovery costs.44 But, the
    Chancery Court did so because the non-party “fail[ed] to do more than merely assert,
    without adequate factual support, that compliance with the subpoena will cause [the
    41
    Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 45(c)(2)(B).
    42
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶¶ 7, 8, 13.
    43
    
    2007 WL 3256944
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Oct. 30, 2007); Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s
    Mot. to Quash ¶ 7.
    44
    Solow, 
    2007 WL 3256944
    , at *2.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 13 of 18
    non-party] to incur ‘significant expenses’ so as to require the Court’s protection.”45
    Of particular importance, the non-party’s brief in opposition to the motion to compel
    stated only that it “has no financial interest in the outcome of the case, and nor is this
    litigation of public importance, [non-party]’s equitable share of assisting the
    Plaintiff’s discovery efforts is minimal.”46
    Solow is of no help to Spinal Tech here. Mazor has provided an affidavit
    setting forth its best estimate of the costs it would incur in answering Spinal Tech’s
    requests, and why its efforts and those costs represent a significant burden.47
    Moreover, as Mazor points out, courts do on occasion allow for non-party
    discovery costs to be shifted to the requesting party.48 While Mazor’s cited cases
    are from federal courts, those courts applyFederal Rule of Civil Procedure 45—the
    federal analog to this Court’s applicable civil rule. And those federal decisions are
    clearly grounded both on the equitable principles made a bit more explicit in the
    45
    
    Id. 46
    Non-Party Noble Energy, Inc.’s Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot. to Compel at ¶ 21, Solow v. Aspect Res.,
    LLC, Del. Ch., C.A. 20397-CS, Chandler, C. (D.I. 77—Aug. 22, 2007).
    47
    Mazor’s Suppl. Mot. to Quash ¶ 19.
    48
    See Standard Chlorine of Del. v. Sinibaldi, 
    821 F. Supp. 232
    , 262 (D. Del. 1992) (shifting
    non-party discovery costs); Celanese Corp. v. E.I. duPont de Nemours & Co., 
    58 F.R.D. 606
    , 612
    (D. Del. 1973) (shifting non-party discovery costs).
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 14 of 18
    federal rule49 and the same fairness principles that command this Court to protect
    anyone subpoenaed from undue hardship and burden.50
    2. Spinal Tech’s suggestion that Mazor is no disinterested non-party and
    should, therefore, cover its own discovery costs is unavailing.
    Spinal Tech’s second argument is that Mazor is no innocent non-party, but in
    fact “largely caused the underlying litigation.”51 Maybe—but until Spinal Tech
    successfully joins Mazor in the underlying litigation, it’s still a non-party.
    Again, Spinal Tech’s cited cases are of little assistance to its cause.52 In In
    re First Am. Corp., the federal district court decided that the non-party should pay
    its discovery costs only after finding that the non-party was and had been a party to
    litigation surrounding the same operative facts as those in that New York case.53 As
    49
    Of relevance here, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45 provides that “[t]hese acts may be
    required only as directed in the order, and the order must protect a person who is neither a party
    nor a party’s officer from significant expense resulting from compliance.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 45
    (d)(2)(B)(ii).
    50
    Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 45(c).
    51
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 8.
    52
    
    Id. 53
    184 F.R.D. 234
    , 242 (S.D.N.Y. 1998). Spinal Tech mentions a later SDNY case—In re
    Honeywell Int’l, Inc. Sec. Litig., where the court found the subpoenaed non-party accounting firm
    was “not a classic disinterested non-party”, 
    230 F.R.D. 293
    , 303 (S.D.N.Y. 2003)—but provides
    no real insight into how that was or should be determined. And the Court is not ready here to
    blithely attach the label “non-classic disinterested non-party” to strip Mazor of any Rule 45
    protection it might otherwise be due.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 15 of 18
    it was and had been a party to litigation involving the same facts, it “could have
    anticipated that the failed transactions would reasonably spawn some litigation[.]”54
    Here—though Spinal Tech has tried—Mazor is not and has not been a party to this
    litigation, and as such can hardly be said to have expected Spinal Tech’s barrage
    here.
    Spinal Tech resorts also to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Konover, where the
    federal district court refused to shift costs for non-party discovery because the
    non-party was actually a limited partnership in which the sued defendant had a 33%
    limited partnership interest.55 Again, not a case that is particularly helpful under
    these circumstances.
    Whatever might be made of the significant factual dissimilarities just
    mentioned, application of the balancing used by the federal courts when deciding on
    non-party discovery cost-shifting under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45—which
    Spinal Tech does not directly engage56—also cuts against its position here. The three
    factors that the federal courts consider when resolving these questions are:
    “(1) whether the non-party actually has an interest in the outcome of the litigation;
    54
    In re First Am. Corp., 184 F.R.D. at 242 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    55
    Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Konover, 
    259 F.R.D. 206
    , 207 (D. Conn. 2009).
    56
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 9.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 16 of 18
    (2) whether the non-party can more readily bear the costs than the requesting party;
    and (3) whether the litigation is of public importance.”57 And, while not dispositive,
    if the non-party is not traditionally “disinterested,” federal courts are less inclined to
    grant discovery cost shifting.58 But when warranted, a federal district court has not
    hesitated to order a requesting party to pay the costs incurred by a non-party to whom
    its discovery subpoena has been targeted.59 And to be sure, this Court is empowered
    by its rules to do so.60 If needed, after the parties meet and confer the agree upon
    the specific RFPs at issue, the Court will engage the appropriate balancing test to
    determine if such cost shifting is appropriate here.
    3. At this point, Spinal Tech has not established that Mazor’s discovery
    costs are out of line.
    Spinal Tech also asserts that Mazor’s discovery costs estimate is wrong.61
    Now, Spinal Tech doesn’t reveal what it believes the actual cost of production should
    be. It just says the volume Mazor estimates it needs to review isn’t “an indication
    57
    Konover, 259 F.R.D. at 207 (citing Linder v. Calero–Portocarrero, 
    180 F.R.D. 168
    , 177
    (D. D.C. 1998)).
    58
    See In re Honeywell Int’l, Inc. Sec. Litig., 230 F.R.D. at 303.
    59
    E.g., Standard Chlorine of Del., 
    821 F. Supp. at 262
    ; Celanese Corp., 58 F.R.D. at 612.
    60
    See Super. Ct. Civ. R. 45.
    61
    Spinal Tech’s Suppl. Opp’n to Mazor’s Mot. to Quash ¶ 13.
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 17 of 18
    of the real number of documents that will need to be reviewed.” 62 That’s not good
    enough.
    At this stage, Mazor has properly demonstrated the substantial costs it might
    incur to complying with the subpoenas and requests as issued.63 And so, if called
    upon to do so after the parties pare down the contested production issues, the Court
    will be guided by Rule 45(c)(3)(B)’s command to protect non-parties from
    significant expenses resulting from a discovery demand.64
    III. CONCLUSION
    So this Court is the appropriate one to hear the substance of the propriety and
    scope issues raised in Mazor’s Motion to Quash/Protective Order related to the
    subpoenas it issued under the Texas district court’s letters rogatory. And the Court
    is authorized when regulating this specific portion of the discovery process to order
    62
    Id.
    63
    E.g., Mazor’s Suppl. Mot. to Quash ¶ 19 (“[Medtronic’s Legal Director and Discovery
    Counsel] testified that pulling even a fraction of the documents Spinal Tech has requested would
    cost, at a minimum, approximately $327,000 and takes months to accomplish.”).
    64
    And the Court might do so by, for instance, fixing costs upfront to avoid uncertainty for both
    Spinal Tech and Mazor. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 45 advisory committee’s note to 1991 amendment
    (“A non-party required to produce documents or materials is protected against significant expense
    resulting from involuntary assistance to the court. This provision applies, for example, to a
    non-party required to provide a list of class members. The court is not required to fix the costs in
    advance of production, although this will often be the most satisfactory accommodation to protect
    the party seeking discovery from excessive costs.”).
    In re Subpoena: De Lage Landen Fin. Servs. v. Spinal Tech.
    C.A. No. N21M-01-040
    August 10, 2021
    Page 18 of 18
    Spinal Tech to compensate Mazor for its discovery costs. As explained, no further
    proceedings on this motion should occur until the parties meet and confer on the
    scope of Spinal Tech’s Requests for Production and the scope of the depositions to
    be held under the subpoenas issued. At that point, if needed, the Court will resolve
    any remaining objections using the applicable Delaware rules of civil procedure,
    controlling Delaware case law on such discovery issues, and the cost allocation
    principles explained above.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    _______________________
    Paul R. Wallace, Judge
    cc: All Counsel via File and Serve
    

Document Info

Docket Number: N21M-01-040

Judges: Wallace J.

Filed Date: 8/10/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/11/2021