Biax Corp. v. Nvidia Corp.

271 F.R.D. 200, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 105869, 2010 WL 3777540
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedSeptember 21, 2010
DocketCivil Action No. 09-cv-01257-PAB-MEH
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 271 F.R.D. 200 (Biax Corp. v. Nvidia Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biax Corp. v. Nvidia Corp., 271 F.R.D. 200, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 105869, 2010 WL 3777540 (D. Colo. 2010).

Opinion

ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTIONS TO COMPEL

MICHAEL E. HEGARTY, United States Magistrate Judge.

Pending before the Court is Plaintiff BIAX’s Motion to Compel Responses to First Set of Interrogatories and Second Set of Requests for Production of Documents and Things ¡filed June 14, 2010; docket # 226 ]; Plaintiff BIAX’s Motion to Compel NVIDIA to Respond to Plaintiffs Third Set of Interrogatories and Fourth Set of Requests for Production of Documents and Things [filed June 25, 2010; docket # 234 ]; and Plaintiff BIAX’s Motion to Compel the Sony Defendants to Respond to Plaintiffs Third Set of Interrogatories and Fourth Set of Requests for Production of Documents and Things ¡filed June 25, 2010; docket # 235 ]. These motions are referred to this Court for disposition. (Dockets ## 227, 240.) The matters are fully briefed, and additional oral argument would not assist the Court. The Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART Plaintiffs motions to compel as stated herein.

The Court held a motions hearing on July 14, 2010, to discuss these and other previously pending motions. (See docket #300.) The Court instructed the parties to meet and confer and identify the portions of Plaintiffs [203]*203three motions to compel remaining for the Court to resolve. The parties filed a Joint Status Report on July 23, 2010, indicating the sections of Plaintiffs motions still subject to dispute. After review of the pleadings, the hearing transcript, and the joint status report, the Court orders as follows.

Motion to Compel Responses to First Set of Interrogatories and Second Set of Requests for Production of Documents and Things (Docket #226)

The parties represent that sections A, C (Sony), G-2 and G-3 were resolved and sections B, C (Nvidia), D, E, and all sections of G except -2 and -3 remain disputed. (Docket # 308 at 1.)

I. Section B: Identification of Responsive Documents

Plaintiff requests the Court to order Defendants to “specify which of their documents are responsive to the individual interrogatories, instead of asserting that responsive information exists somewhere in the many of thousands of pages of documents produced.” (Docket # 226 at 2.) Plaintiff particularly objects to Nvidia’s responses to Interrogatories No. 18 and 20 and Request for Production 27 and to Sony’s responses to Interrogatories No. 15, 18, and 22, and Request for Production 27(a). (Id. at 3-4.)

Plaintiff represents that “Nvidia’s response to Interrogatory 20 makes a useless blanket reference to Bates-stamped pages 1 to 8236 of its production.” (Id. at 3.) In response, Nvidia represents that Interrogatory No. 20 requests a list of documents related to “non-infringement,” whereas Interrogatory No. 27 applies to Nvidia’s “non-infringement case on an element-by-element basis.” (Docket #260 at 22.) Nvidia believes that its response to Interrogatory No. 27 satisfies the specificity which BIAX requests for Interrogatory No. 20. As to Interrogatory No. 18, Nvidia asserts it supplemented its response. (Id.) The Court accepts Nvidia’s representations, to which BIAX did not reply, and DENIES BIAX’s motion in this respect.

Plaintiff BIAX contends that the Sony Defendants “responded to Interrogatory 15 with a general reference to over 20,000 pages of documents.” (Docket #226 at 3.) In response, the Sony Defendants aver that they properly identified Bates ranges of responsive documents in certain cover letters, and in any event, have supplemented their interrogatory responses with the same. (Docket # 259 at 4-5.) BIAX did not challenge this contention in its reply; thus, the Court DENIES AS MOOT this portion of BIAX’s motion.

II. Section C: Adequacy of Defendant Nvidia’s Search for Requested Communications 1

Plaintiff BIAX originally directed this section to all Defendants but has since represented that the section is resolved as to the Sony Defendants. (See docket # 308 at 1.) As to Defendant Nvidia, in its motion Plaintiff contends that Nvidia “has produced only 38 e-mails or other forms of electronic correspondence, totaling less than one hundred pages of documents out of over 100,000 total pages produced.” (Docket # 226 at 5.) Plaintiff believes that “it defies credibility to assume that no such communications exist.” (Id.) Plaintiff argues that Nvidia must conduct a reasonable search and produce relevant documents, and it alleges that Nvidia has not done so, nor has it “identified the appropriate document custodians.” (Id.)

In the motion to compel directed solely at Nvidia, BIAX asserts Nvidia refuses to completely answer Interrogatory No. 36 and refuses to “identify likely document custodians and conduct a reasonable search for their electronic and hard copy documents.” (Docket #234 at 9-10.) BIAX offers “to limit the search to a discrete number of custodians, and come up with specific search terms for those custodians’ electronic files.” (Id. at 10.) BIAX specifically addresses its request for “communications pertaining to the 2005 Sony/Nvidia Definitive Agreement.” [204]*204(Id. at 9 n. 4.) BIAX alleges that Nvidia has not produced “a single e-mail dealing with the business, financial or marketing considerations that went into the 2005 Definitive Agreement.” (Id.)

In response, Nvidia asserts that it “performed a reasonable search for, collection of, and production of, documents sufficient to cover the subject matters on which BIAX has sought legitimate discovery.” (Docket # 260 at 19.) Additionally, Nvidia emphasizes that a search of electronic files would cost “in the range of $70,000 per person or more.” (Id.) As to discovery related to the 2005 Definitive Agreement, Nvidia explains that it searched the files of “(i) the lead contract negotiator for NVIDIA; and (ii) the lead technical person for NVIDIA on the deal; and (iii) the technical project manager.” (Id.) Moreover, Nvidia states that the financial terms are within the agreement itself, which BIAX has in its possession, and it produced the presentations about RSX that it made to Sony after the agreement was concluded. (Id.)

In a brief reply, BIAX avers that “communications by NVIDIA to its customers and potential customers may well bear on NVI-DIA’S valuation and touting of the patented technology.” (Docket # 282 at 9.) BIAX contests Nvidia’s “refusal to produce a 30(b)(6) witness on documents” and refers to an email exchange between counsel regarding “identifying] the custodian from whom [Nvidia] pulled/produced records,” in satisfaction of responding to Interrogatory No. 36. (Id. (citing docket # 282-5 at 2-3).)

During the motion hearing on July 14, 2010, Mr. Chachkes, counsel for Nvidia, represented that Nvidia is “in the process of producing, representative documents, marketing documents, a broad, broad cross-section, thousands of documents” related to communications with customers. (Docket #311 at 129.) Mr. Chachkes stated that Nvidia is producing the vice president of marketing for a deposition, after having produced “representative marketing documents.” (Id. at 130.) Mr. Chachkes also reiterated Nvidia’s position that Nvidia’s knowledge of the patent at issue and Nvidia’s marketing and financial information are “completely irrelevant to any issue in this litigation.” (Id. at 131.)

Section 271 of 35 U.S.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 F.R.D. 200, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 105869, 2010 WL 3777540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biax-corp-v-nvidia-corp-cod-2010.