Haywood v. Wexford Health Sources, Inc

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 3, 2021
Docket1:16-cv-03566
StatusUnknown

This text of Haywood v. Wexford Health Sources, Inc (Haywood v. Wexford Health Sources, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haywood v. Wexford Health Sources, Inc, (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

DONALD HAYWOOD,

Plaintiff, No. 16 CV 3566 v. District Judge Bucklo WEXFORD HEALTH SOURCES, INC., ET AL., Magistrate Judge McShain

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Pending before the Court is plaintiff Donald Haywood’s motion for sanctions against defendants Wexford Health Sources, Inc., Catherine Larry, Elizabeth Konrad, Beth Hart, Brooke Thomas, Daidra Marano, Kelly Haag, and Kelly Renzi (collectively Wexford). [261].1 The motion is fully briefed [273, 284], and the parties have filed supplemental briefs at the Court’s request [295, 296]. For the following reasons, the motion is granted.

Background

This is a state prisoner’s deliberate-indifference case under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In his third amended complaint, plaintiff brings multiple claims of deliberate indifference to his serious mental illness, and one count of First Amendment retaliation, against Wexford and other defendants affiliated with the Illinois Department of Corrections. [207].

At issue in plaintiff’s sanctions motion is Wexford’s production of some 272,000 pages of electronically stored information (ESI). As described in more detail below, plaintiff sought several types of ESI relating to the treatment of his mental illness, including out-of-cell trackers, crisis trackers, and spreadsheets showing when plaintiff was evaluated and treated by psychiatrists and other qualified mental health providers. It is undisputed that Wexford maintained the ESI at issue in Microsoft Excel format. [273] 6. However, Wexford converted the Excel spreadsheets to PDF format so that the spreadsheets–many of which contain protected health information (PHI) for non-party inmates–could be redacted, bates stamped, sorted

1 Bracketed numbers refer to entries on the district court docket. Referenced page numbers are taken from the CM/ECF header placed at the top of filings. via bookmarks, and produced to plaintiff. [273] 4-5. Contending that the converted PDF documents are not reasonably usable, plaintiff seeks an order compelling Wexford to produce the ESI in its native format and requiring Wexford to pay the attorney fees plaintiff’s counsel incurred dealing with this issue.

On February 7, 2020, plaintiff served a Request for Production of Documents on Wexford. [273-1]. Plaintiff requested that Wexford produce all documents relating to plaintiff’s mental health, including “all documents relating to the timeliness of all mental health treatment and evaluations provided to plaintiff, including all mental health databases” and “all correspondence relating to alleged rule violations, disciplinary violations, or diagnosis and treatment of plaintiff’s mental illness, including without limitation letters to and from plaintiff, emails, text messages, and all other electronically stored information.” [Id.] 4, at ¶¶ 15-16. Plaintiff’s request did not specify the form or forms in which the ESI was to be produced. See [id.] 1-4. The parties’ briefs state, moreover, that no meet-and-confer sessions took place regarding ESI discovery, the search terms and custodians to be used, or the parameters of Wexford’s ESI review and production. [261] 2; [273] 3-4. Nor, finally, is there an order governing ESI discovery on the docket in this case. Accordingly, Wexford “conducted a search of all Wexford databases with search terms “Donald Haywood” and “R47947 (Plaintiff’s inmate number)” and “produced the files with Plaintiff’s name.” [273] 6.

Wexford made its first ESI production on October 9, 2020, producing roughly 15,000 pages of documents in PDF format. [273] 4; [284] 2-3. Although Civil Rule 34(b) obligated Wexford, as the party responding to a request for ESI, to “state the form or forms it intends to use” in its production, Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(D), Wexford did not include such a statement in its response. [294] 1-4.

On October 21, 2020, plaintiff’s counsel emailed Wexford’s counsel about issues with the ESI production. [284-1]. Plaintiff objected to Wexford’s production of the ESI in converted PDF format, alleging that “the rules require that the documents be provided in [ ] native format” and asserting that counsel were aware from their work in another case involving Wexford that “the native format is Excel.” [Id.] 2. Plaintiff also maintained that “[t]he pdf’s you provided are not usable and have nothing like the functionality of an Excel Spreadsheet.” [Id.]. Counsel requested that the spreadsheets be produced in their native format. [Id.].

Plaintiff’s counsel sent Wexford a second email on November 9, 2020, reiterating their concerns about the ESI production and responding to Wexford’s cited reasons for converting the ESI from Excel to PDF. [284-2]. As for Wexford’s asserted need to convert the spreadsheets to PDF so that the ESI could be redacted, plaintiff contended that there was “no reason to redact anything” because “[t]he protective order” entered by the District Judge “does not allow you to unilaterally redact anything.” [Id.] 2. Plaintiff also stated that his attorneys “represent[ ] all of the people” in IDOC custody “currently receiving mental health care” and “medical care” in two pending class actions, Rasho v. Jeffreys and the Lippert case, such that counsel would be entitled to receive in those cases the non-party PHI contained in the spreadsheets counsel was seeking in this case. [Id.]. Regarding Wexford’s “method of redaction,” plaintiff’s counsel objected that it had “made the production unusable” because certain “diagonal columns across the top [of the spreadsheets] are not legible” and were “cut off”; had the documents been “produced in excel,” counsel explained, “it would be easy to click into the cell to see what it says.” [Id.]. Finally, plaintiff’s counsel suggested that, if redaction had been both permissible and necessary, Wexford should have “cut and paste[ed] those rows which related to Mr. Haywood and the headers, and add[ed] them to a new spreadsheet,” which “would have retained the full legibility and functionality of spreadsheets[.]” [Id.].

On December 2, 2020, plaintiff sent his first letter to Wexford requesting a Local Rule 37.2 conference. As relevant to the pending motion, the letter outlined three areas of concern.

First, plaintiff argued that Wexford’s ESI production entailed the “[v]oluminous production of non-responsive, irrelevant documents.” [261-1] 3. According to plaintiff, the production–which at this point ran to about 64,000 pages– was not “indexed or labeled in any way that makes it identifiable or useful, and is not designated as to which request each document is supposed to be responsive to, as required by Rule 34.” [Id.]. As examples, plaintiff observed that (1) the titles of the bookmarks used to organize the PDFs into binders–such as “6B22076E,” “Authorizations4,” and “Book1”–were indecipherable; (2) one binder of PDF documents contained only a list of prisoners who had received care at Menard Correctional Center, “a facility Mr. Haywood has never been at”; (3) “hundreds of pages” were “blank or contain[ed] empty spreadsheets”; (4) “hundreds of pages of records” appeared “to not only not pertain to Mr. Haywood, but to be for prisoners from other states.” [Id.] 3-4. Plaintiff explained that “[t]his is a non-exhaustive list with examples of the types of information that is non-responsive, indecipherable, and irrelevant that we have discovered thus far.” [Id.] 5.

Second, plaintiff contended that Wexford had not complied with Fed. R. Civ. P 34 because the ESI was not produced in either its native form or a reasonably usable form. [261-1] 5-6.

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