In Re Convergent Technologies Securities Litigation

108 F.R.D. 328, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1290, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14447
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedOctober 28, 1985
DocketNo. C-84-20749-RPA
StatusPublished
Cited by332 cases

This text of 108 F.R.D. 328 (In Re Convergent Technologies Securities Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Convergent Technologies Securities Litigation, 108 F.R.D. 328, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1290, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14447 (N.D. Cal. 1985).

Opinion

ORDER

WAYNE D. BRAZIL, United States Magistrate.

The principal1 issue in this discovery dispute can be simply framed: when (at which juncture in the pretrial period) should plaintiffs answer “contention”2 interrogatories served by defendants. The parties do not disagree about whether the questions should be answered. The sole question is when.

Counsel already have spent upwards of $40,000 of their clients’ money on this one discovery dispute.3 That fact strikes this court as strong evidence that there has been in this case a major breakdown in what is supposed to be the self-executing system of pretrial discovery. The spirit of Rule 26,4 as amended in 1983, has been [331]*331violated. So has the spirit of Rule l,5 which declares that the purpose of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is “to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action” The discovery system depends absolutely on good faith and common sense from counsel. The courts, sorely pressed by demands to try cases promptly and to rule thoughtfully on potentially case dispositive motions, simply do not have the resources to police closely the operation of the discovery process. The whole system of Civil adjudication would be ground to a virtual halt if the courts were forced to intervene in even a modest percentage of discovery transactions. That fact should impose on counsel an acute sense of responsibility about how they handle discovery matters. They should strive to be cooperative, practical and sensible, and should turn to the courts (or take positions that force others to turn to the courts) only in extraordinary situations that implicate truly significant interests.

These are not simply the sentiments of an idealistic and frustrated magistrate. They are the law. They were clearly made so by the 1983 amendments to Rule 26.6 Those amendments formally interred any argument that discovery should be a free form exercise conducted in a free for all spirit. Discovery is not now and never was free. Discovery is expensive. The drafters of the 1983 amendments to sections (b) and (g) of Rule 26 formally recognized that fact by superimposing the concept of proportionality on all behavior in the discovery arena. It is no longer sufficient, as a precondition for conducting discovery, to show that the information sought “appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.” After satisfying this threshold requirement counsel also must make a common sense determination, taking into account all the circumstances, that the information sought is of sufficient potential significance to justify the burden the discovery probe would impose, that the discovery tool selected is the most efficacious of the means that might be used to acquire the desired information (taking into account cost effectiveness and the nature of the information being sought), and that the timing of the probe is sensible, i.e., that there is no other juncture in the pretrial period when there would be a clearly happier balance between the benefit derived from and the burdens imposed by the particular discovery effort.

This articulation of the responsibilities counsel must assume in conducting or responding to discovery may make it appear that the 1983 amendments require counsel to conduct complex analyses each time they take action in the discovery arena. Not so. What the 1983 amendments require is, at heart, very simple: good faith and common sense. Counsel can satisfy these requirements by not using or responding to discovery for some ulterior purpose and by exercising straight forward judgment. The questions are simply stated: 1) what information am I really likely to need and 2) what is the most cost effective way to get it. Tailoring probes and responses to the real issues in the case at hand, rather than relying on stock questions or knee jerk objections and evasive responses, is all that is required.

[332]*332The problem, one senses, is not that the requirements the law imposes are too subtle. Rather, the problem is more likely to be that counsel are less interested in satisfying the law’s requirements than in seeking tactical advantages. At least in cases involving big economic stakes, good faith and common sense hardly seem to be the dominant forces. Instead, it appears that the root evil in complex civil litigation continues to be the pervasiveness of gaming. Civil litigation is too often civil only on the surface. Underneath, it is obsession with pursuit of procedural or psychological edge. In adopting the 1983 amendments, the rulemakers have unequivocally condemned that obsession.

The fact that counsel have spent so much money on this one discovery dispute raises troubling questions in this court’s mind that reach beyond the confines of this particular litigation. In little more than a year this court has been forced to intervene in discovery disputes in many cases involving big economic stakes. I have emerged from my contacts with these matters with an uneasy sense that the discovery system in large commercial cases more than occasionally may be perverted into an arena for economic power plays, that parties use discovery tools (or cast their responses to discovery requests) not so much to learn what the facts are, but more to muscle one another into attitudes conducive to favorable settlements. While I do not have sufficient evidence to make a fair judgment about whether the discovery process has been so perverted in this case, my fear that discovery has been distorted by economic combat in this type of litigation compels me to make it absolutely clear that it is irresponsible, unethical, and unlawful to use discovery for the purpose of flexing economic muscle.

I. GENERAL PRINCIPLES

Before considering specific interrogatories it is advisable to articulate some of the generalizations the court has considered en route to deciding matters presented by defendants’ motions.

At the outset I point out that the phrase “contention interrogatory” is used imprecisely to refer to many different kinds of questions. Some people would classify as a contention interrogatory any question that asks another party to indicate what it contends. Some people would define contention interrogatories as embracing only questions that ask another party whether it makes some specified contention. Interrogatories of this kind typically would begin with the phrase “Do you contend that____” Another kind of question that some people put in the category “contention interrogatory” asks an opposing party to state all the facts on which it bases some specified contention. Yet another form of this category of interrogatory asks an opponent to state all the evidence on which it bases some specified contention. Some contention interrogatories ask the responding party to take a position, and then to explain or defend that position, with respect to how the law applies to facts. A variation on this theme involves interrogatories that ask parties to spell out the legal basis for, or theory behind, some specified contention.

It is not uncommon for a set of “contention interrogatories” to include all of these kinds of questions.

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Bluebook (online)
108 F.R.D. 328, 3 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 1290, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-convergent-technologies-securities-litigation-cand-1985.