IN RE PORK ANTITRUST LITIGATION

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 7, 2019
Docket0:18-cv-01776
StatusUnknown

This text of IN RE PORK ANTITRUST LITIGATION (IN RE PORK ANTITRUST LITIGATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IN RE PORK ANTITRUST LITIGATION, (mnd 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

IN RE PORK ANTITRUST LITIGATION Case No. 18-cv-1776 (JRT/HB)

This Document Relates To: All Actions ORDER

HILDY BOWBEER, United States Magistrate Judge

This matter is before the Court on Defendants’ Motion to Stay Discovery [Doc. No. 193]. The motion is granted in part and denied in part as set forth below and as further detailed on the record at the November 21, 2018, motion hearing and status conference and at the status conference on January 28, 2019, and in the Order Regarding Disclosure of Information filed contemporaneously herewith. I. Background On September 21, 2018, thirteen putative antitrust class actions were consolidated for pretrial purposes. (Order at 4–5 [Doc. No. 85].) Generally, the Plaintiffs in these matters allege that Defendants conspired or colluded to artificially raise, fix, or maintain prices in the pork market in violation of federal antitrust laws. On October 23, 2018, pursuant to a schedule established by the Court with the agreement of the parties, Defendants filed eleven motions to dismiss and a motion to stay discovery. The motions to dismiss were heard by the Honorable John R. Tunheim, Chief Judge, United States District Court, on January 28, 2019. The motion to stay was heard by the undersigned on November 21, 2018. A. The Parties’ Positions on Conducting Discovery While the Motions to Dismiss Are Pending

Significantly, neither side urged the Court to adopt an “all or nothing” approach to moving forward with discovery while the motions to dismiss are pending, although their respective positions about what precisely should occur during the interim are materially different. Plaintiffs initially proposed that the parties undertake the following tasks while the motions to dismiss are pending: 1. Make disclosures regarding ESI systems, employees with certain job duties, and other relevant information, as more specifically described in a Proposed Order Regarding Disclosure of Information (see Clark Decl. Ex. E [Doc. No. 205-2 at 25]);

2. Exchange Rule 26(a) initial disclosures;

3. Submit a Rule 26(f) report and conduct a Rule 16 pretrial conference to, inter alia, negotiate time periods and the number of interrogatories;

4. Produce all documents produced to the Department of Justice (DOJ) during a prior investigation of Agri Stats;

5. Negotiate the production of documents responsive to the Rule 34 requests Plaintiffs served on November 1, 2018;

6. Meet and confer on document sources, such as document custodians and non- custodial sources; and

7. Meet and confer on a proposed search methodology order.

(Pl.’s Mem. Opp’n Mot. Stay at 4–5 [Doc. No. 204].) Plaintiffs argued these tasks would allow the parties to make substantial progress on threshold discovery issues, while avoiding the significant burden of loading, processing, reviewing, and producing custodial documents. Plaintiffs did not seek full-scale discovery. Defendants agreed to serve Rule 26(a) disclosures, negotiate a confidentiality order, negotiate an ESI protocol, serve initial disclosures by December 3, 2018, and

produce readily available organizational charts by December 3, 2018. (Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Mot. Stay at 1–2 [Doc. No. 195].) Defendants did not agree to the other proposed tasks, however. They pointed out that the full disclosures sought by Plaintiffs would require them to gather broad categories of information for a ten-year period at significant expense. They also argued that although Plaintiffs characterized the requested disclosures as “ESI disclosures,” Plaintiffs really sought broad discovery over a ten-year

period in the form of documents and information, the identification of email systems and noncustodial data sources, and the identification of employees who held numerous positions. Thus, Defendants objected, the additional tasks requested by Plaintiffs would involve significant additional burden, and the ruling on the motions to dismiss could dramatically affect the scope of discovery and therefore of the associated tasks, including

by impacting the assessment of both relevance and proportionality required by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26. As a result, there was a substantial risk that much of the effort associated with these tasks would be wasted, either because they would have to be redone in light of the rulings on the motions to dismiss, or because those rulings could make some of the work irrelevant and unnecessary or even eliminate the need for any

discovery whatsoever. In addition, Defendants pointed out as to the fourth proposed task that the DOJ investigation had not concerned pork products and that in any event, no Defendants other than Agri Stats had produced any documents to the DOJ. And the fifth proposed task, Defendants argued, would require them to respond to 68 broad requests for production pertaining to virtually every aspect of their businesses for the past ten years, including

each individual pork sale transaction (for the past fifteen years), budgets and projections, telephone records, pricing models, and contracts, even if they were not yet required to actually collect and produce documents. B. The Motion Hearing and Subsequent Developments At the conclusion of the motion hearing on November 21, the Court took the motion to stay under advisement, but instructed the parties to meet and confer further on

two issues: (1) the relevance of documents produced in connection with the DOJ’s investigation of Agri Stats, and the burden of reviewing and producing them; and (2) the extent to which the parties could make progress on negotiating the Plaintiffs’ Rule 34 requests for production before a decision on the pending motions to dismiss was issued. (Ct. Mins. Nov. 21, 2018 [Doc. No. 213].) The Court convened a status conference

immediately after the motion hearing and provided further guidance and direction about the tasks it expected the parties to undertake while the motions to dismiss were pending. (Ct. Mins. Nov. 21, 2018 [Doc. No. 214].) Specifically, the Court advised the parties it would issue a protective order in the form proposed by the parties1; ordered the parties to meet and confer further on paragraphs IV(D)(2) and V of the proposed ESI Protocol2 and

1 The Court declined to include Defendants’ proposed language that communications with in-house counsel need not be included on privilege logs. 2 The parties’ draft ESI Protocol and a description of the terms on which they had not reached agreement were submitted to the Court in advance of the status conference. (Joint Status Rep. & Letter Br. Exs. C, D, Oct. 30, 2018 [Doc. No. 203-1].) submit a joint letter update to the Court; and to meet and confer to attempt to reach agreement concerning the interim discovery obligations of so-called “holding company”

Defendants. (Id.) The Court entered the protective order on November 26, 2018 [Doc. No. 212]. As instructed, the parties filed a joint status report and letter brief on December 12, 2018 [Doc. No. 233]. The parties set forth their agreement that the “holding company” Defendants (Hormel Foods, LLC, JBS USA Food Company Holdings, Mitsubishi Corporation (Americas), and Seaboard Corporation) could defer discovery pending

resolution of the motions to dismiss. As for the Rule 34 requests for production, the parties agreed to limit their meet- and-confer efforts to 32 of the 46 requests for production propounded by Plaintiffs, but did not agree on the scope and form of such discussions. Plaintiffs proposed that Defendants serve written objections and responses to the requests for production after

engaging in a meet-and-confer, but Defendants agreed only to meet and confer.

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