Oracle America, Inc. v. Google Inc.

172 F. Supp. 3d 1100, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39675, 2016 WL 1252794
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMarch 25, 2016
DocketNo. C 10-03561 WHA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 F. Supp. 3d 1100 (Oracle America, Inc. v. Google Inc.) 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
Oracle America, Inc. v. Google Inc., 172 F. Supp. 3d 1100, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39675, 2016 WL 1252794 (N.D. Cal. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER RE INTERNET AND SOCIAL MEDIA SEARCHES OF JURORS

WILLIAM ALSUP, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

Trial judges have such'respect for juries — reverential respect would not be too strong to say — that it must pain them to contemplate that, in addition to the sacrifice jurors make for our country, they must suffer trial lawyers and jury consultants scouring over their' Facebook and other profiles to dissect their politics, religion, relationships, preferences, friends, photographs, and other personal information.

In this high-profile copyright action, both sides requested that' the Court require the venire to complete a two-page jury questionnaire. One side then wanted a full extra day to’ digest the answers, and the other side wanted two full extra days, all before beginning voir dire. Wondering about the delay allocated to reviewing two pages, the judge eventually realized that counsel wanted the names and residences from the questionnaire so that, during the delay, their teams could scrub Facebook, Twitter, Linkedln, and other Internet sites to extract personal data on the venire. Upon inquiry, counsel admitted this. The questionnaire idea cratered, and the discussion moved to whether Internet investigation by counsel about the venire should be allowed at all. That led to a series of memoranda by counsel on the subject and now to this order.

An ordinary Google search on the venire would fetch hits, including links to many Facebook profiles, which, in turn, would at least display profile information classified as “public.” Counsel could uncover , even more personal information by logging onto their own Facebook accounts and researching the specific venire persons. In this way, counsel could mine not only the “public” data but the details classified as “for friends only” or “friends of friends,” depending on the fortuity of friend listings. The same is true, more or less, for other social media sites.

The Court, of course, realizes that social media and Internet searches on the venire [1102]*1102would turn up information useful to the lawyers in exercising their three peremptory challenges, and, might even, in a very rare case, turn up information concealed during voir dire that could lead to a for-cause removal. While the trial is underway, ongoing searches might conceivably reveal commentary about the case, to or from a juror.

Nevertheless, in this case there are good reasons to restrict, if not forbid, such searches by counsel, their jury consultants, investigators, and clients.

The first reason is anchored in the danger that upon learning of counsel’s own searches, directed at them, our jurors would stray from the Court’s admonition to reft-ain from conducting Internet searches on the lawyers and the case. This .is a high-profile lawsuit, as stated, and dates back to 2010. , Nearly one million hits (including tens of thousands of news results) appear in a Google search for “Oracle v. Google.” These include strong opinions on both sides and at least the usual amount of inaccurate information. In this very case, we earlier learned that both sides hired online commentators who have promoted their respective litigation viewpoints on blogs and other web sites. Numerous of the top results for searches on counsel for either party (or for the undersigned judge) include discussions of this'controversy and its national policy implications. As a result, we have an unusually strong need to prevent any member of our jury from yielding to the impulse to conduct Internet searches on our lawyers or our case or its history.

Our jury will, of course, be admonished to refrain from any Internet research about the lawsuit, the parties, the lawyers, or'the judge — an admonition that will-be regularly repeated. See Judicial Conference Committee on Court Administration and Case Management, Proposed Model Jury Instructions: The Use of Electronic Technology to Conduct Research on or Communicate about a Case (June 2012). Indeed, the entire venire will be told to refrain from any such research soon after it reaches the courtroom and well before the final jury is even selected.

Google is willing to accept an outright ban on Internet research about the venire and our jury, provided the ban applies equally to both sides, Oracle, however, will not. Oracle initially took a broad position on the scope of Internet research it intended to conduct, but it has since purported to scale back its plan. On numerous occasions, Oracle has supplied confusing answers to the Court’s inquiries about its plan, and its responses make little sense in light of how the Court understands the most prominent social media sites to operate. For purposes of this order, it is unnecessary to pin Oracle down in its intentions, but it will be necessary for Oracle to pin down its specific search intention's by the time jury selection begins, as outlined below.

To return to the first concern, the apparent unfairness in allowing the lawyers to do to the venire what the venire cannot do to the lawyers will -likely have a corrosive effect on fidelity to the no-research admonition. Once our venire learns of the lawyers’ Internet searches (as the venire would via the instruction Oracle requests), a very serious risk will be presented that they will feel justified in doing to the lawyers (and to the case itself) what the lawyers are doing to them, namely, conducting Internet searches — despite the no-research admonition. The one-sidedness of Oracle’s approach will be hard to accept and therein lies the danger. Given the massive volume of Internet commentary on the lawyers and the case, this presents a significant risk.

A second danger posed by allowing counsel to conduct research about the veni-[1103]*1103re and the jury is, that it- will facilitate improper personal appeals to particular jurors via jury arguments and witness-examinations patterned after preferences of jurors found through such • Internet searches. For example, if. a search found that a juror’s favorite book is To Kill A Mockingbird, it wouldn’t be hard for counsel to construct a copyright jury argument (or a line of expert, questions) based on an analogy to that work and to play upon the recent death of Harper Lee, all in an effort to ingratiate himself or herself into the heartstrings of that juror. The, same could be done with a favorite quote or with any number of other juror attitudes , on free trade, innovation, politics, or history. Jury arguments may, of course, employ analogies and quotations, but it would be out of bounds to play up to a juror through such a calculated personal appeal, all the more-so since the judge, having no access to the dossiers, couldn’t see what was really in play. See United States v. Nobari, 574 F.3d 1065, 1077 (9th Cir.2009).

A third reason is to protect the privacy of the venire. They are not celebrities or public figures. The jury is not a fantasy team composed by consultants, but good citizens commuting from all over our district, willing to serve our country, and willing to bear the burden of deciding a commercial dispute the parties themselves cannot resolve. Their privacy matters. Their privacy should yield only as necessary to reveal bias or a reluctance to follow the Court’s instructions. It is a weak answer that venire persons, through their social media privacy settings, have chosen to expose their profiles' to scrutiny, for navigating privacy settings and fully understanding default settings is more a matter of blind faith than conscious ■ choice.

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172 F. Supp. 3d 1100, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39675, 2016 WL 1252794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oracle-america-inc-v-google-inc-cand-2016.