Oxbow Carbon & Minerals LLC v. Union Pacific Railroad Company

322 F.R.D. 1
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 11, 2017
DocketCivil Action No. 2011-1049
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 322 F.R.D. 1 (Oxbow Carbon & Minerals LLC v. Union Pacific Railroad Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oxbow Carbon & Minerals LLC v. Union Pacific Railroad Company, 322 F.R.D. 1 (D.D.C. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

G. MICHAEL HARVEY, UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE

This matter was referred to the undersigned for the resolution of all discovery disputes. Presently ripe for resolution is Defendants’ motion to compel, [Dkts. 105, 108], requesting that the Court order Plaintiffs to produce all documents belonging to their CEO, the production of which Plaintiffs, in turn, argue would be unduly burdensome and disproportionate to any value the documents might possess to Defendants in this litigation. Following two hearings on this matter, and upon consideration of the parties’ filings and the entire record herein, 1 the Court finds that Defendants’ motion to compel should be granted.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs are five related companies (collectively, “Oxbow”) that mine and sell coal and petroleum coke (“petcoke”). See Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 9-13. They allege in the Amended Complaint that Union Pacific (“UP”) and BNSF Railway Company (“BNSF”) — both railroad companies with which Oxbow contracts to ship coal and petcoke — conspired to engage in anticompetitive conduct from 2004 *4 to 2012 in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act, codified at 15 U.S.C. §§ 1 and 1px solid var(--green-border)">2, that forced Oxbow to pay higher prices to ship coal and petcoke. See id. at ¶¶ 1-8, 14-15. Specifically, Oxbow believes that UP and BNSF conspired to (1) fix fuel rates applied to commercial rail freight service above competitive levels through a uniform fuel surcharge and (2) allocate certain markets for coal shipment to each other, granting UP a monopoly in at least one region of the country. Id. at ¶¶ 1-8. Oxbow claims it paid Defendants more than $60,000,000 in illegal fuel surcharges as a result of the conspiracy. Id. at ¶ 137. Oxbow seeks to recover treble damages under 15 U.S.C. § 15, as well as its “lost business and profits” that proximately resulted from the conspiracy. Id. at ¶ 134 & p. 54.

In their motion, Defendants request that the Court compel Oxbow to add William I, Koch (“Koch”), Oxbow’s founder, CEO, and principle owner as a document custodian whose records will be searched for material responsive to Plaintiffs’ discovery requests. See Mot. at 1-2, 12-14. Defendants maintain that Koch indisputably possesses relevant, unique information responsive to their requests, and argue that Oxbow has improperly refused to produce this information based on the unsupported theory that production of his documents would be disproportionately burdensome and duplicative of the documents produced from the search of the nineteen other Oxbow document custodians’ files. Id. Based upon its review of the documents already produced from the other Oxbow custodians, Defendants believe that Koch’s records contain information that would, among other things, reveal that market forces — as opposed to Defendants’ alleged collusion— contributed to the increasing rail freight costs and any of Oxbow’s lost profits. Id. at 5-9. Relatedly, Defendants assert that their discovery request is proportionate and reasonable in light of the facts of this case, including the tens of millions of dollars that Oxbow seeks in damages. Id. at 9-14.

In their opposition, Oxbow argues that Defendants have failed to satisfy their burden of demonstrating that the discovery they seek is responsive and not unduly burdensome. See Resp. at 1. Based on their calculations, Oxbow estimated that adding Koch as a document custodian would result in roughly 130 gigabytes of additional documents to be filtered through the parties’ previously-agreed-upon search terms, a process that Oxbow initially estimated would cost $250,000. Id. at 4. Oxbow further contends that many of Koch’s documents would likely be duplicative of the other custodians’ documents or only marginally responsive given Koch’s senior position over a conglomerate of Oxbow companies, only some of which are involved in the coal and petcoke businesses. Id. at 7-15. Despite these arguments, Oxbow represented at the first hearing on Defendants’ motion that it was open to analyzing a random sample of Koch’s records using the agreed-upon search terms to provide the parties with concrete numbers regarding the responsiveness of Koch’s documents to the terms and with a basis to negotiate new search terms if necessary. See 6/14/17 TR. at 53:22-56:9. Accordingly, the undersigned held Defendants’ motion in abeyance pending the analysis of a sample of Koch’s documents and the parties’ attempt to negotiate a resolution of the dispute themselves. See Order at 1.

Following the hearing, Oxbow collected a total of 467,614 documents from Koch’s electronic and physical files and provided them to a vendor for processing. Report at 1-2. After removing any duplicative records, the vendor searched Koch’s documents using the previously-agreed-upon search terms, which yielded 45,639 document hits — 82,600 documents in total when including “families” of documents. See id, at 2. 2 The vendor collected a random sample of ten percent of these hits and any associated families — 12,-074 documents in total — and provided them to Oxbow for review for privilege and responsiveness. Of these 12,074 documents, Oxbow deter-mined that approximately 1,300 *5 documents — 11.67 percent of them — -were actually responsive to the search terms and produced them to Defendants. Id. at 3. In total, the initial processing of Koch’s records and review of the sample documents cost Oxbow $57,197.95. Id. at 3-4. Based on its experience reviewing the sample documents, Oxbow now estimates that it will cost approximately $85,000 to process, review, and produce the remainder of Koch’s documents to the Defendants, bringing the total cost of the effort, including the review of the sample documents, to approximately $142,000— significantly less than Oxbow’s original estimate of $260,000. Id. at 3-1; see also Resp. at 4, Oxbow’s initial estimate was based on its prediction that, after processing, searching, and filtering Koch’s documents through the agreed-upon search terms, it would have to review approximately 214,000 documents for false positives and privileged information before producing the responsive documents to Defendants. See Resp. at 18. In reality, applying the agreed-upon search terms yielded only 46,639 hits on Koch’s documents — 82,600 documents when including document families. Report at 2.

Unfortunately, the sampling effort did not result in the parties resolving the dispute without further intervention of the Court. In their August 2, 2017 Joint Status Report, the parties advance dramatically different interpretations of the significance of the sampling’s results.

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Bluebook (online)
322 F.R.D. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxbow-carbon-minerals-llc-v-union-pacific-railroad-company-dcd-2017.