Nidec Motor Corporation v. Broad Ocean Motor LLc et al
Filing
168
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER - For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs Motion to Compel, Doc. 147 , Defendants Motion for Leave to File Sur-Reply, Doc. 153 , and Plaintiffs Motion to Strike, Doc. 166 , are DENIED. A status conference will be held at 1:00 PM on Wednesday, October 19, 2022, in the courtroom of the undersigned, for which the parties are directed to prepare according to the instructions herein. ( Status Conference set for 10/19/2022 01:00 PM in Courtroom 16N - St. Louis before District Judge Sarah E. Pitlyk.)Signed by District Judge Sarah E. Pitlyk on 09/27/2022. (KRZ)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI
EASTERN DIVISION
NIDEC MOTOR CORPORATION,
v.
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
Plaintiff,
BROAD OCEAN MOTOR, LLC, et al.,
Defendants.
Case No. 4:13-cv-01895-SEP
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Before the Court are Plaintiff Nidec Motor Corporation’s Motion to Compel, Doc. [147];
a Motion for Leave to File Sur-Reply, Doc. [153], filed by Defendants Zhogshan Broad Ocean
Motor Co., Ltd., and Broad Ocean Motor (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd.; and Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike
Defendants’ Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Compel, Doc. [166]. For the reasons set
forth below, the Motion to Compel, the Motion for Leave to File Sur-Reply, and the Motion to
Strike 1 are denied.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff’s motions arise from a dispute about the production of information related to the
Defendants’ sales of the Accused Products at issue in this patent-infringement case. 2
Specifically, Plaintiff contends that Defendants have not complied with its Request for
Production No. 7—served in July 2021—which seeks the production of certain sales data of the
Accused Products in the United States. 3 Docs. [148] at 2, 3; [149-3] at 7. In August 2021, in
On May 23, 2022, in conjunction with its Motion to Strike, Plaintiff filed a Notice of Subsequent
Factual Development. See Doc. [166]. The Court considers the factual allegations in both the motion to
compel and the motion to strike briefing.
1
Defendants in this case are: Motors & Armatures, Incorporated (MARS) and the “Broad Ocean
Defendants,” which include Broad Ocean Motor, LLC (BOM), Broad Ocean Technologies, LLC (BOT),
Zhongshan Broad Ocean Motor Company Limited (ZBOM), and Broad Ocean Motor (Hong Kong)
Company Limited. Doc. [128] at 1.
2
Plaintiff’s Request for Production No. 7 states: “For each Accused Product, documents sufficient to
show, since January, 2007, (a) total U.S. sales and/or licensing revenues; (b) the total unit volume of U.S.
sales, licenses, and/or shipments to customers; (c) the total dollar volume of U.S. customer returns and/or
cancellations; (d) the total unit volume of U.S. customer returns; (e) the number of units manufactured or
3
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response to Plaintiff’s request, the Broad Ocean Defendants agreed to produce the relevant
information “within 2-3 weeks” as it was available to them. Doc. [149-1] at 1. Shortly
thereafter, however, the Broad Ocean Defendants notified Plaintiff that a different entity, Broad
Ocean Motor (Hong Kong) Company, Ltd. (BOMHK)—an entity not yet a party to this case—
possessed the information sought in Request for Production No. 7. Doc. [151] at 1.
Accordingly, Plaintiff added BOMHK as a party to this litigation, and the Court amended the
parties’ case management order to allow additional time for discovery related to the new entity.
See Doc. [143]. Plaintiff subsequently served the same production request related to the
accused-product sales on BOMHK, which BOMHK agreed to produce by December 22, 2021.
Doc. [148] at 2.
According to BOMHK, it “was fully prepared” to disclose the subject information, but
just before the December deadline, it became aware that disclosure of the requested information
could expose the Broad Ocean Defendants to liability under the People’s Republic of China’s
(PRC) laws and regulations. Doc. [151] at 1. As such, BOMHK objected and responded to
Plaintiff’s request, with counsel for Defendant noting that it was “diligently working to assess
[the] issue” and that they hoped to have a resolution by the end of 2021. Id.; Docs. [148] at 2.
[149-2] at 1. Defendants also contend that its counsel offered to provide Plaintiff’s counsel with
specific Chinese laws and regulations that they believed could subject Defendants to civil and
criminal liability in the PRC. Doc. [151-2] ¶¶ 10, 11.
Plaintiff subsequently filed the instant Motion to Compel, requesting that the Court order
BOMHK and ZBOM to respond to Request for Production No. 7 and produce the requested
United States sales data of the Accused Products. Doc. [148] at 2. In response, Defendants
argue that they have been “actively and in good faith working with Chinese counsel to identify,
if possible, an acceptable manner” to produce the data without running afoul of Chinese laws and
regulations. Doc. [151] at 2. According to Defendants, one way in which disclosure may be
appropriate is to receive guidance or permission from the PRC authorities to produce the
information to Plaintiff—a method that Defendants assert they are pursuing. Id.; Doc. [151-1]
¶ 20. Therefore, Defendants believe that additional time is necessary to work with Chinese
produced for sale or use in or importation into the U.S.; (f) the costs of production, manufacturing,
delivery and/or distribution of Accused Products for sale or use in, or importation into, the U.S.; (g) the
profits on such sales; and (h) the research and development costs.” Doc. [149-3] at 7.
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counsel and authorities and contend that time is not of the essence in light of the current stage of
this litigation, and the fact that the issue could be addressed by bifurcating the issues of claim
construction and alleged liability from damages. Doc. [151] at 2-3.
On May 23, 2022, Plaintiff informed the Court that Defendants had made no progress
towards production of the requested information. See Doc. [166]. In response, Defendants
represented that, although they were working towards a resolution, their efforts have been
thwarted by the PRC’s limited ability to address the issue due to the Covid-19 pandemic. See id.
at 1 (citing Doc. [166-1]). Plaintiff requests that the Court strike Defendants’ response to the
Motion to Compel insofar as it requests additional time to receive guidance or permission from
the PRC to disclose the relevant sales information. Id. at 2. Defendants contend that they have
been and are continuing to work in good faith with the PRC, but that the PRC’s resources to
address the disclosure issue remain limited due to their response to Covid-19. Doc. [167] at 2.
Moreover, Defendants again submit that there is no urgent need for production of the sales data,
because: (1) the case is at an early stage; (2) there are no upcoming deadlines involving alleged
damages; (3) no claim construction order has yet been issued; and (4) no ADR referral has been
made. Id. at 3. Finally, Defendants note that the possibility of civil and criminal penalties under
PCR laws and regulations remains palpable, and they urge the Court to permit counsel to
continue working with the relevant authorities to avoid such risk. See id.
LEGAL STANDARD
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 authorizes motions to compel discovery. See Fed. R.
Civ. P. 37(a)(1) (“On notice to other parties and all affected persons, a party may move for an
order compelling disclosure or discovery.”). Rule 26(b) governs the scope of discovery in
federal matters, and states that:
Unless otherwise limited by court order, the scope of discovery is as follows:
Parties may obtain discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to
any party’s claim or defense and proportional to the needs of the case, considering
the importance of the issues at stake in the action, the amount in controversy, the
parties’ relative access to relevant information, the parties’ resources, the
importance of the discovery in resolving the issues, and whether the burden or
expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit. Information within
this scope of discovery need not be admissible in evidence to be discoverable.
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Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Rule 26 “vests the district court with broad discretion in regulating
discovery.” United States v. James B. Nutter & Co., 2021 WL 4227058, at *1 (W.D. Mo. Sept.
16, 2021) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 26 advisory committee’s notes to 2015 amendment).
Rule 34 also permits parties to serve requests for production. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(a).
Under Rule 34(a)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, however, a party need only produce
those documents that are in its “possession, custody, or control.” Id. “Control is defined broadly
as the ‘ability to obtain upon demand documents in the possession of another.’ The party to
whom the discovery is directed need not have legal ownership or actual physical possession, but
rather a ‘practical ability’ to obtain the documents.” Huggins v. Fed. Express Corp., 250 F.R.D.
404, 408 (E.D. Mo. 2008) (quoting Orthoarm, Inc. v. Forestadent USA, Inc., 2007 WL 1796214,
at *2 (E.D. Mo. June 19, 2007)).
DISCUSSION
I.
Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel is denied.
Plaintiff advances two arguments in support of its Motion to Compel: (1) that ZBOM has
possession, custody, or control of the relevant sales data and can be ordered to produce the data
instead of BOMHK and (2) that BOMHK’s refusal to produce the sales data based on the laws
and regulations of the PRC should be overruled. Defendants counter that that ZBOM does not
have control over the relevant data, and even if it did, it is subject to the same Chinese privacy
laws as BOMHK.
A. There is sufficient evidence that ZBOM has “control” over the requested sales
data such that it may be compelled to produce it.
Defendant ZBOM objected to Plaintiff’s Request for Production No. 7, contending that
“it has not made, used, offered to sell, or sold any of the Accused Products in, or imported any of
the Accused Products into, the United States and, accordingly, it lacks relevant, responsive, nonprivileged documents, information or things responsive to this Request.” Doc. [148] at 6 (citing
[149-4] at 32). Plaintiff argues that, as the parent entity of BOMHK—the entity Defendants
claim has custody of the relevant information—ZBOM should, by virtue of that close
relationship, have possession and control of the relevant sales data. Id. Moreover, Plaintiff notes
that ZBOM has never made an objection to disclosure of the sales data based on PRC laws and
regulations. Id.
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Plaintiff’s argument that ZBOM has control over the information allegedly in BMHOK’s
custody is primarily based on ZBOM’s previous statements in this litigation. See id.
Specifically, Plaintiff cites the following: (1) ZBOM’s reliance on a declaration of Xingfu Chen
in support of a claim that ZBOM had sales offices relevant to the Accused Products; (2) Broad
Ocean’s claim that “[a]ll of Broad Ocean’s documents related to the Accused Products that are
relevant to this action are stored on BOMC’s servers and computer systems in Zhongshan,
China”; (3) a statement suggesting that Hui Li, the Vice President of Sales and Marketing at
BOMC, “may have knowledge related to the sales and marketing of the Accused Products”; and
(4) the fact that Defendants’ Initial Disclosures identified documents relating to sales of the
Accused Products located at Broad Ocean’s corporate offices in China. 4 Doc. [148] at 7. Thus,
according to Plaintiff, for over seven years of this litigation, the Broad Ocean Defendants
maintained that ZBOM (i.e., the parent corporation) had control over the sales data before they
first denied it in September 2021. Id.
ZBOM may be required to produce the requested sales data only if it has “control” over
them. “Control” is not just legal ownership or actual possession; instead, it is determined by
whether the entity has the “‘practical ability’ to obtain the documents.” Wells v. FedEx Ground
Package Sys., Inc., 2012 WL 4513860, at *1 (E.D. Mo. Oct. 1, 2012). The Court finds
Orthoarm, Inc. v. Forestadent USA, Inc. instructive here. 2007 WL 1796214 (E.D. Mo. June 19,
2007). There, the Court noted that, in the parent/subsidiary context, “numerous courts have
found that the documents of a parent company are within the ‘control’ of a subsidiary and are
therefore subject to production, particularly when the parent company is producing the product
accused of patent infringement.” Id. at *2 (citing Camden Iron & Metal, Inc. v. Marubeni Am.
Corp., 138 F.R.D. 438, 443 (D.N.J. 1991); Afros S.P.A. v. Krauss-Maffei Corp., 113 F.R.D. 127,
130 (D. Del. 1986)). Moreover, that holds true even when the parent is a foreign company. Id.
(citing M.L.C., Inc. v. N. Am. Phillips Corp., 109 F.R.D. 134, 138 (S.D.N.Y. 1986); Afros S.P.A.,
113 F.R.D. at 129-31)).
Orthoarm applied a three-party test derived from Afros S.P.A. v. Krauss-Maffei
Corporation, 113 F.R.D. 127, 130 (D. Del. 1986), which counsels courts to consider: “(1) the
Several of Plaintiff’s acknowledged representations can be found in documents that were filed in Nidec
Motor Corp. v. Broad Ocean Motor LLC., et al., No. 4:16-cv-00399 (E.D. Mo. June 19, 2015), before that
case’s consolidation with this case. See Docs. [12-2] and [12] (No. 4:16-cv-00399).
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corporate structures of the party to whom the discovery is directed and the non-party in physical
possession of the requested documents, (2) the non-party’s connection to the subject matter of
the litigation, and (3) whether the non-party will feel the benefits or burdens of any award in the
case.” 2007 WL 1796214, at *2. Other judges in this district have applied this test in similar
circumstances. See A.O.A. v. Doe Run Res. Corp., 2014 WL 1356103, at *2 (E.D. Mo. Apr. 7,
2014) (requiring disclosure where a subsidiary is owned by a party-defendant, the companies
have an “extremely close connection” and the defendants had the “practical ability to obtain the
documents sought”); Wells, 2012 WL 4513860, at *2 (E.D. Mo. Oct. 1, 2012) (finding that a
defendant and its sister company had a sufficiently close relationship to demonstrate that
defendant had the “practical ability” to obtain the information sought by plaintiff).
In Orthoarm, the plaintiff sought “documents in the possession, custody and control of
[the defendant], including documents of its ‘parents, subsidiaries and affiliates.” Orthoarm,
2007 WL 1796214, at *1. Specifically, plaintiff sought disclosure of information related to the
sale of the accused devices from the parent entity—a German company—that the subsidiary
defendant in the United States claimed to have no control over. Id. Applying the three-part test,
the Court determined that, first, the “overlapping corporate structure of the two companies,” and
the fact that the two entities shared officers and members, “weigh[ed] heavily in favor of a
finding of control for the purpose of document production.” Id. at 2. The second factor also
weighed in favor of disclosure, as the parent company was intimately involved in the “design,
development, and production of the accused device.” Id. at 3. Indeed, the Court noted that
access to the parent company’s financial documents was essential to an accurate damage
calculation in the case. Id. And finally, the Court found that the parent company’s rights would
be “seriously affect[ed]” by the outcome of the litigation, as a finding of infringement would
require the parent company to stop all sales of the infringing product. Id.
In a sense, this case is the inverse of Orthoarm, because here Plaintiff seeks sales data for
the accused products from a parent company, and the parent protests that the data are in the
possession of a foreign subsidiary. But that difference only strengthens Plaintiff’s case for
compelling production. As a matter of common sense, it is more likely that a parent company
has control over a subsidiary’s data than the other way around. Another difference also
strengthens the case for production here: BOMHK is itself a party to this litigation; Plaintiff is
not seeking data that is in the possession of a non-party. In other salient respects, this case is
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similar to Orthoarm: The requested sales data is pertinent—indeed, necessary—to calculating
damages, and, as the seller of the allegedly infringing products, BOMHK will certainly be
affected by the Court’s final judgment in this case. And finally, Defendants make no argument
that ZBOM lacks sufficient control over the data to be required to produce it. Instead, they refer
the Court to arguments made in the briefing of a motion to amend the Court’s case management
order and suggest that the matter has already been settled. See Doc. [151] at 9 (citing Docs.
[130] at 4; [132] at 3-4; [140] at 4; [143] at 2-3) (“Despite the parties having already briefed and
addressed the fact that ZBOM does not control the requested financial information…”). In fact,
Defendant’s earlier briefing says nothing about ZBOM’s practical ability to obtain sales data
from BOMHK for the purposes of responding to discovery requests, and the Court certainly
made no finding in that regard. 5 See Doc. [143] at 2-3. Lacking any such argument, applying
the Afros factors, the Court finds that ZBOM has control over BOMHK’s documents and can be
compelled to produce the requested data.
B. Both ZBOM and BOMHK objected to production of the sales data in Plaintiff’s
Request for Production No. 7 based on PRC laws and regulations.
Plaintiff also argues that ZBOM must produce the requested sales data regardless of any
complications related to Chinese law and regulations because it did not assert such a defense
earlier. The Broad Ocean entities other than BOMHK appear to have objected to production of
the data on the basis of PRC secrecy laws in their Objections and Responses to Plaintiff’s
Amended First Set of Consolidated Requests for Production. Doc. [149-4] at 31 (“Each of the
Broad Ocean Entities further objects to the extent this Request would require disclosure of
information that may violate any of the PRC Secrecy Laws, and on that basis will not produce
any such information.”) (emphasis added). After it was added as a party, BOMHK objected on
the same basis. Doc. [149-6] at 29. Plaintiff complains that ZBOM did not assert the defense in
2014 or in more recent correspondence. See Doc. [152] at 6. But neither ZBOM’s responses to
a nearly decade-old request for production nor the informal conversations of counsel render
ZBOM and BOMHK’s objections to the current request for production untimely.
The Court likewise declines to overrule Defendants’ objections for lack of specificity.
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(B) (requiring a party to “state with specificity the grounds for
Counsel is admonished to avoid mischaracterizing the record in future filings. See Clark v. United
Parcel Serv., Inc., 460 F.3d 1004, 1010 (8th Cir. 2006) (affirming imposition of Rule 11 sanctions for,
among other things, “misstatements and mischaracterizations of the record”).
5
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objecting to the request, including the reasons.”); E.D. Mo. L.R. 3.04(c) (“Upon the filing of a
motion to compel, the Court may summarily overrule an objection to any discovery request if the
objection is not stated in detail.”). Plaintiff contends that, even at subsequent meet and confers,
Defendants failed to inform counsel of the specific laws and regulations preventing disclosure.
Docs. [148] at 8. Defendants claim to have offered that information but Plaintiff’s counsel was
not interested. Doc. [151] at 2 n.1 (citing Docs. [151-2] ¶¶ 8-11, [151-1]). Given that Plaintiff is
now aware of the specific laws and regulations upon which Defendants’ objection rests, the
Court does not overrule the objection for lack of specificity.
C. Defendants have now had significant additional time to confer with PRC
authorities to determine whether they can receive permission to produce the
requested data.
The Court accepts Defendants’ arguments that, at the time this motion to compel was
briefed, they needed additional time to determine whether they could produce the requested sales
information without exposing themselves to civil or criminal liability under the laws of the PRC.
Absent any evidence of bad faith, the Court accepts the representations of Defendants’ counsel
that they were diligently working to find a solution to the production issue. See Doc. [151] at 2,
5, 10. The Court acknowledges the difficulties Defendants allege they have faced in conferring
with PRC officials, see Doc. [166] at 1, and hopes that the additional time they have had during
the pendency of this motion has enabled them to ascertain a method of production that does not
run afoul of PCR criminal and civil laws and regulations.
The Court also notes that Plaintiff has not rebutted Defendants’ contention that there is
“no urgency to the production of the financial information.” Doc. [151] at 2. Although the
Court takes no position on the parties’ arguments relating to bifurcation at this time, Plaintiff’s
blanket assertion that “[f]urther delaying production” in this case is “unwarranted” is not
sufficient to deny Defendants reasonable additional time to evaluate the consequences they could
face if production is deemed to violate Chinese law. 6 Doc. [152] at 9; Doc. [151-1] at ¶¶ 9-18
(“penalties against divulgence of inside information include imprisonment, criminal detention,
and/or monetary penalty . . . .”). The Court is sympathetic that Plaintiff had been awaiting
production of this information for several months, but considering the gravity of the potential
Plaintiff attempts to argue that the sales information is important at all stages of a patent infringement
case. See Doc. [152] at 3. But, in so arguing, Plaintiff still focuses only on the prejudice that would
result if Plaintiff is unable to “calculate or recover damages.” Id. (emphasis added).
6
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consequences described by Defendants’ counsel in China, Doc. [151-1] at ¶¶ 9-18, absent
evidence that the delay would cause actual prejudice, the additional 45 days requested by
Defendants was not an unreasonable request.
The factors cited by both parties, see Docs. [151] at 5, [152] at 2, also support granting
Defendants additional time to resolve this issue. Specifically, the parties apply several factors
from the Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relation Law, which provides, in relevant part:
In deciding whether to issue an order directing production of information located
abroad, and in framing such an order, a court or agency in the United States should
take into account the importance to the investigation or litigation of the documents
or other information requested; the degree of specificity of the request; whether the
information originated in the United States; the availability of alternative means of
securing the information; and the extent to which noncompliance with the request
would undermine important interests of the United States, or compliance with the
request would undermine important interests of the state where the information is
located.
Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations Law § 442 (1987).
The requested data certainly is integral to this litigation. Although Defendants dispute
the time at which the data becomes necessary to disclose (i.e., at the liability versus the damages
portion of the litigation), even they do not contest its relevance. The fourth factor, however, asks
the Court to also consider the availability of alternative means of securing the information. Here,
not only have Defendants represented the possibility of compliance through receiving the PRC’s
approval, but other methods of disclosure have also been raised—albeit briefly—by the parties.
See Doc. [151] at 8 (noting that the Hague Evidence Convention may provide an alternative
method for production of the sales data).
In light of the above, the Court denies the pending Motion to Compel. However, the
Court notes that Defendants have already had far more than the 45 additional days they requested
to confer with the PRC authorities. Thus, the Court will hold a status conference at 1:00 PM on
Wednesday, October 19, 2022, in Courtroom 16-North to discuss Defendants’ production of the
sales data and any remaining, associated issues. If Defendants still have not devised a way to
produce the data without violating PRC law, then the Court expects the parties to be prepared to
discuss the merits of all proposed alternative methods of disclosure. The parties must meet and
confer by telephone or videoconference no later than Wednesday, October 12, 2022, and must
communicate to the Court in a joint memorandum the current status of this issue and any other
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topics that they believe should be addressed at the status conference no later than 5:00 PM on
Monday, October 17, 2022.
II.
Defendants’ Motion for Leave to File a Sur-reply is denied.
Defendants have requested leave to file a sur-reply to Plaintiff’s reply. Doc. [153]. “Sur-
replies are largely disfavored in federal court.” Fuller v. Lion Oil Trading & Transp., LLC, 2020
WL 3057392, at *6 (W.D. Ark. June 9, 2020) (collecting cases). While the Court has discretion
to permit a sur-reply where justice so requires, it does not allow them as a matter of course. Id.
In particular, a “surreply is unwarranted where the reply responds to the arguments in the
resistance and does not raise new arguments.” Fleshner v. Tiedt, 2019 WL 271619, at *2 (N.D.
Iowa Jan. 18, 2019).
Defendants have not raised any novel argument in their proposed sur-reply. See Doc.
[153-1]. Nor have Defendants raised any other consideration that persuades the court that a surreply is necessary in this instance. Therefore, the Motion for Leave to File Sur-Reply is denied.
The Court did not consider the material contained in Defendants’ proposed sur-reply in its
analysis of the Motion to Compel.
III.
Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike is denied.
Finally, Plaintiff requests that the Court strike Defendants’ argument that they need
additional time in order to obtain permission from PRC authorities. See Doc. [166] at 2. The
Court “may strike from a pleading an insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial,
impertinent, or scandalous matter,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(f). But memoranda and arguments within
memoranda are not pleadings, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 7(a); thus, Plaintiff’s motion lacks a legal basis
and the Court denies it. See, e.g., Williams v. LG Chem, Ltd., 2022 WL 873366, at *6 (E.D. Mo.
Mar. 24, 2022).
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CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff’s Motion to Compel, Doc. [147], Defendants’ Motion
for Leave to File Sur-Reply, Doc. [153], and Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike, Doc. [166], are denied.
A status conference will be held at 1:00 PM on Wednesday, October 19, 2022, in the
courtroom of the undersigned, for which the parties are directed to prepare according to the
instructions herein.
Dated this 27th day of September, 2022.
SARAH E. PITLYK
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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