LEG Q LLC v. RSR Corporation et al
Filing
32
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING LEG Q LLC'S APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL ASSISTANCE PURSUANT TO 28 U.S.C. § 1782: The Court GRANTS LEG Q LLC's Application for Judicial Assistance Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 [Dkt. No. 1 ] an d ORDERS that LEG Q LLC is authorized under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 and Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 26, 30, and 45 to issue with a return date of at least 28 days and serve (1) subpoenas for the production of documents, information, or object s to Quexco, Inc., EB Holdings II, Inc., Quemetco, Inc., RSR Corporation, and Revere Smelting & Refining Corporation, substantially in the form of Dkt. Nos. 1-1 to 1-5, respectively, and (2) subpoenas for deposition testimony to Quexco, Inc., EB Ho ldings II, Inc., Quemetco, Inc., RSR Corporation, and Revere Smelting & Refining Corporation, substantially in the form of Dkt. Nos. 1-6 to 1-10, respectively. The Court further ORDERS that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and any applicable lo cal rules will apply to discovery pursuant to this order and that deposition testimony obtained pursuant to these subpoenas may be taken before any certified court reporter authorized to take testimony and administer oaths in the State of Texas. (Ordered by Magistrate Judge David L. Horan on 8/31/2017) (mcrd)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
DALLAS DIVISION
LEG Q LLC,
Plaintiff,
V.
RSR CORPORATION, ET AL.,
Defendants.
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No. 3:17-cv-1559-N-BN
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING LEG Q LLC’S
APPLICATION FOR JUDICIAL ASSISTANCE
PURSUANT TO 28 U.S.C. § 1782
LEG Q LLC (“LEG Q”) has filed an Application for Judicial Assistance Pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. § 1782, see Dkt. No. 1 (the “Application”), requesting leave under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1782 and Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 26, 30, and 45 to issue and serve (1)
subpoenas for the production of documents, information, or objects to Quexco, Inc., EB
Holdings II, Inc., Quemetco, Inc., RSR Corporation, and Revere Smelting & Refining
Corporation and (2) subpoenas for deposition testimony to Quexco, Inc., EB Holdings
II, Inc., Quemetco, Inc., RSR Corporation, and Revere Smelting & Refining
Corporation.
United States District Judge David C. Godbey has referred the Application to
the undersigned United States magistrate judge for determination under 28 U.S.C. §
636(b). See Dkt. No. 30.
Quexco, Inc., EB Holdings II, Inc., Quemetco, Inc., RSR Corporation, and Revere
Smelting & Refining Corporation jointly filed a response to the Application, see Dkt.
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No. 25, and LEG Q filed a reply, see Dkt. No. 28.
The Court determines that a hearing or oral argument on the Application is not
necessary.
For the reasons and to the extent explained below, the Court GRANTS the
Application [Dkt. No. 1] and DENIES as moot LEG Q’s Motion for a Hearing on LEG
Q LLC’s Application for Judicial Assistance Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 [Dkt. No. 6].
Background
LEG Q’s Application seeks an order under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 “permitting [LEG
Q] to subpoena documents and deposition testimony from RSR Corporation (‘RSR’),
Revere Smelting & Refining Corporation (‘Revere’), Quemetco, Inc. (‘Quemetco’),
Quexco, Inc. (‘Quexco’), and EB Holdings II, Inc. (‘EB Holdings,’ and, together with
RSR, Revere, Quemetco, and Quexco, the ‘Subpoena Recipients’ [or ‘Respondents’]) for
use in a shareholder derivative action it intends to bring in the English High Court on
behalf of Eco-Bat Technologies Ltd. (‘Eco-Bat’ or the ‘Company’) against Eco-Bat’s
Chairman and the directors that he controls.” Dkt. No. 2 at 1. LEG Q explains that it
“is a minority shareholder of Eco-Bat, an English lead recycling company that is
dominated and controlled by Howard Meyers (‘Meyers’), its Chairman, Managing
Director, and indirect majority shareholder”; that “Meyers and the Eco-Bat directors
he controls have schemed to enrich Meyers at the expense of Eco-Bat and its minority
shareholders, which have been shut out of Eco-Bat’s governance and stonewalled in
their attempts to gain critical information about the Company”; and that “LEG Q is
preparing to commence a shareholder derivative action in the English High Court
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against Meyers and other current and former Eco-Bat directors to recover massive
losses Eco-Bat has incurred as the result of their misconduct and breaches of their
duties.” Id. (footnote omitted); see also id. at 3 (“LEG Q intends to bring a derivative
action in the English High Court against six current and former directors of Eco-Bat,
including Meyers, to recover for massive losses caused by their breaches of duty to the
Company (the ‘English Derivative Action’).”).
“In particular, LEG Q intends to prove that the defendant directors (including
Meyers) orchestrated or, at minimum, condoned Eco-Bat’s participation in an unlawful
cartel to fix the price of scrap automotive batteries in Europe, for which the European
Commission fined Eco-Bat over €32 million earlier this year,” and “LEG Q also intends
to establish that, through a series of improper, procedurally-unsound related-party
transactions, the defendant directors siphoned assets from Eco-Bat and redirected
them into entities wholly owned and controlled by Meyers and his family.” Id. at 1-2.
“Finally, LEG Q intends to prove that the defendant directors failed to exercise proper
corporate governance by rubber-stamping Meyers’s self-dealing activities while
scrubbing from Eco-Bat’s books and records the objections of the directors appointed
by the minority shareholders.” Id. at 2.
According to LEG Q, it “seeks disclosure under Section 1782 to enable it to
satisfy its heightened pleading burden under English law – which requires a derivative
plaintiff to present evidence in support of its claims promptly after commencing suit,
before it can proceed with its claim and later avail itself of the disclosure mechanisms
under English law – and to prove its claims at trial,” and “Section 1782 is the only
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mechanism practically available to LEG Q to obtain the evidence it will need to pursue
its claims beyond the initial pleading stage.” Id.
LEG Q asserts that its Application “satisfies the statutory requirements to
obtain disclosure under Section 1782: the Subpoena Recipients are headquartered and
maintain their principal places of businesses in this District, and LEG Q seeks
discovery from them for use in its contemplated derivative action in London.” Id. And,
LEG Q contends, “all of the factors guiding the Court’s discretion under Section 1782
favor LEG Q’s petition: LEG Q seeks to serve subpoenas narrowly tailored to its
contemplated derivative claims; English courts are receptive to evidence gathered
under Section 1782; and LEG Q’s application is a good faith request for probative
evidence that does not circumvent any discovery prohibition under English law.” Id.
LEG Q explains that “[e]ach of the Subpoena Recipients possesses documents
and information that are likely to be probative of, and relevant to, LEG Q’s claims”:
Quexco. Although he is Eco-Bat’s Chairman and Managing
Director, Meyers stores his e-mails and electronic files relating to Eco-Bat
on one or more servers owned by Quexco. Glynn-Jones Decl. Ex. 2 ¶ 8.3,
Appx. 157. If Meyers has e-mails and electronic files concerning Eco-Bat’s
cartel activity, its one-sided acquisitions from and management
agreements with Meyers-controlled entities, and the breakdown in
Eco-Bat’s corporate governance – in particular, e-mails and files
concerning Meyers’s involvement in such matters – they are held by
Quexco. In addition, as the parent company of Quemetco and Revere,
Quexco can likely provide documents and testimony about Eco-Bat’s
acquisition of the Indiana, New York, and California lead recycling
facilities, the “negotiation” and renewal of the one-sided facilities
management agreements for those facilities, and Quemetco’s
misappropriation of an operating permit for the California facility. Id. Ex.
1 at 26, 65-66 & Ex. 2 ¶ 9, Appx. 36, 75-76 & 158-59. Likewise, as RSR’s
parent, Quexco can presumably provide documents and testimony about
RSR’s performance under its services agreement with Eco-Bat, including
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RSR’s practice of charging Eco-Bat to use intellectual property that
Eco-Bat paid to develop. Id. Ex. 1 at 26, 65 & Ex. 2 ¶ 9.6, Appx. 36, 75 &
159.
EB Holdings. As Eco-Bat’s majority shareholder, which controls
the majority of the appointments to Eco-Bat’s Board (i.e., the prospective
defendants), EB Holdings likely has relevant information about all
aspects of the English Derivative Action, including all of the matters
addressed in the preceding paragraph, as well as the collapse of Eco-Bat’s
corporate governance and the disenfranchisement of Eco-Bat’s minority
directors.
RSR, Quemetco, and Revere. As noted, RSR, Quemetco, and
Revere – all owned and controlled by Meyers – entered into one-sided
agreements with Eco-Bat pursuant to which Eco-Bat pays significant fees
to these companies to operate facilities purchased (but, in practice, never
controlled) by Eco-Bat and to use intellectual property that Eco-Bat paid
to develop. All three of these companies are likely to have information
about the “negotiation” and renewal of these agreements, their fairness
(or lack thereof) to Eco-Bat, the parties’ performance under such
agreements, and the amount of value improperly extracted from Eco-Bat
pursuant to them.
Id. at 9-10 (footnote omitted).
Respondents assert in response that “LEG Q’s Application is part of an ongoing,
concerted effort by LEG Q and others to take control of [Eco-Bat] from Respondent EB
Holdings and, ultimately, its shareholder Howard Meyers” and that “LEG Q, an
activist minority shareholder of Eco-Bat, has longstanding hostilities toward Eco-Bat’s
management and has used various legal maneuvers to try to gain leverage over
Respondents and their affiliates.” Dkt. No. 25 at 1. According to Respondents, “[i]n
addition to efforts to obtain information in the U.K., LEG Q has filed a separate § 1782
action in Wisconsin, attempted to appear in EB Holdings’ pending bankruptcy
proceeding (even though LEG Q was not a creditor at the time), and, most recently,
purportedly purchasing part of EB Holdings’ debt in order to become a creditor in
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connection with the Bankruptcy and in a possible effort to gain access to information
in a related proceeding in Nevada state court.” Id.
Respondents assert that “LEG Q’s Application, motivated as much by a desire
to harass and burden Respondents as by an actual desire for the information, is not a
proper use of § 1782”; that “LEG Q is attempting to obtain discovery in connection with
a proposed shareholder derivative action to be filed in the U.K.”; and that “[p]ermitting
such discovery here would circumvent the express rules recently adopted in England
that require a party to make an initial prima facie showing in order to even maintain
a shareholder derivative suit or proceed with discovery.” Id.
Respondents contend that, “[u]ntil the English court recognizes LEG Q’s prima
facie right to pursue a claim, this Court should not permit LEG Q to obtain discovery”
and that “[t]his is especially true where the discovery being sought is extremely
burdensome, seeking ‘all documents’ and at least five depositions on numerous topics
for a period of over twenty years.” Id. at 1-2. Respondent further argue that “there is
little doubt that LEG Q could obtain the requested information in various other
forums, including directly from Eco-Bat in the U.K.” Id. at 2.
According to Respondents, “[u]nder these circumstances, this Court should
exercise its broad discretion to deny the Application in its entirety” or, “[i]n the
alternative, the Court should stay this proceeding until a determination by the English
court as to whether LEG Q can make the required prima facie showing to proceed with
discovery on its shareholder derivative claim,” and, “[i]f LEG Q can make such a
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showing, then this Court can consider what specific discovery would be proper under
§ 1782,” but, “[i]f LEG Q cannot, this proceeding would be moot.” Id.
Finally, Respondents contend that, “if the Court is inclined to grant any portion
of the Application at this time, it should significantly narrow the scope of the requested
subpoenas to include an appropriately-tailored production of documents accompanied
by a records custodian affidavit,” where “[t]he depositions of numerous corporate
representatives would be overly burdensome and is unnecessary.” Id.; see also id. at
18 n.2. More specifically, Respondents assert that “LEG Q’s Application seeks vast,
overbroad discovery, requesting ‘all documents’ related to a wide variety of topics over
a more than twenty-year period. Specifically, the proposed subpoenas ask for
documents and depositions from the Respondents (with the same requests for each
Respondent)”:
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“All documents” and depositions “concerning Eco-Bat’s
participating in a[n alleged] cartel” “from January 1, 2006 through
the present.” Docs. 1-1 at 4; 1-2 at 4; 1-6 at 4; 1-7 at 4.”
“All documents” and depositions “concerning ... the Board of
Directors of Eco-Bat” and its members. Docs. 1-1 at 4; 1-2 at 4; 1-6
at 4; 1-7 at 4.
“All documents” and depositions related to the 1996 Agreement”
between Eco-Bat and RSR Corporation” “from September 14, 1995
through the present.” Docs. 1-1 at 5; 1-2 at 5; 1-4 at 4; 1-6 at 4; 1-7
at 4; 1-9 at 4.
“All documents” and depositions related to “the 2003 Facility
Agreements” between Eco-Bat on one side and either Quemetco or
Revere on the other “from July 31, 2002 to the present.” Docs. 1-1
at 5-6; 1-2 at 5-6; 1-3 at 4; 1-4 at 5; 1-5 at 4; 1-6 at 5; 1-7 at 5; 1-8
at 4; 1-9 at 4; 1-10 at 4.
“All documents” and depositions related to “the 2000 Facility
Agreement” on Eco-Bat¡|s 2016 annual report “from May 1, 2000
to the present.” Docs. 1-1 at 6; 1-2 at 6; 1-3 at 4-5; 1-4 at 6; 1-6 at
5; 1-7 at 5; 1-8 at 4; 1-9 at 4.
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•
“All documents” and depositions related to “any Other . . .
Agreement” with Eco-Bat. Docs. 1-1 at 6-7; 1-2 at 6-7; 1-3 at 5; 1-4
at 4-5; 1-5 at 4-5; 1-7 at 4; 1-6 at 5; 1-7 at 5; 1-8 at 4; 1-9 at 4; 1-10
at 4.
•
“All documents” and depositions concerning licenses or permits “for
any facility owned by Eco-Bat.” Docs. 1-1 at 7; 1-2 at 7; 1-3 at 5; 1-4
at 7; 1-6 at 5; 1-7 at 4; 1-8 at 4; 1-9 at 5.
•
Documents related to the board of directors for each Respondent
and each director’s financial interests “[f]or the period from
September 14, 1995 to the present.” Docs. 1-1 at 7; 1-2 at 7; 1-3 at
6; 1-4 at 7; 1-5 at 5.
•
“All documents” concerning any potential conflicts of interests of
any member of the board of directors of any respondent “from
September 14, 1995 to the present.” Docs. 1-1 at 7; 1-2 at 7; 1-3 at
6; 1-4 at 8; 1-5 at 5.
•
“[A]ll documents” and depositions “show[ing] the amount of and
basis for any payments ... to [the potential individual defendants
of the U.K. lawsuit] from September 14, 1995 to the present.” Docs.
1-1 at 7-8; 1-2 at 7-8; 1-3 at 6; 1-4 at 8; 1-5 at 5; 1-6 at 5; 1-7 at 5;
1-8 at 5; 1-9 at 5; 1-10 at 4.
•
“All documents” and depositions related to an “Outstanding
Payment ... that Eco-Bat allegedly owes RSR.” Docs. 1-4 at 7-9; 1-9
at 5.
•
“All documents” and depositions related to “any Other Subsidiary
Agreement ... between a subsidiary of RSR on the one hand and
Eco-Bat on the other.” Docs. 1-4 at 6, 10; 1-9 at 5.
Importantly, almost every request in the proposed subpoenas seeks
information within Eco-Bat’s control, yet LEG Q would require
Respondents to perform a comprehensive search for “all” responsive
records spanning a period of up to twenty-two years or more.
In addition, LEG Q seeks depositions of each of the specified
entities. For purposes of at least EB Holdings and Quexco, which are
holding companies with minimal or no business operations, the deposition
designee for each entity would almost certainly be Meyers or Lospinoso.
Thus, the real effect of these depositions requests would be to grant LEG
Q an extra, advance deposition of the exact individuals that it seeks to
sue in the U.K. But, the Court would be doing so before LEG Q has even
established a prima facie case to pursue its derivative claims, as required
under U.K. law. Neither the U.S. nor U.K. policy countenances premature
fishing expeditions of this nature.
Id. at 5-7.
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Respondents argue that “the discretionary factors [set forth in Intel Corp. v.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 542 U.S. 241 (2004),] weigh heavily against LEG Q’s
Application”:
First, LEG Q is attempting to seek discovery otherwise available through
the U.K. court, the European Commission, the Bankruptcy, or the PIK
Loan Litigation. Second, U.K. courts are unlikely to be receptive to the
admission of evidence that circumvents their own statutorily-mandated
procedures. Third, LEG Q is misusing § 1782(a) in an effort to circumvent
U.K. laws specifically limiting a shareholder’s access to early discovery
for derivative claims. Finally, the discovery sought is unduly intrusive,
burdensome and harassing.
Id. at 8.
In the alternative, Respondents contend that,
[e]ven if the Court is inclined to grant LEG Q’s § 1782 Application, the
Court should at least stay these proceedings until LEG Q applies to an
English High Court for permission and the English High Court has the
opportunity to determine whether LEG Q can maintain such a
shareholder derivative suit. Petrus v. Bowen, 883 F.2d 581, 583 (5th Cir.
1981) (“A trial court has broad discretion and inherent power to stay
discovery until preliminary questions that may dispose of the case are
determined.”). Such a stay will ensure that the Court will not, by
granting LEG Q discovery, inadvertently undermine the deliberate U.K.
policy in the Companies Act, which was adopted to shield parties from
being forced to bear the cost of defending shareholder derivative suits
before an English court has the opportunity to determine whether the
claim should proceed.
....
If this Court is inclined to grant any portion of the Application at
this time, it should, at the very least, narrowly tailor the proper
discovery. More specifically, the Court should restrict discovery to only
relevant document production accompanied by a records custodian
affidavit. Depositions should not be permitted at this time. In order to
permit the parties to narrowly tailor the discovery, the Court should set
a return date under the subpoenas of at least 28 days to allow time for
objections regarding the burden as though the subpoenas had been issued
to a third party in ordinary U.S. litigation. Respondents should be
permitted to raise any objections, move to quash, or seek any protective
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order deemed necessary, pursuant to local rules and the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure.
Id. at 19-20.
LEG Q replies that Respondents’ argument – asserting that the discretionary
factors support the denial of LEG Q’s application or, at a minimum, a stay of these
proceedings – is meritless where (1) the disclosure LEG Q seeks is beyond the English
Court’s reach; (2) the English Court is receptive to Section 1782 assistance; (3) LEG Q’s
request does not circumvent any English proof-gathering restrictions; and (4) LEG Q
does not seek unduly intrusive or burdensome disclosure. See Dkt. No. 28 at 1-15.
Legal Standards and Analysis
I.
Section 1782 Statutory Requirements
“Three statutory requirements must be satisfied before a district court may
grant assistance under § 1782(a): (1) the person from whom discovery is sought must
reside or be found in the district in which the application is filed; (2) the discovery must
be for use in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal; and (3) the application must be
made by a foreign or international tribunal or any interested person.’’ Bravo Express
Corp. v. Total Petrochemicals & Refining U.S., 613 F. App’x 319, 322 (5th Cir. 2015)
(quoting Tex. Keystone, Inc. v. Prime Natural Res., Inc., 694 F.3d 548, 553 (5th Cir.
2012)).
As LEG Q correctly observes, “Respondents do not contest that LEG Q satisfies
all three” of Section 1782’s statutory requirements. Dkt. No. 28 at 1; accord Dkt. No.
25 at 7-8. And the Court finds that the statutory requirements are met.
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First, LEG Q has shown that EB Holdings, RSR, Revere, Quemetco, and Quexco
reside or may be found in the Northern District of Texas “because they are all
headquartered and maintain their principal places of business in Dallas.” Dkt. No. 2
at 11.
Second, “LEG Q satisfies the second requirement for Section 1782 assistance
because it is in the process of commencing the English Derivative Action and intends
to use the subpoenaed documents and deposition testimony to obtain permission from
the English High Court to continue its derivative claims beyond the pleading stage, as
well as to prove those claims at trial.” Id. at 12. The Court may grant Section 1782
assistance based on “reliable indications of the likelihood that [foreign] proceedings will
be instituted within a reasonable time.” Bravo, 613 F. App’x at 322-23. LEG Q has
shown that it “has served a Letter Before Action on the intended defendants in the
English Derivative Action and is in the midst of the pre-action correspondence process
that typically precedes the filing of a shareholder derivative action in the English High
Court, and it intends to commence that action after obtaining discovery pursuant to
Section 1782.” Dkt. No. 2 at 13.
Third, under 28 U.S.C. § 1782, interested parties, such as LEG Q, may obtain
discovery for use in foreign litigation from individuals or entities located within the
United States, and, as the prospective claimant in the English Derivative Action, LEG
Q is an “interested person” within the meaning of Section 1782. See Intel Corp. v.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., 542 U.S. 241, 256 (2004).
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II.
Section 1782 Discretionary Factors
The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has made clear that,
“once an interested party makes the requisite showing that it has met the statutory
factors, the district court judge has the discretion to grant the application seeking the
authority to issue subpoenas.” Tex. Keystone, 694 F.3d at 553 & n.2.
Here, the Court finds that the discretionary factors that the United States
Supreme Court set out in Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., as “bear[ing]
consideration in ruling on a § 1782(a) request” on the whole weigh in favor of granting
the Application. 542 U.S. at 265. Those factors include “(1) whether ‘the person from
whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign proceeding,’ because
‘nonparticipants in the foreign proceeding may be outside the foreign tribunal’s
jurisdictional reach’ and therefore their evidence may be ‘unobtainable absent §
1782(a) aid’; (2) ‘the nature of the foreign tribunal, the character of the proceedings
underway abroad, and the receptivity of the foreign government or the court or agency
abroad to U.S. federal-court judicial assistance’; (3) ‘whether the § 1782(a) request
conceals an attempt to circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions or other policies
of a foreign country or the United States’; and (4) whether the § 1782(a) request is
‘unduly intrusive or burdensome.’” Bravo Express, 613 F. App’x at 323-24 (quoting
Intel, 542 U.S. at 264-65); accord Tex. Keystone, 694 F.3d at 553 n.2.
A.
The first factor
As to the first discretionary factor, the Supreme Court observed in Intel that,
“when the person from whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign
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proceeding..., the need for § 1782(a) aid generally is not as apparent as it ordinarily is
when evidence is sought from a nonparticipant in the matter arising abroad. A foreign
tribunal has jurisdiction over those appearing before it, and can itself order them to
produce evidence.” Intel, 542 U.S. at 264. “In contrast, nonparticipants in the foreign
proceeding may be outside the foreign tribunal’s jurisdictional reach; hence, their
evidence, available in the United States, may be unobtainable absent § 1782(a) aid.”
Id.
Here, LEG Q explains that it “does not intend to name any of the Subpoena
Recipients as defendants in the English Derivative Action” and that it “also seeks
information ‘outside the [English High Court’s] jurisdictional reach,’ a factor favoring
Section 1782 assistance.” Dkt. No. 2 at 14 (quoting Intel, 542 U.S. at 264). LEG Q
explains that,
[f]or example, LEG Q seeks deposition testimony from corporate
representatives of the Subpoena Recipients, which the English High
Court would lack jurisdiction to compel. Likewise, there is no basis under
the English Civil Procedure Rules for LEG Q to obtain pre-action
disclosure from the Subpoena Recipients, who will not be parties to the
English Derivative Action. Glynn-Jones Decl. ¶¶ 22-24, Appx. 7-8.
Although, in limited circumstances, English courts have equitable
discretion to order nonparties to provide pre-action disclosure of
documents (not testimony), they almost always decline to exercise such
discretion where, as here, the nonparties are foreign companies located
outside of England and where disclosure may be obtained from them
pursuant to Section 1782.
Id. at 14-15.
Respondents counter that “the discovery sought is obtainable without the aid of
§ 1782 in several ways: (1) from Eco-Bat or its individual board members in the
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proposed U.K. action; (2) from Eco-Bat or its individual board members through U.K.
pre-action procedures; (3) directly from the Respondents through the proposed U.K.
action; (4) from the European Commission that investigated the alleged cartel; and (5)
via appropriate proceedings in the Bankruptcy or based on the discovery in the PIK
Loan Litigation.” Dkt. No. 25 at 8-9.
Respondents more specifically assert that (1) “[i]t is evident from the face of LEG
Q’s discovery requests that the vast majority of the information LEG Q seeks would be
available from Eco-Bat, which LEG Q admits would be a defendant in its purported
derivative suit,” and, “[b]ecause the discovery would be obtainable without the aid of
§ 1782, the Court should refuse to permit LEG Q to use this burdensome procedure”;
(2) “[e]ven at this stage, the relevant evidence is available to LEG Q through Eco-Bat
in the U.K. because Rule 31.16 of the U.K. Civil Procedure Rules (aptly titled
‘Disclosure before proceedings start’) and section 33 of the Senior Courts Act 1981
authorize an English court to grant pre-action disclosure from a likely party to the
proceedings”; (3) “LEG Q would also be able to seek the requested discovery directly
from the Respondents under the third-party discovery rules in U.K. Civil Procedure
Rules 31.17 and 34.2,” where “LEG Q has admitted that English courts have authority
to grant pre-action disclosure against foreign nonparties, such as Respondents”; (4)
“LEG Q can obtain the information it seeks regarding the alleged cartel directly from
the European Commission,” which “investigated the alleged cartel,” and “LEG Q can
request the European Commission’s files related to the investigation under the
European Union Transparency Regulation, which is comparable to the United States
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Freedom of Information Act”; and (5) “[n]ow that LEG Q has purportedly purchased
an interest in the PIK Loan, it might attempt to obtain the same information it
requests here through the ongoing discovery in the PIK Loan Litigation. LEG Q has
also sought to appear in EB Holdings’ Bankruptcy.” Id. at 9-12.
As LEG Q correctly notes, “Section 1782 does not require [an applicant] to seek
discovery in the foreign jurisdiction before seeking the assistance of a district court.”
In re Application of HydroDive Nigeria, Ltd., No. 13-MC-0477, 2013 WL 12155021, at
*4 (S.D. Tex. May 29, 2013) (citing In re Metallgesellschaft AG, 121 F.3d 77, 79 (2d Cir.
1997) (“Similarly, we have held that a district court may not refuse a request for
discovery pursuant to § 1782 because a foreign tribunal has not yet had the
opportunity to consider the discovery request. Such a ‘quasi-exhaustion requirement,’
finds no support in the plain language of the statute and runs counter to its express
purposes....” (citation omitted))). But a “respondent’s connection to the foreign
proceeding is part of a broader inquiry: whether the discovery is ‘outside the foreign
tribunal's jurisdictional reach,’ and thus ‘unobtainable absent § 1782(a) aid.’” In re
Kiobel, No. 16 CIV. 7992 (AKH), 2017 WL 354183, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 24, 2017)
(quoting Intel, 542 U.S. at 264).
In reply, LEG Q attempts to make that showing, asserting that, “[i]n applying
the first Intel factor, courts focus on whether the discovery may be had from the foreign
tribunal (here, the English High Court), not whether it can be obtained elsewhere.”
Dkt. No. 28 at 1-2 (emphasis removed).
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As far as the first discretionary factor is concerned, the Court is persuaded that
“[t]he evidence LEG Q seeks is not within the reach of the English High Court” and
that there is no “basis for Respondents’ (legally irrelevant) assertion that such evidence
is likely to be forthcoming from other sources in the absence of Section 1782 aid.” Id.
at 2.
As LEG Q points out, Eco-Bat already “rejected [a] request [for voluntary
disclosure], and it is likely to oppose any formal application to the English court for
pre-action disclosure.” Id. at 2-3 (footnote omitted). Cf. Ecuadorian Plaintiffs v.
Chevron Corp., 619 F.3d 373, 376, 377 (5th Cir. 2010) (“[The plaintiffs] argue that
allowing Chevron to seek discovery from 3TM in the United States is inappropriate,
since Cabrera is subject to the jurisdiction of the Ecuadorian court and Chevron could
ask him to turn over any 3TM documents he reviewed. .... “[w]e find it senseless to
require Chevron to seek 3TM documents from Cabrera, given the plaintiffs' denial that
they provided any such documents to Cabrera and Cabrera's interest in denying receipt
of 3TM material. As noted above, the Ecuadorian court ordered Cabrera to disclose all
of the source material for his report. Consequently, if Cabrera relied on 3TM
documents but did not disclose them, he is unlikely to turn them over now, as doing so
would reveal he violated the Ecuadorian court’s order.”).
And, as LEG Q persuasively demonstrates, “[t]hat the evidence LEG Q seeks is
‘related’ to Eco-Bat does not mean that it is ‘held by’ Eco-Bat,” as Respondents assert.
Dkt. No. 28 at 3.
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Further, LEG Q asserts that “English civil procedure does not authorize
nonparty document discovery pre-action, and even after an action commences, U.S.
based nonparties (such as Respondents) may assert jurisdictional objections to such
discovery”; that, “both before and after litigation commences, English courts cannot
compel testimony from nonparties (such as Respondents) located outside the territorial
boundaries of the United Kingdom”; and that, while “English courts have ‘equitable
discretion’ to order pre-action document disclosure from nonparties,” “English courts
almost always decline to exercise such discretion, especially when tools such as Section
1782 are available in the jurisdiction where disclosure is sought.” Dkt. No. 28 at 4-5
(internal quotation marks omitted).
Respondents’ assertion that LEG Q can seek the discovery that LEG Q wants
directly from Respondents in England is, the Court concludes, at best half-right.
As for Respondents’ argument that LEG Q can obtain the evidence it seeks from
the European Commission or in other domestic proceedings, the Court agrees with
LEG Q that this is legally irrelevant to the first discretionary factor’s inquiry and that,
even if LEG Q could obtain the European Commission investigation file, it would not
provide all that LEG Q is seeking.
The Court concludes that, on balance, this first factor weighs in favor of granting
LEG Q’s Application.
B.
The second factor
As to the second discretionary factor, LEG Q correctly asserts that “Section 1782
applications should be denied based on a foreign jurisdiction’s lack of receptivity to the
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evidence sought only where there is ‘authoritative proof’ – in the form of a judicial,
executive, or legislative declaration – that the foreign jurisdiction would be hostile to
such evidence.” Dkt. No. 28 at 15 (citing Ecuadorian Plaintiffs, 619 F.3d at 377 (noting
that “there has been no ‘clear directive’ from the Ecuadorian court that it ‘would reject
evidence’ produced in the United States”)). LEG Q notes that “English courts are not
hostile to discovery gathered under Section 1782 – just the opposite”; that “[t]he House
of Lords has ruled that litigants in English proceedings can seek assistance from U.S.
courts under Section 1782 even if the information they seek would not be discoverable
under English law”; and that “federal courts regularly grant Section 1782 applications
to gather discovery for use in English litigation.” Id.
Respondents counter that “English law has adopted a procedure exclusively for
shareholder derivative suits, through which a party must first ‘disclose’ a prima facie
case in an application to an English court for permission to maintain a shareholder
derivative claim”; that, “[b]ased on this prima facie showing, a court will determine
whether to allow the case to continue or order discovery of evidence”; and that,
“[b]ecause the very purpose of the English procedure is to save parties and nonparties
from costly discovery for nonmeritorious claims, it is reasonable to conclude that
English Courts would disfavor consideration of evidence obtained through
extraordinary measures prior to meeting the prima facie threshold.” Dkt. No. 25 at 1213. Asserting that “LEG Q has failed to cite any authority indicating that an English
court would be receptive to evidence acquired pre-action for use in a shareholder
derivative suit,” Respondents contend that, “in light of the fact that an English court
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would likely disfavor using evidence that circumvents the procedures and policy of the
Companies Act, the Court should weigh this factor against granting the Application.”
Id. at 13.
Respondents are attempting in invert the burden here. The United States Court
of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has held that, “to avoid ‘speculative foray[s] into legal
territories unfamiliar to federal judges, parties must provide authoritative proof that
a foreign tribunal would reject evidence because of a violation of [an] alleged [foreign]
privilege.” Ecuadorian Plaintiffs, 619 F.3d at 378 (internal quotation marks).
Respondents’ suppositions and inferences – whether reasonable or not – are not the
same as a clear directive or authoritative proof that the English High Court would
reject evidence obtained with the aid of section 1782.
The Court determines that the second factor does not weigh against an exercise
of discretion in LEG Q’s favor.
C.
The third factor
As to the third discretionary factor, as another court in this circuit has
explained, in Intel, the “Supreme Court noted that ‘[w]hile comity and parity concerns
may be important touchstones for a district court's exercise of discretion in particular
cases, they do not permit our insertion of a generally applicable foreign-discoverability
rule into the text of § 1782,’” but “the Court also instructed that district courts consider
‘whether the § 1782(a) request conceals an attempt to circumvent foreign
proof-gathering restrictions or other policies of a foreign country or the United
States,’”“ such that, “while the court should not base its § 1782(a) decision on whether
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this discovery would be allowed in [England], it may consider [English] restrictions and
whether this request is an attempt to thwart those restrictions.” In re Application of
RSM Prod. Corp. v. Noble Energy, Inc., 195 F. Supp. 3d 899, 906 (S.D. Tex. 2016)
(quoting Intel, 542 U.S. at 261, 264); see also id. (“In Mees [v. Buiter, 793 F.3d 291 (2d
Cir. 2015)], the Second Circuit noted that § 1782 ‘contains no foreign-discoverability
requirement,’ and that while district judges ‘‘may well find that in appropriate cases
a determination of discoverability under the laws of the foreign jurisdiction is a useful
tool in their exercise of discretion under section 1782,’‘ district courts should not
outright deny discovery under § 1782 ‘solely because such discovery is unavailable in
the foreign country.’” (quoting Mees, 793 F.3d at 303)).
Respondents argue that the English rule requiring a plaintiff to make an initial
prima facie showing to even maintain a derivative suit or proceed with discovery is
itself a “proof-gathering restriction” intended to weed out meritless claims before
discovery commences. See Dkt. No. 25 at 1, 13, 15-16.
LEG Q replies that the fact “[t]hat English law does not afford litigants a
mechanism to take nonparty discovery in certain contexts (preaction) or through
certain means (depositions) does not mean that English courts prohibit the use of
evidence lawfully gathered under recognized U.S. procedures that lack an English
counterpart”; that “Respondents’ argument to the contrary relies, improperly, on
importing a ‘foreign-discoverability requirement’ into Section 1782”; and that “[t]he
mere fact that the discovery sought ... might not be obtainable under English law does
not, by itself, suggest that LEG Q’s Section 1782 application is an attempt to
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circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions.” Dkt. No. 28 at 10-11 (internal
quotation marks omitted). According to LEG Q, “[f]or precisely this reason, federal
courts routinely authorize nonparty depositions under Section 1782 in connection with
English proceedings, even though English procedure does not permit U.S. style
depositions.” Id. at 11 (footnote omitted). LEG Q urges the Court to follow the lead of
the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, which has explained that
“[t]hat a country does not enable broad discovery within a litigation does not mean that
it has a policy that restricts parties from obtaining evidence through other lawful
means. ‘[P]roof-gathering restrictions’ are best understood as rules akin to privileges
that prohibit the acquisition or use of certain materials, rather than as rules that fail
to facilitate investigation of claims by empowering parties to require their adversarial
and non-party witnesses to provide information.” Mees, 793 F.3d at 303 n.20.
The Court finds that LEG Q has the better of this argument as to this factor. As
LEG Q notes, “Respondents cite no rules that ‘prohibit’ LEG Q from using Section 1782
documentary or deposition evidence to make a prima facie showing supporting its
derivative claims (or to prove its claims at trial, LEG Q’s other planned use for the
evidence). Nor do they cite any evidence that granting LEG Q’s application would pit
this Court against, or contradict any rulings of, the English court.” Dkt. No. 28 at 12.
The Court agrees that the English High Court’s possible restriction on permitting
discovery through a matter before it does not equate to forbidding a party seeking to
bring a derivative action from obtaining proof in support of a prima facie showing by
other means. Further, Respondents’ arguments on the first and third discretionary
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factors appear to be somewhat at cross-purposes, where they asserted as to the first
that “LEG Q has admitted that English courts have authority to grant pre-action
disclosure against foreign nonparties, such as Respondents.” Dkt. No. 25 at 11.
The Court is persuaded that, under these circumstances, LEG Q’s Application
does not conceal an attempt to circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions or other
policies of a foreign country or the United States and that this factor weighs in favor
of granting the Application.
D.
The fourth factor
As to the fourth discretionary factor, LEG Q correctly notes that “[t]he
intrusiveness and burden of Section 1782 disclosure are evaluated under the same
standards that typically govern discovery requests under the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure.” Dkt. No. 2 at 17 (citing Tex. Keystone, 694 F.3d at 554); accord Mees, 793
F.3d at 302 (explaining that “a district court evaluating a § 1782 discovery request
should assess whether the discovery sought is overbroad or unduly burdensome by
applying the familiar standards of Rule 26 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure”).
LEG Q contends that “[t]he disclosure that [it] seeks from the Subpoena Recipients is
narrowly tailored to the claims LEG Q intends to assert in the English Derivative
Action and is intended to be framed in a manner that would be acceptable to the
English High Court” and that “[t]he proposed subpoenas – which contain a handful of
document requests and deposition topics – seek disclosure on the limited number of
issues that connect each Subpoena Recipient to LEG Q’s claims.” Id.
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Respondents counter that “[r]equests are unduly intrusive and burdensome
where they are not narrowly tailored, request confidential information and appear to
be a broad ‘fishing expedition’ for irrelevant information” and that, “[h]ere, LEG Q’s
request is overly broad and unduly intrusive.” Dkt. No. 25 at 17.
According to Respondents, “almost every request for documents seeks ‘all
documents’ related to each category for excessively long periods of time.” Id. (emphasis
removed). Respondents argue that “LEG Q’s requests place an enormous burden on the
Respondents by requesting a cumbersome amount of documents spanning a period of
over twenty years or, potentially more” and LEG Q’s “requests are extremely
burdensome for a third party, particularly when most or all of the information could
be obtained from a party to the potential lawsuit, and it is not certain that the lawsuit
will actually be filed or will be allowed to continue past the initial prima facie stage.”
Id. at 18. And, Respondents contend, “LEG Q’s subpoena requests presume
Respondents’ access to relevant information regarding Eco-Bat’s internal governance
and further fail to justify the burdensome costs of production, which would include
mining servers for e-mails and electronic files and retrieving unspecified documents
related to acquisitions and service agreements.” Id.
Respondents further assert that “LEG Q’s requests for depositions are also
extremely burdensome and intrusive” and that, “[b]ecause the topics span twenty-plus
years and various subject matters, simply preparing corporate representatives on the
broad range of topics would be a significant undertaking.” Id. “Moreover, in the case
of at least EB Holdings and Quexco, which are holding companies with no business
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operations, the designated witnesses would have to be Meyers or Lospinoso, both of
whom are purported targets of LEG Q’s derivative action in the U.K.,” and
Respondents argue that “it would be improper to permit LEG Q to take depositions of
those individuals pursuant to § 1782, when LEG Q would not otherwise be permitted
to obtain such discovery at this point in the U.K.” Id. at 18-19.
LEG Q replies that “Respondents have neither substantiated their conclusory
assertions of burden nor met and conferred with LEG Q concerning its requests” and
that “[t]his is fatal” where “[i]t is broadly accepted that courts evaluating Section 1782
applications under Intel’s fourth factor should give no weight to burden objections, or
impose limits on the disclosure sought, where the respondent lays no empirical
foundation for its contention of undue burden, including by estimating the number of
documents that it would be required to provide ..., the number of hours of work by
lawyers ... required, and the expense, and has made no effort to negotiate the scope of
disclosure.” Dkt. No. 28 at 12 (internal quotation marks omitted).
LEG Q further contends that, “while urging the Court to ‘significantly narrow
the scope’ of LEG Q’s requests, [Dkt. No. 25] at 18 n.2, Respondents neither propose
nor justify any specific modifications.” Id. at 13. And LEG Q argues that “Respondents’
conclusory burden arguments are without merit:”
•
•
Respondents falsely assert that many of LEG Q’s requests are
“without any time limitation” or lack “temporal scope,” Opp. at 17,
when the very first instruction in LEG Q’s proposed subpoenas
defines a default time period (January 2006 to the present).
Respondents’ scope objections to LEG Q’s requests beg the question
of how burdensome it would be for them to identify and produce
responsive documents. For example, the burden associated with
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•
•
LEG Q’s request for documents concerning any “actual or potential
conflict of interest” held by Meyers or other Eco-Bat directors, see,
e.g., App. Ex. 1 at Request No. 10, may be minimal, unless the
subject of such director conflicts regularly arose.
As Respondents have acknowledged, EB Holdings and Quexco are
holding companies “with minimal or no business operations.” Opp.
at 6. This implies that they will have only a few custodians (one of
whom is Meyers, who keeps his email on a Quexco server), and
that the burden of collecting and reviewing documents from them
would be minimal.
Respondents’ suggestion that LEG Q can avoid burdening them by
seeking disclosure from Eco-Bat, Opp. at 18, ignores LEG Q’s
showing that Respondents have unique evidence.
Id. (footnotes and citation omitted).
Finally, LEG Q asserts that, although “Respondents also assert that LEG Q’s
deposition requests will result in an ‘extra, advance deposition’ of Meyers or Lospinoso
– intended defendants in LEG Q’s derivative action and allegedly the only ‘employees
or representatives’ of EB Holdings and Quexco – and therefore impose an undue
burden,” “[t]his is a complete red herring” where Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
“30(b)(6) allows each Respondent to designate as a corporate representative any ‘one
or more ... persons who consent to testify on [its] behalf,’ and those persons need not
be ‘officers, directors, or managing agents’ of the Respondents.” Id. at 18-19 (quoting
FED. R. CIV. P. 30(b)(6)).
The Court is persuaded that, on this record, this factor weighs in favor of
granting the Application. Respondents do not specify and quantify the burden that
they assert and do not suggest how the requests should narrowed other than to
complain about the use of “all documents” and the time frame for each document
request. Respondents also appear to seek to shift the burden to LEG Q to establish
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with certainty that Respondents have access to relevant information regarding
Eco-Bat’s internal governance – which, whether required to do so or not, LEG Q has
in fact sought to do in support of its Application. And the Court is not convinced that
Respondents’ hope that the English Derivative Action may not actually be filed or be
allowed to continue past the initial prima facie stage does not make unduly
burdensome any discovery that would permit LEG Q to attempt to support a prima
facie showing if and – as LEG Q reports that it intends – when LEG Q does file the
English Derivative Action.
As for the deposition subpoenas, Respondents can, as LEG Q notes, designate
any appropriate representative for corporate representative testimony, and the Court
does not believe it appropriate under the circumstances to deny a Section 1782
application based on the respondents’ assertion of who they may unilaterally decide to
put up to testify. Under the circumstances, the Court does not find that the taking of
corporate representative depositions of Respondents is in and of itself unduly intrusive,
burdensome, and harassing.
And all of these concerns – including the breadth of topics in the deposition
subpoenas – can properly be addressed through the mechanisms, including objections
and motions, specifically provided by Rule 45. Respondents will not be precluded from
challenging the subpoenas, once issued, under any applicable local rules and the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, including as being unduly burdensome, irrelevant,
or overly broad. See Tex. Keystone, 694 F.3d at 554 (explaining that the Federal Rules
of Civil Procedure govern discovery requests once the district court grants a Section
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1782 application); accord Grupo Mexico SAB de CV v. SAS Asset Recovery, Ltd., 821
F.3d 573, 574 (5th Cir. 2016) (“Significantly, unless the court orders otherwise, the
testimony or documents shall be produced in accord with the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure. 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a).”). But, before filing any subpoena-related motion,
Respondents will be required to first confer by telephone or meets face-to-face with
LEG Q’s counsel to meaningfully discuss each contested discovery dispute in a genuine
effort to avoid the need for any judicial intervention. See, e.g., Dondi Properties Corp.
v. Commerce Savs. & Loan Ass’n, 121 F.R.D. 284, 289-90 (N.D. Tex. 1988); N.D. TEX.
L. CIV. R. 7.l(a).
Accordingly, “informed by the twin aims of the statute, which are to provide
efficient means of assistance [in our federal courts] to participants in international
litigation ... and to encourage foreign countries by example to provide similar means
of assistance to our courts,” Bravo Express, 613 F. App’x at 321 (internal quotation
marks omitted), the Court will exercise its discretion to grant the Application.
III.
Respondents’ Request for a Stay
Further, the Court determines that a stay is not justified here where, as more
fully explained above, LEG Q should not be deprived of the opportunity that Section
1782 properly affords here to seek discovery under Rules 26, 30, and 45 to attempt to
support a prima facie showing in the English Derivative Action.
Conclusion
The Court GRANTS LEG Q LLC’s Application for Judicial Assistance Pursuant
to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 [Dkt. No. 1] and ORDERS that LEG Q LLC is authorized under 28
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U.S.C. § 1782 and Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 26, 30, and 45 to issue – with a
return date of at least 28 days – and serve (1) subpoenas for the production of
documents, information, or objects to Quexco, Inc., EB Holdings II, Inc., Quemetco,
Inc., RSR Corporation, and Revere Smelting & Refining Corporation, substantially in
the form of Dkt. Nos. 1-1 to 1-5, respectively, and (2) subpoenas for deposition
testimony to Quexco, Inc., EB Holdings II, Inc., Quemetco, Inc., RSR Corporation, and
Revere Smelting & Refining Corporation, substantially in the form of Dkt. Nos. 1-6 to
1-10, respectively.
The Court further ORDERS that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and any
applicable local rules will apply to discovery pursuant to this order and that deposition
testimony obtained pursuant to these subpoenas may be taken before any certified
court reporter authorized to take testimony and administer oaths in the State of Texas.
SO ORDERED.
DATED: August 31, 2017
_________________________________________
DAVID L. HORAN
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
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