Judge Scheindlin Decides that the Metadata is “Integral” in FOIA Case: Fmr. Judge Ron Hedges Weighs In

by Dean Gonsowski on February 28th, 2011

Just as when Judge Scheindlin penned Pension Committee, her latest opinion is already garnering a ton of buzz.  In Nat. Day Laborer Org. Network v. United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (“NDLON”), 2011 WL 381625 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 7, 2011) Judge Scheindlin boldly takes on four governmental agencies (ICE, the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Office of Legal Counsel) over metadata production in response to FOIA demands.

In NDLON Plaintiffs submitted identical twenty-one page FOIA requests to each of the four defendant agencies.  And, after some initial missed deadlines and judicial intervention, Plaintiffs sent the defendants a proposed protocol that requested a specific format for the production of electronic records.  Significantly, the proposed protocol was based on the “format demands routinely made by two government entities-the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice Criminal Division” (invoking the old “good for the goose” argument).

Before ruling on the protocol, Judge Scheindlin examined the parties’ efforts to cooperate and she was uniformly underwhelmed:

“As far as I can tell from the record submitted by the parties, the equivalent of a Rule 26(f) conference, at which the parties are required to discuss form of production, was not held and no agreement regarding form of production was ever reached. Nor was a dispute regarding form of production brought to the Court for resolution.”

In evaluating controlling law, the fact that “[n]o federal court has yet recognized that metadata is part of a public record as defined in FOIA” didn’t stop Judge Scheindlin from looking to both state law and the FRCP for guidance.  Next, she relied on Aguilar, which noted that the Sedona Conference abandoned an earlier presumption against the production of metadata in recognition of “‘the need to produce reasonably accessible metadata that will enable the receiving party to have the same ability to access, search, and display the information as the producing party ….’”  She then foreshadowed her subsequent ruling by concluding: “[b]y now, it is well accepted, if not indisputable, that metadata is generally considered to be an integral part of an electronic record.”

The Government, not surprisingly didn’t go down without a fight, arguing that “metadata is substantive information that must be explicitly requested and then reviewed by an agency for possible exemptions.”  In concert they also claimed that “if the requirements of FOIA and the requirements of the Rules conflict, FOIA must trump the Rules.”  Judge Scheindlin wasn’t persuaded, holding that:

“[T]here is no need to decide this question because FOIA does not conflict with the Rules. FOIA is silent with respect to form of production, requiring only that the record be provided in ‘any form or format requested by the person if the record is readily reproducible by the agency in that form or format.’… Defendants’ productions to date have failed to comply with Rule 34or with FOIA.”

In terms of the remedy for the government’s failure, she did cut them some slack:  “Because no metadata was specifically requested in Plaintiffs’ July 23 e-mail, and because this is an issue of first impression, I will not require Defendants to re-produce all of the records with metadata.”  But for future productions she held that the bulk of the ESI be produced in “TIFF image format but with corresponding load files, Bates stamping, and the preservation of “parent-child” relationships (i.e. the association between an attachment and its parent record)” citing the metadata list below for non-email files.

  1. Identifier
  2. File Name
  3. Custodian
  4. Source Device
  5. Source Path
  6. Production Path
  7. Modified Date
  8. Modified Time
  9. Time Offset Value

So, here’s the rub.  The legal populous, not surprisingly, likes bright line rules.  So, when Judge Scheindlin writes (in Footnote 41):  “[w]hile not necessary to the holding in this case, I believe that these are the minimum fields of metadata that should accompany any production of a significant collection of ESI” it’s easy to see how the above nine fields may become a blunt instrument wielded haphazardly by requesting parties.   Not surprisingly, Judge Scheindlin is aware of her mantle and further tries to caveat her holding (in footnote 44):

“To be clear, my Order requiring the use of this Proposed Protocol for future productions-as amended by the specific metadata fields I have required and by the options I have offered the parties regarding the form of production for spreadsheets-is limited to this case. I am certainly not suggesting that the Proposed Protocol should be used as a standard production protocol in all cases. The production of individual static images on a small scale, where no automated review platform is likely to be used, may be perfectly reasonable depending on the scope and nature of the litigation.

The impact of footnote 44 was top of mind when I recently spoke to Fmr. Judge Ron Hedges who chimed in:

“Attorneys must confer with regard to production requirements, as they should before bringing any dispute before a federal court. Moreover, attorneys should recognize that, as Judge Scheindlin said in footnote 44, that the selection of metadata fields to request are case-dependent.  Any attempt to arrive at a ‘universal’ or ‘bright line’ standard for production of metadata ignores the text of Rule 34(b) and the bargaining that occurs in meets-and-confers, and the unique aspects of individual civil actions.”

Despite agreeing with Judge Hedges’ sentiment, the main question in my mind will be whether footnote 44 is given its due weight going forward.  My concern is that, as is oft discussed with her Pension Committee decision, parties may hone in on the bright line test and miss the nuances.  While it’s easy to argue against the folly of this thinking, it may not stop it from happening in the near term.

Finally, in another shout out to the Cooperation Proclamation, Judge Scheindlin takes a swipe at counsel, who forced her to rule on an “e-discovery issue that could have been avoided had the parties had the good sense to ‘meet and confer,’ ‘cooperate’ and generally make every effort to ‘communicate’ as to the form in which ESI would be produced.”

“The quoted words are found in opinion after opinion and yet lawyers fail to take the necessary steps to fulfill their obligations to each other and to the court. While certainly not rising to the level of a breach of an ethical obligation, such conduct certainly shows that all lawyers-even highly respected private lawyers, Government lawyers, and professors of law-need to make greater efforts to comply with the expectations that courts now demand of counsel with respect to expensive and time-consuming document production. Lawyers are all too ready to point the finger at the courts and the Rules for increasing the expense of litigation, but that expense could be greatly diminished if lawyers met their own obligations to ensure that document production is handled as expeditiously and inexpensively as possible. This can only be achieved through cooperation and communication.”

In the end, NDLON will continue to generate a ton of discussion (as did Zubulake and Pension Committee).  While this decision won’t single-handedly end the metadata discussion it will hopefully serve as a launching point for more clarity down the road.  For this, practitioners on both sides of the debate should be thankful.

One Response to “Judge Scheindlin Decides that the Metadata is “Integral” in FOIA Case: Fmr. Judge Ron Hedges Weighs In”

  1. Government Appeals NDLON Metadata Case – Does FOIA Trump the FCRP? | e-discovery 2.0 Says:

    [...] seems like just yesterday that I wrote a post discussing Judge Scheindlin’s latest electronic discovery opinion in Nat. Day Laborer Org. [...]

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