PacifiCorp v. Gas Transmission Northwest Corporation, No. 3:2010cv00099 - Document 409 (D. Or. 2012)

Court Description: OPINION & ORDER: Nmihwest's Bill of Costs 371 is Granted in Part and Denied in part, and Northwest is awarded its cost in the amount of $52,773.81. Northwest's motion for attorney's fees 375 is Granted in Part and Denied in Part, and Northwest is awarded its attorney's fees in the amount of $27,148.36. Signed on 12/10/12 by Magistrate Judge Paul Papak. (gm)

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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON PACIFICORP, an Oregon corporation, Plaintiff, 3:1 0-cv-00099-PK OPINION AND ORDER NORTHWEST PIPELINE GP, a Delaware Partnership, and GAS TRANSMISSION NORTHWEST CORPORATION, a California corporation, Defendants. PAPAK, Judge: Plaintiff Pacificorp brought this action alleging state law claims for negligence, negligence/res ipsa loquitor, trespass, and nuisance against Northwest Pipeline ("Northwest") and negligence /res ipsa loquitor and breach of contract against Gas Transmission Northwest ("GTN"), arising from shut -downs of the natural gas power generation plant in Hermiston, Oregon purportedly caused by compressor oil in the gas supply that contaminated the generator turbines. Previously this court granted a motion for summary judgment eliminating Northwest as a defendant in the case, leaving GTN as the only remaining defendant. (#361.) Now before the Page 1- OPINION AND ORDER court is Northwest's bill of costs (#371) and motion for attorney's fees (#375). For the reasons stated below, both motions are granted in part and denied in part. LEGAL STANDARDS I. Bill of Costs The entitlement of a prevailing pmty in a federal lawsuit to recover its costs, other than attorney's fees, is governed by Federal Civil Procedure Rule 54(d)(l). In relevant part, Rule 54(d)(!) provides that such costs "should be allowed to the prevailing party" except where federal statute, the rules of civil procedure, or a court order "provides otherwise." Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d)(l ). "By its terms, the rule creates a presumption in favor of awarding costs to a prevailing party, but vests in the district court discretion to refuse to award costs." Association of Mexican-American Educators v. California, 231 F.3d 572, 591 (9th Cir. 2000), citing National lrifo. Servs., Inc. v. TRW, Inc., 51 F.3d 1470, 1471 (9th Cir. 1995). "A district court need not give affirmative reasons for awarding costs; instead, it need only find that the reasons for denying costs are not sufficiently persuasive to overcome the presumption in favor of an award." Save Our Valley v. Sound Transit, 335 F.3d 932, 945 (9th Cir. 2003). However, in the event a comi declines to award a prevailing pmiy its costs under Rule 54(d)(!), its reasons for so declining must be specified. See Association ofivlexican-American Educators, 231 F.3d at 591, quoting Subscription Television, Inc. v. Southern Cal. Theatre Owners Ass'n, 576 F.2d 230, 234 (9th Cir. 1978). It is the burden of the party against whom costs are to be taxed to establish grounds for denying award of costs. See Save Our Valley, 335 F.3d at 944-945, citing National Info. Servs. v. TljJV, Inc., 51 F.3d 1470, 1471-1472 (9th Cir. 1995). The expenses that the district courts are authorized to tax as costs under Rule 54( d)(l) are enumerated at 28 U.S.C. § 1920. See 28 U.S. C.§ 1920; see also Crmtford Filling Co. v. JT Page 2- OPINION AND ORDER Gibbons, Inc., 482 U.S. 437,441-445 (1987). Although the district courts have broad discretion to allow or disallow a prevailing party to recoup the ordinary costs oflitigation, the court may not rely on that discretion to tax expenses beyond those enumerated at Section 1920. See id.; see also Frederick v. City ofPortland, 162 F.R.D. 139, 142 (D. Or. 1995). Nevertheless, the district courts enjoy independent discretion to construe and interpret the expenses enumerated at Section 1920. See Aljlex Corp. v. Underwriters Lab., Inc., 914 F.2d 175, 177-178 (9th Cir. 1990) (per curiam). II. Attorney's Fees Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 provides that if a motion to compel disclosure or discovety is granted, "the court must, after giving an opportunity to be heard, require the party or deponent whose conduct necessitated the motion, the party or attomey advising that conduct, or both to pay the movant's reasonable expenses incurred in making the motion, including attorney's fees." Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(A). Attorney's fees are not to be awarded when any of the following exceptions applies: "(i) the movant filed the motion before attempting in good faith to obtain the disclosure or discovery without court action; (ii) the opposing party's nondisclosure, response, or objection was substantially justified; or (iii) other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust." I d. Rule 3 7 also provides for sanctions against a party that destroys relevant evidence in violation of a discovery order. United States ex rei. Berglund v. Boeing Co., 835 F. Supp. 2d 1020, 1050 (D. Or. 2011) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2); Leon v. IDX Sys. Corp., 464 F.3d 951, 958 (9th Cir. 2006). However, Rule 37(b)(2) does not authorize sanctions for more general discovety abuse when a party has not specifically disobeyed a court order or instruction. See Unigard Sec. Ins. Co. v. Lakewood Eng'g & iYifg. Corp., 982 F.2d 363, 368 (9th Cir. 1992). Page 3- OPINION AND ORDER In addition, under its inherent powers a district court may impose sanctions in the fonn of attomey's fees against a party or counsel who acts in "bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons." Leon v. IDX Sys. Corp., 464 F.3d 951, 961 (9th Cir. 2006); Berglund, 835 F. Supp. 2d 1020, 1049, (D. Or. 2011). Before awarding attomey's fees as sanctions, the court must make an express finding that the sanctioned party's behavior constituted or was tantamount to bad faith. Id DISCUSSION I. Bill of Costs Northwest requests an award of its costs in the total amount of$71,445.58. This amount includes $200 for clerk of court fees, $37,631.43 for deposition and hearing transcripts, and $33,614.26 for printing, exemplification, and copying of materials. PacifiCorp objects to many of these costs, including costs associated with: deposition transcripts not necessary for Nmthwest to prevail on its summary judgment motion; deposition videotaping; the summmy judgment hearing transcript; copying potential deposition exhibits; tabs, binders, and folders used to assemble copies; copying documents provided to expe1ts; copying Judge's Working Binders; unspecified and duplicative copying; and all electronic discovery fees unrelated to conve1ting and Bates-numbering documents for production to PacifiCorp. I address each aspect of disputed costs in turn. A. Deposition and Hearing Transcripts 28 U.S.C. § 1920(2) provides recovery for "[flees for printed or electronically recorded transcripts necessarily obtained for use in the case." 1. Deposition Transcripts Deposition transcripts are necessarily obtained under § 1920(2) if the depositions were Page 4- OPINION AND ORDER introduced into evidence at trial, were required for a dispositive motion, or if taking the deposition was reasonable as part of the pretrial preparation of the case, as opposed to merely for counsel's convenience. United States ex rei. Berglund v. Boeing Co., No. 03:02--cv-193-AC, 2012 WL 697140, at *2 (D. Or. Feb. 29, 2012). PacifiCorp, however, seeks to limit recovery for deposition transcripts to only those necessary to support the particular argument on which Northwest succeeded. Because Northwest prevailed on its "no duty" argument, PacifiCorp argues that Nmihwest is not entitled to any of its deposition and hearing transcript costs which pertained to developing Northwest's factual arguments. Altematively, PacifiCorp argues that Northwest is only entitled to costs for the six depositions it actually cited in connection with the "no-duty" argument. In suppmi of this contention, PacifiCorp relies on a recent decision by Judge Mosman indicating that depositions pertaining to the merits of a case are not necessarily obtained under § 1920(2) when the court dismissed the action on purely jurisdictional grounds. See AH}vf v. Portland Pub. Sch., Case No. 3:11-cv-00739-MO, slip op. at *3 (D. Or. Sept. 5, 2012.) But Judge Mosman cited no cases in adopting his narrow construction of§ 1920(2) and I decline to apply it. Moreover, Nmihwest's successful "no duty" argument went directly to the merits of the case, whereas in AH1vi defendant prevailed because the court lacked jurisdiction over the action altogether. Finally, the relevant inquiry for § 1920(2) is "whether the depositions reasonably seemed necessary at the time they were taken," not in retrospect after lcaming how the case was ultimately resolved. Hunt v. City ofPortland, No. CV 08-802-AC, 2011 WL 3555772, at *6 (D. Or. Aug. 11, 2011). Northwest reasonably pursued depositions relating to several theories of defense at the outset of this case, not only its argument that it owed no duty of care to PacifiCorp. I therefore find that $37,429.57 Page 5- OPINION AND ORDER ofNorthwest's deposition transcript costs are recoverable under§ 1920(2). 1 2. Videography for Deposition PacifiCorp next objects to costs for videography at the depositions of John Roscher and Ed Towes, which it argues was unnecessary. However, these depositions were taken by PacifiCorp and used primarily in PacifiCorp's motions to compel and motion for summaty judgment. (Skelton Dec!., #373, at I 0, 12). And PacifiCorp-- not Northwest- ordered them to be video recorded. Jd at n.l. As a result, it appears that Notihwest paid for both the preparation of traditional deposition transcripts as well some portion of the additional costs incuned because of PacifiCorp's decision to videotape these depositions. The standard rationale for denying costs for a patiy's own decision to videotape depositions therefore does not apply in this instance. Cf Berglund, 2012 WL 697140, at *3; Davico v. Glaxosmithkline Pharmaceuticals, CV No. 05-6052-TC, 2008 WL 624049, at *2 (D.Or. Jan. 23, 2008) ("In shoti, if a party wishes to videotape a deposition that is not a perpetuation deposition, it may certainly do so at its own expense, but this court is not going to pass on what it views to be an unnecessmy expense to the other pmiy by awarding such in a bill of costs."). The $1,180.00 in video deposition charges are appropriately taxed. 3. Summary Judgment Hearing Transcript PacifiCorp objects to Northwest taxing the cost of producing the transcript of the hearing on the patiies summary judgment motions, arguing that Notihwest made no filings between the date of the hearing and the date the couti granted Northwest's summaty judgment motion. 1 This amount reduces Northwest's request of $37,631.42 by $201.85, the amount improperly included in the cost of the transcript for Bany Orgill's deposition. Compare (Skelton Dec!., #373, ~ r) with (Skelton Dec!., #373, Ex. Bat 18.) Page 6- OPINION AND ORDER Northwest insists that the summary judgment hearing transcript was necessary for pretrial preparation and for review of the court's order on summmy judgment. Because the court's lengthy summmy judgment order was self-explanatory and because the content of the summary judgment oral argument itself was never at issue, I agree with PacifiCorp that the hearing transcript was unnecessmy and improperly taxed under§ 1920(2), even though hearing transcripts may be necessary in other circumstances. See, e.g., Berglund, 2012 WL 697140, at *2 (transcripts from earlier hearings were necessary because defendant was forced to defend against assetiions made by plaintiff during oral argument). Therefore, Nmihwest may not recover the $456.25 for the summmy judgment hearing transcript. B. Printing, Exemplification, and Copying 28 U.S. C.§ 1920 also provides for taxing of"[f]ees and disbursements for printing and witnesses" as well as "[f]ees for exemplification and the costs of making copies of any materials where the copies are necessarily obtained for use in the case." 28 U.S.C. § 1920(3),(4). 1. Potential Deposition Exhibits PacifiCorp objects generally to $5,764.13 in costs for copies of"potential deposition exhibits"- relevant documents that were taken to depositions about which witnesses may have had knowledge. (Skelton Dec!., #373, ~4.b.i.) This categmy necessarily includes documents that were eventually marked as exhibits in the depositions, which had to be re-copied once they were marked. !d. PacifiCorp contends that costs for these copies are not recoverable because they were made only for the convenience ofNorthwest's attomeys and amount to costs of attorney preparation for depositions. I disagree. An attomey must anive at deposition with four copies of any document that may be marked as an exhibit: one each for herself, the deponent, opposing Page 7- OPINION AND ORDER counsel, and the court repmier. The fact that some of these potential deposition exhibits never made it into the record does not diminish their necessity. See Adidas Am., Inc. v. Payless Shoesource, Inc., Nos. 01-1655-KI, 03-1116-KI, 2009 WL 302246, at *4 (D. Or. Feb. 9, 2009) (citing Haagen-Dazs Co., Inc. v. Double Rainbow Gourmet Ice Creams, Inc., 920 F.2d 587, 588 (9th Cir.1990) (per curiam) (allowing costs for reproducing documents even though documents were not introduced as evidence to support summary judgment motion). Additionally, PacifiCorp objects to ce1iain copying costs within this categmy, arguing that Northwest's documentation fails to adequately describe the purpose for these copies. Indeed, several entries in a chart created by Northwest summarizing these costs list copying of potential deposition exhibits, but do not identifY the name of the deponent, and the corresponding invoices themselves do not even indicate that the copying was meant for depositions. (Skelton Dec!., #373, at Ex. F at 1-5, 7 .) However, in a case of this size with so many copies being made, Northwest's counsel's attestation that these charges are for potential deposition exhibits is sufficient. See Adidas Am., Inc, 2009 WL 302246, at *4 (denying objection to copy charges that were not specifically described because: "In a case of this size and nature, it would not be possible for a law fi1m to track the nature of each copy and report the information on a per copy basis to the comi in a bill of costs. Likewise, it would not be possible for the comi to review each copy charge and determine if it was reasonably necessary for use in the case, as opposed to a convenience forcoun~el. There are just too many documents to allow this type of review. I accept counsels' statements in their declarations explaining that the copying costs were necessarily incuned."). Therefore I decline to reduce Northwest's costs of$5,764.13 for copying potential deposition exhibits. Page 8- OPINION AND ORDER 2. Marked Deposition Exhibits Although PacifiCorp does not object generally to the Nmihwest's taxing of copying costs for two sets of marked deposition exhibits, PacifiCorp objects to specific invoices that purportedly lack descriptions of the purpose for the copying. PacifiCmp also objects to duplicative copying costs, asse1iing that Nmihwest has sought to recover for copying of five or more sets of deposition exhibits. However, Northwest's counsel declares that each of these invoices correspond with copying of marked deposition exhibits and that Nmihwest seeks compensation only for two sets of such exhibits out of the five sets that it produced. (Skelton Decl., #373, at 15, Ex. E.) I accept this explanation generally, except with respect to two invoices dated 8/31/11, which indicate that Nmihwest made ten copies of exhibits 220-255, rather than the standard five sets. !d., Ex. E at 10, 11. Accordingly, I reduce Nmihwest's costs for these marked exhibits by $900, representing the cost of the extra five sets of copies of exhibits 220-255. Jd., Ex. Eat 10. 3. Binders, Tabs, and Folders PacifiCorp next objects to $2,954.55 in so-called "office supply costs," including tabs, file folders, binders, "client communication" related to copying, and "Manual Formatting/Processing of spreadsheets and problematic files" related to copying. PacifiCorp contends that these costs are considered a pati of a law firm's overhead and are not necessarily incuned under §1920, citing Avila v. Willits Env't, No. C 99-03941 SI, 2009 WL 4254367, at *3 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 24, 2009). But that case addresses the recoverability of labor and machine setup costs where a pmiy does not have access to documents and has to pay a govemment agency to make copies on its behalf, not the types of charges at issue here. I d. Rather, a recent decision in Page 9- OPINION AND ORDER the Federal Circuit suggests that tabs, binders, and the like are recoverable under§ 1920(4), so long as they are related to assembling documents whose reproduction is also necessaty under Section 1920. See Synopsys, Inc. v. Ricoh Co., Ltd. (In re Ricoh Co. Patent Litigation), 661 F.3d 1361, 1368 n.3 (Fed. Cir. 2011). This is eminently reasonable- having stack upon stack of photocopied documents without binders to contain them or tabs to divide makes the copies themselves almost useless. Northwest is entitled to recover these costs. 4. Copies of Documents for Expert Review PacifiCmp objects to $1,134.94 for copying of documents for expert review, which PacifiCorp characterizes as copies made solely for the convenience of attomeys. See Arboireau v. Adidas Salomon AG, No. 01-1 05-ST, 2002 WL 31466564, at *6 (D. Or. June 14, 2002) ("recoverable copying costs do not include extra copies of filed papers, correspondence, and copies of cases since these are prepared for the convenience of the attorneys") (internal quotation omitted). Northwest, however, explains that these documents were initially provided by PacifiC01p to Northwest in electronic fmm. (Skelton Dec!., #373, at 16.) Nmihwest then had to print these documents in order to provide them to its experts, who were retained to rebut opinions offered by PacifiCorp experts. Id. Comis in this district have awarded copying costs for "expe1i repmis and related documentation." Adidas Am., Inc., 2009 WL 302246, at *5. Although finished expe1i reports are not exactly the same as the materials Northwest provided to its experts for initial review in this case, I still find that copying of such materials is not just a matter of convenience for counsel, but rather is necessmy when engaging an expe1i witness. PacifiCorp argues that Nmihwest made duplicate copies of certain documents, since an invoice for one copy job indicate two sets of copies were made and does not identify which expert(s) were to receive Page 10- OPINION AND ORDER the documents. (Skelton Dec!., #373, at Ex. G.) Northwest, however, indicates that these documents were produced for two separate expe11s. I d., Ex. G at 1. Again, in a case of this complexity, I accept Nmihwest's representations that it seeks compensation for only one set of copies per expert and I decline to reduce Nmihwest's costs for copying of documents for expert review. See Adidas Am., Inc., 2009 WL 302246, at *5. 5. Judge Working Binders PacifiCorp objects to $1,738.56 for coping of Judge Working Binders, arguing that this charge commingles pe1missible costs for judge's copies on Nmihwest's own motion with impe1missible costs for working copies of other parties' motions, and provides no way of determining which costs are associated with judge's as opposed to attorney's copies. Northwest explains that while it made multiple copies of these documents, the costs sought in this category correspond only with judge's copies. (Skelton Dec!., #373, at 16-17.) For example, where Northwest made four copies of certain documents, it seeks recovery for only one set. But this explanation does not address the first issue PacifiCorp raises. Indeed, two of the three invoices indicate copies were made to create working versions of pleadings filed by multiple parties, not just by Nmihwest. (Skelton Dec!., #373, Ex. H, at 1-4) ("Combined work for NWP, GTN, PacifiCorp, Confidential and Declaration sets" and "GTN Spoliation Working Binder & NWP Spoliation Working Binder"). Northwest is not required to submit judge's copies on behalf of other pm1ies in the case. I therefore only allow costs that are identified as judge's copies that Nmihwest was required to submit- $57.89 for judge's copies of Northwest's opposition to PacifiCorp's summary judgment motion. See Berglund, 2012 WL 697140, at *4 (denying copying costs where the com1 cannot determine which among the requested costs could be Page II- OPINION AND ORDER awarded). Nmihwest's request is thus reduced by $1,680.67 with respect to costs for copying of these documents. 6. Electronic Discovery Fees PacifiCorp also objects to most ofNorthwest's costs relating to electronic discovety. PacifiCorp concedes that Northwest is entitled to recover costs for convetiing its own documents into searchable PDFs and Bates stamping those documents in preparation for producing them to PacifiCorp. However, PacifiCorp resists other ofNmihwest's costs relating to electronic discovery, namely $16,091.10 in payments to attomeys and staff in the K&L Gates e-Dat group and $951.26 in data storage costs. In recognition of the growing use of electronic discovety, in 2008 Congress amended § 1920(4) from "[a] judge or clerk of any court of the United States may tax as costs the following: ... fees for exemplifications and copies of papers" to "fees for exemplification and the costs of making copies of any materials." Jardin v. DATAllegro, Inc., No. 08-CV-1462-IEG (WVG), 2011 WL 4835742, at *5 (S.D. Cal. Oct. 12, 2011). Consequently, where circumstances require conversion of electronic data into a different format to share with parties during discovety, "exemplification" has been deemed to encompass all costs stemming from that process of conversion. !d. at *6 (cost of convetiing electronic discovety to a new data fmmat for electronic production in lieu of making conventional copies taxable under§ 1920(4)). Courts recognize that costs of technical expetis required to physically prepare and produce electronic discovery may be properly taxed tmder § 1920(4) because these services are substantially different from those usually offered by attorneys or paralegals. See Tibbie v. Edison Jnt'l, No. CV 07-5359 SVW (AGRx), 2011 WL 3759927, at *6 (C.D. Cal. Aug. 22, 2011); Jardin, 2011 WL 4835742, Page 12- OPINION AND ORDER at *6-8. However, fees for "intellectual effmis" involved in production of documents are not taxable under § 1920(4), such as legal fees charged by attorneys or paralegals who review documents to determine responsiveness, privilege, and confidentiality designations. Jardin, 2011 WL 4835742, at *7-8 (quoting Romero v. Pomona, 883 F.2d 1418, 1428 (9th Cir.l989)). Accordingly, third-party consulting services limited to technical issues related to the physical production of infom1ation- and unrelated to review of documents or strategic decision-makingare discoverable. Jd at *8-*9. Here, Northwest describes several steps in its electronic discovery process for which it incuned costs (or fees) for services from its vender, the K&L Gates e-DAT group. First, theeDAT group helped Notihwest collect all documents from Northwest's servers that could potentially be responsive to numerous Pacifi Corp requests for production and then wim10w down that collection significantly by eliminating redundant or irrelevant documents. (Skelton Dec!., #373 at 17.) Second, the e-DAT group processed the material into a document database. Id at 18. Third, attorneys reviewed the material and mm·ked responsive content.' Id. Fourth, theeDAT group Bates labeled the documents for production. !d. Fifth, the e-DAT group conve1ied the documents into searchable PDFs, a format reviewable by PacifiCorp. !d. Last, prior to and during this whole process, the e-DAT group stored Northwest's electronic materials on its servers, along with documents produced electronically by other pmiies. Jd. From the authority discussed above, it is clear that the first step in the electronic discovery process - collecting documents and culling them for responsiveness- involves the type of"intellectua1 effotis" that are not taxable under §1920(4). Even though technical expertise was 2 Notihwest does not seek to recover costs for this attorney review. Page 13- OPINION AND ORDER undoubtedly required for the e-DAT group to search Northwest's servers, legal expe1iise was also necessary to formulate those searches based on discovery requests and to "ensure all material responsive to PacifiCorp's requests was collected." (Skelton Dec!., #373, at 18.) The fact that two of the members of the e-DAT team are attorneys at K&L Gates is relevant, but not dispositive. Rather, the fact that these attorneys and other non-attorney staff billed for such activities as "analyz[ing]" documents and strategizing about "structuring email search protocols," indicates that their expertise was not purely technical and was also aimed at identifYing responsive materials. (Skelton Dec!., #373, Ex. I, at I 1, 43-44, 50). Costs associated with these activities are not taxable. It is less clear whether costs incurred in processing the selected electronic documents into a useful database are taxable. Some comis find that database creation is not taxable. See },;fann v. Heckler & Koch Def, Inc., No. 1:08cv611 (JCC), 2011 WL 1599580, at *8-9 (E.D. Va. Apr. 28, 2011) (cost of having a vendor compile electronic files into an electronic database was not taxable); Kellogg Brown & Root Int'l, Inc. v. Altanmia Commercial i'viktg. Co. W.L.L., No. H-07-2684, 2009 WL 1457632, at *5 (S.D. Tex. May26, 2009) ("The steps of extracting data from an electronic medium and storing that data for possible use in discovery is more like the work of an attorney or legal assistant in locating and segregating documents that may be responsive to discove1y than it is like copying those documents for use in a case."); Summit Tech., Inc. v. Nidek Co., 435 F.3d 1371, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2006). However, other courts have allowed recove1y for electronic storage of documents generally. See Adidas Am., Inc., 2009 WL 302246, at *6 ("We are well past the day when all copies are basic photocopies. The electronic storage of documents, especially when they are numerous, allows a more efficient way Page 14- OPINION Al'ID ORDER to litigate the case and to present the evidence at trial.") Because the task of conve1iing alreadyselected files into a database is a purely technical one, I find that these costs are taxable. Northwest concedes that the third step- review and marking by attomeys- is not taxable. And PacifiCorp concedes the that fourth and fifth steps- Bates stamping and conversion to searchable PDFs- are taxable. Finally, the storage of electronic data throughout this process is obviously required to prepare and produce the requested electronic discovery, requires no intellectual efforts, and may be properly taxed under § 1920(4). Accordingly, Northwest's electronic discovery costs must be reduced to eliminate costs associated with the initial step of collecting and nanowing potentially responsive documents from Northwest's own servers. Admittedly, it is not obvious to the court how to separate these costs from others that are taxable. However, from the records provided by Nmihwest, it appears that the "e-Dat Charges" totaling $16,091.10 are a fair approximation for the intellectual efforts necessary in the initial step of the electronic discovery process, while the "ESI Conversion & Data Storage" charges totaling $4,597.90 fairly approximate the more technical aspects of database processing, Bates stamping, and conversion. (Skelton Dec!., #373, Ex. I at 1.) Nmihwest's costs are thus reduced by $16,091.10. In sum, Nmihwest's total bill of costs seeking $71,445.58 must be reduced by $18,671.77, yielding a total award of costs in the amount of$52,773.81. II. Attorney's Fees Pursuant to Rule 37 and the coUJi's inherent powers, Nmihwest seeks attorney's fees and expenses of$134,741.78 as sanctions for PacifiCorp's spoliation of evidence and discovery violations. Concerning spoliation, Northwest argues that PacifiCorp's willful destruction of key Page 15- OPINION AND ORDER physical evidence in this case required Northwest to engage in significant additional investigation and motion practice. Similarly, Northwest contends that Northwest withholding of discoverable documents- the 2008 Exponent Root Cause Analysis, Black & Veatch and Anamet Reports- and inadequate preparation of its 30(b)(6) witness unnecessmily lengthened discovery and required Nmihwest to incur additional attomey's fees. A. Procedural Issues Before addressing the merits ofNorthwest's motion, I pause to consider several procedural issues. PacifiCorp argues that the comi cannot now award attorney's fees for spoliation or discovery violations because the couti previously denied Nmihwest's requests for such fees. PacifiCorp points out that Nmihwest explicitly sought attomey's fees in its motions to compel, and also requested any "just, equitable, and proper" relief in its earlier spoliation sanctions motion, which ostensibly implied a request for attomey's fees. (#144 at 3, #145 at 22, #180 at 2-3, #279 at 2-3.) And PacifiCorp observes the comi failed to award Notihwest attorney's fees when it granted the various motions to compel and denied the spoliation sanction motion as moot after dismissing Northwest from the case. (Opinion and Order, #170, Opinion and Order, #210, Opinion and Order, #361.) These previous rulings, however, do not preclude Northwest's cmTent motion for fees because the comi never expressly addressed the issue of fees, nor made any findings concerning the entitlement to fees. To the extent that the couti inadvertently overlooked those requests for attorney's fees at the time, the couti considers them now. PacifiCorp raises two other timing concerns. First, PacifiCorp argues that Notihwest cannot effectively "reopen" its spoliation sanctions motion by now requesting monetary Page 16- OPINION AND ORDER sanctions, because the court has already denied Northwest's spoliation sanctions as moot. This is just another variation on the preclusion theme. The comt made numerous findings about the nature ofPacifiCorp's spoliation, but denied Northwest's motion for spoliation sanctions as moot because Northwest's requested relief- exclusion of evidence and adverse inference instructions - was obviated by the comt' s dismissal of all claims against Northwest. The court's denial of Northwest's earlier spoliation sanctions motion as moot has no preclusive effect on the court's ability to grant a different form of relief. Second, PacifiCorp contends that Northwest's cunent motion for attomey's fees as a spoliation sanction is untimely because the comt previously indicated that "(s]poliation issue[s] may also be presented either along with dispositive motions or as part of motions in limine that will be filed after preparation of a pretrial order." (Opinion and Order, #170, at 13.) PacifiCorp ignores the immediately preceding sentence from the coutt's ruling, however, which provides that "the comt will address any spoliation arguments as they are presented by motion and set appropriate schedules for briefing." I d. Nmihwest' s current motion for attorney's fees does not violate any court scheduling order. B. Spoliation Nmihwest moves for attomey's fees as a spoliation sanction primarily under the court's inherent powers. See Leon v. IDXSys. Corp., 464 F.3d 951, 961 (9th Cir. 2006) (under its inherent powers the district court may impose spoliation sanctions, including attorney's fees, in the fotm of attorney's fees against a patty or counsel who acts in "bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons"). In Leon, the Ninth Circuit held that a district court" must make an express finding that the sanctioned party's behavior constituted or was tantamount to bad faith"' as a prerequisite to awarding attomey's fees as a spoliation sanction. 464 F.3d at 961 Page 17- OPINION AND ORDER (quoting Primus Auto. Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Batarse, 115 F.3d 644, 648 (9th Cir. 1997)). "Bad faith ... includes a broad range of willful improper conduct." Fink v. Gomez, 239 F.3d 989, 992 (9th Cir. 2001). Here, PacifiCorp argues that attorney's fees are unjustified because the court has never made the requisite finding that Pacifi Corp acted in bad faith. The Ninth Circuit recognizes that willful spoliation of evidence may be the type of behavior that constitutes or is tantamount to bad faith conduct. In Leon, for example, an employment discrimination plaintiff was allowed to keep his work laptop while on unpaid leave, but was wamed to preserve all data on the laptop. 464 F.3d at 955-956. Instead, he intentionally erased portions ofthe laptop's hard drive that contained "personal files," purportedly to protect his privacy, although the erased files also included pornography and other evidence potentially relevant to his employment claims. Id. The district comt dismissed the action under its inherent powers as a sanction for the plaintiffs spoliation of evidence, finding that plaintiff had acted in bad faith, and also imposed a monetary sanction against plaintiff for the costs of investigation and litigating the spoliation issue. !d. at 956-957. On appeal, the Ninth Circuit reviewed the district comt's factual finding of bad faith, identifying no clear enor. !d. at 959. The Ninth Circuit recognized the district court found plaintiffs behavior "amounted to willful spoliation" because he knew he was under a duty to preserve the data on his laptop but "intentionally" deleted many files. !d. Northwest also cites other cases in this circuit that impose attorney's fees as spoliation sanctions where a patty commits willful spoliation, even though the comt did not make an explicit finding of "bad faith," indicating that willful destiUction of potentially relevant evidence may be conduct tantamount to bad faith. For example, in United States ex rel. Berglund v. Page 18- OPINION AND ORDER Boeing Co., 835 F. Supp. 2d 1020 (D. Or. 2011), the district court determined that plaintiff willfully destroyed emails and discarded several hard drives that were relevant to his claim against defendant - one of which the court specifically ordered him to preserve- and lied about those activities. Jd at 1054. The district comi never explicitly found that plaintiff acted in "bad faith," but nonetheless ordered plaintiff to pay defendant for the cost of investigating plaintiffs destruction of evidence. Id at 1055. Similarly, in Kopitar v. Nationwide ivlut. ins. Co., 266 F.R.D. 493, 497, 501 (E.D. Cal. 201 0), the court imposed attorney's fees associated with bringing a spoliation motion pursuant to the court's inherent power after finding that the plaintiff committed "willful spoliation," even though the comi made no express finding of bad faith. There, plaintiff had clear notice that he needed to preserve a mold-damaged wall in his home and allow defendant's experts to be present if he repaired or demolished the wall, but tore down the wall anyway without notifying defendant. Jd at 497. I do not agree with Northwest, however, that in the Ninth Circuit willful spoliation is necessarily tantamount to bad faith conduct. Each of the cases discussed above featured a higher level of misconduct than mere willful destruction of potentially relevant evidence. See Leon, 464 F.3d at 959. Rather, the court could infer that plaintiffs in those cases had an improper purpose for destroying the evidence, based on the fact that each contravened clear instructions to preserve evidence and/or destroyed evidence that was obviously relevant to ongoing litigation. For instance, in Leon, the plaintiff was warned of the need to preserve data on his laptop during litigation. Likewise, in Berglund, the plaintiff deleted relevant data after the stmi of litigation, disobeyed a court's order to preserve certain evidence, and even lied about that conduct. And in Kopilar, the plaintiff ignored a clear warning not to alter relevant evidence without the defendant Page 19- OPINION AND ORDER being present. Thus, these cases imposing attorney's fee sanctions even without an express bad faith (or "tantamount to bad faith") finding still compmi with the Ninth Circuit's jurisprudence, which recognizes that the type of bad faith necessary to impose attorney's fees as a sanction under the comi's inherent powers requires conduct substantially motived by an improper purpose. See Fink, 239 F.3d at 992 ("a finding of bad faith does not require that the legal and factual basis for the action prove totally frivolous; where a litigant is substantially motivated by vindictiveness, obduracy, or mala fides, the assertion of a colorable claim will not bar the assessment of attorney's fees.") In this case, I previously found that PacifiCorp spoliated fuel nozzles, the fuel scrubber, oil and gas samples, and other physical evidence, which justified my imposition of evidentiary sanctions under the court's inherent powers because PacifiCorp had willfully destroyed potentially relevant evidence. (Opinion and Order, #361, at 20-40.) But that finding does not mean I must now conclude PacifiCorp acted in bad faith when it destroyed each piece of evidence. PacifiCorp destroyed the majority of the plant's damaged fuel nozzles by refurbishing them for future use, but failed to notify defendants that they were doing so. While this conduct was unquestionably willful, it was not necessarily infected with an improper motive, especially given the repetitive outages, the high cost of buying replacement nozzles, and the need to ensure back-up nozzles remained available to avoid future extended outages. Nor was PacifiCorp's destruction of the gas and liquid samples, the pig, filter cartridge, reference oil, conosion samples, and metallurgical samples tantamount to bad faith. These original samples appear to have been discarded after testing of them was conducted and results provided. By contrast, I conclude that PacifiCorp possessed some improper motive for destroying Page 20- OPINION AND ORDER the fuel scrubber. First, PacifiCorp scrapped the scrubber well after this litigation commenced. And unlike with the damaged fuel nozzles, PacifiCorp had no credible explanation for destroying this obviously relevant piece of physical evidence. Consequently, I find that PacifiCorp's destruction of the fuel scrubber was tantamount to bad faith conduct, but that PacifiCorp's destruction of other evidence in this case, while willful, was not tantamount to bad faith. Accordingly, Northwest is entitled only to a portion of attomey's fees and costs incurred in investigating and challenging PacifiCorp's spoliation. C. Withholding Discovery 1. Documents N01ihwest argues that PacifiCorp's failure to timely produce the 2008 Exponent Root Cause Analysis, the Black & Veatch Rep01i, and the Anamet Report required Northwest to move to compel those documents and incur unnecessary attomey' s fees that should be awarded under Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(A) and the court's inherent powers. 3 Rule 37 provides that a court should not impose reasonable expenses associated with filing a successful motion to compel discovery if "the opposing party's nondisclosure, response, or objection was substantially justified" or if "other circumstances make an award of expenses mljust." Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(A)(ii),(iii). "A request for discovery is 'substantially justified' under [Rule 37(a)(5)(A)(ii)] if reasonable people could differ as to whether the party requested must comply." Reygo Pac. Corp. v. Johnston Pump Co., 680 F.2d 647, 649 (9th Cir. 1982), overruled on other grounds by 1\<lolski v. Evergreen Dynasty Corp., 500 F.3d 1047, 1055 n.2 (9th Cir. 2007) (citing C. Wright and A. 3 Although Notihwest invokes the court's inherent powers to award fees associated with successful motions to compel, both parties' arguments focus on the standard for awarding such fees under Rul 37(a)(5)(A). Page 21- OPINION At\ID ORDER Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure s 2288). The losing party bears the burden to demonstrate that its discovery conduct was substantially justified. See Adv. Comm. Notes to 1970 Amendment to former Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(4). a. 2008 Exponent Root Cause Analysis The 2008 Exponent Root Cause Analysis was a 2008 report authored by several scientists at Exponent, including Dr. Kemal. The report, labeled as a "draft," discussed the nature of various outages at the Hermiston plant and the firm's conclusions about the causes of those outages. Dr. Kemal's 2011 Rule 26 expert report copied much of the text of the 2008 report verbatim, but omitted several conclusions suggesting PacifiCorp's own negligence contributed to those outages. Starting in June 2011, Northwest inquired about the existence of a root cause analysis of the plant outages and also requested production of all reports provided to PacifiCorp's testifying experts. PacifiCorp did not reveal the existence of the 2008 report at that time. During a July 27,2011 hearing, the court specifically ordered PacifiCorp to produce any repmts of consultants who would later become repmting expe1ts, urging the parties not to "hid[e] the ball .... " 4 (Hearing Transcript, #129, at 73-74.) Also in July, PacifiCorp witness and He1miston plant manager Frank Glasgow testified that no analysis of the root causes of the plant outages had been performed. (Skelton Dep., #222, Ex. 7, at 42-44.) Then, on October 19, 2011, the court ordered PacifiCorp to produce all documents reviewed by Dr. Kemal in the preparation of his 2011 Rule 26 expe1t report, but PacifiCorp again did not reveal the existence of the 2008 report. (#152.) 4 That hearing occuned at least a month before the deadline for PacifiCorp to disclose its expe1t reports. (#141.) In fact, Dr. Kemal's Rule 26 repmt was dated "October 2011." Page 22- OPINION AND ORDER Only after defendants discovered the 2008 repmi listed on the Exponent website in November 20 II did PacifiCorp acknowledge its existence. Northwest moved to compel the 2008 repmi, but PacifiCorp argued that it was a draft of Dr. Kemal' s 20 II expmi repmi and therefore protected from disclosure under the recently amended Rule 26(b)(4)(B). After reviewing the document in camera, the court concluded that it could not be considered a "draft" of the 2011 Dr. Kemal expert report, and ordered PacifiCorp to produce it. (#210.) PacifiCorp moved for reconsideration, arguing both that the report was protected as a draft under Rule 26(b)(4)(B) and that, even if the report was not a draft, it was otherwise protected under the work product doctrine of Rule 26(b)(3)(B) or protected because it contained opinions of a consulting expert under Rule 26(b)(4)(D). The comi denied reconsideration and PacifiCorp eventually produced the report in May 2012. (#224, #225.) Northwest argues that PacifiCorp's suppression of the existence of the 2008 repmi and PacifiCorp's unwarranted resistance to producing the repmi once identified justifY an award of attorney's fees incuned in pursuing its production. I agree that PacifiCorp's failure to initially acknowledge the existence of the 2008 report from June to November 2011 was completely unjustified, and necessarily led to certain increased costs associated with Northwest's continued efforts to seek out the root cause analysis through other avenues. PacifiCorp does not even address this point in its opposition to the cunent motion for attorney's fees, effectively conceding that it lacked substantial justification- or any legitimate justification at all- for hiding the report's existence. Moreover, in light of the aspects of the report finding PacifiCorp's own conduct contributed to the outages, I find that PacifiCorp's attempts to conceal the existence of the 2008 repmi was tantamount to bad faith conduct. This type of deceptive activity reflects Page 23- OPINION AND ORDER poorly on the counsel who permit or encourage it, hinders the efficiency of the litigation process, and ultimately undermines the public's faith in the courts. It must be strongly discouraged. Northwest is therefore entitled under Rule 37(a)(5)(A) and this court's inherent authority to attorney's fees incurred in pursuing the 2008 report from June to November 2011. I disagree, however, that Pacifi Corp's resistance to producing the report - once identified- was unjustified. This court's mling concerning the report required interpretation and application of language recently added to Rule 26 that few courts had ever addressed. Indeed, the question of what constitutes a "draft" report was one of first impression, not only in this circuit, but nationwide. Moreover, the 2008 report contained some indicia of being a draft of the later 2011 expe1t report and the court required a thorough in camera examination of the report to conclude that it should not be considered a draft. Finally, the interplay between Rule 26's protections for draft expert repmts and other independent Rule 26 protections was hardly clear. Because reasonable minds could differ as to whether PacifiCorp was required to produce the repmt, PacifiCorp's resistance to Northwest's motion to compel and PacifiCorp's motion for reconsideration were both substantially justified. Reygo, 680 F.2d at 649. b. Black & Veatch Report The Black & Veatch Report was generated based on a site visit to the Hermiston plant in February 2008, shortly before the last of the outages for which PacifiCorp claims damages in this action. PacifiCorp provided the Black & Veatch Report to its expe1t Dr. Kemal, who listed it in an appendix to his repmi and reviewed it, but declared that he did not rely on it or consider it relevant to the opinions he offered in the report. Northwest moved to compel the repmt (#144), but PacifiCorp argued that it was not required to produce the repmt because Dr. Kemal did not Page 24- OPINION AND ORDER rely on it or consider it relevant. (#155, at 4.) This court ordered PacifiCorp to produce the report, reasoning that since Dr. Kemal read and considered the report among other documents, it was part of the "facts or data considered" by the expert witness "in fanning his opinions to be expressed" and must be disclosed under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(4)(C)(ii). (#170.) PacifiCorp argues that its resistance to producing the Black & Veatch rep01i was substantially justified, based on Dr. Kemal's declaration. I agree. Reasonable minds could differ concerning whether a document that an expert reads but finds to be i11'elevant to his own opinions constitutes data considered "in forming his opinions to be expressed." c. Anament Report The Anamet Rep01i was also listed in an appendix to Dr. Kemal's report and relied upon by Dr. Kemal in his analysis. (Opinion and Order, #170, at 3.) Northwest moved to compel all the documents listed in that appendix- which included the Anament Rep01t- arguing that Dr. Kemal had relied upon them. (Mot. to Compel, #144.) PacifiCorp produced many other documents listed in the appendix before resisting Northwest's motion to compel, but not the Anament Report. (Response Br., #155, at 4); (Reply Br., #.160, at 5 n.8.) This court then ordered PacifiCorp to produce the report. (#170, at 3.) PaciiiCorp now explains that the document was "inadve1iently not produced," and argues that defendants made similar oversights during discovery in this case. PacifiCorp also notes that the Anament Report played such a minor role in the motion to compel briefing that PacifiCorp's failure to produce it could not have required Northwest to incur more than a few minutes in additional eff01i. Although PacifiCorp's failure to produce the rep01i was not substantially justified, the pmiies' entire discussion of the Ana met Rep01i was confined to a single sentence in briefing. Under these circumstances, an award of Page 25- OPINION AND ORDER expenses pertaining to effmis to secure the Anament Repmi would be unjust. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(a)(5)(A)(iii). 2. Unprepared 30(b)(6) Witness Finally, Northwest contends that PacifiCorp's failure to properly prepare Shane Holst, its 30(b)(6) witness, required Northwest to seek the comi's intervention. After Holst could not testify about two noticed deposition topics, defendants moved to compel PacifiCmp to produce other witnesses who could address those topics. The court found that PacifiCorp had not satisfied its obligation to provide a deponent knowledgeable about the first of the two topics, the details of gas testing conducted by PERC in late 2008 and 2009, and ordered PacifiCorp to either re-designate a different witness or adequately prepare Holst on that topic. (Opinion and Order, #170, at 10-11.) Citing A·larker v. Union Fid Life Ins. Co., 125 F.R.D. 121, 126 (M.D.N.C. 1989), the court recognized that a corporation which fails to adequately prepare its 30(b)(6) witness may be required to bear the additional expenses associated with re-opening the 30(b)(6) deposition. ld. at 11. Northwest now asks the court to award Nmihwest those fees and expenses. PacifiCorp argues that an award of fees and costs would be inappropriate because the comi granted Nmihwest's motion only in part, and because PacifiCorp's resistance to re-designating a witness conceming PERC gas testing was not entirely without merit. To the extent that Northwest seeks fees and reasonable expenses associated with bringing its motion to compel a new 30(b)(6) deponent, no such fees and expenses are awarded because PacifiCmp's resistance to that motion was substantially justified. However, Nmihwest is entitled to the fees and reasonable expenses of conducting the second Holst deposition, which would have been avoided had PacifiCorp properly prepared Holst initially. See lvfarker, 125 F.R.D. at 127 (awarding Page 26- OPINION AND ORDER compensation for attorney travel time and expenses for additional30(b)(6) deposition). D. Remedy As described above, Northwest is entitled to an award of a portion of its requested attomey's fees and costs, specifically those associated with: (1) investigating and pursuing spoliation sanctions for PacifiCorp's destruction of the fuel scrubber; (2) identifying and pursuing the 2008 Exponent Root Cause Analysis that PacifiCorp improperly failed to identify; and (3) re-opening the 30(b)( 6) deposition of Shane Holst concerning the details of gas testing conducted by FERC. Because it is impossible to precisely detennine which entries in Northwest's billing records correspond with these efforts, the court estimates that Northwest is entitled to 20% of its requested fees, or $27,148.36. CONCLUSION For the reasons discussed above, Nmihwest's Bill of Costs (#371) is granted in pmi and denied in pmi, and Northwest is awarded its cost in the amount of $52,773.81. Northwest's motion for attorney's fees (#375) is granted in part and denied in part, and Northwest is awarded its attomey's fees in the amount of$27,148.36. IT IS SO ORDERED. Dated this I Di~ay of December, (12. '\ ( . -\\ \)~)~~~ a11 IlibillP1 (/ ', >IJ«ft ~\/~ Monorable United States Magistrate Judge Page 27- OPINION AND ORDER

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