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IN THE Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 24S-CT-186 FILED Jan 24 2025, 10:09 am Charles Jennings CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court Appellant (Plaintiff below) âvâ Jessica A. Smiley and Progressive Southeastern Insurance Co. Appellees (Defendants below) Argued: June 20, 2024 | Decided: January 24, 2025 Appeal from the Hamilton Superior Court No. 29D01-2002-CT-1487 The Honorable Michael A. Casati, Judge On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 23A-CT-303 Opinion by Justice Goff Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa and Slaughter concur. Justice Molter dissents with separate opinion. Goff, Justice. To assist in trial preparation, our rules of discovery are designed to enhance the availability of information to both parties. At the same time, our discovery rules contain certain limiting principles aimed at curbing information overreach and the potential for abuse. These limiting principlesâincluding restrictions based on relevance, burden, expense, embarrassment, privilege, and proportionalityâimplicate the value of protecting a partyâs privacy interests. The discovery request here, access to a partyâs smartphone device, presents a unique challenge to balancing these privacy interests against the disclosure of information. In resolving this issue of first impression, we hold that the party seeking production of a smartphone must provide some evidence of the deviceâs use at a time when it could have been a contributing cause of the incident litigated and must describe the data sought with reasonable particularity. In so holding, we stress three things: (1) that, unlike certain privileged information exempt from disclosure, privacy concerns are not a per se bar to discovery of relevant information; (2) that the âsome evidenceâ standard poses a relatively low burden on the requesting party, leading to disclosure in most cases when that party makes the required showing through sources obtained by less-invasive means; and (3) that, given the highly deferential standard of review, we will affirm a trial courtâs discovery ruling so long as itâs sustainable on any legal basis in the record. Based on the record here, we hold that, because the plaintiffâs discovery request lacks the necessary evidentiary support and because it casts too wide a net, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying plaintiffâs motion to compel. Accordingly, we affirm. Facts and Procedural History While traveling northbound on Westfield Boulevard in Carmel during rush hour, motorist Jessica Smiley (the Defendant) struck and injured a pedestrian, Charles Jennings (the Plaintiff). Defendant claimed that Plaintiff stepped out from behind a large box truck traveling in the Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 2 of 21 opposite direction, obstructing her view and preventing her from stopping until it was too late. Witnesses at the scene corroborated these events. And investigating officers determined that the Plaintiff had not crossed at an intersection; that there were no crosswalk signs, yield signs, stop signs, or pedestrian-crossing signs in the immediate vicinity; and that there was no evidence of Defendant speeding, driving recklessly, or having been distracted. Plaintiff later sued Defendant and her insurer for negligence. Defendant responded by raising a contributory-negligence defense. During the early stages of discovery, Plaintiff subpoenaed Defendantâs cellphone provider (Verizon), records from which revealed that Defendant had not been talking or texting at the time of the accident.1 Defendant also permitted Plaintiffâs expert to physically inspect and download data from her carâs âblack box,â which likewise revealed nothing of consequence. Tr. Vol. 2, p. 7; App. Vol. 2, p. 30. Plaintiff later sought access to Defendantâs iPhone âfor purposes of extracting, without modifying, data reflecting the utilization of the subject phoneâ on the date of the accident. App. Vol. 2, p. 39. The Defendant objected, and the Plaintiff moved to compel production, citing several things in support of the discovery request: his reconstruction expertâs report that Defendant was âinattentive and/or distractedâ at the time of the collision, the Defendantâs deposition testimony that she had used a navigation app earlier in the day, and Defendantâs deposition testimony that she had âlooked upâ just before the accident. Id. at 30â32, 42. At the ensuing motion-to-compel hearing, Plaintiff offered to âenter into any kind of reasonable protective orderâ to ensure the Defendantâs privacy interests and to meet opposing counsel âat a place and a timeâ to supervise the data downloaded âfor a one-hour period.â Tr. Vol. 2, p. 7. The trial court initially ruled in Plaintiffâs favor, directing Defendant to 1There is some dispute over whether the Verizon records included text-message records. Compare Oral Argument at 8:59â9:02 (Plaintiffâs counsel suggesting that the Verizon records included talk-and-text records), with Oral Argument at 21:09â21:13 (Defendantâs counsel insisting that the opposing party âonly had talk informationâ). Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 3 of 21 âmake her phone available for inspection by Plaintiffâs Expertâ to assess the phoneâs use âfrom 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.â on the date of the accident. App. Vol. 2, p. 47. The order also instructed Plaintiffâs expert âto redact any personal information from any data generated from the inspection before providing that data to counsel for Plaintiff.â Id. Defendant then moved the court to reconsider its order, arguing that Plaintiffâs motion to compel raised âsignificant privacy concernsâ and implicated issues related to the âscope of discovery that are not routine,â especially given the lack of evidence to suggest she was using her phone at the time of the accident. Id. at 49. The evidence in fact showed the contrary, Defendant submitted, pointing to the Verizon records, her testimony to having closed the navigation app before driving, and the testimony from two investigating officers who had no reason to believe Defendant was on her phone at the time of the accident. Having considered these arguments in light of âDefendantâs legitimate privacy concerns,â the trial court reversed its original determination and denied Plaintiffâs motion to compel. Id. at 61. From this ruling, the court granted Defendantâs motion in limine, barring any discussion at trial of Defendantâs objection to producing her cell phone for inspection and of its âdecision to grant an Order denying [the] Motion to Compel.â Id. at 63. At the conclusion of trial, a jury returned a verdict assigning ninety percent fault to Plaintiff and ten percent fault to Defendant, thus barring Plaintiff from recovering under Indianaâs contributory-fault standard. See Ind. Code § 34-51-2-6. The Court of Appeals affirmed in a unanimous opinion, holding that, absent âsufficient indicatorsâ of Defendantâs cell-phone use at the time of the accident, âthe burdenâ of Plaintiffâs âproposed telephone inspection outweighs its likely benefit in light of [Defendantâs] significant privacy concerns.â Jennings v. Smiley, 224 N.E.3d 996, 999â1000 (Ind. Ct. App. 2023) (citing Ind. Trial Rule 26(B)(1)). In so holding, the panel rejected out-of- state precedent cited by the Plaintiff as both inapt and âunnecessaryâ to âcraft a framework for such discovery requestsâ when Trial Rule 26(B) sufficed. Id. at 1000. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 4 of 21 Plaintiff petitioned for transfer, which we granted, thus vacating the Court of Appealsâ decision. See Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A). Standards of Review A trial courtâs ruling on a motion to compel discovery generally enjoys âwide discretionary latitudeâ on appeal. Armstrong v. State, 499 N.E.2d 189, 191 (Ind. 1986); see also Minges v. State, 192 N.E.3d 893, 896 (Ind. 2022) (stressing that trial courts enjoy âbroad discretion on issues of discoveryâ). Given the trial courtâs ability to âweigh the evidence and assess witness credibility,â we apply an abuse-of-discretion standard of review, interfering only if the ruling is âclearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances and the error affects a partyâs substantial rights.â Hall v. State, 36 N.E.3d 459, 466 (Ind. 2015) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted). We will affirm if the ruling is âsustainable on any legal basis in the record, even though this was not the reason enunciated by the trial court.â Estate of Lee ex rel. McGarrah v. Lee & Urbahns Co., 876 N.E.2d 361, 367 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted). This deferential standard gives way to de novo review when it comes to interpreting our trial rules. See Minges, 192 N.E.3d at 896. Discussion and Decision At its core, this case requires us to confront a tension inherent in civil discovery: how to enhance the availability of information to both parties in preparation for trial while ensuring proper protection of their privacy interests. The Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by prohibiting him from inspecting the Defendantâs iPhone and by enforcing the motion in limine. While acknowledging Defendantâs privacy interests, he insists that heâs âentitled to limited and targeted discoveryâ of the phone to resolve the âcentral issueâ of whether Defendant was distracted in the moments before the accident. Appellantâs Br. at 21, 22, 29. Defendant responds by arguing that, given the prior admission of pertinent data from her cell- phone records and her carâs black box, âthe requested discovery was Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 5 of 21 unduly cumulative and unnecessary.â Joint Appelleesâ Br. at 13. Whatâs more, she contends, the needs of the case fail to meet the âextraordinary burden that such an inspection would present,â adding that the âincursion into [her] privacy interest and the potential for abuse of access to such information is far beyond what is called for in a typical personal injury case.â Id. Finally, Defendant contends that any error by the trial court was harmless, given the overwhelming evidence in her favor. Beyond these arguments, the parties offer competing theories on how to analyze the dispute before us. The Defendant argues that Trial Rule 26(B)(1) itself offers âsufficient guidanceâ when analyzing whether the burden of the proposed cell-phone inspection outweighs its likely benefit. Resp. to Pet. to Trans. (Progressive) at 7â8; Resp. to Pet. to Trans. (Smiley) at 5â6. The Plaintiff, for his part, acknowledges that our Trial Rules offer general guidance for discovery disputes but urges us to âcraft a more precise, efficient and just rule of law.â Reply in Support of Trans. at 4. In his view, cell-phone inspection requests turn on âa careful balancing of competing interests, not a privilege moored solely in privacy concerns that forecloses even targeted discovery.â Appellantâs Br. at 25. Discovery is permissible, he insists, so long as thereâs âspecific evidenceâ of possible cellphone use and âadequate safeguardsâ in place to protect the opposing partyâs âlegitimate privacy concerns.â Pet. to Trans. at 10, 17â19. With these arguments in mind, our discussion proceeds as follows: First, we trace the recent evolution of Trial Rule 26(B)(1), leading us to conclude that the potential for invasion of privacy is a âburdenâ courts should consider when determining the scope of discovery. In recognizing the unique privacy interests implicated by the modern-day smartphone, we then articulate a standard for analyzing discovery requests for the sensitive content contained in these devices. Finally, we apply this standard to the Plaintiff here and conclude that, because his discovery request lacks the necessary evidentiary support and because of its impermissible overbreadth, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the motion to compel. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 6 of 21 I. Our discovery rules balance the tension between access to information and information overreach. The rules of discovery have long played a âvital role in the preparation for trial.â Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 501 (1947). To that end, these rules aim to enhance the availability of information to both parties in anticipation of litigation and, thus, to âreduce the possibility of surprise at trial.â Minges, 192 N.E.3d at 897. At the same time, experience shows that pretrial discovery entails âsignificant potential for abuse.â Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, 467 U.S. 20, 34 (1984). And such âabuse is not limited to matters of delay and expense; discovery also may seriously implicate privacy interests of litigants and third parties.â Id. at 34â35. So, while designed to encourage âliberal discovery,â see Minges, 192 N.E.3d at 897, our trial rules also contain certain limiting principlesâprinciples aimed at balancing the tension between open access to information, on the one hand, and information overreach, on the other hand. For example, to prevent an improper âfishing expedition,â Crawford v. State, 948 N.E.2d 1165, 1168 (Ind. 2011) (internal citation and quotation marks omitted), a party seeking discovery must âdescribe each item and category with reasonable particularity,â T.R. 34(B). Though the âparty need not specify the information soughtâ when the âcontents of the item are unknown or unknowable,â that party must show âsomething more precise than âgive me everything related to the case.ââ In re WTHR-TV, 693 N.E.2d 1, 8 (Ind. 1998). Our rules also protect against the disclosure of certain information. Minges, 192 N.E.3d at 898. Trial Rule 26(B)(3), for example, codifies the common-law doctrine under which an attorneyâs work product is deemed privileged and thus protected from disclosure. Id. (citing Hickman, 329 U.S. at 509â10). Finally, the trial court may, upon motion by âany partyâ and for âgood cause shown,â issue an order designed to âprotect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expenseâ that may result from a discovery request. T.R. 26(C). These provisions, taken together, stand for the âgeneral propositionâ that âdiscovery should go forward, but, if challenged, a balance must be struck between the need for the information and the burden of supplying Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 7 of 21 it.â In re WTHR-TV, 693 N.E.2d at 6. The means for achieving this balance is an issue we turn to first in resolving the dispute here. A. Rule 26(B)âs proportionality framework requires analysis of an opposing partyâs legitimate privacy concerns. Before 2007, Trial Rule 26(B)(1) defined the scope of discovery broadly, giving the parties access to any information ârelevant to the subject-matter involved in the pending action,â so long as that information appeared âreasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.â T.R. 26(B)(1) (2006). The Rule carved out a narrow exception for matters deemed âprivileged.â Id. But, as a general rule, â[p]rivate matters were discoverable by default, even where the privacy interests were significant and the relevance only marginal.â See Robert D. Keeling & Ray Mangum, The Burden of Privacy in Discovery, 105 Judicature 66, 67 (2021) (discussing the federal rule and âits state law analoguesâ). Trial Rule 26(C) was the only mechanism by which a party could seek relief from disclosure of confidential or private information, and only upon a showing of âgood cause.â T.R. 26(C). In 2007, this Court amended Trial Rule 26 by adding the second paragraph to subdivision (B)(1). See Order Amending Rules of Trial Procedure, 94S00-0702-MS-49 (Ind. Sept. 10, 2007). Under the revised rule, a trial court may limit the scope of discovery if (among other things) âthe burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit,â considering âthe needs of the case, the amount in controversy, the partiesâ resources, the importance of the issues at stake in the litigation, and the importance of the proposed discovery in resolving the issues.â Id. Rather than characterizing relevant information as discoverable by default (with a narrow exception for âprivilegedâ matters), Trial Rule 26(B)(1) now limits the scope of discovery to matters that are both relevant and proportional. Though proportionality in discovery may often implicate financial considerations, an emerging consensus among courts and commentators Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 8 of 21 considers the invasion of privacy interests a âburdenâ to weigh against the âlikely benefitâ of discovery. Keeling & Mangum, supra, at 68; see also The Sedona Conference, The Sedona Principles, Third Edition: Best Practices, Recommendations & Principles for Addressing Electronic Document Production, 19 Sedona Conf. J. 1, 69 (2018) (concluding that proportionality analysis requires consideration of financial burdens as well as ânon-monetary costs,â including the âinvasion of privacy rightsâ). We find several reasons to join in this consensus. To begin with, Indiana courts have interpreted Trial Rule 26(C) to ârecognize a privacy interest.â McGarrah, 876 N.E.2d at 369. That rule, as noted above, protects a party, upon a showing of âgood cause,â from the âannoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expenseâ associated with a discovery request. Id. at 367 (quoting T.R. 26(C)). Though it âcontains no specific reference to privacy,â Rule 26(C) implicates such an interest in its âbroad purpose and language.â Id. at 369 (quoting Rhinehart, 467 U.S. at 35 n.21). Trial Rule 26(B)(1), in turn, incorporates this privacy interest by reference, directing trial courts to limit discovery, if necessary, either on âits own initiative after reasonable notice or pursuant to a motion under Rule 26(C).â In other words, a court can address privacy issues as a threshold matter in determining the scope of discovery or in response to a partyâs request for a protective order under Trial Rule 26(C). Beyond the text of Rule 26(B)(1), modern advances in technologyâand the accompanying concerns over the security of personal informationâ further compel us to recognize privacy interests as an integral part of the proportionality analysis.2 See Sedona Principles, supra, at 68â69; cf. Minges, 192 N.E.3d at 895, 900, 901 (citing technological advances, along with Trial Rule 26(B)(1)âs proportionality analysis, to reinterpret the scope of 2Notably, the same year it amended Trial Rule 26(B)(1), the Court added subdivision (C)(9), under which âa party need notâ under certain circumstances âprovide discovery of electronically stored information from sources that the party identifies as not reasonably accessible because of undue burden or cost.â See Order Amending Rules of Trial Procedure, 94S00-0702-MS-49 (Ind. Sept. 10, 2007). Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 9 of 21 discovery under the work-product doctrine). Smartphones, especially, present a unique challenge to protecting this information. These devices, ubiquitous in modern society, paint a âdetailed mosaic of oneâs personal life.â Agnieszka A. McPeak, Social Media, Smartphones, and Proportional Privacy in Civil Discovery, 64 Kan. L. Rev. 235, 286 (2015). Unlike the limited data found in talk-and-text records or a carâs black box, see post, at 1, the voluminous data extracted from a smartphoneâthrough its GPS- tracking system and countless software applicationsâcan reveal a âprecise, comprehensive record of a personâs public movementsâ and a âwealth of detail about her familial, political, professional, religious, and sexual associations,â Riley v. California, 573 U.S. 373, 396 (2014) (quoting United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400, 415 (2012) (Sotomayor, J., concurring)). Indeed, the contents of a smartphone can reveal âfar more than the most exhaustive search of a house.â Riley, 573 U.S. at 396. And when these data exchange hands during the discovery process, the potential for breaches or leaksâintentional or notâincreases, irrevocably exposing sensitive information to unintended third parties or the public at large. Keeling & Mangum, supra, at 73; see also William G. Childs, When the Bell Canât Be Unrung: Document Leaks and Protective Orders in Mass Tort Litigation, 27 Rev. Litig. 565, 567 (2008) (stressing that ânew technologies have dramatically increasedâ the potential for âleaked confidential documentsâ). Given the sheer breadth of information contained in the modern smartphone, we recognize the potential for information overreach when parties seek access to these devices. The standard for balancing this concern for privacy against an otherwise âliberal discoveryâ process is an issue we turn to next. B. Civil discovery requests for smartphone access call for careful analysis of several factors. The litigants here have asked us to articulate a measured way in which a party may access an opposing partyâs smartphone in the context of a civil-discovery request. To resolve this issue of first impression, and to assist us in developing guidance for trial courts, we turn to decisions from Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 10 of 21 other jurisdictions. Cf. Bridgestone Ams. Holding, Inc. v. Mayberry, 878 N.E.2d 189, 191â93 (Ind. 2007) (surveying state and federal precedent in developing an âanalysis the trial court must follow when one party seeks discovery of a trade secretâ); Terre Haute Regâl Hosp., Inc. v. Trueblood, 600 N.E.2d 1358, 1360 (Ind. 1992) (considering the âlaw of other jurisdictionsâ in balancing the âcompeting interestsâ of the âscope of discovery and the physician-patient privilegeâ). In Crabtree v. Angieâs List, Inc., plaintiffs sued their employer for the wrongful denial of overtime compensation during a one-year period. No. 1:16-cv-00877-SEB-MJD, 2017 WL 413242, at *1 (S.D. Ind. Jan. 31, 2017). The employer-defendant, in response, moved to compel discovery, seeking GPS and location-services data, email messages, text messages, and other digital communications from the plaintiffsâ personal cell phones to âconstruct a detailed and accurate timeline of when [they] were or were not working.â Id. at *1, *4. Plaintiffs objected on grounds that the request posed âsignificant privacy concerns.â Id. at *1. Whatâs more, they stressed, the GPS data would fail to âaccurately portray whether [they] were working at any given time,â the defendant had âalternative, and far less intrusive, means to identify periods of time when Plaintiffs were working,â and the request amounted to a âfishing expeditionâ not relevant to the claims or defenses in the case. Id. at *1, *4. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, in an opinion by Magistrate Judge Mark Dinsmore, denied the defendantâs motion, noting the intrusiveness of collecting âall GPS/location data for 24-hours a day for a one year period from a personal device that would be tracking Plaintiffsâ movements well outside of their working time.â Id. at *2. The court further opined that the defendant, in its demand for emails and text messages, cast âtoo wide a netâ without âsufficiently justify[ing] the breadth of the request.â Id. at *5. Ultimately, the court concluded that the defendant failed to show that the âGPS/location services data from Plaintiffsâ electronic devices [would] be more probativeâ than the phone records the defendant already possessed. Id. at *3. So, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1), the court concluded, the âforensic examination of Plaintiffsâ electronic devices [was] not proportional to the needs of the case because any benefit the data might provide [was] outweighed by Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 11 of 21 Plaintiffsâ significant privacy and confidentiality interests.â3 Id. (citation omitted). In a more recent case, Estate of Logan v. City of South Bend, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, in an opinion by Magistrate Judge Michael Gotsch, reached a similar conclusion. No. 3:19- CV-495-DRL-MGG, 2021 WL 389412, at *5 (N.D. Ind. Feb. 3, 2021). That case arose as a constitutional claim based on a police officerâs alleged use of excessive and deadly force. Id. at *1. The plaintiff requested the production and forensic inspection of the defendant-officerâs cell phones, both âpersonal and city-issued.â Id. The defendant objected, arguing that, absent âany explanation to justifyâ the request, âthe inspection would be unduly intrusive.â Id. The plaintiff then moved to compel production, contending that, because the cost of inspection to the defendant would be negligible and because the forensic examiner would conduct the examination in the presence of the defendant and his lawyer, its request posed âonly a minor burden and [was] clearly proportional to the needs of the case.â Id. at *3. The district court disagreed. The plaintiff did ânot provide sufficient information as to how the cell phone information is relevant or why it goes to the heart of the case,â the court explained, âleaving [it] unable to ascertain whether a forensic examination of [the officerâs] cell phoneâeven limited to the time of his shift on the date of the incidentâis proportional enough to justify invading [the officerâs] privacy interests.â Id. at *4. Whatâs more, the court opined, because the defendant had already produced cellphone records for the day of the incident, and because plaintiff failed to âidentify the information it hope[d] to attain from the inspection,â or how any data extracted would aid in resolving 3Though Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1) contains structural and textual elements not found in Indiana Trial Rule 26(B)(1), both rules set forth similar factors for analyzing proportionality in discovery. And because the Indiana rule generally âis patterned afterâ its federal counterpart, âauthorities on the latter are relevantâ to our discussion. Rembold Motors, Inc. v. Bonfield, 293 N.E.2d 210, 220 (Ind. Ct. App. 1973) (referring to Trial Rule 26(B)(1) specifically). Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 12 of 21 the case, any âbenefitâ of production was âoutweighed by the Defendantâs privacy and confidentiality interests.â Id. at *5. Beyond these cases, we find especially helpful the guidance articulated by the Texas Supreme Court in In re Kuraray America, Inc. The defendant in that case, the owner and operator of an ethylene plant, stood accused of negligence for injuries sustained by several workers following a chemical release from one of the plantâs reactors. 656 S.W.3d 137, 139â40 (Tex. 2022). Citing âcell phone usage and abuseâ by several employees responsible for monitoring the reactor as âa potential cause of the release,â the plaintiffs sought access to âall information collected from all phones post incident,â with no time limitation specified. Id. at 140â41. Production of these data, the plaintiffs insisted, was essential in determining whether the employees âmight have been distracted by their phones when they should have been alerted to changing plant conditions that led to the release.â Id. at 141. Despite the defendantâs proposal to submit cell-phone data limited to the day of the incident, the trial court ordered production of data extending back several months before that date. Id. The defendant appealed, arguing that the plaintiffsâ failure to show a âcausal connection between cell-phone use and the releaseâ made the data âirrelevant,â rendering the trial courtâs production order âoverbroad and beyond the permissible scope of discovery.â Id. In resolving the dispute, the Texas Supreme Court began its analysis by setting forth several âkey principlesâ: First, the party seeking production of cell-phone data must âprovide some evidence of cell-phone use by the person whose data is sought at a time when it could have been a contributing cause of the incident on which the claim is based.â Id. at 142. If the requesting party meets this initial burden, then the âtrial court may order production of cell-phone data, provided its temporal scope is tailored to encompass only the period in which cell-phone use could have contributed to the incident.â Id. âOnly if this initial production indicates that cell-phone use could have contributed to the incident,â the court stressed, âmay a trial court consider whether additional discovery regarding cell-phone use beyond that timeframe may be relevant.â Id. Applying these principles to the case before it, the court found the temporal scope of the discovery request âimpermissibly overbroad.â Id. at Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 13 of 21 143. And absent âsome evidenceâ that the employeesâ earlier cell-phone use could have been a contributing cause of the incident, such usage, the court concluded, was âneither relevant nor discoverable.â Id. at 144. **** From these cases, along with elements from our own jurisprudence and other sources of authority, we offer the following analytical framework to guide our trial courts in managing discovery requests for the production and inspection of smartphone data. First, the party seeking production of smartphone data must provide âsome evidenceâ of the smartphoneâs use by the person from whom the data is sought. See Kuraray, 656 S.W.3d at 142. Such evidenceâwhether in the form of deposition testimony, phone records, or other sources obtained by less-invasive meansâmust show the smartphoneâs use âat a time when it could have been a contributing cause of the incident on which the claim is based.â See id. This standard presents a relatively low burden for the requesting party to overcome. We stress, however, that â[m]ere suspicion or speculationâ of smartphone use is insufficient to justify intruding into the privacy interests of an opposing party. See Estate of Logan, 2021 WL 389412, at *4 (internal citation and quotation marks omitted). Second, as with any discovery request, the party seeking production of smartphone data must âdescribe each item and category with reasonable particularity.â See T.R. 34(B). This specificity applies to the subject matter of the information sought (e.g., navigation apps) and the temporal scope of the request (e.g., on the day of the incident). See Kuraray, 656 S.W.3d at 142. Of course, the âparty need not specify the information sought where the contents of the item are unknown or unknowable.â In re WTHR-TV, 693 N.E.2d at 8. But the party must offer something more precise than a demand for an unrestricted inspection of the smartphone or a request for âallâ emails, text messages, photos, or other digital files. See id.; Crabtree, 2017 WL 413242, at *5; Sedona Principles, supra, at 87. To help narrow the request, the party can use less-invasive discovery tools like depositions, interrogatories, and requests for production of phone records. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 14 of 21 If the requesting party meets these initial burdens (âsome evidenceâ of smartphone use and âreasonable particularityâ in description), then the trial court may order production of the smartphone data unless the opposing party objects to the discovery request. When a party objects, âa balance must be struck between the need for the information and the burden of supplying it.â4 In re WTHR-TV, 693 N.E.2d at 6. When crafting the appropriate relief, whether in defining the scope of discovery as a threshold matter or in response to a request for protective order, a court should consider all proportionality factors to determine whether the âburden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.â See T.R. 26(B)(1) (citing T.R. 26(C)).5 Though privacy concerns are âgermane to the question of whether requested discovery is burdensome or oppressive,â we stress that such concerns are not a per se bar to discovery of relevant information and should not be confused with legal privileges or other discovery exclusions. See E.E.O.C. v. Simply Storage Mgmt., LLC, 270 F.R.D. 430, 434 (S.D. Ind. 2010). In the absence of an objection, discovery may proceed, provided the temporal scope of the data sought encompasses only that period in which smartphone use âcould have contributed to the incident.â See Kuraray, 656 S.W.3d at 142. If this initial production indicates that smartphone use 4As with the party seeking discovery, the objecting party should state âthe reasons for objectionâ with reasonable specificity and whether their objection applies to a specific item or category of data. See Ind. Trial Rule 34(B). This specificity should include the grounds for asserting that the request lacks proportionality and why the costs and burdens of the requested discovery outweigh the likely benefits of the discovery sought. See The Sedona Conference, The Sedona Principles, Third Edition: Best Practices, Recommendations & Principles for Addressing Electronic Document Production, 19 Sedona Conf. J. 1, 70 (2018). 5 For example, the âimportance of the issues at stake in the actionâ may apply not only to the issues before the litigating parties but also to broader issues related to public policy or judicial doctrine. Sedona Principles, supra, at 66; see, e.g., Terre Haute Regâl Hosp., Inc. v. Trueblood, 600 N.E.2d 1358, 1361 (Ind. 1992) (citing, among other things, the public interest in âbeing protected from incompetent physiciansâ to permit discovery of otherwise privileged medical records of non-party patients). As another example, if the proposed discovery plays a small part in resolving the issues litigated, the scope of discovery may be narrowed, even if the monetary amount in controversy is significant. Sedona Principles, supra, at 66â67. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 15 of 21 could have contributed to the incident, then the court may consider whether further discovery beyond that timeframe may be relevant. Id. With this analytical framework in mind, we now turn to Plaintiffâs discovery request here. II. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying Plaintiffâs motion to compel. To reiterate, the Plaintiff here sought and received records from Defendantâs cellphone provider as well as data from the âblack boxâ of Defendantâs car. Tr. Vol. 2, p. 7; App. Vol. 2, p. 30. When this information revealed nothing of consequence for his case, the Plaintiff sought access to Defendantâs iPhone âfor purposes of extracting, without modifying, data reflecting the utilization of the subject phoneâ on the date of the accident. App. Vol. 2, p. 39. In support of this request, the Plaintiff cited his reconstruction expertâs report that Defendant was âinattentive and/or distractedâ at the time of the collision, the Defendantâs deposition testimony that she had used a navigation app earlier in the day, and Defendantâs deposition testimony that she had âlooked upâ just before the accident. Id. at 30â32. For the reasons below, we find no abuse of discretion by the trial court in denying Plaintiffâs motion to compel. A. Plaintiffâs discovery request lacks the necessary evidentiary support. To begin with, Plaintiffâs discovery request lacks the necessary evidentiary supportâeven under the relatively liberal standard set forth above. And we reach this conclusion even if we were to apply Plaintiffâs âproposed safeguardsâ (limiting the data to a one-hour period immediately surrounding the accident and allowing opposing counsel to supervise the inspection). See Appellantâs Reply Br. at 12. First, despite his conclusion that the Defendant was âinattentive and/or distracted,â the accident-reconstruction expert agreed that Defendant Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 16 of 21 âcould not have seen [Plaintiff] before the truck passed by him as heâs waiting on the corner.â App. Vol. 2, p. 30; Tr. Vol. 3, p. 116. Plaintiff acknowledges this unfavorable âevidentiary interpretationâ but insists that itâs ânot an admission that hurtsâ him. Pet. to Trans. at 13 (emphasis omitted). According to Plaintiff, the expert was simply âagreeing withâ Defendantâs counsel that she was unable to see Plaintiff as he was ââwaiting on the cornerâ before walking acrossâ the street. Id. (quoting Tr. Vol. 3, p. 116). The âlocation that matteredâ to the expertâs conclusions, Plaintiff submits, was âin the roadwayâ where Defendant hit him. Id. at 13â14 (quoting Tr. Vol. 3, p. 118). But such a proposition arguably undermines the Plaintiffâs position, considering it was rush hour when the accident occurred. In any case, while claiming that Defendant must have been distracted since she never saw the Plaintiff, the expert could offer âno explanation for why [Plaintiff] never saw [Defendantâs] vehicle after he walked out behind the truck.â Tr. Vol. 3, p. 124. Second, the investigating officers at the scene found no evidence that the Defendant was distracted, driving recklessly, or speeding. Likewise, two witnesses in a car immediately behind the Defendant noticed no signs of distraction or anything out of the ordinary with Defendantâs driving. The driver of that car testified to having seen âsomethingâ on the side of the road as several cars were passing in the oncoming lane but couldnât tell whether it was a person and, if it was, whether âthey were going to cross the street.â Id. at 51â53. Whatâs more, the driver attested, he didnât even see the âfigure as it emerged after the truck passed.â Id. at 53. Third, while Defendant allegedly admitted to having âlooked upâ just before the accident, the officer to whom she originally made that comment testified that the phrase is âsomething that people commonly sayâ during an accident investigation. Tr. Vol. 2, p. 144. And the officer took the Defendantâs comment as just thatâan idiom or expression, not as an indication or admission of distraction. Id. Finally, while Defendant admitted to having used the navigation app before leaving the house, she testified to having closed it before driving. Defendantâs testimony aside, even if the Waze app (or other apps) were open while she was driving, Plaintiff made no showing that he (or his Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 17 of 21 expert) could determine whether the apps were simply running in the background or whether Defendant was actively using them. In fact, when Defendantâs counsel raised this very point at the motion-to-compel hearing, Plaintiffâs counsel responded simply that their expert knew the âdifference between an active app and an app thatâs not running.â Id. at 13. But even if that assertion were to suffice, and even if Defendant were actively using the Waze app, Plaintiff still fails to explain how use of the app necessarily proved that Defendant was distracted. Because the evidence suggests that Defendant was not using her phone at the time of the accident, we cannot say the trial court abused its discretion by denying Plaintiffâs motion to compel. Still, Plaintiff insists that evidence of Defendantâs phone use could âprove sheâs a liar.â Oral Argument at 41:50â42:00. That very well may be true. But the central issue at trial (as Plaintiff repeatedly stressed in his briefings) was whether Defendant was distracted at the time of the accident, not whether Defendant was credible. And, again, evidence of app useâeven if it were to impeach Defendantâs testimonyâdoes not necessarily prove distraction. To be sure, had the outcome of this case depended on Defendantâs testimony alone, the exclusion of evidence undermining her credibility could have resulted in reversible error. Cf. Oaks v. Chamberlain, 76 N.E.3d 941, 951 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017) (holding that exclusion of testimony from defendantâs sole expert witness had a âprobable impactâ on plaintiffâs âsubstantial rightsâ given the implications of that testimony on the expertâs credibility in opining on a central issue at trial). But thatâs not the case here. Whatâs more, we can reasonably infer the jury contemplatedâbut ultimately rejectedâthe possibility of Defendant lying, considering the accident-reconstruction expertâs opinion that Defendant was distracted by something, and considering Defendantâs insistence that she âwasnât on [her] phoneâ in response to allegations that she was âlooking downâ at the time of the accident. See Tr. Vol. 2, p. 175. Instead, the jury reached its verdict by relying on testimony from several sources corroborating Defendantâs position. And because that verdict assigned ninety percent fault to Plaintiff, we find it unlikely that the trial courtâs ruling impacted his substantial rights, thus rendering any error harmless. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 18 of 21 B. Plaintiffâs discovery request casts too wide a net. Even if his discovery request enjoyed the necessary evidentiary support, the Plaintiff casts âtoo wide a netâ to justify intruding into the Defendantâs smartphone. See Crabtree, 2017 WL 413242, at *5. Plaintiff insists otherwise by repeatedly referring to his discovery request as âultra- targetedâ or âultra-limitedâ and by insisting that it âcould not have been any narrowerâ than it was. Pet. to Trans. at 2, 5, 16, 18, 19; Appellantâs Reply Br. at 16. But we find no support in the record for these assertions. Plaintiffâs request for production, in fact, was extremely broad: Rather than simply wanting to see whether a navigation app (Waze) was running on Defendantâs phone (as he contends in his briefings), Plaintiff sought to extract from the phone âdata reflecting the utilization of the subject phone,â with no stated limit on what that âdataâ encompassed.6 App. Vol. 2, p. 39. The overbroad nature of Plaintiffâs request also renders the discovery he seeks, at least in part, âunreasonably cumulative or duplicative.â See T.R. 26(B)(1). As in Estate of Logan, the Defendant here had already produced cellphone records for the day of the incident, and the Plaintiff fails to âidentify the information [he] hopes to attain from the inspectionâ beyond what heâs already received. See 2021 WL 389412, at *5. And with no limit on the âdataâ sought, Plaintiffâs request encompasses not only the Waze navigation app but also any incoming/outgoing text messages or phone calls Defendant may have made. In fact, at the motion-to-compel hearing, Plaintiff explained that the proposed inspection would reveal âwhether the phone was in use or not in use,â and if it were being used, âwhether it was on an appâ or whether there was âtexting going onâ or âan e-mail being delivered.â Tr. Vol. 2, p. 6. But, as noted above, Plaintiff had already subpoenaed Defendantâs cellphone provider for most of these records, which ultimately revealed that Defendant had not been talking or 6On appeal, Plaintiff quoted his original request for production but added in his briefing that the request was limited to âthe Waze App.â Appellantâs Br. at 28. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 19 of 21 texting at the time of the accident.7 Because Plaintiffâs request was overbroad and would produce duplicative evidence in part, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying that request. Conclusion For the reasons above, we hold that, because the Plaintiff failed to meet his burden of showing how any benefit of producing Defendantâs iPhone for inspection outweighed Defendantâs privacy interest, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying Plaintiffâs motion to compel.8 Affirmed. Rush, C.J., and Massa and Slaughter, JJ., concur. Molter, J., dissents with separate opinion. 7 The dissent insists that, rather than âseeking additional evidence to determine whether [Defendant] was making calls or exchanging text messages,â Plaintiff was merely âseeking discovery of whether [Defendant] was using her phone in some other way,â adding that Plaintiffâs request was limited to âcell phone use around the time the accident occurred.â Post, at 2. But the language of that request imposed no such limits. See App. Vol. 2, p. 39 (request for production seeking access to Defendantâs iPhone âfor purposes of extracting, without modifying, data reflecting the utilization of the subject phoneâ on the âdate of the accidentâ). 8Because we find insufficient evidence to support the Plaintiffâs discovery request, we find no error in the trial courtâs enforcement of the motion in limine, prohibiting testimonial evidence related to the request, the Defendantâs objection, and the courtâs denial of Plaintiffâs motion to compel. See Appellantâs Reply Br. at 23â24. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 20 of 21 ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT Bryan H. Babb Bradley M. Dick Jonathan W. Hughes Bose McKinney & Evans LLP Indianapolis, Indiana ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE JESSICA SMILEY Robert A. Durham Matthew J. Trainor State Farm Litigation Counsel Indianapolis, Indiana ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE PROGRESSIVE SOUTHEASTERN INSURANCE CO. Edward M. Kohan Law Office of the Progressive Group of Insurance Carmel, Indiana Trevor M. Brown McNeely Law LLP Shelbyville, Indiana James W. Hehner Matthew E. Hobson Clendening Johnson & Bohrer, P.C. Indianapolis, Indiana Benjamin A. Katchur Lewis Wagner, LLP Indianapolis, Indiana Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 21 of 21 Molter, J., dissenting. I agree with the Court that our discovery rules balance âthe tension between open access to information, on the one hand, and information overreach, on the other.â Ante, at 7. At bottom, we are trying to strike the right balance âbetween the need for the information and the burden of supplying it.â Id. at 7â8 (quoting In re WTHR-TV, 693 N.E.2d 1, 6 (Ind. 1998)); see also Natâl Collegiate Athletic Assân v. Finnerty, 191 N.E.3d 211, 219 (Ind. 2022) (explaining that our trial rules balance âthe competing goals of limiting potential discovery abuse and ensuring litigantsâ access to necessary informationâ). That requires our trial courts to right-size discovery so that it is proportional to the needs of the case. Id. at 7. But I respectfully disagree with the Courtâs holding that Jennings âfailed to meet his burden of showing how any benefit of producing Defendantâs iPhone for inspection outweighed Defendantâs privacy interest.â Id. at 20. In a car accident case like this one, there is little evidence more relevant than whether a driver was distracted by their cell phone, which is the evidence Jennings sought here. Smiley acknowledged using her iPhoneâs navigation application to chart her route, so Jennings requested a forensic analysis of Smileyâs cell phone covering only data indicating whether she was using her cell phone around the time the accident occurred. The Court concludes Jennings wasnât entitled to that data for a few reasons, but each is mistaken in my view. First, the Court reasons that Jennings is not entitled to a forensic analysis of Smileyâs cell phone because Jennings doesnât have compelling enough evidence that Smiley was using her phone at the moment the accident occurred. Id. at 16â17. But that is the whole point of the discovery requestâto find out whether Smiley was using her cell phone when the accident occurred. Our trial rules do not condone a conundrum where parties must first provide the information they seek before they are permitted to seek it. That is why, for example, Jennings didnât first have to prove that Smiley was using her cell phone before obtaining call and text data from Verizon, and he didnât first have to prove that Smiley was driving carelessly before obtaining data from the carâs black box. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 1 of 3 Relatedly, the Court says that Jennings failed to show how Smiley was distracted by the Waze application more specifically. Id. at 17â18. Again, that is why Jennings needs the Waze data in the first place. That data might show, as the Court seems to suspect, that Smiley was not using the application at all, or that the application was simply announcing driving directions, in which case it seems less likely that the application distracted Smiley. On the other hand, the data might show Smiley was actively engaging with the application when the accident occurred, by inputting directions, identifying traffic hazards, adjusting the volume, or other ways of engaging with the application. If that is what the data reveals, then it becomes more likely that Jennings can show that Smiley was distracted by her cell phone. Second, the Court considers Jenningsâ request to be âextremely broadâ because he sought data reflecting any cell phone use around the time the accident occurred, not just data related to Smileyâs use of the Waze navigation application. Id. at 19. I reach the opposite conclusion; this strikes me as a perfectly tailored request. The point of Jenningsâ inquiry was to discover whether Smiley was distracted by her cell phone. And cell phone data revealing that she was on other applicationsâskimming email or social media accounts, as examplesâis just as relevant to determining whether she was a distracted driver as data from the Waze application would be. Third, the Court says that Jenningsâ request was cumulative because it would have includedâeven though it was not limited toâdata reflecting text messages and phone calls, and Jennings already obtained call and text data from Verizon. Id. at 19. But that conclusion misses a key point of Jenningsâ request: the Verizon data did not cover other cell phone uses, like the Waze navigation application. Jennings wasnât seeking additional evidence to determine whether Smiley was making calls or exchanging text messages; Jennings was seeking discovery of whether Smiley was using her phone in some other way when the accident occurred. So Jenningsâ request was supplemental to the Verizon data, not cumulative of it. These points reflect that the Court both puts too little weight on the side of the scale balancing Jenningsâ need for the discovery and too much Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 2 of 3 weight on the side balancing privacy concerns. That may be a consequence of Smiley neither making any particularized showing that privacy concerns outweigh the value of the discovery, nor even attempting to explain why those concerns cannot be addressed adequately through a protective order, which is a common tool for exchanging sensitive information in discovery. See Tr. Vol. 2 at 7 (plaintiffâs counsel offering âto enter into any kind of reasonable protective order to protect the privacy of the Defendantâ). When the trial court asked defense counsel to explain why a protective order would not suffice to address any privacy concerns, defense counselâs argument was that producing the cell phone in this case would incentivize plaintiffsâ lawyers in future cases to request cell phone data. Id. at 13 (defense counsel arguing that âthis will kind of open the floodgates for allowing this discovery now in every car accident caseâ). That of course has nothing to do with right-sizing discovery in this case, and that is not an appropriate discovery consideration under our trial rules. In sum, cell phone data revealing whether Smiley was using her phone when the accident occurred was critical to a central issue in the caseâ whether Smiley was a distracted driverâand the benefit of that information to resolving the case far outweighed Smileyâs privacy concerns, which could have easily been addressed through a protective order. Accordingly, the trial court exceeded its discretion by denying Jenningsâ motion to compel, and because that error was not harmless, we should vacate the judgment. Since the Court concludes otherwise, I respectfully dissent. Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 24S-CT-186 | January 24, 2025 Page 3 of 3
Case Information
- Court
- Ind.
- Decision Date
- January 24, 2025
- Status
- Precedential