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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA Harrisonburg Division CONSUMER FINANCIAL ) Civil Action No. 5:21-cv-00016 PROTECTION BUREAU, et al., ) Plaintiffs, ) v. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER ) NEXUS SERVICES, INC., et al., ) Defendants. ) By: Joel C. Hoppe ) United States Magistrate Judge Plaintiffs the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (âCFPBâ), the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the People of the State of New York, and the Commonwealth of Virginia filed a seventeen-count complaint alleging that Defendants Nexus Services, Inc., Libre by Nexus, Inc., Micheal Donovan, Richard Moore, and Evan Ajin violated the Consumer Financial Protection Act (âCFPAâ), 12 U.S.C. §§ 5552, 5564, and similar state laws in administering âimmigration bondsâ for indigent consumers facing deportation. See generally Compl. 1â3, 6â47, ECF No. 1; Mem. Op. of Mar. 21, 2022, at 2â4, ECF No. 108.1 The matter is before the Court further to its prior order denying in part and taking under advisement in part Defendantsâ âRevived Motion to Stay and Motion to Quash Third-Party Subpoenas,â ECF No. 67 (âDefs.â Rev. Mot.â). Order of Oct. 19, 2021, ECF No. 98. For the reasons explained below, the Revived Motion, ECF No. 67, as supplemented by Defendantsâ âSupplemental Brief and Motion to Quash or For Protective Order as to Plaintiffsâ Third-Party Subpoenas,â ECF No. 99, is hereby DENIED in its entirety. I. Background In August 2021, Plaintiffsâ counsel issued third-party subpoenas duces tecum to twenty- nine banks and financial-services companies seeking information and business records related to 1 Pinpoint citations to documents filed on the electronic case docket use the header page numbers generated by CM/ECF and the exhibit labels assigned by the filing party. Defendants, as well as to two individuals and twenty entities who are not party to this litigation.2 See Pls.â Br. in Oppân 2, ECF No. 76. That September, Defendants moved to quash seven of those subpoenas, attached to their Revived Motion as Exhibits A to G, see Defs.â Rev. Mot., Decl. of Micheal Donovan ¶ 5, Exs. AâG, ECF No. 67-1, at 5â122, arguing that Defendantsâ financial information was not relevant to Plaintiffsâ claims that Defendants violated state and federal consumer-protection laws, Defs.â Rev. Mot. 8â10; that the âextreme breadth and number of duplicative requestsâ unduly burdened the third-party recipients, id. at 11; and that Plaintiffs did not âneedâ the third parties to produce this information because they âalready engaged in five yearsâ worth of pre-complaint discovery through civil investigative demands and administrative proceedings, and ha[d] received at least 9 GB of documentary information from Defendants,â id. at 10. Defendants did not initially challenge these subpoenasâ separate requests that the recipient banks and financial-services companies produce information related to any non-party individuals and entities. See id. at 7â11; Defs.â Reply Br. 15â16 & n.6, ECF No. 84. âNo third-party subpoena recipient ha[d] moved to quash or for a protective orderâ as of September 27, 2021. Pls.â Br. in Oppân 2. I denied Defendantsâ motion to quash these seven subpoenas to the extent they sought information about each Defendantâs own accounts and records maintained by the recipient banks and financial-services companies. Order of Oct. 19, 2021, at 1. Although Defendants had a cognizable interest in protecting this information from disclosure, Plaintiffs âmade a convincing argumentâ that their subpoenas were procedurally proper, sought information relevant to both 2 The third-party subpoenas at issue here involve multiple âthird partiesâ vis-Ă -vis Plaintiffs and Defendants. For simplicityâs sake, I refer to the third-party recipients of those subpoenas (e.g., Fusion CPA, FirstBank Puerto Rico, American Express Company) as âthird partiesâ and to the third-party subjects of the attached document requests (e.g., Homes by Nexus, Timothy Okonski, Nexus Caridades) as ânonpartiesâ to the litigation. Defendantsâ alleged liability and Plaintiffsâ potential remedies, and were proportional to the needs of the case. Tr. of Hrâg on Defs.â Rev. Mot. 34, 39â40 (Oct. 14, 2021), ECF No. 97; see generally id. at 39â41. I took the motion under advisement âwith respect to the âNamed Businessesâ that are not Defendants to this lawsuit.â Order of Oct. 19, 2021, at 1 (citing Defs.â Reply Br. 15â16 & n.6). While Defendants arguably waived that objection by raising it for the first time in their reply brief, see Clawson v. FedEx Ground Package Sys., Inc., 451 F. Supp. 2d 731, 734â35 (D. Md. 2006), the court must act âon its ownâ to âlimit the frequency or extent of discovery otherwise allowed by the[] rules . . . if it determines that[] the discovery sought is unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, or can be obtained from some other source that is more convenient [or] less burdensome,â Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(i), or âthe proposed discovery is outside the scope permitted by Rule 26(b)(1),â Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(iii). See Mancia v. Mayflower Textile Servs. Co., 253 F.R.D. 354, 364 (D. Md. 2008) (noting that âRule 26(b)(2)(C) imposes an obligation on the Court, sua sponte, to[] âlimit the frequency or extent of discovery otherwise allowed by the rules if it determines thatââ certain criteria are met (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C) (cleaned up)). As drafted, the seven subpoenas attached to Defendantsâ Revived Motion were broad enough that the Court needed to determine for itself whether Plaintiffsâ requests for information related to the nonparties were both ârelevant to any partyâs claims or defense and proportional to the needs of the case,â Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(iii). Because Defendants first raised this issue in their reply brief, however, the parties did not have a full opportunity to brief it before the motion hearing on October 14, 2021. Thus, I ordered Defendants and Plaintiffs to each file one supplemental brief âaddressing whether the Court should modify these subpoenas to exclude any of the non-party âNamed Businessesâ listed in paragraph 7â of Plaintiffsâ subpoena to Fusion CPA, Order of Oct. 19, 2021, at 1â3 (citing Defs.â Rev. Mot., Donovan Decl. Ex. A, Pls.â Subpoena to Fusion CPA ¶ 7 (Aug. 26, 2021), ECF No. 67-1, at 9)), and/or in Request for Production of Documents No. 1 of Plaintiffsâ subpoenas to FirstBank Puerto Rico, Trustco Bank Corp NY, American Express Company, Citibank, Comerica Bank, and Westamerica Bancorporation.3 See generally Defs.â Rev. Mot., Donovan Decl. Ex. B, Pls.â Subpoena to FirstBank P.R. (Aug. 10, 2021), ECF No. 67-1, at 28â30; id. Ex. C, Pls.â Subpoena to Trustco Bank Corp NY (Aug. 10, 2021), ECF No. 67-1, at 41â51; id. Ex. D, Pls.â Subpoena to Am. Express Co. (Aug. 10, 2021), ECF No. 67-1, at 70â72; id. Ex. E, Pls.â Subpoena to Citibank (Aug. 10, 2021), ECF No. 67-1, at 91â93; id. Ex. F, Pls.â Subpoena to Comerica Bank (Aug. 10, 2021), ECF No. 67-1, at 110â12; id. Ex. G, Pls.â Subpoena to Westamerica Bancorp. (Aug. 10, 2021), ECF No. 67-1, at 120; Tr. of Hrâg on Defs.â Rev. Mot. 42â52. I also denied, âwithout prejudice to refiling a properly supported motion,â Defendantsâ request to quash or modify any subpoena that was not attached to their Revived Motion, including twenty-two other third-party subpoenas duces tecum that Defendants first referenced in 3 Plaintiffsâ subpoena to Fusion CPA defines the âNamed Businessesâ as Defendants âLibre by Nexus, Inc., [and] Nexus Services, Inc., and all of their predecessors, successors, present or former parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates, whether direct or indirect, includingâ sixteen entities that are not party to this litigation. Pls.â Subpoena to Fusion CPA ¶ 7, ECF No. 67-1, at 9. Those entities are: (i) Entertainment by Nexus, Inc.; (ii) Entlest Brands, Inc.; (iii) Homes by Nexus, Inc.; (iv) Nexus Caridades, Inc.; (v) Nexus Caridades Attorneys, Inc.; (vi) Nexus Commercial Ventures, LLC; (vii) Nexus Financial Services Corporation; (vii) Nexus Health, Inc.; (ix) Nexus Investigations & Security, Inc.; (x) Nexus Libre, Inc.; (xi) Nexus Monitoring, LLC; (xii) Nexus Programs, Inc.; (xiii) Nexus Properties, LLC; (xiv) One Fish Two Fish, LLC; (xv) Secure by Nexus, Inc.; and (xvi) Serve by Nexus, Inc. Id. Their six other third-party subpoenas request information about two non-party individuals, Timothy Okonski and Erik Schneider, and four non-party entities in addition to the sixteen entities listed above. See, e.g., Pls.â Subpoena to FirstBank P.R. 3â5, at ¶ 1(f)â(bb), ECF No. 67-1, at 28â30. Those additional entities are: (xvii) Executive Investigation Consultants, LLC; (xviii); Fangistics, LLC; (xix) Fixify Solutions, LLC; and (xx) Nexus Services of Virginia, Inc. Id. ¶ 1(v)â(y). See generally Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 6â8, ECF No. 100; Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân Ex. A, Decl. of Donald R. Gordon, Esq. ¶¶ 12â15 (describing each nonpartyâs financial or legal connection to at least one Defendant) (Nov. 16, 2021), ECF No. 100-1, at 5â6. a footnote to their reply brief, see Defs.â Reply Br. 9 n.4, and raised at the motion hearing, see Tr. of Hrâg on Defs.â Rev. Mot. 34â35, 41â44. Order of Oct. 19, 2021, at 3 (emphasis omitted). Defendants filed a supplemental brief, ECF No. 99 (âDefs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp.â), and an unauthorized reply brief, ECF No. 101 (âDefs.â Suppâl Reply Br.â). See Order of Oct. 19, 2021, at 2. Defendantsâ supplemental brief is also labeled a âMotion to Quash and for Protective Orderâ asking the Court to quash or modify âall of the 41 [third-party] subpoenas issued by Plaintiffsâ as of November 2, 2021, Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 1â2, each of which is attached to the brief. See generally Decl. of Adam D. Bowser, Esq. ¶ 3(a)â(oo) (Nov. 2, 2021), ECF No. 99- 1; id. Exs. AâL, ECF No. 99-2, at 1â252; id. Exs. MâZ, ECF No. 99-3, at 1â291; id. Exs. AAâ HH, ECF No. 99-4, at 1â154; id. Exs. IIâOO, ECF No. 99-5, at 1â127. Thus, Defendantsâ supplemental brief purports to challenge not only the seven subpoenas attached to their Revived Motion, see Bowser Decl. ¶ 3(b), (e), (g), (l)â(m), (y), (bb), but also the twenty-two subpoenas referenced in my Order of October 19, 2021, see id. ¶ 3(a), (c)â(d), (f), (h)â(k), (n)â(x), (z)â(aa), and thirteen other subpoenas that Plaintiffs served on additional third parties a few days before I issued that Order, see id. ¶ 3(cc)â(oo).4 See generally Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 3, 5â6 & n.4. 4 Defendants should have moved to quash each subpoena in the court for the district where the respective third-party recipientâs âcompliance is required,â Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(1), rather than filing an omnibus discovery motion in the court where this action is pending, Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c). See generally Sines v. Kessler, No. 3:17cv72, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133124, at *5 (Apr. 20, 2018) (collecting cases). Rule 45 âgive[s] âthe court for the district where compliance [with a subpoena] is required,â and not the litigation court from which a subpoena must issue, primary authority over disputes about subpoenas directed at nonparties located within the compliance courtâs territorial jurisdiction.â Id. (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(a)â (f)). âHowever, Rule 26 also provides that â[a] party or any person from whom discovery is sought may move for a protective order in the court where the action is pending,â and that the litigation âcourt may, for good cause, issue an order to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden.ââ Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1)). Defendantsâ Revived Motion sought an order shielding Defendantsâ own financial information from disclosure in response to Plaintiffsâ third-party subpoenas, see ECF No. 67, and their âSupplemental Brief and Motionâ expressly seeks a âprotective orderâ against what Defendants believe are Plaintiffsâ âoverbroadâ requests for the nonpartiesâ âirrelevantâ information, see Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 1â3, 5, 7â8, 11. Accordingly, I consider Defendantsâ remaining requests under Rule 26(c), and not under Rule 45(d). See, e.g., Sines, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 133124, at *5 (considering defendantâs motion to quash plaintiffsâ third-party subpoenas Twenty-eight of those subpoenas direct the third-party recipient to produce from its own business records âDocuments sufficient to Identify all Accounts,â as well as account statements and related communications, that each of the following non-party Entities âowned, created, were beneficiaries of, or had rights to sign on or make changes toâ: i. Entertainment by Nexus, Inc.; ii. Entlest Brands, Inc.; iii. Executive Investigation Consultants, LLC; iv. Fangistics, LLC; v. Fixify Solutions, LLC; vi. Homes by Nexus, Inc.; vii. Nexus Caridades, Inc.; viii. Nexus Caridades Attorneys, Inc.; ix. Nexus Commercial Ventures, LLC; x. Nexus Financial Services Corporation; xi. Nexus Health, Inc.; xii. Nexus Investigations & Security, Inc.; xiii. Nexus Libre, Inc.; xiv. Nexus Monitoring, LLC; xv. Nexus Programs, Inc.; xvi. Nexus Properties, LLC; xvii. Nexus Services of Virginia, Inc.; xviii. One Fish Two Fish, LLC; xix. Secure by Nexus, Inc.; xx. Serve by Nexus, Inc.; and seeking information related to nonparties under Rule 26(c)); cf. Sirpal v. Fengrong Wang, Civ. No. WDQ-12-0365, 2012 WL 2880565, at *4 n.12 (D. Md. July 12, 2012) (â[T]he Court could consider the [plaintiffâs] motion [to quash third-party subpoena] as one for a protective order, and consider the Rule 26 factors, including relevance, in deciding the motion.â); In re Verizon Wireless, 2019 WL 4415538, at *6 (D. Md. Sept. 16, 2019) (concluding that movants did not have standing to challenge third-party subpoena under Rule 45, but relying on Rule 26(b)(2)(C)(iii) to quash subpoena which did ânot satisfy the [Ruleâs] proportionality concerns as the âproposed discovery outweigh[ed] its likely benefitââ). xxi. â[a]ny other Entity that has Timothy J. Okonski or Erik Schneider listed as having rights to sign on or make changes to the account[.]â See, e.g., Pls.â Subpoena to FirstBank P.R. 3â5, at ¶1(f)â(y), (bb) (entities listed in alphabetical order), ECF No. 67-1, at 28â30; see generally Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 3 (âAs Defendants further noted, and as Plaintiffs did not dispute at the hearing held on October 14, 2021, the 29 subpoenas are substantively identical as to the scope of information sought, including as to the Non-Parties.â). The subpoena to Fusion CPA requests similar financial information and business records related to each nonparty listed above except Mr. Okonski, Mr. Schneider, Executive Investigation Consultants, Fangistics, Fixify Solutions, and Nexus Services of Virginia. See Pls.â Subpoena to Fusion CPA ¶¶ 5â9, Req. for Prod. of Docs. Nos. 1â11, ECF No. 67-1, at 8â9, 11â 12. The thirteen more recent subpoenas are directed to insurance or bonding agencies, see, e.g., Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. Ex. DD, Pls.â Subpoena to Align Gen. Ins. Agency (Oct. 13, 2021), ECF No. 99-4, at 68â81; id. Ex. JJ, Pls.â Subpoena to Brian Jerome Cole & Statewide Bonding, Inc. (Oct. 14, 2021), ECF No. 99-5, at 20â37, and three companies that Defendant Libre by Nexus allegedly contracted with âto lease GPS-enabled monitorsâ and to âprovide GPS- location data aboutâ clients awaiting immigration hearings, Compl. ¶¶ 80â92; see, e.g., Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. Ex. NN, Pls.â Subpoena to Omnilink Sys., Inc. (Oct. 14, 2021), ECF No. 99- 5, at 93â110. They seek documents reflecting any agreements, communications, contracts, and financial transactions, including those related to immigration bonds and GPS-enabled tracking devices, between âDefendantsâ and the third-party subpoena recipient. See, e.g., Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. Ex. DD, Pls.â Subpoena to Align Gen. Ins. Agency, Req. for Prod. of Docs. Nos. 1â 7, ECF No. 99-4, at 70â72; Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. Ex. NN, Pls.â Subpoena to Omnilink Sys., Inc., Req. for Prod. of Docs. Nos. 1â7, ECF No. 99-5, at 98â99. These subpoenas define âDefendantsâ to mean Defendants Donovan, Moore, Ajin, Nexus Services, Libre by Nexus, âand all of their predecessors, successors, present or former parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates, whether direct or indirect, includingâ the same sixteen non-party entities listed in Plaintiffsâ subpoena to Fusion CPA. Compare Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. Ex. DD, Pls.â Subpoena to Align Gen. Ins. Agency ¶ 4, ECF No. 99-4, at 68, with Pls.â Subpoena to Fusion CPA ¶ 7, ECF No. 67-1, at 9. Defendants primarily argue that financial information related to the non-party individuals and entities âis facially irrelevant to Plaintiffsâ claims,â as defined only by Plaintiffâs factual allegations in their Complaint and is therefore âoutside the scope of permissible discoveryâ under Rule 26(b)(1). See generally Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 5â10; e.g., id. at 2 (â[T]hese [non]parties do not even make a cameo appearance in Plaintiffsâ Complaint, and information concerning them is therefore facially irrelevant.â); id. at 4 (âPlaintiffs then drafted a 50-page complaint, and never once even hinted at the Non-Parties being relevant to their claims. The only reasonable conclusion one can draw from these facts: the Non-Parties are entirely irrelevant to Plaintiffsâ claims.â); id. at 5 (âMr. Schneider was not mentioned in the Complaint, let alone named as a party. Thus, the government Plaintiffs are seeking the most granular and sensitive financial records of a . . . small business that has no apparent relevance to Plaintiffsâ claims.â); id. at 8 (âThere is no defensible way to interpret . . . any allegation in the Complaint[] as bringing anything related to the Non-Parties within the scope of Rule 26.â). Defendants also argue that, even if the information is relevant, Plaintiffs âmust âbe able to explain why [they] cannot obtain the same information, or comparable information that would also satisfy [their] needs, from one of theââ Defendants before Plaintiffs can request this information from the third-party subpoena recipients. See id. at 7 (quoting Jordan, 921 F.3d at 189). Defendants assert that âthe Court should modify all of the 41 subpoenas issued by Plaintiffs to date, or issue a comparable protective order, so as to prevent Plaintiffs from conducting irrelevant fishing expeditions into these [non]parties.â Id. at 2. Aside from asking the Court to âpreclud[e] Plaintiffs from seeking discovery on the Non-Parties,â id. at 11, however, Defendants do not propose any specific modifications to the subpoenas as drafted. See id. at 2â11; Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 5 & n.9; Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1)â(2). Separately, Defendants assert that Plaintiffsâ subpoenas to the twenty-nine banks or financial-services companies failed to comply with the Right to Financial Privacy Act (âRFPAâ) of 1978, thus violating the rights of âthe Non-Party Individuals named in th[ose] subpoenas, Tim Okonski and Eri[k] Schneider,â5 id. at 10â11 (citing 12 U.S.C. §§ 3401â3407). They urge the Court to quash these subpoenas on that basis alone âregardless of whose records were being indiscriminately requested by Plaintiffs.â Id. at 11. Plaintiffs filed a supplemental response brief opposing Defendantsâ requests to quash or modify the subpoenas issued to the twenty-nine banks and financial-services companies. See generally Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 4â13. They argue that Defendants lack standing to assert Mr. Okonskiâs and Mr. Schneiderâs rights under the RFPA, id. at 11â12; that the business records and financial information sought in the third-party subpoenas are relevant to the claims and defenses in this action and Plaintiffs may ask third parties to produce that information because 5 Plaintiffsâ subpoena to Fusion CPA does not specifically request information related to Mr. Okonski or Mr. Schneider. See generally Pls.â Subpoena to Fusion CPA ¶¶ 5â9, Req. for Prod. of Docs. Nos. 1â11, ECF No. 67-1, at 8â9, 11â12. Their subpoenas directed to twenty-eight other banks and financial-services companies request âDocuments sufficient to Identify all Accounts that each of the [listed] Persons [and Entities] owned, created, were beneficiaries of, or had rights to sign on or make changes to,â Pls.â Subpoena to FirstBank P.R. 3â5, at ¶ 1(a)â(z), ECF No. 67-1, at 28â30, including â[a]ny other Entity that has Timothy J. Okonski or Erik Schneider listed as having rights to sign on or make changes to the account,â id. ¶ 1(bb), ECF No. 67-1, at 30. See, e.g., Pls.â Subpoena to Am. Express Co. 3â5, at ¶ 1(a)â (z), (bb), ECF No. 67-1, at 70â72; Pls.â Subpoena to Ally Fin. 7â9, at ¶1(a)â(y), (aa) (Aug. 21, 2021), ECF No. 99-2, at 7â9; see generally Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 3 (â[T]he 29 subpoenas are substantively identical as to the scope of information sought, including as to the Non-Parties.â). Defendants have refused to provide it themselves, see id. at 4â11; and that Defendantsâ request is untimely with respect to twenty-two subpoenas not attached to their original motion âbecause the dates for response to those subpoenas ha[d] passed,â id. at 3, before Defendants moved to quash them in November 2021, id. at 12â13 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)). II. The Legal Framework âAll civil discoveryâ into nonprivileged matters, âwhether sought from parties or nonparties, is limited in scope by Rule 26(b)(1) in two fundamental ways. First, the matter sought must be ârelevant to any partyâs claim or defense.ââ Va. Depât of Corrs. v. Jordan, 921 F.3d 180, 188 (4th Cir. 2019) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1)); see Bell, Inc. v. GE Lighting, LLC, No. 6:14cv12, 2014 WL 1630754, at *6 (W.D. Va. Apr. 23, 2014) (âThe scope of discovery for a nonparty litigant under a subpoena duces tecum is the same as the scope of a discovery request made upon a party to the action, and a party is entitled to information that is relevant to a claim or defense in the matter at issue.â (cleaned up)). âRelevance is not, on its own, a high bar.â Jordan, 921 F.3d at 188; see, e.g., United States ex rel. Shamesh v. CA, Inc., 314 F.R.D. 1, 8 (D.D.C. 2016) (â[R]elevance is still to be âconstrued broadly to encompass any matter that bears on, or that reasonably could lead to other matter that could bear onâ any partyâs claim or defense.â (quoting Oppenheimer Fund, Inc. v. Sanders, 437 U.S. 340, 351 (1978)). âThere may be a mountain of documents . . . that are relevant in some way to the partiesâ dispute, even though much of it is uninteresting or cumulative.â Jordan, 921 F.3d at 188. Rule 26(b)(1) therefore imposes a second requirement that discovery into relevant matters âmust also be âproportional to the needs of the case.ââ Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1)). âProportionality requires courts to consider, among other things, âwhether the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.ââ Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1)). âThis relieves parties from the burden of taking unreasonable steps to ferret out every relevant document.â6 Id.; see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(g)(1)(B)(ii)â(iii). âA party or any person from whom discovery is sought may move for a protective order in the court where the action is pending[.]â Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1). âThe court may, for good cause, issue an order to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense[.]â Id. âThis undue burden category âencompasses situations where [a] subpoena seeks information irrelevantââ to the partiesâ claims or defenses, HDSherer LLC v. Natural Molecular Testing Corp., 292 F.R.D. 305, 309 (D.S.C. 2013) (quoting Cook v. Howard, 484 F. Appâx 805, 812 n.7 (4th Cir. 2012)), or is so broad that it is not proportional to the needs of the case, In re Verizon Wireless, 2019 WL 4415538, at *6 (âA subpoena imposes an undue burden on a party when [it] is overbroad.â) (citing In re Subpoena Duces Tecum to AOL, 550 F. Supp. 2d 606, 612 (E.D. Va. 2008)); cf. Jordan, 921 F.3d at 190 (âAnother type of burden arises when a subpoena is overbroadâthat is, when it seeks information beyond what the requesting party reasonably requiresâ from the nonparty) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)(iv)). â[T]he 6 âWhen discovery is sought from nonparties, however, its scope must be limited even more.â Jordan, 921 F.3d at 189 (emphasis added). âNonparties are strangers to the litigation, and since they have no dog in the fight, they have a different set of expectations from the parties themselves. Bystanders should not be drawn into the partiesâ dispute without some good reason, even if they have information that falls within the scope of party discovery.â Id. (cleaned up). âA more demanding variant of the proportionality analysis therefore applies when determining whether, under Rule 45, a subpoena issued against a nonparty âsubjects a person to undue burdenâ and must be quashed or modified.â Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)(iv)). âAs under Rule 26, the ultimate question is still whether the benefits to the requesting party outweigh the burdens on the recipient.â Id. But, Jordan instructs that lower âcourts must give the recipientâs nonparty status special weightâ in evaluating ânot just the relevance of the information sought, but [also] the requesting partyâs need for itâ and whether the âinformation is available to the requesting party from other sources.â Id. (cleaned up). The movant still bears the burdens of proof and of persuasion on a motion to quash under Rule 45(d). Id. at 189 n.2 (âWe do not mean to imply that, on a motion to quash, the requesting party bears the burdens of proof and of persuasion. The moving party bears those burdens.â). âBut the[se] are not terribly difficult burdens to meet if the requesting party cannot articulate its need for the information and address obvious alternative sources.â Id. Additionally, â[a] nonparty should not have to do the work of tailoring a subpoena to what the requesting party needs; the requesting party should have done that before serving it.â Id. at 190. burden is on the party resisting discovery to explain specifically why its objections, including those based on irrelevance, are proper given the broad and liberal construction of federal discovery rules.â Desrosiers v. MAG Indus. Automation Sys., 675 F. Supp. 2d 598, 601 (D. Md. 2009); accord Stone v. Trump, 453 F. Supp. 3d 758, 766 (D. Md. 2020) (â[T]he party resisting discovery bears the burden of persuasion and not the party seeking discovery.â). âSpecifically, the movant must make a particularized showingâ that the information sought is either irrelevant or not proportional to the needs of the case. Mainstreet Collection, Inc. v. Kirklandâs Inc., 270 F.R.D. 238, 241 (E.D.N.C. 2010). â[C]onclsuory or generalized statementsâ opposing discovery âfail to satisfy this burden as a matter of law.â Id. (citing Carefirst of Md., Inc. v. Carefirst Pregnancy Ctrs., Inc., 334 F.3d 390, 402â03 (4th Cir. 2003)); accord Baron Fin. Corp. v. Natanzon, 240 F.R.D. 200, 202 (D. Md. 2006) (âIn order to establish good cause [under Rule 26(c)], a proponent may not rely upon stereotyped and conclusory statements, but must present a particular and specific demonstration of fact, as to why a protective order should issue.â (internal quotation marks omitted)). III. Discussion The Court must address two issues before turning to the merits of Defendantsâ objections. First, Plaintiffs argue that Defendantsâ motion to quash or for protective order is untimely with respect to twenty-two subpoenas not attached to their Revived Motion âbecause the dates for response to those subpoenas ha[d] passed,â Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 3, before Defendants moved to quash them, id. at 12â13 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)). Rule 45(d) requires that a motion to quash or modify a subpoena be âtimely,â Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A), which typically means the motion must be filed âbefore the earlier of the time specified [in the subpoena] for compliance or 14 days after the subpoena is served,â Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(2)(B). See Williams v. Big Picture Loans, LLC, 303 F. Supp. 3d 434, 442 (E.D. Va. 2018) (collecting cases). As explained, however, the Court is considering Defendantsâ request for protective order as to the nonpartiesâ information under Rule 26(b)â(c), and not under Rule 45(d)(3)(A). See supra n.4. Rule 26(c) does not explicitly limit the time within which a party must move for a protective order.7 See Brittain v. Stroh Brewery Co., 136 F.R.D. 408, 413 (M.D.N.C. 1991) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1)). Courts typically will entertain a motion for a protective order if it is made before the discovery deadline, see, e.g., id., which is still several months away in this case, ECF Nos. 66, 113. Accordingly, Defendantsâ request for a protective order is not untimely. Next, Plaintiffs argue that Defendants are not entitled to the remaining relief sought in their motionâi.e., that the Court quash the third-party subpoenas and âpreclud[e] Plaintiffs from seeking discovery on the Non-Parties,â Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 11âbecause Defendants cannot assert a nonpartyâs legal rights or interests. Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 11â12. âOrdinarily, a party does not have standing to challenge a subpoena issued to a nonparty unless the party claims some personal right or privilege in the information sought by the subpoena.â United States v. Idema, 118 F. Appâx 740, 744 (4th Cir. 2005); accord Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 499 (1975) (noting that a litigant âgenerally must assert his own legal rights and interests, and cannot rest his claim to relief on the legal rights or interests of third partiesâ). I previously found that Defendants had a personal right or interest in protecting their own financial information from disclosure, although their reasons for quashing the seven third-party subpoenas failed on the merits. Order of Oct. 19, 2021, at 1. 7 Rule 26(b)(2) likewise contains no timeframe within which a court should limit discovery âon its own . . . if it determinesâ the information sought is unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, can be obtained from some other source, or is outside the scope permitted by Rule 26(b)(1), or the party seeking discovery had ample opportunity to obtain the information by discovery in the action, Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(i)â(iii). See, e.g., Harrison v. Kennedy, No. 3:18cv57, 2019 WL 3712187, at *2 (D.S.C. Aug. 7. 2019) (relying on Rule 26(b)(2)(C) to quash subpoenas that sought âuntimely and impermissible discoveryâ). The remaining information sought by those (and twenty-two other) subpoenas relates only to the nonpartiesâ âfinancial records and communications with the banks,â Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 6. See Order of Oct. 19, 2021, at 1. Defendants do not claim any âpersonal right to, or privilege in,â that information, Idema, 118 F. Appâx at 744. See generally Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 2, 5â6, 8, 10â11 (discussing only the nonpartiesâ rights and interests). Instead, they argue that Plaintiffsâ subpoenas seeking Mr. Okonskiâs and Mr. Schneiderâs financial records should be quashed because they âfacially violate [the] RFPAâs notice and certification requirements,â Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 6 (citing 12 U.S.C. §§ 3403(b), 3407(2)), and the âRFPA provides a clearly recognized right to bank customers to object to their financial information being disclosed to government authorities,â id. at 10 (citing 12 U.S.C. §§ 3403, 3407).8 This argument fails because Defendants are not âthe customer[s] to whom the [remaining] financial records sought by the Government authority pertain.â 12 U.S.C. § 3410(c) (âIf the court finds that the applicant is not the customer to whom the financial records sought by the Government authority pertain, . . . it shall deny [any] motion or applicationâ to quash the subpoena); see also Hugler v. Chimes Dist. of Columbia, No. RDB-15-3315, 2017 WL 1176031, at *2â3 (D. Md. Mar. 30, 2017) (noting that RFPAâs notice-and-certification requirements âappl[y] only to financial records of individuals or partnerships of five or fewer individuals. The RFPA does not protect corporations, associations, larger partnerships, . . . or other legal entitiesâ). 8 Section 3403(b) dictates that â[a] financial institution shall not release the financial records of a customer until the Government authority seeking such records certifies in writing to the financial institution that it has complied with the applicable provisions of this chapter.â 12 U.S.C. § 3403(b). Section 3407(2) allows a Government authority to âobtain financial records under section 3403(4) of this [T]itle pursuant to a judicial subp[o]ena only if . . . a copy of the subp[o]ena has been served upon the customer or mailed to his last known address on or before the date on which the subp[o]ena was served on the financial institution together with [a prescribed] notice which shall state with reasonable specificity the nature of the [underlying] law enforcement inquiry.â Id. § 3407(2). Defendants assert that â[t]he 29 subpoenasâ issued to financial institutions violate the âRFPA on their face becauseâ Plaintiff CFPB âindisputably did not attempt to comply with its notice and certification requirements under [this] law.â Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 11. To the extent Defendants address the standing issue at all, see Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 11â12, Defendants suggest that they can vicariously assert Mr. Okonskiâs and Mr. Schneiderâs personal âprivacy rightsâ because âthe Fourth Circuit has âdirectedâ lower courts to protect the âprivacy or confidentiality interestsâ of âothers who might be affectedâ by a subpoena.â See Defs.â Suppâl Reply Br. 7 (quoting Jordan, 921 F.3d at 190) (âUnder Jordan, the Court is clearly empoweredâindeed, directedâto protect innocent bystanders from the Plaintiffsâ overreach here.â). In Jordan, the Virginia Department of Corrections (âVDOCâ) moved under Rule 45(d) to quash aspects of a third-party subpoena directing it to produce its own records relating to executions. See generally 921 F.3d at 184â87. The VDOCâs previous responses to the subpoena âprovided much of the requested information,â id. at 186, but it objected to producing other information, including documents that would have revealed âhow Virginia has obtained its execution drugsâ and âthe identities of the people who carry out Virginiaâs executions,â id. at 185 & n.1. The district court held that requiring the VDOC to produce additional documents imposed an âundue burdenâ on the state agency, Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)(iv), and it granted the VDOCâs motion to quash for that reason. Id. at 186â87 (summarizing district courtâs findings that the âVDOCâs prompt responses had provided much of the requested information,â â[a]dditional information was unlikely to be relevant to the key issueâ in the underlying litigation, plaintiffs âfailed to explain what relevant information they could receive from [defendant] Mississippi officials, casting more doubt on their need for additional discovery from VDOCâ and âfurther disclosures would burden Virginiaâs ability to obtain lethal-injection drugsâ that it needed âto carry out lawful executionsâ). The Fourth Circuit affirmed the district courtâs order under Rule 45(d)(3). See generally id. at 188â94. In doing so, the panel noted that âa subpoena may impose a burden by invading privacy or confidentially interestsâ and that â[c]ourts may consider the interests of the recipient of the subpoena, as well as others who might be affectedâ by it, in determining if such invasion constitutes an âundue burdenâ that requires the court to quash or modify the subpoena. Id. at 191 (emphasis added) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)(iv)). Contrary to Defendantsâ position, Defs.â Suppâl Reply Br. 6â7, this language does not âdirectâ lower courts to always âconsider the interests of . . . others who might be affectedâ by a third-party subpoena, Jordan, 921 F.3d at 189. See Jordan, 921 F.3d at 188 (âDistrict courts enjoy considerable discretion in overseeing discovery, and we will disturb a district courtâs discovery rulings only if we find an abuse of that discretion.â (internal quotation marks omitted)). Moreover, unlike the VDOC in Jordan, Defendants here claim no cognizable interest in either the information sought by Plaintiffsâ third- party subpoenas or the procedure by which Plaintiffs may have obtained that information, Defs.â Suppâl Reply Br. 6â7. Accordingly, Defendants have not demonstrated standing to challenge any of Plaintiffsâ subpoenas to the extent they seek information related to Mr. Okonski, Mr. Schneider, or the non-party entities. Nonetheless, the Court must ensure that discovery stays within the scope permitted by Rule 26(b)(1). Mancia, 253 F.R.D. at 364; Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(iii). Defendants broadly object that the financial information related to âthe Non-parties [is] entirely irrelevant to Plaintiffsâ claimsâ because most of those nonparties âare never mentioned in the Complaint,â Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 5 (emphasis omitted), and âthe only reference to affiliated [non-party] entitiesâ in the Complaint is one âthrow-awayâ allegation that âhas no independent significanceâ for Plaintiffsâ CPFA claims against Defendants, id. at 4 (emphasis omitted) (citing Compl. ¶ 79). That is the wrong legal standard. The question is whether the information sought is ârelevant to any partyâs claim or defense,â not whether the plaintiffâs complaint alleges certain facts. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) (emphasis added); see Bell, 2014 WL 1630754, at *6 (âThe scope of discovery for a nonparty . . . is the same as the scope of a discovery request made upon a party to the action, and a party is entitled to information that is relevant to a claim or defense in the matter at issue.â (cleaned up)). âWhile the pleadings will be importantâ in determining whether information is discoverable, âit would be a mistake to argue that no fact may be discovered unless it directly correlates with a factual allegation in the complaint or answer.â Thompson v. Depât of Hous. & Urban Dev., 199 F.R.D. 168, 171â72 (D. Md. 2001). â[A] fact must simply be âgermane to a claim or defense in the pleadingâ and, in determining whether a discovery request is relevant, courts âmust look beyond the allegation of a claim or defense to the controlling substantive law.ââ In re Short, No. 21-50463, 2022 WL 301659, at *5 (Bankr. M.D.N.C. Jan. 28, 2022) (quoting 6 Mooreâs Federal Practice § 26.42 (3d ed. 2021)); see also In re Am. Med. Sys., Inc., MDL No. 2325, 2016 WL 3077904, at *4 (D. Md. May 31, 2016) (âRule 26(b)(1) does not precisely define relevancy. Certainly, information is relevant if it logically relates to a partyâs claim or defense.â). Here, the Court looks to the CFPA and state consumer-protection laws to determine whether the information sought is relevant under Rule 26(b)(1). See generally Compl. ¶¶ 142â251. Defendants also urge the Court to use âthe more exacting standards that apply to non- party discoveryâ in determining whether to âquash or modifyâ Plaintiffsâ third-party subpoenas. Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 6 (citing Jordan, 921 F.3d 180). As noted, Jordan involved nonparty VDOCâs motion to quash a subpoena seeking that state agencyâs records relating to executions. See generally 921 F.3d at 184â87. The district court excused the VDOC from producing any additional records under Rule 45(d)(3)(A)(iv), and the Fourth Circuit affirmed. In doing so, the panel explained that â[n]onparties are strangers to the litigation, and since they have no dog in the fight, they . . . . should not be drawn into the partiesâ dispute without some good reason, even if they have information that falls within the scope of party discovery.â Id. at 189 (cleaned up). âA more demanding variant of the [Rule 26(b)(1)] proportionality analysis therefore applies when determining whether, under Rule 45, a subpoena issued against a nonparty âsubjects a person to undue burdenâ and must be quashed or modified.â Id. (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)(iv)). âAs under Rule 26, the ultimate question is still whether the benefits to the requesting party outweigh the burdens on the recipient.â Id. âBut courts must give the recipientâs nonparty status special weight, leading to an even more demanding and sensitive inquiry than the one governing discovery generally.â Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). For example, âcourts should consider not just the relevance of the information sought, but the requesting partyâs need for itâ and whether the âinformation is available to the requesting party fromâ the parties to the litigation âor, in appropriate cases, from third parties that would be more logical targets to for the subpoena.â Id. Johnson further instructs that, while the moving party âbears the burdens of proof and of persuasionâ on a motion to quash under Rule 45(d), âthey are not terribly difficult burdens to meet if the requesting party cannot articulate its need for the information and address obvious alterative sources.â Id. at 189 n.2. Applying this âmore demanding and sensitive inquiryâ makes sense when the nonparty recipient of a subpoena seeks the courtâs protection under Rule 45(d)(3) to avoid undue burden. See, e.g., Jordan, 921 F.3d at 184; Gilmore v. Jones, 339 F.R.D. 111, 114 (W.D. Va. 2021) (granting nonparty recipientsâ motions to quash subpoenas under Rule 45(d)(3)(A)(iv)). It makes considerably less sense when the nonparty recipient is not the one resisting discovery. Here, it is Defendantsâcertainly no strangers to this litigationâwho moved under Rule 26(c)(1) to quash subpoenas to which the third-party recipients must respond. They do not cite any cases where a court has applied âa more demanding variant of the proportionality analysis,â Jordan, 921 F.3d at 189, when determining whether, under Rule 26(c), there is âgood cause[ to] issue an order to protect a party or person from . . . undue burden,â Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1). See generally Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 6â7, 8 (citing Jordan, 921 F.3d at 189â90). Accordingly, the Court reviews Plaintiffsâ third-party subpoenas under the relevancy and proportionality standards in Rule 26(b)(1). See, e.g., Singletary v. Sterling Transp. Co., Inc., 289 F.R.D. 237, 240â42 (E.D. Va. 2012) (granting plaintiffâs motion to quash defendantâs third-party subpoenas seeking plaintiffâs âentire employment file from his former employersâ because they were âboth overbroad and not tailoredâ to return only such information that would be relevant to plaintiffâs claims against defendant) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C)(iii), (c)(1)). Defendants do not specifically articulate why the nonparty information sought in Plaintiffsâ subpoenas is âirrelevantâ to the claims or defenses in this action or ânot proportionalâ to the needs of the case. See generally Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 3â5, 7â10. âInstead, Defendants mistakenly try to shift the burden of persuasion off of themselves and onto Plaintiff[s] as the requesting party,â Bonumose Biochem, LLC v. Zhang, No. 3:17cv33, 2018 WL 10068639, at *2 n.3 (W.D. Va. Sept. 10, 2018). See, e.g., Defs.â Suppâl Br. in Supp. 8 (âTo be clear, it is not Defendantsâ responsibility here to prove a negative, i.e., that the Non-Parties are not relevant to Plaintiffsâ claims.â). Defendants are âresisting discoveryâ here, and they bear the burden âto explain specifically why [their] objections, including those based on irrelevance, are proper given the broad and liberal construction of federal discovery rules.â Desrosiers, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 601. They have not done so. See Mainstreet Collection, 270 F.R.D. at 241 (â[T]he movant must make a particularized showing of why discovery should be denied, and conclusory or generalized statements fail to satisfy this burden as a matter of law.â); Baron Fin. Corp., 240 F.R.D. at 202 (â[T]o establish good cause [under Rule 26(c)], a proponent may not rely upon stereotyped and conclusory statements, but must present a particular and specific demonstration of fact, as to why a protective order should issue.â (internal quotation marks omitted)). Moreover, Plaintiffs argued persuasively that information about Defendantsâ business and financial relationships with the non-party entities and individuals âis relevant because it âlogically relatesâ to claims and fact[s]â at issue in this case, Bonumose, 2018 WL 10068639, at *2 (quoting In re Am. Med. Sys., 2016 WL 3077904, at *4), including potential remedies if Plaintiffs prevail on their CFPA claims. See Pls.â Br. in Oppân 8â9. Plaintiffs also produced evidence demonstrating that Defendants Donovan, Moore, and Ajin are the âsole ownersâ of Defendant Nexus, âwhich in turn wholly ownsâ several non-party entities listed in Plaintiffsâ subpoenas,9 Gordon Decl. ¶ 12 (citing id. Ex. A-5), and that âNexus Programs, Inc. is a âpredecessor entity . . . providing bond securitization services for [immigration] detainees thought the use of GPS devices,ââ Gordon Decl. ¶ 13 (quoting id. Ex. A-6, ECF No. 100-1, at 43). Public records also show that Defendants Donovan, Moore, and/or Ajin are listed as a 9 Those entities are Entertainment by Nexus, Homes by Nexus, Nexus Commercial Ventures, Nexus Investigations & Security, Nexus Properties, One Fish Two Fish, Secure by Nexus, and Serve by Nexus. See Gordon Decl. ¶ 12, ECF No. 100-1, at 5; id. Ex. A-5 (true and correct copy of chart showing Nexusâs âorganizational structure and personnel hierarchy and the relationship of all affiliated entities, including parent and subsidiary status,â produced by Nexus in response to Plaintiff CFPBâs civil investigative demand dated August 21, 2017), ECF No. 100-1, at 39. These Nexus âsubsidiaries all ha[d] their principal place of business at 113 Mill Place Parkwayâ in Verona, Virginia. Id. Ex. A-6, ECF No. 100-1, at 43. In February 2016, Defendants Nexus, Donovan, and Moore further identified Nexus Libre and Nexus Caridades as âsubsidiary compan[ies] of Nexus Services, Inc.â that had âeither a financial interest in or other interest which could be substantially affected by the outcome ofâ pending litigation. Id. Ex. A-7, Joint Statement of Interested Parties, Omnilink Sys. v. Nexus Programs, Inc., No. 1:15cv3181 (N.D. Ga. Feb. 5, 2016), ECF No. 100-1, at 49. Public records show that Executive Investigation Consultants, Nexus Caridades Attorneys, Nexus Financial Services Corporation, Nexus Health, and Nexus Monitoring also have their principal place of business at 113 Mill Place Parkway in Verona, Virginia. See Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 6 n.12. director for nonparties Entlest Brands, Fangistics, Fixify Solutions, Nexus Financial Services Corporation, Nexus Health, and Nexus Services of Virginia. Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 6 n.12. Plaintiffs note that these entitiesâ assets may be âattributable to those Defendants who own or control them.â Id. Plaintiffs also produced compelling evidence that significant amounts of money have been transferred between Defendants Nexus and/or Libre and Mr. Okonski, Fangistics, Fixify Solutions, and Entlest Brands, as well as between Nexus Services of Virginia, and Executive Investigation Consultants, Fangistics, and Fixify Solutions. See Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 5, 7â8; see, e.g., id. Ex. A-8, Decl. of Raymond Peroutka Jr. ¶¶ 5â18 (Nov. 7, 2018), RLI v. Nexus Servs., Inc., No. 5:18cv66 (W.D. Va. filed Apr. 12, 2018). Mr. Okonski was Nexusâs Chief Financial Officer and likely had ârights to sign or make changes on the accountsâ belonging to Nexus and/or its subsidiary entities. Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 8 n.25. Mr. Schneider is also a longtime executive at Nexus and, along with Defendant Donovan, is listed in public records as a director of Nexus Financial Services Corporation. See id. at 6 n.12. Plaintiffs correctly note that their âsubpoenas seek documents concerning entities in which Mr. Okonski and Mr. Schneider have rights to sign or make changes on the accounts,â not the nonparty individualsâ personal financial records. Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 8 n.25; see, e.g., Pls.â Subpoena to FirstBank P.R. 5, at ¶1(bb) (âAny other Entity [including a sole proprietorship] that has Timothy J. Okonski or Erik Schneider listed as having rights to sign or make changes to the account[.]â), ECF No. 67-1, at 30. Accordingly, I find that Plaintiffs may obtain and review the requested nonparty information to âfully understandâ Defendantsâ financial condition and relevant business relationships, Pls.â Suppâl Br. in Oppân 7, as they prepare their case for trial. See generally Sines v. Kessler, No. 3:17cv72, 2019 WL 3767475, at *2 (W.D. Va. Aug. 9, 2019) (ââThe basic philosophy driving discovery today is âthat prior to trial every party to a civil action is entitled to the disclosure of all relevant information in the possession of any person, unless the information is privileged.ââ (quoting 8 Charles Wright & Arthur Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2001 (3d ed. 2002)); accord Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 501 (1947) (âThe way is now clear, consistent with recognized privileges, for the parties to obtain the fullest possible knowledge of the issues and facts before trial.â (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 26-37 (1937)). IV. Conclusion For the foregoing reasons, Defendantsâ âRevived Motion to Stay and Motion to Quash Third-Party Subpoenas,â ECF No. 67, as supplemented by Defendantsâ âSupplemental Brief and Motion to Quash or For Protective Order as to Plaintiffsâ Third-Party Subpoenas,â ECF No. 99, is hereby DENIED in its entirety. IT IS SO ORDERED. ENTER: May 19, 2022 Jor E- Hygy. Joel C. Hoppe U.S. Magistrate Judge 22
Case Information
- Court
- W.D. Va.
- Decision Date
- May 19, 2022
- Status
- Precedential