Rouse v. H.B. Fuller Company

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Rouse v. H.B. Fuller Company

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Lisa Rouse, Juston Rouse, Jenna Drouin,                                  
and Nicholas Drouin, individually and on                                 
behalf of all others similarly situated,  Case No. 22-CV-02173 (JMB/JFD) 
  Plaintiffs,                               ORDER                        
    v.                                                                   
H.B. Fuller Company and H.B. Fuller                                      
Construction Products Inc.,                                              
  Defendants.                                                            

    The  Court  held  a  hearing  on  Plaintiffs’  Motion  to  Compel  the  production  of 
documents in response to Plaintiffs’ Fifth Requests for Production (“RFPs”) (Dkt. No. 273) 
on November 4, 2024. David Hine and Emily St. Cyr appeared for Plaintiffs, and Jeremy 
Root,  Todd  Noteboom,  and  Courtney  Harrison  appeared  for  Defendants  H.B.  Fuller 
Company and H.B. Fuller Construction Products Inc. (“HBF”).               
    Plaintiffs’ RFPs request the following documents:                    
    159. All Documents and Communications responsive to or collected by the 
    ESI Protocol from April 1, 2023 to present. (Emphasis added)         
    160. All Documents and Communications referring to, or relating to, the 
    Products.                                                            
    161.  All  Documents  and  Communications  constituting,  referring  to,  or 
    relating to questions, claims, cases, complaints or grievances You received 
    in any form from anyone—including consumers, contractors, retailers or 
    distributors—referring or relating to the Products including, but not limited 
    to,  legal  complaints,  complaints  to  customer  service,  warranty  claims, 
    complaints to or from state or federal regulatory agencies, and all TEC 
    Product Investigation Reports that You have received referring or relating to 
    the Products.                                                        
    162. All Documents constituting, referring to, [or] relating to summaries, 
    trends, reports, tracking, or analyzing claims or cases initiated, logged, or 
    otherwise reported regarding the Products from 2009 to the present. For the 
    avoidance  of  doubt,  this  request  seeks  all  summaries,  trends,  reports, 
    tracking, or analysis of claims and cases (including those that never result in 
    a claim). (Emphasis added)                                           
    163.  All  Documents  and  Communications  constituting,  referring  to,  or 
    relating to Your testing of the Products from 2009 to the present. (Emphasis 
    added)                                                               
    164.  All  Documents  and  Communications  referring,  or  relating  to  any 
    alleged  defects  in  the  Products,  including  any  documents  constituting, 
    referring, or relating to any to any [sic] investigations conducted into any 
    alleged defects in Products.                                         
    165. Documents sufficient to show any and all amounts paid to consumers, 
    retailers or distributors in connection with complaints about the Products.  
    166. All Documents pertaining to the sale of any H.B. Fuller stock by 
    members of Your Executive Management Team or Board of Directors, as  
    identified on the Website, after August 12, 2022. (Emphasis added)   
    167. All work instructions, standard operating procedures/SOPs, or other 
    procedures, relating to or governing the Products. For the avoidance of doubt, 
    this  request  seeks  all  operative  versions  or  “revisions”  of  the  work 
    instructions, standard operating procedures/SOPs, or other procedures from 
    2009  to  the  present  that  relate  to  the  formulation,  design,  creation, 
    manufacture, quality assurance, testing, review, distribution, claim analysis, 
    customer service, or any other operation relating to the Products. (Emphasis 
    added)                                                               
(Pl.’s Fifth Set of RFPs 7–10, Dkt. No. 277-1 (“5th RFPs”).) The Court will address each 
in turn, but the Court must first describe what it has decided to this point because the 
majority of the discovery requests at issue in this motion are seriously out of compliance 
with the Court’s earlier rulings.                                         
 I.   The Court’s Previous Rulings                                       
    The Court was chiefly guided by two principles when deciding discovery disputes 
in this case. First, material more recent than April 1, 2023 is not discoverable except for 
specific, focused requests. Second, this temporal limit may not be evaded by seeking 
“rolling discovery,” that is, discovery requests of a general nature seeking information 

more recent than April 1, 2023, but doing so in the guise of requesting updates to general 
discovery requests that call for material before that date.               
    This Court found the appropriate temporal scope of discovery in this case to be from 
January 1, 2016 to April 1, 2023.  (Nov. 4 Hr’g Tr. 15:2–5, Dkt. No. 288 (“[A]t some point 
discoverable material stops being discoverable because there's simply got to be some 
finality and in this case that was decided as being April the 1st of 2023.”).)1 As with 

discovery requests seeking production of documents created since April 1, 2023, the court 
has allowed limited discovery on requests for specific documents earlier than 2016. These 
decisions are made on a case-by-case basis. For example, in ruling on a request for 
documents about product formulas, the Court’s oral order on August 21, 2024 was, “Let's 
begin with 2011 to 2016. That component of Plaintiffs' motion to compel is granted in part 

and denied in part. Defendants must produce responsive documents. However, production 
of one formula will be sufficient as to all colors of that particular type of grout.” (August 
21, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 41:12–17, Dkt. No. 259.) The Court will continue to make decisions 
about 2011 to 2016 discovery in this individualized way, rather than on a large scale, in 
order to provide appropriate discovery to Plaintiffs while also managing the volume of 



1 This Court’s order setting the window of time for which material is discoverable has been 
objected to by Plaintiffs and is under review by the District Judge, the Hon. Jeffrey Bryan. 
(See  Dkt.  No.  293.)  Should  Judge  Bryan  decide  that  a  different  temporal  scope  is 
appropriate, the necessary adjustments should be relatively straightforward.  
discovery and reducing the burden that accompanies recovery of documents that may be 
over a decade old.                                                        

    Second, as the Court has stated multiple times, “rolling discovery” will not be 
permitted, no matter how a request for it is framed. (Aug. 21, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 46:3–5, Dkt. 
No. 259 (“I think the characterization of this as rolling discovery is accurate, and I will not 
order that.”); Nov. 4, 2024 Hr’g Tr. 11:19–21, Dkt. No. 288 (“At the conclusion of the 
[Aug. 21] hearing, I said that there wasn't going to be rolling production in this case.”).)  
    The only exception to this rule was for information directly related to two named 

plaintiffs because that information remains discoverable. (Id. at 14:23–15:1.) This is the 
only information beyond April 1, 2023 that Plaintiffs may receive without further analysis, 
and this has been the consistent ruling of the Court since August.        
    As to production of documents after September '23, for today's purposes, that 
    motion is granted in part and denied in part in that defendants need produce 
    documents after 9/23 only as to the customers Andree, who I understand to 
    be a married couple and, therefore, there's two plaintiffs. Those do need to 
    be produced. This does not prevent plaintiffs from other focused -- and I 
    stress “focused” -- requests.”                                       
(Aug. 21, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 42:9–16, Dkt. No. 259.) As with documents preceding 2016, the 
Court left open the possibility of additional focused requests for documents created after 
September 2023 on a limited basis, premised upon a showing of a demonstrable need for 
more recent documents. Some of the requests in Plaintiffs’ Fifth Set of RFPs, specifically 
RFPs 159, 160, and 167, directly violate this Court’s August 21 Order. All these requests 
use the words “to the present” to make explicit that they seek documents produced after 
2023, and none of the three is “focused” in any meaningful sense of that word. This is not 
the first time the Court has admonished the parties for seeking second and third bites at 
discovery cherries in this case. (See Nov. 4, 2024 Hr’g Tr. 12:6–8 (“And this -- these look 

to me, Mr. Hine, like exactly what I said you couldn't have, which is to say rolling 
production.”).) The parties are not being deterred from trying to obtain discovery that has 
been judicially found to be irrelevant or disproportionate by the Court’s responses to this 
behavior to date. Since the Court’s actions so far have apparently been too tepid, the Court 
will resort to sterner tools going forward.                               

I.   RFPs Requesting Information Beyond the Temporal Scope of Discovery Set by 
    the Court                                                            

 A. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 159, 160, and 167 is denied because it 
    directly contradicts the Court’s previous orders.                    
    There could not be a more paradigmatic example of the “rolling discovery” the 
Court forbade in August than RFP 159. It seeks “[a]ll Documents and Communications 
responsive to or collected by the ESI Protocol from April 1, 2023 to present.” On August 
21 the Court ordered the parties not to seek discovery after April 1, 2023, unless it was 
focused. RFP 159 takes as its starting date April 1, 2023 and asks for all responsive 
documents since that date. On November 4, Plaintiffs tried to defend RFP 159 and the other 
clearly violative RFPs by positing a distinction between a new RFP and supplementation 
of a previous RFP. Plaintiffs claimed that they understood only the latter to be “rolling 
production” (because it updates an existing RFP) while a new RFP, by definition, is not an 
update (because there is nothing to be updated), and so is not rolling production. (See Nov. 
4, 2024 Hr’g Tr. 15:10–23, Dkt. No. 288.) In light of the full context of the Court’s August 
21 ruling, which stated clearly that information beyond April 1, 2023 was out of bounds, 
the effort to distinguish existing RFPs from new RFPs is not tenable. Even if an update to 
an old RFP can be distinguished from a wholly new RFP, there is no difference in the 

documents whose disclosure Plaintiffs sought, and it is the documents sought, not the 
discovery technique used to do the seeking, that matters.                 
    The subject of a Court’s discovery orders is the material a party seeks in discovery, 
not the vehicle by which the party attempts to obtain that material. Discovery that is 
irrelevant or disproportional does not become relevant or proportional because it is sought 
by  an  interrogatory  rather  than  in  a  deposition  –  or  in  a  new  RFP  rather  than  a 

supplementation to an old RFP. This is particularly true here, where the Court stated that 
information created beyond a certain date is not discoverable, apart from one-off, focused 
requests for specific material. There is only one reasonable interpretation of the Court’s 
previous order: that Plaintiffs may request documents created beyond April 2023 if the 
request is focused to resolve specific outstanding questions. RFP 159 meets neither of these 

requirements. It lacks specificity in the types of documents it requests, and it specifically 
requests only information beyond April 1, 2023. To the extent Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel 
seeks documents responsive to RFP 159, it is denied.                      
     Turning to RFP 160, the Court finds that in addition to partaking in all of the flaws 
identified  in  RFP  159,  RFP  160  is  also  facially  overbroad,  as  RFP  160  seeks  “All 

Documents and Communications referring to, or relating to, the Products.” (5th RFP.) This 
is in no way focused and seeks information both before and after the Court’s defined 
discovery window. To the extent Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel seeks compliance with RFP 
160, it is denied.                                                        
    RFP 167 specifically seeks information both before January 1, 2016 and beyond 
April 1, 2023. As stated above, requests in such a date range must be focused to address a 

specific question. While veiled slightly, RFP 167 fares no better than RFP 160 in any 
reasonable  overbreadth  analysis.  It  seeks  “All  work  instructions,  standard  operating 
procedures/SOPs, or other procedures, relating to or governing the Products … from 2009 
to  the  present  that  relate  to  the  formulation,  design,  creation,  manufacture,  quality 
assurance, testing, review, distribution, claim analysis, customer service, or any other 
operation relating to the Products.” (5th RFP; emphasis added) It essentially seeks all 

procedures relating to any operations relating to the Products before, during, and after the 
relevant period for discovery in this case. There is no way to interpret the text of RFP 167 
as focused, and therefore, Plaintiffs’ motion as to that request is denied. 

 B. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 161 and 162 is granted in part and 
    denied in part.                                                      
    RFPs  161  and  162  were  discussed  extensively  at  the  November  4  hearing. 
Consistent with that discussion, the Court finds that RFP 161 is overly broad and exceeds 
the scope of discovery set in the August order. What HBF is required to produce regarding 
the “cases,” “claims,”2 complaints, grievances, or other items requested in RFPs 161 and 
162 is 1), as described at the November hearing, is an easily readable spreadsheet such as 


2 On the representation of the parties, a “case” is created any time a customer contacts HBF 
regarding unsatisfactory performance of a Power Grout product. A “claim” is a case that 
has been further developed by a customer who pursues some kind of remedy for an 
unsatisfactory product, which may involve the customer completing and returning a form 
called  a  “Product  Information  Report”  (“PIR”).  This  understanding  controls  for  the 
purposes of this order.                                                   
the one discussed (and which the Court assumes has been produced by now) during the 
November hearing (Nov. 4, 2024, Hr’g. Tr.  31–44, Dkt. No 288) and 2) the raw number 

of “cases” HBF created from January 1, 2016 to April 1, 2023 regarding Power Grout. If 
the spreadsheet is difficult to read or interpret, HBF must provide Plaintiffs with a key or 
other explanatory device that can assist them in understanding the data it provides.  
    At the November 4 hearing, it became apparent that Plaintiffs’ counsel had not yet 
had the opportunity to review HBF’s most recent discovery production. HBF’s counsel 
stated that in that production, there was a document that provided the raw number of 

“cases” created regarding Power Grout. (Nov. 4, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 43:7–44:1.) The Court 
ordered the parties to Meet and Confer regarding that production and to contact the Court 
if the raw number of cases did not appear in that production. (Id. at 44:2–6.) That order is 
duplicated here for clarity and completeness.                             
    Plaintiffs’ motion as to RFP 162 is denied for the same reason as RFP 167. It 

explicitly seeks information beyond April 1, 2023 and is not focused. Denial of RFP 162 
does not change the requirement above that HBF provide Plaintiffs with an easily readable 
customer feedback spreadsheet and the raw number of Power Grout “cases” it has created.   

 C. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 163 and 164 is granted in part and 
    denied to the extent it seeks previously unproduced documents created after 
    April 1, 2023.                                                       
    RFP 163 requests “[a]ll Documents and Communications constituting, referring to, 
or relating to [HBF’s] testing of the Products from 2009 to the present,” while RFP 164 
seeks “[a]ll Documents and Communications referring, or relating to any alleged defects 
in the Products.” While these RFPs are more specific than the RFPs discussed above, they 
temporally extend, in both directions, beyond what the Court has found to be proportional 
discovery in this case. Requests for documents before January 1, 2016 or after April 1, 

2023 must be specific and targeted to documents that are necessary to provide context or 
understanding to documents or events within the window. Plaintiffs’ memorandum in 
support of their motion to compel does not explain why pre-2016 or post-2023 discovery 
as to defects or testing is needed to shed light on 2016 to 2023 discovery. At the case 
management conference on December 9, Plaintiffs will be given an opportunity to explain 
this, and Defendants an opportunity to respond.                           

    To the extent that RFPs 163 and 164 seek previously unproduced documents that 
were created between January 1, 2016 and April 1, 2023, Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel is 
granted. Documents related to HBF’s testing of Power Grout and related products, as well 
as its communications regarding alleged defects, are relevant and proportional to Plaintiff’s 
claims that HBF knew of potential flaws in the products and continued to market them as 

specialty products.                                                       
II.  RFPs Requesting Other Information                                    
    Plaintiffs’ Fifth Set of RFPs also contains three RFPs seeking new information, not 

sought in previous discovery, including the information sought in RFPs 165 and 166. RFP 
165 was not addressed in Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Support of their Motion to Compel, 
(Pl.’s Mem. in Supp., Dkt. No. 276), and HBF states in its brief that it has “agreed to 
supplement this information through August 2024 as opposed to the close of discovery for 
the simple reason that they need time to collect the data and produce it before the close of 
discovery.” (Def.’s Mem. in Opp. 11, n. 2, Dkt. No. 280.) Neither party addressed RFP 165 
at the hearing. Based on HBF’s assertion that this issue has been settled, the Court denies 

as moot Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFP 165. If additional discovery disputes arise 
as to HBF’s payments to customers connected to customer feedback, Plaintiffs may refile 
their Motion as to RFP 165 after the required Meet and Confer process.    
    RFP 166 seeks “All Documents pertaining to the sale of any H.B. Fuller stock by 
members of Your Executive Management Team or Board of Directors, as identified on the 
Website, after August 12, 2022.” As with  RFP 165, RFP 166 was not addressed in 

Plaintiffs’ briefing, (Pl.’s Mem. in Supp., Dkt. No. 276), but HBF objects to the Motion as 
to this RFP because it claims the request is “an irrelevant fishing expedition” and that any 
information Plaintiffs need is already publicly available. At the November 4 hearing, 
Plaintiffs stated that they have received no information regarding the sale of stock and need 
some production on the issue to determine whether it is a line of inquiry that is worth 

pursuing. The Court finds HBF’s argument persuasive. Plaintiffs’ “hunch or speculation 
that there might be something [in the sale of stock] that may help [their] case” Keller v. 
Pepsi Bottling Grp., Inc., No. CV 07-1473 (MJD/AJB), 
2007 WL 9735622
, at *3 (D. Minn. 
Aug.  27,  2007),  does  not  provide  sufficient  justification  for  expanding  the scope  of 
discovery in this case to corporate actions whose relevance is speculative. If Plaintiffs can 

identify anything beyond speculation that there may be something relevant in the stock 
sale, they may revisit the issue.                                         
III.  Extension of Deadline for Rule 30(b)(6) Deposition                  
 Finally, as discussed in the November 4 hearing, the Court will extend the deadline for 

Plaintiffs to take the corporate representative deposition of HBF under Federal Rule of 
Civil Procedure 30(b)(6) to January  5, 2025. The parties  had existing disagreements 
regarding the required deposition notice at the November 4 hearing, that it appears they 
have appealed to Judge Bryan, and the existing deadline passed while the Court drafted 
this Order.                                                               

                        CONCLUSION                                       
 Based on all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED 

THAT for the reasons stated herein and on the record by the Court at the hearing, Plaintiffs’ 
Motion to Compel is GRANTED in part and DENIED in PART.                   
  1.  Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 159, 160, 166, and 167 is DENIED. 

  2.  Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 161 and 162 is GRANTED to the extent 
     that HBF shall produce an easily readable customer feedback spreadsheet and shall 
     disclose the number of Power Grout “cases” it opened between January 1, 2016 
     and April 1, 2023 and otherwise is DENIED.                          
  3.  Plaintiffs’ Motion  to  Compel as  to  RFPs 163  and  164  is TAKEN  UNDER 

     ADVISEMENT pending argument from the attorneys at the December 9, 2024 
     case management conference.                                         
  4.  Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFP 165 is DENIED AS MOOT WITHOUT 
     PREJUDICE.                                                          
5.  The  deadline  by  which  Plaintiffs  must  complete  the  corporate  representative 
  deposition of HBF is EXTENDED to January 5, 2025.                   

 Dated: December 4, 2024        s/  John F. Docherty                  
                                JOHN F. DOCHERTY                      

                                United States Magistrate Judge        

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Lisa Rouse, Juston Rouse, Jenna Drouin,                                  
and Nicholas Drouin, individually and on                                 
behalf of all others similarly situated,  Case No. 22-CV-02173 (JMB/JFD) 
  Plaintiffs,                               ORDER                        
    v.                                                                   
H.B. Fuller Company and H.B. Fuller                                      
Construction Products Inc.,                                              
  Defendants.                                                            

    The  Court  held  a  hearing  on  Plaintiffs’  Motion  to  Compel  the  production  of 
documents in response to Plaintiffs’ Fifth Requests for Production (“RFPs”) (Dkt. No. 273) 
on November 4, 2024. David Hine and Emily St. Cyr appeared for Plaintiffs, and Jeremy 
Root,  Todd  Noteboom,  and  Courtney  Harrison  appeared  for  Defendants  H.B.  Fuller 
Company and H.B. Fuller Construction Products Inc. (“HBF”).               
    Plaintiffs’ RFPs request the following documents:                    
    159. All Documents and Communications responsive to or collected by the 
    ESI Protocol from April 1, 2023 to present. (Emphasis added)         
    160. All Documents and Communications referring to, or relating to, the 
    Products.                                                            
    161.  All  Documents  and  Communications  constituting,  referring  to,  or 
    relating to questions, claims, cases, complaints or grievances You received 
    in any form from anyone—including consumers, contractors, retailers or 
    distributors—referring or relating to the Products including, but not limited 
    to,  legal  complaints,  complaints  to  customer  service,  warranty  claims, 
    complaints to or from state or federal regulatory agencies, and all TEC 
    Product Investigation Reports that You have received referring or relating to 
    the Products.                                                        
    162. All Documents constituting, referring to, [or] relating to summaries, 
    trends, reports, tracking, or analyzing claims or cases initiated, logged, or 
    otherwise reported regarding the Products from 2009 to the present. For the 
    avoidance  of  doubt,  this  request  seeks  all  summaries,  trends,  reports, 
    tracking, or analysis of claims and cases (including those that never result in 
    a claim). (Emphasis added)                                           
    163.  All  Documents  and  Communications  constituting,  referring  to,  or 
    relating to Your testing of the Products from 2009 to the present. (Emphasis 
    added)                                                               
    164.  All  Documents  and  Communications  referring,  or  relating  to  any 
    alleged  defects  in  the  Products,  including  any  documents  constituting, 
    referring, or relating to any to any [sic] investigations conducted into any 
    alleged defects in Products.                                         
    165. Documents sufficient to show any and all amounts paid to consumers, 
    retailers or distributors in connection with complaints about the Products.  
    166. All Documents pertaining to the sale of any H.B. Fuller stock by 
    members of Your Executive Management Team or Board of Directors, as  
    identified on the Website, after August 12, 2022. (Emphasis added)   
    167. All work instructions, standard operating procedures/SOPs, or other 
    procedures, relating to or governing the Products. For the avoidance of doubt, 
    this  request  seeks  all  operative  versions  or  “revisions”  of  the  work 
    instructions, standard operating procedures/SOPs, or other procedures from 
    2009  to  the  present  that  relate  to  the  formulation,  design,  creation, 
    manufacture, quality assurance, testing, review, distribution, claim analysis, 
    customer service, or any other operation relating to the Products. (Emphasis 
    added)                                                               
(Pl.’s Fifth Set of RFPs 7–10, Dkt. No. 277-1 (“5th RFPs”).) The Court will address each 
in turn, but the Court must first describe what it has decided to this point because the 
majority of the discovery requests at issue in this motion are seriously out of compliance 
with the Court’s earlier rulings.                                         
 I.   The Court’s Previous Rulings                                       
    The Court was chiefly guided by two principles when deciding discovery disputes 
in this case. First, material more recent than April 1, 2023 is not discoverable except for 
specific, focused requests. Second, this temporal limit may not be evaded by seeking 
“rolling discovery,” that is, discovery requests of a general nature seeking information 

more recent than April 1, 2023, but doing so in the guise of requesting updates to general 
discovery requests that call for material before that date.               
    This Court found the appropriate temporal scope of discovery in this case to be from 
January 1, 2016 to April 1, 2023.  (Nov. 4 Hr’g Tr. 15:2–5, Dkt. No. 288 (“[A]t some point 
discoverable material stops being discoverable because there's simply got to be some 
finality and in this case that was decided as being April the 1st of 2023.”).)1 As with 

discovery requests seeking production of documents created since April 1, 2023, the court 
has allowed limited discovery on requests for specific documents earlier than 2016. These 
decisions are made on a case-by-case basis. For example, in ruling on a request for 
documents about product formulas, the Court’s oral order on August 21, 2024 was, “Let's 
begin with 2011 to 2016. That component of Plaintiffs' motion to compel is granted in part 

and denied in part. Defendants must produce responsive documents. However, production 
of one formula will be sufficient as to all colors of that particular type of grout.” (August 
21, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 41:12–17, Dkt. No. 259.) The Court will continue to make decisions 
about 2011 to 2016 discovery in this individualized way, rather than on a large scale, in 
order to provide appropriate discovery to Plaintiffs while also managing the volume of 



1 This Court’s order setting the window of time for which material is discoverable has been 
objected to by Plaintiffs and is under review by the District Judge, the Hon. Jeffrey Bryan. 
(See  Dkt.  No.  293.)  Should  Judge  Bryan  decide  that  a  different  temporal  scope  is 
appropriate, the necessary adjustments should be relatively straightforward.  
discovery and reducing the burden that accompanies recovery of documents that may be 
over a decade old.                                                        

    Second, as the Court has stated multiple times, “rolling discovery” will not be 
permitted, no matter how a request for it is framed. (Aug. 21, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 46:3–5, Dkt. 
No. 259 (“I think the characterization of this as rolling discovery is accurate, and I will not 
order that.”); Nov. 4, 2024 Hr’g Tr. 11:19–21, Dkt. No. 288 (“At the conclusion of the 
[Aug. 21] hearing, I said that there wasn't going to be rolling production in this case.”).)  
    The only exception to this rule was for information directly related to two named 

plaintiffs because that information remains discoverable. (Id. at 14:23–15:1.) This is the 
only information beyond April 1, 2023 that Plaintiffs may receive without further analysis, 
and this has been the consistent ruling of the Court since August.        
    As to production of documents after September '23, for today's purposes, that 
    motion is granted in part and denied in part in that defendants need produce 
    documents after 9/23 only as to the customers Andree, who I understand to 
    be a married couple and, therefore, there's two plaintiffs. Those do need to 
    be produced. This does not prevent plaintiffs from other focused -- and I 
    stress “focused” -- requests.”                                       
(Aug. 21, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 42:9–16, Dkt. No. 259.) As with documents preceding 2016, the 
Court left open the possibility of additional focused requests for documents created after 
September 2023 on a limited basis, premised upon a showing of a demonstrable need for 
more recent documents. Some of the requests in Plaintiffs’ Fifth Set of RFPs, specifically 
RFPs 159, 160, and 167, directly violate this Court’s August 21 Order. All these requests 
use the words “to the present” to make explicit that they seek documents produced after 
2023, and none of the three is “focused” in any meaningful sense of that word. This is not 
the first time the Court has admonished the parties for seeking second and third bites at 
discovery cherries in this case. (See Nov. 4, 2024 Hr’g Tr. 12:6–8 (“And this -- these look 

to me, Mr. Hine, like exactly what I said you couldn't have, which is to say rolling 
production.”).) The parties are not being deterred from trying to obtain discovery that has 
been judicially found to be irrelevant or disproportionate by the Court’s responses to this 
behavior to date. Since the Court’s actions so far have apparently been too tepid, the Court 
will resort to sterner tools going forward.                               

I.   RFPs Requesting Information Beyond the Temporal Scope of Discovery Set by 
    the Court                                                            

 A. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 159, 160, and 167 is denied because it 
    directly contradicts the Court’s previous orders.                    
    There could not be a more paradigmatic example of the “rolling discovery” the 
Court forbade in August than RFP 159. It seeks “[a]ll Documents and Communications 
responsive to or collected by the ESI Protocol from April 1, 2023 to present.” On August 
21 the Court ordered the parties not to seek discovery after April 1, 2023, unless it was 
focused. RFP 159 takes as its starting date April 1, 2023 and asks for all responsive 
documents since that date. On November 4, Plaintiffs tried to defend RFP 159 and the other 
clearly violative RFPs by positing a distinction between a new RFP and supplementation 
of a previous RFP. Plaintiffs claimed that they understood only the latter to be “rolling 
production” (because it updates an existing RFP) while a new RFP, by definition, is not an 
update (because there is nothing to be updated), and so is not rolling production. (See Nov. 
4, 2024 Hr’g Tr. 15:10–23, Dkt. No. 288.) In light of the full context of the Court’s August 
21 ruling, which stated clearly that information beyond April 1, 2023 was out of bounds, 
the effort to distinguish existing RFPs from new RFPs is not tenable. Even if an update to 
an old RFP can be distinguished from a wholly new RFP, there is no difference in the 

documents whose disclosure Plaintiffs sought, and it is the documents sought, not the 
discovery technique used to do the seeking, that matters.                 
    The subject of a Court’s discovery orders is the material a party seeks in discovery, 
not the vehicle by which the party attempts to obtain that material. Discovery that is 
irrelevant or disproportional does not become relevant or proportional because it is sought 
by  an  interrogatory  rather  than  in  a  deposition  –  or  in  a  new  RFP  rather  than  a 

supplementation to an old RFP. This is particularly true here, where the Court stated that 
information created beyond a certain date is not discoverable, apart from one-off, focused 
requests for specific material. There is only one reasonable interpretation of the Court’s 
previous order: that Plaintiffs may request documents created beyond April 2023 if the 
request is focused to resolve specific outstanding questions. RFP 159 meets neither of these 

requirements. It lacks specificity in the types of documents it requests, and it specifically 
requests only information beyond April 1, 2023. To the extent Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel 
seeks documents responsive to RFP 159, it is denied.                      
     Turning to RFP 160, the Court finds that in addition to partaking in all of the flaws 
identified  in  RFP  159,  RFP  160  is  also  facially  overbroad,  as  RFP  160  seeks  “All 

Documents and Communications referring to, or relating to, the Products.” (5th RFP.) This 
is in no way focused and seeks information both before and after the Court’s defined 
discovery window. To the extent Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel seeks compliance with RFP 
160, it is denied.                                                        
    RFP 167 specifically seeks information both before January 1, 2016 and beyond 
April 1, 2023. As stated above, requests in such a date range must be focused to address a 

specific question. While veiled slightly, RFP 167 fares no better than RFP 160 in any 
reasonable  overbreadth  analysis.  It  seeks  “All  work  instructions,  standard  operating 
procedures/SOPs, or other procedures, relating to or governing the Products … from 2009 
to  the  present  that  relate  to  the  formulation,  design,  creation,  manufacture,  quality 
assurance, testing, review, distribution, claim analysis, customer service, or any other 
operation relating to the Products.” (5th RFP; emphasis added) It essentially seeks all 

procedures relating to any operations relating to the Products before, during, and after the 
relevant period for discovery in this case. There is no way to interpret the text of RFP 167 
as focused, and therefore, Plaintiffs’ motion as to that request is denied. 

 B. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 161 and 162 is granted in part and 
    denied in part.                                                      
    RFPs  161  and  162  were  discussed  extensively  at  the  November  4  hearing. 
Consistent with that discussion, the Court finds that RFP 161 is overly broad and exceeds 
the scope of discovery set in the August order. What HBF is required to produce regarding 
the “cases,” “claims,”2 complaints, grievances, or other items requested in RFPs 161 and 
162 is 1), as described at the November hearing, is an easily readable spreadsheet such as 


2 On the representation of the parties, a “case” is created any time a customer contacts HBF 
regarding unsatisfactory performance of a Power Grout product. A “claim” is a case that 
has been further developed by a customer who pursues some kind of remedy for an 
unsatisfactory product, which may involve the customer completing and returning a form 
called  a  “Product  Information  Report”  (“PIR”).  This  understanding  controls  for  the 
purposes of this order.                                                   
the one discussed (and which the Court assumes has been produced by now) during the 
November hearing (Nov. 4, 2024, Hr’g. Tr.  31–44, Dkt. No 288) and 2) the raw number 

of “cases” HBF created from January 1, 2016 to April 1, 2023 regarding Power Grout. If 
the spreadsheet is difficult to read or interpret, HBF must provide Plaintiffs with a key or 
other explanatory device that can assist them in understanding the data it provides.  
    At the November 4 hearing, it became apparent that Plaintiffs’ counsel had not yet 
had the opportunity to review HBF’s most recent discovery production. HBF’s counsel 
stated that in that production, there was a document that provided the raw number of 

“cases” created regarding Power Grout. (Nov. 4, 2024 Hr’g. Tr. 43:7–44:1.) The Court 
ordered the parties to Meet and Confer regarding that production and to contact the Court 
if the raw number of cases did not appear in that production. (Id. at 44:2–6.) That order is 
duplicated here for clarity and completeness.                             
    Plaintiffs’ motion as to RFP 162 is denied for the same reason as RFP 167. It 

explicitly seeks information beyond April 1, 2023 and is not focused. Denial of RFP 162 
does not change the requirement above that HBF provide Plaintiffs with an easily readable 
customer feedback spreadsheet and the raw number of Power Grout “cases” it has created.   

 C. Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 163 and 164 is granted in part and 
    denied to the extent it seeks previously unproduced documents created after 
    April 1, 2023.                                                       
    RFP 163 requests “[a]ll Documents and Communications constituting, referring to, 
or relating to [HBF’s] testing of the Products from 2009 to the present,” while RFP 164 
seeks “[a]ll Documents and Communications referring, or relating to any alleged defects 
in the Products.” While these RFPs are more specific than the RFPs discussed above, they 
temporally extend, in both directions, beyond what the Court has found to be proportional 
discovery in this case. Requests for documents before January 1, 2016 or after April 1, 

2023 must be specific and targeted to documents that are necessary to provide context or 
understanding to documents or events within the window. Plaintiffs’ memorandum in 
support of their motion to compel does not explain why pre-2016 or post-2023 discovery 
as to defects or testing is needed to shed light on 2016 to 2023 discovery. At the case 
management conference on December 9, Plaintiffs will be given an opportunity to explain 
this, and Defendants an opportunity to respond.                           

    To the extent that RFPs 163 and 164 seek previously unproduced documents that 
were created between January 1, 2016 and April 1, 2023, Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel is 
granted. Documents related to HBF’s testing of Power Grout and related products, as well 
as its communications regarding alleged defects, are relevant and proportional to Plaintiff’s 
claims that HBF knew of potential flaws in the products and continued to market them as 

specialty products.                                                       
II.  RFPs Requesting Other Information                                    
    Plaintiffs’ Fifth Set of RFPs also contains three RFPs seeking new information, not 

sought in previous discovery, including the information sought in RFPs 165 and 166. RFP 
165 was not addressed in Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Support of their Motion to Compel, 
(Pl.’s Mem. in Supp., Dkt. No. 276), and HBF states in its brief that it has “agreed to 
supplement this information through August 2024 as opposed to the close of discovery for 
the simple reason that they need time to collect the data and produce it before the close of 
discovery.” (Def.’s Mem. in Opp. 11, n. 2, Dkt. No. 280.) Neither party addressed RFP 165 
at the hearing. Based on HBF’s assertion that this issue has been settled, the Court denies 

as moot Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFP 165. If additional discovery disputes arise 
as to HBF’s payments to customers connected to customer feedback, Plaintiffs may refile 
their Motion as to RFP 165 after the required Meet and Confer process.    
    RFP 166 seeks “All Documents pertaining to the sale of any H.B. Fuller stock by 
members of Your Executive Management Team or Board of Directors, as identified on the 
Website, after August 12, 2022.” As with  RFP 165, RFP 166 was not addressed in 

Plaintiffs’ briefing, (Pl.’s Mem. in Supp., Dkt. No. 276), but HBF objects to the Motion as 
to this RFP because it claims the request is “an irrelevant fishing expedition” and that any 
information Plaintiffs need is already publicly available. At the November 4 hearing, 
Plaintiffs stated that they have received no information regarding the sale of stock and need 
some production on the issue to determine whether it is a line of inquiry that is worth 

pursuing. The Court finds HBF’s argument persuasive. Plaintiffs’ “hunch or speculation 
that there might be something [in the sale of stock] that may help [their] case” Keller v. 
Pepsi Bottling Grp., Inc., No. CV 07-1473 (MJD/AJB), 
2007 WL 9735622
, at *3 (D. Minn. 
Aug.  27,  2007),  does  not  provide  sufficient  justification  for  expanding  the scope  of 
discovery in this case to corporate actions whose relevance is speculative. If Plaintiffs can 

identify anything beyond speculation that there may be something relevant in the stock 
sale, they may revisit the issue.                                         
III.  Extension of Deadline for Rule 30(b)(6) Deposition                  
 Finally, as discussed in the November 4 hearing, the Court will extend the deadline for 

Plaintiffs to take the corporate representative deposition of HBF under Federal Rule of 
Civil Procedure 30(b)(6) to January  5, 2025. The parties  had existing disagreements 
regarding the required deposition notice at the November 4 hearing, that it appears they 
have appealed to Judge Bryan, and the existing deadline passed while the Court drafted 
this Order.                                                               

                        CONCLUSION                                       
 Based on all the files, records, and proceedings herein, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED 

THAT for the reasons stated herein and on the record by the Court at the hearing, Plaintiffs’ 
Motion to Compel is GRANTED in part and DENIED in PART.                   
  1.  Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 159, 160, 166, and 167 is DENIED. 

  2.  Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFPs 161 and 162 is GRANTED to the extent 
     that HBF shall produce an easily readable customer feedback spreadsheet and shall 
     disclose the number of Power Grout “cases” it opened between January 1, 2016 
     and April 1, 2023 and otherwise is DENIED.                          
  3.  Plaintiffs’ Motion  to  Compel as  to  RFPs 163  and  164  is TAKEN  UNDER 

     ADVISEMENT pending argument from the attorneys at the December 9, 2024 
     case management conference.                                         
  4.  Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel as to RFP 165 is DENIED AS MOOT WITHOUT 
     PREJUDICE.                                                          
5.  The  deadline  by  which  Plaintiffs  must  complete  the  corporate  representative 
  deposition of HBF is EXTENDED to January 5, 2025.                   

 Dated: December 4, 2024        s/  John F. Docherty                  
                                JOHN F. DOCHERTY                      

                                United States Magistrate Judge        

Reference

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