Court Opinion

ID: 9907543
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-12-06 18:01:06.428745+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:00:54.091731
License: Public Domain

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
                                File Name: 23a0506n.06

                                          No. 23-1308

                         UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                              FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
                                                                                     FILED
                                                                                   Dec 06, 2023
                                                        )                  KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk
 LISA POSTHUMUS LYONS, Kent County Clerk,
                                                        )
        Petitioner-Appellee,                            )      ON APPEAL FROM THE
                                                        )      UNITED STATES DISTRICT
                v.                                      )      COURT FOR THE WESTERN
                                                        )      DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
 MY PILLOW, INC.; MICHAEL J. LINDELL,                   )
        Respondents-Appellants.                         )                            OPINION
                                                        )
                                                        )

BEFORE: WHITE, THAPAR, and BLOOMEKATZ, Circuit Judges.

       BLOOMEKATZ, Circuit Judge. Dominion Voting Systems sued Michael Lindell and his

company, My Pillow, Inc., for defamation because Lindell claimed that Dominion voting machines

helped rig the 2020 election. In search of evidence that could support their defense, Lindell and

My Pillow subpoenaed 38 counties across the country for information about the 2020 election,

including Kent County, Michigan. In this appeal, Lindell and My Pillow challenge the district

court’s affirmance of a magistrate judge’s order quashing the Kent County subpoena and requiring

them to pay Kent County’s attorney’s fees and costs. Because the district court did not abuse its

discretion, we affirm.

                                        I. Background

       On February 22, 2021, U.S. Dominion Inc., Dominion Voting Systems, Inc., and Dominion

Voting Systems Corporation (collectively, “Dominion”) sued Michael Lindell and his company,

My Pillow, Inc. (collectively, “Lindell”), for defamation and related claims in the United States
No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

District Court for the District of Columbia. Lindell had publicly stated that Dominion machines

manipulated the results of the 2020 presidential election by miscounting or changing votes to favor

now-President Joe Biden. To defend against Dominion’s 1.3-billion-dollar damages action,

Lindell hopes to prove that his statements were true, or at least not inherently improbable. For this

reason, he has subpoenaed 38 counties across the country that used Dominion equipment in 2020.

Kent County is one of them.

       Lindell subpoenaed the Kent County Clerk Lisa Posthumus Lyons on September 6, 2022,

and set a production date of September 30, 2022. He requested 22 categories of information,

ranging from forensic images of “[a]ll drives attached to or affiliated with any device used in

conjunction with the election as a communications server or virtual private network

server/concentrator” to “[c]opies of any document, report, or spreadsheet that was produced in

relation to the November 2020 Election.” Subpoena, R. 1-7 at 2, 3. The Clerk wrote to Lindell on

September 9 to express the concern that the request “would impose a considerable burden on the

elections staff and expense upon the County.” Letter, Sept. 9, 2022, R. 1-9. The Clerk asked Lindell

to explain by September 13 why the request was relevant to the defamation lawsuit and whether

he had made any efforts to “minimize the burden of this production.” Id. Lindell did not answer.

       The Clerk sent a second letter on September 16, this time asking Lindell to withdraw the

“unduly burdensome” subpoena by September 19. Letter, Sept. 16, 2022, R. 1-10. The letter

warned that the Clerk would move to quash if the subpoena was not withdrawn. On September

21, Lindell replied. He explained that he had subpoenaed other counties, all with a production

deadline of September 30, 2022, and “intend[ed] to review . . . the collective responses to all these

subpoenas before determining how [he] want[ed] to proceed with respect to each one.” Letter,

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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

Sept. 21, 2022, R. 1-11. He said that he would be in touch “in the future” about the County’s

objections; in the meantime, he would not move to compel compliance with the subpoena. Id.

       The Clerk moved to quash under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45(d)(3)(A)(iv) on

October 4, 2022. Among other things, she submitted a declaration from the Kent County Elections

Director estimating that it would take approximately 80 hours and more than half a million dollars

to gather and review the requested materials. The Elections Director also emphasized that the

subpoena demanded sensitive information about Kent County’s election equipment that could

compromise the security of future elections, including the election taking place the following

month in November 2022. Replacing this equipment would cost more than four million dollars.

       After a hearing, the magistrate judge both quashed the subpoena and sanctioned Lindell by

requiring him to pay Kent County’s attorney’s fees and costs associated with litigating the

subpoena. Lindell appealed the magistrate judge’s orders to the district court, which found no error

and declined to modify them. This appeal followed.

                                           II. Analysis

   A. Standard of Review

       We review orders quashing subpoenas under Rule 45 for abuse of discretion. Hill v.

Homeward Residential, Inc., 799 F.3d 544, 552 (6th Cir. 2015). Likewise, we review orders

imposing Rule 45 sanctions for abuse of discretion. New Prods. Corp. v. Dickinson Wright, PLLC

(In re Modern Plastics Corp.), 890 F.3d 244, 250–51 (6th Cir. 2018).

   B. Order Quashing Subpoena

       Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45 permits litigants to obtain discovery from nonparties

via subpoena while simultaneously protecting nonparties from excessively onerous requests for

information. To achieve this balance, Rule 45(d)(3)(A)(iv) mandates: “the court for the district

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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

where compliance is required must quash or modify a subpoena that . . . subjects a person to undue

burden.” We have instructed district courts to evaluate undue burden in a “case-specific manner”

by “considering ‘such factors as relevance, the need of the party for the documents, the breadth of

the document request, the time period covered by it, the particularity with which the documents

are described and the burden imposed.’” In re Modern Plastics Corp., 890 F.3d at 251 (quoting

Am. Elec. Power Co., Inc. v. United States, 191 F.R.D. 132, 136 (S.D. Ohio 1999)).

       Applying these factors, the district court was well within its discretion to affirm the

magistrate judge’s order quashing Lindell’s subpoena. For a start, it is difficult to overstate the

“breadth of the document request” and the lack of “particularity with which the documents are

described.” See id. Among the more than twenty categories of information requested, the subpoena

directs the Clerk to provide “[c]opies of any document, report, or spreadsheet that was produced

in relation to the November 2020 Election.” Subpoena, R. 1-7 at 3. But consider the enormous

volume and variety of documents, reports, and spreadsheets generated in relation to an election. In

2020, this could have included everything from attendance sheets for election-day workers, to

flyers listing polling hours and locations, to invoices for masks and hand sanitizer distributed

among voters to prevent the spread of COVID-19, to name only a few obvious examples. All these

documents come within the unspecific sweep of this subpoena.

       The subpoena’s astonishing breadth and generality is not confined to this one category of

requested information. After all, the subpoena lists twenty-one others. Several of them display

similar problems of overbreadth and lack of particularity. For example, the subpoena asks for

“[c]opies of all contracts and agreements with the suppliers of any of [Kent County’s] electronic

election system equipment, devices, software, or support services,” and “[c]opies of all contracts

and agreements related to network security, network monitoring, or cybersecurity concerning all

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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

or any part of [Kent County’s] electronic election system.” Id. at 4. The subpoena does not limit

“electronic election system” to Dominion machines or other specialized devices that process

ballots. Instead, it defines “electronic election system” as “all electronic or computerized devices

and equipment used to cast ballots, count votes, tabulate votes, or report results in an election.” Id.

at 1. This encompasses the ordinary computers election workers use to, for instance, transmit vote

totals to the relevant state authorities. All the purchase agreements for any Kent County computer

that participated in the counting and reporting of votes in the 2020 election fall under the scope of

the subpoena. So do all the agreements with the suppliers of software and support services for

those computers, and the contracts related to the computers’ network security, network monitoring,

and cybersecurity. This request would also apply to employment contracts with any IT

professionals who respond to these computers’ technical issues, and to the terms and conditions

associated with the antivirus software installed on these computers. These are just a few examples

of the subpoena’s massive reach into information irrelevant to the underlying suit. We agree with

the district court: “The subpoena could not be written more broadly and is entirely devoid of

specificity.” Op., R. 38 at 4.

        Next, the lengthy “time period covered” by the subpoena also weighs against Lindell. See

In re Modern Plastics Corp., 890 F.3d at 251 (quotation omitted). The subpoena does not ask for

“contracts and agreements” within a certain date range. Instead, it seeks “all” of these contracts

and agreements in various categories, which could easily date back many years. “All” could

include the terms and conditions for antivirus software even if Kent County installed it five years

before the 2020 election. “All” could include the purchase agreements for the computers even if

Kent County ordered them ten years before the 2020 election. “All” could include the employment

contracts signed by the IT professionals even if they began working at Kent County twenty years

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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

before the 2020 election. Although the subpoena frames the information it seeks as “related to the

results of the November 2020 Election,” there is no ceiling on the age of the materials Kent County

must unearth to comply. Subpoena, R. 1-7 at 3.

       Lindell’s subpoena fares no better on the “burden imposed” factor of our undue burden

analysis. See In re Modern Plastics Corp., 890 F.3d at 251 (quotation omitted). As the district

court notes in its opinion affirming the magistrate judge’s order, the Kent County Elections

Director estimated that the subpoena requested 2.5 gigabytes of data, or the equivalent of 250,000

emails. Collecting and reviewing this quantity of information would cost $625,000 and

approximately 80 hours of employee time. Producing the forensic evidence contemplated by the

subpoena would be expensive too. For example, the Elections Director attested that after granting

Lindell access to drives affiliated with the election-management system server, Kent County would

need to hire a contractor to recertify the software system or else replace it entirely, which would

cost $295,000. And to fully address the security issues raised by turning over proprietary

information about election equipment to Lindell, Kent County may need to buy new equipment.

The district court did not abuse its discretion when it credited the Election Director’s testimony

explaining the burden imposed by the subpoena.

       Even relevance and need, the undue-burden factors that Lindell believes favor him, cannot

rescue this subpoena. See id. Lindell insists that the subpoena seeks information that “may well be

central” to his litigation strategy. Reply Br. at 5. But he can only point to the bare fact that Kent

County used Dominion equipment in 2020. He recognizes that there are no known voting

irregularities in Kent County indicating that it is an especially valuable place to search for

evidence. And even if we accept his argument that some of the information requested “may well

be” relevant, that material is still dwarfed by the volume of irrelevant information caught in the

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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

subpoena’s capacious net. Indeed, the magistrate judge observed that the net was cast so wide, he

could not “imagine anything that that net would not capture.” Hr’g Tr., R. 25 at 40. The magistrate

judge aptly called this “the type of subpoena somebody issues when they have no idea really what

they’re looking for.” Id. at 35.

       Every factor points in the same direction: this subpoena is unduly burdensome.

       Rather than focusing on the Rule 45 factors, Lindell contends that Federal Rule of Civil

Procedure 26 furnishes a better set of factors to distinguish an appropriate subpoena from an

unduly burdensome one. But Rule 26 concerns discovery in general, and it provides no explicit

guidance on subpoenas. In contrast, Rule 45, titled “Subpoena,” provides extensive guidance on

subpoenas. See generally Fed. R. Civ. P. 45. Lindell attempts to circumvent this problem by citing

nonbinding, outdated, or decontextualized authority holding that the scope of discovery under Rule

45 and the scope of discovery under Rule 26 are the same. In doing so, he ignores the specific

considerations Rule 45’s “undue burden” language imposes on a subpoena directed at a nonparty,

even though these considerations are clarified in our binding precedent. In re Modern Plastics

Corp., 890 F.3d at 251.

       Lindell further argues the court should have modified the subpoena, rather than quash it.

See Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3)(A)(iv) (unduly burdensome subpoenas must be either quashed or

modified). But Lindell did not ask the magistrate judge to narrow the subpoena, let alone suggest

how he should. And Lindell is wrong that a court is required to consider whether a subpoena can

be modified before quashing it, especially when, as here, he did not ask the court to tailor the

request. He relies on a pair of nonbinding out-of-circuit cases to argue that the magistrate judge

had such a duty. The first precedent is inapplicable because the court found the subpoena was not

too onerous, and in any event, the court said that a lower court should consider modification “when

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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

appropriate,” and the issuer in that case was willing to modify the subpoena. Northrop Corp. v.

McDonnell Douglas Corp., 751 F.2d 395, 403–04 (D.C. Cir. 1984). The second citation contradicts

Lindell’s argument. The footnote he cites states that a “subpoena may be so sweepingly overbroad,

however, that it should be quashed in its entirety.” Va. Dep’t of Corr. v. Jordan, 921 F.3d 180, 190

n.4 (4th Cir. 2019). That is precisely what happened here.

   C. Order Imposing Sanctions

       Rule 45 requires the party issuing a subpoena to take “reasonable steps to avoid imposing

undue burden” on the recipient. Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(1). Steps taken before and after issuing the

subpoena factor into this analysis. See In re Modern Plastics Corp., 890 F.3d at 251. Courts “must

enforce this duty and impose an appropriate sanction—which may include lost earnings and

reasonable attorney’s fees—on a party or attorney who fails to comply.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(1).

The district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that Lindell failed to take reasonable

steps to avoid unduly burdening Kent County and in sanctioning Lindell with the County’s

attorney’s fees and costs.

       Both parties agree that Lindell did not make any effort to avoid burden prior to serving the

subpoena, let alone a reasonable one.1 Although Lindell is right to point out that Rule 45 does not

obligate the issuing party to meet and confer about the scope of a subpoena with the recipient prior

to serving it, he is wrong to assume that there are no other pre-issuance steps that would have

reduced the burden. See In re Modern Plastics Corp., 890 F.3d at 251 (crediting the bankruptcy

       1
          At the hearing, the magistrate judge asked Lindell’s counsel whether Lindell had taken
any steps to avoid undue burden prior to serving the subpoena. Lindell’s counsel responded, “I’m
not sure prior to the subpoena being served, and I don’t know even how the caselaw would
articulate that prior to something being served. I can only attest to conversations that happened
afterwards and the reasonableness of those . . . .” Hr’g Tr., R. 25 at 25. Lindell does not claim that
he took any pre-issuance steps in his briefs.
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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

court’s finding that “much of the expense could have been avoided . . . initially”). For example,

Lindell could have limited his request to documents that contain certain search terms or topics, or

to a shorter, more focused time period. But he failed to do so. Quite the opposite, he defended the

breadth of the subpoena to the magistrate judge, explaining that he is “seeking information related

to the election. . . . [T]hat in itself is a broad term.” Hr’g Tr., R. 25 at 35.

        Likewise, Lindell did not take reasonable steps after issuing the subpoena. Despite two

letters from the Clerk flagging that the subpoena was unduly burdensome—the second of which

warned that the Clerk would move to quash if the subpoena was not withdrawn—Lindell did not

agree to narrow it. He only kicked the can down the road. Lindell responded by noting that he

would “be in further contact in the future regarding Kent County’s objections” and informed the

Clerk that he did not “intend to bring any motion to compel compliance with the subpoena until

[he] ha[d] undertaken further discussion with [the Clerk] regarding the subpoena topics and the

objections.” Letter, Sept. 21, 2022, R. 1-11. These two sentences are the full extent of Lindell’s

efforts to avoid imposing an undue burden on Kent County.

        Lindell’s letter hardly mitigated the burden. In fact, it did not recognize that there was any

burden in the first place; the letter merely acknowledged that the County had objections, not that

the objections were legitimate or worth addressing. The letter gestured vaguely at “further

discussion” but provided no details about that discussion’s length, format, time frame, or

substance. Lindell pointed out that, depending on the subpoena responses from other counties, he

might have decided not to pursue the Kent County subpoena at all, and his letter communicated

this possibility to the Clerk. But merely raising the possibility of reducing an undue burden,

conditional on some future event that may or may not happen, is not the same as taking reasonable

steps to avoid that burden. Lindell could have decided on some unspecified future date that Kent

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No. 23-1308, Lyons v. My Pillow, Inc., et al.

County’s objections were meritless, sent the County a quick email saying so, and moved to compel

the next day. The letter was little more than Lindell’s pledge to think about the objections at some

uncertain point. It was not an attempt to address them.

       Nor is there merit to Lindell’s claim that the magistrate judge did not have discretion to

impose sanctions because Kent County was not actually burdened—after all, he says, the Clerk

did not produce any requested materials before moving to quash, so the County did not incur any

costs in complying with the subpoena. Lindell notes that the subpoena recipient in In re Modern

Plastics incurred production costs, but that case provides no support for Lindell’s theory because

the sanctions order there was not exclusively or even primarily based on those costs. Courts can

hold that a subpoena is unduly burdensome without any evidence that the recipient has already

shouldered the cost of compliance. See generally 9A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller,

Federal Practice and Procedure § 2463.1 (3d ed. Apr. 2023 update). The alternative would lead

to absurdly circular results: a subpoena recipient would have to comply and pay the associated

costs to show that the subpoena is unduly burdensome and then convince a court to quash it. That

would defeat the protections for nonparties embedded in Rule 45.

                                         III. Conclusion

       For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s order.

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