MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO COMPEL YAHOO! AND GOOGLE TO COMPLY WITH THIRD-PARTY DOCUMENT SUBPOENAS
I. INTRODUCTION
This case involves the alleged abduction of plaintiff Colin Bower’s (“Bower”) minor children, N and R, from their home in Massachusetts to Egypt on August 11, 2009. Bower claims that the abduction was carried out by his former spouse and the children’s mother, defendant Mirvat El-Nady Bower (“El-Nady”), and was facilitated by defendant EgyptAir Airlines (“EgyptAir”), which allegedly allowed El-Nady and the children to fly from the United States to Egypt without the plaintiffs permission. By his Amended Complaint, Bower, on his own behalf and as the guardian and legal custodian of N and R, has brought state law claims against both defendants for interferеnce with his custodial relations (Count One), negligent infliction of emotional distress (Count Four), and loss of filial consortium (Count Six). He also has brought state law claims against EgyptAir for negligence (Cоunt Two) and against El-Nady for false imprisonment (Count Three) and intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count Five). El-Nady has not appeared in this action and has not responded to еither the original or the amended complaint.
The matter is presently before the court on “Plaintiffs Motion to Compel Yahoo! and Google to Comply with Third-Party Document Subpoena and to Compel the Defendant, Mirvat El-Nady Bower, to Consent to the Production of Emails” (Docket No. 38). By this motion, Bower is seeking to compel Yahoo! and Google to рroduce all emails from any and all email accounts registered to El-Nady from July 1, 2009 through the present, in response to subpoenas duly served on these entities pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45. To the extent El-Nady’s consent is required to authorize the production, Bower asks that this court order that El-Nady be deemed to have granted such authority.
While taking no position on the merits of the underlying dispute, Yahoo! and Google have asserted that they are unable to comply with the subpoenas because the requested produсtion is barred by the Stored Communications Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2701, et seq. (“SCA”). This court agrees, and, for the reasons detailed herein, the motion to compel is DENIED. Moreover, this court declines to find that the defaulting defendant impliedly consented to the production of her emails.
II. ANALYSIS
The parties agree that both Yahoo! and Google are “electronic communication serviсe” providers and are governed by the SCA. The SCA provides in relevant part that:
a person or entity providing an electronic communication service to the public shall not knowingly divulge to any person or entity the contents of a communication while in electronic storage by that serviced]
18 U.S.C. § 2702(a)(1). The statute lists eight explicit exceptions to this prohibition, but does not include in that list responding
Faced with this statutory language, courts have repeatedly hеld that providers such as Yahoo! and Google may not produce emails in response to civil discovery subpoenas. See, e.g., id. at 609-611, and cases cited. Bower does not challenge this conclusion, but argues, instead, that given El-Nad/s status as a fugitive, she should be deemed to have consented to the disclosure of her emails. In the alternative, Bower argues that this court should order El-Nady to consent, and then, if she fails to do so, order that she be deemed to have consented. It is undisputed that if El-Nady authorized the disclosure of her emails, Yahoo! and Google would comply with her request. There also is case law support for a party to proceed by way of a Rule 34 document request to require an opposing party to obtain its own emails from an electronic service provider. See, e.g., Flagg v. City of Detroit,
As an initial matter, it must be recognized that since Bower hаs not elected to proceed by way of a Rule 34 document request, the scope of potential sanctions for failure to comply with a discovery order is not befоre the court.
With respеct to Bower’s contention that this court should find that El-Nady “consented” to the production of her emails, even assuming, arguendo, that Yahoo! and Google must honor a customer’s “implied cоnsent,” a proposition on which this court expresses no opinion, there is
This court does not minimize the plaintiffs frustration with the present situation and the fact that El-Nady has elected to ignore these court proceedings. However, based on the present record, the SCA precludes Yahoo! and Google from producing the requested emails, and there is no basis for finding that El-Nady consented to the disclosure of her emails. Therefore, plaintiffs mоtion to compel (Docket No. 38) is DENIED.
Notes
. This court does note that the parties have not identified any situation where the court ordered the production of electronicаlly stored information from a provider as a Rule 37 sanction when a party refused to give his or her consent to the production of such information, much less when the party was in default.
