Affirmed by published opinion. Judge MOTZ wrote the opinion, in which Judge DONALD S. RUSSELL and Judge MURNAGHAN joined.
OPINION
Between 1992 and 1994, more than twenty former employees of Lockheed Martin Corporation, Aero and Naval Systems (Lockheed) contacted the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to allege that Lockheed had selected them for lay off on the basis of age. Some of the former employees charged that Lockheed engaged in a pattern of discrimination against older workers. As part of the EEOC’s investigation into the company’s practices, the Commission requested that the company identify what computerized personnel files the company had maintained on Aero and Naval Systems employees from 1991 to 1995.
When Lockheed refused to turn over the information voluntarily, the EEOC issued a subpoena for the information. After the company still refused to produce the requested information, the EEOC filed with the district court an application for enforcement of the subpoena. Following a conference call with the parties, the district court issued an order denying enforcement of the subpoena on the ground that the EEOC had not adequately demonstrated that' the material sought was relevant to its investigation.
Within ten days, the EEOC timely moved for reconsideration, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). Attached to that motion were affidavits of eight EEOC employees located in various regional offices that clarified that the information the Commission sought would permit the EEOC to pursue “a faster, more efficient investigation.” The district court granted the EEOC’s motion for reconsideration and ordered enforcement of the subpoena.
The court reasoned that the EEOC, in its motion and supporting memorandum, had adequately explained “how a description of Lockheed’s computer filing system would assist” the EEOC investigation — i.e., by permitting the agency to “perform its investigative function ... with greater efficiency.” The court explained that “armed with the preliminary information it seeks” the EEOC would be able to “frame its subsequent re *112 quests with greater specificity and with a greater likelihood of obtaining all the personnel information to which it was entitled.” The court found that “the ability to frame more precise requests will help limit the possibility that irrelevant or unnecessary material will be produced for the EEOC to review.” The EEOC would then be “in a better position to obtain and analyze whatever information may be available in usable computer form, rather than being required to undertake the more laborious process of searching paper files.” The court also noted that the EEOC had provided the court with “new evidence” in the form of affidavits, helping to demonstrate that the information sought was relevant.
Lockheed subsequently moved the district court to stay enforcement of the subpoena pending appeal. The company asserted that the order granting the EEOC’s Rule 59(e) motion had been improperly based on newly discovered, previously unavailable evidence, when, in fact, the affidavits were not previously unavailable. The court denied the motion for a stay, finding “little likelihood” that Lockheed would prevail on appeal because enforcement of the subpoena was “virtually mandated by controlling law in the Fourth Circuit.” The court recognized that the affidavits might not have constituted newly discovered evidence but found this unimportant because “[m]y ruling granting the EEOC’s Rule 59 motion ... did not rest on the ‘unavailability’ of the evidence.” Rather, the court explained that its original order denying enforcement of the subpoena had been “based on an erroneous understanding of the relevance” of the data requested and that permitting that ruling to stand would result in “manifest injustice.”
On appeal, Lockheed challenges the district court’s grant of the EEOC’s Rule 59(e) motion and the court’s decision on the- merits granting enforcement of the subpoena. We address each argument in turn.
I.
We review an order granting a Rule 59(e) motion under an abuse of discretion standard.
See Boryan v. United States,
(1) to accommodate an intervening change in controlling law; (2) to account for new evidence not available at trial; or (3) to correct a clear error of law or prevent manifest injustice.
Hutchinson v. Staton,
Lockheed asserts that the district court based its ruling on the second prong of the
Hutchinson
test — “new evidence” — and that under
Boryan,
The affidavits made it clear that the order denying enforcement was based on an erroneous understanding of the relevance of the information sought by the EEOC. In the context of a public agency attempting to fulfill its statutorily mandated purpose, manifest injustice would have been the result of allowing a ruling based on an erroneous and inadequate record to stand.
Thus, the court based its decision to grant the motion for reconsideration on the third prong of the
Hutchinson
test. That prong permits a court, in its discretion, to grant a Rule 59(e) motion “to correct a clear error of law or prevent manifest injustice.”
Hutchinson,
*? II.
Having determined that the district court did not abuse its discretion in granting the EEOC’s Rule 59(e) motion, we turn to the question of whether the district court’s order enforcing the subpoena was clearly erroneous. See Reich v. National Eng’g & Contracting Co., IB F.3d 93, 98 (4th Cir.1993) (holding that an order enforcing an administrative subpoena is reviewed for clear error).
Generally, a district court’s role in enforcing administrative subpoenas is “sharply limited.”
EEOC v. City of Norfolk Police Dep’t,
(1) it is authorized to make such investigation; (2) it has complied with statutory requirements of due process; and (3) the materials requested are relevant.
Id.
(quoting
EEOC v. American and Efird Mills, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has characterized the relevancy requirement as “not especially constraining.”
EEOC v. Shell Oil Co.,
Applying this standard, we vacated a district court’s refusal to enforce an EEOC subpoena for general personnel information; finding such information “relevant and material,” we ordered enforcement of the subpoena for “[d]oeuments containing information on the race, sex, and salaries of applicants, hirees, trainees, and promoted employees” during a multi-year period.
See EEOC v. Maryland Cup Corp.,
We recognize, of course, that an agency’s “broad access to information relevant to inquiries” is not without limits.
EEOC v. Ford Motor Credit Co.,
But, contrary to Lockheed’s contention that Ford Motor Credit is “squarely on point,” that case differs greatly from the one at hand. Here, despite the fact the EEOC is investigating over twenty claims against Lockheed, the Commission makes no massive request for all personnel records over a 12-year, or even over a 3-year period. Indeed, Lockheed, unlike Ford, does not even argue that production of the requested information burdens it. Moreover, rather than having a “tenuous” connection to the discrimination claims, what the EEOC seeks here — identification of the computerized personnel information maintained by Lockheed — is directly relevant to its investigation of those claims.
Such data permits the Commission to better focus its investigation. As the district court found, this information will enable the EEOC to “perform its investigative function” by allowing it to “frame more specific requests” which “will limit the possibility that irrelevant or unnecessary material will be produced for the EEOC to review.” The efficient search for relevant information is imperative in a case like this, where the Commission must investigate not one or two claims against the company, but nearly two dozen. Without this means of locating pertinent data, both the EEOC and the employer could be overwhelmed by the sheer quantity of information needed to address each claim treated individually. .
For this reason, Lockheed’s reliance on
United States v. Coopers & Lybrand,
In sum, in asking Lockheed to identify what computerized personnel files it had maintained, the EEOC subpoenaed relevant information, i.e., information that affords it an opportunity to determine what material “might cast light on the allegations against the employer.”
Shell Oil,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Indeed, in
Shell Oil
itself, the lower courts, in rulings not appealed to the Supreme Court, held that the EEOC had the authority to subpoena information "regarding the existence of personnel data on computer file.”
Shell Oil v. EEOC,
