000 Promneftstroy (“Petitioner” or “PNS”) submitted an application, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782, for an order authorizing the deposition of Eric Wolf. The petitioner argues a deposition of Wolf is necessary for several legal proceedings in the Netherlands between the petitioner and entities associated with the former OAO Yukos Oil Company (“Yukos Oil”) and its affiliates. For the reasons discussed below, the petitioner’s application is granted.
I.
This application is the latest chapter in a long and complex litigation history related to Yukos Oil, a major Russiаn conglomerate that went bankrupt about a decade ago. See generally Bos Decl. ¶¶ 13-16. The petitioner is a Russian closed'joint stock company and the owner of Yukos Finance, B.V., á former subsidiary of Yukos Oik Bos Decl. ¶ 11. PNS has brought a proceeding in the Netherlands against two Foundаtions (Stichtings), Administra-tiekantoor Yukos International (“Foundation I”) and Stichting Administratiekant-oor Financial Performance Holdings (“Foundation II”) (collectively, the “Foundations”), certain directors of the Foundations, GML Limited, which was a Yukos Oil shareholder, and others. See Bos Decl. ¶¶ 3,17,19. In brief, PNS alleges that the defendants were engaged in the improper distribution of Yukos Oil’s assets. It claims they ignored their debtor obligations and improperly distributed approximately $250 million to GML and that the directors of Foundation II withheld 10 percent of that distribution for their own personal profit. See generally Bos Decl. ¶¶ 19-24.
In connection with these claims, PNS seeks to depose Eric Wolf. Wolf has a relationship with Leonid Nevzlin, a former Yukos executive now living in Israel who is the primary shareholder of GML. See Bos Deck ¶ 33. The petitioner claims Wolf has unique and direct personal knowledge of the circumstances and agreements surrounding the contested distribution of funds, while Wolf claims that he possesses no discoverable information.
Originally, PNS sought both to depose Wolf and to subpoena documents, but at a hearing on September 30, 2015, the petitioner withdrew its document subpoena and clarified that it seeks only to depose Wolf. See Sept. 30, 2015 Tr. at 3. PNS further clarified that it seeks to depose Wolf oh only five subjects: (1) the basis for the alleged $250 million advance payment to GML by the Foundation Directors; (2) the basis for the 10 percent of that pаyment that the petitioner alleges was retained by the Directors; (3) Wolfs awareness of the Foundation’s past payments, if any, or future plans to make such payments; (4) the termination by the Foundations of Director Bruce Misamore related to the $250 million distribution; and (5) a reсent global settlement discussion among the various parties as it relates to the other subjects. See id. at 29-31, 43-44; see also Sept. 17, 2015 Tr. at 21.
PNS has been involved in a variety of other suits related to the Yukos bankruptcy in the Netherlands with contested relevance to this action, as recounted by the parties’ оpposing experts. See Bos Decl. ¶¶ 25-30; Drop Decl. ¶¶ 4-18. Most immediately, PNS seeks the Wolf deposition for a summary proceeding before a Dutch Court on October 8, 2015 where the $250 million is at issue. Bos Decl. ¶27, Sept. 30, 2015 Tr. at 5-6. There, PNS says it will seek an order against the Foundations to (1) direct thе Foundations to repay
II.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1782, “[t]he district court of the district in which a person resides or is found may order him to give his testimony or statement or to produce a document or other thing for use in a proceeding in a foreign or international tribunal.” 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). There are three statutory prerequisites for this relief. First, the person from whom discovery is sought must reside or be found in the district of the district court where the application is made; second, the discovery must be for use in a proceeding before a foreign tribunal; and third, the application must be made by the foreign tribunal or “any interested person.” Schmitz v. Bernstein Liebhard & Lifshitz, LLP,
Once these statutory requirements are met, the district court has wide discretion whether to issue discovery orders pursuant to § 1782(a). See id. The district court should weigh four discretionary factors:
(1) Whether the documents or testimony sought are within the foreign tribunal’s jurisdictional reach, and thus accessible absent § 1782 aid;
(2) The nature of the foreign tribunal, the character of the proceedings underway abroad, and the receptivity of the foreign government or the court or agency abroad to U.S. federal-court judicial assistance;
(3) Whether the § 1782 request conceals a[n] attempt to circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions or other policiеs of a foreign country or the United States; and
(4) Whether the subpoena contains unduly intrusive or burdensome requests.
In re Microsoft Corp.,
III.
It is undisputed that the three statutory requirements for Sectiоn 1782 are met in this case. It is clear that Wolf resides in the Southern District of New York, that his testimony is sought for use in a foreign proceeding — the summary proceeding on October 8, 2015 in the Netherlands — and that PNS is an “interested” party — indeed, the moving party in the Dutch proceeding. See Sept. 30, 2015 Tr. at 8. Accordingly, PNS has satisfied the technical requirements of § 1782, and the Court proceeds to “consider whether the purposes of § 1782 are best served by approving [PNS’s] application.” PNS I,
The second discretionary factor asks the Court to weigh the foreign tribunal’s “receptiveness” to assistance from a United States court. See PNS I,
The third discretionary factor seeks to identify “[wjhether the § 1782 request conceals a[n] attempt to circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions.” Microsoft,
PNS, Wolf, and their experts dispute the relevance and legal effect of the other proceedings related to the Yukos bankruptcy that PNS has pressed in the Netherlands. See, e.g., Bos Decl. ¶¶ 25-30; Drop Decl. ¶¶ 4-18. With regard to one partiсular case (referred to by Wolf as the “Main Judgment”), where a Dutch appeals court ruled that PNS had not become a shareholder of Yukos Finance and could not sue, the Dutch Supreme Court later reversed the case and remanded it. Wolf disputes the scoрe of the Dutch Supreme Court’s vacatur and claims a lower court judgment against PNS still stands. See Sept. 30, 2015 Tr. at 37-38.
As an initial matter, PNS I does not control the outcome here. There, the very documents that were being sought in a § 1782 application had been sought in the Netherlands and been denied by the courts
On the issue of standing, it is not within the Court’s purview to adjudge the scope, relevance, and precedential effect of Dutch cases on later Dutch proceedings. As the Court of Appeals has held, “it is unwise— as well as in tension with the aims of [§ ] 1782 — for district judges to try to glean the accepted practices and attitudes of other nations from what are likely to be conflicting and, perhaps, biased interpretations of foreign law.” Euromepa,
In this case, Wolfs own expert concedes that “[c]ourts in the Netherlands do not preclude submission of any material, so [PNS] may рresent whatever evidence it likes related to the proceedings on October 8.” Drop Decl. ¶ 11. The Dutch court will address the standing issue at the outset and “will not consider any such evidence unless [PNS] has standing.” Id. That is a determination for the Dutch court to make, and this Court takеs no position on the matter. See John Deere Ltd.,
The fourth and final discretionary factor asks the court to be mindful of overly intrusive or burdensome discovery requests. See Microsoft,
In light of the connection suggested by these emails between Wolf and Yukos Finance, the Foundations, and GML, a single deposition of Wolf for the limited purposes described above would not be unduly burdensome. Indeed, part of the deposition is about subjects that the parties allied with Wolf put in issue by submitting the emails to the court in the Netherlands. See In re Application of Gemeinshcaftspraxis Dr. Med. Schottdorf, No. Civ. M19-88 (BSJ),
Accordingly, all four of the discretionary factors counsel in favor of granting PNS’s application.
IV.
For the reasons discussed above, the § 1782 application to depose Eric Wolf is granted. The deposition should take place on or before October 5, 2015.
SO ORDERED.
