MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter was referred to the undersigned for full case management. Petitioners Barnwell Enterprises Limited and Jitendra Chhotabhai Patel (collectively, “Petitioners”) have petitioned this Court for an Order pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
BACKGROUND
Petitioners seek discovery from ECP in .connection with pending lawsuits-in Ugan-dCand Mauritius and “possibly other proceedings to be filed in East Africa, the United Kingdom, and other foreign jurisdictions.” See Mot. at 4. The facts from the pending litigation — and from any other litigation that Petitioners may bring related to this application — stem from Petitioners’ business dealings in East Africa. To summarize, Petitioner Patel' and two others fouqded an infrastructure construction company, Spencon International Limited (“Spencon”), in Mauritius in 1979. Id. at 5. Petitioner Patel is also the sole shareholder of Petitioner Barnwell Enterprises Limited, a Mauritian private investment company with a shareholding-interest in Spencon. Id. at 4. As Spencon’s business across East Africa grew, Spencon’s original shareholders decided to-increase the company’s capital base. Id. at 5-6. Accordingly, in 2006 and 2007, ECP Africa FII Investments LLC (“ECP Africa”), one of ECP’s investment vehicles incorporated under the laws of Mauritius, purchased two promissory notes from Spencon for a total of fifteen million dollars that ECP Africa could convert into Spencon common stock after the satisfaction of certain conditions. Id. at 6. ECP, which manages dozens of investments across Africa, manages ECP Africa pursuant to contract and owns less than one percent of its equity. See Resp. at 2.
In 2009, ECP Africa converted the aggregate principal amount of the promissory notes plus interest into Spencon common stock, which amounted to approximately thirty-eight percent of Spen-con’s shares. Mot. at 6. At the same time, ECP Africa entered into a number of agreements with the other shareholders — including a put option agreement, a shareholder’s agreement, and a share pledge agreement — that provided ECP with the right to require Spencon’s original shareholders to’ buy back all of ECP Africa’s shares in, Spencon, gave ECP Africa fifty percent control of Spencon’s board of directors, and required Spen-con’s original shareholders to pledge their remaining shares to secure their obligations to buy back ECP Africa’s shares under the put option agreement, respectively. Id. at 8. One ’ of Spencon’s shareholders did not pledge his shares, which resulted in those shares being dispersed between the remaining shareholders, including ECP Africa. See Patel Dec
In 2011 and 2012, following a series of setbacks between the original shareholders and ECP Africa regarding the business and management of Spencon, a number of shareholders challenged the validity of ECP Africa’s three agreements. See Resp., Ex. A [Dkt. 8-2] at ¶ 20. ECP Africa, in turn, exercised its put right option in February 2013 and filed a request for arbitration with the London Court of International Arbitration (“LCIA”), the governing tribunal pursuant to the put option agreement. Mot. at 8; Resp. at 2-3. In February 2014, the LClA determined that the put option agreement was valid and binding, at around which point ECP Africa exercised its right under the share pledge agreement to transfer the original shareholders’ shares to ECP Africa as an award for the.execution of the put option agreement. See id.', see also Mot. at 9-12.
As a result of this .transfer, ECP Africa accumulated approximately ninety-eight percent of Spencon’s shareholdings. Id, at 13. After acquiring, these shares, ECP Africa appointed four, individuals to Spencon’s board of directors: Carolyn Campbell, Bryce. Fort, Andrew. Brown, and Namita Shah. Id. at 22. These individuals are high-ranking employees of ECP, not ECP Africa, and have been serving as directors of Spencon since early 2014. Id. at 22-23; see also Reply at 4-5.
Accordingly, on May 20, 2015, Petitioner Barnwell Enterprises Limited filed an action in the Supreme Court of Mauritius, Commercial Division, against ECP Africa and several others, nbt including ECP. See Exhibits to Declaration of Petitioner Patel [Dkt. 1-3] at 44-60. The original complaint alleges that ECP Africa unlawfully misappropriated the original shareholder’s pledged shares of Spencon in 2014 and mismanaged Spencon thereafter, and demands fifty million dollars in damages. Id. at 54-58. In an amended complaint filed in Mauritius on January 20, 2017, however, Petitioner Barnwell Enterprises Limited focuses solely on the legality of the transfer of shares, dropping the claim for fifty million dollars in damages and the allegations of mismanagement. See Exhibit D [Dkt. 8-5] at 12-14; see also Exhibit E [Dkt. 8-6] at 2 (“[Petitioner Barnwell Enterprises Limited] will now only canvass the legality of the transfer of the shares.”).
Likewise, on-August 30, 2016, Petitioner Patel filed an action in the High Court of
Presently before the Court is Petitioners’. application for discovery pursuant to section 1782, filed on December 22, 2016. See Mot. Petitioners’ application ineludes twenty-one discovery requests seeking from Washington-based ECP — not ECP Africa — various “oral and documentary (documents and communications) evidence” pertaining to the conduct described above. See id. at 29, 39-40.
1. All documents and communications concerning NP Sharma’s misappropriation of Spencon funds.
2. All documents and communications concerning payments ' to NP Sharma since 2014.
3. All agreements entered into NP Sharma since 2014.
4. All” documents and' communications concerning efforts to sell Spencon to any third-parties between 2009 and present.
5. All documents and communications concerning the appointment of Grant Ramnauth, Carolyn Campbell, Namita Shah, Andrew Brown, Bryce Fort, Marc Sullivan, Ron Series, Andrew Ross and Steve Haswell to Spencon’s Board of Directors.
6. All documents and communications concerning; payments-made to directors, managers and officers of Spencon- since 2014.
7. All documents and .comrhunications concerning expenses charged to Spencon by directors, officers and managers since 2014.
8. All documents and communications concerning bids submitted by Spencon for new business and new contracts, obtained since 2014. ...
9. - All documents and communications concerning CRA.5
10. All documents and communications concerning the sale of Spencon assets to CRA or', any other party.
11. All documents and communications concerning Sanghani.6
12. All documents and communications concerning the Akashas.7
13. All documents and communications concerning anti-corruption/anti-bribery policies distributed at Spencon since 2014.
14. All documents and communications concerning KAKS and KTS.8
15. All weekly budgets reviewed by ECP Directors.
16. All documents and communications concerning other debt-collection agencies.
17. All documents and communications between GN Reddy and ECP Directors since 2014 concerning KTS, KAKS or any other debt-collection vendors.
18. All documents and communications concerning due diligence conducted pri- or to authorizing payments to KTS, KAKS or any other vendors.
19. All documents and communications with the CID9 concerning Spedec or Kasarani10 and the Patels.
20. All documents and communications concerning Spencon’s interest in Spedec.
21. All documents and communications concerning Kasarani.
Id.
LEGAL STANDARD
Section 1782 of Title 28 of the United States Code authorizes a district court, in its discretion, to order a person who resides or may be found in that district to provide discovery in the United States “for use in a proceeding in a foreign or international tribunal, including criminal investigations conducted before formal accusation.” 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). The court “may prescribe the practice and procedure, which may be in whole or part the practice and procedure of the foreign country or the international tribunal, for taking the testimony or statement or producing the document or thing.” Id. To the extent that the court does not order otherwise, “the testimony or statement shall be taken, and the document or other thing produced, in accordance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” Id.
“[A] district court is not required to grant a [section] 1782(a) discovery application simply because it has the authority to do so.” Intel Corp. v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.,
If the applicant satisfies the above criteria, the court should then determine whether .to exercise its discretion to grant the request “in light of the twin aims of the statute to (1) provide efficient means of assistance to participants in international litigation and (2) encourage foreign countries by example to provide similar means of assistance to our courts.” Id. at 114- (citing Norex,
“The discretionary guidelines in Intel do not command that each factor be weighed equally, nor do they dictate whether any particular factor should take precedent,” In Matter of Application of Leret,
DISCUSSION
As a threshold matter, Respondent concedes that this Court has the authority to grant Petitioners’ discovery request — that is, ECP concedes that it is located in this Court’s jurisdiction, that the discovery Petitioners seeks is for use in foreign proceedings, and that Petitioners are interested parties in those proceedings. See Resp. at 5-6; see also Norex,
The first' discretionary Intel factor — whether the person or entity from whom discovery is sought is a participant in the foreign proceedings — weighs in favor of granting Petitioners’ application. Intel,
B. The Nature and Receptivity of the Foreign. Tribunals and Character of the Proceedings
The next Intel factor calls for an assessment of “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,” Intel,
Indeed, an analysis of the merits of ECP Africa’s counsel’s declaration regarding Ugandan and Mauritian law would require this Court to become embroiled in exactly the kind of “legal tug-of-war” that courts should avoid when adjudicating section 1782 applications. See In re Veiga,
The remaining inquiries relevant to this factor — the nature of the foreign tribunal and the character of the proceedings — do not alter the Court’s analysis. This is not, for example, an instance where the parties arrived at the foreign tribunals with “bargained-for expectations” based on a deliberative process concerning the governing procedural process and discovery rules. See In re Application of Caratube Int’l Oil Co., LLP,
C. Circumvention of Foreign Proof-Gathering Restrictions or Other Foreign Policies
The next Intel factor instructs the Court to consider whether the Petitioners’ section 1782 application “conceals an attempt to circumvent foreign proof-gathering restrictions or other policies of a foreign country or the United States.” Intel,
With respect to Respondent’s first contention, as the Court has already explained, section 1782 does not require that the material sought be discoverable or even admissible in the foreign proceedings. See Intel,
Likewise, Respondent’s allegations of gamesmanship on the part of Petitioners are unavailing. As evidence of this claim, Respondent points to Petitioner Patel’s failure to appear for mediation sessions in Uganda and Petitioner Barnwell’s amendment to its pleadings in the Mauritian case. See Resp. at 18. To the extent that the Court should consider these claims in deciding whether to grant Petitioners’ application, the undersigned finds that the evidence provided by Respondent does not establish that Petitioners “are intent on forcing ECP Africa to simultaneously defend against an onslaught” of sensationalized international litigation while also hoping to “frivolously delay” that litigation. See id. at 13. What is more, Petitioners have made an initial showing that the discovery they seek is, at least in part, not frivolous. Indeed, in their reply brief, Petitioners allege that four employees of ECP — not ECP Africa — placed on the board of directors of Spencon have been acting in those positions since early 2014, and provide evidence to suggest that these employees used ECP email connected to servers in the United States to discuss and conduct business with respect to Spencon. See Reply, at 4-6. In any event, the Court finds no reason to believe that Petitioners are seeking to do anything other than obtain discovery in the possession of a non-party located in the District of Columbia to use in foreign litigation, and - thus concludes that this factor, too, militates in favor of granting Petitioners’ application.
D. The Scope of Petitioners’ Discovery Request
The fourth and final Intel factor reminds courts that “unduly intrusive or burdensome requests [made under section 1782] may be rejected or trimmed.” Intel,
Though Respondent’s counsel conceded that these temporal and subject-matter restrictions mitigated a number of Respondent’s concerns with Petitioners’ discovery requests, he also raised objections to the geographic reach of Petitioners’ application. As counsel for Petitioners indicated, in addition to the four employees’ electronic communications accessible from ECP’s office in the District of Columbia, Petitioners seek any responsive, physical documents that are in the custody, possession^ and control of ECP by way of those four employees. See Reply at 9—11; see also TR. at 72:1-79:9. According to Respondent, however, only one of the four employees is in the United States — two others are located in Kenya and one is a citizen of the United Kingdom living in France. See id. at 93:19 — 94:4. Petitioners are thus requesting that these ECP employees, regardless of whether they are located in the United States or a foreign jurisdiction, gather any physical documents in their possession as employees of ECP related to Petitioners’ application and send them to ECP’s Washington, D.C. office for a responsiveness review. See id. at 77:13-79:9.
’As another member of this Court has explained," the body df availablé caselaw “suggests that [section] 1782 is not properly used to seek documents held outside the United States as a general matter.” Norex,
To be sure, the plain language of section 1782 contains no such limitation. Indeed, it explicitly empowers this Court to allow discovery to be taken and produced “in accordance with the Federal Rules .of Civil Procedure.” 18 U.S.C. § 1782(a). And the Federal Rules governing subpoenas and the production of documents contain no geographical limitations with respect to where discoverable information-can be located, requiring simply that a respondent produce any relevant documents, electronically-stored information, or tangible items in their “possession, custody, or control[.]” See Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(a)(1), 45(a)(1)(A)(iii), 45(c)(2)(A).
Thus, while the international location, of documents sought in a section 1782 application has been interpreted by other members of this Court to be a discretionary factor that weighs against granting the petitioner’s application, the Court sees no reason to reject Petitioners’ application out of hand here simply because it might require the production of documents currently located in Kenya or France. Of course,
Moreover, Respondent does not appear to dispute that any physical documents these four individuals might possess as employees of ECP, regardless of where they are located, fall within the company’s “possession, custody, or control” as contemplated by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(a)(1), 45(a)(1)(A)(iii). Nor could it. “Control is the test with regard to the produc tion of documents and is defined not only as possession, but as the legal right to obtain the documents on demand.” Norex,
CONCLUSION
Based on the above, the Court will grant Petitioners section 1782 application and instruct" Respondent to comply with Petitioners’ discovery requests. Consistent with the discussion had on the record at the April 25, 2017 hearing in this matter, the Court will impose time and subject-matter restrictions to be explained in the Order accompanying this Memorandum Opinion.
The parties are hereby advised that, under the provisions of Local Rule 72.2(b) of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, any party who objects to the undersigned’s ruling must file a written objection thereto with the Clerk of this Court within 14 days of the party’s receipt of this Memorandum Opinion and accompanying Order. The written objections must specifically identify the portion of the Memorandum Opinion and Order to which objection is made and the basis for such objections. See LCvR 72.2(b).
Notes
. The relevant docket entries for the purposes of this Memorandum Opinion are: (1) Petitioners’ Memorandum in Support ("Mot.”) [Dkt. 1-1]; (2) Respondent’s Memorandum in Response ("Resp.”) [Dkt. 8]; (3) Petitioners’ Reply Memorandum ("Reply”) [Dkt. 9]; and (4) the Transcript of the April 25, 2017 Discovery Hearing ("TR.”) [Dkt. 13]. All citations to page numbers within a particular document are to the ECF docket page numbers for the document.
. According to Respondent’s counsel’s representations at the hearing, one of these individuals is in the United.States, two are in Kenya, and one is in France. See TR. at 93:19-94:4.
. At the hearing -in this matter, counsel for Petitioners indicated that Petitioner has the right to seek damages in the Mauritian case if the court determines that the transfer of shares was illegal. See TR. at 11:7-12:12. In fact, according to Petitioners’ counsel, Petitioner has moved to amend the complaint in that case to reassert damages. Id. at 20:1-20:4.
. Though originally framed as a request for '‘oral” deposition testimony, counsel for Petitioners conceded that the instant section 1782 application should be construed as only seeking document discovery, See TR, at 27:2-29:21.
. CRA stands for Construction Resources Africa Limited/ a corporation that Petitioners believe was created by the current CEO and CFO of Spencon on September 8, 2016 to ‘ accept asset transfers from Spencon.1 See Mot. at 15, 36.
. Sanghani refers to Manoj Sanghani, an individual that Petitioners believe received the proceeds from the sale of Spencon’s assets after ECP Africa took control of the company in 2014. See Mot. at 16, 36.
. The Akashas refers to the Akasha family, a Kenyan family that Petitioners claim the current ECP-Africa-appointed CEO of Spencon identified to Petitioner Patel as a potential buyer of Spencon's majority interests in a real ' estate development company, Spedec. See Mot. at 19-20, 36.
. KAKS refers to KAKS Limited and KTS refers to Katchung Technical Services, two third-party entities in Uganda that Petitioners believe have worked with Spencon after ECP Africa took control of the company in 2014. See Mot. at 17-18, 36.
. According to Petitioners, CID stands for the Criminal Investigation Division, which Petitioners identify as the arm of the Kenyan government responsible for investigating and bringing criminal cases. See Mot. at 19, 36.
.According to Petitioners, Kasarani is a valuable piece of Kenyan property owned by Spedec, a real estate development company and one of Spencon's subsidiaries. Spencon owns fifty-one percent of Spedec and Petitioner Patel’s son owns the remaining forty-nine percent of the company. See Mot. at 19-20, 36.
. To the extent that Petitioners seek discovery through ECP of documents in ECP Africa’s possession, their requests are denied. See Kestrel Coal Pty. Ltd. v. Joy Global, Inc.,
. Respondent’s assertion that "[t]he nature of the foreign tribunal weighs against énforc-ing discovery if the parly seeking the discov-éfy had options in selecting the forum for the
. Consistent with the parties' representations at the hearing, and as the Court will explain more in the Order accompanying this Memorandum Opinion, a lew of Petitioners’ discovery requests call .for the production of documents from either before or áfter March 2014.
. Thé only geographic limitation in Federal Rule 45, which deals with subpoenas, concerns the location of the respondent's complianee with the subpoena, not the location of any information for production. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(c)(1)(A).
