MEMORANDUM OPINION
Bеfore the Court are Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Production of Documents from Defendant Prosperity Mortgage Company (Discovery Motion # 1; Paper No. 108); Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Production of Loan Files and for a Protective Order (Discovery Motion #2; Paper No. Ill); and Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Production of Documents from Defendants Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. and Wells Fargo Ventures, LLC (Discovery Motion # 4; Paper No. 139). A hearing was held on December 1, 2009. For the following reasons, and as set forth in the Court’s December 2, 2009 Order, the Court grants in part and denies in part Plaintiffs’ Discovery Motion # 1, denies Plaintiffs’ Discovery Motion #4, and grants Plaintiffs’ Discovery Motion # 2.
BACKGROUND
The Minter and Petry cases share similar factual bases, and have the same defendants. Minter plаintiffs allege that Wells Fargo, in conjunction with Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc., created Prosperity Mortgage — a sham Affiliated Business Arrangement (“ABA”) — to facilitate collection of unlawful referral fees and kickbacks. (Paper No. 135, 3). According to plaintiffs, Prosperity is not a mortgage company, but rather a “conduit” through which Long & Foster receives kickbаcks for referring mortgages from Wells Fargo. (Id.). Unsuspecting borrowers essentially pay the referral fee disguised as legitimate charges, for which they receive no additional goods or services-a practice plaintiffs assert violates state and federal laws. (Id.). Petry plaintiffs allege that defendants acted as both a mortgage broker and a lеnder and, in doing so, unlawfully collected “finder’s fees” for originated loans. (Paper No. 135, 3); Md.Code Ann., Comm’l Law § 12-807.
Although plaintiffs in the two cases raise different legal claims (Minter plaintiffs raise claims under RICO and RESPA, while Petry plaintiffs bring claims under the Maryland Finder’s Fee Act), plaintiffs suggest that discovery in the two cases would be duplicative and thus have conducted discovery only in Minter. (Paper No. 135, 3). Defendants do not conсede to a complete overlap in relevant discovery, highlighting the differences in claims in each case against Long & Foster defendants and Walker Jackson Mortgage Company (Paper No. 137, 2-3) and the differences in conduct relevant to each case (Paper No. 136, 2 n. 2). However, the *594 documents at issue here are requested оnly from Prosperity and Wells Fargo defendants and the information sought is equally relevant to claims in both cases, as it involves defendants’ relationships and the fees paid between them.
DISCUSSION
A. Motions to Compel Document Production
As a threshold matter, the parties dispute the time period for which plaintiffs are entitled to discovery. Plaintiffs request documents dating back to Prosperity’s inception in 1993 on thе basis of equitable tolling (Paper No. 108-4, 5-16; Paper No. 119, 4-5), while defendants respond that discovery should be limited to the longest statutory period applicable in this case and that equitable tolling cannot extend that limitation (Paper No. 108-3, 15; Paper No. 113, 13; Paper No. 114, 3-4). 1
Prosperity claims that equitable tolling is not available for claims brought under RESPA on the basis оf the Fourth Circuit’s unpublished 1989 opinion,
Zaremski v. Keystone Title Assoc., Inc.,
Although plaintiffs do not advance an equitable tolling argument in
Petry,
4
the Court similarly finds that the
Petry
claims are subject to equitable tolling. Md.Code Ann., Cts.
&
Jud. Proc. § 5-203 (providing for equitable tolling of a statute where a plaintiffs ability to discover his injury was obstructed by the adverse party’s fraud);
Miller v. Pac. Shore Funding,
The fact that plaintiffs seek class certification also does not preclude equitable tolling. Certainly, the Fourth Circuit routinely denies equitable tolling in precertification class actions where determinаtion of most claims would turn on facts peculiar to the individual claims.
See, e.g., Thorn v. Jefferson-Pilot Life Ins. Co.,
Minter and Petr'y plaintiffs adequately pled equitable tolling in their complaints. Certainly, "merely intoning the word `fraudulently' in a complaint is not sufficient" to raise the defense of equitablе tolling. Weinberger v. Retail Credit Co.,
Here, plaintiffs' claims, as articulated in their complaints, stem from defendants' use of "a uniform and consistent protocol" and their ongoing conduct in each transaction since Prosperity's inception under which plaintiffs and members of the putative class were uniformly and consistently deceived into paying unlawful fees to Prosperity. (Minter Complaint, Paper No. 18, 7-21; Petry Complaint, Paper No. 1, 8-15).
Therefore, having found that equitable tolling is both available and has been adequately pled, the Court concludes that plaintiffs are entitled to discovery of documerits throughout the entire putative class period, dating back to and including Prosperity's 1993 inception.
The parties further contest specific document requests: Prosperity Request Nos. 5, 8, 9, 15, 17, 23, and 25, and Wells Fargo Request Nos. 4 and 7.
*597 As to plaintiffs’ request for Prosрerity’s federal and state tax returns (Prosperity Request No. 5), Prosperity fails to support its contention that tax returns are confidential documents that require a compelling reason for production. (See Paper No. 108-3, 19). It is well-settled that corporate tax returns are not privileged by statute or at common law, e.g., 26 U.S.C. § 6103 note (noting that the 26 U.S.C. § 6103 privilege is limited to рrohibition of disclosures by government officers and does not prevent a court from requiring a taxpayer to disclose tax returns in discovery); Md.Code Ann., Tax-Gen. § 13-202 note (commenting that “Federal and State tax returns are not privileged, and, provided they are relevant, they are discoverable”); Mueller & Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 5:5 (recognizing that tаx returns are not privileged, but that courts should order discovery of them only under a protective order where clearly relevant), and the protective order already in place in this case is adequate to protect any confidential information produced. Plaintiffs have articulated that schedules contained in Prosperity’s tax returns include information relevant to the HUD elements, which are central to this case, and are thus discoverable. Therefore, plaintiffs are entitled to all federal and state tax returns filed by Prosperity and not limited to Maryland, contingent on the parties’ agreement as to nonproduction of any clearly irrelevant schedules and subject to thе existing protective order.
As to plaintiffs’ request for documents regarding Prosperity’s warehouse lines of credit (Prosperity Request No. 9), Prosperity has already provided the Master Agreement establishing its warehouse lines of credit, but plaintiffs requested documents showing when those lines of credit were used and agreed to limit their requests to only documentation relevant to the 200 sample loan files. Plaintiffs allege that this documentation will show to what extent defendants’ actions varied from the practices established in the Master Agreement, and will show when and where transfers were made. Therefore, as this information appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of relevаnt information, plaintiffs are entitled to discovery from Prosperity of the documents requested pertaining to the warehouse lines of credit as requested for the 200 sample loan files.
As to plaintiffs’ requests for memos prepared by or for Prosperity by or for Long & Foster, Wells Fargo, and/or Walker Jackson and for documents containing analyses of Prosperity’s financial performance (Prosperity Request Nos. 23 & 25), the parties have agreed to confer in an attempt to resolve the scope of these requests. Plaintiffs are therefore entitled to discovery of the documents requested under Request Nos. 23 and 25 subject to the parties’ agreement as to the reasonable scope of those requests.
Plaintiffs request all documents submitted to or received from any state or federal agency, including annual reports and documents concerning any state or federal licensure (Prosperity Request Nos. 8,15, & 17; Wells Fargo Request Nos. 4 & 7). Plaintiffs suggest that these documents are likely to establish or infer that Wells Fargo exercised control over Prosperity and its regulatory filings during the relevant period. However, defendants openly admit that Wells Fargo handled regulatory matters for Prosperity and have provided in discovery a copy of an agreement that establishes this fact. Therefore, as the documents requested are not reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of relevant evidеnce and, at best, would result in cumulative or duplicative evidence, plaintiffs are not entitled to filings made by Prosperity or Wells Fargo with state or regulatory agencies to the *598 extent those documents are not otherwise produced.
B. Motion to Compel Production of Loan Files
Originally, plaintiffs sought production of all loan files (Paper No. 111-2, Ex. A, Document Request 1). After extended negotiation, parties agreed to a random sample of 200 loan files covering the entire period of 1993 to the present. (Id., 8 & Ex. H). Prosperity then produced a sample of 100 loan files covering the period of 2003 to the present. (Paper No. 148, 1-2). On the basis of the Court’s finding that the relevant discovery period extends back to 1993, defendants shall now provide to plaintiffs an additional 100 loan files covering the period of 1993 through 2003 in accordance with the parties’ agreed-upon random sampling methods and agreed-upon content.
Although defendants Prosperity and Wells Fargo do not dispute that the loan sample is representative of all loan files, 5 defendants argue that they should not be limited to reliance on the loan sample during the class certification period, and should instead be аble to use all loan files, including those not provided to plaintiffs in discovery, in defending this stage of the litigation. This position is fundamentally unfair, especially in light of defendants’ denial of complete access to all loan files to plaintiffs. Given the random nature of the loan file sample selection and its representative character, plаintiffs and defendants should be equally capable of supporting their positions on the basis of that sample. Limitation of precertification discovery of loan files to a limited sample is an excellent, mutually beneficial cost-saving approach. See Manual for Complex Litigation, Fourth § 21.14 (approving of sampling in the context of class-relаted discovery to the extent it “provides a meaningful, or at least objective, sample of data”). Therefore, plaintiffs and defendants shall be equally limited to only the loan file sample for purposes of class certification.
CONCLUSION
As set forth in the Court’s December 2, 2009 Order, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part Plaintiffs’ Discovery Motion # 1: To Compel Production of Documents from Defendant Prosperity Mortgage (Paper No. 108), DENIES Plaintiffs’ Discovery Motion # 4: To Compel Production of Documents from Defendants Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. and Wells Fargo Ventures, LLC (Paper No. 139), and GRANTS Plaintiffs’ Discovery Motion # 2: To Compel Production of Loan Files and for a Protective Order (Paper No. 111).
Notes
. If the Court does find equitable tolling applicable in this case, Prosperity suggests that it follow
Pedraza v. United Guaranty Corp.,
. Kerby articulated its disagreement with Hardin, declining to follow Zaremski, on the basis of Hardin's
citation to inapposite case law addressing sovereign immunity, which actually tends to support rather than undermine the case for equitable tolling under RESPA and TILA; its extraction of congressional intent by examining which part of which sentence the time limitations are contained while ignoring express congressional purpose in the plain text of the Acts; its apparent as *595 sumption that courts рrior to the 1980 TILA amendment uniformly followed the supposed general rule on recoupment when in fact they were split; its disregarding of well-settled federal principles of equitable tolling as elucidated repeatedly by the Supreme Court; and its application of a 'jurisdictional' statutory canon both before and in the service of determining whethеr the limitations periods are in fact, as it framed the issue, 'jurisdictional.'
Id. at 797.
. At the December 1, 2009 motions hearing, counsel for Prosperity referred the Court to
Phrasavang v. Deutsche Bank,
Civ. No. 09-64,
. Plaintiffs instead rely on extension of Maryland's 12-year "specialty” statute of limitations to Maryland's Finder’s Fee Act, which would entitle plaintiffs to discovery back to December 1995. (Paper No. 136, 3
(citing Master Fin., Inc. v. Crowder,
. At the December 1, 2009 motions hearing, counsel for defendants Prosperity and Wells Fargo expressly declined to dispute that the sample of 200 loan files was representative.
