OPINION OF THE COURT
JEFFREY ARLEN SPINNER, J.
Ordered, that defendant Steelcase's motion is hereby granted as set forth herein below.
Defendant Steelcase moves this court for an order granting said defendant access to plaintiff's current and historical Facebook and MySpace pages and accounts, including all deleted pages and related information upon the grounds that plaintiff has placed certain information on these social networking sites which is believed to be inconsistent with her claims in this action concerning the extent and nature of her injuries, especially her claims for loss of enjoyment of life.
The present application was brought on by order to show cause. The court has reviewed the submissions both in favor of and in opposition to the relief sought, as well as the applicable federal statutory law, specifically the Stored Communications Act (18 USC § 2701 et seq.), which prohibits an entity such as Facebook and MySpace from disclosing such information without the consent of the owner of the account (see 18 USC § 2702 [b] [3]; Flagg v City of Detroit, 252 FRD 346, 352 [ED Mich 2008]).
Scope of Permissible Discovery
Pursuant to CPLR 3101, there shall be full disclosure of all nonprivileged matter which is material and necessary to the defense or prosecution of an action. To this end, trial courts have broad discretion in the supervision of discovery, and in determining what is "material and necessary" (see Allen v Crowell-Collier Publ. Co., 21 N.Y.2d 403 [1968]; Andon v 302-304 Mott St. Assoc., 94 N.Y.2d 740 [2000]; Cabellero v City of New York, 48 A.D.3d 727 [2d Dept 2008]). Within the context of discovery, "necessary" has been interpreted as meaning "`needful' and not indispensable" (see Allen at 407). The "material and necessary" standard is to be interpreted liberally, requiring disclosure of "any facts bearing on the controversy which will assist preparation for trial by sharpening the issues and reducing delay and prolixity. The test is one of usefulness and reason" (see Allen, 21 NY2d at 406; Andon, supra; Hoenig v Westphal, 52 N.Y.2d 605, 608 [1981] [pretrial discovery is to be encouraged, limited only by a test for materiality of "usefulness and reason"]).
Information Sought from Internet Sites
Plaintiffs who place their physical condition in controversy may not shield from disclosure material which is necessary to the defense of the action (see Hoenig v Westphal, supra). Accordingly, in an action seeking damages for personal injuries, discovery is generally permitted with respect to materials that may be relevant to both the issue of damages and the extent of a plaintiff's injury (see Walker v City of New York, 205 A.D.2d 755 [2d Dept 1994]), including a plaintiff's claim for loss of enjoyment of life (see Orlando v Richmond Precast, Inc., 53 A.D.3d 534 [2d Dept 2008] [in an action to recover damages for personal injuries, records sought were material and necessary to the defense regarding plaintiff's claim of loss of enjoyment of life]; Vanalst v City of New York, 276 A.D.2d 789 [2d Dept 2000]; Mora v Saint Vincent's Catholic Med. Ctr. of N.Y., 8 Misc.3d 868 [Sup Ct, NY County 2005]).
Thus, in Sgambelluri v Recinos (192 Misc.2d 777 [Sup Ct, Nassau County 2002]), an action arising out of a motor vehicle accident, the court held that plaintiff's wedding video taken two years after the incident was clearly relevant to the claim of permanency of injuries. As a result of the accident, plaintiff alleged that she sustained permanent injuries to her neck and back, and testified at her deposition that she can no longer participate in certain activities such as running or horseback riding. Defendant sought a copy of her wedding video on the basis that it might have shown plaintiff in various activities such as dancing, which would be relevant to the claims. Plaintiff objected on
Like the plaintiff in Sgambelluri, plaintiff herein also claims she sustained permanent injuries as a result of the incident and that she can no longer participate in certain activities or that these injuries have affected her enjoyment of life. However, contrary to plaintiff's claims, Steelcase contends that a review of the public portions of plaintiff's MySpace and Facebook pages reveals that she has an active lifestyle and has traveled to Florida and Pennsylvania during the time period she claims that her injuries prohibited such activity. In light of this, defendant sought to question plaintiff at her deposition regarding her MySpace and Facebook accounts, to no avail, and following those depositions, served plaintiff with a notice for discovery and inspection requesting, inter alia, "authorizations to obtain full access to and copies of Plaintiff's current and historical records/ information on her Facebook and MySpace accounts." Plaintiff has refused to provide the requested authorizations.
Both Facebook and MySpace are social networking sites where people can share information about their personal lives, including posting photographs and sharing information about what they are doing or thinking. Indeed, Facebook policy states that "it helps you share information with your friends and people around you," and that "Facebook is about sharing information with others."
The information sought by defendant regarding plaintiff's Facebook and MySpace accounts is both material and necessary to the defense of this action and/or could lead to admissible evidence. In this regard, it appears that plaintiff's public profile page on Facebook shows her smiling happily in a photograph outside the confines of her home despite her claim that she has sustained permanent injuries and is largely confined to her house and bed. In light of the fact that the public portions of plaintiff's social networking sites contain material that is contrary to her claims and deposition testimony, there is a reasonable likelihood that the private portions of her sites may contain further evidence such as information with regard to her activities and enjoyment of life, all of which are material and relevant to the defense of this action. Preventing defendant from accessing plaintiff's private postings on Facebook and MySpace would be in direct contravention to the liberal disclosure policy in New York State.
Although there is no New York case law directly addressing the issues raised by this application, there are instructive cases from other jurisdictions. Recently, in Ledbetter v Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (2009 WL 1067018, 2009 US Dist LEXIS 126859 [Civ Action No. 06-cv-01958-WYD-MJW, D Colo, Apr. 21, 2009]), defendant store sought, via subpoena, production of the content of plaintiffs' social networking sites.
Likewise, in Leduc v Roman (2009 CarswellOnt 843 [Feb. 20, 2009]), a matter pending in the Superior Court of Justice, Ontario, Canada, defendant also requested production of the plaintiff's Facebook pages, including private pages. Plaintiff claimed that as a result of injuries allegedly sustained in a car accident, his enjoyment for life had lessened. Canadian law requires that each party disclose every document relating to any matter in the action over which he has possession or control absent a claim of privilege. Plaintiff had failed to disclose the information, which defendant only learned about following a defense psychiatric examination. After only being able to access the limited portions of plaintiff's public profile page, defendant sought an order requiring production of all site materials as well as preservation of the materials. The decision denying the request was reversed on appeal, with the appellate court disagreeing that defendant was on a fishing expedition. In this regard, Judge Brown noted that it was "beyond controversy" that a person's Facebook pages may contain relevant documents (¶ 23); that other Canadian cases had permitted into evidence photographs posted on a person's Facebook page showing them engaged in activities despite their claim to the contrary; and that it is reasonable to infer from the social networking purpose of Facebook that even if a person only maintains a private profile, with the public profile merely listing their name, relevant information exists on their limited-access private pages (¶ 36). In deciding to permit the examination into the private Facebook profile, the court set forth:
Thus, it is reasonable to infer from the limited postings on plaintiff's public Facebook and MySpace profile pages that her private pages may contain material and information that are relevant to her claims or that may lead to the disclosure of admissible evidence. To deny defendant an opportunity to access these sites not only would go against the liberal discovery policies of New York favoring pretrial disclosure, but would condone plaintiff's attempt to hide relevant information behind self-regulated privacy settings.
Plaintiff's Privacy Concerns
Production of plaintiff's entries on her Facebook and MySpace accounts would not be violative of her right to privacy,
The Fourth Amendment's right to privacy protects people, not places (see Katz v United States, 389 U.S. 347, 351 [1967] ["What a person knowingly exposes to the public, even in his own home or office, is not a subject of Fourth Amendment protection"]). In determining whether a right to privacy exists via the Fourth Amendment, courts apply the reasonableness
New York courts have yet to address whether there exists a right to privacy regarding what one posts on their on-line social networking pages such as Facebook and MySpace. However, whether one has a reasonable expectation of privacy in Internet postings or e-mails that have reached their recipients has been addressed by the Second Circuit, which has held that individuals may not enjoy such an expectation of privacy (see United States v Lifshitz, 369 F.3d 173, 190 [2004]):
Likewise, whether one has a reasonable expectation of privacy in e-mails and other writings that have been shared with others, including entries on Facebook and MySpace, has been addressed by the United States District Court of New Jersey, which ordered such entries produced in Beye v Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of N.J. (Civ Case No. 06-5337 [D NJ, Dec. 14, 2007]). In this regard, the court stated that "[t]he privacy concerns are far less where the beneficiary herself chose to disclose the information." As to the entries which had not been shared with others, they were to be preserved. At issue in Beye were on-line journals and diary entries of minor children who had been denied health care benefits for their eating disorders (see also Moreno v Hanford Sentinel, Inc., 172 Cal.App.4th 1125, 91 Cal.Rptr.3d 858 [Ct App, 5th Dist 2009] [no person would have reasonable expectation of privacy where that person took affirmative act of posting own writing on MySpace, making it available to anyone with a computer and opening it up to the public eye]; Dexter v Dexter, 2007 WL 1532084, 2007 Ohio App LEXIS 2388 [Ct App, 11th Dist, Portage County 2007] [no reasonable expectation of privacy regarding MySpace writings open to public view]).
Further that
Thus, when plaintiff created her Facebook and MySpace accounts, she consented to the fact that her personal information would be shared with others, notwithstanding her privacy settings. Indeed, that is the very nature and purpose of these social networking sites, else they would cease to exist. Since plaintiff knew that her information may become publicly available, she cannot now claim that she had a reasonable expectation of privacy. As recently set forth by commentators regarding privacy and social networking sites: given the millions of users, "[i]n this environment, privacy is no longer grounded in reasonable expectations, but rather in some theoretical protocol better known as wishful thinking."
Further, defendant's need for access to the information outweighs any privacy concerns that may be voiced by plaintiff. Defendant has attempted to obtain the sought-after information
Ordered, that defendant Steelcase's motion for an order granting said defendant access to plaintiff's current and historical Facebook and MySpace pages and accounts, including all deleted pages and related information, is hereby granted in all respects; and it is further ordered, that, within 30 days from the date of service of a copy of this order, as directed herein below, plaintiff shall deliver to counsel for defendant Steelcase a properly executed consent and authorization as may be required by the operators of Facebook and MySpace, permitting said defendant to gain access to plaintiff's Facebook and MySpace records, including any records previously deleted or archived by said operators.
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