REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
1 By Amended Notice of Motion, the applicant ("Jarra") seeks orders for discovery which are resisted by the respondents. There are three principal areas of dispute in relation to Jarra's proposed orders.
2 The first question is whether the respondents should be ordered to file and serve an affidavit deposing as to what records are kept and the way in which such records are made and retained by them. Jarra also seeks information as to how certain pulp and paper products ("PPP") and corrugated fibreboard packaging products ("CFP") are categorised or grouped for the purpose of recording production, production cost, sales volumes, sales revenues, sales margins or profits and production figures. In addition, details are sought as to how PPP and CFP production capacities are recorded, monitored, analysed and reported. Information is further sought as to how the costs in manufacturing or supplying PPP or CFP products are recorded, monitored, analysed and reported.
3 The second area of dispute relates to an order that the Amcor entities make initial discovery of certain electronic databases, one of the principal databases being an Oracle database.
4 The third dispute concerns the application of a discovery protocol formulated in relation to the proceedings brought by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission ("ACCC") against the Visy entities. This protocol covers the form in which information is to be provided by the parties in the ACCC proceeding and contains provisions in relation to specific categories of meta-data and the de-duplication of electronic documents.
5 The proceeding before me is a representative action brought pursuant to Part IVA of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth). The Application and Statement of Claim were filed on 11 April 2006. The Amcor entities on 7 July 2006 filed a Cross-Claim against the Visy entities, and the Visy companies filed a Defence to that Cross-Claim on 23 August 2006. A Defence was filed by the Amcor respondents on 7 July 2006 and there has been no Reply by the Applicants to date.
6 It is not necessary for the purposes of this discovery application to descend into the detail of the issues in the case. The Application is brought by a group whose members are described as "all those persons who purchased and paid more than $100,000.00 for corrugated fibreboard packaging products in Australia during the period 1 May 2000 to 1 May 2005." The applicants claim to have suffered loss and seek declarations and damages in respect of alleged contraventions of s 45 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) alleging that arrangements were made between the Amcor and Visy companies which related to the fixing, controlling or maintaining of prices for the supply of corrugated fibre board packaging products. The allegations in the Statement of Claim are disputed. On 27 July 2006, I ordered that the parties agree on categories of discoverable documents or, in default, file an application for discovery. The parties have been unable to agree on the scope of these categories.
7 In late 2005, five months before this proceeding was instituted, the ACCC commenced proceedings against the Visy entities and certain individuals in relation to alleged breaches of s 45 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). Those proceedings raise issues of fact and law which, it is said, are identical to the issues in the present proceeding. The ACCC proceedings also make allegations against the Amcor entities as one of the parties to the arrangement.
8 On 23 February 2006, Heerey J, who is the Docket Judge for the ACCC proceeding, ordered discovery in that proceeding. This order has been treated by the parties as requiring them to give "general" discovery in that matter and there was no reference in the order as to categories of documents for discovery purposes. I understand that matter has been tentatively fixed for hearing to commence in October 2007.
9 On 16 June 2006, the Visy entities agreed with the ACCC as to the terms of an Electronic Document Exchange Protocol ("the ACCC Protocol") in respect of discovery in the ACCC proceeding. That discovery involves many thousands of documents. The ACCC Protocol required the parties to exchange discovered documents in prescribed electronic format described as single page TIFF files. The parties later agreed to the processing of documents in the possession of Visy companies and their storage on a Ringtail database ("the Existing Database"). The discovery is now well-advanced, with a total of 19,653 documents stored in the Existing Database, of which 15,556 are images of hard-copy paper documents and 4,097 are images of original electronic documents (namely emails and the attachments to them) as well as electronic files which have been located as a result of searches of computer servers and computer back-up systems. No doubt, in many cases, some of the documents or attachments will contain many pages of material. It is also anticipated that a further 10,000 hard-copy documents and 15,969 electronic documents are in the process of being imaged and added to the Existing Database. Further searches are also underway for potentially discoverable documents in relation to the ACCC proceeding. To date, the Visy entities have spent in the order of $35,000.00 processing documents for inclusion, and anticipate spending an additional $57,000.00 in respect of additional electronic and hard-copy documents. The Visy entities have provided an estimate that their total costs for processing documents for discovery in accordance with the ACCC Protocol will be in the range of $240,000.00 to $320,000.00.
10 In addition, the Visy entities claim that if the Amended Notice of Motion is granted in this proceeding, there will be further costs incurred in the rectification of coding and other adjustments to the documents which has not been counted. It is also submitted that these figures are exclusive of the costs of examining the documents for the purpose of obtaining legal advice as to discoverability and issues such as privilege.
11 Furthermore, there is a dispute as to extent and number of fields relating to meta-data that it is appropriate to provide at this early stage of the proceeding. The expression "meta-data," which is the subject of a substantial part of the claim for discovery in relation to electronic records, is a reference to electronic information created by and embedded in electronic documents in the form of electronic data. The term describes data contained within an electronic file relating to the identification, origin or history of the file itself. It is, in effect, electronic information about other electronic data. Meta-data can be used to ascertain the author and origin of a document, the existence of any attachments, and whether the document was sent or received by any particular individual. The information which is contained in the meta-data is not visible on a print-out of the relevant document, which shows only the face content and does not disclose the layers of electronic data beneath the visually readable information.
12 In the processing of the meta-data, advanced software may assist in ascertaining the provenance of a document and whether any alterations or deletions have been made to a document's original format. A new sector of the software industry has developed which provides methods of searching large fields of meta-data in a matter of seconds. These applications have proven invaluable to lawyers, particularly in complex litigation involving the collection and analysis of vast numbers of electronic communications.
13 In addition, meta-data can also provide substantial assistance in managing large volumes of documents and assisting with de-duplication, an electronic process by which software identifies absolutely identical documents and "clusters" those which look like they are almost duplicates of each other. Evidence from Mr McCormack, a computer expert for Jarra, states that the provision of meta-data reduces the need to check for duplicate copies because it can be filtered electronically to ensure that similar documents are clustered. This eliminates the need for documents that only have immaterial differences to be examined for production.
14 Jarra claims that the provision of suitable and sufficient fields of meta-data is critical to minimise human error and enable the use of software filters to perform keyword searches and cluster related documents. The ACCC Protocol, which the Amcor and Visy entities have already accepted, provides for the discovery of fourteen fields or parameters of meta-data in relation to electronic communications. Jarra seeks an additional nine fields of meta-data information. The evidence is that this will involve substantial additional expenditure of time and cost, and Jarra has not offered to meet these expenses
15 Given the comprehensive nature and utility of meta-data information, Jarra contends that it is likely that the Amcor and Visy entities will have already captured a great deal of the required detailed meta-data to assist them in their own internal processing of documents, even though they have not been required to produce complete data to the ACCC. However, there is no evidentiary factual basis for this contention.