Carfora V Teachers Insurance Annuity Association Of America
Cc O V I N G T Oo N Covington & Burling LLP
One CityCenter
BEIJING BOSTON BRUSSELS DUBAI FRANKFURT 850 Tenth Street, NW
JOHANNESBURG LONDON LOS ANGELES NEW YORK Washington, DC 20001-4956
PALO ALTO SAN FRANCISCO SEOUL SHANGHAI WASHINGTON T +1202 662 6000
Via ECF July 17, 2025
The Honorable Katherine Polk Failla
United States District Court
Southern District of New York MEMO ENDORSED
Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse
40 Foley Square
New York, New York 10007
Re: Carfora etal. v. TIAA et al., No. 21-08384 (KPF) (S.D.N.Y.)
Dear Judge Failla,
I represent non-party Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (“MSK”’) in connection
with Plaintiffs’ request for non-party discovery. I write to respectfully request that the Court
deny Plaintiffs’ July 14, 2025, letter request for an order compelling MSK to produce documents
responsive to Plaintiffs’ Subpoena dated February 10, 2025 (the “Subpoena” and for a pre-
motion conference. See ECF 122.
In their letter motion, Plaintiffs “seek to enforce the Subpoena and request a pre-motion
discovery conference pursuant to Local Rule 37.2.” ECF 122, at 1. Plaintiffs’ request should be
denied because the Subpoena seeks information that could be obtained directly from Defendants,
compliance with the Subpoena would impose undue burdens on MSK, and Plaintiffs have failed
to narrow the Subpoena despite MSK’s good-faith efforts to reach a reasonable compromise.
First, the Subpoena seeks documents from MSK that can be obtained directly from
Defendants.' The Subpoena demands that MSK produce documents related to “[Teachers’
Insurance & Annuity Association of America and TIAA-CREF Individual & Institutional
Services, LLC’s] sales or promotion of Non-Plan Products or Services.” ECF 122-1. As stated
in MSK’s March 19, 2025, Responses and Objections to the Subpoena, this request requires
MSK to produce documents that should be directly obtained from Defendants. See ECF 122-3.
' The Subpoena is overbroad to the extent that it requires Plaintiffs to produce documents that would also be in
Defendants’ possession, custody, or control. See, e.g., Torre v. Charter Communications, Inc., No. 19-CV-5708,
2020 WL 7705940, at *1 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 28, 2020) (quashing non-party subpoena where plaintiffs sought “a large
universe of documents from . . . a non-party, that could and should be obtained from [the] [d]efendant.”).
COVINGTON
Judge Failla
July 17, 2025
Page 2
Second, the Subpoena includes several far-reaching document requests to which MSK
cannot easily respond. See ECF 122-1. Where discovery is sought from a non-party, “burden and
expense are to be weighted more heavily.” Lynch v. City of New York, No. 16-CV-7355, 2021
WL 4652305, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. Oct. 5, 2021). Although Plaintiffs state that the Subpoena
“contains only two document requests,” the first of those requests includes seven subparts. ECF
122, at 1; ECF 122-1. Among other requests, Plaintiffs have demanded that MSK produce “all
responsive documents” in its “possession, custody, or control” relating to “the sale of Non-Plan
products or services,” “Financial Consultants’ ability to market or otherwise promote Non-Plan
Products or Services,” and “transfers of Plan assets into Non-Plan Products or Services.” ECF
122-1. These materials are not “readily available,” as Plaintiffs suggest, and MSK would need to
expend significant time and resources to identify and produce any relevant documents. ECF 122,
at 2.
Third, contrary to Plaintiffs’ assertions, MSK has engaged in repeated efforts to reach an
appropriate compromise on the scope of the Subpoena. Plaintiffs served the Subpoena on MSK
on February 20, 2025. See ECF 122-2. On March 19, 2025, when MSK served its Responses
and Objections to the Subpoena, pursuant to an agreed extension, MSK offered to meet and
confer regarding the responses and objections. See ECF 122-3; ECF 122-4. MSK subsequently
met and conferred with Plaintiffs on two occasions: March 25, 2025 and April 24, 2025. See
ECF 122-4. At both meetings, MSK indicated that it was willing to consider a discovery
compromise, provided the Plaintiffs exhausted opportunities for party discovery. Plaintiffs did
not propose any acceptable resolution, and refused to address their ability to obtain discovery
from parties to the litigation. Plaintiffs proceeded to file their July 14, 2025, letter request. See
ECF 122; ECF 122-4.
COVINGTON
Judge Failla
July 17, 2025
Page 3
For the foregoing reasons, MSK respectfully requests that the Court deny Plaintiffs’ July
14, 2025, letter request for an order compelling MSK to respond to the Subpoena. If the Court
elects to schedule a pre-motion discovery conference, MSK respectfully requests the opportunity
to confer with Plaintiffs about scheduling of that conference.
Respectfully submitted,
/s/ Laura Flahive Wu
Laura Flahive Wu
Iflahivewu@cov.com
Robert Newman
rmewman@cov.com
One CityCenter
850 Tenth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001-4956
Telephone: (202) 662-5982
Counsel to Non-Party Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
ce: Counsel of Record (via ECF)
The Court is in receipt of Plaintiffs' letter motion requesting a
conference on its anticipated motion to compel third-party Memorial Sloan-
Kettering Cancer Center ("MSK") to produce documents. (Dkt. #122). The
Court is also in receipt of MSK's response in opposition. (Dkt. #127).
The Court intends to hold a pre-motion conference to discuss the third-
party subpoena. Accordingly, and as requested by MSK, the Court will
allow the parties to confer regarding the scheduling of this conference.
Plaintiffs and MSK are instructed to file a joint letter proposing times
for a conference on or before July 25, 2025. While the Court will work to
accommodate the parties, the Court notes that it is presiding over a trial
during the next several weeks, and will have limited availability.
The Clerk of Court is directed to terminate the pending motion at docket
entry 122.
Dated: July 22, 2025 SO ORDERED.
New York, New York ia
Hither bal. Fath
HON. KATHERINE POLK FAILLA
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE