Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

News & Analysis Policies & Forms Your Library
News & Analysis Policies & Forms Your Library

User account menu

Sign in Get Started
x

You're signed out

Sign in to access subscriber actions.

Eastland appeals court slaps employer on social media discovery

March 2024 employment law letter
Authors: 

by Michael P. Maslanka, UNT-Dallas College of Law

A recent employment law case in West Texas sheds light on what an employer in an employment lawsuit can ask of the employee via written discovery (pretrial fact finding). It’s a gold mine! We will talk about it in this month’s issue and the next.

Facts

Richard Scherer sued his former employer, Endeavor Energy, in Midland County state court. He claimed his age and his national origin were considered by Endeavor in denying him a promotion.

The company sent Scherer written discovery asking questions it thought were relevant to its defense. He resisted answering some of the written questions (called interrogatories). The dispute found its way to the appeals court.

Social media interrogatory

Here was the company’s written question on social media: "List all email addresses you have used during the last five years and provide all web addresses for any online content with which you are associated, including, without limitation, social media websites (e.g., Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Snapchat, Tik Tok)."

Scherer objected to the request as overbroad. Or as my mother would say, “What does the request have to do with the price of eggs in China (i.e. the lawsuit)?”

Continue reading your article with a HRLaws membership
  • Sign in
  • Sign up
Upgrade to a subscription now
to get unlimited access to everything on HR Laws.
Start subscription
Any time

Publications

  • Employment Law Letter
  • Employers State Law Alert
  • Federal Employment Law Insider

Your Library Reading List

Reading list 6
Creating List 7
Testing

Let's manage your states

We'll keep you updated on state changes

Manage States
© 2025
BLR®, A DIVISION OF SIMPLIFY COMPLIANCE LLC | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Footer - Copyright

  • terms
  • legal
  • privacy