Cramton v. Grabbagreen Franchising LLC et al
Filing
386
ORDER: IT IS ORDERED that Cramton's motion to preclude Defendants from introducing certain exhibits at trial on the ground that the exhibits are protected by the attorney-client privilege (Doc. 374 ) is denied [see attached Order for details]. Signed by Judge Dominic W Lanza on 3/9/21. (MAW)
1
WO
2
3
4
5
6
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
7
FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA
8
9
Kim Cramton,
No. CV-17-04663-PHX-DWL
Plaintiff,
10
ORDER
11
v.
12
Grabbagreen Franchising LLC, et al.,
13
Defendants.
14
15
The bench trial in this matter will begin on May 24, 2021. (Doc. 383.) Pending
16
before the Court is Plaintiff Kim Cramton’s (“Cramton”) supplemental brief, which the
17
Court construes as a motion to preclude Defendants from introducing certain exhibits at
18
trial on the ground that the exhibits are protected by the attorney-client privilege. (Doc.
19
374.) For the following reasons, the motion is denied.
20
RELEVANT BACKGROUND
21
In advance of the previous trial setting, Defendants issued a trial subpoena to
22
Shelley DiGiacomo, Cramton’s former attorney. (Doc. 370.) Ms. DiGiacomo, in turn,
23
moved to quash the subpoena on the ground that any testimony she might provide would
24
be protected by the attorney-client privilege. (Id.)
25
On December 3, 2020, the Court issued an order denying the motion to quash. (Doc.
26
371.) This order explained that “in the Final Pretrial Order, Defendants identified Ms.
27
DiGiacomo as a necessary witness and made clear that they would only be asking her about
28
certain non-privileged topics, and Ms. Cramton did not raise any privilege-related
1
objections. Thus, the motion to quash will be denied without prejudice. Any privilege-
2
related objections to specific questions can be taken up during trial.” (Doc. 371, citation
3
omitted.) However, the Court also authorized Cramton, to the extent she wished to be
4
further heard, to file a supplemental brief. (Id.)
5
On December 7, 2020, Cramton filed a supplemental brief. (Doc. 374.) The brief
6
focuses less on the propriety of calling Ms. DiGiacomo as a witness and more on the fact
7
that Defendants have identified, on their exhibit list, “dozens of Plaintiff’s attorney-client
8
protected communications with [Ms. DiGiacomo] as exhibits in this case.”
9
According to Cramton, “the only reason that Defendants lucked into accessing these emails
10
was because Ms. Cramton voluntarily turned over a copy of the entire hard [drive] of her
11
laptop that she used when she was working for Defendants.” (Id. at 3.) Nevertheless,
12
Cramton urges the Court to find that she “did not waive[] her attorney-client privilege with
13
her former attorney.” (Id. at 4.) The thrust of Cramton’s argument is that, even though she
14
communicated with DiGiacomo via her company-issued computer, she didn’t waive the
15
privilege though such conduct because “[n]owhere does the employee manual mention a
16
computer use and monitoring policy” and she “is also not aware of any such policy.” (Id.
17
at 2-3.) Enclosed with the supplemental brief is a privilege log, dated April 6, 2018, that
18
identifies certain Cramton-DiGiacomo emails as privileged. (Doc. 374-1.)
(Id.)
19
On December 17, 2020, Defendants filed a response to Cramton’s supplemental
20
brief. (Doc. 384.) First, Defendants argue that Cramton waived any privilege by sending
21
and receiving the emails in question on a company-issued computer. (Id. at 2-4.) In
22
support of this argument, Defendants assert that “the [employee] manual expressly states
23
that employees have no expectation of privacy while using company property, and that all
24
information stored, transmitted or received using company systems or computers are
25
subject to review and monitoring including company computers and emails.” (Id.) Second,
26
and alternatively, Defendants note that after Cramton stopped working for them, she copied
27
all of the emails in question onto a personal hard drive and attempted to delete them from
28
the company’s computer system. (Id. at 4-6.) Defendants further note that, in response to
-2-
1
their requests during the discovery process for documents stored on this personal hard
2
drive, Cramton declined to “produc[e] bates labeled PDFs . . . or creat[e] a directory with
3
hash values assigned to the content of the hard drive in its native ESI format” and instead
4
simply “delivered the hard drive in an ‘as is’ state to the Defendants as her document
5
production in discovery.” (Id., emphasis omitted.) According to Defendants, Cramton’s
6
voluntary production of the entire hard drive means she has waived any privilege claim
7
pertaining to its contents. (Id.) Defendants further argue that, because they sent a letter to
8
Cramton’s counsel in October 2018 disclosing this issue (Doc. 384-1 at 22-23 [“[We have]
9
a copy of Mrs. Cramton’s hard drive. We plan to review documents on that drive but want
10
to first clear this [privilege] issue.”]), Cramton’s current efforts to assert privilege claims
11
are untimely. (Doc. 384 at 5.) Third, and finally, putting aside these theories of waiver,
12
Defendants argue that some of the emails in question aren’t actually privileged because
13
they “lack content for the purpose of securing or giving legal advice.” (Id. at 1.)
14
DISCUSSION
15
As a threshold matter, although the parties’ supplemental briefs suggest their
16
privilege dispute is governed by federal law, the only remaining claims in this action—
17
Cramton’s minimum wage claim (Count Four) and claims for breach of the implied
18
covenant of good faith and fair dealing (Count Seven), negligent misrepresentation (Count
19
Nine), and fraud (Count Ten)—are state-law claims. This raises an interesting choice-of-
20
law issue. On the one hand, the Ninth Circuit has held that, “[i]n diversity actions,
21
questions of privilege are controlled by state law.” In re Cal. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 892
22
F.2d 778, 781 (9th Cir. 1989). On the other hand, this is not a diversity action. The Court
23
asserted supplemental jurisdiction over Counts Four, Seven, Nine, and Ten at the outset of
24
this case under 28 U.S.C. § 1367, based on the presence of federal claims in Cramton’s
25
complaint, and retained jurisdiction over the state-law claims after the federal claims were
26
dismissed at summary judgment. Some courts have suggested that, in this instance,
27
privilege claims are governed by federal law. Vanderbilt v. Town of Chilmark, 174 F.R.D.
28
225, 227 (D. Mass. 1987) (“Rule 501 does not instruct a federal court on which law of
-3-
1
privilege to use in a federal question case where the court is also hearing a state law claim
2
pursuant to supplemental jurisdiction. Every circuit that has reached this issue has held
3
that . . . the federal law of privilege applies.”); EEOC v. Dudley Perkins Co., 2010 WL
4
11714698, *3 n.4 (N.D. Cal. 2010) (same).
5
It is unnecessary to resolve the choice-of-law issue here because the result would be
6
the same under Arizona or federal law. In Arizona, “a client waives the [attorney-client]
7
privilege by disclosing confidential communications to a third party.” Ulibarri v. Superior
8
Ct., 909 P.2d 449, 452 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1995). Similarly, under federal law as construed by
9
the Ninth Circuit, “voluntary disclosure of the content of a privileged attorney
10
communication constitutes waiver of the privilege.” Weil v. Inv./Indicators, Rsch. &
11
Mgmt., Inc., 647 F.2d 18, 24-25 (9th Cir. 1981).1 In Weil, the court applied these principles
12
to find that a party had “waived its attorney-client privilege” with respect to a particular
13
communication by “disclos[ing] the content of [that] privileged communication” during
14
the discovery process. Id. The court emphasized that the disclosing party’s “bare assertion
15
that it did not subjectively intend to waive the privilege is insufficient to make out the
16
necessary element of nonwaiver.” Id.2
17
That, in a nutshell, is what happened here. In July 2018, during the early stages of
18
the discovery process, Defendants’ counsel sent an email to Cramton’s counsel
19
complaining about the fact that Cramton had not yet “produced anything related to the hard
20
drive of the computer that Cramton copied and then returned wiped.” (Doc. 216-1 at 103.)
21
1
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
See also In re Pacific Pictures Corp., 679 F.3d 1121, 1126-27 (9th Cir. 2012)
(“[V]oluntarily disclosing privileged documents to third parties will generally destroy the
privilege.”); United States v. Ruehle, 583 F.3d 600, 612 (9th Cir. 2009) (noting “the settled
rule that any voluntary disclosure of information to a third party waives the attorney-client
privilege, regardless of whether such disclosure later turns out to be harmful”).
2
See also Bittaker v. Woodford, 331 F.3d 715, 719 n. 4 (9th Cir. 2004) (“Despite the
somewhat misleading nomenclature, an ‘express’ waiver need not be effectuated by words
or accompanied by the litigant’s subjective intent. Rather, the privilege may be waived by
the client’s, and in some cases the attorney’s, actions, even if the disclosure that gave rise
to the waiver was inadvertent.”) (citation omitted); Restatement (Third) of The Law
Governing Lawyers § 79 cmt. g (Am. Law Inst. 2000) (“To constitute waiver, a disclosure
must be voluntary. The disclosing person need not be aware that the communication was
privileged, nor specifically intend to waive the privilege.”); id. cmt. c (“The privilege is
waived if the client’s lawyer or another authorized agent of the client discloses the
communication acting under actual or apparent authority.”).
-4-
1
Notably, Defendants didn’t request a verbatim copy of the hard drive—instead, they
2
“request[ed] that [Cramton] have a forensic person take possession of the hard drive copy
3
she made and run a directory of all files on that hard drive. Once we have a copy of the
4
directory of files, then we can discuss with you what should be produced.” (Id.) In
5
September 2018, following several telephonic meet-and-confer sessions, Cramton’s
6
counsel wrote a response email explaining that, because “there are many more files on the
7
hard drive than we previously thought,” Cramton didn’t “think it would be feasible or
8
productive for us to proceed as we discussed before.” (Id. at 110.) Accordingly, in lieu of
9
imaging the hard drive and producing to Defendants only the subset of documents that
10
were subject to disclosure—an approach that would have enabled Cramton to withhold the
11
DiGiacomo emails on privilege grounds—Cramton offered to “turn over the entire hard
12
drive to [Defendants].” (Id.) In this email, Cramton also invited Defendants to feel “free”
13
to “Bates stamp and produce those documents from the imaged hard drive that [you]
14
believe are relevant to this litigation.” (Id.) Cramton then proceeded to turn over the entire
15
hard drive, which included her emails with DiGiacomo.
16
This disclosure was fundamentally inconsistent with a desire to maintain the
17
confidentiality of those emails. In re Pacific Pictures Corp., 679 F.3d 1121, 1127 (9th Cir.
18
2012) (“The reason behind this [waiver through voluntary disclosure] rule is that, if clients
19
themselves divulge such information to third parties, chances are that they would also have
20
divulged it to their attorneys, even without the protection of the privilege. Under such
21
circumstances, there simply is no justification to shut off judicial inquiry into these
22
communications.”) (cleaned up). Courts have not hesitated to find waiver under analogous
23
circumstances. See, e.g., United States v. Mackey, 2012 WL 3260462, *3-4 (N.D. Ga.
24
2012) (defendant waived attorney-client privilege as to a memo prepared by defendant’s
25
counsel by “voluntarily produc[ing] . . . several computer hard drives” to state regulators,
26
including one that contained the memo in question); United States v. Gen. Mar. Mgmt.
27
(Port.) L.D.A., 2008 WL 2810594, *2 (S.D. Tex. 2008) (“Buenbrazo waived his attorney-
28
client and spousal communications privileges when he voluntarily disclosed the entire
-5-
1
contents of his computer hard drive . . . . It is well-established that disclosure of attorney-
2
client communications to a third party lacking a common legal interest will result in a
3
waiver of the attorney-client privilege.”).
4
Cramton’s actions (and inaction) since the September 2018 disclosure provide
5
further support for a waiver finding. The emails on the hard drive have now been in
6
Defendants’ possession for over two years, yet Cramton is only now taking steps to
7
preclude Defendants from introducing those emails into evidence at trial. Cf. United States
8
v. de la Jara, 973 F.2d 746, 749-50 (9th Cir. 1992) (affirming district court’s finding of
9
waiver, where government seized a privileged letter while executing a search warrant and
10
the privilege holder “did nothing to recover the letter or protect its confidentiality during
11
the six month interlude between its seizure and introduction into evidence,” because “we
12
will deem the privilege to be waived if the privilege holder fails to pursue all reasonable
13
means of preserving the confidentiality of the privileged matter”).
14
Given these conclusions, there is no need to resolve Defendants’ argument that
15
Cramton waived the privilege with respect to her email communications with DiGiacomo
16
simply by engaging in those communications on a company-owned computer. Even
17
assuming the emails were once privileged, any privilege was lost when Cramton
18
voluntarily produced the emails to Defendants during the discovery process in this case.
19
Finally, as for the scope of Defendants’ questioning of DiGiacomo at trial, the Court
20
again concludes that any privilege-related objections must be raised on a question-by-
21
question basis. Certainly, DiGiacomo will be allowed to testify about the emails in
22
question, but the Court cannot say on the current record just how broadly the waiver
23
reaches. See generally Fed. R. Evid. 502. In Hernandez v. Tanninen, 604 F.3d 1095 (9th
24
Cir. 2010), the district court concluded that the plaintiff had “entirely” waived the attorney-
25
client privilege with his former attorney (Ferguson) by voluntarily disclosing, as
26
attachments to a summary judgment motion, evidence of his communications with
27
Ferguson about the defendant. Id. at 1098. See also id. at 1100 (“Hernandez disclosed
28
only his communications with Ferguson about Tanninen.”). The Ninth Circuit reversed in
-6-
1
part, holding that although “[d]isclosing a privileged communication . . . results in waiver
2
as to all other communications on the same subject,” the waiver extends “only as to
3
communications about the matter actually disclosed.” Id. at 1100. Thus, “[b]ecause
4
Hernandez only waived privilege with respect to his communications with Ferguson about
5
Tanninen, . . . the district court clearly erred in finding a blanket waiver of the attorney-
6
client and work product privileges as to the entire case.” Id. at 1101. Here, because the
7
Court has not yet had an opportunity to review the emails in question, it is impossible to
8
ascertain their subject matter (which may define the scope of the resulting waiver).
9
Accordingly,
10
IT IS ORDERED that Cramton’s motion to preclude Defendants from introducing
11
certain exhibits at trial on the ground that the exhibits are protected by the attorney-client
12
privilege (Doc. 374) is denied.
13
Dated this 9th day of March, 2021.
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
-7-
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?