Gazzara et al v. Pulte Home Corporation
Filing
149
ORDER granting in part and denying in part 134 Motion for remedy for breach of the parties' confidentiality agreement. Signed by Magistrate Judge Thomas B. Smith on 11/28/2016. (Smith, Thomas)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
ORLANDO DIVISION
SHAUN PARKER GAZZARA, ANA
PAULA GAZZARA, HARRY JAMES
WHITMAN and MARCIA FAYE
WHITMAN,
Plaintiffs,
v.
Case No: 6:16-cv-657-Orl-31TBS
PULTE HOME CORPORATION,
Defendant.
ORDER
This case comes before the Court without oral argument on Defendant Pulte Home
Corporation’s Motion to Cure Plaintiffs’ Breach of the Confidentiality Agreement (Doc.
134), and Plaintiff’s response to the motion (Doc. 148).
The parties entered into a Confidentiality Agreement (“Agreement”) in anticipation
of the production by Defendant of documents containing confidential, proprietary and
business information and trade secrets (Doc. 134-2). The Agreement authorizes
Defendant to designate any part of a discovery response confidential by marking the
information with the words “This document is subject to a Confidentiality Agreement and
will be enforced by the Court in Gazzara, et al, v. Pulte Home Corporation, or as
‘Confidential’” (Id., ¶ 1). If Defendant designates a document “Confidential,” the
designation must “include a brief description (e.g. ‘proprietary business information’) as to
why the document is confidential.” (Id.).
Information Defendant designates “Confidential” may only be disclosed to the
named parties, the “immediate employees of a party's counsel, and other individuals
legitimately assisting in the preparation of this case for trial such as a party's co-counsel,
consultants, court reporters, judges, magistrates, mediators, experts, and their respective
staffs … as necessary for the preparation and/or examination of witnesses at depositions,
hearings or trial, or for mediation.” (Id., ¶ 3). Recipients must handle “Confidential”
information with “reasonable and appropriate care … to ensure that its confidential nature
is maintained.” (Id., ¶ 5).
Before a person receives “Confidential” information, he/she must sign an
acknowledgment letter certifying that he/she will not: (1) disclose the information to
anyone to whom disclosure is not authorized by the Agreement; (2) that he/she will not
use the information other than for legitimate purposes in the case; and (3) that he/she has
read the Agreement and agrees to be bound by its terms (Id., ¶ 6). Information
designated “Confidential” may not be reproduced or copied except for people authorized
to receive the information pursuant to the Agreement, after execution of an
acknowledgement letter (Id., ¶ 8).
Parties desiring to file “ Confidential” information must first file a motion for the
entry of an order allowing the information to be filed under seal. Parties may not file
information designated “Confidential” “under seal without first having obtained an order
granting leave to file under seal on a showing of particularized need.” (Id., ¶ 14).
Any party may challenge a “Confidential” designation by giving written notice to
Defendant’s counsel, “detailing the material or portion of material challenged and the
specific basis for the challenge.” (Id., ¶ 11). If a party challenges Defendant’s
“Confidential” designation then Defendant has ten days to respond (Id.). “If the parties are
unable to reach an agreement regarding the confidentiality of the item, the party opposing
continued confidentiality may file a motion seeking a determination from the Court
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whether the items are properly designated confidential. The prevailing party shall be
awarded attorney's fees and costs incurred with filing or responding to the motion.” (Id.).
Defendant has produced a privilege log which includes the email addresses for its
senior management (Doc. 134, ¶ 3). Pursuant to the Agreement, Defendant designated
the email addresses “Confidential.” (Id.). On November 4, 2016, Plaintiffs filed an
unredacted copy of the privilege log (Doc. 132). Less than 2 hours later, counsel for
Defendant emailed one of the attorneys for Plaintiffs asking that the log be stricken from
the record and that a redacted version be filed immediately (Doc. 134-3 at 7). One of the
attorneys for Plaintiffs responded as follows:
Although it may be marked as such, I respectfully disagree
that this information is properly designated. Nonetheless, if
you disagree, you may file a motion to seal that particular
exhibit and state that it is unopposed. In the future, I would
suggest that you use a conspicuous watermark (which you can
easily apply using Adobe) so that our staffs can readily identify
any information you claim is confidential when handling
voluminous filings and avoid any misunderstandings in the
future. Thanks.
(Id.).
Counsel for Defendant responded:
In the spirit of cooperation, we included the email addresses in
our privilege log so that you could easily identify the individuals
involved in the communications. But, to avoid their email
addresses from being made public, we marked the document
confidential in accordance with the terms of the confidentiality
agreement.
Under the terms of the agreement, there is a provision for you
to challenge the designation. You may not simply file a
confidential document and place the burden on Pulte to have it
sealed.
Here, in fact, there is no need for either party to file a motion to
seal. The Court does not need the email addresses to
adjudicate your motion to compel. The question, accordingly, is
not whether the privilege log should have been filed under
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seal, but whether it should have been redacted to remove the
email addresses before filing. Under the confidentiality
agreement, it should have.
The filing is in violation of the confidentiality agreement.
Please redact and correct the filing in accordance with your
obligations.
Thank you,
(Id., at 6).
In response, Plaintiff’s attorney wrote:
I am sure that you understand that I don't control the docket,
the judge does, so you should file something with him instead
of sending emails to me. It's a long log so it's easiest to seal it
rather than redact it, which is a tedious task prone to error in
any event. I am not sure I follow (1) why the email addresses,
, are confidential, or (2) why, if
they are not necessary to adjudicate the motion, you put them
in the log, the whole point of which is to give only enough
information to adjudicate a privilege dispute. In any event, I
have agreed to your relief, but I am not your associate and we
disagree with the mechanics anyway, so file whatever you
deem appropriate and notice it as unopposed to the extent it is
consistent with the foregoing.
(Id., at 5).
Defendant’s counsel replied:
I just got off the phone with Judge Presnell’s clerk. Due to it
being Friday afternoon, even if we filed an emergency motion
today, I’m told your filing will not be corrected until sometime
next week.
If you do not make the necessary filing to remedy your breach
of the Confidentiality Agreement by 10:00am on Monday,
November 7th, we will prepare a motion to effect redaction of
the confidential information. If you force us to do so, we will
also move for sanctions seeking, without limitation,
reimbursement of our attorneys’ fees associated with me
having to call the court, me and Stephanie conferring with you
to reconsider your position, and the cost to prepare the
necessary motion to redact Exhibit 7.
I suggest you reconsider your position.
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(Id., at 4).
Plaintiffs’ attorney responded: “You could have done this today.” (Id., at 3). Minutes
later he continued: “Why didn’t you just ask the JA to pull it off? They have done it for me
before without a motion. This is ridiculous.” (Id.). These messages elicited the following
reply: “Plaintiffs’ Counsel—We know your position and you know ours. Please do not send
any more insulting e-mails on this.” (Id., at 2). Finally, counsel for Plaintiffs wrote:
I neither understand nor agree with your email but I’m not
going to take the time or energy to refute each assertion
because I don’t think it would be productive and worthwhile.
Suffice it to say that if I haven’t addressed something
specifically, I neither understand nor agree with it. I reserve all
rights.
Have a good weekend and remember to vote!
(Id.).
Now, Defendant seeks an order enforcing the Agreement, striking and removing its
privilege logs from the docket, replacing the stricken privilege logs with a redacted version,
and an award of Defendant’s attorney’s fees and costs incurred in the prosecution of this
motion (Doc. 134 at 4-5).
When counsel agree to the terms of a confidentiality agreement, they are bound by
its terms. Chicago Tribune Co. v. Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., 263 F.3d 1304, 1315 n. 15
(11th Cir. 2001). “Filing a document on the district court's electronic filing system is not
consistent with keeping information confidential.... We think it is fair to presume in this day
and age that every attorney understands that an electronic filing is immediately available
to the public and is not a sealed document.” Rivera v. Sharp, No. 1:08-cv-20, 2010 WL
2555065 (D. V.I. June 21, 2010) (quoting Baella-Silva v. Hulsey, 454 F.3d 5, 11-12 (1st
-5-
Cir. 2006)); Grove Fresh Distributors, Inc. v. John Labatt Ltd., 888 F. Supp. 1427, 1446
(N.D. Ill. 1995).
Defendant designated its privilege log “Confidential” and Plaintiffs have never
employed the procedure in the Agreement to challenge that designation. Still, they filed
the unredacted privilege log on the docket and when the error was called to their attention,
they did not correct it. Plaintiffs’ position has not changed since Defendant’s motion was
filed and the privilege log is still in the public record. The Court has no difficulty finding
from these facts that Plaintiffs materially breached the Agreement.
Defendant’s motion is titled: “Pulte Home Corporation’s Motion to Cure Plaintiffs’
Breach of the Confidentiality Agreement.” Plaintiffs’ response is titled “Response to
Defendant’s Motion to Redact.” Plaintiffs explain:
Despite Pulte’s attempt to turn their gratuitous inclusion of
information in their privilege log and possible inadvertence by
Mr. Sasso’s staff into the “tiff du jour” in this litigation, Plaintiffs
will neither dignify their titling of the document with a response
nor respond except to protect the record.
(Doc. 148, n. 1). Then, Plaintiffs argue the motion “is wildly inappropriate” and should be
denied (Id., at 1). The Court will address each of Plaintiffs’ arguments individually.
First, Plaintiffs contend that counsel for Defendant did not comply with M.D. FLA.
Rule 3.01(g) before filing this motion (Id., at 2). Rule 3.01(g) provides:
Before filing any motion in a civil case, except a motion for
injunctive relief, for judgment on the pleadings, for summary
judgment, to dismiss or to permit maintenance of a class
action, to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief
can be granted, or to involuntarily dismiss an action, the
moving party shall confer with counsel for the opposing party
in a good faith effort to resolve the issues raised by the
motion, and shall file with the motion a statement (1) certifying
that the moving counsel has conferred with opposing counsel
and (2) stating whether counsel agree on the resolution of the
motion.
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Rule 3.01(g) requires that attorneys make a serious effort to resolve most disputes
before a motion is filed. The Court expects counsel to have an honest, conscientious, civil
exchange during which they address the realities of their respective positions. What
constitutes a sufficient Rule 3.01(g) conference depends, in part, on the size and
complexity of the matter. If the issue is simple, then a relatively brief conversation may
suffice. On the other hand, if the issue is large or complex, more effort will be required
before counsel can say that a reasonable, good faith effort was made. In many instances,
it may be appropriate to compare the effort required to satisfy Rule 3.01(g) to the effort
required to prepare the motion or response. If the matter will require significant, time
consuming briefing, then the Court expects counsel to spend more time trying to resolve
the dispute than may be necessary on a matter requiring a short motion and short
response. What is never acceptable is a perfunctory inquiry or response. Regardless of
the size or complexity of the matter, the Court expects counsel to have a real, substantive
conversation.
In making Plaintiffs’ Rule 3.01(g) argument, counsel alleges:
In fact, Plaintiffs first learned of the substance of Pulte’s
concerns and the (dubious) basis therefor when they received
the Motion. Prior to that, Plaintiffs, who were indignant at
Pulte’s accusations but nonetheless interested in avoiding this
unnecessary motion practice in a contingency fee case,
actually agreed to an appropriate “remedy.” Unfortunately,
Pulte seems more interested in hectoring counsel over an
imagined breach of the confidentiality agreement and ordering
him to remedy their deficient log himself than in protecting any
genuinely confidential information. Pulte could have filed a
simple consent motion to seal the document containing four or
five lines of text.
(Doc. 148 at 2). The first quoted sentence is not true; counsel for Defendant clearly
explained their concern by email the day the unredacted privilege logs were filed. The
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second sentence is, at best, puzzling. Why were Plaintiffs’ counsel indignant upon being
informed that they had breached the Agreement, and what does their fee agreement have
to do with this dispute? The Court also wonders why Plaintiffs’ counsel propose a
“remedy” which shifts the burden from themselves to Defendant. As the breaching
parties, Plaintiffs were responsible for taking the steps necessary to remove the
“Confidential” information from the docket. Finally, Plaintiffs’ counsel accuses Defendant’s
counsel of “hectoring,” i.e., bullying behavior. But, it appears that it is one of the attorneys
for Plaintiffs who has attempted to hector his opponents.
Still, counsel for Defendant failed to pick-up the telephone and call Plaintiffs’
counsel before this motion was filed. Considering the emails that went back-and-forth this
is understandable but not acceptable. One of the attorneys representing Defendant
should have actually conferred with one of the attorneys representing Plaintiffs before the
motion was filed. Because each side is represented by multiple attorneys, it would have
made sense to have lawyers who did not author the emails talk before the motion was
filed. After making this finding the Court would ordinarily deny the motion but under the
circumstances, it will discuss Plaintiffs’ remaining arguments.
Plaintiffs point out that Defendant could have, but did not ask the Court to strike
the unredacted privilege logs from the docket during the hearing on November 10, 2016
(Id.). Instead, according to Plaintiffs’ counsel, Defendant has “resorted to innuendoes and
mischaracterizations regarding what undersigned counsel will charitably (to Pulte) call a
misunderstanding and attempted to embarrass Plaintiffs and accumulate billable hours.”
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(Id., at 2-3). Plaintiffs fail to identify the “innuendos and mischaracterization” to which they
refer and the Court is unaware of any committed by Defendant’s counsel. 1
Plaintiffs argue that many of the email addresses Defendant designated
“Confidential” are readily ascertainable and appear in the public record (Id., at 3).
Assuming this is true, the Agreement dictates how the matter should be handled, and
Plaintiffs did not follow the Agreement.
Plaintiffs contend that privilege logs are designed to be reviewed by the Court when
evaluating claims of privilege (Id., at 3-4). This is true, but it is not an excuse or justification
for filing information designated “Confidential” before following the agreed procedure for
challenging the designation.
Next, Plaintiffs contend that Defendant’s privilege logs were not properly marked
because the “Confidential” designation begins on the fifth page, in non-bolded, nonitalicized, non-underlined seven point font (Id., at 4). This argument is unfounded. The
Agreement does not require Defendant to label the first page of a document containing
confidential information “Confidential.” The Agreement also does not require bolding,
italics, underlining or a specific font size. This may be why Plaintiffs fail to cite any part of
the Agreement in support of their argument.
Plaintiffs assert that Defendant is off-base because the Agreement only governs
information that is disclosed (Doc. 148 at 5). What Plaintiffs overlook is that Defendant is
complaining about the public disclosure of information it revealed and marked
“Confidential.”
This is the second time one of Plaintiffs’ attorneys has accused opposing counsel of making a
misrepresentation to the Court (Doc. 125, ¶ 25). The Court is currently investigating the first accusation.
1
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Lastly, Plaintiffs complain that Defendant, after labeling the disclosure of its
“Confidential” information “accidental,” now alleges that the breach was intentional
because Plaintiffs failed to take corrective action after the disclosure was brought to their
attention (Id.). According to Plaintiffs, Defendant improperly placed the burden on them
“by gratuitously including information it now claims is confidential in a document which is
specifically drafted in contemplation of filing before the court to adjudicate a discovery
dispute.” (Id.). The Court agrees that designating information in a privilege log
“Confidential” may have been unwise, but it is not prohibited by the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure or the Agreement, and it does not excuse Plaintiffs’ breach.
Having found Plaintiffs in breach of the Agreement, the Court now turns to the
issue of relief. Plaintiffs argue that Defendant is not “entitled to any relief beyond what
Plaintiffs readily but incredulously consented to weeks ago. In fact, this is simply yet
another pretext for counsel to harass Plaintiffs and gouge Pulte.” (Id.). No facts support
the contention that counsel for Defendant are gouging their client, and the Court has
already rejected what it considers to be Plaintiffs’ counsel’s feigned incredulity. At this
point in the analysis, the Court would ordinarily award Defendant its attorney’s fees and
costs incurred in connection with this motion. That relief will be DENIED because of
counsels’ failure to comply with Rule 3.01(g). The Court will, however, GRANT the motion
to the extent that Exhibit 7 to docket entry 132 is STRICKEN and the Clerk shall
REMOVE it from the docket. Plaintiffs have 7 days from the rendition of this Order to refile Exhibit 7 in redacted form.
The parties' failure to effectively communicate is hampering the orderly course of
this litigation. Local Rule 2.04(h) directs attorneys and litigants to "conduct themselves
with civility and in a spirit of cooperation in order to reduce unnecessary cost and delay."
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The tone of some of the papers filed in this case does not reflect compliance with this
rule. Mr. Beltran in particular is reminded that pejorative terms and derogatory statements
are rarely necessary or effective, and such conduct does not reflect well on counsel or the
bar. Future violations of the letter or spirit of this rule from any counsel or party will be
grounds for consideration of sanctions.
DONE and ORDERED in Orlando, Florida on November 28, 2016.
Copies furnished to Counsel of Record
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