Minter v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company
Filing
38
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER by Magistrate Judge James D. Moyer on 6/25/2012; defendant shall, consistent with the courts analysis, produce the documents submitted for in camera review within twenty days of the date of entry of this order.cc:counsel (TLB)
UNTIED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY
AT LOUISVILLE
TIA MINTER
PLAINTIFF
v.
CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:11CV-249-S
LIBERTY MUTUAL FIRE
INSURANCE COMPANY
DEFENDANT
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company withheld from discovery several documents and
portions thereof under claims of attorney-client privilege and of work product doctrine. Pursuant
to an order dated March 1, 2012 (docket no. 32), the court ordered the materials withheld to be
produced for in camera review along with the privilege log tendered to the plaintiff, Ms. Minter.
The court has now reviewed each document produced for its review and must now determine
which, if any should be produced to Ms. Minter.
With rare exception, Liberty Mutual asserted both the work product privilege and the
attorney-client privilege with respect to each document withheld.1 Because this is a diversity
case, the court must consult federal law to resolve contested assertions of attorney work product
claims and consult state law to resolve claims of privilege. See Fed. R. Evid. 501; In re
Powerhouse Licensing, LLC, 441 F.3d 467, 472 (6th Cir. 2006).
1
Liberty Mutual also withheld a few documents on the basis of an asserted “self-critical
analysis” privilege. No such privilege is available under Kentucky law, however. See
University of Kentucky v. Courier-Journal & Louisville Times Co., 830 S.W.2d 373, 378 (Ky.
1992).
As a preliminary matter, however, the magistrate judge notes that document nos. 641,2
660, and 847-849 do not appear to have been produced to the court. Document nos. 725 and
772 are blank pages not identified as such, but instead withheld on the basis of a claimed
privilege. Document 840 is nothing more than a salutation attached to a letter withheld on the
basis of privilege. In addition, many of the documents are duplicates that should have been
identified as such and culled.
FIRST APPEARANCE IN THE FILE
DUPLICATES
52-53
775-776, 777-778
654-655
656-657
664-668
759-763
674
803
680-688
740-748, 814-822
712-717
789-794, plus the following,
which differ only by the omission
the highlighting of certain terms
that reveal nothing about the
litigation strategy or the attorney’s
impressions: 734-739, 789-794,
796-801, 831-836
718-724
782-788, 824-830
775-776
777-778
781
795, 823
The court is willing to review the documents it did not receive, if necessary, after defendant
considers their discoverability in light of the opinion below.
2
All of the documents are Bates stamped with a ten character identifier that begins with
LM, ends with a number greater than zero, and contains a intervening variable number of zeros.
For convenience herein, the court will refer to the documents only by their end number.
2
A.
In this matter, as is often the case in first-party bad faith claims, there is an inherent
tension between the attorney-client privilege and the plaintiff’s otherwise legitimate discovery
requests. The Kentucky Supreme Court has repeatedly declared that the attorney-client privilege
is generally sacrosanct and may not be overridden, even by an opposing party showing its need
to obtain the information contained in privileged communications. See, e.g., The St. Luke’s
Hospitals, Inc. v. Kopowski, 160 S.W. 3d 771, 776-777 (Ky. 2005). Yet the Kentucky Supreme
Court has also declared that the privilege may be abrogated on occasion, and that the starting
point of any analysis regarding which circumstances warrant the overriding of the attorney-client
privilege is Kentucky Rule of Evidence 503, which “specifically delineates the circumstances in
which the privilege gives way to other considerations.” St. Luke’s Hospitals, 160 S.W.3d at 777.
The first of the statutorily enumerated exceptions, and the one potentially applicable here,
is “furtherance of a crime or fraud.” KRE 503(d)(1). In this matter, plaintiff’s central allegation
is one of fraud, because Ms. Minter alleges that her insurer violated the terms of the Unfair
Claims Settlement Act, KRS 304.12-230, which was enacted “to protect the public from unfair
trade practices and fraud.” See, e.g., State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v.
Reeder, 763 S.W.2d 116, 118 (Ky. 1989).
The court is aware that at least one panel of the Kentucky Court of Appeals declined to
create an express exception to the attorney-client privilege in bad faith litigation. In George v.
Guaranty Nat'l Ins. Co., No. 95–CA–1577–MR (Slip Op. Mar. 8, 1996), the Court of Appeals
reversed the trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment in favor of the insurer with respect
3
to plaintiff’s first-party bad faith claim. In that case, however, the plaintiffs appealed two issues:
whether summary judgment was appropriate and whether the trial court erred when it rejected
the plaintiff's request to discover certain correspondence written during the underlying coverage
claim between the insurer's attorney and the insurer. The Court of Appeals, in an unpublished
opinion, rejected the plaintiff's contention that an exception to the attorney-client privilege
necessarily arose when a claim of bad faith was alleged, noting: “To develop an exception in
bad faith cases against insurers would impede the free flow of information and honest evaluation
of claims. In the absence of fraud or criminal activity, an insurer is entitled to the attorney-client
privilege to the same extent as other litigants. George v. Guaranty Nat'l Ins. Co., No.
95–CA–1577–MR (Slip Op. Mar. 8, 1996). Kentucky's highest court failed to reach the privilege
issue because it concluded summary judgment was properly granted.
In addition, the magistrate judge is mindful of Judge Russell’s recent opinion in Shaheen
v. Progressive Cas. Ins. Co., 2012 WL 692668 (W.D. Ky. 2012), in which he evaluated the
applicability of the attorney-client privilege in a bad faith action. Shaheen dealt with a thirdparty case, not a first-party case as is present here, but in determining that the privilege has some
applicability under Kentucky law in a third-party bad faith action, Judge Russell noted in dicta:
“For discovery requests in first-party cases, because the insurance file is created on behalf of the
insured, the entire file is typically discoverable by the plaintiff.” 2012 WL 692668, *3 (citations
omitted). Although Judge Russell cited cases from other states in support of his observation, the
magistrate judge cannot disagree with his analysis, because there is no clear recent guidance
from Kentucky’s highest court.
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Moreover, the magistrate judge is also aware that first-party bad-faith actions against an
insurer can only be proved by showing exactly how the company processed the claim and why
the company made the decisions it did. Without the claims file, a contemporaneously-prepared
history of the handling of the claim, it is difficult to see how an action for first-party bad faith
could be maintained without requiring an overwhelming number of depositions, whose costs
would thereby render all but the rare wealthy few first-party bad faith claimants financially
unable to proceed. This court is therefore unwilling to predict that Kentucky’s highest court
would enter an opinion that would shield portions of a claims file from discovery in a first-party
bad faith case on the basis of the attorney-client privilege, and therefore rules that the attorneyclient privilege does not shield materials contained in Ms. Minter’s underlying claims file. Any
documents not specifically protected from discovery on the basis of the work-product doctrine
(see below) shall be produced.
B.
The next question is whether any of the withheld documents might instead be protected
from discovery by the work product doctrine, which protects an attorney’s trial preparation
materials from discovery. The work product doctrine protects a lawyer’s trial preparation
materials from discovery, see Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 510-514 (1947), and Rule
26(b)(3)(A) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure precludes the discovery of “documents and
tangible things that are prepared in anticipation of litigation or for trial by [a party’s attorney].”
The prohibition may be overcome, however, if the party requesting the material shows “it has
substantial need for the materials to prepare its case and cannot, without undue hardship, obtain
their substantial equivalent by other means.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3)(A)(II). More importantly,
5
the doctrine was created to protect the integrity of the adversarial process in ongoing litigation,
and does not typically protect from discovery work product created in other cases or concluded
suits.
To determine whether a document has been prepared “in anticipation of litigation,”this
court must ask two questions: (1) whether that document was prepared “because of” a party's
subjective anticipation of litigation, as contrasted with ordinary business purpose; and (2)
whether that subjective anticipation was objectively reasonable. In re Professionals Direct Ins.
Co., 578 F.3d 432, 439 (6th Cir. 2009). The party claiming protection carries the burden of
showing that anticipated litigation was the driving force behind the preparation of each requested
document. Id. (internal citations omitted).
The materials at issue in this matter are the contents of the claims file for the underlying
litigation. All of the documents were created before plaintiff filed her complaint in this case.
During the end of negotiations, a bad-faith lawsuit might reasonably have been anticipated, but
the majority of the file was created before that.
The court notes, however, that defendant was overly broad in asserting the work product
privilege, and included among the putatively privileged documents, mere transmittal letters that
contained no attorney impressions or strategy, but merely transmitted without any substantive
comment, documents received by the attorney to the insurance company. If defendant wants
these [Document nos. 1, 3, 648, 837, 838 and 846] they shall be produced without redaction.
Almost one-fifth of the documents, perhaps as much as one-quarter to one-third, are
multiple copies of draft responses to interrogatories, which appear to differ little from the
responses ultimately produced [Document nos. 712-724, 734-739]. These are attorney-work
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product, but a more thorough review of the withheld documents would have revealed to Liberty
Mutual that there was little (if anything) in there worth fighting over and thereby unnecessarily
expending judicial resources. Nevertheless, Ms. Minter may discover them if she wishes.
There are also several versions of a master medical chronology prepared by defendant’s
counsel to assist defendant in evaluating plaintiff’s claims [Document nos. 680-688]. This is
unquestionably attorney-work product, but it contains no extraneous commentary regarding the
significance of any entry. It could be prepared just as easily by plaintiff and her current counsel,
if they were aware of which of her medical files the defendant reviewed. Accordingly, it shall be
produced, but defendant may redact the third column.
The remainder of the documents shall be produced unredacted.
C.
For the reasons discussed above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that defendant shall,
consistent with the court’s analysis above, produce the documents submitted for in camera
review within twenty days of the date of entry of this order.
June 25, 2012
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