Utility Constructors, Inc. et al v. Perez et al
Filing
89
ORDER AND REASONS DENYING 72 Motion for Hearing; MOTION for Permission to Issue Subpoena and Subpoena Duces Tecum to Attorney Under Rule 508 as set forth in document. Signed by Magistrate Judge Joseph C. Wilkinson, Jr on 8/22/2016. (my)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA
UTILITY CONSTRUCTORS, INC.
CIVIL ACTION
VERSUS
NO. 15-4675
LYNN PERKINS PEREZ ET AL.
SECTION “I” (2)
ORDER AND REASONS ON MOTION
Plaintiffs and counter-defendants Utility Constructors, Inc. and Terry Lovelace
(collectively “Utility” or “defendants”)1 filed this declaratory judgment action
regarding the obligations of the parties under a Site Development Agreement (the
“Agreement”) with defendants Chalyn Perez (“Perez”); Lynn Perkins Perez,
individually and in her capacity as the independent executrix of the Estate of Chalin O.
Perez, Sr.; Stella Lands, Inc.; and Edmond Fitzmaurice III, in his capacity as Trustee of
the CKCC Trust (collectively the “Perez entities” or “plaintiffs”). The Perez entities
counterclaimed for damages pursuant to the court’s diversity jurisdiction.
Utility filed a Motion for Contradictory Hearing and for Permission to Issue
Subpoena and Subpoena Duces Tecum to Attorney Under Rule 508. Record Doc.
No. 72. Utility seeks a contradictory hearing and permission pursuant to Article 508 of
the Louisiana Code of Evidence to issue subpoenas (Record Doc. No. 72-7) to the Perez
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In their memoranda regarding the motion before me, the parties refer to the original plaintiffs, who
are counter-defendants on the damages counterclaim, as “defendants” and to the original defendants,
who are counter-plaintiffs on the damages counterclaim, as “plaintiffs.” The court adopts the same
terminology for purposes of the motion.
entities’ counsel of record in this matter, Troy J. Charpentier, and his law firm, Kean
Miller LLP. Perez filed a timely memorandum in opposition. Record Doc. No. 82. IT
IS ORDERED that the motion is DENIED for the following reasons.
In addition to representing the Perez entities in this lawsuit, Charpentier
represented them in connection with drafting the Agreement. The proposed subpoenas
would require Kean Miller to produce and Charpentier to testify about all drafts of and
revisions to the Agreement, including all written and oral communications, notes and
other documents between the Perez entities and their attorneys, and by or between the
attorneys, regarding drafting and editing the Agreement.
Defendants seek this
information because the Perez entities’ amended counterclaim alleges that certain
obligations allegedly owed to plaintiffs by defendants were mistakenly omitted from
the final Agreement. Defendants seek a judgment reforming the Agreement to correct
the error and enforcing the Agreement under its reformed terms.
Perez negotiated the Agreement on behalf of the Perez entities from November
2011 into January 2012. On November 4, 2011, defendants’ counsel sent a first draft
of an Agreement to Perez. Perez sent a redlined draft back on November 10, 2011.
Perez testified at his deposition that the striking through (signifying a proposed
deletion) of the original Paragraph 2 in this draft was a mistake by his lawyers at Kean
Miller, who had sent the redlined version to him. Perez averred that all parties intended
and understood at the time that the language of original Paragraph 2 was a part of their
Agreement. He testified that the deletion was a mistake that “we all overlooked” at the
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time and that the parties did not realize until three years later that Paragraph 2 had been
“accidentally struck.” Defendants’ Exh. D, Record Doc. No. 72-5, Perez deposition
testimony at pp. 70, 74-77; first draft of Agreement, Defendant’s Exh. A, Record Doc.
No. 72-2 at p. 2, ¶ 2; redlined draft, Record Doc. No. 72-2 at pp. 9-10, showing new ¶ 2
and stricken former ¶ 2.
The court previously granted in part the Perez entities’ Motion to Quash
Subpoenas and Subpoenas Duces Tecum Issued to Kean Miller, LLP and Troy J.
Charpentier and for Protective Order, Record Doc. No. 61, quashing the identical
subpoenas that Utility had already issued because they violated La. Code Evid. art. 508.
The court also denied as premature the Perez entities’ request for an order that Utility
is not entitled to the discovery sought in the subpoenas. The court deferred to the instant
motion the question whether any party is entitled to that discovery. Record Doc. No. 84.
Utility brings its motion under La. Code Evid. art. 508, which provides a
procedure to seek court permission when a party intends to issue a subpoena to another
party’s attorney. In my ruling on the Perez entities’ motion to quash the previously
issued subpoenas, I found that Article 508 applies to this diversity case under Fed. R.
Evid. 501, as persuasively explained and applied in Keybank Nat’l Ass’n v. Perkins
Rowe Assocs., LLC, No. 09-497-JJB-SCR, 2010 WL 1252328, at *3-4 (M.D. La.
Mar. 24, 2010); see also Hall v. Louisiana, No. 12-657-BAJ, 2014 WL 1652791, at *4
& n.4 (M.D. La. Apr. 23, 2014) (“[A]rticle 508 and the federal common law essentially
employ the same substantive analysis in considering whether to allow the deposition of
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opposing counsel.” Under federal common law, the “information sought must be
nonprivileged.” “Compare La. C. Evid. art. 508 (considering whether the information
sought is (a) essential to the case, (b) not intended to harm or harass, (c) narrowly
tailored and (d) not available from any other source), with Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b), (g)
(discovery requests may not be overly broad or intended to harass), and Shelton [v. Am.
Motors Corp., 805 F.2d 1323, 1327 (8th Cir. 1986), approved by Theriot v. Parish of
Jefferson, 185 F.3d 477, 491 (5th Cir. 1999), and Nguyen v. Excel Corp., 197 F.3d 200
(5th Cir. 1999))] (considering, among other things, whether the information is ‘crucial’
and may be obtained by any other means).”).
Article 508(A) provides:
Neither a subpoena nor a court order shall be issued to a lawyer or his
representative to appear or testify in any civil or juvenile proceeding,
including pretrial discovery, . . . where the purpose of the subpoena or
order is to ask the lawyer or his representative to reveal information about
a client or former client obtained in the course of representing the client
unless, after a contradictory hearing, it has been determined that the
information sought is not protected from disclosure by any applicable
privilege or work product rule; and all of the following:
(1) The information sought is essential to the successful completion of an
ongoing investigation, is essential to the case of the party seeking the
information, and is not merely peripheral, cumulative, or speculative.
(2) The purpose of seeking the information is not to harass the attorney or
his client.
(3) With respect to a subpoena, the subpoena lists the information sought
with particularity, is reasonably limited as to subject matter and period of
time, and gives timely notice.
(4) There is no practicable alternative means of obtaining the information.
La. Code Evid. Ann. art. 508(A) (emphasis added).
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I find that the contradictory hearing element of Article 508 is satisfied by the
motion and memoranda filed by the parties, and that oral argument and presentation of
live testimony are not necessary. Before reaching the four factors in Article 508, the
court must determine whether the information sought is protected from disclosure by
any applicable privilege or work product rule. Keybank Nat’l Ass’n, 2010 WL
1252328, at *3; Burkart v. Burkart, 71 So. 3d 532, 538 (La. App. 1st Cir. 2011).
It is undisputed that the information sought by the subject subpoenas is attorneyclient privileged. However, Utility argues that the Perez entities have negated their
privilege by asserting in this litigation a breach of duty by their own attorneys in
deleting Paragraph 2 from the draft Agreement. Utility relies on Bank One, N.A. v.
Payton, 968 So. 2d 202 (La. App. 4th Cir. 2007), which held that “[t]here is no privilege
as to a communication which is relevant to an issue of breach of duty by a lawyer to the
client or by the client to his lawyer.” Id. at 208 (citing La. Code Evid. art. 506(C)(3)).
“An attorney-client privilege may be waived if a party injects into litigation an issue
that requires testimony from his attorney.” Burkart, 71 So. 3d at 538 (citing Bank One,
968 So. 2d 202 at 209) (emphasis added). Thus, Utility is essentially arguing that the
Perez entities waived their privilege by placing at issue their otherwise confidential
communications with their attorneys regarding the draft Agreement.
I find that the Bank One decision is inapplicable for three reasons. In that case,
plaintiff bank sued its debtor, who counterclaimed. The bank filed an exception of res
judicata to defendant’s counterclaim on the basis that the parties had settled the issues
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involved in the counterclaim in a previous proceeding between them. During the prior
proceeding, an attorney who was not defendant’s counsel of record had entered into a
settlement with the bank purportedly on defendant’s behalf. In the case itself, the bank
subpoenaed that attorney to testify about the settlement at the hearing on its exception
of res judicata. Defendant objected that his communications with the attorney were
privileged, but he also testified that he had not authorized the attorney to represent him
with respect to settling the prior matter. The Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal
affirmed the trial court’s holding that the attorney-client privilege did not apply to
defendant’s communications with the attorney about the settlement.
First, Bank One is distinguishable because the appeal court found that
defendant’s “communications to [the attorney] through which the Bank was induced to
cancel the foreclosure sale could never have been intended to be confidential: of
necessity they had to be communicated to the Bank’s attorney to achieve the desired
settlement.” Bank One, 968 So. 2d 202 at 208. Only confidential communications are
privileged. La. Code Evid. 506(A)(5), (B). In the instant case, Utility has neither
alleged nor shown that communications between Perez and the Kean Miller attorneys
were not intended to be and/or were not kept confidential.
Second, the Bank One court held that defendant had no privilege to prevent the
attorney from disclosing anything that he and the attorney had discussed during the
prior case because defendant’s “allegation of unauthorized representation . . . asserts a
breach of duty by that lawyer against the putative client. By making that claim against
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[the attorney, defendant] removed the claim of privileged communication insofar as his
discussions with [the attorney] were concerned.” Id. at 208-09. No such allegation or
claim has been made in the instant case. Although Perez testified that the Kean Miller
lawyers “accidentally struck” Paragraph 2 from the redlined draft, the Perez entities
have not alleged in this action that their attorneys breached their duty to their clients.
Rather, the Perez entities assert that all parties to the Agreement made a mutual mistake
by not noticing the error in the draft Agreement. Unlike Bank One, the Kean Miller
lawyers continue to represent the Perez entities in this case. On the current record, the
Perez entities have not waived their privilege in the fashion found in Bank One.
In addition, the court in Bank One did not address the elements of at-issue
waiver, a doctrine that controls the instant motion. Under Louisiana law, at-issue
waiver occurs when a party places privileged communications “at issue,” which means
more than simply that the client’s communications with his lawyer have been referred
to in litigation or may be relevant to the subject matter of the litigation. “Placing at
issue” means that the waiving party “‘pleads a claim or defense in such a way that he
will be forced inevitably to draw upon a privileged communication at trial in order to
prevail. Consequently, he places at issue and waives his privilege as to communications
on the same subject under his control.’” Dixie Mill Supply Co. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 168
F.R.D. 554, 555-56 (E.D. La. 1996) (quoting Smith v. Kavanaugh, Pierson & Talley,
513 So. 2d 1138, 1145 (La. 1987)) (emphasis added); accord Trestman v. Axis Surplus
Ins. Co., No. 06-11400, 2008 WL 1930540, at *3-4 (E.D. La. Apr. 29, 2008) (citing
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Dixie Mill, 168 F.R.D. at 556; Smith, 513 So. 2d at 1145; Merhige v. Gubbles, 657 So.
2d 1098, 1101 (La. App. 4th Cir. 2005); Stumpf v. Stumpf, 613 So. 2d 683, 685 (La.
App. 5th Cir. 1993)); Williams Land Co. v. BellSouth Telecomms., Inc., No. 02-1628,
2005 WL 940564, at *2 (E.D. La. Apr. 14, 2005).
Thus, “placing at issue” waiver does not depend upon the relevance of the
privileged communications or on the adversary’s need, no matter how strong, for the
privileged matters. Stumpf, 613 So. 2d at 685; Smith, 513 So. 2d at 1146; see also
Gibbens v. Quality Rental Tools, Inc., No. 13-6401, 2014 WL 5432113, at *5 (E.D. La.
Oct. 24, 2014) (quoting Rhone-Poulenc Rorer Inc. v. Home Indem. Co., 32 F.3d 851,
863 (3d Cir. 1994)) (under traditional principles of attorney-client privilege, attorney
advice “is not in issue merely because it is relevant, and does not necessarily become
an issue merely because the attorney’s advice might affect the client’s state of mind in
a relevant manner”).
This kind of waiver occurs only when the party allegedly waiving the privilege
has “committed himself to a course of action that will require the disclosure of a
privileged communication.” Stumpf, 613 So. 2d at 685 (quotation omitted) (emphasis
added). A finding of waiver must be based on an affirmative act by the privilege holder
that creates some further detriment to the truth-seeking process in addition to that
already taken into account in the creation of the privilege itself. McNeely v. Bd. of
River Port Pilot Comm’rs, 534 So. 2d 1255, 1255-56 (La. 1988); Smith, 513 So. 2d at
1143; State v. A.D.L., 92 So. 3d 989, 992 (La. App. 3d Cir. 2012).
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To determine whether the Perez entities have waived their privilege as to their
communications with their lawyers, the court focuses on (1) whether Perez has already
revealed privileged communications and (2) the Perez entities’ intended use of their
protected communications, i.e., whether they “have committed [themselves] to a course
of action that will require the disclosure of a privileged communication, and not on
[Utility’s] alleged need for the testimony of a non-party like [Charpentier] to resolve
any dispute.” Gibbens, 2014 WL 5432113, at *5 (quotation omitted) (citing Smith, 513
So. 2d at 1146).
The burden to establish at-issue waiver of a privilege is upon Utility, the party
asserting that waiver occurred. United States v. Newell, 315 F.3d 510, 525 (5th Cir.
2002); In re Santa Fe Int’l Corp., 272 F.3d 705, 710 (5th Cir. 2001); Hodges, Grant &
Kaufman v. United States, 768 F.2d 719, 721 (5th Cir. 1985); Hall, 2014 WL 1652791,
at *4. No such showing has been made here.
Perez did not reveal any privileged communications with his attorneys when he
testified that his lawyers sent to him the redlined draft that deleted Paragraph 2 from
the original draft and that the deletion was a mistake. The Perez entities have placed at
issue whether all parties made a mutual mistake regarding that deletion, but they will
not inevitably be forced to disclose privileged communications to prove their
contention. They can present other evidence regarding the parties’ understanding and
intentions, such as the testimony of Perez and other parties to the Agreement, and other
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relevant documents. Whether the evidence is credible or sufficient to prove their claim
will be up to the jury.
The information sought by Utility is protected from disclosure by the attorneyclient privilege, which has not been waived by placing at issue any breach of duty by
the Perez entities’ lawyers or inevitably forcing plaintiffs to draw upon privilege
communications to prove their claim. Therefore, under La. Code Evid. art. 508 or
federal common law, the proposed subpoenas to Charpentier and Kean Miller are not
permitted. See Hall, 2014 WL 1652791, at *4-5 (federal common law); Gibbens, 2014
WL 5432113, at *6 (La. Code Evid. art. 508); Plotkin v. N. River Ins. Co., No. 12-1077,
2012 WL 2179103, at *6 (E.D. La. June 12, 2012) (same); Keybank Nat’l Ass’n, 2010
WL 1252328, at *3 (same).
The court need not address the four additional factors listed in Article 508, which
apply only if no privilege protects the information sought. However, I note that all of
those factors must be met. I would find for the same reasons discussed above that the
information sought is not essential to Utility’s successful completion of an ongoing
investigation or to its case, and that Utility has practicable alternative means of
obtaining the information it needs to defend against the claim of mutual mistake.
22nd
New Orleans, Louisiana, this _________ day of August, 2016.
____________________________________
JOSEPH C. WILKINSON, JR.
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
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