Chevron Corporation v. Donziger et al
Filing
310
MEMORANDUM OPINION. This Court has considered this motion with the great care that it deserves. Informed persons, knowing and understanding all of the myriad and complex facts of these extensive proceedings, and putting aside the rhetoric and other d evices deployed here by the LAP Representatives, readily would see that the Court's rulings have been firmly grounded in the law and the evidence. There is no objective reason to think that it has been anything less than entirely impartial. The motion to recuse the undersigned [DI 284] is denied. (Signed by Judge Lewis A. Kaplan on 5/9/11) (rjm) Modified on 5/9/2011 (rjm).
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
------------------------------------------x
CHEVRON CORPORATION,
Plaintiff,
-against-
11 Civ. 0691 (LAK)
STEVEN DONZIGER, et al.,
Defendants.
------------------------------------------x
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appearances:
Randy M. Mastro
Andrea E. Neuman
Scott A. Edelman
Kristen L. Hendricks
William E. Thomson
GIBSON , DUNN & CRUTCHER, LLP
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Julio C. Gomez
JULIO C. GOMEZ, ATTORNEY AT LAW LLC
Carlos A. Zalaya, II
F. GERALD MAPLES, PA
Attorneys for Defendants Hugo Gerardo
Camacho Naranjo and Javier Piaguaje
Payaguaje
LEWIS A. KAPLAN , District Judge.
The so-called Lago Agrio plaintiffs1 (the “LAPs”) recently obtained a multibillion
dollar judgment (the “Judgment”) against Chevron Corporation (“Chevron”) from a provincial court
in Ecuador for alleged environmental pollution by Texaco, Inc. (“Texaco”), the shares of which now
1
The Lago Agrio plaintiffs are forty-eight individuals, one of whom now is deceased.
2
are owned, directly or indirectly, by Chevron. Steven Donziger, a New York attorney, has been a
lead lawyer for them for many years. The Judgment came after about 18 years of litigation in this
Court, in Ecuador, and in other fora, among them a number of U.S. district courts in which Chevron
sought discovery pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 in relation to the Ecuadorian litigation and an
international arbitration between Chevron and Ecuador.
At the time this case began, the undersigned had been presiding for months over and
had decided the central issues in two of the Section 1782 proceedings. In the first, Chevron sought
discovery from a documentary film maker, Joseph Berlinger, who had produced a film about the
Ecuadorian litigation. The second sought discovery from Donziger. This Court’s rulings granting
discovery and denying a motion to quash by Donziger have been affirmed by the Court of Appeals.2
Chevron brought this action against the LAPs, Donziger and others on February 1,
2011. The amended complaint asserts, among other things, that the Ecuadorian judicial system
“does not provide impartial tribunals or procedures compatible with the requirements of due process
of law”3 and that the Judgment was obtained by fraud by Donziger and others. Chevron seeks, in
addition to other relief, a declaration that the Judgment is not entitled to enforcement or recognition
and an injunction barring its enforcement outside Ecuador.
Two days later, Chevron sought a temporary restraining order (“TRO”) and a
preliminary injunction barring enforcement of the Judgment. After hearing both sides, the Court
granted the TRO on February 8, 2011, and the preliminary injunction on March 7, 2011. Since then,
the two LAPs who have appeared in this action, subsequently referred to as the LAP
2
Certain aspects of those proceedings remain pending.
3
N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 5304(a)(1).
3
Representatives,4 and Donziger have appealed from the preliminary injunction, this Court denied
a stay pending appeal, and the Court granted Chevron’s request to bifurcate for expedited discovery
and trial Count 9 of the complaint, which seeks a declaration that the Ecuadorian judgment is
unenforceable and unrecognizable.
After participating in the Section 1782 proceedings before the undersigned for many
months and unsuccessfully litigating the preliminary injunction motion and the motion for a separate
and expedited trial of the declaratory judgment claim in this case, all without seeking recusal, the
LAP Representatives now move to disqualify the undersigned, arguing that his impartiality in this
case reasonably might be questioned. The motion rests entirely on rulings and events that occurred
in the two previous Section 1782 proceedings and on this Court’s rulings in this action. There is no
claim of any extrajudicial source of bias.
Facts
The background of the litigation is set forth in the Court’s prior opinions in the
Section 1782 proceedings5 and in this action,6 familiarity with which is assumed. It therefore will
4
The remaining LAPs and other Ecuadorian defendants have defaulted. A certificate of
default has been entered.
5
In re Chevron Corp., 709 F. Supp.2d 283 (S.D.N.Y.) (“Berlinger § 1782 I”), aff’d sub nom.,
Chevron Corp. v. Berlinger, 629 F.3d 297 (2d Cir. 2010); In re Chevron Corp., 736 F.
Supp.2d 773 (S.D.N.Y. 2010) (“Berlinger § 1782 II”); In re Chevron Corp., 749 F. Supp.2d
135 (S.D.N.Y.) (“Donziger §1782 I”), fuller opinion, In re Chevron Corp., 749 F. Supp.2d
141 (S.D.N.Y.) (“Donziger §1782 II”), on reconsideration, 749 F. Supp.2d 170 (S.D.N.Y.)
(“Donziger § 1782 III”), aff’d sub nom., Lago Agrio Plaintiffs v. Chevron Corp., Nos.
10-4341-cv, 10-4405-cv (CON), 2010 WL 5151325 (2d Cir. Dec. 15, 2010).
6
Chevron Corp. v. Donziger, ___ F. Supp.2d ____, 2011 WL 778052 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 7,
2011) (“Donziger I”); Chevron Corp. v. Donziger, No. 11 Civ. 0691 (LAK), 2011 WL
4
suffice to summarize the circumstances in which this case and motion arise.
I.
The Aguinda and Lago Agrio Cases
The litigation that led to the Ecuadorian judgment arose out of the activities of a
fourth-tier subsidiary of Texaco, Texaco Petroleum Company (“TexPet”), which operated and partly
owned a petroleum concession in the Oriente region of eastern Ecuador from 1965 until the early
1990s. In 1990, TexPet turned operations of the concession over to the Republic of Ecuador
(“ROE”) which, through the state-owned oil company Petroecuador, had owned a 50 percent interest
in the concession since 1976. In 1992, TexPet relinquished all of its interests in the concession,
leaving it owned and operated entirely by Petroecuador from that point forward.
Donziger and certain other American lawyers took an interest in these events. In
1993, they filed Aguinda v. Texaco,7 a Southern District of New York purported class action on
behalf of indigenous Ecuadorian plaintiffs including, it appears, all or most of the LAPs. The
Aguinda plaintiffs sought billions of dollars in damages for alleged personal injuries and property
damage as well as remediation of alleged environmental harm said to have been caused by the
operation of the petroleum concession.
While the Aguinda litigation was pending, the ROE released TexPet from any claims
arising out of those operations in exchange for TexPet performing certain remedial environmental
979609 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 7, 2011) (“Donziger II”); Chevron Corp. v. Donziger, No. 11 Civ.
0691 (LAK), 2011 WL 1408386 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 6, 2011) (“Donziger III”); Chevron Corp.
v. Donziger, No. 11 Civ. 0691 (LAK), 2011 WL 1465679 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 15, 2011)
(“Donziger IV”); Chevron Corp. v. Donziger, No. 11 Civ. 0691 (LAK), 2011 WL 1560926
(S.D.N.Y. Apr. 18, 2011) (“Donziger V”).
7
No. 93 Civ. 7527 (JSR) (S.D.N.Y. filed Nov. 3, 1993).
5
work, which the ROE deemed completed in 1998. As the ROE represented at the time that all of
the claims asserted in the Aguinda action belonged to it, the release seems to have been intended to
put an end to any claims or litigation concerning TexPet’s alleged pollution. In 2001, the Aguinda
action was dismissed on the ground of forum non conveniens.8 The Second Circuit affirmed the
dismissal in 2002.9
After the ROE released TexPet from liability, however, Ecuador enacted the
Environmental Management Act of 1999. That statute, among other things, created a new private
right of action for damages for the cost of remediation of environmental harms generally, as distinct
from personal injuries or property damages to specific plaintiffs. In 2003, after Aguinda was
dismissed, the LAPs commenced the Lago Agrio litigation against Chevron, a subsidiary of which
had acquired all of Texaco’s outstanding shares in 2001. That same year, the Comptroller General
of the ROE filed a denuncia, apparently a criminal accusation, against two Chevron (formerly
TexPet) lawyers, as well as former ROE and Petroecuador officials, alleging that they had falsified
documents and violated Ecuadorian law in connection with the ROE’s release of TexPet. Those
charges were dropped in 2006 for insufficient evidence but were reactivated in 2008 – apparently
at the urging of Donziger (who remained central to the LAPs’ Lago Agrio litigation effort) and his
colleagues by the new Ecuadorian administration led by then-recently elected President Correa.
Those criminal charges, as far as the Court understands, remain pending. The Lago Agrio litigation
ultimately led to the Judgment.
8
Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc., 142 F. Supp.2d 534 (S.D.N.Y.2001).
9
Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc., 303 F.3d 470 (2d Cir. 2002).
6
II.
The Section 1782 Proceedings
In recent years, Chevron brought more than a dozen Section 1782 proceedings in U.S.
courts to obtain evidence for use in the Ecuadorian litigation and an international arbitration it has
brought against Ecuador in relation to these events. As noted, two of those cases were brought in
the Southern District of New York and are before the undersigned.
A.
The Berlinger Section 1782 Proceeding
The first related to the film Crude, the making of which Donziger had solicited and
in which Donziger appeared on camera at great length. The film portrayed some of Donziger’s
activities in and statements about the Lago Agrio litigation. Among other things, the film, as
released to the public, depicted:
(1)
Donziger pressuring an Ecuadorian judge “to block the judicial inspection of
a laboratory allegedly being used by the Lago Agrio plaintiffs to test for
environmental contamination. Donziger describe[d] his use of ‘pressure tactics’ to
influence the judge and concede[d] that ‘[t]his [wa]s something you would never do
in the United States, but Ecuador, you know, this is how the game is played, it’s
dirty,’”10 and
(2)
A representative of the LAPs reporting to Donziger that he had
“coordinat[ed] everything” with the president of Ecuador, Donziger being embraced
and lauded by the president, and Donziger explaining that “President Correa had
called for criminal prosecutions to proceed against those who engineered the
10
Berlinger § 1782 I, 709 F. Supp.2d at 289.
7
Settlement and Final Release.” Donziger added that “‘Correa just said that anyone
in the Ecuador government who approved the so-called remediation is now going to
be subject to litigation in Ecuador. Those guys are shittin’ in their pants right
now.’”11
In addition, one version of the film – in a part edited out of the version released generally at the
LAPs’ request – depicted an ex parte meeting involving Donziger, some of the LAPs, and others
with an expert who contributed to a supposedly neutral damages assessment by a court-appointed
expert.12
This and other evidence led to Berlinger § 1782 I, which was affirmed on appeal and
ultimately required the film maker to turn over the outtakes that did not make their way into Crude.13
B.
The Donziger Section 1782 Proceeding
The outtakes included, among other things, scenes in which Donziger and others
spoke of pressuring the Ecuadorian judiciary to rule in the LAPs’ favor, described the Ecuadorian
judicial system as “corrupt,” traveled to meet ex parte with an Ecuadorian judge, and appeared to
be driving the criminal prosecutions of the two Chevron Ecuadorian lawyers. Chevron therefore
obtained a Section 1782 subpoena requiring Donziger to produce documents and submit to a
deposition. Donziger and the LAPs, separately represented, moved to quash.
At the heart of the motion to quash were Donziger’s and the LAPs’ arguments that
11
Id.
12
Id.
13
Berlinger § 1782 I, 709 F. Supp.2d 283, aff’d sub nom. Chevron Corp., 629 F.3d 297.
8
discovery from Donziger would be inappropriate because he was among the LAPs’ lawyers and that
the attorney-client privilege and work product doctrine in any case precluded production. Chevron
rejoined, among other things, that the circumstances warranted discovery notwithstanding that
Donziger is a lawyer and that any claim of privilege or work product was overcome by the crimefraud exception. Donziger responded that nothing in the Crude outtakes revealed anything unlawful
and that the crime-fraud exception to the privileges therefore did not apply.
As Donziger and the LAPs refused to cooperate in seeking a stay of proceedings in
Ecuador to facilitate consideration of issues raised in this Court, the litigation of the motion to quash
occurred under extreme time pressure. Chevron was faced with the imminent prospect of an
enormous judgment in the Ecuadorian litigation, and the two Chevron attorneys were facing criminal
prosecution there with a critical preliminary hearing just a short time away. All sought the evidence
for use in defending themselves in Ecuador. Thus, it was apparent that Chevron and the two accused
lawyers were in a race against time – delay served the interests of Donziger and the Ecuadorian
plaintiffs because delay of discovery in the Section 1782 proceeding threatened to preclude its use
either in the preliminary hearing in the Ecuadorian criminal case or before entry of judgment in the
civil litigation.
The Court denied the motion to quash and ordered that Donziger comply with
Chevron’s subpoena.14 That decision was affirmed on appeal.15 At no point during either of the
Section 1782 proceedings did Donziger, the LAPs, or any other party move to recuse the
14
Donziger §1782 I, 749 F. Supp.2d 135, fuller opinion, Donziger §1782 II, 749 F. Supp.2d
141, on reconsideration, Donziger § 1782 III, 749 F. Supp.2d 170.
15
Chevron Corp., 2010 WL 5151325.
9
undersigned.
III.
This Action
As noted, Chevron filed this action on February 1, 2011. Its core is Chevron’s claim
that the Judgment is not recognizable or enforceable. The complaint asserts also claims under the
Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, several state law tort claims, and claims
against Donziger for violating legal ethics standards. On February 3, Chevron moved for a TRO and
a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of the Judgment.16 The Court scheduled argument on
the TRO for February 8, 2011.
As will be seen, Donziger and, to an extent, the LAP
Representatives, began questioning the impartiality of the undersigned at the outset, entirely on the
basis of events in the Section 1782 proceedings.
A.
Donziger’s Letter of February 8, 2011
On February 8 – the date on which the Court had scheduled the TRO argument –
Donziger requested an adjournment, claiming that he needed more time to obtain counsel.17 The
16
DI 4.
17
DI 158 (“Donziger Letter”) at 1.
The accuracy of that claim was quite debatable. Donziger at the time was represented by the
Kaplan, Friedman firm in the Section 1782 proceeding. Even before the order to show
cause was filed, several media outlets quoted a statement by attorney Gerald Lefcourt, who
claimed to represent Donziger. See, e.g., Alison Frankel, Chevron Files RICO Suit Against
Steven Donziger, Ecuadorian Plaintiffs, and Expert Consultants (Feb. 3, 2011, 8:30 AM),
http://amlawdaily.typepad.com/amlawdaily/2011/02/chevronrico.html; Barbara Leonard,
Chevron Levels RICO Charges Over $113 Billion Trial in Ecuador (Feb. 1, 2011 4:17 PM),
http://www.courthousenews.com/2011/02/01/33808.htm; Erin Fuchs, Chevron Accuses
Ecuadoreans'
Atty
Of
Extortion
(Feb.
1,
2011),
http://www.law360.com/topnews/articles/223261/chevron-accuses-ecuadoreans-atty-of-e
10
Court denied the request, noting that TROs, which may be granted without notice, are of limited
duration.18 Most of the letter, however, was devoted to Donziger’s further assertion that an
“overwhelming appearance of impropriety . . . would attach to this Court accepting this case.”19 The
letter made essentially four arguments, all or most of which have resurfaced in the present motion.
First, it alleged that “the Court has shown antagonism towards [Donziger] and the
Aguinda litigation.”20 This assertion rested on misleading and out-of-context quotations from the
transcripts of arguments in the Section 1782 proceedings.
Second, it asserted that the Court had “urged” Chevron to bring this action, a
contention based on the Court’s question during the argument of the motion to quash in the Donziger
Section 1782 proceeding whether “the phrases Hobbs Act, extortion, RICO, have any bearing
here?”21 As will appear, the suggestion that the Court urged Chevron to bring this action is entirely
unsupportable.
Third, Donziger claimed that this Court should not preside because Chevron
contemplates the undersigned being a witness in this case. Not surprisingly, there is no suggestion
either in the letter or elsewhere that the undersigned has any personal knowledge of any facts
xtortion. There is evidence also that Donziger retained Mr. Lefcourt as early as December
2010 to represent him in response to any civil complaint or criminal investigation. See DI
298 Exs. 15, 16; Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, at *45 & n. 405. In addition, he is a lawyer
himself and, according to his letterhead, employs two associates.
18
Tr., Feb. 8, 2011 at 2:2-13.
19
Id.
20
Donziger Letter at 3.
21
Donziger Letter at 2 (quoting In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002 (LAK), Tr., Sept. 23,
2010).
11
relevant to this action beyond whatever it has learned by presiding as a judge and certainly no
suggestion that Chevron (or anyone else) intends to attempt to call him as a witness.
Fourth, the letter alleged that the Court had made a number of remarks about
Donziger’s conduct during proceedings in the Section 1782 proceedings that indicated that it had
“reached conclusions as to numerous of the ultimate issues in this case.”22 As will be seen, this
allegation is without merit.
B.
Donziger’s Motion to Reassign the Case
Approximately three weeks after the February 8 letter and approximately four weeks
after Chevron filed this action, Donziger, joined by the LAP Representatives,23 moved to transfer
this case from the undersigned to the Honorable Jed S. Rakoff – who had presided over the Aguinda
action – under the related case provision of the Southern District’s Rules for the Division of
Business Among District Judges (the “RDB”).24 That application was entirely baseless for reasons
set out in the Court’s decision denying it.25 But it was notable also for two additional reasons.
First, in seeking reassignment to Judge Rakoff, neither the LAP Representatives nor
Donziger disclosed that the LAPs in 2000 had moved unsuccessfully to recuse Judge Rakoff in the
22
Donziger Letter at 1-2.
23
DI 167.
24
DI 160 (“Transfer Motion”).
25
Donziger II, 2011 WL 979609.
12
Aguinda case26 or that the Crude outtakes contained footage of Donziger calling Judge Rakoff
“corrupt,” “totally biased against us,” and “a dishonest judge.”27
Second, although the subject had no proper bearing on whether the RDB had been
abused by Chevron, as Donziger and the LAP Representatives claimed, much of the transfer motion
repeated and expanded upon the assertions that the undersigned had demonstrated bias in favor of
Chevron. Those contentions now form a substantial part of the basis for the present motion.28
C.
This Motion
Notwithstanding the allegations contained in Donziger’s letter and the transfer
motion, this is the first application by any party to this case or the Section 1782 proceedings to
recuse the undersigned. It was made nearly two months after the transfer motion, more than two and
a half months after Donziger’s letter, nearly three months after Chevron filed this action, and more
than one year after this Court began presiding over the related Section 1782 proceedings.
The motion largely echoes the arguments and allegations of Donziger’s letter and the
transfer motion. The LAP Representatives repeat the arguments that the undersigned (1) encouraged
Chevron to bring this suit, (2) views the Lago Agrio litigation effort as a “game,” (3) has prejudged
26
Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc., 139 F. Supp.2d 438 (S.D.N.Y. 2000), aff’d, In re Aguinda, 241 F.3d
194 (2d Cir. 2001).
27
DI 179 Ex. 2.
The Court notes a recent article by a respected commentator taking the view that “[t]he effort
to force or shame off a case a judge . . . is becoming the latest weapon in a litigator’s arsenal
– litigation by other means.” Linda Greenhouse, Recuse Me, N.Y. T IMES (May 4, 2011),
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/04/recuse-me/?partner=rss&emc=rss.
28
Transfer Motion, passim.
13
the merits of this case, (4) has questioned the LAPs’ existence by calling them the “so-called Lago
Agrio Plaintiffs,” (5) is antagonistic towards the government and courts of Ecuador, and (6) may be
called as a witness in this action. To this they have added complaints about the substance of the
Court’s rulings on and in connection with the preliminary injunction and bifurcation motion and its
denial of a stay pending appeal. In the last analysis, however, the motion rests almost entirely on
criticism of and disagreement with the Court’s rulings and reasoning in this case and in the Section
1782 proceedings.
Discussion
I.
Recusal Under Section 455(a)
The LAP Representatives argue only that the undersigned should be recused because
his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.29 The relevant statute therefore is Section 455(a)
of the Judicial Code,30 which provides that “[a]ny . . . judge . . . shall disqualify himself in any
proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” That statute makes
disqualification a matter addressed to the district judge’s discretion,31 subject to review only for
29
They have not asserted that there is any extrajudicial source of bias. And while they
nominally repeat Donziger’s previous assertion that the undersigned is disqualified because
he is a possible witness, they have relegated that argument to a footnote on the last page of
their memorandum. LAP Representatives Mem. at 35 n.17. In any case, there is no basis
for it. There is no suggestion that the undersigned has personal knowledge of any facts or
otherwise could be a material witness in this case. See 28 U.S.C. § 455(b)(5)(iv).
30
28 U.S.C. § 455(a).
31
In re Basciano, 542 F.3d 950, 956 (2d Cir. 2008) (“[t]he district judge has discretion ‘in the
first instance to determine whether to disqualify himself.’”) (quoting In re Drexel Burnham
Lambert Inc., 861 F.2d 1307, 1312 (2d Cir. 1988)), cert. denied, 129 S. Ct. 1401 (2009).
14
abuse.32 Moreover, it has both procedural and substantive components.
A.
Timeliness
A motion for recusal under Section 455(a) must be made “as soon as the facts on
which it is premised are known to the parties.”33 The LAP Representatives protest in large part the
Court’s remarks and rulings from the Section 1782 proceedings, which occurred months and, in
some instances, approximately one year before this motion. Yet the LAP Representatives never
moved to recuse the undersigned in those cases. Nor did they do so for nearly three months of
litigation in this action. Instead, they waited until after this Court had ruled on the preliminary
injunction and bifurcation motions in this case. In all the circumstances, this motion is untimely
and, quite possibly, so untimely that the LAP Representatives impliedly have waived their right to
seek recusal.34 At a minimum, it is untimely insofar as it relies upon anything that transpired in the
Section 1782 proceedings and through the argument of the preliminary injunction motion in this
case.
B.
The Substantive Standard
The substantive standard that governs this motion is plain:
“It is axiomatic that a judge may not preside over a case when his impartiality
32
In re Basciano, 542 F.3d at 956.
33
United States v. Bayless, 201 F.3d 116, 127 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 529 U.S. 1061 (2000);
see also Apple v. Jewish Hosp. & Medial Center, 829 F.2d 326, 333 (2d Cir. 1987).
34
Bayless, 201 F.3d at 127 (“[U]ntimeliness in making a motion for recusal can sometimes
constitute the basis for finding an implied waiver.”).
15
might reasonably be questioned. In deciding the sensitive question of whether to
recuse a judge, the test of impartiality is what a reasonable person, knowing and
understanding all the facts and circumstances, would believe.
*
*
*
“[T]he test to be applied is an objective one which assumes that a reasonable person
knows and understands all the relevant facts. See Pepsico, Inc. v. McMillen, 764
F.2d 458, 460 (7th Cir.1985); United States v. Ferguson, 550 F. Supp. 1256, 1260
(S.D.N.Y.1982). * * * Like all legal issues, judges determine appearance of
impropriety – not by considering what a straw poll of the only partly informed
man-in-the-street would show – but by examining the record facts and the law, and
then deciding whether a reasonable person knowing and understanding all the
relevant facts would recuse the judge.”35
Moreover, recusal under Section 455(a) typically is appropriate only in cases of bias or prejudice
stemming from an extrajudicial source.36 Here, however, no one has contended that the Court
harbors a bias or prejudice stemming from such a source. Rather, the argument is based on colloquy
between the Court and counsel during arguments and substantive rulings.
The Court’s comments from the bench on various occasions, all or most in the
Section 1782 proceedings, upon which the LAP Representatives rely – which, as discussed below,
are wholly innocuous when read in context – were germane to the issues presented, based on the
evidence, and made on the record in proceedings over which the Court was presiding. As the
Supreme Court made clear in Liteky v. United States, comments based on evidence adduced before
a judge are not a basis for recusal even where they reflect a disposition with respect to a litigant:
“The judge who presides at a trial may, upon completion of the evidence, be
exceedingly ill disposed towards the defendant, who has been shown to be a
thoroughly reprehensible person. But the judge is not thereby recusable for bias or
35
In re Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc., 861 F.2d 1307, 1308, 1313 (first and third emphases
added).
36
Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 550-51 (1994).
16
prejudice, since his knowledge and the opinion it produced were properly and
necessarily acquired in the course of the proceedings, and are indeed sometimes (as
in a bench trial) necessary to completion of the judge's task. As Judge Jerome Frank
pithily put it: ‘Impartiality is not gullibility. Disinterestedness does not mean
child-like innocence. If the judge did not form judgments of the actors in those
court-house dramas called trials, he could never render decisions.’ [citation
omitted]. Also not subject to deprecatory characterization as ‘bias’ or ‘prejudice’ are
opinions held by judges as a result of what they learned in earlier proceedings. It has
long been regarded as normal and proper for a judge to sit in the same case upon its
remand, and to sit in successive trials involving the same defendant.”37
The Court continued:
“[J]udicial remarks during the course of a trial that are critical or disapproving of, or
even hostile to, counsel, the parties, or their cases, ordinarily do not support a bias
or partiality challenge. . . . Not establishing bias or partiality . . . are expressions of
impatience, dissatisfaction, annoyance, and even anger, that are within the bounds
of what imperfect men and women, even after having been confirmed as federal
judges, sometimes display. A judge’s ordinary efforts at courtroom administration
– even a stern and short-tempered judge’s ordinary efforts at courtroom
administration – remain immune.”38
To be sure, there may be cases in which “[a] favorable or unfavorable predisposition
can also deserve to be characterized as ‘bias’ or ‘prejudice’ because, even though it springs from the
facts adduced or the events occurring at trial, it is so extreme as to display clear inability to render
fair judgment.”39 But this quite clearly is not such a case. Not only do the Court’s comments and
questions, taken in context and in full, fail to support any claim of bias, prejudice or inappropriate
prejudgment, but this Court – unlike several others that have decided related Section 1782
37
Id. at 550-51.
38
Id. at 555-56.
39
Id. at 551.
17
proceedings40 – has declined to rule on Chevron’s contention that Donziger’s activities come within
the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege.41 It has taken cognizance of the fact that
the rules governing conduct in Ecuador may be different than those familiar to American lawyers.42
And it repeatedly made clear the provisional nature of its findings and views in ruling on the
preliminary injunction motion.43
The LAPs’ contention that the Court’s rulings give rise to an appearance of partiality
40
In re Chevron Corp., No. 10-MC-21 (J/LFG) (D.N.M. Sept. 13, 2010) (finding “that . . .
discussions trigger the crime-fraud exception, because they relate to corruption of the
judicial process, the preparation of fraudulent reports, the fabrication of evidence, and the
preparation of the purported expert reports by the attorneys and their consultants.”); In re
Application of Chevron Corp., No. 10-cv-1146-IEG (WMC) (S.D. Cal. Sept. 10, 2010)
(crime-fraud exception applies because “[t]here is ample evidence in the record that the
Ecuadorian Plaintiffs secretly provided information to Mr. Cabrera, who was supposedly a
neutral court-appointed expert, and colluded with Mr. Cabrera to make it look like the
opinions were his own.”); Chevron Corp. v. Champ, No. 1:10-mc-0027 (GCM-DLH)
(W.D.N.C. Aug. 30, 2010) (“While this court is unfamiliar with the practices of the
Ecuadorian judicial system, the court must believe that the concept of fraud is universal, and
that what has blatantly occurred in this matter would in fact be considered fraud by any
court. If such conduct does not amount to fraud in a particular country, then that country has
larger problems than an oil spill.”).
41
Donziger § 1782 I, 2010 WL 4118093, at *4.
The LAP Representatives’ contention that the undersigned’s rulings “went much further
than any court ever has,” DI 305 at 1-2, is remarkable in light of the Court’s restraint on this
crucial issue – one on which multiple other judges have ruled against their position.
42
Tr., Feb. 8, 2011, at 47:17-19.
43
E.g., Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, at *6 (“recognizing that this like all findings at this
stage is provisional, the Court infers that the EMA was substantially drafted and its
enactment procured by Bonifaz, Donziger and other American attorneys for the Aguinda
plaintiffs”), *11 (recognizing possible bias against the LAPs of witness relied upon by
Chevron), *12 (recognizing that evidence that Ecuadorian judge appointed the ostensibly
neutral expert in exchange for the LAPs’ agreement not to file complaint against him and
that the LAPs paid the neutral expert up front and promised him future consideration if they
prevailed was not conclusive and open to further examination at trial).
18
is baseless as well. The Supreme Court has been abundantly clear:
“judicial rulings alone almost never constitute a valid basis for a bias or partiality
motion. [citation omitted]. In and of themselves (i.e., apart from surrounding
comments or accompanying opinion), they cannot possibly show reliance upon an
extrajudicial source; and can only in the rarest circumstances evidence the degree of
favoritism or antagonism required . . . when no extrajudicial source is involved.”44
Here, there is no allegation of extrajudicial source. And the rulings complained of, which in some
cases are rather different than the LAP Representatives’ distorted and misleading accounts of them,
plainly do not fall within “the rarest circumstances” in which they could evidence the requisite bias
or appearance of partiality. They therefore “are proper grounds for appeal, not for recusal.”45 The
Court’s decisions, where appealed, uniformly have been affirmed. Disagreement or dissatisfaction
with the Court’s rulings is not enough to succeed on this motion.46 An adversary system inherently
has one side that wins and another that loses.47 “If losses compromised the appearance of justice,
this system would grind to a halt.”48
Indeed, Donziger previously made to the Second Circuit much the argument that the
LAP Representatives make now. In Lago Agrio Plaintiffs v. Chevron Corp.,49 in which many of the
44
Liteky, 510 U.S. at 555.
45
Id.
46
See, e.g., Truong v. Charles Schwab & Co., No. 07 Civ. 8085 (SHS), 2009 WL 464452, *1
(S.D.N.Y. Feb. 24, 2009).
47
United States v. Awadallah, 436 F.3d 125, 137 (2d Cir. 2006).
48
Id.
49
2010 WL 5151325.
19
statements and rulings complained of were made, Donziger’s appellate brief was sharply critical of
this Court, complaining among other things that:
“the District Court formed a jaundiced view of Donziger and his role in the Lago
Agrio case. Having done so, the Court swept aside the considerations that have led
the courts to strongly disfavor discovery from active litigation counsel, and when
they permit such discovery, to limit it to the essential. In permitting the broadest
possible discovery of the Lago Agrio plaintiffs’ lead lawyer, the District Court
abused its discretion.”50
In affirming this Court’s decision in that matter, however, the Court of Appeals wrote:
“[I]n light of the complexity of this case and the urgency of its adjudication, we wish
to note the exemplary manner in which the able District Judge has discharged his
duties. There is no question but that all concerned, not least this Court, are well
served by the careful and comprehensive analysis which is evident repeatedly
throughout the many memoranda and orders of the District Court, many of which
were produced with rapidity in the context of the District Court’s daunting schedule
in this and other important cases.”51
These principles alone suffice to dispose of this motion. But the motion fails for an
additional reason. “In deciding the sensitive question of whether to recuse a judge, the test of
impartiality is what a reasonable person, knowing and understanding all the facts and
circumstances, would believe.”52 When considered in context,53 the remarks and rulings that the
LAP Representatives protest are perfectly banal.
50
Brief on behalf of Steven Donziger, Lago Agrio Plaintiffs v. Chevron Corp., at 6.
51
Lago Agrio Plaintiffs, 2010 WL 5151325, at *2.
52
In re Drexel Burnham Lambert, Inc., 861 F.2d 1307, 1309 (2d Cir.1988) (emphasis added),
reh'g denied, 869 F.2d 116 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1102 (1989); see also Hoatson
v. N.Y. Archdiocese, 280 Fed. Appx. 88, 91 (2d Cir. 2008) (quoting Bayless, 201 F.3d at
127).
53
The Court does not attempt to enumerate or clarify each of the LAP Representatives’
claimed grievances, many of which merit no attention whatsoever.
20
II.
The Comments and Questions Relied Upon
A.
The Allegation that the Court “Urged” Chevron to Bring this Action
The LAP Representatives and Donziger repeatedly have contended that the Court
urged Chevron to bring this action by asking, during the September 23, 2010 argument of the motion
to quash in the Section 1782 proceeding against Donziger, whether “the phrases Hobbs Act,
extortion, RICO, have any bearing.” The Court certainly did include those words in a much longer
question on that occasion. But they were certainly not a suggestion that Chevron bring this case,
as the record makes abundantly clear. So the LAP Representatives’ assertion is flatly contradicted
by the record. The facts are these.
Chevron moved for a Section 1782 subpoena for discovery from Donziger on August
18, 2010.54 Recognizing that Donziger probably would raise privilege objections to any subpoena,
its memorandum argued that any such argument would fail under the crime-fraud exception because
“Donziger [had] orchestrated a scheme to tamper with expert testimony, to obstruct inquiry into that
tampering, and to procure a fraudulent official report with the stated intent of extorting a settlement
or enforcing a judgment based on that report in U.S. courts.” It argued also that the District of New
Jersey already had overruled related claims of privilege under the crime-fraud exception.55
Donziger moved to quash the subpoena on August 27, 2010,56 in part on the ground
of alleged attorney-client privilege. Chevron’s September 1 opposition to that motion argued that
any privilege had been vitiated by the crime-fraud exception. Specifically, it accused Donziger of
54
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002 (LAK), DI 11.
55
Id. DI 11, at 23.
56
Id.. DI 23.
21
engaging in racketeering activity, extortion, and Hobbs Act violations:
“The evidentiary record Chevron has put before this Court amply supports a finding
of at least ‘probable cause’ that numerous U.S. criminal statutes have been violated.
For example, under the Hobbs Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1951, a conspiracy to commit
extortion – i.e., the ‘obtaining of property from another, with his consent, induced
by wrongful use of actual or threatened force, violence, or fear, or under color of
official right’—is a felony punishable by twenty years’ imprisonment. The broad
scheme to threaten or obtain a false judgment based on faked evidence and corrupted
court experts positing wildly excessive damages ‘assessments,’ from a tribunal
subjected to intense political and physical pressure, topped off with a campaign of
public vilification against Chevron and its employees based on knowing falsehoods,
represents a literal extortion racket. [citation omitted]. This scheme also involves
multiple acts of mail and wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343, and
1346. And Donziger’s attempts to intimidate or mislead Calmbacher in connection
with his deposition is probable cause for obstruction of justice in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 1503 or witness tampering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(b).” . . . .
“All of these acts and the conspiracy to commit them, if committed in
furtherance of a racketeering enterprise, constitute predicate acts under RICO, 18
U.S.C. §§ 1961-1964.”57
Thus, Chevron had laid out its RICO, Hobbs Act and extortion claims well before the motion to
quash was argued and well before the Court even posed its question. In short, the chronology is
flatly inconsistent with the LAP Representatives’ contention. But that is not all.
When the motion to quash came on for argument on September 23, Donziger’s
counsel asserted that the crime-fraud exception did not apply because “there’s no Ecuadorian statue
or case saying that the principal conduct that’s being attacked was unlawful.”58 At that point, the
Court interposed a question – which contains the language on which the LAP Representatives rely
but which they quote quite selectively (the underscored portions below having been elided in the
57
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002 (LAK), DI 38 at 23-24.
58
Id., Tr. Sept. 23, 2010, 23:18-23.
22
LAP Representatives’ motion59). It said:
“But then, wait a minute. There’s all kinds of reference in Donziger’s own
statement[s] to pressuring and humiliating the judges. Got to put pressure on the
judges because otherwise they’re not going our way. There’s certainly a certain
amount of evidence which if credited suggests that phony expert reports have been
submitted, come back [i.e., Calmbach], and then depending on one’s view of the
business with Cabrera maybe that’s true. The object of the whole game, according
to Donziger, is to make this so uncomfortable and so unpleasant for Chevron that
they’ll write a check and be done with it. I believe I also saw a clip in the course of
preparing for this argument in which reference is made to the criminal case and
Donziger or one of his Ecuadorian colleagues makes the comment that the whole
criminal problem in Ecuador could be made by the plaintiffs to go away if somehow
this whole thing could be wrapped up in a nice big settlement. So the name of the
game is, arguably, to put a lot of pressure on the courts[,] to feed them a record in
part false for the purpose of getting a big judgment or threatening a big judgment,
which conceivably might be enforceable in the U.S. or in Britain or some other such
place, in order to persuade Chevron to come up with some money. Now, do the
phrases Hobbs Act, extortion, RICO, have any bearing here?”60
The quoted words to which the LAP Representatives now object – that is, the non-underscored
portion of the full text quoted above – thus adverted to an argument that Chevron already had made,
were based on evidence before the Court, and came in response to Donziger’s counsel’s assertion
that there was no evidence of illegality.
Given this record, the suggestion that this Court suggested that Chevron bring this
action is entirely unsupportable.
B.
The Court’s Description of the Genesis of the Lago Agrio Litigation
The LAP Representatives and Donziger complain of the Court’s description of the
genesis of the Lago Agrio litigation. For example, the letter, transfer motion, and recusal motion
59
See LAP Representatives Mem. at 4-5.
60
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002 (LAK), Tr. Sept. 23, 2010, at 24:6-22.
23
all point to the Court’s statement during the argument of the motion to quash last September in the
Donziger Section 1782 proceeding that:
“Look, we all understand what the basic facts are, right? The basic facts are that this
lawsuit is put together and financed by Donziger and the Kohn firm, American class
action lawyers. They start out in the U.S. to hit Chevron as big as they can.”61
Once again, however, they ignore the very next words of out of the undersigned’s mouth, which
were these: “Maybe their case is meritorious, maybe it isn’t. I haven’t got a clue.”62 Perhaps
equally egregious, they ignore the context in which the statement was made63 and disregard the fact
that the Court acknowledged that Chevron too might have engaged in questionable actions in
Ecuador, stating “for all I know, both sides are behaving corruptly there. I don’t know, but maybe
they all are. Beats me.”64
61
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002 (LAK), Tr., Sept. 23, 2010, at 15:25-16:4.
62
Id. at 16:4-5.
63
The quoted sentences were part of a much longer response by the Court to Donziger’s
argument that no discovery against him should be permitted because he was litigation
counsel to the LAPs and his contention that Chevron was wrong in questioning that he
functioned in that role. Id. at 14:20-15:23. The Court responded in substance that (1) the
Aguinda case had its genesis with Donziger and a firm of class action lawyers who sought
a large recovery, (2) the Court had no view as to whether the case was meritorious, (3)
Chevron had succeeded in obtaining dismissal of Aguinda in favor of litigation in Ecuador,
(4) Donziger had made “it clear that anybody giving anybody the least respect, at least in
his opinion, to the Ecuadorian courts is out of his mind,” a reference to Donziger’s
statement, among others, that the Ecuadorian judiciary is weak and its judges corrupt, (5)
both the LAPs and Chevron may have behaved corruptly in Ecuador although the Court did
not know whether that was the case, (6) “at the end of the day, [the Court had] two or three
questions to decide here,” which it then proceeded to state, and (7) “the rhetoric about, well,
he’s a lawyer, there’s a lawsuit and he’s related to the lawsuit . . . basically begs every one
of those questions.” Id. at 15:25-17:19.
64
Id. at 16:17-19. See also Tr., Apr. 30, 2010, at 33:4-7 (“THE COURT: . . . I don’t for a
minute assume a priori that anyone’s hands in this matter are clean.”).
24
C.
The Court’s References to “Games”
The LAP Representatives protest certain statements in which the Court used the word
“game” or the phrase “name of the game.” These statements alluded primarily to Donziger’s and
the LAPs’ delaying tactics, to wit, prolonging the Section 1782 proceedings in the apparent hope
that the Ecuadorian court would render a judgment before Chevron and its Ecuadorian lawyers could
obtain or make use of any discovery obtained through this Court. One such statement was “I know
the game here.”65
The context of the statement was this: While arguing the motion to quash, Donziger
requested that the Court grant him time to comply with the subpoena if the motion were denied.
Mindful of the urgency of completing the discovery, the Court asked Donziger whether he would
be willing to have the Ecuadorian litigation stayed pending his compliance. Donziger refused. In
the ensuing exchange the Court remarked:
“I will look at the question of time very differently if the activity stops in Ecuador
than otherwise. And you know that’s my view from the last case. You know it’s the
Court of Appeals’ view from the last case. Don’t tell me about how long Mr.
Donziger needs. I know the game here.”66
The Court did no more than recognize the obvious – that Donziger’s request for more time, if
granted and if no stay of the Ecuadorian case were in place, would have benefitted Donziger and the
LAPs at the expense of Chevron and its attorneys facing prosecution in Ecuador. Moreover, there
is strong evidence that delay was not merely the effect of various procedural moves and requests by
65
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002 (LAK), Tr., Sept. 23, 2010, at 35:19.
66
Id. at 35:15-19.
25
Donziger and the LAPs, but the subjective purpose of at least some of them.67
D.
Allegations that the Court has Prejudged the Merits of this Case
The LAP Representatives contend that the Court has reached conclusions on a
number of ultimate issues in this case. The argument appears to take two or three forms.
First, the LAP Representatives protest certain conclusions that the Court reached in
ruling on Chevron’s request for a preliminary injunction. The Court stated, for example, that
“Chevron is likely to prevail on its claim that the judgment is neither recognizable nor
enforceable.”68 Such conclusions were neither improper nor gratuitous. “A party seeking a
preliminary injunction must establish irreparable harm and either (a) a likelihood of success on the
merits or (b) sufficiently serious questions going to the merits and a balance of hardships decidedly
in its favor.”69 Consequently, a court ruling on a motion for a preliminary injunction not only can
but must reach conclusions as to the likely outcome of the case before it. A ruling that a party is or
is not likely to succeed in certain respects is not, as the LAP Representatives suggest, grounds for
recusal. If it were, no court could rule on a preliminary injunction and continue to preside over the
67
In a May 27, 2010 email, Donziger approved the following litigation strategy with respect
to a § 1782 proceeding pending in the District of Colorado that sought evidence that the
supposedly neutral Ecuadorian expert’s report had been ghostwritten by the LAPs: “Appeal;
move for stay; if we win with kane [presumably Judge John L. Kane, Jr., of the U.S. District
Court for the District of Colorado] great; if we lose, we produce whatever we want (narrow
read); gd [presumably Chevron counsel Gibson Dunn] complains and then we move for
clarification. If we lose again, we think about another appeal.” In re Chevron Corp., No.
10-MC-00002 (LAK), DI 150 Ex. 3.
68
Donziger V, 2011 WL 1560926, at *2.
69
Kamerling v. Massanari, 295 F.3d 206, 214 (2d Cir.2002).
26
case to which it pertained.
Second, the LAP Representatives complain about the Court’s statements regarding
certain “issues” that, in fact, are nothing more than the undisputed factual background of this case.
For example, during the argument of the TRO application, counsel for the LAP Representatives
asserted that “Chevron’s game is to leave these peasants with their land ruined and this oil down
there uncleaned up.”70 The Court interjected that it understood “that emotions are high on both sides
of this matter,” but that it understood also “that Chevron never did business in Ecuador and . . . that
Texaco was out of Ecuador for years before [Chevron] acquired Texaco and further that Texaco has
been out of Ecuador for 19 years and that whatever has happened since 1992 has happened on the
watch of the Ecuadorian-owned oil company,” which was followed by a request to counsel to “try
to keep some facts more or less in order.”71 The accuracy of the Court’s understanding is
undisputed.
Third, the LAP Representatives take issue with certain “conclusions” that were not
conclusions at all. They allege, for example, that the Court has “conten[ded] that Chevron should
not assume liability for Texaco.”72 The Court has done no such thing. While summarizing the
complaint and, specifically, the LAPs’ contention that “Chevron . . . is subject to Texaco and TexPet
liabilities,”73 the Court stated in a footnote the indisputable proposition that Chevron did not succeed
70
Tr., Feb. 8, 2011, at 39:2-4.
71
Id. at 39:6-12.
72
LAP Representatives Mot. at 5-6 n.3.
73
Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, at *6.
27
to Texaco’s liabilities by merger.74 Briefly stated, this is because Texaco was the surviving
company in a reverse triangular merger with a wholly owned subsidiary of Chevron by which
Chevron acquired the stock but, under American law, not the liabilities of Texaco. But the Court
took pains to point out that “[t]here are circumstances in which an acquiring company in a
transaction structured like this one could be held liable for obligations of a subsidiary” and
“expresse[d] no view as to whether any of those circumstances is present here.”75
The issue of Chevron’s status (or lack thereof) as Texaco’s successor in interest bears
also on the LAP Representatives’ incorrect assertion or implication that the Court has determined
that Chevron is not bound here by statements made by Texaco during the Aguinda litigation,76 a
matter pertinent to the LAP Representatives’ contention that Chevron is judicially estopped to deny
the adequacy and fairness of the Ecuadorian courts by Texaco’s assertions during the Aguinda
litigation that forum non conveniens dismissal would be appropriate because Ecuador would provide
an adequate forum. In ruling on the preliminary injunction motion, the Court merely rejected the
contention that Chevron is unlikely to succeed in this action on account of the purported judicial
estoppel. It did so for two reasons. First, it held that “there [wa]s no evidence in th[e preliminary
injunction] record that, if accepted, could justify disregarding Texaco’s separate corporate
existence.”77 Second, and more importantly, the Court held that even if Texaco’s statements were
74
Id. at *6 n.40.
75
Id.
76
See LAP Representatives Mem. at 5-6 & n.3.
77
Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, at *42.
28
attributable to Chevron (something that may or may not be demonstrated on a fuller record), the
statements concerning the adequacy of an Ecuadorian forum were in 1998-2001 and thus spoke only
as of that time. Thus, even if Chevron were bound by Texaco’s arguments regarding the adequacy
of an Ecuadorian forum as of the time those arguments were made, it is entirely possible that
changes in Ecuador since leave open the question whether the Judgment, rendered in 2011 in a case
that did not even begin until 2003, is recognizable and enforceable.78
E.
Alleged Antagonism
The LAP Representatives argue that the Court has called the LAPs’ existence into
question by calling them the “so-called Lago Agrio Plaintiffs.” This is groundless. The use of “socalled” simply indicates, consistent with the primary definition for the phrase, that these indigenous
Ecuadorians are “commonly named” the Lago Agrio Plaintiffs, or “popularly so termed.”79 Indeed,
both their own counsel and the Second Circuit have so referred to them.80
The LAP Representatives contend that certain other remarks by the Court evidence
bias when in fact they stated conclusions, based on evidence, pertinent to the legal issues that were
78
Id. at *43.
79
M erriam -W eb ster
D iction ary:
S o-called ,
definition,
available
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/so-called?show=0&t=1303930092.
at
The Lago Agrio plaintiffs have been so termed long before this Court came to preside over
the pertinent proceedings. See, e.g., Republic of Ecuador v. Chevrontexaco Corp., 426 F.
Supp.2d 159, 161, 163 (S.D.N.Y. 2006). Indeed, their own counsel has used the phrase from
the outset of this Court’s involvement. See Tr., Apr. 30, 2010, at 3:19-20.
80
See In re Chevron, 10-MC-00001, Tr., Apr. 30, 2010, at 3:19-20; Lago Agrio Plaintiffs v.
Chevron Corp., Nos. 10-4341-cv, 10-4405-cv (CON), 2010 WL 5151325 (2d Cir. Dec. 15,
2010).
29
before the Court. For instance, the LAP Representatives argue that this Court’s alleged bias in favor
of Chevron is revealed by its statement, made during the TRO hearing, that Chevron is “a company
of considerable importance to our economy that employs thousands all over the world.”81 The Court
did so, however, only after noting that the “[p]ublic interest warrant[ed] some consideration” in
determining whether a TRO was appropriate.82 Courts routinely consider the public interest as a
factor in deciding whether to grant TROs and other injunctive relief.83
F.
Allegations Against the Special Master
The LAP Representatives argue that the Special Master, Max Gitter, Esq., whom the
Court appointed to preside over Donziger’s deposition in the Donziger Section 1782 proceeding
exhibited bias against Donziger and in favor of Chevron. For substantially the reasons discussed
in Chevron’s memorandum,84 these allegations are unfounded and, in any case, immaterial to the
motion before the Court. Indeed, no party appealed any of his rulings to or sought his removal by
this Court, as was their right. The Special Master is not even appointed in this case. Quite simply,
there has been no demonstration that the allegations against him and his rulings have any bearing
on the question whether the undersigned should be disqualified.
81
LAP Representatives Mem. at 7 (quoting Tr., Feb. 8, 2011, at 49:21-50:4).
82
Tr., Feb. 8, 2011, at 49:14.
83
See, e.g., Clinical Insight, Inc. v. Louisville Cardiology Medical Group, PSC, 2011 WL
1549478, at *3 (W.D.N.Y. Apr. 22, 2011) (citing Jackson Dairy, Inc. v. H.P. Hood & Sons,
Inc., 596 F.2d 70, 72 (2d Cir. 1979)).
84
DI 297 at 32-35.
30
III.
The Rulings Relied Upon
The LAP Representatives complain also that the Court’s rulings in the Section 1782
proceedings and in this action are evidence of the Court’s bias against them and the other
defendants. They offer a number of instances of this alleged “pattern of inequitable and overly harsh
treatment.” Each example, however, is no more than a ruling by this Court based on fair legal
reasoning. Where appealed, they were affirmed.
A.
The Donziger Section 1782 Proceeding
1.
Alleged Waiver of Privilege as to Three Documents Filed with the Court
The LAP Representatives protest the Court’s ruling in the Donziger Section 1782
proceeding denying the LAPs’ motion to file three documents under seal and holding that “the
[public] filing of these documents with the Court waived whatever privileges otherwise might have
attached to them.”85 Their belated objections are without merit.
The LAPs filed and sought to have sealed (1) a declaration of an attorney, (2) a
document that appeared already to have been filed with the Ecuadorian court, and (3) an e-mail
exchange between Donziger and a testifying expert. As the party asserting privilege, the LAPs had
the burden of establishing it. They made no such showing. The Court, moreover, found no basis
for asserting privilege on the face of the documents.86 The LAPs did not object at the time that the
ruling was made. Thus, the Court’s denial of the motion to seal was simply a judicial ruling that,
under Liteky, is not grounds for recusal.
85
LAP Representatives Mem. at 23-24.
86
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002, Order [DI 61] at 1.
31
2.
Rulings on Supplementing the Record
The LAP Representatives allege that the Court allowed Chevron, in the Donziger
Section 1782 proceeding, to supplement the record on Donziger’s motion to quash after briefing was
completed but refused the LAPs’ request to hold the record open for additional submissions.87 This
description mischaracterizes what actually happened.
On September 20, 2010, Chevron moved for leave to supplement the record with
testimony and documents from other Section 1782 proceedings outside of this District and one
additional video segment from the Crude outtakes.88 The LAPs opposed the motion and, in the
alternative, asked the Court to hold the record open for five days following oral argument on the
motion to quash if the motion to supplement was granted. The Court granted Chevron’s motion and
did not rule on the LAPs’ alternative request,89 which sought blank check authority for unspecified
possible future filings.90 The Court later heard oral argument on the motion to quash on September
23. On September 28, the fifth day following oral argument, the LAPs filed a motion to supplement
to correct an allegedly erroneous and incomplete translation of one of the Crude outtakes. That
motion was given careful consideration in Donziger § 1782 II, where the Court concluded that the
dispute as to the translation was immaterial.91 The LAPs made no other request to supplement the
87
LAP Representatives Mem. at 20.
88
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002, DI 60.
89
In re Chevron Corp., 10-MC-00002, DI 70 at 1.
90
Id., DI 64 at 3.
91
See Donziger § 1782 II, 749 F.Supp.2d at 151 n.38.
32
record. There was no disparity of treatment.
3.
Donziger’s Failure to Submit a Privilege Log
The LAP Representatives complain also of the Court’s holding in the Donziger 1782
proceeding that Donziger waived the attorney-client privilege and work product protection with
respect to subpoenaed documents by failing to file a timely privilege log.92 In addition, they claim
that the manner in which the issue was adjudicated was misleading to the Court of Appeals.93
To begin with, the Second Circuit affirmed this Court’s privilege ruling in Lago
Agrio Plaintiffs v. Chevron Corp. The merits of this Court’s decision on that matter have been
established conclusively.
The complaint about the manner in which the issue was adjudicated is difficult to
understand, but it appears to rest on the fact that the Court, given the press of time, first issued its
ruling in summary form on October 20, 2010,94 then followed with a fuller opinion on November
10,95 and still later, on November 30, 2010, granted Donziger’s motion for reconsideration and
reaffirmed its previous conclusions.96 The suggestion appears to be that the Second Circuit
somehow was misled in the process. But the fact of the matter is that all of this was before the Court
92
LAP Representatives Mem. at 23.
93
Id. at 29.
94
Donziger § 1782 I, 749 F.Supp.2d 135.
95
Donziger § 1782 II, 749 F.Supp.2d 141.
96
Donziger § 1782 III, 749 F. Supp.2d 170.
33
of Appeals in Lago Agrio Plaintiffs, which was not argued until December 9, 2010. Indeed,
Donziger and the LAPs made to the Second Circuit substantially the same argument that the LAP
Representatives make here.97 There is no more merit to the argument now than there was then, when
the Second Circuit affirmed notwithstanding this contention.
B.
Proceedings in This Action
1.
Alleged Waiver of Donziger’s Right to Oppose Preliminary Injunction
The LAP Representatives claim that the Court ruled that Donziger waived his right
to oppose entry of the preliminary injunction and that this is evidence of the Court’s bias or
impartiality.98 The Court, however, made no such ruling.
Chevron moved for a TRO and a preliminary injunction on February 3, 2011. The
Court scheduled argument on the TRO for February 8.
On or before that date, the LAP
representatives submitted a lengthy brief and over 1,200 pages of evidence. Donziger, an attorney
who, moreover, was represented at the time by other counsel in the Donziger Section 1782
proceeding, submitted nothing.
When the TRO came on for argument, Donziger appeared but submitted no papers.
The LAP Representatives, in contrast, filed another brief. As the motion for a preliminary injunction
already had been pending for eight days, the Court set a deadline for opposition papers on the
97
Reply Brief for Respondent-Appellant Steven R. Donziger, Lago Agrio Plaintiffs v. Chevron
Corp., at 5-12; Brief for Respondent-Appellant Lago Agrio Plaintiffs, Lago Agrio Plaintiffs
v. Chevron Corp., at 4-8.
98
LAP Representatives Mem. at 25.
34
preliminary injunction motion of February 11.99
Donziger did not file opposition papers by the February 11 deadline. He did,
however, appear at oral argument on February 18, represented by counsel, who unsuccessfully
sought an adjournment100 and then argued in opposition of the motion. On February 25, two weeks
after opposition papers were due, Donziger’s counsel, without seeking leave to do so, filed a
memorandum styled as an “offer of proof in opposition to the preliminary injunction” and an
“objection to the court’s closure of the record,” with accompanying exhibits.101
Relying on the Supreme Court’s holding in Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation,102
the Court ruled, in the exercise of discretion, that the subsequent filings were untimely and violated
an express order of the Court and declined to consider them part of the record on the motion.103 In
the alternative, however, the Court examined Donziger’s belated filings and found that they would
not have warranted a different result even if they had been considered part of the record.104
In sum, then, the Court never ruled that Donziger waived his right to oppose the
preliminary injunction motion. To the contrary, it considered the arguments his counsel made on
99
The LAP Representatives argue also that Donziger was unable to obtain counsel. As noted
previously, that is quite doubtful. Supra note 17.
100
Tr., Feb. 18, 2011, at 2:20-3:8.
101
DI 137-142.
102
497 U.S. 871 (1990).
103
Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, *49-50.
104
Id. at 51.
35
February 18. Beyond that, it merely required adherence to the briefing schedule it had set, bearing
in mind the urgency of the situation and the need to issue a decision on a very large and complex
record before the TRO expired. Moreover, although it was not required to do so, it considered
Donziger’s belated filings in the alternative.
2.
Alleged Waiver of Unclean Hands Defense
The LAP Representatives protest the Court’s alleged ruling that they had waived their
unclean hands defense.105 The Court made no such ruling.
As of February 11, the deadline for submission of opposition papers, the LAP
Representatives had timely filed 95 pages of briefing and over 1,200 pages of affidavits and exhibits,
none of which asserted any unclean hands defense.
On February 28, the LAP Representatives moved to increase the amount of the TRO
bond that the Court had required.106 The motion included a declaration by one of the LAPs’
Ecuadorian lawyers which claimed to support, among other things, a defense of unclean hands.107
Still later, on March 4, four days before the TRO was set to expire, the LAP Representatives made
a further submission without explanation for the late filing.108 The Court exercised its discretion
to reject the late filings for purposes of the preliminary injunction motion for the same reasons that
105
LAP Representatives Mem. at 25-26.
106
DI 151.
107
DI 152-155.
108
DI 172.
36
it declined to consider Donziger’s belated submissions.109
Thus, the Court never ruled that the unclean hands defense had been waived. To the
contrary, it expressly stated that the unclean hands defense “may of course be asserted by [the LAPs]
in later proceedings.”110 It simply held that it would not consider an affirmative defense to the
motion for a preliminary injunction that had not been raised in any of the timely briefing or
argument and that was first raised at a very late date.
3.
Alleged Waiver of Personal Jurisdiction Objections
The LAP Representatives assert that “the Court ruled that the Ecuadorian plaintiffs
waived their right to challenge personal jurisdiction.”111 If this is meant to suggest that the Court
ruled that the LAP Representatives have waived that right, the suggestion is demonstrably wrong,
as the Court did no such thing. If it is meant only to indicate that the Court so ruled as to the nonappearing LAPs, it is accurate, but the ruling was indisputably correct and in any case not evidence
of partiality.
So far as the LAP Representatives are concerned, they argued that Chevron was
unlikely to prevail on the merits, and that a preliminary injunction should be denied, because they
109
Donziger I,2011 WL 778052, at *48.
110
Id. See also DI 183 at 2.
If the LAP Representatives had wanted to give the Court more time to consider fully this
new defense, they could have sought leave to file the papers and agreed to an extension of
the TRO or a legally binding commitment regarding the initiation of enforcement
proceedings. See Tr., Feb. 18, 2011, 43:18-45:10. No such proposals were made to the
Court.
111
LAP Representatives Mem. at 28.
37
were not subject to personal jurisdiction here. The Court considered and rejected that argument on
its merits.112
The non-appearing LAPs were and are in a very different position. Consistent with
the service provision in the February 3 order to show cause, Chevron served the LAPs on February
4, 2011.113 The LAPs had until February 25 to respond to the complaint. Two days shy of that
deadline, however, defendant Fajardo (LAPs’ Ecuadorian counsel in the Lago Agrio litigation) sent
the Court a letter requesting that the Court grant him and the LAPs an extension of time to
respond.114 The letter stated also that Fajardo and the LAPs “vigorously dispute[d] Chevron’s claim
that this Court has any jurisdiction over” them. Fajardo, however, is not admitted to practice in this
Court. He therefore may not represent anyone here except himself.115 The Court therefore could
112
Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, at *36-40 (section titled “Chevron Is Likely to Establish
Personal Jurisdiction As to the Two Foreign Defendants Who Have Not W aived the
Defense”).
113
DI 4, 75.
114
DI 128.
115
See Local Civil Rule 1.3(c). This Court consistently has enforced Rule 1.3(c) in prior
matters. Accord In re Parmalat Securities Litig., 04 MD 1653 (LAK), DI 190 (Sept. 6,
2005) (submissions by Italian lawyers who were not admitted to practice in the Southern
District of New York were nullities); In re Parmalat Securities Litig., 04 MD 1653 (LAK),
DI 243 (Dec. 7, 2005) (same); Trustees of I.G. Frben Aktionarsvereinigung e.V. v. United
States, No. 04 Civ. 0431 (LAK), 2004 WL 251205 (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 11, 2004). Furthermore,
the requirement is a strict one. For example, it is “a well-established general rule in this
Circuit that a parent not admitted to the bar cannot bring an action pro se in federal court on
behalf of his or her child.” Tindall v. Poultney High School Dist., 414 F.3d 281, 284-85 (2d
Cir. 2005)(citations omitted); Cf. Rodriguez v. Eastman Kodak Co., 88 Fed. Appx. 470, 471
(2d Cir. 2004) (“[I]t is well established that a pro se class representative cannot adequately
represent the interests of other class members.” (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted)).
Contrary to the LAP Representative’s implication, LAP Representatives Mem. at 28,
Fajardo’s inability to act as counsel for other defendants in this case did not make it improper
38
not consider the letter as a request for an extension by the LAPs. Nonetheless, on its own motion,
the Court granted the LAPs a modest extension, making clear that it would consider a request for
a further extension if it were made on notice and by a member of the Bar or by an individual
defendant pro se.116 In the event, the non-appearing LAPs neither sought a further extension nor
answered, moved or otherwise responded to the complaint– in a word, they defaulted.117
In ruling on Chevron’s motion for a preliminary injunction, the Court considered (as
it was obliged to do) whether Chevron was reasonably likely to succeed in proving the Court’s
personal jurisdiction over the non-appearing LAPs.118 In view of the fact that Rule 12(h) provides
that the defense of lack of personal jurisdiction is waived if it is not included in a timely answer or
Rule 12(b) motion, it so ruled. Nonetheless, the Court declined to “address the question whether
an appropriate future request for an extension within which to respond or move would be granted
or whether any of these defendants then might be relieved of his or her waiver.”119 No such
application has been made.
to provide for service on the LAPs by serving Fajardo, their Ecuadorian attorney. While
Rule 1.3(c) requires that lawyers appearing before this Court be admitted to the Southern
District of New York, F ED . R. C IV . P. 4(f)(3) permits service of foreign defendants by “other
means not prohibited by international agreement.” See Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, at *36.
116
DI 127 at 2.
117
All of the LAPs were represented by American counsel throughout the Section 1782
proceedings in this and other courts. Indeed, they are represented by the Motley Rice and
Emery Celli firms to this day in the Berlinger and Donziger Section 1782 proceedings, which
remain pending in this Court.
118
Donziger I, 2011 WL 778052, at *40.
119
Id. n. 369.
Subsequently, the Clerk entered a certificate of default.
39
4.
Recent Rulings
The LAP Representatives complain also of the Court’s rulings on subsequent motions
in this action. The Court sees no reason to address any of these arguments, all of which are baseless
as readily appears from the Court’s prior decisions.
IV.
Alleged External Opinion
Finally, the LAP Representatives’ reply memorandum concludes with the claim that
it does not matter what they, Chevron or the Court think about the Court’s ability to provide
impartial justice. “What matters is that the public—and in this case, the ‘public’ includes the global
judicial and diplomatic community—perceive this Court as offering a fair and impartial forum to
adjudicate Chevron’s grave and extraordinary claims.” And they end with the assertion that “[i]t
has become abundantly clear . . . to any reasonably impartial observer” that this is an occasion when
the Court has succumbed to prejudices and passions at the expense of reason and temperance.” This
is evidenced, they claim, by two news clippings, one of which observed only that “Chevron has
received the lion’s share of rulings in Judge Kaplan’s court” and the other of which expressed the
view that “Steven Donziger seems to have drawn the distaste of Judge Kaplan”120 – neither a
conclusion, whether right or wrong, that supports the LAP Representatives’ conclusion. But that
is not what matters here, as press reports have little if any bearing even where they support a
litigant’s position:
“[W]e cannot adopt a per se rule holding that when someone claims to see smoke,
we must find that there is fire. That which is seen is sometimes merely a
smokescreen. Judicial inquiry may not therefore be defined by what appears in the
120
DI 305, at 8-10 & n.12.
40
press. If such were the case, those litigants fortunate enough to have easy access to
the media could make charges against a judge's impartiality that would effectively
veto the assignment of judges. Judge-shopping would then become an additional and
potent tactical weapon in the skilled practitioner’s arsenal. Instead, the sensitive
issue of whether a judge should be disqualified requires a careful examination of
those relevant facts and circumstances to determine whether the charges reasonably
bring into question a judge’s impartiality.”121
That is especially true here given the LAPs’ ready access to the media as evidenced by their
procurement of the making of the film Crude to tell their story and their conduct of a media
campaign.122
Conclusion
This Court has considered this motion with the great care that it deserves. Informed
persons, knowing and understanding all of the myriad and complex facts of these extensive
proceedings, and putting aside the rhetoric and other devices deployed here by the LAP
Representatives, readily would see that the Court’s rulings have been firmly grounded in the law and
the evidence. There is no objective reason to think that it has been anything less than entirely
impartial.
The motion to recuse the undersigned [DI 284] is denied.
SO ORDERED.
Dated:
May 9, 2011
121
In re Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc., 861 F.2d at 1309.
122
E.g., Donziger § 1782 II, 749 F. Supp.2d 157-58.
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