CR Bard v. Medical Components
Filing
455
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER granting 231 Defendant's Short-Form Motion to Compel Production of Clawed Back Document. Signed by Magistrate Judge Daphne A. Oberg on 3/4/21. (dla)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
CENTRAL DIVISION
C.R. BARD, INC., and BARD
PERIPHERAL VASCULAR, INC.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
MEDICAL COMPONENTS, INC.,
Defendant.
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND
ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S
SHORT-FORM MOTION TO COMPEL
PRODUCTION OF CLAWED BACK
DOCUMENT (DOC. NO. 231)
Case No. 2:12-cv-00032-RJS-DAO
Judge Robert J. Shelby
Magistrate Judge Daphne A. Oberg
Before the court is Defendant Medical Components, Inc.’s (“MedComp”) Short-Form
Motion to Compel Production of Clawed Back Document (“Mot.,” Doc. No. 231). The court
held a hearing on this motion on November 24, 2020. (Doc. No. 247.) After considering the
arguments of the parties and upon review of the briefs and their accompanying exhibits, the court
GRANTS the motion for the reasons set forth below.
BACKGROUND
The parties are currently involved in extensive, multi-action, patent litigation. 1 In 2012,
C.R. Bard, Inc. 2 initiated this action (“Port I”) against MedComp alleging MedComp was
infringing three patents which C.R. Bard owned by assignment: the ’022 patent; the ’302 patent;
and the ’615 patent. (Am. Compl., Doc. No. 69.) In addition to Port I, C.R. Bard, Inc. and Bard
Peripheral Vascular, Inc. (collectively, “Bard”) are involved in patent litigation in the District of
1
The court presumes an understanding of the relevant factual and procedural background and
does not repeat it here except as otherwise relevant to this order.
2
Bard Peripheral Vascular, Inc., was later added as co-plaintiff pursuant to the court’s order on
MedComp’s Motion for Joinder of Parties. (Order Den. Mot. to Substitute Party and Granting
Mot. for Joinder of Parties, Doc. No. 149.)
1
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Delaware, C.R. Bard, Inc. & Bard Peripheral Vascular, Inc. v. AngioDynamics, Inc., Case No.
1:15-cv-00218 (“Port II”), which involves patents in the same family as those at issue here.
(Order Concerning Prod. of Elec. Stored and Hard Copy Info. 1, Doc. No. 191.) Lastly, Bard
and MedComp are also litigating issues involving the same patent family before Judge Nielson in
the District of Utah, C.R. Bard, Inc. v. Medical Components, Inc., 2:17-cv-00754 (“Port III”).
(Id.)
Here, MedComp seeks to compel production of a clawed-back document,
BARD_AD_2296958, on the basis that it is not privileged and, even if it is privileged, Bard
waived the privilege. (Mot. 2, Doc. No. 231.) MedComp contends Bard waived privilege by
intentionally producing the document in Port II and by failing to act in a timely manner
following notice of disclosure by MedComp. (Id.)
LEGAL STANDARDS
Rule 502 of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides the disclosure of privileged
information does not constitute a waiver of privilege if: “(1) the disclosure is inadvertent; (2) the
holder of the privilege or protection took reasonable steps to prevent disclosure; and (3) the
holder promptly took reasonable steps to rectify the error, including (if applicable) following
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(5)(B).” Fed. R. Evid. 502(b). The party claiming the
disclosure was inadvertent has the burden to prove these elements. Hatfield v. Cottages on 78th
Cmty. Ass’n, No. 2:19-cv-00964, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72117, at *9 (D. Utah Apr. 23, 2020)
(unpublished). When analyzing these issues, a court should consider “the overriding issues of
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fairness and fair play.” United States v. Basic Research, LLC, No. 2:09-cv-00972, 2010 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 155541, at *5 (D. Utah Mar. 17, 2010) (unpublished).
Rule 502 does not require a party to conduct “a post-production review to determine
whether any protected communication or information has been produced by mistake” in order to
avoid waiving privilege. Fed. R. Evid. 502(b) advisory committee’s note. However, the rule
does require the producing party “follow up on any obvious indications that a protected
communication or information has been produced inadvertently.” Id.; see also United States v.
Koerber, No. 2:09-cr-302, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 59579, at *18–19 (D. Utah June 2, 2011
(unpublished) (finding defendant acted promptly and reasonably to rectify inadvertent disclosure
where he twice asked that documents be set aside as privileged after being notified of the
inadvertent disclosure).
In Mycone Dental Supply Co Inc., the Northern District of California found the producing
party failed to promptly rectify an inadvertent disclosure when it took “45 days to research its
assertion of privilege before sending its clawback letter.” Mycone Dental Supply Co Inc. v.
Creative Nail Design Inc., No. C-12-00747, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 126336, at *12 (N.D. Cal.
Sep. 4, 2013) (unpublished). According to the court, the producing party “should have recalled
the document that was used in the deposition immediately after the deposition and then
conducted a more thorough and timely investigation into the rest of the production after the
initial clawback request,” rather than taking seven weeks to look into the matter. Id. at *8–9.
ANALYSIS
Pursuant to a court order, Bard reproduced in this case, Port I, its entire Port II
production. (Bard’s Opp’n to MedComp’s Short Form Mot. to Compel the Prod. of Clawed
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Back Doc. (“Opp’n”) 1, Doc. No. 245; see also Order Concerning Prod. of Elec. Stored and
Hard Copy Info., Doc. No. 191.)
The parties’ communications regarding the disputed document began on July 28, 2020,
when MedComp sent Bard a five-page chart listing documents it believed Bard produced in
whole or in greater part in the Port I case than it had in other litigation. 3 (Ex. C to Mot. 6, Doc.
No. 231-3; Opp’n 1, Doc. No. 245; Ex. 2 to Opp’n, Doc. No. 245-2.) In other words, according
to MedComp, Bard redacted more information in the documents produced in other litigation than
it did in the documents produced in Port I (and Port II). 4 MedComp’s chart listed
BARD_AD_2296958, the document at issue here, as a document produced in whole or in greater
part in Port I and Port II. (Ex. 2 to Opp’n 5, Doc. No. 245-2.) According to Bard, it immediately
reviewed the chart. (Opp’n 1, Doc. No. 245.) Bard explains that, with one exception, it became
apparent the “documents MedComp identified as corresponding to one another were, in fact,
different documents.” (Id. at 1–2.) On August 4, 2020 Bard responded to MedComp, explaining
that only one document in the chart had a duplicate which had been produced, and that the
redacted material in the Port III version of this one document was not relevant to the case. (Ex.
C to Mot. 5, Doc. No. 231-3.)
On August 28, MedComp responded, clarifying its position with regard to the documents
in the chart: “Bard’s production of elsewhere-redacted material in an unredacted document
waives any privilege which might otherwise apply.” (Id. at 3–4.) MedComp pointed out that
3
The parties’ email exchanges address myriad other issues not directly relevant to this motion.
4
MedComp entitled its chart “Bard Documents That Bard Redacted in Bard-MedComp Utah
2017 Case but Produced in Whole or Greater Part in Bard-MedComp Utah 2012 Case (List As of
July 28, 2020).” (Ex. 2 to Opp’n, Doc. No. 245-2.) Because the Port II production was
reproduced in Port I, the columns reference and compare the Port II and Port III productions.
4
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even if the documents were not exact duplicates, the same material (i.e., material redacted in
other documents), could be contained in them. (Id. at 4.)
On September 3, 2020 Bard responded:
MedComp points to different documents that have allegedly different redactions in
Port II and Port III. MedComp has not explained why Bard must redact different
documents in the same way, nor has MedComp provided any basis for the
suggestion that the same text that is redacted in Port III is unredacted in Port II.
MedComp is asking Bard to analyze a large number of non-identical documents to
determine whether the text redacted in Port III was not redacted in Port II. That is
a costly and unnecessary exercise that Bard is not willing to undertake.
(Id. at 2.)
On September 16, the parties met and conferred and Bard again reiterated that it provided
the chart to its vendor “to confirm if the documents were the same, and if so, if they have been
produced with inconsistent redactions.” (Ex. 4 to Opp’n 2, Doc. No. 245-4.) The vendor
confirmed, that with the exception of one, the documents were not the same, so it could not
answer this question. (Id.) In light of this, Bard asked MedComp to explain its “contention that
the material redacted in the Port III documents it identified was produced without redaction in
the Port II documents it identifies.” (Id.) MedComp responded that “when the documents are
viewed side-by-side, the unredacted text is identical, so MedComp concluded that the text that is
redacted is also identical.” (Id.) On September 18, Bard provided examples of documents in the
chart that were not identical and renewed its request that MedComp “identify the basis for its
contention that the Port II documents in your July 28th list contain information that is redacted in
the Port III documents on your list.” (Ex. 5 to Opp’n 1, Doc. No. 245-5.) MedComp did not
reply. (Opp’n 2, Doc. No. 245.) After waiting several weeks for a response, Bard analyzed the
documents and identified one document that was inadvertently produced in Port II without
5
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redactions. (Id.) Bard then clawed back BARD_AD_2296958 on October 27, 2020. (Ex. B to
Mot. 1, Doc. No. 231-2.)
The above facts make it clear Bard did not promptly take reasonable steps to rectify the
error once it was put on notice. No doubt, there was some initial confusion as to MedComp’s
assertions when it provided Bard with a list of documents it alleged were produced with
redactions in other litigation and without redactions in Port I. But at least as of MedComp’s
August 28 email, Bard was on notice that MedComp believed the listed documents were
potentially privileged documents produced without redactions, and that MedComp believed the
privilege was waived.
Bard posits that it did not understand MedComp’s assertion that the documents were
related and that it continually asked MedComp to explain the basis for its argument but received
no real answer. This misses the point. As of August 28, Bard was on notice of the need to
conduct a privilege review, not a cross-reference analysis. Once Bard was on notice that the Port
I and Port II documents listed were produced with potentially privileged information unredacted,
Bard had an obligation under Rule 502 to take prompt and reasonable steps to rectify this error.
At a minimum, it was necessary for Bard to request that the listed documents be set aside as
privileged while it reviewed the documents to see if they contained privileged information.
Instead, it chose not to undertake this “costly and unnecessary exercise.” Once its vendor
confirmed the documents were not duplicates, Bard took no action other than continually
requesting that MedComp explain the basis for the cross-references in the chart. Regardless of
whether Bard understood MedComp’s assertion that the documents were similar, it was
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unreasonable for Bard to wait almost two months to review the documents MedComp indicated
were produced without redactions.
Bard’s actions were neither prompt nor reasonable. By failing to take prompt, reasonable
steps to rectify the disclosure, Bard waived privilege to BARD_AD_2296958. 5
CONCLUSION
For the above-described reasons, the court GRANTS MedComp’s motion. Bard must
produce the unredacted version of BARD_AD_2296958 to MedComp within fourteen days of
the date of this order.
DATED this 4th day of March, 2021.
BY THE COURT:
______________________________
Daphne A. Oberg
United States Magistrate Judge
5
Because the court finds Bard waived privilege by failing to promptly and reasonably rectify the
disclosure, MedComp’s other bases for production are not addressed.
7
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