Tilot Oil LLC v. BP Products North America Inc
Filing
93
ORDER signed by Judge J P Stadtmueller on 8/3/11 granting 53 defendant's Motion to Compel; plaintiff shall execute [56-7] the authorization attached to the affidavit of Kathryn R. Downey as Exhibit G. See Order. (cc: all counsel) (nm)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
TILOT OIL, LLC,
Plaintiff,
v.
Case No. 09-CV-210
BP PRODUCTS NORTH AMERICA, INC.,
Defendant.
ORDER
On May 13, 2011, defendant BP Products North America, Inc. (“BP”) filed a
Motion to Compel (Docket #53) seeking a court order requiring plaintiff Tilot Oil, LLC
(“Tilot”) to execute an authorization allowing the State of W isconsin to provide
certain discovery.
In this action, Tilot has brought suit against BP under the
Resource, Conservation, and Recovery Act (“RCRA”) as well as in tort for alleged
groundwater contamination that has migrated onto Tilot’s property and affected the
use of one of Tilot’s buildings.
Tilot has alleged that petroleum found in this
groundwater has made the basement of a particular building unusable and threatens
the health and safety of Tilot employees. During discovery, Tilot produced an
Industrial Hygiene Consultation Report (“Consultation Report”) prepared by the
University of Wisconsin – Madison’s W isCon Program (“W isconsin”). Kim A. Dietz
(“Dietz”), a University of W isconsin employee, drafted the Consultation Report.
Since production of the Consultation Report, BP has sought all documents related
to the report, including the underlying W isCon file, as well as the deposition of Dietz.
Tilot initially responded that it did not have control of the underlying W isCon file, and
W isconsin itself refused to produce the file or Dietz for a deposition without the
authorization of Tilot. Tilot in turn has refused to authorize the disclosures, leading
to BP’s filing of this motion to compel.
Because Tilot has failed to show that BP is not entitled to the discovery at
issue, the court will grant BP’s motion. Discovery may be obtained “regarding any
nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense,” and it need not
be admissible at trial so long as it “appears reasonably calculated to lead to the
discovery of admissible evidence.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). A party may move the
court for an order compelling discovery where the nonmovant fails to respond that
inspection of materials will be permitted as requested.
Fed. R. Civ. P.
37(a)(3)(B)(iv). There is no dispute that the discovery sought is relevant. Tilot
makes essentially three arguments as to why it should not be compelled to execute
the authorization: (1) the underlying materials are protected from disclosure by
regulation; (2) the relationship between Tilot and W isconsin is privileged; and (3) the
material is analogous to facts held by an expert retained for trial preparation and,
therefore, not subject to discovery.
I.
PROTECTION BY REGULATION
Tilot first argues that the regulations covering on-site consultations prevent
W isconsin from disclosing the underlying materials and, therefore, Tilot should not
be compelled to authorize their production. Under U.S. Occupational Safety and
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Health Administration (“OSHA”) regulations, OSHA is permitted to enter cooperative
agreements with states in order to use state personnel to provide consultative
services to employers regarding health and safety issues.
§ 1908.1(a).
See 29 C.F.R.
Those regulations also place confidentiality restrictions on state
agencies which perform such consultations. The consultation must result in a written
report that, because it “contains information considered confidential, and because
disclosure of such reports would adversely affect the operation of the OSHA
consultation program, the state shall not disclose” it. 29 C.F.R. § 1908.6(g)(2). The
regulations further provide that “[t]he consultant shall preserve the confidentiality of
information obtained as the result of a consultative visit which contains or might
reveal a trade secret of the employer.”
29 C.F.R. § 1908.6(h)(1).
Moreover,
“[d]isclosure of consultation program information which identifies employers who
have requested the services of a consultant would adversely affect the operation of
the OSHA consultation program as well as breach the confidentiality of commercial
information not customarily disclosed by the employer. Accordingly, the state shall
keep such information confidential.” 29 C.F.R. § 1908.6(h)(2).
Aside from pointing out these regulations, Tilot generally argues that neither
the Consultation Report, nor its underlying materials, should be used as evidence
in this case, and that compelling such discovery would defeat the OSHA program’s
goals of encouraging voluntary health and safety consultation. First, as BP points
out, the question of admissibility at trial is separate from the question of whether
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materials are discoverable. Thus, Tilot’s protestation that these materials, including
the already-disclosed Consultation Report, should not be used as evidence has no
bearing on the discovery issue the court is confronted with. Second, nothing about
the confidentiality regulations establish that the material in question is not
discoverable through Tilot. The regulations speak of the consultant’s duty to keep
reports and underlying materials confidential; they do not speak to whether the
employer itself may withhold such materials during discovery.1
Moreover, Tilot has concluded, but not demonstrated, that producing the
materials in question would in fact defeat the goals of the regulations.
The
regulations focus on keeping normally non-disclosed commercial information as well
as trade secrets confidential in an effort to assure employers that engaging in
voluntary consultation will not inadvertently harm them through later disclosure by
the consultant. The Consultation Report itself has already been disclosed, and thus
any commercial information or trade secrets that might normally be of concern have
likely already been disclosed. Tilot has not argued otherwise. Further, there is no
reason to believe that allowing discovery, particularly after disclosure of the
Consultation Report, will hamper the OSHA consultation program. The primary
concern behind disclosure is that employers will avoid engaging in consultation if
1
Though the WisCon materials aside from the Consultation Report are not directly in Tilot’s
possession, they are within its control and thus potentially subject to production. Fed. R. Civ. P.
34(a)(1); See Chaveriat v. Williams Pipe Line Co., 11 F.3d 1420, 1426 (7th Cir. 1993) (citing to
Eleventh and Third Circuit cases explaining that “control” encompasses legal right to obtain
documents requested upon demand); see also, e.g., Comeau v. Rupp, 810 F. Supp. 1127, 1166
(D. Kan. 1992). As the regulations note, the employer is entitled to the report. 29 C.F.R.
§ 1908.6(g).
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they know that the consultant will simply disclose the consultation and the results
upon a Freedom of Information Act or similar records request. The fact that an
employer consulted in the first place is likely to carry a negative connotation, as
would any potentially negative findings in the report. However, once those facts
have already been disclosed voluntarily by the employer, the concern over deterring
employer participation is eliminated. Were this a case in which the Consultation
Report had not been disclosed either, the analysis might differ, but the court is not
confronted with that situation. Thus, because the regulations impose a duty only
upon OSHA and the State, and because the policy underlying the confidentiality
regulations is inapplicable in this situation, the regulations provide no reason that the
materials BP seeks ought not be produced.2
II.
PRIVILEGE
Relatedly, Tilot next argues that the consultation relationship between it and
W isconsin is privileged and, therefore, the materials at issue fall outside the scope
of discovery. As noted previously, discovery is permitted only as to nonprivileged
matters. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Federal Rule of Evidence 501 recognizes that
privileges found in the common law may apply under the rules. Fed. R. Evid. 501.
Thus, courts are permitted to develop rules of privilege “on a case-by-case basis,”
however, such authority must be exercised carefully. Univ. of Pa. v. Equal Emp’t
2
To the extent that the underlying WisCon file contains trade secrets not found in the
Consultation Report, Tilot remains able to move this court for an appropriate protective order. See
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c)(1)(G).
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Opportunity Comm’n, 493 U.S. 182, 189 (1990). A new privilege must “promote[]
sufficiently important interests to outweigh the need for probative evidence.” Id. The
asserted privilege must also serve a public end. Jaffee v. Redmond, 518 U.S. 1, 11
(1996).
In Jaffee, for example, the Supreme Court recognized a psychotherapistpatient privilege, noting that the privilege is “rooted in the imperative need for
confidence and trust” because effective therapy relies on such in order for the patient
to make frank and complete disclosures.
Id. at 10.
The mere possibility of
disclosure, the Court wrote, could impede successful treatment. Id. Moreover, the
Court found the privilege served a public end by facilitating appropriate treatment
and noted that “[t]he mental health of our citizenry . . . is a public good of
transcendent importance.” Id. at 11. The Court then found that the evidentiary
benefit from denying the privilege would be modest because the evidence would be
unlikely to exist without the privilege. Id. at 11-12. The Court also found persuasive
the fact that all fifty states had enacted laws recognizing the privilege. Id. at 12.
It is also worth pointing out that there is a distinction between confidentiality
and privilege. See 2 Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence
§ 5:3 (3d ed. 2007) (duty of confidentiality generally broader than evidentiary
privilege). In University of Pennsylvania, the Court declined to create a privilege in
academic peer review materials, relying primarily on the fact that Congress had not
created the privilege when it extended Title VII to educational institutions. 493 U.S.
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at 189-95.
However, amidst its analysis, the Court noted that Congress had
considered the issue of confidentiality, and provided some level of protection, but did
not see fit to provide a privilege. Id. at 192-93.
Here, Tilot argues that the relationship between itself and W isconsin requires
confidence and trust and that a privilege would serve public ends by promoting the
improvement of worker safety and health. Tilot goes so far as to assert that, if these
materials are available to the public it will not undergo such consultations in the
future. W ith regard to Tilot’s private interest, the court disagrees that its relationship
with W isconsin requires confidence and trust.
The W isCon program provides
professional consultation services in order to determine whether working conditions
are safe – that is, the goal of the consultation is to determine objectively the level of
hazard present in a workplace. The actual performance of this consultation in fact
requires no confidence or trust, it requires only the observation of objectively
measurable phenomena, for example air sampling in this case. Instead, confidence
and trust is more properly viewed as necessary, to some degree, in order to
encourage businesses to consult with W isconsin in the first place. This may relate
to achievement of a more general public end of improving worker safety and health,
but it has little to do with allowing Tilot and W isconsin to carry out their consultation
relationship once engaged. And even to the extent that confidence and trust are
important to achieving the goal of improved health and safety, the confidence
provided for by regulation is not the only means by which worker health is
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safeguarded. OSHA has authority to investigate and remedy safety and health
violations without regard for the confidences of an employer that is not in compliance
with the law.3 See 29 U.S.C. § 657(a) (authority to enter, inspect, and investigate
places of employment); id. § 658(a) (authority to issue citations); id. § 662(a)
(jurisdiction of federal courts, upon petition, to restrain dangerous conditions or
practices). Instead, the confidentiality provided for in the consultation process is an
incentive to increase voluntary compliance. W hile such an incentive surely furthers
the goals of employee health and safety, it does not do so to the extent that elevating
a regulatory guarantee of confidentiality to a wide-ranging evidentiary privilege is
imperative to continued achievement of those goals.
W hat’s more, the circumstances of this case further counsel against creating
a new privilege here. Tilot has brought this action in order to remedy alleged
contamination of its property that, among other things, presents a potential harm to
its employees. Yet, after receiving objective evidence with regard to the safety of
working conditions, Tilot seeks to withhold this information. In fact, Tilot’s motive for
consulting in this particular instance seems slightly questionable given that it
instituted this litigation in February 2009 and only performed the W isCon
consultation in June 2009. Thus, it seems a stretch to believe that failure to create
a new privilege here will disadvantage employee health and safety by discouraging
3
With the exception of protecting employer trade secrets. See 29 C.F.R. § 1903.9.
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employers already involved in workplace-safety litigation from voluntarily consulting
with the State regarding workplace safety.
Finally, even if such a privilege existed, Tilot would have waived it by
disclosing the Consultation Report. W hile there is obviously no case law concerning
waiver of the privilege that Tilot wishes the court to create, generally accepted
principles of waiver found in other privileges provide enough guidance to establish
that Tilot would have waived any privilege in this instance. Broadly, privileges are
waived when the privileged evidence is exposed. See United States v. Salerno, 505
U.S. 317, 323 (1992) (“Parties may forfeit a privilege by exposing privileged
evidence”). However, disclosure must generally be voluntary and not inadvertent.
See Paul F. Rothstein & Susan W . Crump, Federal Testimonial Privileges §§ 2:28,
2:30, 4:14, 5:19, 7:7 (2d ed. 2004) (discussing waiver of attorney-client, marital
communications, executive, and informer’s privileges). The attorney-client privilege
has some of the most developed law with regard to waiver through disclosure and
whether a disclosure is inadvertent. Federal evidentiary rules specifically provide
that disclosure of attorney-client communications does not waive the privilege if: (1)
the disclosure was inadvertent; (2) the privilege holder took reasonable steps to
prevent disclosure; and (3) the holder promptly took reasonable steps to correct the
error. Fed. R. Evid. 502(b). Prior to creation of Rule 502, many courts looked to a
similar five-factor test in determining whether waiver occurred: (1) reasonableness
of precautions taken to prevent disclosure; (2) time taken to correct the error; (3)
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scope of discovery; (4) extent of disclosure; and (5) overriding issues of fairness.
E.g., United States v. Nat’l Ass’n of Realtors, 242 F.R.D. 491, 494 (N.D. Ill. 2007);
see also 8 Charles Alan W right et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 2016.3 (3d
ed. 1998).
Here, applying similar principles, the court looks to whether the disclosure was
in fact inadvertent, as well as steps taken to prevent the disclosure and to correct it
upon discovery. Tilot asserts only that, at the time it produced the Consultation
Report, counsel was not aware that the document was privileged, but that the
document was marked “confidential” and not intended as a waiver. However, the
document was produced on March 12, 2010, and Tilot did not assert the privilege
until February 2011. Granted, this fact might play differently if Tilot had been
completely unaware of the production, but, as BP points out, one of BP’s experts
relied on the Consultation Report in his December 2010 expert report, and the
Consultation Report was used during four depositions without objection from Tilot.
Thus, there is little reason to believe Tilot was completely unaware of the
Consultation Report’s production until W isconsin replied to BP that it would not
produce the underlying materials. These facts also weigh against Tilot with regard
to the reasonableness and time taken to correct the supposed error in production.
Further, while Tilot marked the report “confidential,” that is not an assertion of
privilege, and in fact tends to further show that Tilot was aware that it was producing
the document.
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At best, Tilot has an argument that it was unaware the proposed privilege
existed at all – or that the report was covered by the privilege – but not that it was
unaware it had produced the supposedly privileged document. This argument is not
sufficient, however, because otherwise there would be no temporal limit on asserting
privilege after disclosure; a party who wished to take back the disclosed material
would need only argue that it simply had not formed the opinion that the material was
privileged at the time of disclosure, not that it was unaware the document had been
disclosed. As such, Tilot has failed to persuade the court that it should create a new
privilege and, therefore, the Consultation Report and underlying materials are not
privileged. And, even were the materials privileged, Tilot would have waived the
privilege in this case through voluntary disclosure.
III.
EXPERT RETAINED FOR TRIAL
Lastly, Tilot argues that Dietz is the equivalent of an expert employed for trial
preparation and, therefore, facts held by him are non-discoverable. Generally, a
party may not discover facts or opinions “held by an expert who has been retained
or specially employed by another party in anticipation of litigation or to prepare for
trial and who is not expected to be called as a witness at trial.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
26(b)(4)(D).
Tilot argues only that Dietz is the “equivalent” of such an expert
because he was consulted “to educate Tilot about employee health and safety
issues.” Tilot points to no case law establishing that a state agency employee that
performs a consultation under OSHA regulations should be treated similarly to a
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retained or specially employed expert. In fact, Tilot explicitly states that Dietz “was
not engaged to educate Tilot’s counsel for trial,” but rather “he was consulted to
educate Tilot about employee health and safety issues.”
Aside from Tilot’s seeming admission that Dietz was not at any time “retained
or specially employed . . . in anticipation of litigation or to prepare for trial,” the
purpose of state consultations under the OSHA program show that such a state
employee should not be considered a retained or specially employed expert merely
because the consultation issues are also issues in the litigation. As noted in the
program regulations, consultations are available at no cost and are intended “to
assist [employers] in establishing effective occupational safety and health programs
for providing employment and places of employment which are safe and healthful.”
29 C.F.R. § 1908.1(a). Both the concepts of retainment and employment generally
contemplate some form of payment. W hile that need not always be the case, the
fact that W isconsin provided consultation at no cost and ostensibly for the purpose
of assessing and improving worker health and safety rather than to prepare Tilot for
litigation or trial shows there is no reason to equate the consultant with an expert
retained or employed specifically for a lawsuit. That the focus of the consultation
relates to issues also relevant to the litigation does not change this analysis. Mere
relevance to a lawsuit cannot transform discoverable facts into non-discoverable
material.4
4
In fact, relevance is a hallmark of discoverable material.
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Moreover, the purpose underlying discovery protection of non-testifying
experts and known facts does not support the analogy pressed by Tilot.
The
purpose of such protection is to avoid deterring parties from thoroughly preparing a
case, particularly through the non-testifying expert’s contribution to developing
pretrial strategy and, accordingly, contribution to attorney work product. 8A Charles
Alan W right et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 2032 (3d ed. 1998).
Additionally, without protection, a non-testifying expert’s opinions might be later
brought to light at trial, adverse to the party that retained the expert, and given
greater weight simply because the party in question retained the expert. Id. These
concerns, however, are not applicable where, as here, the “expert” in question has
conducted objective scientific testing of hazards in the work environment, rather than
providing opinion or insight used to actually prepare the case. Instead, an expert
such as Dietz is much more akin to a source of objective fact than expert opinion.
And, while Rule 26 also protects facts known by a non-testifying expert, the thrust
of the rule is aimed at experts that provide strategy-forming advice and consultation,
not professionals performing their job within the operating procedures of a state
program. Thus, the court finds no reason to hold that the materials at issue are nondiscoverable per Rule 26(b)(4)(D).
IV.
CONCLUSION
In sum, Tilot has not established that the materials related to the Consultation
Report are non-discoverable, including the deposition of Dietz. OSHA regulations
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relevant to the consultation program do not, of themselves, establish that the
materials are non-discoverable. Nor is the consultation relationship between Tilot
and Wisconsin privileged such that the materials are non-discoverable. Finally,
Tilot’s brief argument attempting to characterize Dietz as analogous to a retained or
specially employed, non-testifying expert does not succeed. As such, because Tilot
has failed to establish that BP is not entitled to the requested discovery, and has not
produced such discovery, the court will grant BP’s motion to compel.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that the defendant’s Motion to Compel (Docket #53) be and
the same is hereby GRANTED; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the plaintiff shall execute the authorization
attached to the affidavit of Kathryn R. Downey as Exhibit G (Docket #56-7).
Dated at Milwaukee, W isconsin, this 3rd day of August, 2011.
BY THE COURT:
J.P. Stadtmueller
U.S. District Judge
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