Butler v. Daimler Trucks North America LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJanuary 10, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-02377
StatusUnknown

This text of Butler v. Daimler Trucks North America LLC (Butler v. Daimler Trucks North America LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Daimler Trucks North America LLC, (D. Kan. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS

DAMIAN BUTLER, et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v. Case No. 19-2377-JAR

DAIMLER TRUCKS NORTH AMERICA LLC, and DAIMLER AG,

Defendants.

ORDER In this product-liability case, plaintiffs allege defendant Daimler Trucks North America LLC (“DTNA”) is liable for an accident in which a semi-tractor truck collided with three vehicles, killing five people.1 Plaintiffs bring strict-liability and negligence claims premised on DTNA’s failure to equip the semi-tractor with forward-collision- warning (“FCW”) and automatic-emergency-braking (“AEB”) systems. The court held a scheduling conference on December 10, 2019. During the conference, the parties informed the court that they agree there is good cause under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c) for the entry of a protective order to govern documents they will exchange in discovery, but they disagree about the scope and form of the order. The court directed them to confer further about a proposed protective order and set a procedure for filing a

1 A second named defendant, Daimler AG, has not appeared in this case. 1 O:\ORDERS\19-2377-JAR-38.docx motion to resolve any remaining disputes.2 The parties have now filed a joint motion (ECF No. 38) asking the court to decide two disputed issues:

(1) whether plaintiffs’ counsel should be allowed to share documents defendants produce and designate as confidential with lawyers not involved in this case; and

(2) whether the protective order should require that, after the case is concluded, counsel return or destroy confidential documents produced by other parties.

Rule 26(c) “confers broad discretion on the trial court to decide when a protective order is appropriate and what degree of protection is required.”3 For the reasons stated below, the court declines to include a sharing provision in the protective order and accepts DTNA’s proposal that counsel be required to return or destroy confidential documents within ten years of the conclusion of litigation. 1. Whether the Protective Order Should Include a Sharing Provision The parties agree that the protective order generally should prohibit disclosure of discovery designated as “confidential” to persons outside the litigation.4 But plaintiffs request that the order include an exception that would allow plaintiffs’ counsel to share confidential information with “lawyers involved in pending or contemplated lawsuits

2 ECF No. 32 at 4. In the future, both sides are expected to comply with page limitations imposed by the court and to avoid lengthy, multi-page, single-spaced footnotes that bypass those limitations. 3 Hilton v. Sedgwick Cty., No. 15-2021-JAR, 2015 WL 3904362, at *1 (D. Kan. June 25, 2015) (internal quotations and citations omitted). 4 See ECF No. 38-3, plaintiffs’ redlined version of DTNA’s proposed protective order, at ¶ 6(b). 2 O:\ORDERS\19-2377-JAR-38.docx against Defendants in which the claims or allegations include the failure to equip heavy trucks with [FCW] and [AEB] system technologies as standard equipment” if such persons agree to be bound to the terms of the protective order and to this court’s jurisdiction.5

Plaintiffs assert such “sharing provisions” are common in courts across the country and create efficiencies in the judicial system by alleviating costly discovery for parties in related cases. They assert sharing provisions reduce the volume of discovery requests and make proceedings more truthful because the responding party will aim to be consistent in addressing similar issues across suits. Plaintiffs further contend DTNA’s confidential

materials will be protected because they will not be shared unless the recipients in collateral litigation agree to be bound by the protective order and to submit to the court’s jurisdiction. DTNA opposes the inclusion of a sharing provision in the protective order. DTNA submits that disclosure of its highly sensitive business information should be limited to the

greatest extent possible to prevent compromise of the information, particularly since dissemination would cause it competitive harm. DTNA notes limiting disclosure to this case does not harm plaintiffs’ ability to litigate their claims. Finally, DTNA argues a sharing provision would actually decrease efficiency in this action, as the court would be forced to monitor, and potentially litigate, compliance with the protective order by nonparties.

5 Id. 3 O:\ORDERS\19-2377-JAR-38.docx The parties cite caselaw from across the country supporting their respective positions—jurisdictions appear to be split on whether sharing provisions are appropriate or useful. In the District of Kansas, however, judges have consistently rejected the inclusion

of sharing provisions in protective orders. In McKellips v. Kumho Tire Co., for example, the plaintiffs made many of the same arguments advanced by plaintiffs here: that adding a sharing provision in a products-liability action “promotes efficiencies in terms of discovery for both plaintiffs’ attorneys and for the defendant, reduces discovery costs, promotes public safety, and facilitates the identification of discrepancies or inconsistencies in

discovery produced by defendants in different cases.”6 Magistrate Judge Theresa James rejected the plaintiffs’ request, noting that including a “preemptive” sharing provision in a protective order places the power solely in the hands of plaintiffs’ counsel to determine which outside attorneys meet the criteria for disclosure of defendants’ confidential information, with no advance notice or opportunity to object given to defendants.7 Judge

James was not persuaded that a sharing provision would promote efficiency, and she was concerned that such a provision would “open the barn doors” to disclosure of confidential information to “yet-unidentified collateral litigants.”8 The better course, she determined, was to permit the plaintiffs to make sharing requests on a case-by-case basis, should they

6 No. 13-2393-JTM, 2014 WL 3541726, at *1 (D. Kan. July 17, 2014). 7 Id. at 1-2. 8 Id. at 2. 4 O:\ORDERS\19-2377-JAR-38.docx become aware of other product-liability cases involving similar allegations against the defendants.

In Hilton v. Sedgwick County, Magistrate Judge Karen Humphreys also rejected the inclusion of a sharing provision in a protective order. Judge Humphreys stated she agreed with the decision in McKellips that it is “more appropriate to make a decision regarding the disclosure of confidential information to parties in collateral litigation ‘on a case-by- case basis during the course of this litigation.’”9 Plaintiffs have not articulated any way in

which McKellips or Hilton was wrongly decided. In fact, the cases cited by plaintiffs support this case-by-case approach, which allows a court to evaluate a specific collateral litigant’s request and need for shared discovery.10

9 2015 WL 3904362, at *2. Such was the process applied in Zapata v. IBP, Inc., in which Magistrate Judge Gerald Rushfelt was asked to decide whether a protective order should issue prohibiting disclosure of confidential information in specific collateral litigation. 160 F.R.D. 625, 627-28 (D. Kan. 1995). 10 See, e.g., Foltz v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 331 F.3d 1122, 1131-32 (9th Cir. 2003) (holding that a collateral litigant’s request to modify a protective order to gain access to discovery should not be “automatically” granted, but should only be granted if the collateral litigant demonstrates “relevance of the protected discovery to the collateral proceedings and its general discoverability therein”); Wilk v. Am. Med.

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Butler v. Daimler Trucks North America LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-daimler-trucks-north-america-llc-ksd-2020.