Gold Standard, Inc. v. American Barrick Resources Corp.

805 P.2d 164, 144 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1990 Utah LEXIS 71, 1990 WL 149824
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1990
Docket890205
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 805 P.2d 164 (Gold Standard, Inc. v. American Barrick Resources Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gold Standard, Inc. v. American Barrick Resources Corp., 805 P.2d 164, 144 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1990 Utah LEXIS 71, 1990 WL 149824 (Utah 1990).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice:

Plaintiff Gold Standard, Inc., obtained interlocutory review of a district court order holding that Gold Standard could make no further use during discovery of two documents of Getty Oil Company and Getty Mining Company because they were subject to the work product privilege. We hold that the documents are not subject to the work product privilege and that even if *166 they were, Getty waived its right to assert that privilege.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

In December 1973, Getty and Gold Standard entered into a joint operating agreement for the development of the Mercur mine in Tooele County, Utah. Getty, as senior partner, held a 75 percent interest in the venture; Gold Standard held a 25 percent participating interest. Under the terms of the agreement, both parties were to pay for a feasibility study during the exploration phase, Phase I, of the project. The purpose of the feasibility study, ostensibly conducted by Bechtel Incorporated, was to determine whether continued development was economically feasible. Upon completion of the feasibility study, which would mark the end of Phase I, Gold Standard was to present the study to financial institutions to finance its interest in the mine during Phase II.

On October 1, 1980, one month before the completion of the feasibility study, Getty transferred its offices for the management of the Mercur mine from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City. The following spring, Getty presented a Bechtel engineering study to Gold Standard, claiming that it formed the necessary feasibility study under the terms of the operating agreement. Although Gold Standard asserts that it did not accept the Bechtel study as the final feasibility study, it paid its portion of the cost.

Both parties proceeded with the development of the mine in 1981, but Gold Standard was unable to finance its interest in the mine. Gold Standard blames this failure on the inadequacy of the Bechtel study as a feasibility study. Under the' terms of the operating agreement, Gold Standard’s 25 percent interest was converted into a 15 percent net profits interest because it failed to meet the expenses required of it for Phase II. The Mercur mine began production in 1983. In February 1984, defendant Texaco, Inc., acquired the interest of Getty and Getty Mining Co. in the Mercur mine.

On June 28, 1984, Gold Standard President Scott Smith sent a letter to Willis B. Reals, Texaco’s senior Vice President, explaining the problems Gold Standard had encountered with Getty with respect to the feasibility study. Smith’s letter included a letter dated September' 20, 1983, from Gold Standard attorney Robert S. McConnell to Smith. The McConnell letter addressed the alleged unfairness of Getty’s prior conduct. Immediately after receiving the letter, Reals wrote to Getty Mining President H.E. Wendt and asked Wendt for his reaction to the Smith letter and for legal advice. Wendt in turn contacted John M. Mintz, Getty’s mining manager, for information to formulate a response.

The first of two disputed memoranda was written July 13, 1984, when Charles Kundert, Getty’s Los Angeles engineering manager, responded to Mintz’s request to review the Mercur-related records in Los Angeles. Kundert wrote that he knew of no feasibility study completed before the spring of 1981. Getty had submitted the Bechtel study as the feasibility study sometime in the spring of 1981.

The second disputed memorandum, a letter from Mintz to Wendt, was written in response to the Kundert memorandum. On July 16, 1984, Mintz sent a letter to Wendt which stated that he could not find a feasibility study for the Mercur mine in Getty’s data room index. The Kundert memorandum was included in Mintz’s letter to Wendt. Despite this information, Wendt wrote directly to Gold Standard’s Smith on October 25, 1984, and referred to Gold Standard’s claim of unfairness as a “lame excuse” because Phase II had been under development for four years with Gold Standard’s consent.

During the summer of 1985, defendant American Barrick Resources Corporation (“Barrick”), not a party to this appeal, acquired Texaco’s interest in the Getty mine. In December 1986, Gold Standard filed its complaint against defendants, claiming, inter alia, that Getty had breached the operating agreement by not providing a proper *167 feasibility study. 1

In early 1987, Richard Klatt, a former Getty project geologist, delivered the Kun-dert and Mintz memoranda, the two disputed documents, to Gold Standard. Klatt had copied the memoranda for his personal Mercur file while working in Getty’s Los Angeles office. The memoranda were part of a general, nonconfidential reading file which was circulated weekly through Getty’s exploration offices in Los Angeles in 1984. Klatt' took copies of the memoranda with him when he left Getty's employment. On June 1, 1987, during a meeting with Gold Standard, Kundert signed an affidavit discussing the circumstances surrounding the writing of his memorandum to Mintz, and in September 1987, Getty received a copy of Kundert’s affidavit, with the Kun-dert and Mintz documents, and learned of Klatt’s prior ex parte contact with Gold Standard. Getty did not at that time raise any issue as to whether the work product privilege concerned those memoranda.

On December 2, 1987, during Gold Standard’s deposition of Kundert, Gold Standard marked the memoranda and had them appended as exhibits to the deposition. Getty’s counsel asked Kundert if he knew whether the memoranda had been requested by Mintz’s attorney. Kundert responded that he had merely responded to a management inquiry by Mintz. Again, Getty raised no work product issue during the deposition.

In late 1987 or early 1988, Getty delivered the memoranda to Gold Standard under Gold Standard’s demand for document production, and the memoranda were again used during four subsequent depositions by Gold Standard. Getty, however, did not mention the work product issue until June 15, 1988, during the deposition of H.E. Wendt, Getty Mining Co. president.

Some eight months after Getty had produced the memoranda during the discovery process, and a year after it knew the mem-oranda were in Gold Standard’s possession and had been used in five different depositions, Getty filed a motion for a protective order on September 26, 1988. In its motion, Getty asserted (1) the memoranda were subject to the work product privilege; and (2) it had not waived the work product privilege. Getty asked the court to order Gold Standard to return all copies of the memoranda and prohibit Gold Standard from using the memoranda during discovery. The trial court granted Getty’s motion and ruled that (1) the memoranda were work product prepared in anticipation of litigation; (2) Getty had not waived its right to assert the work product doctrine because it had taken reasonable precautions to prevent inadvertent disclosure and had not acted in a dilatory manner when seeking the return of the documents; and (3) the work product doctrine applied even though Gold Standard had obtained copies of the memoranda through means other than the formal discovery process. The trial court ordered Gold Standard to return all copies of the memoranda to Getty and return Klatt’s originals to him and prohibited the further use of the memoranda in the discovery process.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Willden
2024 UT 37 (Utah Supreme Court, 2024)
Gillman v. Gillman
2021 UT 33 (Utah Supreme Court, 2021)
State v. Patterson
2013 UT App 11 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2013)
Roth v. Joseph
2010 UT App 332 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2010)
Braun v. NEVADA CHEMICALS, INC.
2010 UT App 188 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2010)
Angel Investors, LLC v. Garrity
2009 UT 40 (Utah Supreme Court, 2009)
State v. All Real Property, Residence & Appurtenances
2005 UT 90 (Utah Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. McNearney
2005 UT App 133 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2005)
Wells Dairy, Inc. v. American Industrial Refrigeration, Inc.
690 N.W.2d 38 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2004)
State v. All Real Property
2004 UT App 232 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2004)
LeVanger v. HIGHLAND ESTATES PROPERTIES OWNERS ASSOCIATION
2003 UT App 377 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2003)
Lifewise Master Funding v. Telebank
206 F.R.D. 298 (D. Utah, 2002)
Taylor v. Hansen
958 P.2d 923 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1998)
State v. Parker
936 P.2d 1118 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1997)
State Ex Rel. United Hospital Center, Inc. v. Bedell
484 S.E.2d 199 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1997)
Askew v. Hardman
918 P.2d 469 (Utah Supreme Court, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
805 P.2d 164, 144 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1990 Utah LEXIS 71, 1990 WL 149824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gold-standard-inc-v-american-barrick-resources-corp-utah-1990.