In Re: Dealer Management Systems Antitrust Litigation

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 6, 2018
Docket1:18-cv-00864
StatusUnknown

This text of In Re: Dealer Management Systems Antitrust Litigation (In Re: Dealer Management Systems Antitrust Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Dealer Management Systems Antitrust Litigation, (N.D. Ill. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

IN RE: DEALER MANAGEMENT ; SYSTEMS ANTITRUST LITIGATION ) ) This document relates to: ) No. 18 CV 0864 ) Jeffrey T. Gilbert A ) y Ed OBSES ) Magistrate Judge ) ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Defendant The Reynolds and Reynolds Company’s (“Reynolds’s”) Motion to Compel Production of Documents Pursuant to Subpoena [ECF No. 280]. In responding to Reynolds’s motion, Non-Party Dominion Enterprises, Inc. (“Dominion”) also moved to Modify the Confidentiality Order entered in this case [ECF No. 303]. For the reasons stated below, Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 280] is granted and Non-Party Dominion’s Motion [ECF No. 303] is denied. I. BACKGROUND On December 7, 2017, Reynolds served a subpoena duces tecum on Dominion with a return date of December 22, 2017. Reynolds’s Motion, [ECF No. 283], { 1; Dominion’s Motion, [ECF No. 305], at 4. According to Reynolds, the purpose of the subpoena was to obtain information from Dominion related to the testimony of one of Dominion’s employees, Alan Andreu. Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 283], § 2. Mr. Andreu testified on Dominion’s behalf during a preliminary injunction hearing in one of the cases that make up this multi-district litigation, Authenticom, Inc. v. CDK Global, LLC, 2017 WL 3017048 (W.D. Wisc. 2017). Jd. Reynolds contends that Mr. Andreu made statements that implicated Reynolds and its co-Defendant, CDK

Global, LLC (“CDK”), in alleged unlawful conduct that led to price increases in the integration fees charged to Dominion. Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 283], § 2. Reynolds says it is seeking documents that form the basis of Dominion’s testimony in the Authenticom case and documents that Dominion produced to the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”). Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 283], { 2, 3. It says it wants the documents to rebut assertions in this case that Reynolds and CDK engaged in activities that violate the anti-trust laws. Jd. Dominion objected to Reynolds’s subpoena stating that because it “continues to be a direct competitor of Reynolds . ... Dominion needs assurances that the outside attorneys with access to Dominion’s documents are not attorneys that advise defendants on business issues.” Dominion’s Motion [ECF No, 305], at 4; Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 283], § 4. According to Dominion, its counsel and Reynolds’s then-counsel, Perkins Coie, were near agreement on Dominion’s production of documents in response to the subpoena, which was served in the Authenticom case, when that case and others were transferred to the Northern District of Illinois as part of this multi- district litigation in early 2018. Dominion’s Motion [ECF No. 305], at 4. Following the transfer of the case, however, Reynolds changed counsel. /d. Dominion contends that Reynolds’s new counsel rescinded the previous confidentiality accommodations agreed to by Perkins Coie, a fact that Reynolds does not dispute. /d.; Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 283], { 4. Reynolds says that the existing Confidentiality Order addresses satisfactorily all of Dominion’s confidentiality concerns stemming from it and Reynolds being competitors or Dominion being a customer of Reynolds. Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 283], at § 7. Dominion, on the other hand, continues to be concerned that, while the Confidentiality Order prohibits receiving parties (i.e., Reynolds’s outside counsel) from using discovery materials for any purpose outside of the litigation, it is not sufficient to protect Dominion’s interests in this case. Dominion’s position

is rooted in its speculation that once Reynolds’s outside counsel receives Dominion’s confidential information, it will be impossible for counsel not to use that information in a way that would harm Dominion if counsel were to be asked to provide legal advice to Reynolds having anything to do with Dominion outside the context of this litigation. Dominion’s Motion [ECF No. 305], at 6. Specifically, Dominion fears that Reynolds’s outside counsel may use the information it receives to provide business advice or aid their client in competitive decision-making. /d. at 6-9. Reynolds's response is two-fold: first, that none of Reynolds’s outside counsel are involved in competitive decision-making for the company, and second, that the Confidentiality Order has safeguards that prevent Reynolds’s counsel from sharing or using the information it receives from Dominion for any purpose outside the litigation. Reynolds’s Motion [ECF No. 283], {ff 7, 1 1, The parties agree they are at an impasse. Dominion’s Motion [ECF No. 305], at 6; Reynolds’s Motion [ECF 283], at 5. The Court also agrees. Reynolds seeks documents it believes

are relevant to its defense of this case while Dominion refuses to produce those documents without

a stronger confidentiality order and assurances from Reynolds that, once the documents are produced, Reynolds will not use confidential information contained in those documents to do harm to Dominion’s business. II. ANALYSIS The Court will first address Reynolds’s Motion to Compel and then deal with Dominion’s Motion to Modify the Confidentiality Order. For the reasons discussed below, Reynolds’s Motion is granted and Dominion’s Motion is denied. The Court agrees with Reynolds that the existing Confidentiality Order adequately addresses Dominion’s concerns and there is no basis for Dominion’s insistence that the Confidentiality Order be modified.

Reyilds isthe savant here but Dominion’s concerns about disclosure of confidential information extend to both Reynolds and its co-Defendant CDK.

A. Reynolds’s Motion to Compel Non-Party Dominion to Produce Documents Reynolds says it served its subpoena on Dominion to assess Dominion’s testimony in a preliminary injunction hearing in the Authenticom case. According to Reynolds, Dominion testified in that case to the effect that an alleged conspiracy between Defendants Reynolds and CDK caused a price increase in the integration fees charged to Dominion. Dominion raises two concerns about disclosing the information Reynolds has requested. First, Dominion contends that Reynolds is misrepresenting Dominion’s testimony at the preliminary injunction hearing and it states that Dominion never testified about an alleged conspiracy between Reynolds and CDK. Second, Dominion insists that, as a customer and competitor of Reynolds, making the documents Reynolds has requested available to Reynolds would result in an unacceptable risk of harm to Dominion’s business. Neither argument holds water. While the Court recognizes that the parties disagree about the content and context of Dominion’s testimony in the Authenticom case, this disagreement does not change the Court’s conclusion that the documents Reynolds is seeking are relevant and discoverable in this case. The Court is persuaded by the fact that Dominion’s testimony was introduced in a preliminary injunction proceeding in the Authenticom case and the information being sought is directly relevant to the allegations being made against Reynolds in the instant multi-district litigation. Dominion cannot, at this stage, avoid the discovery by disclaiming or minimizing its prior testimony in the Authenticom case or trying to explain it away. There will be time for that following the discovery phase of the case. It cannot now, however, use those arguments to withhold documents that are relevant to the testimony given by one of its employees in the Authenticom case. To do so would

deprive Reynolds of information that is relevant to its defense and is not justified by any burden that may be imposed on Dominion. Reynolds also emphasizes that a Confidentiality Order already has been entered in this case that protects parties and non-parties, such as Dominion.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re: Dealer Management Systems Antitrust Litigation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dealer-management-systems-antitrust-litigation-ilnd-2018.