In Re Prohibition Against Disclosing ENE Communications to Settlement Judges

494 F. Supp. 2d 1097, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40571, 2007 WL 1514643
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMay 21, 2007
DocketC 07-80133 WDB MISC
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 494 F. Supp. 2d 1097 (In Re Prohibition Against Disclosing ENE Communications to Settlement Judges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Prohibition Against Disclosing ENE Communications to Settlement Judges, 494 F. Supp. 2d 1097, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40571, 2007 WL 1514643 (N.D. Cal. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION RE WHETHER ADR LOCAL RULES PERMIT A PARTY TO DISCLOSE TO A SETTLEMENT JUDGE AN ASSESSMENT BY AN ENE EVALUATOR

BRAZIL, United States Magistrate Judge.

I.

Introduction

A party to a civil case has delivered to the undersigned a letter of complaint alleging that opposing counsel violated the ADR Local Rules by disclosing to a settlement conference magistrate judge the assessment of the case that had been formed earlier in the pretrial period by an evaluator during an Early Neutral Evaluation conducted under this Court’s ADR program. The undersigned has issued a separate ORDER (disclosed only to the parties) that sets forth the disposition of the letter of complaint. The purpose of this OPINION is to apprise the public of how the undersigned interprets the pertinent provisions of the ADR Local Rules. 1

*1098 It is important to emphasize, at the outset, that the lawyer who disclosed the evaluator’s assessment of the case did not first seek permission to do so from opposing counsel and from the evaluator. Had such permission been sought and given, no violation of the ADR Local Rules would have occurred. 2 Thus, the pertinent Rules create an opportunity for the participants in an ENE session to share the product of the evaluator’s efforts with their settlement judge if all the parties jointly conclude that it would be appropriate and helpful to do so. In other words, the Rules provide an avenue for capitalizing on contributions made by the evaluator, or for making subsequent use of any communications made during an ENE, if all participants agree on such a course.

It is against this backdrop that the issue we address in this opinion takes clear shape: in the absence of a stipulation by all parties and the evaluator, do the ADR Local Rules prohibit a party from disclosing to a settlement judge any communication made in connection with an ENE session and any view expressed by an evaluator? For the reasons set forth in the pages that follow, the answer is “yes.”

The letter of complaint that sought intervention by the ADR Magistrate Judge in this matter alleged that defense counsel committed two violations of the ADR Local Rules. The first consisted of describing the evaluator’s assessment of the merits of the case in the body of the “Settlement Conference Statement” that was submitted to the magistrate judge who had been assigned to host the settlement conference. The second alleged violation consisted of attaching the evaluator’s written evaluation as an exhibit to that Statement — -thus making the evaluation itself available for the settlement judge to read.

The body of the defendant’s Settlement Conference Statement includes these two sentences:

Plaintiff obtained an order from the court referring this matter to Early Neutral Evaluation. The evaluator, in a rather detailed opinion, was clearly unimpressed with the plaintiffs factual or legal claims, concluding that the [defendant] is “significantly more likely than not” to prevail on all of plaintiffs claims.

Defense counsel then attached as an exhibit to his Settlement Conference Statement a copy of the evaluator’s written evaluation — a closely reasoned discussion of relevant law and evidence that filled seven single-spaced typed pages.

Before beginning the substantive discussion of the issues before the court in these ADR proceedings, I feel constrained to take a moment to praise and thank the evaluator who so obviously devoted such conscientious effort to this assignment. The evaluation that he presented in writing to the parties is an extremely impres *1099 sive document — reflecting a systematic, detailed consideration of what the evaluator understood the relevant law and evidence to be. Without implying anything about the ultimate accuracy of the views the evaluator developed, 3 the Court takes this opportunity to publicly acknowledge the significant amount of work and the considerable care that are reflected in this lengthy written evaluation. It is powerful evidence about how much our evaluators give of themselves in this program and how valuable to litigants their efforts can be.

As I hope subsequent sections of this opinion make clear, there is, ironically, a direct correlation between the character and quality of an evaluator’s written evaluation and the level of risk that would be entailed if that opinion were disclosed to a settlement judge.

II.

The Meaning of the Two Relevant Rules

The parties point to two separate provisions in the ADR Local Rules that are relevant to the pending dispute. The first and most obviously relevant provision is ADR Local Rule 5-12, which addresses squarely the subject of “Confidentiality” in ENE proceedings. This Local Rule begins by setting forth, in its first major subsection, a generally applicable prohibition; then, in the second major subsection, the Rule identifies a few specific exceptions to that general prohibition.

The general prohibition states, in pertinent part, that “this court” and every person involved in the ENE process must “treat as ‘confidential information’ the contents of the written ENE Statements, anything that happened or was said, any position taken, and any view of the merits of the case formed by any participant in connection with any ENE session.” The Rule proceeds to prohibit disclosure of “confidential information” to “anyone not involved in the litigation” or to “the assigned judge.” (emphasis added). In addition, the Rule declares that “confidential information” may not be “used for any purpose, including impeachment, in any pending or future proceeding in this court. ” (emphasis added).

The second of the two major subsections of ADR Local Rule 5-12 sets forth five specific exceptions to the general prohibition that is announced in the first subsection. None of these exceptions purports to permit a party to disclose any “confidential information” from an ENE session to a settlement judge.

In framing these provisions of ADR Local Rule 5-12 it was the Court’s intention to impose a broad prohibition on disclosing ENE communications and then to identify, in the second subsection, the only exceptions to that broad prohibition. This intention is made clear in the first few words of subsection (a), which declare that “Except as provided in subdivision (b) of this local rule [everyone must treat ENE communications as confidential information].” Thus, if the general prohibition applies, disclosure of an ENE communication is permitted only in the five circumstances specified in the “exceptions subsection”— and in no others.

ADR Local Rule 7-5 is the second provision in the ADR Local Rules that arguably has some bearing on the matters in issue here. That Local Rule addresses “Settlement Conference Confidentiality.” Its structure parallels the structure of the local rule that addresses the confidentiality *1100

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494 F. Supp. 2d 1097, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40571, 2007 WL 1514643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-prohibition-against-disclosing-ene-communications-to-settlement-cand-2007.