IN RE TURKEY ANTITRUST LITIGATION

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 16, 2022
Docket1:19-cv-08318
StatusUnknown

This text of IN RE TURKEY ANTITRUST LITIGATION (IN RE TURKEY 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 TURKEY ANTITRUST LITIGATION, (N.D. Ill. 2022).

Opinion

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

IN RE TURKEY ANTITRUST LITIGATION

JOHN GROSS AND COMPANY, INC., Case No. 19 C 8318 et al., District Judge: Virginia M. Kendall Plaintiffs, Magistrate Judge: Gabriel A. Fuentes v.

AGRI STATS, INC., et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court are two motions to quash third-party subpoenas for investigative materials generated at the direction of Plaintiffs’ counsel, and a cross-motion by Defendants to compel compliance with those subpoenas. These three motions are now docketed before this Court. (D.E. 275.)1 Together, the motions raise the question of whether the work-product doctrine, or other limits on civil discovery, applies to protect investigative work that one of Plaintiffs’ counsel, the Hagens Berman firm, conducted through the third-party retained investigators shortly before the

1 This matter is before the magistrate judge on referral for discovery supervision. (D.E. 267, 268.) The two Rule 45 subpoenas in question contain identical document requests and are directed at Maine-based On Point Investigations, LLC (“On Point”) and Seattle-based Lael Henterly (“Henterly”), who is On Point’s lead investigator. See Defendants’ Opposition to the Motions to Quash Investigator Subpoenas and Cross- Motion to Compel Pre-Client Investigative Materials (“Opp.”; D.E. 275), Exh. 1 (D.E. 275-1). Plaintiffs’ counsel at Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP (“Hagens Berman”) and Lockridge Grindal Nauen PLLP (“Lockridge Grindal”) are representing On Point and Henterly, and are co-movants with On Point and Henterly on the motions to quash the subpoenas, which were served on May 21, 2021. Hagens Berman, Lockridge Grindal, On Point and Henterly (the “Movants”) filed the motion to quash in the District of Maine and the Western District of Washington in June 2021, and by agreement, the matters were ordered transferred to the Northern District of Illinois for decision. (No. 21 C 3551, D.E. 1, Exh. 1, and D.E. 9; No. 21 C 3763, D.E. 1, 4, 8). Defendants cross-moved to compel compliance with the subpoenas. Opp. at 2. The motions, which include all motions to quash the subpoenas on On Point and Henterly, and Defendants’ cross-motion to compel, also are before the magistrate judge by operation of the consolidation of the miscellaneous actions (Nos. 21 C 3551 and 21 C 3763) with No. 19 C 8318. filing of this action and apparently before a named plaintiff engaged Hagens Berman to file the lawsuit. Resolving the motions requires the Court to look at the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as a whole, Rule 26(b)(3) governing work-product protection in particular, the origin and evolution of work-product protection in the federal courts, and the nature of the materials sought by the

subpoenas. To understand better the information the Movants are seeking to protect as attorney work product, the Court obtained from the Movants a sample of the materials responsive to the subpoenas for in camera review. (D.E. 441.) BACKGROUND This consolidated action is a civil antitrust lawsuit by two sets of plaintiffs seeking to represent classes of purchasers of turkeys and turkey products in the United States. Plaintiffs John Gross and Co., Inc. (“John Gross”), and Maplevale Farms, Inc. (“Maplevale”) (collectively “Plaintiffs”) alleged in the Second Amended Complaint that they purchased turkey directly from one or more of the multiple defendant turkey producers (or “integrators,” as they are called). Second Amended Complaint (D.E. 387) ⁋⁋ 54-55.2 Plaintiffs seek to represent a class of Direct

Purchaser Plaintiffs (“DPPs”) who allege that the turkey integrator defendants, who are breeders, processors, and sellers of turkeys and turkey products, artificially inflated turkey prices through anti-competitive exchanges of information in reports created by another Defendant, Agri Stats, Inc. (“Agri Stats”). The turkey integrator Defendants are Butterball LLC (“Butterball”), Cargill Meat Solutions Corporation and Cargill, Inc. (“Cargill”), Cooper Farms, Inc. (“Cooper Farms”), Farbest Foods, Inc., Foster Farms, LLC, Foster Poultry Farms, Hormel Foods Corporation, House of Raeford Farms, Inc., Perdue Farms, Inc., Perdue Foods LLC, The Hillshire Brands Company,

2 This matter (No. 19 C 8318) also is consolidated with separate DPP actions against the same defendants by plaintiffs Winn Dixie Stores, Inc. and Bi-Lo Holding, LLC (No. 21 C 4131), and by Amory Investments, LLC (No. 21 C 6600). Tyson Foods, Inc., Tyson Fresh Meats, Inc., Tyson Prepared Foods, Inc., Jennie-O Turkey Store, Inc., Prestage Farms, Inc., Prestage Foods, Inc., Prestage Farms of South Carolina, LLC (collectively, with Agri Stats, “Defendants”).3 Plaintiff Sandee’s Bakery is one of nine entities (the Indirect Purchaser Plaintiffs, or “IPPs”) alleging that their antitrust injuries stemmed from

their indirect purchases of turkey or turkey products from the same turkey integrator Defendants, whom the IPPs have named along with Agri Stats as having artificially inflated turkey product pricing through the same alleged information exchanges. Third Amended Complaint (D.E. 417). The motions to quash the On Point and Henterly subpoenas, and Defendants’ cross-motion to compel compliance with them, arise from the DPP action brought by Plaintiffs including John Gross, insofar as Defendants are seeking production of investigative files created after Hagens Berman retained On Point (which engaged Henterly) in November 2019, shortly before the filing of the DPP action in which John Gross was one of the initial class representatives. Defendants assert that if the On Point/Henterly investigation occurred before John Gross formally became a client of Hagens Berman, no work-product protection exists under Rule 26(b)(3) for the related

investigative documents, because in the words of Defendants, Hagens Berman was then “clientless,” the materials concern a mere “pre-client” investigation, and the context in which On Point and Henterly did the investigative work was simply Hagens Berman’s “business development” activity. Opp. at 1. Defendants maintain that under these circumstances, the investigative materials could not have been prepared “by or for” a “party” or its representative, as Defendants maintain is required to trigger work-product protection under Rule 26(b)(3), which they read as requiring that the

3 The district court granted the DPPs’ motion for final approval of settlement with Tyson on February 3, 2022. (D.E. 406.) The three Prestage defendants were added to the DPP and IPP cases in the DPPs’ Second Amended Complaint and the IPPs’ Third Amended Complaint, filed on January 11, 2022. (D.E. 380, 378.) “party” for whom the materials are being prepared must be a party to the litigation. Id. at 5-14. If there was no attorney-client relationship between Hagens Berman and any of the named Plaintiffs at the time of the On Point/Henterly investigative work, Defendants assert, the work cannot have been performed by or for a party to the litigation and thus falls outside a literal reading of Rule

26(b)(3)’s protections for work product. Id. That is, Defendants are arguing that the Court should read Rule 26(b)(3) literally to determine that the work-product doctrine does not shield the On Point/Henterly investigative materials from discovery and are implying, at least, that Rule 26(b)(3) is the discovery rules’ sole source of protection against Defendants’ requested investigative discovery.

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IN RE TURKEY ANTITRUST LITIGATION, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-turkey-antitrust-litigation-ilnd-2022.