Krase v. Graco Children Products, Inc.

79 F.3d 346
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1996
DocketNo. 1281, Docket 95-9118
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 F.3d 346 (Krase v. Graco Children Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krase v. Graco Children Products, Inc., 79 F.3d 346 (2d Cir. 1996).

Opinion

MINER, Circuit Judge:

Appellant National Broadcasting Company, Inc. (“NBC”) appeals from orders entered in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Duffy, J.) denying its motion to quash a subpoena for the unbroadeasted portions of certain videotaped television interviews and holding it in contempt. Such unbroadcasted portions are often referred to as “raw footage” or “out-takes.” The subpoena giving rise to this appeal was issued out of the Southern District upon the request of appellee Graco Children’s Products, Inc. (“Graco”) in connection with its defense of a products liability action brought against Graco in the District of Massachusetts by Ruth Marden.

As appears from the caption, there originally were three products liability actions pending against Graco, two in the District of Massachusetts and one in the Southern District of Texas. These actions were based on similar claims that an infant’s cradle manufactured by Graco was defective. In aid of its defense in each case, Graco served upon NBC subpoenas similar to the one at issue here. It withdrew the subpoena relating to the Murphy action prior to the district court decision reviewed on this appeal, and has since withdrawn the subpoena relating to the Krase action.

In denying the motion to quash, the district court rejected claims of privilege asserted by NBC under the New York Shield Law, the New York State Constitution, and the United States Constitution. Relying on the Shield Law, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

“Dateline” is a prime-time news program produced by NBC at its national headquarters in New York City. On May 23, 1995, a Dateline report about infant deaths that occurred in Graco Converta-Cradles was aired. The Converta-Cradle was a swinging cradle for infants in which the infant was rocked from head-to-toe rather than from side-to-side as in traditional cradles. According to the Dateline report, nearly 190,000 Conver-ta-Cradles were sold during the two years that Graco manufactured and distributed the [349]*349product. Almost as soon as the product was placed on the market, the safety of the Con-verta-Cradle was seriously questioned. Fourteen infants were reported to have died in the cradle. After receiving notification from the Consumer Product Safety Commission in 1991, Graco stopped manufacturing the product. Sometime thereafter, Graco instituted a voluntary recall of the Converta-Cradles and notified its customers.

Dateline reported on various products liability lawsuits that had been commenced by parents whose infants had died in the Con-verta-Cradle, including the suit commenced by Ruth Marden for the wrongful death of her infant son, Alexander. Some of the parents and their lawyers were interviewed on videotape, and Dateline used portions of the interviews on the air. Among those interviewed were Ms. Marden and her lawyer, Daniel Leonard. A portion of Ms. Marderis interview, relating to the circumstances surrounding her son’s death, was broadcast on the program, but no portion of Mr. Leonard’s interview was used. Parts of other interviews also were used, including a portion of the interview of Richard Bethea, Graco’s attorney. According to Mr. Bethea, Graco took the position that the infant deaths were caused by Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (“SIDS”) and were in no way related to any defect in the Converta-Cradle. However, in the Dateline report, reference was made to Graeo’s records of internal meetings in which there were discussions of the risk of suffocation caused by the head-to-toe swinging motion of the Converta-Cradle. The Dateline report concluded with an admonition to “keep an eye out for cradles that may have slipped by the 1992 recall.”

Approximately three months after the Dateline broadcast, Graco served a subpoena on NBC relating to the action brought in the District of Massachusetts by Marden against Graco. The subpoena required that NBC provide deposition testimony and produce the following items:

1.Any outtakes or raw footage (audio and/or video) of interviews with Andrew John Marden and/or Ruth Mar-den and/or their attorney, Daniel Patrick Leonard, concerning the following:
(a) The purpose, frequency and method of the Mardens’ customary usage of the Graco Converta-Cradle which is the subject of this suit;
(b) Alexander Marderis physical condition, activities and usage of the Con-verta-Cradle on November 10, 1991;
(c) All of the facts, circumstances and events of November 10, 1991 involving Alexander Marden, the Marden children, Andrew John Marden and Ruth Marden; and
(d) The position in which Mrs. Marden found her child in Graco’s Converta-Cradle product on the evening of November 10, 1991, or her recollections thereof.
2. Any notes of interviews with the Mar-dens or their attorney, Daniel Patrick Leonard, concerning the areas of inquiry set forth in Paragraph 1 above.
3.' Any outtakes or raw footage (audio and/or video) containing any and all information concerning the areas of inquiry set forth in Paragraph 1 above.
4. Any notes containing any and all information concerning the areas of inquiry set forth in Paragraph 1 above.

Shortly after the subpoena was served,NBC filed its motion to quash, contending that the material sought was protected by the qualified journalist’s privilege for non-confidential newsgathering material established by the New York Shield Law, the New York State Constitution and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. NBC argued, inter alia, that Graco had not shown that the material was critical or necessary to Graco’s defense of the underlying lawsuit, as required by the Shield Law. It also contended that there was no basis whatsoever for obtaining the out-takes of the interview with Marderis attorney, because the attorney was not a party, his statements were not evidence of the facts in dispute, and he had not been deposed. NBC noted that Marden herself was a source of information about her child’s physical condition, his position in the Converta-Cradle and her use of the product. Indeed, Graco had deposed Ms. [350]*350Marden in regard to these matters after the Dateline broadcast.

In opposition to the motion to quash, Graco argued that the out-takes were necessary to its defense because they might reveal statements that could be used to impeach trial testimony on such matters as the infant’s position in the cradle, its physical condition prior to death and the use of the cradle. According to Graco, the out-take material was essential to its SIDS defense. Graco also advanced the argument that the outtakes were necessary because the interview portions broadcast were themselves inconsistent with the deposition testimony, apparently contending that the out-takes would demonstrate further inconsistencies. Also, Graco claimed that Ms. Marden admitted at her deposition, given two months after the broadcast of her Dateline interview, that she was unable to reconstruct the interview. In sum, Graco asserted that the out-takes were necessary to its defense because there were inconsistencies between the broadcast statements and the later deposition testimony of Ms.

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