Long v. American Red Cross

145 F.R.D. 658, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2243, 1993 WL 52814
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 26, 1993
DocketNo. C2-92-566
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 145 F.R.D. 658 (Long v. American Red Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. American Red Cross, 145 F.R.D. 658, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2243, 1993 WL 52814 (S.D. Ohio 1993).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

KEMP, United States Magistrate Judge.

This is a personal injury action involving the collection and transfusion of HIV-positive blood. According to the complaint, blood containing the AIDS virus was donated to the American Red Cross and, in September, 1984, transfused into plaintiff Judy L. Long. She died on December 21, 1992. Her husband, Gary Long, is also a plaintiff in this action. The -matter is currently before the Court to determine whether the Red Cross can be compelled to identify the donor of the blood at issue so that the plaintiffs can find out more about him.

Recently, the Red Cross advised the Court that the donor is now deceased. The basic issue to be decided is whether the plaintiffs’ need for information which is inaccessible to them unless they learn the identity of the donor outweighs the Red Cross’ interest in preserving the adequacy and safety of the nation’s blood supply, and the privacy interest of the donor or his family in keeping that information completely confidential. For the reasons that follow, the plaintiffs’ motion to compel discovery will be conditionally granted.

I.

Before beginning the discussion and analysis of this concededly difficult discovery issue, it may be helpful to explain why the particular analytical framework contained in this opinion has been selected. Despite the fact that the parties advance public policy arguments dealing with the discovery needs of injured parties, the pri[660]*660vacy rights of blood donors, and the Red Cross’ desire to maintain an adequate and safe supply of volunteer-donated blood, what the parties have requested, and are entitled to, is a judicial decision.

It cannot be questioned that judicial decisions may be influenced legitimately by matters of public policy. It is also the case, however, that judicial decision-making differs from legislative or executive decision-making in at least one important respect: judges decide individual cases, or rule on motions presented within the framework of those cases. Each case, and each motion, has a unique set of facts which forms the basis for the judicial decision. Further, the level of proof required to establish a proposition as factual for purposes of a judicial decision is very different from the level which is required for purposes of making a legislative judgment. If judges stray too far from these basic propositions, and base their decisions on sweeping generalizations about public policy and on thinly-supported factual assertions, judges tend to become legislators. However, judicial decisions of this type are neither made in response to the will of the electors, nor subject to the type of debate and compromise which typically accompanies legislative pronouncements. It is important, therefore, to emphasize that the decision reached in this opinion is not an attempt to settle, or even to address, the larger question of whether, as a matter of policy, the right of a recipient of tainted blood to learn as much as possible about what happened when that blood was collected should always (or never) be given priority over the interests of either the collecting organization or the donor in keeping a part of that process confidential. Rather, “[i]n these tragic cases there is no hard and fast rule on when access to a donor should be allowed. These cases are extremely fact-sensitive, and the courts must decide each case by balancing the interests of the plaintiff, the donor, and society.” Snyder v. Mekhjian, 125 N.J. 328, 593 A.2d 318, 334 (1991) (Garibaldi, J., dissenting). The within decision, therefore, represents the Court’s best attempt to arrive at an appropriate balancing of these interests on the specific facts of this case.

Because of the need to focus upon the specific facts of this case, and because the facts which relate to each of the three distinct sets of interests involved are conceptually distinct, the opinion will be divided into a discussion of the facts and law that relate to (1) the plaintiffs' interest; (2) the privacy interest being asserted on behalf of the donor and the donor’s survivors; and (3) the interests of the Red Cross in providing a safe and adequate blood supply through the use of volunteer donors. While it might appear, at first blush, that some of these interests are not particularly fact-specific, a review of other decisions reveals that, even as to issues involving the safety and adequacy of the nation’s blood supply, the factual record in this case may differ significantly from the factual record (or lack of a factual record) in other cases. Consequently, the Court will now conduct a separate analysis of each of these three interests.

A. The Plaintiffs’ Interests.

On a general level, the interest of an injured plaintiff in discovering information which is relevant, as that term is defined in Fed.R.Civ.P. 26, to any cognizable legal theory on which recovery for his or her injuries may be had is an interest which has long been recognized by the judicial system and which may well be implicit in the Constitution. Certainly, under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, there is a presumption that any party to a lawsuit, in furtherance of either a claim or a defense, may obtain discovery of any information which has some identifiable relationship with the merits of that claim or defense. At least one court has suggested that this is part of the general right of access to the courts, which is a right of constitutional dimension. See Doe v. Puget Sound Blood Center, 117 Wash.2d 772, 819 P.2d 370 (1991).

Even cases which have denied the type of discovery being sought here have described the plaintiff’s interest in pursuing discovery as an “important” interest. See Doe v. [661]*661American Red Cross Blood Services, 125 F.R.D. 646, 654 (D.S.C.1989). These general propositions, however, do little to advance the analysis in any individual case beyond identifying the long-standing recognition of the right to request and to pursue relevant information during the course of discovery. Since defining the dimensions of that entitlement in a particular case requires balancing the interests of those seeking discovery and those opposing it, it is important to determine in this case exactly how important the requested information is. That depends, in turn, on the theories which plaintiffs have advanced in this case, and the type of information to which these plaintiffs have already been given access.

First, the Red Cross has apparently conceded that Judy Long contracted AIDS from a blood transfusion, and that the transfused blood was supplied by the Red Cross. Thus, the plaintiffs do not have to show who the donor was in order to show that his blood, collected and supplied by the Red Cross, was the source of her infection. However, plaintiffs contend that their need for the information is not simply to demonstrate that the tainted blood came from the Red Cross, but to demonstrate that, but for the negligence of the Red Cross, that blood would never have been supplied to the hospital where Judy Long received her transfusion.

Plaintiffs’ negligence claim is based on two distinct theories.

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Bluebook (online)
145 F.R.D. 658, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2243, 1993 WL 52814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-american-red-cross-ohsd-1993.