Mesabi Metallics Company LLC v. Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc.

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedMay 23, 2022
Docket17-51210
StatusUnknown

This text of Mesabi Metallics Company LLC v. Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc. (Mesabi Metallics Company LLC v. Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mesabi Metallics Company LLC v. Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc., (Del. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT DISTRICT OF DELAWARE CRAIG T. GOLDBLATT pp, 824 N. MARKET STREET JUDGE 4 WILMINGTON, DELAWARE CA fy. (302) 252-3832 “eh

May 23, 2022 VIA CM/ECF Re: Mesabi Metallics Company v. Cleveland-Cliffs, Adv. Proc. No. 17-51210 Dear Counsel: This letter is to follow up on the May 20, 2022 hearing in the above-captioned adversary proceeding. Plaintiff Mesabi Metallics served a Rule 45 subpoena on nonparty U.S. Steel, seeking documents that it contends are relevant to the antitrust and business tort claims it is asserting against defendant Cleveland-Cliffs. The May 20, 2022 hearing was on U.S. Steel’s motion for a protective order and Mesabi’s motion to compel compliance with its subpoena. In a letter dated May 18, 2022, the Court set out its preliminary views based on its review of the parties’ pleadings and the text of Rule 45. Rule 45(d)(2)(B) states that a party on whom a subpoena is served may object. It then provides, in the language that is most critical to the present dispute, that: If an objection is made, the following rules apply: (i) At any time, on notice to the commanded person, the serving party may move the court for the district where compliance is required for an order compelling production or inspection. (ii) These acts may be required only as directed in the order, and the order must protect a person who is neither a party nor a party’s officer from significant expense resulting from compliance.1

1 Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(b)(2)(B), as made applicable to this adversary proceeding by Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9016.

In the Court’s May 18, 2022 letter, the Court expressed its preliminary view that in light of this language, and the Third Circuit’s decision in R.J. Reynolds Tobacco v. Philip Morris, Inc.,2 cost-shifting appeared to be mandatory so long as the cost of complying with the su1F bpoena would be “significant.” And in view of the declarations provided by U.S. Steel about the costs it had already incurred, the Court expressed its view that the cost of compliance (which had already reached more than $140,000) was indeed significant. The parties’ argument at the May 20, 2022 hearing, while extremely helpful, did not alter the Court’s views on this point. While Mesabi correctly pointed out (as it did in its briefs) that there is case law holding that a court may consider the relative size of the parties in assessing what degree of expense is “significant,”3 this Court is persuaded that, even for a large company like U.S. Steel, the cost of co2F mplying with the subpoena is significant. The Court accordingly concludes that in the circumstances presented here, cost-shifting is mandatory. Relatedly, Mesabi also correctly points out that there are cases, following a suggestion in Moore’s Federal Practice, stating that to “determine whether a nonparty should be required to bear all or some of the expense of compliance with a subpoena, the courts consider three factors: (1) whether the nonparty has an actual interest in the outcome of the case; (2) whether the nonparty can more readily bear the costs than can the requesting party; and (3) whether the litigation is of public importance.”4 The passage of Moore’s Federal Practice on which these cases rely, however, is cu3F rious, in that it follows a sentence stating that some courts “have held,” as the Third Circuit has in R.J. Reynolds, “that Rule 45(d)(2)(B)(ii) requires a district court to shift the cost of compliance with a subpoena if those costs are significant.”5 4F The Moore’s treatise offers no explanation how one might square a mandatory requirement to shift costs with a three-factor balancing test. In light of the mandatory language of Rule 45 (“the order must protect a [nonparty] from significant expense”), however, it would perhaps be more appropriate to suggest that the significance of the costs at issue may be considered in light of the three factors the treatise identifies than to imply that the nonparty should be required to bear a significant expense if it has an “interest” in the case, has greater means than the party that issued the subpoena, or if the case is one of public importance. While it is true that the latter reading, which is the one Mesabi urges, has support in some of

2 29 Fed. Appx 880 (3d Cir. 2002). 3 See, e.g., Sandoz Inc. v. United Therapeutics Corp., No. 19-10170, 2021 WL 1259667 (D.N.J. April 6, 2021); Mallinckrodt LLC v. Actavis Labs FL, Inc., No. 2:15-3800 (KSH)(CLW), 2017 WL 5476801 (D.N.J. Feb. 10, 2017). 4 See, e.g., Maximum Human Performance, LLC v. Sigma-Tau HealthScience, LLC, No. 12-6526, 2013 WL 4537790 (D.N.J. Aug. 27, 2013) at * 4 (citing 9 Moore’s Federal Practice § 45.41[3]; In re Subpoenas to Folliard, No. 10-789, 2012 WL 907763 at * 2-3 (D.D.C Mar. 16, 2012). 5 Moore’s Federal Practice § 45.41[3] (emphasis in original). the case law, neither Mesabi nor the cases on which it relies confronts the fact that this principle is directly contrary to both the language of Rule 45(b)(2)(B)(ii) and the Third Circuit’s statement in R.J. Reynolds that the rules “impose[] mandatory fee shifting” and require that “[s]ignificant expenses must be borne by the party seeking discovery.”6 Thus reading the three-factor test merely as a tool to help assess whether an5F y given expense is “significant,” the Court is persuaded that the costs of complying with Mesabi’s subpoena are “significant” even when those costs are viewed in light of the three considerations Moore’s identifies. The principal issue that seems to divide the parties, however, is whether the costs that are shifted should include the attorneys’ fees associated with attorney review of the documents that are identified in response to a key-word search, to see if those documents are (a) responsive to the requests set out in the subpoena; (b) subject to a claim of privilege; or (c) otherwise contain sensitive business information such that other protections might be appropriate. Mesabi correctly points out that there are a number of cases stating that conducting such a review is for the benefit of the party subject to the subpoena, and that the party that issues the subpoena should therefore not be required to bear that cost. The Eastern District of Pennsylvania, for example, stated in Steward Health Care System that the fees at issue there were incurred “as a result of [the third party’s] own desire to check for privileged and confidential documents. These types of attorneys’ fees are not subject to reimbursement under Rule 45.” 7 Similarly, the Middle District of Pennsylvania found in Lefta Associates v. Hurley th6Fat fees were not subject to cost-shifting under Rule 45 when the fees “appear largely related to efforts by the bank to protect its own interests in connection with its compliance with the subpoena, by independently reviewing these documents itself to determine claims of privilege it might assert.”8 7F Other cases, however, have provided for the reimbursement of legal fees and costs associated with document review and production. For example, the Southern District of Ohio held in Georgia-Pacific LLC v. American Intern. Specialty Lines Ins. Co. that a nonparty was entitled to recover the reasonable costs associated with having its “attorneys … review some ten bankers’ boxes of documents, as well as electronically stored information” in light of the concerns that the materials included privileged communications and to prevent “the disclosure of any confidential medical

6 29 Fed. Appx at 882-883. 7 Steward Health Care System LLC v. Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island, No. 15-572, 2016 WL 8716426 at *4 (E.D. Pa. Nov. 4, 2016). 8 Lefta Assocs. v. Hurley, No. 1:09-CV-2487, 2011 WL 1793265 at *4 (M.D. Pa. May 11, 2011).

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Mesabi Metallics Company LLC v. Cleveland-Cliffs, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mesabi-metallics-company-llc-v-cleveland-cliffs-inc-deb-2022.