National Rifle Association of America v. Ackerman McQueen Inc

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 14, 2020
Docket3:19-cv-02074
StatusUnknown

This text of National Rifle Association of America v. Ackerman McQueen Inc (National Rifle Association of America v. Ackerman McQueen Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Rifle Association of America v. Ackerman McQueen Inc, (N.D. Tex. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION

NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION OF ) AMERICA, ) ) Plaintiff and Counter-Defendant, ) ) and ) ) WAYNE LAPIERRE, ) ) Third-Party Defendant, ) CIVIL ACTION NO. ) VS. ) 3:19-CV-2074-G ) ACKERMAN MCQUEEN, INC., ) ) Defendant and Counter-Plaintiff, ) ) and ) ) MERCURY GROUP, INC., ET AL., ) ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the court is the motion to disqualify the law firm of Dorsey & Whitney LLP (“Dorsey”) as counsel for the defendants, filed by the plaintiff the National Rifle Association of America (“NRA”) (docket entry 106), and the Plaintiff National Rifle Association of America’s Memorandum of Law in Support of Plaintiff’s Motion to Disqualify the Law Firm of Dorsey & Whitney LLP as Counsel for Defendants and for Other Appropriate Sanctions and Relief (“Motion”) (docket entry 107). For the reasons set forth herein, the motion is denied.

I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background On August 30, 2019, the NRA filed this suit against its former advertising agency Ackerman McQueen, Inc. (“AMc”), Mercury Group, Inc. (a wholly owned affiliate of AMc), and four individual defendants (collectively “defendants”), alleging

claims of false association under the Lanham Act, copyright infringement, and fraud, among others.1 See Plaintiff’s First Amended Complaint (docket entry 18). Dorsey represents all of the defendants in this case, and the NRA is represented by the law firm of Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors (“BAC”). The NRA filed the instant motion

to disqualify Dorsey on April 16, 2020. See Docket Entry 106. The NRA’s motion stems from Dorsey’s possession and litigation use of an allegedly privileged and confidential PowerPoint presentation. The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted.

On January 4 and 5 of 2019, the NRA held two days of meetings at the Regency Ballroom of the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Tysons Corner, Virginia. Motion at 4, 7 n.25. On January 4, 2019, BAC’s managing director of public affairs, Travis

1 A full recitation of the facts is provided in the court’s memorandum opinion and order entered today resolving the defendants’ motion to dismiss. - 2 - Carter (“Carter”), delivered a presentation before the NRA’s Public Affairs Committee. Id. at 7 n.25. Carter used a PowerPoint during his presentation; the

court refers to Carter’s January 4, 2019 presentation as “the public affairs presentation” and refers to the PowerPoint used during the public affairs presentation as “the public affairs PowerPoint.” See Sealed Exhibits in Support of Defendants’ Motion to Disqualify Plaintiff’s Counsel, Exhibit A-65 (“The Public Affairs PowerPoint”) (docket entry 112) at APP. 1130-62.

Present during the January 4, 2019 public affairs presentation were members of the NRA’s Public Affairs Committee, as well as various AMc representatives who attended in their capacity as the NRA’s “long-time advertising, branding, networks and communications advisor[s].” Appendix in Support of Plaintiff National Rifle

Association of America’s Memorandum of Law in Support of Plaintiff’s and Third-Party Defendant’s Motion to Disqualify the Law Firm of Dorsey & Whitney LLP as Counsel for Defendants and for Other Appropriate Sanctions and Relief (“Plaintiff’s Appendix”) (docket entry 108) at APP. 019.

On January 5, 2019, the day after Carter delivered the public affairs presentation, attorney William Brewer (“Brewer”) of BAC delivered a different presentation at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Tysons Corner, which the court refers to as “the executive briefing.” See Motion at 4. Like Carter, Brewer used a PowerPoint

- 3 - during his presentation; the court refers to this PowerPoint as “Exhibit B-9.” See id.; Docket Entry 109, Exhibit B-9 (“Exhibit B-9”).

Present during the January 5, 2019 executive briefing were members of the NRA’s outside counsel, NRA board members, Motion at 5, NRA senior staff members, and “a very select number of other invited guests.” Plaintiff’s Appendix, Exhibit 4 (“Carter Declaration”) at APP. 097. No AMc representatives were present during the executive briefing.

The public affairs PowerPoint and Exhibit B-9 are highly similar. Though the former is comprised of 33 slides and the latter is comprised of only 19, the slides contained in Exhibit B-9 are largely duplicative of the slides contained in the public affairs PowerPoint. Compare The Public Affairs PowerPoint, with, Exhibit B-9. The

majority of the language and imagery used in Exhibit B-9 is identical to language and imagery used in the public affairs PowerPoint. Each slide of both PowerPoints also bears the legend “ATTORNEY WORK PRODUCT PRIVILEGED & CONFIDENTIAL.” Despite the fact that both PowerPoints bear this legend, the

NRA concedes that the January 4, 2019 public affairs presentation is “non- privileged,” but contends that Exhibit B-9 is protected by the attorney-client privilege. See Motion at 7; id. at n.25. An AMc employee named John Popp (“Popp) was onsite at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Tysons Corner on January 4 and 5, 2019 to assist the NRA with the NRA’s

- 4 - audio/visual presentations. See Defendants’ Response to Plaintiff’s Motion to Disqualify the Law Firm Dorsey & Whitney LLP as Counsel for Defendants and for

Other Appropriate Sanctions and Relief (“Response”) (docket entry 127) at 2-3. On January 4, 2019, Carter handed Popp a thumb drive containing the public affairs PowerPoint and directed Popp to load the presentation onto AMc’s laptop. “Popp copied the presentation to AMc’s laptop to ensure functionality, returned the thumb drive to Carter, sent the presentation to [Popp’s] supervisor ([Nader] Tavangar), and

deleted the presentation from the laptop after the meeting ended. Popp followed the same protocol for Exhibit B-9 on January 5, 2019.” Response at 3; see also Motion at 4. On January 7, 2020, more than three months after this lawsuit was filed,

Tavangar (an executive vice president at AMc) sent a pdf copy of Exhibit B-9 to Dorsey. Response at 6. Tavangar maintains that at the time that he provided Exhibit B-9 to Dorsey, Tavangar mistakenly believed that Exhibit B-9 was the PowerPoint that accompanied the January 4, 2019 public affairs presentation, not

the January 5, 2019 executive briefing. Id. Tavangar expressed this mistaken belief to Dorsey attorneys on January 7 and 8, 2020. Docket Entry 136, Exhibit D (“Tavangar Declaration”) at APP. 028. Tavangar further asserts that the pdf copy of Exhibit B-9 that Tavangar sent to Dorsey did not contain any presentation notes. Id. at APP. 027. Tavangar also maintains that he has neither seen nor reviewed any

- 5 - presentation notes that may be associated with Exhibit B-9.2 Id. Additionally, Dorsey attorney Michael Gruber (“Gruber”) attests that he has never seen nor

reviewed any presentation notes associated with Exhibit B-9, and that to Gruber’s knowledge, no one at Dorsey has seen or reviewed such notes. Docket Entry 136, Exhibit B (“Gruber Declaration”) at APP. 018. On February 12, 2020, Dorsey filed Exhibit B-9 under seal in this case in connection with the defendants’ response to the NRA’s motion to compel. See

Docket Entry 52. On February 18, 2020, BAC sent a letter to Dorsey in which BAC asserted that Exhibit B-9 is privileged and demanded that Dorsey withdraw Exhibit B-9. See Plaintiff National Rifle Association’s Reply in Support of Its Motion to Disqualify the Law Firm Dorsey & Whitney LLP as Counsel for Defendants

(“Reply”) (docket entry 151) at 2. On March 2, 2020, Dorsey responded to BAC’s letter, asserting (mistakenly) that Exhibit B-9 was the PowerPoint that was presented during the January 4, 2019 public affairs meeting, and was therefore not subject to the attorney-client privilege. Id. at 3; Plaintiff’s Appendix at APP. 109. On March 3,

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