Reuters Ltd. v. Dow Jones Telerate, Inc.

231 A.D.2d 337, 662 N.Y.S.2d 450, 1997 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8503
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 4, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 231 A.D.2d 337 (Reuters Ltd. v. Dow Jones Telerate, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reuters Ltd. v. Dow Jones Telerate, Inc., 231 A.D.2d 337, 662 N.Y.S.2d 450, 1997 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8503 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Ellerin, J. P.

At issue on this appeal is the permissible scope of a subpoena duces tecum issued by arbitrators to a nonparty to the arbitration.

[339]*339Petitioners Reuters Limited and Reuters, S.A. (collectively Reuters) and respondent Dow Jones Telerate, Inc. (Dow) are the two largest distributors, by electronic means, of "real time” financial news to financial market professionals, and are ardent competitors. The underlying arbitration giving rise to this special proceeding involves a contract dispute between Reuters and Cantor Fitzgerald, L.P. and Market Data Corporation (collectively Cantor). Cantor is a major inter-dealer/broker of financial securities, including United States Treasury, international and domestic municipal securities, and has been providing its brokered prices of United States Treasury securities to Dow for 30 years.

In 1993, Cantor entered into an agreement with Reuters to provide it with brokered prices of international government bonds and municipal securities. In the underlying arbitration between Reuters and Cantor that arises from that contract, Reuters contended that Cantor defaulted on its promise to resist opposition by its customers to the "transparency” of their bids and other trading information, i.e., the widespread dissemination of such information over Reuters’ computer network, and that, as a response to those protests, Cantor repeatedly breached its contract with Reuters by withholding large amounts of information through a practice called "off-screen trading”.

Cantor asserted in the arbitration that its contract with Reuters does not require that Cantor provide data that is not captured electronically by Cantor’s screen system, that the practice of "off-screen trading” is well known in the financial industry and that Cantor’s contract with Reuters was modeled upon Cantor’s contractual relationship with Dow for United States Treasury securities data, pursuant to which Cantor has regularly and permissibly engaged in off-screen trading of such securities and thereby withheld that data from Dow.

In response, the arbitrators ordered that, if Cantor were going to argue a defense based on its practices with Dow, Cantor was required to provide Reuters with documents reflecting that relationship and practices. The panel also issued a subpoena duces tecum to Dow, a nonparty to the arbitration, demanding that it produce "[a]ll documents”, including those stored via "computer, digital, electronic, optical or magnetic storage media, tape or other recordings, e-mail, audio, or video means”

"1. * * * relating to or reflecting proposed or actual efforts, strategy or tactics to respond to the resistance of [Cantor’s] [340]*340trading customers to the dissemination of Brokerage Information on U.S. Treasury Securities and to bring about transparency in the U.S. Treasury market. This request is directed at both the dissemination of U.S. Treasury Brokerage Information to the broker-dealer community via computer (the speed screen system or its predecessor[s]) and successor(s), as well as the dissemination of U.S. Treasury Brokerage Information to the non-dealer financial community.

"2. All documents relating to or reflecting the existence, amount, reasons for, significance and/or impact of off-screen trading in U.S. Treasury Securities.

"3. All documents relating to or reflecting disputes, disagreements, communications, plans, strategies, tactics or suspicions regarding the scope, content, sufficiency, completeness, accuracy, genuineness, timeliness, and/or manner of presentation (e.g., whether the data is properly indexed and/or is made difficult to find or use) of the U.S. Treasury Brokerage Information provided by [Cantor] to, or through, [Dow].

"4. All documents relating to or reflecting the proposed sale or license between [Cantor] and [Dow] of [Cantor’s] Brokerage Information for [international government bonds] and/or U.S. Municipal Securities.”

The subpoena provided Dow with less than two days to go through 30 years of documents, including e-mail, computer data, etc., to determine which of them related to its efforts, strategy or tactics regarding transparency or to the existence, amount, reasons for, significance and/or impact of off-screen trading in United States Treasury securities.

Dow advised the arbitrators that the documents requested of it were irrelevant to the arbitration, and contained highly sensitive matter, which Reuters, its foremost competitor, could use to its commercial advantage, and that the requests were "vague and ambiguous and absurdly overbroad, especially given that the subpoena seeks documents from a non-party”.

Reuters commenced the instant proceeding to compel Dow to comply with the subpoena. The IAS Court granted the motion to compel production, but held that Dow was entitled to a Referee to be appointed by the American Arbitration Association or that Dow could choose, in lieu of a Referee, to have Reuters and Cantor execute a confidentiality agreement.

The ability to compel the production of evidence is "essential to the very existence of a court of justice in any civilized community” (Matter of Makames [Johnson], 238 App Div 534, 536). [341]*341Moreover, there is no question that arbitrators, who are entrusted with deciding an increasing number of disputes in our society, are among those who are statutorily authorized to issue subpoenas, whether ad testificandum or duces tecum (CPLR 2302 [a]; 7505; see, Matter of Minerals & Chems. Philipp Corp. [Panamerican Commodities], 15 AD2d 432, appeal dismissed 11 NY2d 1109). There is, however, an essential difference between a subpoena, issued in the context of an arbitration and one issued in the context of a litigated matter, in that the former is a nonjudicial subpoena. In the case of judicial subpoenas, including those issued by an attorney of record in a matter pending before a court, a person who fails to comply, without making a motion to quash, runs the risk of being held in contempt based directly on that failure (4 Weinstein-KornMiller, NY Civ Prac j] 2308.01a; Judiciary Law § 750 [A] [3]; § 753). In distinction, a person who is served with a nonjudicial subpoena cannot be held in contempt for failure to comply unless and until a court has issued an order compelling compliance, which order has been disobeyed (Dias v Consolidated Edison Co., 116 AD2d 453, 454). Thus, there is no need to move to quash such a subpoena in order to avoid sanctions, and one who is served and does not wish to comply may safely wait until the party who served the subpoena moves to compel compliance.

While the difference between a judicial and nonjudicial subpoena is significant in regard to the availability of, and procedural course for, sanctions, there is no significant difference with respect to evaluating the substantive grounds for deciding either a motion to compel compliance with or to quash a subpoena, which present essentially identical substantive issues, albeit that they are brought by a different party with a different perspective (see, Matter of Friedman v Hi-Li Manor Home for Adults, 42 NY2d 408, 413). Among those grounds is the contention that the documents sought are not relevant to the issues extant before the tribunal, whether that tribunal be a panel of arbitrators, a court, a legislative or administrative board of inquiry, a Grand Jury, or other such entity.

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Bluebook (online)
231 A.D.2d 337, 662 N.Y.S.2d 450, 1997 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reuters-ltd-v-dow-jones-telerate-inc-nyappdiv-1997.