Sanders v. Canal Insurance

924 F. Supp. 107, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6484, 1996 WL 243490
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedMay 1, 1996
DocketCivil 95-1002-FR
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 924 F. Supp. 107 (Sanders v. Canal Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Canal Insurance, 924 F. Supp. 107, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6484, 1996 WL 243490 (D. Or. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

FRYE, District Judge:

The matters before the court are 1) the defendant’s second motion for a protective order (# 33); and 2) the defendant’s motion to compel plaintiffs answers to interrogatories and response to- request for production (# 36).

*108 BACKGROUND

On October 26, 1992 and again on November 13, 1992, W. Carleton Dunn, a representative of the defendant, Canal Insurance Company (Canal Insurance), received requests from the Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Louisiana to assist in an investigation of consumer complaints. The focus of the investigation was the plaintiff, James H. Sanders, as well as Shippers Dispatch, Robert Wright, and the Home International Reinsurance Co., Ltd. The Louisiana Department of Insurance asked Dunn to deliver the requested information when the fraud unit of the Louisiana Department of Insurance met with the United States Attorney, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and representatives of other insurance companies. With statutory immunity from civil suit for libel or slander for any information that he might provide to the Louisiana Department of Insurance, Dunn prepared a file of the requested information and delivered it to the Louisiana Department of Insurance at the meeting.

On June 2, 1995, Sanders filed this action alleging claims for libel and negligence against Canal Insurance. Sanders, an administrative contractor for various transportation-related companies, alleges that Canal Insurance distributed false and defamatory documents within the insurance industry which brought him into disrepute in the insurance and trucking industries.

Canal Insurance has filed a motion for summary judgment, which is supported by an affidavit of Dunn. Dunn denies that he delivered the documents at issue to other insurance companies. The motion for summary judgment has been reset to allow Sanders to depose Dunn. In preparation for the taking of Dunn’s deposition, Sanders has filed interrogatories and a request for the production of documents which relate to the communications that Canal Insurance had with other insurance companies regarding Sanders, Shippers Dispatch, and Home International Reinsurance Co., Ltd.

Canal Insurance moves the court for the following: (1) a protective order limiting the discovery that it must provide; and (2) an order compelling Sanders to answer interrogatories and produce documents.

ANALYSIS AND RULING

I. Canal Insurance’s Second Motion for a Protective Order

Canal Insurance seeks an order protecting it from being required to disclose the identities of those employees who met with law enforcement and government insurance fraud investigators; protecting it from being required to produce an investigation file consisting of “work product” documents including interoffice memoranda prepared in anticipation of litigation with Sanders and other entities and individuals that was delivered to the Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Louisiana pursuant to written requests and a grant of immunity and confidentiality under R.S. 22:1246 and R.S. 22:1247 of the laws of the State of Louisiana; and protecting it from being required to produce interoffice memoranda, notes, correspondence with attorneys, and records obtained in anticipation of litigation against Sanders, Shippers Dispatch, its known in-house carriers, and Home International Reinsurance Co., Ltd.

Canal Insurance makes this motion for a protective order on the following grounds: (a) that disclosure of matter relating to these investigations is protected by statute; (b) that disclosure of matter relating to these investigations is protected by informer and investigative privileges; and (c) that disclosure of the work product of its own investigation of Sanders, Shippers Dispatch, and Home International Reinsurance Co., Ltd. is protected by the attorney-client privilege because it was prepared in anticipation of litigation.

A. Statutory Prohibitions on Disclosure of Documents

Canal Insurance contends that R.S. 22:1246 of the Louisiana statutes prohibits public inspection of paper, documents, reports or evidence relative to the subject of an investigation by the Louisiana Department of Insurance and that R.S. 22:1247, which provides a grant of immunity from civil suit for libel or slander to insurers submitting such *109 information to the Department of Insurance in the State of Louisiana, prohibits disclosure of the requested documents.

Sanders contends that he has not alleged a claim of libel or slander against Canal Insurance with regard to any information that Canal Insurance may have provided to the Louisiana Department of Insurance, and therefore R.S. 22:1247 is not applicable. Sanders contends that he has alleged that Canal Insurance published'to other insurance companies statements that defamed Sanders. Sanders also contends that R.S. 22:1246 only protects the papers, documents, reports or evidence relative to the subject of an investigation in the possession of the Louisiana Department of Insurance and the documents sought by Sanders are in the possession of Canal Insurance, not the Louisiana Department of Insurance. Sanders also contends that, if the court adopts the interpretation of Canal Insurance regarding R.S. 22:1246, any party to any insurance-related lawsuit can evade discovery by sending copies of requested documents that it does not want to produce to the Louisiana Department of Insurance.

R.S. 22:1246B of the Louisiana Insurance Fraud statutes provides, in relevant part:

The section [of insurance fraud’s] papers, documents, reports, or evidence relative to the subject of an investigation under this Part shall not be subject to public inspection for so long as the section deems reasonably necessary to complete the investigation____ Further, such papers, documents, reports, or evidence relative to the subject of investigation under this Section shall not be subject to subpoena until opened for public inspection by the section, unless the section consents____

Appendix A to Defendant’s Second Motion for a Protective Order, pp. 1-2.

R.S. 22:1246 applies only to papers, documents or other evidence in the possession of the fraud section of the Louisiana Department of Insurance. Canal Insurance is not protected by R.S. 22:1246 from disclosing documents to Sanders, even though copies of those documents were submitted to law enforcement and to the Louisiana Department of Insurance.

R.S. 22:1247A provides, in relevant part:

No insurer, employees, or agents of any insurer, or any other person acting without malice, fraudulent intent, or bad faith, shall be subject to civil liability for libel, slander, or any other relevant tort, and no civil cause of action of any nature shall exist against such person or entity by virtue of the filing of reports or furnishing other information, either orally or in writing, concerning suspected, anticipated, or completed fraudulent insurance acts when such reports or information are required by this Part or required by the section of insurance fraud as a result of the authority herein granted or when such reports or information are provided to or received from:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
924 F. Supp. 107, 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6484, 1996 WL 243490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-canal-insurance-ord-1996.