Valmarc Corporation v. Nike, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJanuary 16, 2024
Docket3:21-cv-01556
StatusUnknown

This text of Valmarc Corporation v. Nike, Inc. (Valmarc Corporation v. Nike, Inc.) 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
Valmarc Corporation v. Nike, Inc., (D. Or. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

VALMARC CORPORATION, Case No. 3:21-cv-1556-IM

Plaintiff, ORDER DENYING IN PART AND RESERVING IN PART v. DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO COMPEL NIKE, INC., and CONVERSE, INC.,

Defendants.

IMMERGUT, District Judge.

Before this Court is Defendants Nike, Inc. and Converse, Inc.’s Motion to Compel Plaintiff Valmarc Corporation to Produce Responsive, Non-Privileged Documents (“MTC”), ECF 148. Defendants request that this Court compel Plaintiff to produce seven separate tranches of documents—what Defendants refer to as Exhibits F, J, K, L, H, and M and communications between Plaintiff and the third-party private equity group Striker Partners. In Defendants’ telling, these documents are not protected by the attorney-client privilege. PAGE 1 – OPINION AND ORDER DENYING IN PART AND RESERVING IN PART For the reasons below, this Court DENIES the Motion to Compel with regard to Exhibits F, J, K, and L, RESERVES ruling with regard to Exhibits H and M pending in camera review, and DENIES the Motion with regard to communications between Plaintiff and Striker, with leave for Defendants to renew their request after narrowing their request to specific categories of

documents and conferring with Plaintiff. The sections below (A) address the applicability of the attorney-client privilege to the specific exhibits Defendants identify in their Motion; and (B) address arguments concerning communications between Plaintiff and Striker. A. Attorney-Client Privilege 1. Exhibit F Exhibit F is a series of emails between non-lawyers employed by Plaintiff, but their emails include a forwarded chain of emails between Plaintiff’s patent infringement attorney and an executive. See ECF 149-6, Ex. F. As currently produced, the emails include redactions to both the non-lawyers’ emails between each other and to the forwarded email chain between the executive and the attorney. See id. Plaintiff logged these emails as privileged because the

forwarded emails “reflect[] legal advice from attorney K. Kim regarding patent infringement analysis.” ECF 149-5, Ex. E at 21, 24–26. Plaintiff has agreed to re-produce the emails “with the redactions to emails between non-lawyer personnel removed” but with redactions retained “on the underlying privileged emails.” Plaintiff’s Response (“Resp.”), ECF 160 at 4. In light of Plaintiff’s concession, the Motion is DENIED on this point. The outside counsel’s emails remain privileged even though they were forwarded between non-lawyers. The attorney-client privilege applies to “‘a communication between nonlegal employees in which the employees discuss or transmit legal advice given by counsel,’ as well as ‘an employee

PAGE 2 – OPINION AND ORDER DENYING IN PART AND RESERVING IN PART communication regarding her intent to seek legal advice about a particular issue.’” United States ex rel. Schmuckley v. Rite Aid Corp., Case No. 2:12-cv-01699-KJM-JDP, 2023 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13561, at *5 (E.D. Cal. Jan. 25, 2023) (citation and alteration omitted). Defendants themselves accept that “certain advice regarding the merits of [legal] claims might be privileged if requested

or received from an attorney.” MTC, ECF 148 at 5. And they do not otherwise challenge the sufficiency of Plaintiff’s privilege log.1 Accordingly, Plaintiff’s agreement to remove redactions to the communications between non-lawyers and retain redactions to the outside counsel’s emails moots Defendants’ motion to compel on this point. 2. Exhibit J Exhibit J is a series of redacted emails between Plaintiff’s employees. See ECF 149-10, Ex. J. Plaintiff logged these emails as privileged because they “reflect[] legal advice of Wilmer Hale and K. Kim re potential intellectual property issues.” ECF 149-5, Ex. E at 7, 13, 23. Defendants argue, however, that this cannot be the case because “neither the law firm Wilmer Hale nor Mr. Kim are senders or recipients of” the emails. MTC, ECF 148 at 6–7. The Motion is DENIED on this point. Defendants cite no case law for their “senders or

recipients” argument, and Defendants do not otherwise challenge the sufficiency of the privilege log entries, which show the recipients of the emails, when these emails were sent, and a specific basis for the attorney-client privilege. See In re Grand Jury Investigation, 974 F.2d 1068, 1070–

1 Defendants observe that Plaintiff amended its privilege log entries; the entries first stated that the underlying emails from Attorney Kim were “regarding Nike litigation” and were amended to be “regarding patent infringement analysis.” MTC, ECF 148 at 4 & n.3. But Defendants do not explain why the attorney-client privilege should not extend to the underlying emails, notwithstanding the amendments. Their arguments only address communications between non-lawyers. PAGE 3 – OPINION AND ORDER DENYING IN PART AND RESERVING IN PART 71 (9th Cir. 1992) (explaining that when a privilege log entry contains such information, it is sufficient to “establish the attorney-client privilege”). 3. Exhibit K Exhibit K is a series of redacted emails between several of Plaintiff’s executives. ECF 149-11, Ex. K. Plaintiff logged these emails as privileged because they contain “[e]mail

communication reflecting legal advice from William Moorman and John Ottaviani regarding Nike NDA.” ECF 149-5, Ex. E at 145. Defendants argue, however, that these emails cannot be privileged because “none of these lawyers sent or received these communications.” MTC, ECF 148 at 7. The Motion is DENIED on this point. Again, Defendants cite no case law for their “senders or recipients” argument, and Defendants do not otherwise challenge the sufficiency of the privilege log entries, which show the recipients of the emails, when these emails were sent, and a specific basis for the attorney-client privilege. 4. Exhibit L Exhibit L is an email chain between two of Plaintiff’s executives. See ECF 149-12, Ex. L.

Plaintiff logged the redacted portion of this email as an “[e]mail [c]ommunication reflecting legal question for Valmarc’s IP attorney regarding cease-and-desist.” ECF 149-5, Ex. E at 159. Defendants contend, however, that “the unredacted portions of the email suggest that the redacted portion of the email is not seeking or receiving legal advice.” MTC, ECF 148 at 7. This contention lacks merit, and the Motion is DENIED on this point. The title of the email is “Nike” and the only unredacted portion states: “John, thank you – we will have to discuss in detail.” ECF 149-12, Ex. L. There is no indication that the redacted portion of the

PAGE 4 – OPINION AND ORDER DENYING IN PART AND RESERVING IN PART email does not concern legal advice, and Defendants do not otherwise challenge the sufficiency of Plaintiff’s privilege log entry. 5. Exhibit H Exhibit H consists of redacted minutes from a Valmarc Board of Directors meeting held in August 2018. ECF 149-8, Ex. H. The redacted portions are two paragraphs that seem to

explain why Attorney William R. Moorman joined the meeting. Id. at 4–5, 39–40. Defendants allege that this board meeting is the last board meeting before Plaintiff’s statute of limitations cut-off date and that the redacted portion could prove vital to Defendants’ statute of limitations defense. MTC, ECF 148 at 5–6. Plaintiff’s privilege log entry for these minutes is opaque and conclusory: it states that the redacted portion “reflect[s] legal advice regarding the subject matter conveyed in the unredacted portion of the document.” ECF 149-5, Ex. E at 57, 112. With regard to these minutes, this Court RESERVES ruling on the Motion pending in camera review.

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