UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 79–570 |
CONTINENTAL
OIL COMPANY, |
|
Respondent. |
|
April 27, 1981
DECISION
Before BARNAKO, Acting Chairman; CLEARY and COTTINE,
Commissioners.
BY THE COMMISSION:
On
December 7, 1979, Administrative Law Judge James A. Cronin certified an
interlocutory appeal on whether he erred in denying the Secretary’s motion to
discover two investigative reports of the Respondent, Continental Oil Company
(‘Conoco’).[1]
On January 7, 1980, the Commission accepted the interlocutory appeal under Rule
75[2] of the Commission Rules of
Procedure. We affirm Judge Cronin’s decision and hold that the investigative
reports are attorney work product and are not discoverable.
On
October 3, 1978, an explosion and fire occurred at Respondent’s refinery in
Denver, Colorado. As a result of the explosion, three employees were killed,
twelve persons were hospitalized and extensive damage was done to the Conoco
plant and surrounding area.
Within
hours of the tragedy, several investigations were started. One investigation
was conducted by officers of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(‘OSHA’). This investigation lasted approximately four months and consisted of
numerous inspections, tests, interviews and requests for documents. By February
1979, the Secretary had charged Conoco with 10 serious, 2 other than serious,
and 2 willful violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, 29
U.S.C. §§ 651–78 (‘the Act’). More than $26,000 in penalties were proposed.
Conoco,
through its attorneys, also conducted its own investigations into the cause of
the explosion. One of the investigations was conducted by an independent team
of experts specifically hired by Conoco’s attorneys to investigate the Denver
refinery explosion. The second investigation was conducted by expert Conoco
employees. Both sets of experts performed their research under the supervision
of Conoco’s attorneys. Each team reported their findings directly to the
attorneys and no one else. The attorneys used the findings to advise Conoco
about the litigation arising from the explosion. Both teams of experts produced
reports which are the subject of this appeal.
Before
the hearing on the merits, the secretary and Conoco conducted lengthy
discovery, concerning, among other things, the two investigative reports.
Before discovery began, Judge Cronin issued a discovery order. The order said
that requests for documents, inspection and interrogatories should be made by
April 27, 1979, and that all discovery should be completed by July 19, 1979.[3] On April 27, 1979, the
Secretary requested all documents relating to Conoco’s investigation of the
explosion. Conoco refused, claiming that the documents were protected by the attorney
work product doctrine. On May 14, 1979, the Secretary served Conoco with a set
of interrogatories which included a request to identify any documents
pertaining to the explosion, the number of pages in each, who prepared the
documents and a description of the contents of the documents. Conoco gave
certain general information concerning these documents, including the names of
the persons who prepared the documents, but Conoco claimed that the other
requests for specific information were unnecessary and burdensome. On July 6,
1979, Judge Cronin ordered Conoco to identify by name all of the investigative
material it had developed pertaining to the explosion and describe the contents
of each document. Conoco identified the documents, including the two investigative
reports, at a pretrial conference on July 19, 1979.
On
August 24, 1979, the Secretary requested certain investigatory documents.
Conoco refused, saying that under Judge Cronin’s discovery order the
Secretary’s request was untimely. Subsequently, the Secretary moved to compel
discovery of the material including the investigative reports. Conoco claimed
the reports were attorney work product, explaining that the reports had been
prepared by request of its attorneys, in preparation for the anticipated
litigation, and that Conoco was not planning to use the experts who prepared
the reports as witnesses at the hearing.
Judge
Cronin held a preliminary hearing on September 25, 1979, to determine whether
Conoco should produce the two investigative reports. Only Conoco presented
evidence. After weighing the evidence presented at the hearing and viewing the
reports in camera, Judge Cronin determined that the reports were attorney work
product and that the Secretary had not made the requisite showing to obtain
discovery under Rule 26 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Judge Cronin
found that the Secretary had failed to meet his burden under Federal Rule
26(b)(3) to show both a ‘substantial need’ for the report prepared by Conoco’s
expert employees and ‘the inability to obtain the substantial equivalent
without undue hardship.’[4] Judge Cronin further
concluded that the report prepared by the team of independent experts who would
not testify at the hearing was governed by Federal Rule 26(b)(4)(B) and that the
Secretary had not made a showing of ‘exceptional circumstances’ under that
Rule.[5] Therefore Judge Cronin
denied the Secretary’s motion to compel discovery of the investigative reports.
Beginning
October 22, 1979, a hearing on the merits was held. At the close of his
rebuttal case on November 15, 1979, the Secretary renewed his request for the
reports. The Secretary contended that the record as a whole demonstrated
‘exceptional circumstances’ and ‘substantial need’ and therefore the reports
should be discoverable.
No
November 16, 1979, at the hearing, Judge Cronin ruled that the Secretary’s
request was untimely and unreasonable. Judge Cronin essentially repeated the
findings of his earlier memorandum decision and ruled that the reports were not
discoverable. He also noted that the Secretary could have deposed Conoco’s
expert employees but inexplicably chose not to do so. However, to avoid a later
remand if his ruling should be reversed by the Commission, On December 7, 1979,
Judge Cronin certified an interlocutory appeal. The certification of the appeal
stated:
The ruling denies the Secretary access to
relevant evidence on the grounds his motion to produce was untimely and
unreasonable. The ruling concludes the Secretary should have moved to produce
before resting his direct case and not waited until his rebuttal. The following
question, therefore, is presented:
Whether the judge erred in ruling that the
Secretary’s motion was untimely and unreasonable.
II
In
its brief to the Commission, Conoco contends that the only question before the
Commission is whether the Administrative Law Judge abused his discretion by
denying the Secretary’s motion, made at the end of his rebuttal, to compel
discovery of the two investigative reports on the basis of the motion’s
untimeliness. Conoco does not believe the question presented by the
interlocutory appeal is whether the reports are discoverable. In general,
Conoco argues that the Secretary failed to take advantage of the ample
opportunities for discovery in this case and that his motion to compel
discovery, coming late in the hearing, was untimely.
Conoco
notes that judges are usually given great discretion in controlling discovery.
The Secretary, Conoco contends, was given many opportunities for discovery
beyond the original cut-off dates for discovery. Clearly, the judge concluded
that to give the Secretary one more chance at such an advanced stage in the
proceedings would unduly burden the efficient administration of this case.
Therefore, Conoco argues, the judge’s determination should be affirmed.
Although
Conoco contends this appeal does not encompass the merits of the discovery
order, its brief also addresses these issues. Conoco argues that the reports
are attorney work product and privileged from discovery under Rule 26(B)(3) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Conoco contends that the evidence clearly
shows the reports were prepared in anticipation of litigation and not in the
ordinary course of business. In addition, Conoco claims that the Secretary has
failed to demonstrate the substantial need and undue hardship which would
permit discovery of the reports under Federal Rule 26(b)(3) and has failed to
demonstrate ‘exceptional circumstances’ under Federal Rule 26(b)(4)(B).
In
his brief, the Secretary argues that his motion is not untimely because it came
at the earliest possible time when the evidence showed that a substantial need
under Federal Rule 26(b)(3) and exceptional circumstances under Federal Rule
26(b)(4)(B) existed to compel discovery of the reports. The Secretary claims
that ‘[t]he record as a whole demonstrates that complainant has a substantial
need of the factual portion of the two documents and has been unable to obtain
such facts by other means.’
On
whether the material constitutes attorney work product, the Secretary argues
for a narrow interpretation of that privilege. The Secretary admits that the mental
impressions and opinions of Conoco’s attorneys are clearly protected as
attorney work product under the Federal Rules. However, the Secretary is only
requesting the factual portions of the reports and not any legal opinions or
conclusions of Conoco’s attorneys. In addition, the reports were prepared by
experts rather than the attorneys. According to the Secretary, the attorney
work product privilege does not apply to the work of such experts.
The
Secretary also contends that the reports were not prepared in anticipation of
litigation but rather in the regular course of business. After the explosion,
Conoco prepared the reports in a way any responsible company would investigate
such a fatal accident. Therefore, in the Secretary’s view, the reports are discoverable
since the work product privilege does not apply to any documents prepared in
the regular course of business.
The
Secretary also argues that even if the Commission should find that this
material is work product, he has shown a substantial need for the material. The
Secretary claims that the reports are essential to his case because they
contain information developed by Conoco’s process superintendent during the two
to three weeks immediately after the accident. Further, all of the information in
the reports was compiled long before the Secretary’s experts were able to view
the site of the explosion. The reports contain the results of destructive
testing and reconstructed strip charts. Strip charts monitored the performance
of an operating unit in Conoco’s plant, the catalytic polymerization unit, up
until the explosion. After the explosion, certain strip charts were lost.
Through various tests, Conoco’s two teams of experts reconstructed the probable
temperature, pressure, and flow rate readout of these strip charts. The
Secretary claims such factual and highly technical information is discoverable
without any further showing. The Secretary also argues that his need is even
more compelling because throughout the litigation, Conoco has controlled the
sources of the investigative information and the people who generated that
information.
The
Secretary also contends that he has shown an inability to obtain the
substantial equivalent of the reports without undue hardship. The Secretary
argues that, in various ways, Conoco did not cooperate during discovery and
that Conoco has used its pretrial strategy to keep the cause of the explosion
hidden. The Secretary emphasizes that Conoco used two sets of experts to
investigate the accident but determined not to call these experts as witnesses
at the trial. Conoco then employed a completely separate set of experts to
testify at the trial. With this strategy, the Secretary claims, Conoco has kept
the real cause of the explosion from being discovered. The experts who
testified did not possess the knowledge of the crucial facts of the case, and
the experts with the knowledge of the crucial facts were protected by the
attorney work product privilege. From these circumstances, the Secretary asks
the Commission to infer that Conoco would not allow any discovery directed
toward producing information that is the substantial equivalent of the reports.
III
We
conclude that the interlocutory appeal includes the merits as well as the
timeliness of the Secretary’s claim that the investigative reports are
discoverable. An interlocutory appeal is appropriate where a judge’s ruling
involves an important question of law or policy and an immediate appeal of the
ruling may materially expedite the proceedings. Commission Rule 75(b), 29
C.F.R. § 220.75(b). In this case, if the judge erred in his initial ruling
against discovery of the reports, the Commission later may be required to
remand the case for further proceedings in order to include the reports or
evidence flowing from the reports in the record. The purpose of this early
appeal is to avoid a later remand. This purpose can be achieved only if the
Commission determines the merits of the Secretary’s motion. See Quality Stamping Products Co., 79
OSAHRC 28/F11, 7 BNA OSHC 1285, 1979 CCH OSHD ¶ 23,520 (No. 78–235, 1979), and
cases cited therein.
Historically,
the Commission has been reluctant to overturn the discovery orders of its
administrative law judges. As the Commission observed in KLI, Inc., 78 OSAHRC 82/A2, 6 BNA OSHC 1097, 1098, 1977–78 CCH OSHD
¶22, 350 at p. 26,937 (No. 13490, 1978).
Normally, discovery orders will be sought from the Judge rather than
from the full Commission, and the decision whether to allow discovery is within
the Judge’s sound discretion.
Therefore,
discovery orders will only be reversed when ‘the Judge’s actions constitute an
abuse of discretion resulting in substantial prejudice.’ Perini Corp., 77 OSAHRC 136/A2, 5 BNA OSHC 1596, 1600, 1977–78 CCH
OSHD ¶21, 967 at p. 26,473 (No. 11007, 1977).
In
order to qualify for protection under Rule 26(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure[6]
as trial preparation materials the reports at issue must be (1) documents or
tangible things, (2) prepared in anticipation of litigation or trial, and (3)
gathered by or for another party or by or for that other party’s
representative.[7]
The reports pass this three-pronged test.
Clearly,
the reports are tangible. In addition, the testimony at the September 25, 1979,
preliminary hearing indicated that the reports were prepared in anticipation of
litigation. Immediately after the explosion, Conoco contacted its attorneys.
The attorneys hired the independent team of experts and controlled Conoco’s
expert employees who performed the investigation. These experts reported to the
attorneys who used the reports to prepare for the anticipated litigation. Even
the Secretary’s attorney admitted that ‘at least one of the purposes’ for the
reports was the anticipated litigation after the accident. Moreover, to qualify
as work product, the material need not have been prepared for any specific
litigation but only ‘with an eye toward litigation.’[8]
Finally,
the rule is broad enough to encompass the work of persons who are not
attorneys. The Supreme Court has observed,
attorneys often must rely on the
assistance of investigators and other agents in the compilation of materials in
preparation for trial. It is therefore necessary that the doctrine protect
material prepared by agents for the attorney as well as those prepared by the
attorney himself.[9]
The
testimony at the preliminary hearing clearly indicated that the reports were
developed in anticipation of litigation by the two teams of experts at the
direction of Conoco’s attorneys. Therefore, the reports are attorney work
product.
The
fact that the reports qualify under this three-pronged test does not mean that
the documents are not discoverable. The work product immunity is qualified.
Generally, the opinions and mental impressions of attorneys and their agents
are entitled to an almost absolute protection.[10] However, trial
preparation material which does not contain opinions or mental impressions can
be discovered ‘upon a showing that the party seeking discovery has substantial
need of the materials . . . and that he is unable without undue hardship to
obtain the substantial equivalent of the materials by others means.’[11]
What
constitutes a sufficient showing under Rule 26 is difficult to pinpoint and
depends on the facts of a given case. A fine line exists between the legitimate
use of discovery and an attorney abusing the discovery process to reap the
benefits of opposing counsel’s hard work. The Federal Rules provide for liberal
discovery but ‘each side should be encouraged to prepare independently, and . .
. one side should not automatically have the benefit of the detailed
preparatory work of the other side.’[12] Thus, the courts
generally consider (1) the importance of the material, (2) the difficulty of
obtaining the material from different sources, and (3) whether those different
sources would supply the substantial equivalent of the material sought.[13]
Obviously,
the reports are relevant. Moreover, the Secretary has claimed that he needs the
reports for effective rebuttal because they contain highly technical
information available only to Conoco, and Conoco used different experts to
testify at the hearing from those who prepared the reports. Also, the
Secretary’s experts indicated in their testimony at the hearing on the merits
that they need the reconstructed strip charts to give a knowledgeable opinion
on the cause of the explosion. Therefore, the Secretary has demonstrated a need
for the material.
However,
some of the Secretary’s claims could have been presented at the preliminary
hearing. Indeed, the Secretary has stated in his brief on review that no new
evidence arose between the preliminary hearing and the hearing on the merits.
However, the Secretary presented no evidence at the preliminary hearing.
Moreover,
the courts have consistently held that the Federal Rules require more than a
showing of relevance and importance to compel the discovery of work product.[14] The Secretary has not
demonstrated why he was unable to obtain substantially equivalent information
through depositions and interrogatories.
The
Secretary knew long before the preliminary hearing that a second set of experts
would testify and that Conoco consistently contended that the reports were not
discoverable because they were attorney work product. After filing the
complaint, the Secretary directed a document production request and
interrogatories to Conoco concerning materials developed by Conoco during its
investigation. Conoco answered this discovery months before the preliminary
hearing by identifying the investigative reports and the persons who prepared
them. It was thus clear at a very early stage of the discovery process that the
investigative reports existed and would play an important role in the
litigation. But despite his early knowledge of the reports and Conoco’s
consistent claims that the reports were protected by the attorney work product
doctrine, the Secretary never sought to depose any of Conoco’s expert
employees.[15]
The
Secretary has contended that in various ways Conoco did not cooperate during
discovery and sought to conceal the information obtained by the teams of
experts. The Secretary would have us infer that Conoco’s expert employees would
be hostile to any depositions by the Secretary. However, the Secretary has not
demonstrated this assertion beyond stating it since the Secretary made no
attempt at alternative discovery. Courts have required that a party demonstrate
that other discovery methods would be insufficient[16] and have held that a part
must first make some attempt at alternative discovery before it requests an
attorney to turn over his work product. See
United States v. Chatham City Corp., 72 F.R.D. 640 (S.D. Ga. 1976); Howard v. Seaboard Coastline Railroad Co.,
60 F.R.D. 638 (N.D. Ga. 1973); Fidelity
& Deposit Co. of Maryland v. S. Stefan Strauss, Inc., 52 F.R.D. 536
(E.D. Pa. 1971). This has been particularly true when, as in this case, the
material requested was clearly important in the litigation, and the people whom
the party would depose were known to the party for some time.
Courts
have adhered to this requirement that a party make a specific showing of undue
hardship even in complex cases. As the Court in Hercules, Inc. v. Exxon Corp., 434 F. Supp. 136, 153 (D. Del.
1977), stated:
Defendant has not made any showing of
substantial need or undue hardship in obtaining the substantial equivalent of
the materials by other means. The Court recognizes the difficulty of making
such a showing without having access to the documents themselves. However, the
Court sees no reason why the defendant would not be able to obtain relevant
information contained in those documents through other discovery means, such as
depositions and interrogatories. Accordingly, production will be denied.
The
Secretary has had ample opportunities to develop his case without the work
product of Conoco’s attorneys. At the same time that Conoco was investigating
the explosion, the Secretary conducted a four-month investigation during which
the Secretary took pictures, interviewed employees and conducted tests. Conoco
made its employees available for interviews and also made its facilities
available during OSHA’s four-month inspection. Conoco contacted OSHA any time
it disassembled a part of its facilities so that OSHA officials could be
present and photograph the scene if they wished. Moreover, the record indicates
that the Secretary has been able to obtain, through discovery, a substantial
amount of the material he has requested. While the Secretary has been unable to
obtain the reconstructed strip charts and the investigative reports, he did
discover the names of the experts who prepared this material. And there is no
basis to conclude that the Secretary could not have deposed Conoco’s experts
and thereby developed the substantial equivalent of the material he now seeks.
Thus,
although the Secretary has shown the two investigative reports would be useful
in the preparation of his case, he has expressed only the broadest generalities
to indicate why he is unable to obtain substantially equivalent information
through alternative discovery methods. He has offered almost no proof to
substantiate this general claim.
Admittedly,
the case is complex, and the Secretary therefore may have decided that
depositions could not provide the substantial equivalent of the written
reports. However, the Secretary has made no such showing to support his
decision. Federal Rule 26(b)(3) requires such a showing. Therefore, under the
circumstances, we cannot find that Judge Cronin’s ruling constituted an abuse
of discretion. That ruling is therefore affirmed, and the case is remanded for
further proceedings.
SO ORDERED
FOR THE COMMISSION:
Ray H. Darling, Jr.
Executive Secretary
DATED: APR 27 1981
COTTINE, Commissioner, dissenting:
The
majority concedes that the Secretary has demonstrated a substantial need for
the strip chart reconstruction data to prove certain claims arising out of the
catastrophic oil refinery explosion and fire involved in this case.
Nevertheless, the majority upholds the judge’s denial of access to this data on
the grounds that: (1) it was prepared in anticipation of litigation within the
meaning of Fed.R.C v.P. 26(b)(3), and (2) the Secretary has failed to show that
he could not have obtained the substantial equivalent of that information by
other means, specifically depositions. However, depositions would be an unduly
burdensome procedure not calculated to obtain information equivalent to the
data sought by the Secretary. Indeed, any discovery device other than
production of the documents would be an inadequate substitute for the necessary
scientific data. Therefore, the Secretary is entitled to the strip chart
reconstructions. He also is entitled to destructive testing data prepared for
Conoco, for which he has also shown a specific need and lack of alternative
sources. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(3), (4).[17] Consequently, it was an
abuse of discretion for the judge to deny the Secretary all access to these
documents.
I
The
Secretary seeks disclosure of two investigative reports concerning the
explosion at Conoco’s facility. One report was prepared for the company by an
expert team of Conoco employees and another report by a team of independent
experts. The Secretary contends that the reports are not attorney work-product
but rather accident reports that any responsible corporation would have
prepared under the circumstances. However, the expert investigation leading to
these reports was conducted by Conoco’s attorneys in a manner specifically
calculated to preserve the work-product privilege. As a result, the majority
properly concludes that the data are subject to the qualified work-product
privilege. Accordingly, facts contained in the reports must be disclosed only
where the Secretary has shown both a need for them and no practical alternative
means of obtaining them.[18]
The
Secretary has attempted to show a specific need and the lack of practical
alternative sources for obtaining two types of data that have been withheld.
The first category of data is comprised of reconstructions of the probable
temperature, pressure and flow rates in the catalytic polimerization unit
(‘CPU’), where the fatal explosion occurred.[19] The temperature, pressure
and flow rate data for the CPU were routinely measured by instruments that
recorded the data on strip charts. Some of the strip charts covering the period
of the explosion are missing, and Conoco’s experts attempted to reconstruct the
probable levels based on the strip charts that are available. The second
category of data is comprised of the results of destructive testing performed
for Conoco on certain equipment in the CPU.
Throughout
the proceedings below the Secretary made numerous timely requests for this
information. It should be noted that prehearing discovery was extensive in this
case and both parties have been diligent in their efforts to prepare their
cases for a hearing on the merits. The Secretary’s requests for this specific
information began at the outset of these proceedings. Conoco originally
instructed its attorneys to cooperate fully with the Secretary in investigating
the explosion and fire. Apparently in reliance on that policy, the Secretary’s
area director requested pressure, temperature, and flow rate charts regarding
the CPU and other relevant information in November, 1978—several weeks before
issuance of the citations. On December 5, 1978, Conoco indicated by letter that
the information would be forthcoming. Yet, some of the strip charts were not
turned over until shortly before the hearing on the merits in October, 1979. In
the meantime, the Secretary had filed:
(1) a timely request for production of all
documents relating to the incident—Cohoco refused to comply with this request,
claiming that the documents were attorney work-product;
(2) timely interrogatories to determine
the nature and authorship of each document—Conoco also substantially failed to
comply with this request;
(3) a timely motion to compel answers to
those interrogatories—Conoco complied on July 19, 1979, after the judge entered
an order to compel; and
(4) a timely motion to compel production
of selected documents out of the hundreds identified by Conoco—the judge
granted this motion in large part.
Confronted
with Conoco’s work product objections, the Secretary made numerous attempts to
show both his need for the requested information and his lack of alternative
sources for the data. In his motion to compel production, filed on September 6,
1979, the Secretary stated that he ‘has substantial need for them [the
specified materials] in the preparation of his case and cannot obtain their
substantial equivalent by other means.’ At the hearing on the motion, the
Secretary’s counsel questioned a Conoco attorney who appeared as a witness for
the company to determine ‘whether we have a situation where we are unable to
obtain this [sic] substantial equivalent to what is in these books through
other means.’ Hearing Transcript, September 25, 1979, at 83. The Secretary’s
counsel elicited specific evidence at that hearing that the investigative
reports contained the strip chart reconstructions. This was the first
confirmation on the record that the reports contained the reconstructions. The
Secretary’s counsel also elicited the fact that destructive testing had been
performed on Conoco’s behalf. Six days after the motion hearing, the Secretary
submitted an affidavit by his expert witness, A. J. Qeinlivan. This affidavit
specified the missing strip charts that Quinlivan needed in order to determine
the internal pressure of sub-units of the CPU before the explosion. He also
stated that the results of destructive testing could not be duplicated by him
and could be vital to rendering an informed opinion in the case. The judge
considered these posthearing submissions untimely despite the fact that they
were received in advance of his decision on the motion.
The
judge denied the Secretary’s motion to compel as to this information. In
further pursuit of the data, the Secretary filed a subpoena duces tecum to
require Conoco to bring the investigative reports, among other documents, to
the hearing on the merits. The judge quashed the subpoena insofar as it related
to the reports. Finally, the Secretary renewed his request for the reports at
the completion of his rebuttal evidence. It is the judge’s denial of that
request that is specifically before us.
II
To
deny the Secretary access to this scientific data concerning the explosion and
fire in support of his claims of violations of the Act is contrary to the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Supreme Court stated the controlling
consideration in Hickman v. Taylor,
329 U.S. 495 (1947):
Mutual knowledge of all the relevant facts
gathered by both parties is essential to proper litigation. To that end, either
party may compel the other to disgorge whatever facts he has in his possession.
329 U.S. at 507. ‘The purpose of our modern discovery
procedure is to narrow the issues, to eliminate surprise, and to achieve
substantial justice.’ Greyhound Lines,
Inc. v. Miller, 402 F.2d 134, 143 (8th Cir. 1968). Furthermore, the
discovery rules are to be liberally construed to achieve their purpose. Hickman v. Taylor, supra; Schlagenhauf v.
Holder, 379 U.S. 104, 114–15 (1964).
The
majority affirms the judge’s refusal to order disclosure on the rationale that,
despite all the Secretary’s efforts to obtain the information involved, the
Secretary failed to prove that he could not have obtained the information by
other means, specifically depositions. Depositions are an inherently inadequate
means of obtaining the technical details of a complex scientific study written
many months earlier by a large group of experts. The detailed information
sought would require the deponent to read specific data from the report into
the record. This would be an unduly burdensome means of disclosure.
Furthermore, if the deponent referred to the study to refresh his or her
recollection, the study would be subject to disclosure. Thus, the deposition
procedure would simply waste time and resources and end with disclosure of the
identical material the Secretary now seeks. Moreover, where time has probably
dimmed the witnesses’ memories of the facts, disclosure of the pertinent
documents will be required unless the party seeking discovery is responsible
for the time lapse. See Southern Railway
Co. v. Lanham, 403 F.2d 119, 126–31 (5th Cir. 1968), rehearing denied, 408 F.2d 348 (1969); Reynolds v. United States, 192 F.2d 987, 991–92 (3d Cir. 1951), rev’d on other grounds, 345 U.S. 1
(1953); Guilford Nat’l Bank of Greensboro
v. Southern Railway Co., 297 F.2d 921 (4th Cir. 1962); See generally, 8
Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and
Procedure: Civil § 2025 at pp. 218–24 (1970). The same rule applies when a
witness’s recollections are unreliable for other reasons. See Southern Railway Co. v. Lanham, supra; See also Advisory
Committee Note to Rule 26(b)(3), 48 F.R.D. 485, 501 (1969).
Other
substitute means for the production of the scientific data would also be
insufficient. Where the information needed is contained in a detailed
scientific study, there is no practical substitute for the report itself. To
require interrogatories, for example, would require the Secretary to make a
detailed request and Conoco to reproduce essentially a written duplicate of the
studies. This type of procedure on its face is unduly burdensome. The studies
contain the scientific data in its irreducible form.[20] Thus, the Secretary is
entitled to the original documents.
III
In denying the Secretary the necessary information,
the judge acted contrary to the Commission’s rules and precedent and abused his
discretion. Commission Rule 66, 29 C.F.R. § 2200.66,
states that it shall be the duty of the judge to assure that the facts in
controversy are fully elicited. The Commission’s role as representative of the
public interest ‘does not permit it to act as an umpire blandly calling balls
and strikes for adversaries appearing before it; the right of the public must
receive active and affirmative protection at the hands of the Commission.’ Brennan v. OSHRC (John J. Gordon Co.),
492 F.2d 1027 (2d Cir. 1974), quoting Scenic
Hudson Preservation Conf. v. FPC, 354 F.2d 608, 620 (2d Cir. 1965), cert. denied, 384 U.S. 941 (1966). The
strong public interest in preventing a repetition of this type of catastrophic
oil refinery explosion is apparent. Moreover, the judge’s discretion should be
exercised consistent with the Commission’s oft-stated preference for
determinations on the merits. Ralston
Purina Co., 79 OSAHRC 81/E6, 7 BNA OSHC 1730, 1979 CCH OSHD ¶23,897 (No.
78–145, 1979); ASARCO, Inc., El Paso Div.,
—— OSAHRC ——, 8 BNA OSHC 2156, 1980 CCH OSHD ¶24,838 (Nos. 79–6850, etc.,
1980); Duquesne Light Co., —— OSAHRC
——, 8 BNA OSHC 1218, 1980 CCH OSHD ¶24,384 (Nos. 78–5034, etc., (1980). This
preference is even more significant in a case affected with a strong public
interest.
The
judge’s ruling here was as much an abuse of discretion as the ruling involved
in Ralston Purina Co., supra. There,
the judge denied the Secretary a discovery inspection in a noise case, where
the request came 17 days before the hearing and almost eight months after the
citation was issued. The Commission found the delay excusable based on the
Secretary’s reasonable decision not to undertake the expense of an inspection
until after an anticipated settlement failed. We stated:
The practical effect of denying discovery
inspection here is to undercut the Secretary’s case. Without expert testimony,
it is doubtful that the Secretary can show the feasibility of engineering
controls. Thus, denying the Secretary’s motion for discovery inspection has
already resulted in substantial prejudice to the Secretary’s case. Furthermore,
delay of one month will not impair the merits of respondent’s defense.
7 BNA OSHC at 1721, 1980 CCH OSHD at p. 28,977.
Here,
as in Ralston Purina, the data involve matters on which expert testimony is
required and prejudice to the Secretary from being denied access to this
important scientific data is obvious. Inasmuch as the Secretary proceeded in a
responsible manner to obtain this scientific data, did not delay these
proceedings, and was unable to obtain substantially equivalent material through
other means, the judge abused his discretion in denying the Secretary access to
these data.
For
the foregoing reasons I would grant the Secretary disclosure of the strip chart
reconstructions and the destructive testing data and would remand the case for
further proceedings on the merits.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC
DOCKET NO. 79–570 |
CONTINENTAL
OIL COMPANY, |
|
Respondent. |
|
October 4, 1979
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
On
September 26, 1979, an evidentiary hearing was held on the Secretary of Labor’s
motion under Rule 37(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (F.R.Civ.P.) to
compel Continental Oil Company to permit entry at Conoco’s Denver refinery for
purposes of photographing, measuring, and testing in certain areas and also to
compel Conoco to produce certain designated documents, investigative reports,
and photographs. At the hearing a part of the Secretary’s motion to compel was
granted, and entry and production of certain documents were ordered. Decision
was reserved, however, with respect to ordering the production of two
investigative reports, numbers 1 and 6, and 337 photographs, pending an
in-camera inspection of these items by this Judge, review of the hearing
transcript, and possible submission of additional briefs. This matter now is
ready for determination.
Conoco
resists discovery on several alternative grounds. It contends the reports and
photographs are absolutely immune to discovery by the attorney-client privilege
and also protected from discovery by the qualified immunity provided by Rules
26(b)(4) or 26(b)(3), F.R.Civ.P. The Secretary, on the other hand, contends
that he has substantial need of these items and is unable to obtain them
elsewhere. Each of Conoco’s objections and the Secretary’s contentions will be
discussed below.
The
record reflects that on October 3, 1978, a major fire and explosion occurred at
Conoco’s Denver refinery, killing three employees, causing twenty-five million
dollars in damage to the refinery, and untold damage to the area surrounding
the refinery. Over 900 claims and several law suits have been filed against
Conoco as a result of this explosion and fire.
In
anticipation of litigation, Conoco’s general attorney, A. Earl Hodges, directed
Conoco’s Denver legal counsel, the firm of Demuth, Eiberger, Kemp and Backus,
in conjunction with the Denver law firm of Walberg and Pryor, counsel for
Conoco’s liability and workmen’s compensation carrier, The Hartford Insurance
Company, to conduct a special investigation into the October 3rd explosion and
fire. Obviously, Conoco adopted this investigative format in an attempt to keep
confidential all of the findings and conclusions developed or acquired in this
investigation and insulate them from disclosure and discovery. But the fact
remains, Conoco ordered the investigation in anticipation of litigation.
Mr.
Earl Eiberger, Esq. retained a team of independent technical experts from the
Denver area and secured, on special assignment, a group of Conoco engineering
experts employed at other Conoco facilities to conduct a detailed investigation
to determine the underlying causes of the explosion and fire and what steps
could be taken to prevent recurrence of similar accidents in the future. He
instructed both groups to submit their separate reports to his law firm and
maintain these reports as ‘privileged and confidential’.
The
members of the independent team of experts, their company affiliations, and
areas of specialty in the investigation are as follows:
Ralph J. Mangone Mangone Laboratory, Inc.
Metallurgical Golden, Colorado Analysis
Robert E. Dragoo, Jr. Stearns-Roger, Inc.
Control Systems Denver, Colorado Analysis
Thomas R. Morton Stearns-Roger, Inc.
Process Analysis Denver, Colorado
Maurice M. Schulte Stearns-Roger, Inc.
Mechanical Analysis Denver, Colorado
Robert F. Harrison Independent Prof.
Engineer Explosion Rey, Colorado Analysis
Members
from Stearns-Roger Inc., were assisted by John E. Williams, Project Supervisor.
This team prepared preliminary investigative report #1 which consists of
various analyses, process, metallurgical, explosion, control systems, and
mechanical, as well as conclusions and recommendations. Attachments to the
report include witness interviews conducted by attorneys, reports on scanning
electron microscope work, radiographic work, chemical analysis, metallurgical
testing, relief valve examination, piping sketches, computer printouts relating
to a fluid dynamic analysis, site-path sketches, calculation work sheets, and
photographs.
Preliminary
investigative report #6 was prepared by members of the Conoco team of experts,
who were John M. Griffith, Consulting Engineer, Maintenance Engineering
Department; J. W. Leigh, Chief Process Engineer, Refining Division, Process
Engineering Department; S. T. McLaury, Metallurgy Division, Maintenance
Engineering Department, and D. R. Unruh, Process Superintendent, North American
Refining. This report relates the events leading up to the explosion based on
witness interviews conducted by attorneys, contains a review of the process and
mechanical design of the refinery unit, a computer simulation of the stabilizer
and splitter, evaluations of physical evidence secured from a dismantling of
the Cat Poly unit’s fractionating section, various analyses and conclusions
concerning the possible causes of the explosion and fire, photographs, and
sketches. The 337 photographs were taken by Mr. Griffith.
During
the investigation, both teams worked in close cooperation, and each team used the
evidence and findings generated by both teams in preparing their separate
reports.
Attorney-Client
Privilege
Conoco’s
claim that the investigative reports and photographs are permanently protected
from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege is rejected.
The
protective cloak of this particular privilege does not extend to information
which an attorney secures from third persons while acting for his client in
anticipation of litigation. Hickman v.
Taylor, 329 U.S. 495 (1947); See also
Franks v. National Dairy Products Corp., 41 F.R.D. 234 (D. C. Tex. 1966).
Therefore, report No. 1, which was prepared by non-parties, clearly is not
privileged. The attorney-client privilege also is inapplicable to
communications from employees of a client who do not meet the ‘control group’
test formulated in Philadelphia v.
Westinghouse Electric Corporation, 210 F. Supp. 483 (E.D. Pa. 1962). This
test requires that the employee communicant be in a position to control or take
a substantial part in a decision about any action to be taken upon the advice
of counsel, or be a member of the group having such authority. The Conoco team
preparing report #6 obviously are not members of any such ‘control group’. They
are persons who merely aided in furnishing technical information to be used as
a basis for decision. See Congoleum
Industries Inc., v. GAF Corporation, 49 F.R.D. 82 (E.D. Pa., 1969).
Rule
26(b)(4), F.R.Civ.P.
Conoco
also contends that if not protected by the attorney-client privilege both
investigative reports and the photographs taken by an expert may be discovered
only by complying with the requirements of Rule 26(b)(4).
Conoco
represents that it expects to call none of these experts as witnesses. Rule
26(b)(4)A therefore, which reference experts who are expected to be called as
witnesses, is inapplicable. Rule 26(b)(4)B, however, provides that a party also
may discover facts known or opinions held by an expert who has been ‘retained
or specially employed’ by a party in anticipation of litigation and who is not expected
to be called as a witness ‘upon a showing of exceptional circumstances under
which it is impracticable for the party seeking discovery to obtain facts or
opinions on the same subject by other means’.
The
Judge agrees with Conoco that the independent contractor team of experts who
prepared report #1 falls within the ambit of 26(b)(4)B because the team was
retained in anticipation of litigation, but disagrees that 26(b)(4)B is
applicable to Conoco’s own team of experts.
The
unrefuted evidence establishes that both reports and the photographs were
prepared by experts. As previously noted, the record also supports a finding
that the investigation was conducted in anticipation of litigation.
Furthermore, the independent team of experts obviously was ‘retained’. The
Conoco team, however, was not ‘retained or specially employed’ as those terms
are used in 26(b)(4)B. They were simply expert employees of Conoco on special
assignment, a situation not contemplated by 26(b)(4)B. The Advisory Committee
notes to the 1970 Amendments of Rule 26(b)(4) make clear that in-house experts
were not intended to be covered by 26(b)(4)B. There, the Committee points out
that ‘an expert who is simply a general employee of the party not specially
employed on the case’ is excluded from the restrictive provisions of Rule
26(b)(4)B dealing with those experts ‘retained or specially employed’ in
anticipation of litigation See Rules of Civil Procedure, 48 F.R.D. 487, at 504.
Professor
Graham in Graham Discovery of Experts
Under Rule 26(b)(4) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure: Part one, An
Analytical Study, 1976, U. Ill., L.F. 895, argues that regular employee
experts specially assigned to work on a matter in anticipation of the
litigation are subject to discovery only as provided in Rule 26(b)(4). This
Judge disagrees, and concurs with the analysis and conclusions in Virginia Electric & Pow. Co. v. Sun
Shipbuilding and D.D. Co., 68 F.R.D. 397 (1975), that ‘retained or
specially employed’ refers only to the manner by which the experts are
obtained, that generally employed employees are not covered by 26(b)(4)B, and
that expert employees are to be treated as ordinary witnesses under Rule
26(b)(1).
To
obtain discovery of the independent team of experts, the Secretary has the
burden of showing that it is impracticable for him ‘to obtain facts or opinions
on the same subject by other means’. He failed to carry this substantial
burden. No supporting affidavits were filed with the Secretary’s motion to
compel. The Secretary at the hearing also decided to introduce no direct
evidence on this issue, relying instead on argument and cross-examination of
Mr. Hodges, Conoco’s general attorney.[21]
The
record reflects the Secretary conducted a four month investigation of the fire
and explosion. His representatives commenced their investigation on October 3rd
and concluded it on January 12, 1979. They took hundreds of photographs and
conducted numerous interviews with Conoco’s employees. It is uncontradicted the
Conoco cooperated fully and provided the Secretary’s team of investigators with
complete access to the refinery and its management personnel. Conoco apparently
complied with the Secretary’s requests for the production of 24 documents. With
respect to other requests, Conoco represented that the documents were either
missing or destroyed in the fire. There also is no indication whatsoever that
Conoco refused any requests to conduct the same tests as performed by the
independent or Conoce experts. To the contrary, according to Mr. Hodges, the
Secretary’s representatives were notified whenever dismantling of any of the
equipment was to take place and were free to take photographs and make their
own evaluations. Apparently, they didn’t advantage of this opportunity, and
their failure to do so is unexplained.
On
this record the showing required for discovery under Rule 26(b)(4)B has not
been made, and discovery of the independent experts’ report #1, therefore, must
be denied.
Rule
26(b)(3), F.R.Civ.P.
Although
the reports and photographs of the Conoco team of experts are not immune from
discovery by the expert opinion restrictions of 26(b)(4)B, these materials
nevertheless may be covered by the qualified immunity from discovery provided
by Rule 26(b)(3). That rule provides that documents and tangible things
prepared by a party’s agent in anticipation of litigation may be discovered
only upon a showing that the party seeking discovery has substantial need of
the materials in the preparation of his case and that he is unable without due
hardship to obtain the substantial equivalent of the materials by other means.
The burden on the party seeking discovery under 26(b)(3) obviously is not as
great as his burden under Rule 26(b)(4). The Secretary, however, failed to meet
either burden for similar reasons.
This
record establishes that the Secretary had the same opportunity to develop facts
and opinions concerning the October 3rd fire and explosion as did Conoco’s team
of experts. There is no indication that he was precluded from obtaining
substantially equivalent materials through testing and seeking his own expert
evaluation of these tests. His representatives apparently interviewed most of
the same witnesses as Conco and commenced photographing at the site on October
3rd.
Many
courts have held that photographs, diagrams and the like are freely
discoverable under Rule 26(b)(3) because of their uniqueness. Here, however,
the Secretary’s representatives took their own photographs, some 200,
throughout the same period Conoco was taking its own, thereby obtaining the
substantial equivalent of the Conoco photographs. They also took their own
measurements and could have made their own diagrams or sketches.
Rule
26(b)(3), of course, provides protection only for ‘documents and tangible
things’ and only at the discovery stage. The Courts have consistently held that
the work product concept furnishes no shield against discovery, by
interrogatories or deposition, of the facts that a party has learned, or of the
persons from whom he has learned such facts. It is noted in this regard that
the Secretary never sought an order to depose Conoco’s team of experts. The
Secretary, however, charges in his brief that Conoco deprived him of relevant
information because Conoco did not answer the Secretary’s interrogatories on the
basis of ‘such information as is available to the party’, as required by Rule
33(a), F.R.Civ.P., namely, the information furnished by Conoco’s teams of
experts. If true, the charge is serious. But the record contains nothing in
support of this allegation, and nothing in a review of Conoco’s responses to
the Secretary’s interrogatories indicates that Conoco failed to comply with
Rule 33(a).
On
this record, the Secretary has not established his right to discover
investigative reports #1 and #6, and the 337 photographs. His motion to compel
discovery of these documents, therefore, is denied.
SO ORDERED.
James A. Cronin, Jr.,
Judge, OSHRC
Dated: October 4, 1979
[1] Judge Cronin
stated that the interlocutory appeal presented the following question:
Whether
the judge erred in ruling that the Secretary’s motion was untimely and
unreasonable.
[2] 29 C.F.R. §
2200.75.
[3] Judge Cronin
later extended the time for filing requests for discovery to June 1, 1979, but
again said that all discovery should be completed by July 19.
[4] Rule 26(b)(3) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure pertains to materials generated during
trial preparation and provides:
[A]
party may obtain discovery of documents and tangible things otherwise
discoverable under subdivision (b)(1) of this rule and prepared in anticipation
of litigation or for trial by or for another party or by or for that other
party’s representative (including his attorney, consultant, surety, indemnitor,
insurer or agent) only upon a showing
that the party seeking discovery has substantial need of the materials in the
preparation of his case and that he is unable without undue hardship to obtain
the substantial equivalent of the materials by other means. In ordering
discovery of such materials when the required showing has been made, the court
shall protect against disclosure of mental impressions, conclusions, opinions,
or legal theories of an attorney or other representative of a party concerning
the litigation. (Emphasis added)
[5] Rule 26(b)(4)(B)
of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure applies to experts used in trial
preparation and provides:
A
party may discover facts known or opinions held by an expert who has been
retained or specially employed by another party in anticipation of litigation
or preparation for trial and who is not expected to be called as a witness at
trial, only as provided in Rule 35(b) or upon a showing of exceptional
circumstances under which it is impracticable for the party seeking discovery
to obtain facts or opinions on the same subject by other means.
[6] See note 4 supra. Under § 12(g) of the Act, 29
U.S.C. § 661(f), all proceedings are governed by the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure unless the Commission has adopted a different rule. See Commission Rule 2(b), 29 C.F.R. §
2200.2(b); see also Quality Stamping
Products Co., supra.
[7] see WRIGHT AND MILLER, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDUTE: CIVIL § 2024.
[8] Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 511
(1947). See also Natta v. Hogan, 392
F.2d 686 (10th Cir. 1969).
[9] United States v. Nobles, 422 U.S. 225,
238–9 (1975). See also MOORE’S FEDERAL
PRACTICE, ¶26.63[8] and ¶26.64[2]; WRIGHT AND MILLER, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE: CIVIL § 2024.
[10] In re Murphy, 560 F.2d 326 (8th Cir.
1977); United States v. Leggett &
Platt, Inc., 542 F.2d 655 (6th Cir. 1976).
[11] Fed. R. Civ. P.
26(b)(3); See also In re Murphy, 560
F.2d 326 (8th Cir. 1977).
[12] Fed. R. Civ. P.
26, 28 U.S.C.A., Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules.
[13] Id.
[14] See Hickman v. Taylor, supra, at 511–2,
and Guilford Nat’l. Bank v. Southern Ry.
Co., 297 F.2d 921 (4th Cir. 1962).
[15] Commission Rule
53, 29 C.F.R. § 2200.53, requires that a party seek permission of the
Commission or the judge for depositions and interrogatories.
A
substantial question exists under Federal Rule 26(b)(4)(B) about whether the
Secretary could have ever deposed Conoco’s outside experts. It is clear,
however, that the Secretary could have deposed the Conoco employees who
prepared the report. Since testimony indicated that the two reports were
prepared simultaneously and to a great extent jointly, if the Secretary had
deposed the Conoco employees, it is reasonable to conclude that he would have
learned substantially the same information as if he had deposed the outside
experts.
[16] See Hercules, Inc. v. Exxon Corp., 434
F. Supp. 136 (D. Del. 1977); Xerox Corp.
v. International Business Mach. Corp., 64 F.R.D. 367 (S.D. N.Y. 1974); Miles v. Bell Helicopter Co., 385
F.Supp. 1029 (N.D. Ga. 1974); Arney v.
George A. Hormel & Co., 53 F.R.D. 179 (D. Minn. 1971).
[17] The text of these
rules is set forth in the lead opinion at nn. 4 & 5.
[18] The provisions of
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(3) and (4) apply by their terms only to discovery. See Bethlehem Steel Co., 9 BNA OSHC
1321, 1330, 1981 CCH OSHD ¶ 25,200 at p. 31.112 (No. 12817, 1981). The specific
issue before us concerns the propriety of a request for production made at the
hearing on the merits after numerous pretrial discovery attempts. In United States v. Nobles, 422 U.S. 225
(1975), the Supreme Court extended the attorney work-product doctrine of
Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495 (1947), to material prepared by agents of an
attorney. 422 U.S. at 238–39. The Court also stated:
[T]he
concerns reflected in the work-product doctrine do not disappear once trial has
begun. Disclosure of an attorney’s efforts at trial, as surely as disclosure
during pretrial discovery, could disrupt the orderly development and
presentation of this case.
Id. at 239. Though
the Court’s latter statement was dictum, the conclusion that the attorney
work-product privilege stated in Hickman
applies at the trial stage is consistent with ‘the public policy underlying the
orderly prosecution and defense of claims.’ 422 U.S. at 237–38. But see United States v. Nobles (White, J.,
concurring) (the work-product doctrine is not generally applicable at the trial
stage). Therefore, the showing required of the Secretary at the hearing on the
merits is essentially the same showing required under Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(3) and
(4).
[19] The investigative
reports are the only known source for the reconstruction data.
[20] The best evidence rule also suggests that indirect means of obtaining the technical details of a complex scientific study are inadequate. The best evidence of a detailed scientific study is the study itself. It is well recognized that where written records constitute the primary evidence of a fact, they are of substantially greater probative value and reliability than secondary evidence such as summaries or non-written versions of that fact. United States v. Alexander, 326 F.2d 736 (4th Cir. 1964). See generally 4 Wigmore on Evidence § 1179 (Chadbourn rev. 1972). The best evidence rule does not apply directly here, but applying the theory behind the rule, the Secretary would be entitled to the studies he seeks.
[21] An affidavit
filed by the Secretary six days after the evidentiary hearing was closed is
considered untimely and has not been considered.