This is an attempted interlocutory appeal by Coverall North America, Inc., seeking review in this court of a discovery-related order by the district court in litigation now pending before it. The case in the district court is a class action by Coverall’s “franchisees” alleging that Coverall made misrepresentations, failed to keep its contractual promises, and wrongly classified them as independent contractors; the nature of Coverall’s operatiоns and other pertinent background is described in
Awuah v. Coverall North America, Inc.,
During discovery, Coverall’s former chief financial officer, Steven R. Cumbow, was deposed and the deposition initially sealed because of Coverall’s claims that it revealed privileged and confidential information about Coverall’s business practices including various accounting matters. Thereafter, in October 2008, the plaintiffs moved to unseal the deposition so that they could make fuller use of it. The district court held a hearing, reviewed disputed passages and unsealed portions that it found not to be privileged.
Coverall then sought a protective order as to certain passages of Cumbow’s deposition that it claimed reveаled trade secrets or competitively sensitive information, and after further proceedings the district judge ruled against the trade secrets claim but agreed that certain deposition passages— although not all those requested by Coverall- — -should remain sealed because they are competitively sensitive. Although Coverall sought protection for passages on 28 pages of Cumbow’s deposition, protection was granted for all passagеs on 15 pages and, on another page, for one passage but not a second. Coverall has now appealed from the denial of protection as to the remaining passages (and their disclosure has been stаyed pending this appeal).
The general rule is that interlocutory orders are not immediately reviewable but must await a final judgment; however, among a number of exceptions is that created by the collateral order doсtrine,
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
Many discovery orders are effectively reviewable on final judgment, but disclosure of allegedly privileged or sensitive information may threaten immediate harm that cannot later be undone on review of the final judgment. The unsealing order in this case meets that test and also definitively resolves the question whether *481 the disputed passages are to be made рublic. Plaintiffs dispute that the confidentiality issue is “distinct from the merits” of the case — a criterion whose application may in some instances not be straightforward; 2 but we bypass that question because we conclude that the final requirement — importance—cannot be satisfied.
It might be asked why such requirements exist at all if an order may cause irreparable harm that cannot be undone by later review, but the final judgment rule implicitly accepts that some harms may rеsult from deferring appeals; for example, a court may unreviewably refuse to dismiss a case on summary judgment prior to trial, thereby imposing heavy costs on the defense.
Digital Equip. Corp. v. Desktop Direct, Inc.,
Further, in the course of a single case, discovery-related orders are often numerous and often сlose calls. Yet they are rarely overturned on appeal, because review is normally for abuse of discretion,
Mack v. Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co.,
The “importance” requirement in the collateral order doctrine thus serves as a mediаting device, just as it does with mandamus, another vehicle for review of interlocutory orders with somewhat different criteria.
See United States v. Horn,
This is the settled rule in this circuit,
In re Insurers Syndicate for the Joint Underwriting of Medico-Hosp. Prof'l Liab. Ins.,
[CJourts routinely dismiss appeals from orders granting discovery, denying discovery, granting protective orders, granting a protective order narrower than requested, denying protective orders, refusing to modify protective orders, or dealing with the procedures for conducting discovery.
15B Wright, Miller & Cooper,
supra,
§ 3914.23, at 124-30. While one circuit has created an automatic exception when a party is ordered to disclose trade secrets,
In re Carco Elecs.,
The situation is different where a discovery order is directed to a non-party who is not otherwise part of the litigation,
e.g., Gill,
Turning then to the importance criterion, cases dеemed to qualify usually present a disputable
legal
issue whose importance turns on the likelihood that it will arise in other cases.
E.g., Cohen,
There is no “legal” issue presented by the merits of the discovery order in this ease. The district court’s decisions on virtually all of the disputed passages involved routine judgments about the likelihood that competitive harm will be done by disclosures about particular aspects of Coverall’s business operations. It would be hard to think of more fact-bound controversies or ones more likely to turn on largely speculative judgments about a business with which the district court is now familiar as a result of managing the ease and its еxtensive review of the disclosure issues. Coverall does not even attempt to frame an abstract legal issue for our review.
Some collateral order cases suggest that only distinctly legal issues can qualify; others, by referring only tо importance, might suggest that in rare cases the significance of the interest at stake or even the magnitude of an error might qualify.
3
We have no reason to pursue those possibilities because nothing of the kind has been established here. What is before us is a routine set of arguments, none too strong in themselves, that the judge underestimated the potential for competitive damage as a result of the release of the limited number of passages he deсlined to protect.
See, e.g., Poliquin v. Garden Way, Inc.,
Of course, Coverall has fought energetically and over a considerable period against the disclosures and one might infer that this resistance is a proxy demonstrating the extreme competitive sensitivity of the information. The inference, not in any
*483
case proof that the district court was mistaken, is hardly air-tight: Coverall has been charged — it has not been found liable in this case — with activities that could be viewed as highly unattractive.
See Awuah,
Conversely, one may ask why plaintiffs are рressing for unsealing since the protective order allows plaintiffs’ counsel access to the information; merely embarrassing a defendant into settlement might not be an appealing ground for forced disclosure. But, asked at oral argument how the sealing of available information disadvantaged plaintiffs, plaintiffs’ counsel offered reasons why counsel were handicapped by the protective order — for example, in working with experts or other potential witnesses and during arbitration to which some plaintiffs may be subject — and the reasons were not implausible.
The appeal is dismissed for want of a final judgment. Costs are awarded in favor of appellees.
It is so ordered.
ADDENDUM
Many cases in other circuits disallow immеdiate appeals of discovery orders that govern what information needs to be disclosed and to whom.
E.g., Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. v. Turner & Newall, PLC,
Notes
. Some of our cases condense the four factors into three,
Lee-Barnes v. Puerto Ven Quarry Corp.,
.
See, e.g., Van Cauwenberghe v. Biard,
.
E.g., Digital Equip.,
