The Official Secured Creditors’ Committee of Amfesco Industries, Inc. sought to intervene in this case for the purpose of modifying a protective order entered as part of the final judgment. The district court refused to allow intervention. We affirm.
*1229 I. BACKGROUND
This appeal is a tale of two lawsuits, both rising from the rubble of Amfesco’s collapse. In late 1985, Amfesco entered bankruptcy in the Eastern District of New York. The bankruptcy court constituted an Official Secured Creditors’ Committee and appointed Irving Trust Company, Chemical Bank, and Banco Popular de Puerto Rico as members of it. On November 18, 1987, the Committee sued Amfesco’s former directors in a New York state court. Some seven weeks earlier, however, Banco Popular, acting to its own behoof, had sued Amfesco’s former directors and accountants in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico.
The two cases were spun from much the same yarn. The federal action alleged fraud, negligence, and civil conspiracy; the state action alleged waste and mismanagement. An insurer provided counsel for the directors in both forums, acting pursuant to a liability policy purchased by Amfesco in its salad days. Because the policy was a corporate asset, the bankruptcy court enjoined the insurer from disbursing the policy’s avails without prior bankruptcy court approval.
On September 9, 1988, the parties to the federal action entered into a confidentiality agreement providing, inter alia, that any person producing discovery material (the “Designating Party”) could classify the information as “confidential,” thus restricting its dissemination to individuals directly involved in the litigation. The agreеment also provided for judicial review of inter-party disputes anent classification. The district court sanctioned the confidentiality agreement, embodying it in a protective order. Paragraph ten of the protective order stipulated that:
Promptly after final termination of this action, each party or other person subject to the terms hereof shall assemble and destroy or return to the Designating. Party all material, documents and things in his or its possession or control designated as Confidential Information by any other party, as well as all copies, summaries, and abstracts thereof, and all other materials, memoranda or documents, constituting or containing information designated as Confidential Information and not subsequently relieved of that designation by the Designating Party or by a court. If such material, documеnts, or things are destroyed, the person shall certify their destruction to the Designating Party in writing. The [nondisclosure] provisions of this Stipulation ... shall continue after the conclusion of this action until such time as the parties may otherwise agree in writing.
In April 1989, following protracted discovery, the director-defendants sought the bankruptcy court’s permission to use insurance monies for settlement of the federal action. On May 1, the Committee filed a motion beseeching the bankruptcy judge to condition approval of the directors’ application on a requirement that the settling parties share the fruits of their federal-court discovery with the Committee. The bankruptcy judge, hesitant about fiddling with another tribunal’s protective order, granted the directors’ application but stayed disbursement of the needed funds for sixty days (during which period thе Committee, if it so desired, might have asked the Puerto Rico federal district court to modify the protective order). The Committee made no overtures to the district court. After the sixty-day grace period had passed, the district court, unaware of the Committee’s misgivings, entered the settlement agreement as a final judgment. The judgment expressly reaffirmed the protective order.
Some three weeks thereafter (on August 10, 1989, to be exact), the Committee moved to intervene in the federal action for the purpose of enjoining the destruction of discovery documents. All parties to the federal action objected. The district court pondered the motion for over two years. 1 On September 6, 1991, the court finally heard oral argument.
*1230 The objectors (appellees before us) urged that intervention should be denied for four reasons: (1) the motion was untimely; (2) the Committee had no standing to intervene; (3) the court lacked authority to grant the relief requested; and (4) modification of the protective order would undermine the settlement. Five days later, the district court ruled. The court stated that it lacked authority to impose “new, affirmative requirements” on the appellees after the underlying litigation had been concluded. Acсordingly, the court denied the application for intervention without addressing appellees’ other asseverations. This appeal ensued.
II. DISCUSSION
The matter of when, and under what circumstances, a protective order may be lifted at the insistence of a nonparty after entry of final judgment is a complicated one. It is unnecessary for us to meet that issue head-on. After all, an appellate court is not wedded to the district court’s reasoning but, instead, can affirm a judgment on any independently sufficient ground reflected in the record,
see, e.g., Garside v. Osco Drug, Inc.,
We have made it pellucidly clear that Rule 24’s timeliness requirement is of great importance.
See Caterino v. Barry,
There is no bright-line rule delineating when a motion to intervene is or is not timeous. Instead, courts must decide the question on a case by case basis, examining the totality of the relevant circumstances.
See NAACP,
In this circuit, four factors — all of which are informed to some degree by the case’s posture — must be considered in ruling on the timeliness of a motion to intervene: (1) the length of time the applicant knew or reasonably should have known that its interest was imperilled before it moved to intervene; (2) the foreseeable prejudice to existing parties if intervention is granted; (3) the foreseeable prejudice to the applicant if intervention is denied; and (4) idiocratic circumstances which, fairly viewed, militate for or against interventiоn.
See Public Citizen,
1.
Knowledge.
The first factor focuses on actual or constructive knowledge of possible jeopardy. While knowledge of the existence of litigation, simpliciter, does not invariably trigger one’s obligation to seek intervention, the count begins no later than the time “when the intervenor became aware that its interest in the case would no longer be adequately protected by the [existing] parties.”
Public Citizen,
Once a potential intervenor has acquired such knowledge, the tempo of the count accelerates. The applicant must then act reasonably promptly.
See United Airlines, Inc. v. McDonald,
The knowledge factor cuts rather sharply against the Committee. At least by May 1,1989, when it asked the bankruptcy court to modify the protective order, the Committee was fully aware of the potential hazards and likely consequences of inaction.
4
The bankruptcy court gave the Committee a generous opportunity to challenge the protective order prior to the entry of final judgment. The Committee squandered this opportunity, waiting until after the protective order was embodied in a final judgment before attempting to intervene in the federal action. We find the Committee’s failure to act for over three months, though armed with full knowledge, to be inexpiable.
Compare, e.g., NAACP,
2.
Prejudice to Appellees.
The second prong of the test focuses on whether the delay in seeking intervention prejudiced the existing parties. This is a vital element of a timeliness inquiry.
See Fiandaca,
As a general rule, prejudice to existing parties is less likely in a case where post-judgment intervention does not seek to disturb the core judgment, but merely to reconfigure an ancillary term.
See Caterino,
Prejudice can inhere in other respects as well. Once settlement efforts are completed and embodied in a final judgment, the parties expect to be able to tailor their future actions and decisions in reliance on that judgment. It follows inexorably that modifying a settlement term can knock the props out from under justifiable reliance of this sort. Moreover, courts have long recognized the systemic benefits of policies favoring the voluntary resolution of disputes.
See United States v. Cannons Eng’g Corp.,
These considerations have obvious pertinence here, leading us to believe that post-judgment intervention would circumvent the settlement and cause unfair prejudice to the appellees.
3.
Prejudice to Appellant.
The penultimate factor in the four-part test focuses on what prejudice an applicant will suffer if intervention is denied. This requires that we determine whether the movant, had intervention been allowed, would have “enjoy[ed] a significant probability of success on the merits.”
Garrity,
This case does not involve a right of public access, based either on the First Amendment or the common law, to records and documents filed with the district court,
compare, e.g., Littlejohn v. BIC Corp.,
In
Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart,
Because the Committee stands little chance of modifying the protective order in any meaningful sense, 5 denying intervention does littlе to prejudice the Committee’s cause.
4. Exceptional Circumstances. The last prong of the test necessitates consideration of unusual features militating in favor of, or against, intervention. Here, the balance is unaffected. Although the Committee will undoubtedly suffer some inconvenience and expense in order to recreate the desired data, it has shown no more. Inconvenience and expense are altogether оrdinary concomitants of the pretrial discovery pavane. Given that the state action is a garden variety tort suit, implicating parochial concerns, so modest a burden is not enough to tip the scales.
In treating the state action as prosaic, it is important to note what this case does
not
involve. First, there is no basis for any claim that the state action touches upon matters of broad soсietal import or that an overriding public interest will be served by modifying the protective order.
Cf., e.g., Public Citizen,
Finally, we reject the hypothesis that self-initiated discovery would necessarily be futile. The protective order does not provide that all discovery materials gathered in the federal action are to be destroyed; neither the persons who solicited information during discovery nor the persons who produced the information are under any compulsion to atomize original reсords. By the same token, the protective order in no way purports to immunize the Designating Parties (who, presumably, now hold whatever materials are still in existence) from state-court discovery orders.
A slightly different situation may obtain with regard to the deposition previously taken from the decedent, David Greenblatt. Yet, the Committee has not limited its application to this one identifiable needle but has sought relief аffecting a vast haystack of discovery materials. What is more, it has not shown a clear need for a federal court order respecting even the Greenblatt deposition. Under the terms of the protective order, the party that designated the deposition transcript as “confidential” is not disabled from producing it if directed to do so by a New York state court. Thus, the Committee may seek the transcript by means of discovery in the state action. 7
III. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. On this record, it seems inequitable to allow a latecomer, who fiddled while Rome burned, to collect a share of the fire insurance. Given appellant’s unrelieved tardiness and the absence of any mitigating circumstances, we decline to disturb the district court’s denial of post-judgment intervention.
Affirmed.
Notes
. During this period, one of Amfesco’s directors, David Greenblatt, died. Greenblatt had earlier been deposed in the federal action.
. The Committee moved for intervention as of right and permissively, citing both Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a) and (b). While both of these sections are subject to the precondition that an application for intervention be “timely," we have written that “the standards of timeliness for a Rule 24(a) motion are less strict than for a Rule 24(b) motion because greater interests are at stake in the fоrmer case.”
Fiandaca v. Cunningham,
.. The trial court here made no explicit finding on timeliness, although it suggested in dictum that appellant had an arguably valid position on this, and other, issues. Had the trial court made a finding on timeliness, we would review that determination for abuse of discretion.
See NAACP,
. It seems highly probable that the Committee should have known of the protective order, and its dangers, well before May 1, 1989. We need not explore the incidence and effect of constructive knowledge, however, for even assuming that the Committee’s earlier knowledge was somehow imperfect, it nonetheless slept upon its rights in a thoroughly inexcusable fashion once it possessed actual knowledge.
. It is, of cоurse, possible that, under certain circumstances, the public may enjoy a right of access to discovery materials held in the reluctant hands of private parties based on Fed.R.Civ.P. 5(d) in conjunction with Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c).
See In re “Agent Orange”Product Liability Litig.,
. The existence of this alternative bolsters our conclusion,
see supra
Part 11(3), that the Committee will not suffer significant prejudice from the denial of its attempt at intervention.
See Garrity,
. While we leave all questions regarding the discoverability of information in the state action for adjudication by the state courts,
see United Nuclear Corp. v. Cranford Ins. Co.,
