Before the Court is Defendant Bill O'Reilly's Motion to seal two Settlement and Arbitration Agreements filed in connection with his Motion to Compel Arbitration and/or Dismiss the Complaint. For the foregoing reasons, Defendant O'Reilly's Motion to Seal is DENIED.
I. Background
On December 21, 2017, Plaintiffs Rachel Witlieb Bernstein, Andrea Mackris, and Rebecca Gomez Diamond filed an Amended Complaint against Defendants Bill O'Reilly and Fox News Network LLC, alleging claims for defamation, breach of contract, breach of covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and tortious interference. (Am. Compl, dkt. 10).
*165The day before a responsive pleading was due, Defendant O'Reilly informed the Court that he would move to dismiss the Complaint and/or Compel Arbitration the following day. He also sought an Order from this Court directing certain Settlement, Mutual Release, and Arbitration Agreements ("Agreements") made between him and Diamond and Mackris to be filed in redacted form and under seal. (Def. O'Reilly's Letter of March 19, 2018, dkt. 35). Plaintiffs opposed on March 20, 2018. (Dkt. 39). Defendant Fox News indicated it took no position on the sealing on March 22, 2018. (Dkt. 48).
On March 20, 2018, Defendant O'Reilly filed a Motion to Dismiss the Complaint and/or Compel Arbitration. (O'Reilly Mot. Dismiss, dkt. 43). Mr. O'Reilly invoked the Agreements in his Motion, and attached only selected portions of the Agreements on the public docket. (See Exhibits to Bourne Decl. in support of Mot. Dismiss, dkt. 44).
On March 22, 2018, Plaintiffs indicated they too would "quote from various portions of the Settlement Agreements" in opposing the Motion to Dismiss and/or Compel Arbitration, and sought guidance from the Court because they intended submit the entire, unredacted Agreements in connection with their Opposition. (Pls.' letter of March 22, 2018, dkt. 46).
On March 26, 2018, the Court ordered Defendant O'Reilly to produce the entire, unreacted Agreements to the Court for in camera review in order to determine the propriety of sealing the documents. (Order of March 26, 2018, dkt. 49). The Court received the unredacted Agreements on March 29, 2018.
II. Discussion
There is a long-established "general presumption in favor of public access to judicial documents." Collado v. City of New York,
A Motion to Seal documents filed in connection with a Motion for Summary Judgment or a Motion to Dismiss should generally be ruled on expeditiously and separately from the underlying Motion it is made in connection with. Lugosch,
*166United States v. Erie Cnty., New York,
There are "two related but distinct presumptions in favor of public access to court proceedings and records:" "[a] slightly weaker form based in federal common law" and a "strong form rooted in the First Amendment." Newsday LLC v. Cty. of Nassau,
A. Common Law Presumption of Access
"In Lugosch, the Second Circuit described a three-step inquiry to be used by district courts prior to permitting judicial documents to be withheld from public view." Collado,
First, a court must determine whether " 'the documents at issue are 'judicial documents' " to which the presumption of access attaches. Lugosch,
1. Judicial Documents
The Court of Appeals has defined "judicial documents" as documents that are "relevant to the performance of the judicial function and useful in the judicial process." Amodeo I,
"[O]nce [documents submitted to support or oppose a motion] come to the attention of the district judge, they can fairly be assumed to play a role in the court's deliberations." Lugosch,
Just as with documents submitted in connection with a Motion for Summary Judgment, documents filed in connection to a Motion to Compel Arbitration or Dismiss "are judicial documents to which a presumption of immediate public access attaches under both the common law and the First Amendment." Lugosch,
The resolution of Defendants' Motions to Compel and/or Motions to Dismiss relies heavily on a full examination of the Settlement and Arbitration Agreements in question. Defendant O'Reilly refers repeatedly to the Agreements throughout his Motion (see, e.g., O'Reilly Mot. to Dismiss, dkt. 45, at 1-12) and Plaintiffs indicate they seek to Oppose by referring to various parts of the Agreements as well (Pls.' letter of March 22, 2018, dkt. 46). Defendant O'Reilly asks the Court to resolve a dispute by relying on the very Agreements *167he seeks to shield from public view. Accordingly, the Agreements are "judicial documents" under Second Circuit doctrine.
2. Weight of Presumption
Once a document is classified as a judicial document and the presumption of access attaches, a court must determine the weight of the presumption of access. Lugosch,
The Circuit has emphasized that the "presumptive right to 'public observation' is at its apogee when asserted with respect to documents relating to 'matters that directly affect an adjudication.' " Gambale v. Deutsche Bank AG,
Indeed, "[a]fter Lugosch, it appears that the test focuses not on whether the document was actually used by the court but, rather, on the role the document was intended to play in the exercise of the court's Article III duties. If a party submitted the document as part of the process of adjudication, the presumption of public access accorded the document is entitled to great weight." United States v. Sattar,
Similar to the "judicial documents" analysis supra, Defendant O'Reilly seeks immediate action from this Court: for the Court to Compel arbitration and/or Dismiss the Complaint. O'Reilly relies on the agreements in support of his Motion for this Court to exercise its Article III adjudicatory powers. When this Court issues its Opinion on his Motion, the public deserves to see what judicial document it relied on. See Lugosch,
"The documents comprise a significant proportion of the ... record before the Court and they pertain to matters that *168'directly affect' the Court's adjudication." Collado,
3. Countervailing Factors
"A party may overcome the presumption of access by demonstrating that sealing will further other substantial interests such as a third party's personal privacy interests, the public's safety, or preservation of attorney-client privilege." Under Seal,
"The burden of demonstrating that a document submitted to a court should be sealed rests on the party seeking such action." DiRussa v. Dean Witter Reynolds Inc.,
Defendant O'Reilly has failed to meet that burden. See Collado,
Defendant first argues that the Agreements are "private agreement[s], which ... the Parties intended to keep confidential." (Def. O'Reilly's Letter of March 27, 2018 at 2). Defendant cites no case law for this proposition and its application as a "countervailing factor." Rather, Defendant O'Reilly makes the broader argument that failing to seal "Confidential Agreements will discourage confidential private resolutions of disputes" and that "confidentiality provisions would become meaningless." (Id. ).
Yet Courts in this District have long held that bargained-for confidentiality does not overcome the presumption of access to judicial documents. See Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Wales LLC,
*169see also Under Seal,
Defendant next makes the conclusory assertion that the Agreements concern "embarrassing conduct with no public ramifications." (Def. O'Reilly's Letter of March 27, 2018 at 2). Defendant does not explain what conduct may, or may not, be embarrassing or the public ramifications of that conduct. (
"A possibility of future adverse impact on employment or the celebrity status of a party is not a 'higher value' sufficient to overcome the presumption of access to judicial documents." Under Seal,
Thus, Defendant O'Reilly has failed to present compelling countervailing factors that could overcome the presumption of public access to the Agreements in question. A Common Law presumption of access applies to the agreements.
B. First Amendment
Because the Court has held that Defendant O'Reilly is not entitled to seal the Agreements under the less stringent Common Law standard, it need not also determine whether the Agreements are subject to a First Amendment presumption, which the Second Circuit has characterized as "more stringent." Lugosch,
Nevertheless, the Court notes briefly that a First Amendment right of access would attach to the Agreements in question as well. Just as with the Common Law right, the First Amendment protects access to judicial documents if the documents "are necessary to understand the merits" of the proceeding. Newsday LLC,
*170Moreover, the First Amendment presumption may be overcome only if the moving Party makes "specific, on the record findings ... demonstrating that closure is essential to preserve higher values and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest." Lugosch,
Defendant O'Reilly has not even come close to rebutting this First Amendment presumption. O'Reilly only refers to generalized "privacy interests," "embarrassing conduct" and the overarching policy goals of maintaining confidentiality in private agreements. (Def. O'Reilly's Letter of March 27, 2018 at 2). He does not articulate what privacy interests he holds, or how redactions or sealing would be narrowly tailored to achieve those interests. Thus, in addition to a Common Law presumption, the Agreements are also entitled to a First Amendment presumption of access.
C. Partial Redaction
The Court also declines Defendant O'Reilly's request for partial redactions (and partial disclosure) of the Agreements. Partial redaction is not a "viable remedy." Amodeo II,
The Agreements each have multiple, interlocking and cross-referencing sections. They also contain integration clauses which explicitly state that the Agreement "constitutes and contains the entire agreement and understanding between the Parties concerning the subject matters addressed herein." (Diamond Agreement ¶ 9; see also Mackris Agreement ¶ 10). Defendant O'Reilly may not now seek to extricate certain portions of an agreement that is fully integrated.
Moreover, O'Reilly makes arguments in his Motion to Dismiss that require a full consideration of the entire agreement. For example, he argues in his Motion to Dismiss: "Plaintiffs now shamelessly disclaim their express agreements to arbitrate, as well as their express promises of confidentiality, while keeping the money they received in consideration." (O'Reilly Mot. to Dismiss at 1). In order to evaluate that claim, the Court would need to review and analyze the Agreement as a whole and the interlocking portions to which O'Reilly refers; thereafter, the public should be able to see what the Court relied on in issuing its Opinion. The public would have no way to make sense of the Court's analysis testing this claim with only partial or limited access to the Agreement.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, Defendant O'Reilly's Motion to Seal the Mackris and Diamond Settlement and Arbitration Agreements filed in connection with his Motion to Compel Arbitration and/or Dismiss the Complaint is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
As to the weight of the presumption given to such summary judgment filings, the Circuit has emphasized "that the presumption is of the highest: 'documents used by parties moving for, or opposing, summary judgment should not remain under seal absent the most compelling reasons.' " Lugosch,
Defendant's citation to Gambale v. Deutsche Bank AG,
