Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Dier, J.), entered January 24, 1990 in Warren County, which, inter alia, formulated and imposed conditions of confidentiality for disclosure pursuant to plaintiffs notice to produce.
When a dispute arose between the parties to this appeal, as to the extent of plaintiffs discovery, plaintiff and defendant Adirondack Construction Corporation (hereinafter Adirondack) appeared before Supreme Court on January 19, 1990. Adirondack objected to having to release to plaintiff certain documents and materials that it claimed were trade and business secrets. Plaintiff claimed that Adirondack had been previously ordered orally by Supreme Court to produce the documents and had already made over 800 documents available to plaintiff. Adirondack alleged that there could be hun
The order was prepared and signed on January 24, 1990 and provided that all documents produced and released by the parties to the action were to be used only for the purpose of prosecuting or defending the action, were to be made available only to persons directly related to the action, were not to be duplicated except to provide copies to persons directly related to the action, and were not to be disclosed to any person not directly related to the action. Plaintiff appeals from that part of the order which imposed confidentiality requirements on documents produced prior to January 22, 1990, contending that Supreme Court signed the order without its review of any of the documents it had stamped confidential and that the order signed was broader than even the prior oral order of the court.
We agree that the provisions of the order are overly broad and unduly restrictive. In the first place, Adirondack failed to make the initial showing necessary to support its assertion that it would be required to reveal trade secrets, which would shift the burden to plaintiff to show that the information sought was indispensable to support its case (see, Curtis v Complete Foam Insulation Corp.,
With respect to plaintiffs argument that the order appealed from constitutes a "gag order”, we find such claim to be without merit.
Order reversed, on the law, with costs against defendant Adirondack Construction Corporation, and matter remitted to the Supreme Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this court’s decision. Casey, J. P., Weiss, Levine, Mercure and Harvey, JJ., concur.
