As motions judge for the week during which motions to seal the settlement agreements in these two appeals were filed, I ordered the motions consolidated and now rule on them.
In Goesel the parties agreed to settle a personal injury suit, but because the suit was on behalf of a minor they were required by Local Rule 17.1 of the Northern District of Illinois to obtain the district judge’s approval of the settlement. See Elustra v. Mineo, 595 F.3d 699, 709-10 (7th Cir.2010); cf. Villalobos v. Cicero School District 99,
In Massuda, a suit for breach of fiduciary duty, the district judge dismissed most of the plaintiffs claims on the ground that they were derivative from claims in a previous suit that the parties had settled. In so ruling the court relied on a redacted copy of the settlement agreement in the earlier suit, filed under seal, that inked out almost all the terms of the settlement other than the names of the parties and the nature of the suit. The defendants want the redaсted settlement agreement kept under seal in this court as well.
“Documents that affect the disposition of federal litigation are presumptively open to public view.” In re Specht,
The presumption can be rebutted. A litigant is allowed, for example, to conceal trade secrets, and, if there are compelling rеasons of personal privacy, to litigate under a pseudonym. See, e.g., Doe v. City of Chicago,
But what about concealment of terms in settlement agreements? Settlements are ubiquitous in the legal system, but most settlement agreements never show up in a judicial record and so are not subject to the. right of public access. Either the agreement is made before a suit is filed (and so the suit is never filed), or, if after, the parties file a stipulation of dismissal and in that event they’re not required to make the agreement a part of the court record. Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(a)(l)(ii); Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co.,
If though it is part of the judicial record the settlеment is made without any court action (approval, disapproval, or approval with modifications as in Goesel) there will rarely be a good reason to require that its terms be made public, becаuse making them public would not reveal anything about judicial activity. See LEAP Systems, Inc. v. MoneyTrax, Inc., supra,
The net effects of compelled disclosure of settlement terms are deeply uncertain. It’s been argued, on behalf of disclosure, that settlement agreements, which often contain terms going far beyond just a dollar amount, may conceal safety hazards and other matters of acute public concern. Richard A. Zitrin, “The Laudable South Carolina Court Rules Must Be Broadened,” 55 S. Carolina L.Rev. 883, 887-89 (2004). Usually, however, all that is sought to be concealed is the size of the settlement. Robert Timothy Reagan et al., Sealed Settlement Agreements in Federal District Court 1, 8 (Federal Judicial Center 2004). Yet making that information public can be defended as encouraging prelitigation settlements, since they are not open to public scrutiny, and thus as economizing on litigation costs. Also and more important, the more that is known about size (and other terms) of settlements, the easier it should be for prospective litigants to predict the likely outcome of their own litigation, and ability to predict outcоme should both foster and simplify settlement. See Scott A. Moss, “Illuminating Secrecy: A New Economic Analysis of Confidential Settlements,” 105 Mich. L.Rev. MI, 898-903 (2007); Ben Depoorter, “Law in the Shadow of Bargaining: The Feedback Effect of Civil Sеttlements,” 95 Cornell L.Rev. 957, 974 (2010). Disclosure of sizes of settlements should also reduce the probability of lopsided settlements — ones that the parties would have recognized were too large or too small had they hаd information about settlements in similar cases.
So there is an upside to disclosing settlement terms, but there is also a downside. If parties know that the size of their settlement will become public, their settlement negotiations are likely to become more complicated. See id. at 980-83; Note, “Quality, Not Quantity: An Analysis of Confidential Settlements and Litigants’ Economic Incentives,” 154 U. Pa. L.Rev. 433, 456 (2005). The defendant will fear that if the amount is large, making it public will invite more suits against him, while the plaintiffs lawyer will fear that if the amount is small he will find settlement
Yet in the end this to and fro of comрeting considerations may be of little importance. Depoorter in the article cited above argues that most lawyers who negotiate settlements are experienced and know from their own cases (and by word-of-mouth from other lawyers) what the attainable terms of settlement are likely to be in the class of cases that they handle. So maybe there is little at stake in the decision whether to allow or forbid parties to conceal the size of a settlement.
Against a background of such uncertainty, it’s difficult to imagine what arguments or evidence parties wanting to conceal the amount or other terms of their settlement (apart from terms that would reveal trade secrets or seriously compromise personal or institutional privacy or national security) could present tо rebut the presumption of public access to judicial records. The parties before me haven’t even tried. In neither case have they offered any reason for secrecy except that they have a confidentiality agreement. Obviously that’s insufficient, and I could stop there: because there is potential public value to disclosing settlement terms, including amount, parties have to give the judge a reason for not disclosing them— and the fact that they don’t want to disclose is not a reason. See Arthur R. Miller, “Confidentiality, Protective Orders, and Public Access to the Courts,” 105 Harv. L.Rev. 427, 492-93 (1991). But I’ll trudge on.
In Goesel an outsider to the litigation could not evaluate the dispute over the district judge’s modification of the settlement without knowing the amount of the settlement (including fees and costs) before and after the modification. That is information important to future negotiations over attorneys’ fees in cases in which the plaintiff is a minor; and no good reason—in fact no reason at all—has been given for thinking that concealment of the informatiоn would serve some social purpose.
As for the other case, Massuda, there is no indication that the amount of the settlement figured in the district court’s decision. Nor is an unredacted copy of the settlement agreement, which would reveal that amount, even in the judicial record in either the district court or this court; as far as I can tell the district judge never saw it. The only issue is whether the redacted agreement, which is in the judicial record, should be under seal, as the defendants request. I can’t understand why they want that, since almost everything of any possible interest has been redacted, including the size of the settlement. I asked them for an exрlanation, and their unhelpful response was that they requested the seal “in an abundance of caution” but “do not object to the Seventh Circuit unsealing the redacted document if it decides to do sо.” Oddest of all, they had included a copy of the redacted settlement agreement in the appendix to their brief on appeal—a public document— thus mooting their request for concealment.
The request in Goesel is therefore denied; in Massuda it is dismissed.
