Lead Opinion
Plaintiff-appellant appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Pollack, /.) quashing its deposition subpoena of defendant-appellee Dennis Friedman, Esq. (“Friedman”), an attorney who previously served as counsel during merger negotiations to a now-bankrupt corporation of which the non-attorney defendants-appel-lees are former directors. The former directors are being sued by plaintiff-appellant in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware for breach of then-fiduciary duties in connection with the merger and have raised a defense based on Friedman’s advice. Although no longer serving as a formal adviser to the former directors, Friedman is a non-litigation partner at the law firm now representing them in the Delaware litigation. The dis
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff-appellant, the Liquidation Trust of Hechinger Investment Company of Delaware, Inc., and the non-attorney defendants-appellees, former members of the company’s board of directors, are currently involved in securities litigation in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware. That litigation concerns the defendants’ actions in connection with the merger of Hechinger Investment Company (“Hechinger”) and another home improvement company, Builder’s Square. The combined companies declared bankruptcy approximately two years after the merger. Plaintiffs predecessor-in-interest (an unsecured creditors’ committee) subsequently brought the underlying Delaware lawsuit, claiming inter alia that Hechinger’s former directors breached their fiduciary duties to the company’s creditors by approving the merger. The directors have asserted affirmative defenses in the lawsuit based on the business judgment rule and their reliance on the advice of their counsel, defendant-appellee Friedman, during the merger negotiations. According to defendants, at the time Hechinger’s board was considering the Builder’s Square merger, Friedman (then of Chad-bourne & Parke LLP) advised them about their fiduciary obligations and the business judgment rule. Friedman’s representation of Hechinger ended after the merger, and he subsequently moved to Gibson Dunn & Crutcher (“GDC”), the law firm serving as trial counsel for the defendants in the pending Delaware litigation. Friedman is not a litigator and is not counsel of record either in the court below or in the underlying action.
On October 3, 2002, plaintiff served Friedman with a non-party deposition subpoena, issued in the Southern District of New York, seeking his testimony concerning the nature and substance of his advice to the defendants in connection with the Hechinger-Builder’s Square merger. Having deposed all of the available former Hechinger directors, plaintiff claims that the directors had either conflicting or no recollections of whether Friedman specifically directed the board to consider the interests of Hechinger’s creditors in evaluating the merits of the proposed merger. Plaintiff therefore argues that deposing Friedman is necessary. Friedman and the Hechinger defendants moved to quash the subpoena on October 7, 2002.
After a hearing on November 12, 2002, the district court initially held the motion to quash in abeyance “pending a good faith showing by plaintiff of the propriety of the intended inquiries to the particular proposed witness.” (Nov. 12, 2002 Order.) The district court instructed plaintiff to “show by proposed interrogatories covering the desired deposition that legally proper inquiries exist under the circumstances to ground the request for deposing the attorney-witness; and that the at
In its December 10, 2002 order, the district court first held that the proposed deposition was not barred by attorney-client privilege because plaintiff, as bankruptcy trustee, could waive the privilege with respect to both defendants’ communications with Friedman and his attorney work product.
Plaintiff appealed from the December 10, 2002 order, and defendants moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the order was not sufficiently final to provide this Court with jurisdiction because it left open the possibility that the district court might, at some later point, permit the plaintiff to depose Friedman. A panel of this Court denied the motion and ordered the appeal expedited. (June 26, 2003 Order Denying Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the Appeal.)
DISCUSSION
We review a district court’s ruling on a motion to quash a subpoena for abuse of discretion. See DG Acquisition Corp. v. Dabah (In re DG Acquisition Corp.),
The deposition-discovery regime set out by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is an extremely permissive one to which courts have long “accorded a broad and liberal treatment to effectuate then-purpose that civil trials in the federal courts [need not] be carried on in the dark.” Schlagenhauf v. Holder,
Nevertheless, the federal rules give district courts broad discretion to manage the manner in which discovery proceeds. In particular, Rule 26(b)(2) permits a district court to limit “[t]he frequency or extent of use of the discovery methods otherwise permitted under [the federal] rules” if it determines that (1) the discovery sought is unreasonably cumulative or duplicative, or more readily obtainable from another source; (2) the party seeking discovery already has had ample opportunity to obtain the information sought; or (3) the burden or' expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit. Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(2)(i)-(iii). Moreover, Rule 26(c) provides that “for good cause shown” a court may make “any order which justice requires to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense,” including that the discovery not be had or that it be had only by a method other than that selected by the party seeking discovery. Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c)(1), (3).
Courts have been especially concerned about the burdens imposed on the adversary process when lawyers themselves have been the subject of discovery requests, and have resisted the idea that lawyers should routinely be subject to broad discovery. See, e.g., Hickman v. Taylor,
In light of these concerns, the Eighth Circuit held that parties seeking to depose “opposing trial counsel” must show that: (1) no other means exist to obtain the information sought through the deposition than to depose opposing counsel; (2) the information sought is relevant and not privileged; and (3) the information is crucial to the preparation of the case. Id. (the “Shelton rule”). The court went on to hold that in the case before it the plaintiff did not meet the “non-privileged” prong of the test. Id. at 1328-29. Shelton thus represents a departure from the otherwise permissive deposition-discovery regime under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Eighth Circuit summarized the specific policies that animated its heightened standard for depositions of opposing counsel as follows:
Taking the deposition of opposing counsel not only disrupts the adversarial system and lowers the standards of the profession, but it also adds to the already burdensome time and costs of litigation. It is not hard to imagine additional pretrial delays to resolve work-product and attorney-client objections, as well as delays to resolve collateral issues raised by the attorney’s testimony. Finally, the practice of deposing opposing counsel detracts from the quality of client representation. Counsel should be free to devote his or her time and efforts to preparing the client’s case without fear of being interrogated by his or her opponent. Moreover, the “chilling effect” that such practice will have on the truthful communications from the client to the attorney is obvious.
Id. at 1327. Although the Shelton court did not explicitly rest this aspect of its holding on concerns about intruding on attorney-client privilege, such concerns
The Eighth Circuit further explained the policies animating its Shelton decision in Pamida, Inc. v. E.S. Originals, Inc.,
The Shelton test was intended] to protect against the ills of deposing opposing counsel in a pending case which could potentially lead to the disclosure of the attorney’s litigation strategy. Because this abuse of the discovery process had become an ever increasing practice, this Court erected the Shelton test as a barrier to protect trial attorneys from these depositions. But Shelton was not intended to provide heightened protection to attorneys who represented a client in a completed case and then also happened to represent that same client in a pending case where the information known only by the attorneys regarding the prior concluded case was crucial.
Id. at 730 (internal citations omitted). Accordingly, the court held that “[the defendant] need not satisfy Shelton to depose the [plaintiffs] attorneys regarding information involving the concluded patent infringement case,” but that the proposed depositions were still subject to the standards of Rule 26. Id. at 730-31.
Although we have cited Shelton for the proposition that depositions of “opposing counsel” are disfavored, see United States v. Yonkers Bd. of Educ.,
Here, the district court’s ruling — that plaintiff “must demonstrate that the [proposed] deposition is the only practical means of obtaining the information” and thus must first attempt to proceed by written interrogatories — was premised on its determination that the proposed deposition was subject to the Shelton test, rather than to the flexible approach that we conclude is mandated by the federal rules. However, we need not rule definitively whether the reliance on Shelton tainted the district court’s exercise of discretion because we have recently been advised that Friedman has agreed to be deposed.
CONCLUSION
The appeal is dismissed as moot.
Notes
. This ruling was in accordance with a similar ruling made by the District Court in Delaware. See In re Hechinger Investment Co. of Delaware,
. District courts have also typically treated oral depositions as a means of obtaining discoverable information that is preferable to written interrogatories. See Mill-Run Tours, Inc. v. Khashoggi,
. Two other circuits have upheld lower court rulings premised on Shelton by affirming on the grounds that the rulings were within the lower court’s discretion to manage discovery under Rule 26. See Boughton v. Cotter Corp.,
. Our concurring colleague does not believe "that this now-mooted appeal warrants a writing on its former merits.” Infra, at 73. We recognize that the mootness of this appeal deprives us of appellate jurisdiction to adjudicate the merits and requires dismissal of the appeal. In such circumstances, any discussion of the merits is dicta and would normally be inappropriate. Nevertheless, two esteemed district court judges — in this litigation, In re Subpoena Issued to Friedman,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in
result only.
Because the jurisdictional requirement of an actual case or controversy under
