235 F.R.D. 241 | S.D.N.Y. | 2006
On November 14, 2005, Magistrate Judge Andrew J. Peck, to whom this case was referred for supervision of pretrial proceedings, issued an Opinion and Order (“Order”)
Plaintiffs move to set aside the Order to the extent that it denies the motion to compel production of reported trade data for locations other than the Henry Hub. Platts moves to set aside the Order to the extent that it grants Plaintiffs’ motion to compel production of the Henry Hub data. Intelligence Press moves to set aside the Order to the extent that it requires Intelligence Press to produce data related to the Henry Hub and to the extent that it requires Intelligence
The Court, having reviewed the Order and the objections to the Order filed by Plaintiffs,
I. BACKGROUND
The relevant facts and prior proceedings are discussed in Magistrate Judge Peek’s thorough decision (see Natural Gas, 235 F.R.D. 199, 203-04), a copy of which is incorporated herein, and in this Court’s rulings denying Defendants’ motion to dismiss and granting Plaintiffs’ motion to certify the class. See In re Natural Gas Commodity Litig. (“Natural Gas I”), 337 F.Supp.2d 498 (S.D.N.Y.2004); In re Natural Gas Commodities Litig. (“Natural Gas II”), 231 F.R.D. 171 (S.D.N.Y.2005). Plaintiffs allege that Defendants manipulated the prices of natural gas futures contracts traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange (“NYMEX”) by falsely reporting trade data related to physical trades of natural gas to industry publications that publish indices of natural gas trade prices. As detailed in the Order, Plaintiffs moved to compel the production of the trade data that was reported to the Publications and used by the Publications to create the published indices. The Publications assert that the reported trade data constitutes confidential information protected by a qualified reporter’s privilege and further argue that Plaintiffs failed to make a sufficient showing to overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A district court reviewing a magistrate judge’s non-dispositive pretrial order may modify or set aside any part of that order if it is “clearly erroneous or contrary to law.” Fed. R. Civ. 72(a). An order may be deemed
Platts argues that to the extent the Order held that Plaintiffs met their burden to overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege, the Order should be subject to a de novo, rather than a “clearly erroneous,” standard of review because that part of the decision involved an incursion into Platts’s First Amendment rights. (See Platts’s Reply at 3-4.) Platts cites several Second Circuit cases in which the Circuit Court applied a heightened standard of review to district court decisions where First Amendment rights were at issue. (See id. (citing U.S. v. Quattrone, 402 F.3d 304, 310-11 (2d Cir.2005))) (subjecting district court order to “exacting review” where order constituted a prior restraint on speech); Green Party of New York State v. New York State Board of Elections, 389 F.3d 411, 418 (2d Cir.2004) (holding that “independent examination of the record as a whole” was required in appeal of district court order granting preliminary injunction affecting First Amendment rights.) Platts argues that a district court’s review of a magistrate judge’s nondispositive order should similarly employ a heightened standard of review where First Amendment rights are at stake.
Platts’ argument for a heightened standard of review is premised on the assumption that the standard of review of magistrate judges’ orders by a district court is determined not by Fed.R.Civ.P. 72(a), but by reference to the standard of review applied by the Circuit Court to cases on appeal. However, neither the language of the Rule nor any relevant authority supports this proposition. Accordingly, the Court rejects Platts’s argument and concludes that the “clearly erroneous” standard of review is appropriate.
III. DISCUSSION
A. PLAINTIFFS’ SHOWING WAS ADEQUATE TO PIERCE THE QUALIFIED REPORTER’S PRIVILEGE
Reporters are protected by a qualified privilege against compelled disclosure of confidential sources and information prepared or obtained in connection with a news story. See United States v. Cutler, 6 F.3d 67, 71 (2d Cir.1993). The qualified reporter’s privilege may be overcome only upon a “clear and specific showing” that the information is “[1] highly material and relevant, [2] necessary or critical to the maintenance of the claim, and [3] not obtainable from other available sources.” Id. It is undisputed that the data sought by the Plaintiffs was obtained by reporters in connection with the preparation of news items and thus protected by the qualified reporter’s privilege. As detailed below, Magistrate Judge Peck correctly applied the three part test and concluded that Plaintiffs made a sufficient showing to overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege.
1. Relevance
To maintain their claim, Plaintiffs must prove that Defendants made false reports and that these false reports affected the published gas price indices at issue. The requested data will enable Plaintiffs to identify the alleged false reports Defendants provided to the Publications and to demonstrate that the false reports affected the published indices. Accordingly, the requested data is highly relevant and material to Plaintiffs’ claim.
2. Criticality
The second step in the test, whether the material sought is “necessary or critical” to the case, is satisfied where the party’s claim or defense “ ‘virtually rises or falls with the admission or exclusion of the proffered evidence.’ ” Natural Gas, 235 F.R.D., at-(quoting In re Application to Quash Subpoena to Nat’l Broadcasting Co., 79 F.3d 346, 351 (2d Cir.1996)) (applying the identical test under N.Y. Civil Rights Law § 79(h)(c)).
Platts argues that data related to its monthly indices is not “necessary or critical”
Plaintiffs dispute this assertion and have submitted expert reports purporting to demonstrate that NYMEX futures prices are in fact highly correlated with the published daily and monthly price indices. However, for purposes of their motion to compel, the test that Plaintiffs must satisfy is grounded on relevancy and criticality, not on causation. Plaintiffs do not have to demonstrate that the false reports caused artificiality in futures prices. They must show only that the requested data is relevant, critical to the maintenance of their claim, and not otherwise available. The ultimate validity of Plaintiffs’ case, insofar as it entails causation as an element of a claim, need not be proved at this stage of the litigation. To obtain information during pretrial discovery proceedings that is sufficiently relevant and necessary to maintain a claim, a litigant should not be compelled to establish that the requested material will enable it to prevail on the merits. As in the instant case, particular data may be an essential component to a party’s ability to establish causation, but it does not follow that the litigant actually must prove the causal link at this point.
The Publications also argue that Plaintiffs failed to make a sufficient showing that the requested data is necessary and critical to their claim because Plaintiffs allege that, even if the requested data is not produced, Plaintiffs would be able to use regression analysis to construct “but-for” spot prices in the absence of the Publications’ data. Magistrate Judge Peck rejected this argument, noting that such a method of reconstructing price data was identified by Plaintiffs as an inferior approach, and that such an analysis would be subject to methodological challenges by Defendants. Furthermore, the Magistrate Judge correctly concluded that the relevant authority does not define “necessary or critical” as requiring “uniqueness.” Natural Gas, 235 F.R.D., at 214-15.
3. Availability from Other Sources
Finally, the Court is persuaded that Plaintiffs made a sufficient showing that the requested data was not obtainable from other sources. Plaintiffs sought the information from Defendants, none of which was able to produce a complete set of the reported trade information. See id. at 204-05.
4. Authority
The Publications cite E & J Gallo Winery v. Encana Energy Services Inc., 33 Med. L. Rptr. 1413 (S.D.N.Y.2005), to support their assertion that Plaintiffs failed to meet the heavy burden required to overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege. In E & J Gallo, the court denied a motion to compel Platts to produce reported natural gas trading data and other testimony on the grounds that the plaintiff had not made a sufficient showing that the subpoenaed documents and testimony were highly material or critical to the plaintiffs claims. The court also held that the plaintiff had failed to show that it exhausted efforts to seek the documents and testimony from alternative sources. See id. As Magistrate Judge Peck noted, however, the E & J Gallo court did not provide details about the factual basis for the court’s holding. Without such details, it is not possible to compare the plaintiffs showing in E & J Gallo with that of Plaintiffs’ in the instant proceeding. The analysis of whether a plaintiff has made a sufficient showing to overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege is necessarily fact-specific. Thus, the absence of an explanation of the factual basis for the decision renders E & J Gallo of limited value to the inquiry in the matter before this Court. Accordingly, the Order is not clearly erroneous on the ground that Magistrate
Platts also asserts that the Magistrate Judge erred in relying, in part, on In re Application to Enforce Administrative Subpoena of the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission v. McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. (“CFTC”), 403 F.Supp.2d 34 (D.D.C.2005). In CFTC, the CFTC sought to prove that an energy company had submitted false trade data to Platts in an attempt to affect energy prices. The CFTC court held that the plaintiff made a sufficient showing to overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege because the plaintiff demonstrated that the subpoenaed information was “crucial to the plaintiffs proof.” The court further noted that “to determine whether the Energy Company’s false reports actually did affect prices, or had the potential to do so, the CFTC needs to know how Platts transformed the raw data from companies such as Energy Company into its published indices ... Thus, Platts’ formulas are crucial for determining whether Energy Company’s false reporting did, or could have, had an effect on prices.” Id., 235 F.R.D. at 213. Magistrate Judge Peck concluded that Plaintiffs made a similar showing in the instant proceeding and accordingly held that “the same analysis and conclusion applies” to the Plaintiffs’ motion to compel.
Platts asserts that the Magistrate Judge’s reliance on CFTC was misplaced because that case “turned on the comparison of the CFTC’s investigative authority to that of a grand jury.” (See Platts’s Mem. at 8 (citing CFTC, 390 F.Supp.2d at 33.)) Platts explains that the CFTC court considered the CFTC’s status as a government enforcement agency an important factor in its consideration of whether the plaintiff had overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege. The CFTC court explained that the burden was less onerous for a criminal enforcement agency than for a party in an ordinary civil case and likened a CFTC investigation to a grand jury investigation. See CFTC, 390 F.Supp.2d at 33. While the CFTC court considered the CFTC’s status as an enforcement agency a significant factor weighing in the CFTC’s favor in its analysis of whether the CFTC had overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege, the CFTC’s status as an enforcement agency was not by itself dispositive, but rather only one of the court’s considerations. Furthermore, Magistrate Judge Peck cites that portion of the CFTC courts’s analysis relating to the relevance and criticality of the requested documents. The CFTC court’s conclusion that the materials were relevant and critical to the plaintiffs claim was not grounded in the plaintiffs status as a government enforcement agency. Therefore, the Magistrate Judge’s reliance, in part, on the CFTC court’s analysis, does not constitute an error of law.
5. Intelligence Press’s Daily Indices
Intelligence Press also argues that Plaintiffs failed to make a sufficient showing of relevance and criticality with respect to the trade data related to Intelligence Press’s daily indices. Intelligence Press argues that its daily indices reach only a small fraction of the relevant market and therefore could not have played a role in the manipulation of natural gas futures prices. This argument, like Platts’s contention regarding time lag between bidding and publication of the indi-ces that the Court rejected above, goes to the issue of causation, not relevance and criticality. As already discussed, to prevail in their motion to compel, Plaintiffs are not required to demonstrate that the indices caused artificiality in the futures contract prices, but only to show that the requested data is highly relevant, necessary to their ability to ultimately prove their claim, and unavailable from other sources. As set forth above, Plaintiffs showing is sufficient to satisfy each of the three prongs.
B. TRADE DATA FOR LOCATIONS OTHER THAN THE HENRY HUB
Magistrate Judge Peck determined that Plaintiffs’ showing was sufficient to overcome the qualified reporter’s privilege with respect to the reported trade data for trades of natural gas delivered at the Henry Hub. However, he found that Plaintiffs failed to make a sufficient showing with regard to trade data related to trades at other natural gas trading locations. In this regard, the
As noted above, Plaintiffs submitted supplemental materials in support of their objections to the Order that demonstrate the relevance and criticality of the non-Henry Hub data to the maintenance of their claim. These submissions include additional declarations and accompanying exhibits providing evidence of correlations between published spot price indices at locations other than the Henry Hub with NYMEX futures prices. The additional materials include the Declaration of Franklin Edwards (the “Edwards Deck”), dated December 9, 2005, the Declaration of Mark Dwyer (the “Dwyer Deck”), dated February 1, 2006, the Declaration of Michael J. Harris (the “Harris Deck”), dated December 8, 2005, and the Declaration of Michael J. Harris dated February 1, 2006 (the “Harris Deck 2”). The Publications and the Defendants had an opportunity to review these supplemental materials and to offer additional submissions and arguments in response to these submissions. Platts submitted additional declarations from Benjamin Schlesinger (“Schlesinger”), dated December 19, 2005, January 6, 2006, and February 1, 2006 (“Schlesinger Deck 1”; “Schlesinger Deck 2”; and “Schlesinger Deck 3”, respectively.).
A district court has discretion to consider supplemental evidence on review of a magistrate judge’s order. See Hynes v. Squillace, 143 F.3d 653 (2d Cir.1998). Plaintiffs’ supplemental materials include expert reports that purport to demonstrate that published price indices for trades at locations other than the Henry Hub are closely correlated and related to prices of NYMEX natural gas futures contracts. (See Edwards Deck; Harris Deck; Harris Deck 2; and Dwyer Deck) Plaintiffs also assert that courts in commodity futures manipulation cases have frequently recognized that manipulative acts occurring at locations other than the delivery point for futures contracts may, under certain circumstances, skew futures contract prices. (See Pls.’ Mem. at 15-16 (citing In re Sumitomo Copper Litigation, 182 F.R.D. 85, 87 (S.D.N.Y.1998)); Transnor (Bermuda) Ltd. v. BP North America Petroleum, 738 F.Supp. 1472, 1474 (S.D.N.Y.1990).)
Platts’s submissions include several Declarations from Schlesinger to refute Plaintiffs’ claims, asserting that none of the published price indices at any of the trading locations are meaningfully related to NY-MEX futures contract prices. (See Schlesinger Decl. 1.) Furthermore, Schlesinger states that Plaintiffs’ submissions are inadequate because the submissions demonstrate only correlations between published price indices and NYMEX futures prices, not causation. (See Schlesinger Decl. 2 at 2.) The Court has already sufficiently addressed this point above. At this pretrial stage of the litigation, causation is not a showing Plaintiffs are required to make in order to satisfy the three prongs of the applicable test and thus obtain relevant discovery. Accordingly, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs have made a sufficient showing to overcome qualified reporter’s privilege with respect to the trade data for natural gas physical trading locations including, but not limited to, the Henry Hub.
C. THE BURDEN ON THE PUBLICATIONS
The Court recognizes that the modification of the Order to include all natural gas trading hubs substantially increases the burden imposed on the Publications. Therefore, the Publications shall utilize a sample protocol, as described in the Order, to minimize the burden on them. The Publications shall confer with Plaintiffs to develop and agree to
IV. ORDER
For the reasons discussed above, it is hereby
ORDERED that the motion of plaintiffs in this action, certain natural gas futures traders (the “Plaintiffs”), to set aside that part of the Opinion and Order (“Order”) of Magistrate Judge Andrew J. Peck dated November 14, 2005 that denied Plaintiffs’ motion to compel production of documents related to reported trades at locations other than the Henry Hub (Docket No. 388) is GRANTED subject to the limitations discussed above; and it is further
ORDERED that the motion by non-party Platts to set aside that part of the Order that granted Plaintiffs’ motion to compel production of documents related to reported trades at the Henry Hub (Docket No. 386) is DENIED, and it is further
ORDERED that the motion by non-party Intelligence Press, Inc. to set aside that part of the Order that granted Plaintiffs’ motion to compel production of documents related to reported trades at the Henry Hub and to set aside that part of the Order that granted Plaintiffs’ motion to compel production of information relating to Intelligence Press, Inc.’s daily price indices (Docket No. 383) is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
. The Order is reported at In re Natural Gas, No. 235 F.R.D. 199 (S.D.N.Y.2005).
. See Plaintiffs' Memorandum of Objections to the November 14, 2005 Order Concerning Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Production of Documents, dated December 19, 2005 ("Pis.' Mem.”); Plaintiffs' Reply Memorandum in Further Support of Their Objections to the November 14, 2005 Order Concerning Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Production of Documents, dated February 1, 2006; and Plaintiffs’ Memorandum in Opposition to the Objections of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and Intelligence Press to the November 14, 2005 Order Concerning Plaintiffs’ Motion to Compel Production of Documents, dated January 6, 2005.
. See Memorandum of Law Setting Forth the Objections of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. to the November 14, 2005 Opinion and Order of Chief Magistrate Judge Peck and in Support of Motion Requesting Modification Thereto ("Platts’s Mem.”), dated December 19, 2005; Reply Memorandum of Law in Further Support of the Objections of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. to the November 14, 2005 Opinion and Order of Chief Magistrate Judge Peck and in Support of Motion Requesting Modification Thereto ("Platts’s Reply”), dated February 1, 2006; and Memorandum of Law Submitted by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Responding to and Opposing Plaintiffs' Objections to the November 14, 2005 Opinion and Order of Chief Magistrate Judge Peck, dated January 6, 2005.
. See Memorandum of Law in Support of Intelligence Press, Inc.’s Objections to Magistrate Judge Peck’s Order dated November 14, 2005, dated December 19, 2005; Intelligence Press, Inc.’s Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Objectives to Magistrate Judge Peck's November 14, 2005 Order, dated January 5, 2006; and Intelligence Press, Inc.'s Reply Memorandum to Plaintiffs’ Opposition to its Objections to the November 14, 2005 Order, dated February 1, 2006.
. See Defendants’ Response to the Plaintiffs' and Publications’ Objections to Magistrate Judge's November 14, 2005 Order Concerning Plaintiffs' Motion to Compel Production of Documents, dated January 4, 2006.