Opinion
Eight years ago, our Supreme Court held that the right of public access to court proceedings under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution applied to civil as well as criminal proceedings. (See
NBC Subsidiary (KNBC-TV), Inc. v. Superior Court
(1999)
Based upon this footnote in NBC Subsidiary, the Judicial Council in 2001 adopted two rules concerning the sealing of trial court records that are presently rules 2.550 and 2.551 of the California Rules of Court (collectively, the sealed records rules, or rules). 1 Those rules create a presumption of public access to some, but not all, court-filed documents. The sealed records rules “do not apply to discovery motions and records filed or lodged in connection with discovery motions or proceedings. However, the rules do apply to discovery materials that are used at trial or submitted as a basis for adjudication of matters other than discovery motions or proceedings.” (Rule 2.550(a)(3).)
The main issue presented by this appeal is whether the rules’ presumption of public access applies to discovery documents produced and designated confidential pursuant to a protective order, where the records are later attached to a court-filed pleading that is not used at trial or to adjudicate a material controversy. The resolution of that issue turns, in substantial part, on the meaning of the limiting phrase “as a basis for adjudication” found in footnote 25 of the NBC Subsidiary decision, in the sealed records rules, and in an advisory committee comment to the rules.
This shareholder derivative action was brought on behalf of the corporation, Mercury Interactive Corporation (Mercury), to recover damages to the corporation resulting from the alleged backdating of stock options by several former Mercury executives. (See generally
In re Zoran Corp. Derivative Litigation
(N.D.Cal. 2007)
Defendants and Mercury appeal from the order unsealing the records.
3
We conclude that the trial court erred when it found that there was a presumption of public access to the exhibits to the Complaint under
NBC Subsidiary, supra,
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. The Pleadings and Motion to Unseal
This action commenced on or about October 14, 2005, with the filing by plaintiff Charles Conrardy of a shareholder derivative complaint on behalf of Mercury. Plaintiff Paul Morillo filed a similar suit on November 5, 2005. The two suits were ordered consolidated in December 2005. (Conrardy and Morillo are hereafter collectively referred to as plaintiffs.) Following Mercury’s motion for partial termination of the derivative litigation, the court entered an order dismissing the case as to certain individual defendants, staying the litigation as to another individual defendant, and ordering the filing of a consolidated complaint by plaintiffs. Pursuant to that order, plaintiffs filed their consolidated Complaint on September 22, 2006.
Plaintiffs—both shareholders of Mercury—alleged in the Complaint filed under seal that the action was being prosecuted against defendants at the *70 request of a special litigation committee of Mercury’s board of directors. 5 In the time period from 1996 to 2002, defendants below 6 —former Mercury officers and directors—allegedly “engaged in an unlawful stock option backdating scheme whereby they grossly enriched themselves at the expense of Mercury by granting themselves (and their colleagues) millions of under-priced options to purchase Mercury stock.” According to the Complaint, defendants granted themselves backdated stock options that had an aggregate excess value (i.e., increased value by backdating the option grant date, as compared with the actual option grant date) of over $54 million. In addition to defendants receiving this “immediate paper gain,” plaintiffs alleged that defendants received an aggregate of nearly $88 million in proceeds from their stock sales that were improper because they were made at a time they possessed material inside information concerning their own backdating scheme and the consequent overstatement of Mercury’s net income.
Plaintiffs alleged that defendants’ actions resulted, inter alia, in the overstatement of Mercury’s net income by nearly $570 million from 1992 through March 2005, which required the company to file a restatement in July 2006; Mercury’s incurring $70 million in attorney fees for the investigation of the backdating; the company’s being delisted from the NASDAQ stock exchange; and Mercury’s being investigated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Defendants’ conduct allegedly caused damage to Mercury in excess of $100 million. Plaintiffs alleged in the Complaint that Mercury’s special litigation committee concluded in June 2006 that defendants had breached their fiduciary duties to the company by backdating stock options, and that the lawsuit should continue against defendants, “thus transforming the derivative nature of this action into a direct action by Mercury . . . .”
On September 29, 2006, the media made a request by letter to the court that the Complaint that had been filed under seal be ordered unsealed. The court issued an order directing the parties to show cause why the Complaint should remain under seal. The parties thereafter entered into a stipulation that resulted in a continuance of the hearing on that request and established a briefing schedule for a formal motion to unseal by the media.
On October 26, 2006, the media filed a formal motion to unseal the Complaint. They argued, inter alia, that civil litigation documents filed with *71 the court are presumptively public, the Complaint concerned a matter of great public interest (alleged stock option backdating), and there was no overriding interest here that overcame the public’s right of access to the pleading. Separate oppositions to the media’s motion were filed by defendants and Mercury on November 6, 2006.
On December 8, 2006, defendants filed a demurrer to the Complaint, contending that the action was not maintainable because plaintiffs lacked standing. They argued that because of a merger consummated in November 2006 in which all of Mercury’s stock—including shares previously owned by plaintiffs—was acquired by Hewlett-Packard Company (HP), plaintiffs did not have standing to bring a shareholder derivative suit. The demurrer was noticed for hearing on January 19, 2007.
On January 3, 2007, defendants and Mercury each filed formal applications to seal (1) the Complaint and its exhibits, and (2) plaintiffs’ opposition to the demurrer. That application was prompted by the court’s interim order observing that no party had filed an application to seal the Complaint, and that the sealed records rules did not permit the court’s sealing of records “solely based on the stipulation of the parties.” On January 5, 2007, 7 the court heard extended argument on the media’s motion to unseal and on defendants’ and Mercury’s applications to seal. On January 24, 2007, the court granted the media’s motion to unseal, but stayed the order until February 8, 2007, to permit the parties to exercise any appellate remedies.
II. Proceedings in Lower Court Following Order Unsealing Records
On February 5, 2007, the court sustained defendants’ demurrer to the Complaint without leave to amend. It concluded that under the “continuous ownership doctrine, [p]laintiffs lost standing to maintain this derivative action when they ceased being [Mercury] shareholders as a result of the HP acquisition.” 8 Judgment was entered on the demurrer on March 7, 2007. 9
*72 Defendants applied for a stay of the court’s order unsealing the Complaint. The court granted the application and extended the stay of the order to February 16, 2007.
On February 19, 2007, defendant Skaer filed an ex parte motion to seal a copy of the Complaint that she contended had been inadvertently filed unsealed as an exhibit attached to a declaration of counsel. The application was accompanied by a declaration of Skaer’s counsel, M. Todd Scott. In it, Scott stated that he had filed on October 6, 2006, a motion to stay action and a supporting declaration to which a number of exhibits were attached, including a copy of the Complaint as exhibit E; that he had intended that the Complaint be filed under seal, but it was inadvertently filed unsealed; and that he had not learned that the Complaint had not been filed under seal until February 16, 2007. The media opposed the application, inter alia, on the grounds that defendants’ “own voluntary disclosure in an unsealed document it filed in this court . . . precludes any ability of defendants to meet the already-heavy burden imposed by Rule 2.550 to justify sealing”; and the Complaint, as a result of it having been filed in an unsealed document, had already been widely publicized in the Wall Street Journal and on the Internet in articles published on or about February 19, 2007. The court granted the application and ordered that all copies of the Complaint on file with the court be sealed until February 26, 2007.
III. Appellate Proceedings
Defendants and Smith, and Mercury filed separate timely notices of appeal from the order unsealing the Complaint, its exhibits, and plaintiffs’ opposition to demurrer on February 7, 2007. Shortly thereafter, the media filed a motion to dismiss the appeal that was opposed by defendants. We ordered the deferral of the disposition of that motion pending consideration of the appeal. 10
Defendants and Smith also filed a petition for a writ of supersedeas seeking a stay of the order unsealing records. Mercury joined in that petition. We *73 issued two temporary stay orders. 11 On May 10, 2007, we issued a writ of supersedeas, staying enforcement (pending the appeal) of the order only insofar as it pertained to the unsealing of the Complaint’s exhibits. Because the Complaint had previously been inadvertently disclosed and publicized, defendants, in their reply submitted in support of their petition for writ of supersedeas, conceded that their challenge to the order was moot except insofar as it concerned the Complaint’s exhibits.
DISCUSSION
I. Issue on Appeal and Parties ’ Contentions
The main issue presented in this appeal is whether the court erred in granting the media’s motion to unseal the exhibits to the Complaint. The parties have filed extensive briefs concerning this appeal, defendants’ supersedeas petition, and the media’s motion to dismiss the appeal on mootness grounds (see pt. III. of Discussion, post). At the risk of oversimplifying the parties’ positions or overlooking some of them, we briefly outline below what we believe to be the central contentions.
Defendants argue 12 that there is no First Amendment right of access to discovery materials filed with the court under the circumstances presented here. They argue that the Complaint’s exhibits were “raw discovery” materials that were designated confidential pursuant to a stipulated protective order. The records did not become presumptively accessible to the public simply because plaintiffs (the nondesignating parties) chose to attach them to their Complaint. They contend further that the sealed records rules do not apply here because the exhibits were neither “used at trial [nor] submitted as a basis for adjudication.” (Rule 2.550(a)(3).) Defendants emphasize that plaintiffs attached the confidential discovery materials to the Complaint at a time when the future of the lawsuit was in question, based upon the pendency of defendants and *74 Smith’s motion to stay due to plaintiffs’ lack of standing. 13 Indeed, they argue that the Complaint “was defective, if not a legal nullity” because it was ultimately dismissed by the court below.
The media naturally disagree. They assert first that defendants are judicially estopped from denying the applicability of the sealed records rules by their execution of the stipulated protective order. The media also argue that defendants have waived the right to contend that the sealed records rules are inapplicable because, among other things, defendants themselves filed an unsealed copy of the Complaint. On the merits, the media argue that the sealed records rules “plainly apply to all court records other than those filed in connection with a discovery motion or proceeding.”
Defendants and Mercury also contend that, assuming arguendo the sealed records rules apply here, it was nonetheless error for the trial court to conclude that they did not make a sufficient showing under the rules to warrant an order sealing the exhibits to the Complaint. They argue that the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, 15 United States Code section 78u-4(b)(3)(B) (Reform Act) provided “an overriding interest that [overcame] the right of public access to the record[s]” (rule 2.550(d)(1)), and that “overriding interest supported] sealing the record” (rule 2.550(d)(2)), as required for sealing records governed by the rules. There is a parallel federal securities class action 14 against Mercury and some of the individuals who are defendants herein. There is a motion to dismiss pending in that federal case, and thus there is a mandatory stay on discovery under the Reform Act. 15 Thus (defendants and Mercury urge), there is an overriding interest in keeping the exhibits sealed in this now defunct state case while the discovery stay remains in place in the parallel federal action. Otherwise, the plaintiffs in the federal case would be able to obtain discovery to which they were not otherwise entitled because of the stay; thus (defendants and Mercury argue), *75 the objectives of the Reform Act would be thwarted. In further support of this argument, defendants and Mercury note that after enacting the Reform Act, Congress enacted the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998, 15 United States Code section 78u-4(b)(3)(D) (SLUSA), under which “a [federal] court may stay discovery proceedings in any private action in a State court, as necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments . . . .” The sealing of the Complaint’s exhibits (they argue) is thus consistent with the federal court’s discretionary power under SLUSA to stay discovery in state court proceedings such as the present case.
The media respond that the court below properly relied on
Small v. Fritz Companies, Inc.
(2003)
There are two procedural questions raised by the media that are threshold matters that we must decide before addressing the substantive arguments of the parties. First, is the order being challenged here appealable? Second, even if the order is subject to appeal, has it been rendered moot by the Complaint’s becoming part of the public domain as a result of its having been inadvertently filed as an unsealed exhibit with the court?
II. Appealability
We are confronted initially with the issue of whether the judgment below is appealable. The media contend that the order granting the motion to unseal is not an appealable order. This issue is central to our jurisdiction.
(Olson v. Cory
(1983)
Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1 is “[t]he principal statute [that] defines the scope of appellate jurisdiction in the Court of Appeal . . . .”
(Samuel v. Stevedoring Services
(1994)
Plainly, an order concerning the sealing of court records is not made expressly appealable under Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1. But the collateral order doctrine is one exception to the one final judgment rule.
(Lester v. Lennane
(2000)
The collateral order exception has been applied in at least four cases involving appellate review of orders concerning the sealing of court records. In
Gilbert v. National Enquirer, Inc.
(1996)
The media argue unpersuasively that
Providian
and
Gilbert
should not be regarded as authorities for the proposition that orders concerning the sealing of records are appealable because those holdings appeared in footnotes in the opinions.
16
As we have noted, in both cases the court held that the sealing orders were appealable as final orders on collateral matters. The placement of the text expressing those holdings in footnotes does not negate their authoritative nature.
(Melancon v. Walt Disney Productions
(1954)
Lastly, the media assert that the order is nonappealable under the California Public Records Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.; CPRA)—which the media claim to be an analogous statute—which provides that disclosure orders are not subject to appeal. (Gov. Code, § 6259, subd. (c).) We reject that contention. Under Government Code section 6252, subdivision (f), the CPRA is expressly made inapplicable to the records of the judicial branch of the government.
(Copley Press, Inc. v. Superior Court
(1992)
We conclude therefore that the order directing the unsealing of the exhibits to the Complaint is appealable because it is a “final determination of a collateral matter in that it directs the performance of an act—i.e., unsealing— against defendants.” (Providian,
supra,
III. Mootness
The media argue that the issue on appeal—namely, whether it was error for the court to order the unsealing of the exhibits attached to the Complaint—is moot. They assert that by defendants’ own admission, one of their attorneys filed the Complaint along with its exhibits in an unsealed form in the court below as an exhibit to a declaration on October 6, 2006. “Generally, an appeal will be dismissed as ‘moot’ when, through no fault of respondent, the occurrence of an event renders it impossible for the appellate *78 court to grant appellant any effective relief. [Citations.]” (Eisenberg et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Appeals and Writs, supra, ][ 5:22, p. 5-5.) As a result of this unsealed filing, the Complaint—which made reference to its exhibits—was the subject of a Wall Street Journal article. In addition, the Complaint was posted on the Internet on February 19, 2007. Therefore, the media argue that no effective relief can be ordered by this court even were defendants’ appeal meritorious.
Defendants respond that although the Complaint and its exhibits were filed, through inadvertence, in an unsealed manner, only the Complaint was the subject of publicity. They argue that the exhibits—which they repeatedly characterize as “raw discovery” materials—were never disseminated and are therefore still available for protection through sealing. Defendants assert further that the information contained in the exhibits is much broader than the excerpts of those exhibits identified in the Complaint. Therefore, they argue that the appeal has not been rendered moot as to the potential disclosure of the exhibits.
Appellate courts generally will not review matters that are moot. “A case is moot when the decision of the reviewing court ‘can have no practical impact or provide the parties effectual relief. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] ‘When no effective relief can be granted, an appeal is moot and will be dismissed.’ [Citation.]”
(MHC Operating Limited Partnership
v.
City of San Jose
(2003)
*79
We have reviewed the contents of the Complaint—as well as the sealed exhibits to the Complaint that are at issue here—to determine whether the controversy is moot.
17
We will describe the Complaint’s exhibits in general terms in order not to compromise the confidentiality claimed by defendants with respect to them. (See
Providian, supra,
There are 17 exhibits attached to the Complaint, labeled consecutively as exhibits 1 through 17. Genetically, they consist of an aggregate number of 25 e-mail communications; one spreadsheet; one reprinted newspaper article; one metadata document from a computer; a corporate document (“Unanimous Written Consent”); and seven graphs concerning specific stock option grants. The Complaint refers to each of the 17 exhibits. Some of the exhibits bear specific confidentiality designations; others do not. And one exhibit—a reprint of a newspaper article—is obviously not a confidential document (irrespective of whether it did or did not bear a confidentiality designation).
From a review of the Complaint’s exhibits, it is clear that collectively they contain a significant amount of material other than what is excerpted in the Complaint itself. While it is true that the text of some of the exhibits (or portions thereof) is quoted or paraphrased in the Complaint, the substance of the exhibits is not disclosed in its entirety in the Complaint. For example, although one of the e-mails that is included in exhibit 6 is quoted fully in the Complaint, the remaining six e-mails in the collective exhibit are not quoted or paraphrased in the Complaint. Similarly, although one of the e-mails included in exhibit 7 is quoted in full in the Complaint and another is quoted in part, the remaining four e-mails in the collective exhibit are not quoted or referred to in the Complaint.
We therefore reject the media’s claim that the appeal is moot on the basis that the Complaint, after the court’s order, became part of the public domain. While it is obvious that the Complaint contains references to the exhibits and in some instances discloses all or substantially all of their substance, it is equally clear that significant portions of the substance of the exhibits have not been revealed in the Complaint. Therefore, the controversy concerning the court’s order unsealing the Complaint’s exhibits is not moot.
Finally, we address whether developments subsequent to the close of briefing have rendered this appeal moot. This court became aware through *80 press reports in October 2007 of a pending settlement of the related federal class action securities suit involving Mercury. At least one newspaper article also reported that the federal judge presiding over the case had previously dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims in July 2007 but had granted them leave to amend. (Anderson, HP Settles Record-High Options Case, Daily Journal (Oct. 16, 2007) p. 1.) As a result, we requested that the parties submit letter briefs advising us of the impact, if any, of the reported settlement of the federal suit upon this appeal. We have received and considered the letter briefs of the parties. We have concluded therefrom that the pending settlement of the related federal suit does not render this appeal moot.
The main substantive issues that must be resolved through this appeal are whether the court below properly concluded that (1) the sealed records rules applied to the Complaint’s exhibits, and (2) defendants failed to show as required under the rules that there was an overriding interest that would be prejudiced by disclosure such that the exhibits should be sealed. Defendants acknowledge that the settlement of the federal suit would impact their argument as to the second issue, namely, whether they made a sufficient showing of an overriding interest to justify the sealing of the exhibits to the Complaint. But they point out in their letter brief that the proposed settlement of the federal class action litigation is still subject to federal court approval. (See Fed. Rules Civ.Proc., rule 23(e)(1)(A), 28 U.S.C.) We will not presume such approval.
In any event, irrespective of whether the federal case has settled (or will ultimately settle), the question of whether the sealed records rules apply to the exhibits under the circumstances presented here is unaffected by the status of the federal suit. Accordingly, regardless of whether the settlement of the federal securities case becomes final, defendants’ appeal of the order unsealing the exhibits is not moot. 18
IV. Standard of Review
Defendants contend that the order unsealing the Complaint’s exhibits is subject to de novo review. The media argue that we should review the order to determine whether the court abused its discretion.
We acknowledge that the First District Court of Appeal (Division Four) has held that an order unsealing records under the sealed records rules is
*81
reviewed on appeal for abuse of discretion.
(Providian, supra, 96
Cal.App.4th at pp. 299-301; see also
People v. Jackson
(2005)
Appellate courts may independently determine the proper interpretation of statutes.
(People ex rel. Lockyer v. Shamrock Foods Co.
(2000)
Our initial focus is on whether the sealed records rules apply to the Complaint’s exhibits under the circumstances presented in this instance. This requires us to interpret the rules and the Supreme Court’s discussion in
NBC Subsidiary, supra,
*82 V. NBC Subsidiary Decision and Sealed Records Rules
Before addressing the issue of whether the court erred in granting the media’s motion to unseal the Complaint and its exhibits, we will discuss the NBC Subsidiary case and the sealed records rules.
A. NBC Subsidiary Decision
In
NBC Subsidiary, supra,
After reviewing United States Supreme Court decisions dealing with the public right of access to criminal proceedings under the First Amendment, the
NBC Subsidiary
court observed that while no cases issued from the high court had specifically recognized the existence of a similar constitutional right of access with respect to civil proceedings, the high court’s reasoning “suggests that the First Amendment right of access extends beyond the context of criminal proceedings and encompasses civil proceedings as well. [Citations.]”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
Based upon its conclusion that there was, in general, a First Amendment right of access to civil trials and proceedings, the court concluded that the trial court’s order closing certain trial proceedings could not survive constitutional scrutiny.
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
In the course of reviewing lower court decisions finding the existence of a First Amendment right of access to civil proceedings, the NBC Subsidiary court explained in a footnote that many reviewing courts had similarly found a constitutional right of access to certain documents filed with the court in civil litigation 21 The court noted that “[n]umerous reviewing courts likewise have found a First Amendment right of access to civil litigation documents *84 filed in court as a basis for adjudication. . . . [ft] By contrast, [other] decisions have held that the First Amendment does not compel public access to discovery materials that are neither used at trial nor submitted as a basis for adjudication.” (NBC Subsidiary, supra, 20 Cal.4th at pp. 1208-1209, fn. 25, citations omitted.) It is thus clear that our high court enunciated a rule under which a certain class of court-filed documents is subject to a presumption of a First Amendment right of public access. What is less clear—as we discuss, post—are the parameters of that class of documents.
B. The Sealed Records Rules
As a result of the NBC Subsidiary decision, the Judicial Council promulgated the sealed records rules, effective January 1, 2001. The standard for sealing records enunciated in the rules was based on NBC Subsidiary. (Advisory Com. com., rule 2.550.) The rules “recognize the First Amendment right of access to documents used at trial or as a basis of adjudication.” (Ibid.) They provide, subject to certain exceptions we will discuss, that a court “record must not be filed under seal without a court order.” (Rule 2.551(a).) Further, a “court must not permit a record to be filed under seal based solely on the agreement or stipulation of the parties.” (Rule 2.551(a).) A party seeking the sealing of a court record must file a written motion or application with an accompanying memorandum and declaration stating facts justifying the record’s sealing. (Rule 2.551(b)(1).) In so doing, the moving party must lodge with the court the record for which the sealing order is sought; the court then holds the record “conditionally under seal” while the motion or application is being decided. (Rule 2.551(b)(4).) The court may order the record sealed only upon it making express findings that the facts establish that “(1) There exists an overriding interest that overcomes the right of public access to the record; [ft] (2) The overriding interest supports sealing the record; [ft] (3) A substantial probability exists that the overriding interest will be prejudiced if the record is not sealed; [ft] (4) The proposed sealing is narrowly tailored; and [ft] (5) No less restrictive means exist to achieve the overriding interest.” (Rule 2.550(d).) The court must state specifically in its sealing order the facts that support its issuance. (Rule 2.550(e)(1)(A).) 22
*85 Rule 2.550(a)(2) provides that the “rules do not apply to records that are required to be kept confidential by law.” The sealed records rules are also inapplicable to “discovery motions and records filed or lodged in connection with discovery motions or proceedings.” (Rule 2.550(a)(3).) But the rules “do apply to discovery materials that are used at trial or submitted as a basis for adjudication of matters other than discovery motions or proceedings.” (Ibid.) The rules, however—like the Supreme Court in NBC Subsidiary—do not explain the meaning of the phrase “submitted as a basis for adjudication.” We therefore discuss below, in the procedural context before us, whether NBC Subsidiary and the sealed records rules apply to the Complaint’s exhibits.
VI. Propriety of Order Unsealing Exhibits to Complaint
Defendants argue that the court below erred in concluding that the Complaint’s exhibits, by virtue of plaintiffs’ having attached them to the Complaint that they filed, were subject to a presumptive right of public access under NBC Subsidiary and the sealed records rules. Before addressing the merits of that argument, we must first dispose of the media’s threshold contentions that defendants’ challenge to the order is barred by principles of judicial estoppel and/or waiver.
A. Judicial Estoppel and Waiver
1. Judicial estoppel
The media—citing, inter alia,
Jackson v. County of Los Angeles
(1997)
The doctrine of judicial estoppel applies when “(1) the same party has taken two positions; (2) the positions were taken in judicial or quasi-judicial administrative proceedings; (3) the party was successful in asserting the first position (i.e., the tribunal adopted the position or accepted it as true); (4) the two positions are totally inconsistent; and (5) the first position was not taken as a result of ignorance, fraud, or mistake.”
(Jackson v. County of Los Angeles, supra,
We reject the media’s claim of judicial estoppel. Contrary to the media’s apparent assertion, the stipulated protective order cannot be read as an agreement by defendants that the court filing of any discovery document would result in the applicability of the sealed records rules. Paragraph 8 of the stipulation specified certain procedures for the filing of discovery material previously designated confidential. It identified one procedure when a party attached confidential discovery material to papers filed in connection with a discovery proceeding. Consistently with rule 2.550(a)(3), that provision made no reference to the sealed records rules. The stipulation at paragraph 8 also specified different procedures where the designating party or nondesignating party filed with the court or sought to use at trial confidential discovery material “[i]n connection with the adjudication of matters other than discovery.” In those instances, the stipulation made reference to the sealed records rules. As we discuss, post, this provision is consistent with NBC Subsidiary and the rules adopted as a result of that decision. The stipulation did not state that all court-filed discovery materials other than those relating to discovery motions were governed by the rules. Moreover—as we discuss below in connection with the media’s waiver argument—defendants did not take the unambiguous position below that the sealed records rules were applicable to the circumstances here. There is no basis for a finding of judicial estoppel.
2. Waiver
The media also assert—as an argument apparently related to, but distinct from, their judicial estoppel contention—that defendants have waived the right to contend that the sealed records rules are inapplicable to the filing of the Complaint and exhibits. They base this waiver argument on the grounds that (1) the parties agreed below that the rules were applicable, (2) defendants took the position in opposition to the media’s motion to unseal that the rules did apply to the filing of the Complaint’s exhibits, (3) defendants ignored the requirements of the rules by waiting a period of months to file a motion to seal the Complaint and its exhibits, and (4) defendants themselves filed a copy of the unsealed Complaint in connection with a motion to stay. We reject the media’s claim of waiver.
First, as we have noted, the stipulated protective order did not include the parties’ agreement that the sealed records rules applied to the circumstances presented here, i.e., where discovery material that has been designated confidential is filed with the court neither in conjunction with a discovery motion nor in connection with the adjudication of a substantive matter. We do not read the stipulation to constitute a waiver of the legal position defendants assert here.
*87 Second, it is true that the initial opposition to the motion to unseal filed by defendants and Smith did not develop the legal position that the sealed records rules were inapplicable. That initial opposition focused on plaintiffs’ lack of standing to sue and the prejudicial impact of a proposed unsealing of the Complaint, particularly in light of the mandatory discovery stay imposed under the Reform Act in the related federal securities litigation. 23 But defendants and Smith, in later filings—both in opposition to the media’s request that their motion be heard before the hearing on demurrer, and in connection with their application to seal records—did in fact argue that there was no First Amendment right of access to discovery materials that are not a basis for adjudication of the merits of the case.
Third, although defendants did not file a motion to seal for a period of several months after plaintiffs filed the Complaint, this inaction was consistent with their position that the sealed records rules did not apply under the circumstances. When they did file an application to seal on January 3, 2007, defendants and Smith did so in response to an observation in the trial court’s interim order that it was “not permitted to seal records solely based on the stipulation of the parties”; in their application, they specifically noted that it was their belief that the sealed records rules were inapplicable in the situation before them. Defendants’ failure to file a motion to seal for several months did not constitute a waiver.
Fourth, it is undisputed that Scott, Skaer’s counsel, attached a copy of the Complaint as exhibit E to his declaration in support of the motion to stay filed on October 6, 2006, and that this exhibit was not sealed. It is also not disputed that this unsealed filing was inadvertent. Scott stated in his declaration that the cover page of the Complaint was marked “CONFIDENTIAL: FILED UNDER SEAL”; he was aware that the Complaint had been sealed; and he had knowledge at the time that the media had requested by letter that the court unseal the Complaint. He declared that, based on this knowledge, he had intended that the copy of the Complaint filed as an exhibit in connection with the stay motion be filed under seal and thought that it had been sealed. It was not until February 16, 2007, when he was so informed by the court clerk, that Scott learned that the document had not been filed under seal as he had believed. We do not find that defendants waived their legal position concerning the propriety of sealing the Complaint under these circumstances. Even if this unsealed filing constituted unequivocal conduct on the part of Skaer (through her counsel) supporting the media’s claim of waiver—which it did *88 not—there is no basis for a finding that such conduct by Skaer’s agent was chargeable to any of the other parties, i.e., Mercury, Klein, Abrams, or Smith.
The media cite the recent case of
Savaglio
v.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
(2007)
Prior to the newspaper’s attempt to gain access to court records, Wal-Mart, in two separate proceedings, had sought writ review of trial court rulings on the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification and its motion for summary adjudication.
(Savaglio, supra,
The circumstances here are very different. There was no effort by defendants or Mercury to seal a large volume of court records. In fact, the sealing occurred not as a result of their conduct, but because plaintiffs chose to attach to their Complaint discovery material that had been previously designated by Mercury *89 as confidential. And unlike the sealing here, the sealing of pleadings in Savaglio plainly involved the sealing of documents submitted as a basis for adjudication of dispositive motions (i.e., class certification and summary adjudication motions). Further, the act claimed to have constituted a waiver here—Scott’s inadvertently unsealed filing of a copy of the Complaint as an exhibit to his declaration—was not one that was so inconsistent with an intent to assert confidentiality, and was in any event not chargeable to the remaining defendants or Mercury.
We therefore conclude that defendants have not waived their claim that the exhibits to the Complaint were not subject to a presumption of access and should not have been ordered unsealed by the trial court.
B. Scope of Public Access under NBC Subsidiary
1. Potential interpretations of NBC Subsidiary
As we recently observed, the sealed records rules were adopted by the Judicial Council “[t]o effectuate the principles embodied in [the
NBC Subsidiary
decision] . . . .”
(H.B. Fuller Co.
v.
Doe
(2007)
As the Supreme Court stated, there is a First Amendment right of access to documents in civil litigation that are “filed in court as a basis for adjudication.”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
Having carefully reviewed NBC Subsidiary and the authorities cited therein, we reject the media’s interpretation of the circumstances under which filed discovery material becomes “a basis for adjudication” such that there is a First Amendment right of access to it. Discovery material is not automatically submitted “as a basis for adjudication”—and thus does not perforce become accessible to the public—simply by virtue of it becoming a part of the court file. We come to this conclusion based upon various factors, including (1) the language used by the Supreme Court in footnote 25 of NBC Subsidiary, along with the cases cited in that two-sentence footnote, (2) the context in which the court decided NBC Subsidiary, and (3) the principles supporting, and policy objectives of, public access to the courts enunciated by the Supreme Court and in prior decisions of our nation’s highest court.
2. NBC Subsidiary language and cited authorities
The first sentence of footnote 25 cannot reasonably be read as saying that there have been numerous appellate decisions finding the existence of a constitutional right of access to
any
documents filed in a civil case. (See
NBC Subsidiary, supra,
Although the court did not explain the qualifying phrase, it plainly describes something other than a document that is simply filed with the court. (Cf.
In re Harincar
(1946)
In
Brown & Williamson v. F.T.C., supra,
In
Rushford v. New Yorker Magazine, Inc., supra,
*92
In
Continental Illinois Securities, supra,
In
Grove Fresh Distributers, Inc. v. Everfresh Jucie Co., supra,
Lastly, in
Copley Press, supra, 6
Cal.App.4th at page 109, the press sought access to the minute books of the clerks of six superior court judges. The appellate court—noting that “the minute books constitute the only easily accessible source of the daily chronology of court activities” (ibid.)—held that “the clerk’s initial or ‘rough’ minutes constitute^] a court record which should be available for public inspection.”
(Id.
at p. 115.) In so holding, although the court observed that the First Amendment allows for “broad access rights to judicial hearings and records . . . both in criminal and civil cases” (
*93
The second sentence of footnote 25 cannot reasonably be construed as a statement by our high court that other courts have held that there is no First Amendment right of access to discovery materials unless they are used at trial or
filed with the court.
(See
NBC Subsidiary, supra,
In
Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, supra,
The
NBC Subsidiary
court again cited
Continental Illinois Securities, supra,
In the third case cited by the California Supreme Court after the second sentence of footnote 25
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
*95
Finally, reading the two sentences of footnote 25 in
NBC Subsidiary
together, one cannot reasonably conclude that the Supreme Court held that the First Amendment right of access adheres inevitably once discovery material is filed in civil litigation, irrespective of the circumstances under which it is filed. Were that a proper interpretation of
NBC Subsidiary,
it would have been unnecessary for the court to have juxtaposed the proposition that there is a right of access to “civil litigation documents filed in court as a basis for adjudication”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
3. Context of NBC Subsidiary decision
Our conclusion that the Supreme Court held that discovery material does not automatically become subject to a presumptive right of access once it is filed in civil litigation is also supported by the context of the NBC Subsidiary decision. It is important to note that the Supreme Court was addressing the constitutionality of the denial of public access to civil proceedings, not to court filings. Indeed, NBC Subsidiary addressed a fairly extreme exclusion order that closed portions of trial proceedings. A major focus of the Supreme Court was whether the First Amendment provided a right of access generally to civil trials, where the nation’s highest court had previously addressed only whether there was a constitutional right of access to criminal proceedings. (See NBC Subsidiary, supra, 20 Cal.4th at pp. 1197-1212.) It addressed only in passing the subject of the sealing of civil litigation documents. (Id. at pp. 1208-1209, fn. 25.)
From its focus on the constitutionality of closing a portion of a civil trial, the court in
NBC Subsidiary
did not make a sweeping pronouncement that
*96
there was a presumption of a right of access under the First Amendment to
all
proceedings. Rather, it concluded that “it is clear today that
substantive
courtroom proceedings in ordinary civil cases are ‘presumptively open’. . . .”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
Thus, viewing the Supreme Court’s decision in NBC Subsidiary in its entirety, we must conclude that it cannot be construed as finding a presumption of public access to all court-filed documents, the position advanced by the media. Indeed, an interpretation of NBC Subsidiary as creating a First Amendment presumptive right to all documents filed in civil litigation, regardless of the circumstances of their filing, would conceivably result in broader access rights to civil court filings than to civil proceedings. We do not construe NBC Subsidiary to have created such an anomaly.
4. Principles and policy considerations regarding public access
The Supreme Court in
NBC Subsidiary,
drawing upon prior United States Supreme Court cases and other authorities, identified several policy justifications supporting the constitutional right of access to the courts. The court summarized these rationales as follows: “[P]ublic access plays an important and specific structural role in the conduct of such proceedings. Public access to civil proceedings serves to (i) demonstrate that justice is meted out fairly, thereby promoting public confidence in such governmental proceedings; (ii) provide a means by which citizens scrutinize and check the use and possible abuse of judicial power; and (iii) enhance the truthfinding function of the proceeding. [Citation.]”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
It cannot be said that public access to any court-filed civil discovery documents—regardless of their relevance to the issues in the case, the circumstances of their filing, or the extent of their use in the proceedings— promotes any or all of these three objectives. Public access to a discovery document that is not considered or relied on by the court in adjudicating any substantive controversy does nothing to (1) establish the fairness of *97 the proceedings, (2) increase public confidence in the judicial process, (3) provide useful scrutiny of the performance of judicial functions, or (4) improve the quality of the truth-finding process.
The Supreme Court in
NBC Subsidiary
explained that Justice Brennan, in his concurring opinion in the
Richmond Newspapers
case, enunciated a two-part test utilized by the United States Supreme Court in several later decisions involving public access to criminal proceedings.
29
“Justice Brennan elaborated on two principles, . . . that may be used to confirm the existence and scope of a right of access: (i) historical tradition, and (ii) the specific structural value of access in the circumstances. ‘First, the case for a right of access has special force when drawn from an enduring and vital tradition of public entree to particular proceedings or information. [Citation.] Such a tradition commands respect in part because the Constitution carries the gloss of history. More importantly, a tradition of accessibility implies the favorable judgment of experience. Second, the value of access must be measured in specifics. Analysis is not advanced by rhetorical statements that all information bears upon public issues; what is crucial in individual cases is whether access to a particular government process is important in terms of that very process.’ [Citation.]”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
There is no “historical tradition”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
Furthermore, there is little or no “specific stmctural value of access in the circumstances”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
Contrary to any structural utility associated with presumed access to all court-filed discovery materials, application of such a presumption strongly suggests negative consequences upon civil discovery and the court’s powers of supervision over its cases. As Justice Powell noted, “[discovery] processes ... are a matter of legislative grace . . . [citation] . . . [and] continued court control over the discovered information does not raise the same specter of government censorship that such control might suggest in other situations.”
(Seattle Times, supra,
Parties to civil litigation, recognizing the broad policies favoring discovery, often choose to avoid costly and time-consuming motion practice by entering into stipulations for protective orders that permit production but limit disclosure and use of discovered information deemed by the producing party to contain confidential, proprietary, and/or private information. They thereby defer or obviate the need for specific court determination as to the propriety of designating materials confidential
30
unless and until that designation is challenged.
(Chicago Tribune Co.
v.
Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc.
(11th Cir.
*99
2001)
Although we are not bound by them, we acknowledge that a number of federal cases have similarly concluded that the First Amendment right of access does not apply across the board to all court-filed discovery materials. In
Chicago Tribune, supra,
Likewise, in
Phillips, supra,
Therefore, as we recently observed, public access to discovery materials that are not part of trial proceedings or filed in connection with a motion on a substantive issue “is favored neither by tradition nor by functional analysis.”
(H.B. Fuller, supra,
C. Application of NBC Subsidiary to Challenged Order
In applying the principles of NBC Subsidiary here, we first note that the text of tihe sealed records rules neither expressly includes nor excludes filed discovery material from the rules’ parameters under the circumstances presented here. The exhibits to the Complaint are not “discovery motions and records filed or lodged in connection with discovery motions or proceedings,” a category not embraced under the rules. (Rule 2.550(a)(3).) But the Complaint’s exhibits are also not “discovery materials that are used at trial or submitted as a basis for adjudication of matters other than discovery motions or proceedings,” a category that is expressly within the ambit of the sealed records rules. (Ibid.)
The comments of the advisory committee, however, make it clear that the sealed records rules do not apply to the situation here: “The sealed records rules also do not apply to discovery proceedings, motions, and materials that are not used at trial or submitted to the court as a basis for adjudication. (See
NBC Subsidiary, supra,
20 Cal.4th at pp. 1208-1209, fn. 25.)” (Advisory Com. com., rule 2.550.)
31
We derive the intent of the Judicial Council from
*101
the comments of its advisory committee. (See
Providian, supra,
The media urge that, as a result of the California electorate’s passage of Proposition 59 in November 2004, which added subdivision (b) to article I, section 3 of the California Constitution, we must construe the rules in a manner favoring a right of access to court filings. We agree with that proposition as a general matter, as have other courts. (See, e.g.,
Savaglio, supra,
149 Cal.App.4th at pp. 597, 600;
Burkle, supra,
Our conclusion that the sealed records rules—read consistently with language in the rules’ progenitor,
NBC
Subsidiary—do not apply to discovery materials that are not used at trial or submitted as a basis for adjudication is not altered by these constitutionally mandated rules of construction. While we will liberally construe the rules in furtherance of the public’s right of access, article I, section 3, subdivision (b) of the California Constitution does not sanction an interpretation of the sealed records rules that is unreasonable. (Cf.
Alvarez v. Superior Court
(2007)
*102
Moreover, the appellate decisions cited by the media that construe and apply the sealed records rules do not compel a contrary holding. We have previously discussed
Savaglio, supra,
In
Burkle, supra,
Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Superior Court
(2003)
*103
Lastly, the defendant in
Huffy Corp. v. Superior Court
(2003)
In this instance, contrary to the media’s assertion, plaintiffs’ mere act of attaching the discovery materials as exhibits to the Complaint did not result in them being submitted as a basis for adjudication within the ambit of the rules. While the importance of a complaint in framing the claims and issues presented in civil litigation cannot be downplayed, we disagree that any material attached to it—such as the discovery material designated confidential pursuant to a duly entered protective order here—necessarily is “submitted as a basis for adjudication.” The pleadings, including complaints, are not typically evidentiary matters that are submitted to a jury in adjudicating a controversy. (Wegner et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Trials and Evidence (The Rutter Group 2007) f 15:51, p. 15-9.)
Further, the Complaint’s exhibits did not become a basis for adjudication as a result of the trial court’s order sustaining defendants’ demurrer on the basis that plaintiffs lacked standing to sue. A demurrer will he in an instance in which the plaintiff lacks standing.
(PacLink Communications Internat., Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(2001)
We stress that the issue we decide here is a rather narrow one: the applicability of the sealed records rules to discovery material designated confidential pursuant to a protective order and later filed with the court and not used at trial or submitted as a basis for adjudication. The case—by virtue of the unusual procedural path it took after the trial court’s order on January 24, 2007—does not concern the sealing of the Complaint or the propriety of the order unsealing the Complaint itself. Our holding is not meant to encourage the filing of complaints or other pleadings under seal, nor is it intended to suggest that pleadings should not, as a general rule, be open to public inspection. 35
*105
We thus conclude that the trial court erred when it held that there was a presumption of public access to the Complaint’s exhibits, where they consisted of discovery material that was not admitted at trial or used as a basis of the court’s adjudication of a substantive matter. The sealed records rules did not apply to these documents. In so holding, we echo our colleague, Justice Gilbert of the Second District Court of Appeal, in saying that “[w]e do not take lightly the public’s right of access to court proceedings and the interests served by public access.”
(People v. Jackson, supra,
D. Further Proceedings
Because the court based its order on the erroneous legal conclusion that the filed discovery material was governed by the sealed records rules, it must be reversed. Beyond defendants’ statement that upon reversal the records should remain under seal, the parties do not address the issue of what should transpire *106 in the event the order is reversed. It is clear to us, however, that the sealing controversy should not necessarily be concluded upon issuance of remittitur.
A simple reversal with instructions that the documents should remain under seal would suggest, in theory, an outcome in which documents would remain permanently under court seal without any justification other than the fact that a party producing them in discovery (in this case, Mercury) had originally designated them confidential pursuant to a stipulated protective order. In this instance, based upon our in camera review of the Complaint’s exhibits, we are aware of at least one document—exhibit 2, a reprinted newspaper article—for which any claim of confidentiality appears, to say the least, dubious. The stipulated protective order itself does not provide that the designation of a document as confidential is the final word. 37 Instead, the order (in paragraph 11) specifies a mechanism for challenging a confidentiality designation made by a party or third party producing discovery material. It states that “[i]f a party contends that any material is not entitled to confidential treatment,” it may so notify the other party or nonparty responsible for the confidentiality designation of its position. If, after an attempt to resolve the controversy informally, the disagreement remains, the designating party or third party, within 25 days of termination of the meet-and-confer discussions, may “apply to the Court for an order designating the material as confidential. The party or non[]party seeking the order has the burden of establishing that the document is entitled to protection.”
From the above recital of the mechanism for challenging a confidentiality designation, one problem with its application in this instance is readily apparent. The stipulated protective order allows a party to challenge such a designation. It does not specifically afford a stranger to the litigation—in this case, a representative of the press—the opportunity to challenge a confidentiality designation.
The court’s authority to control discovery, including its right to issue, modify, or vacate protective orders, derives from the Civil Discovery Act, Code of Civil Procedure section 2016.010 et seq. (See, e.g., Code Civ. Proc., §§ 2017.010 [authorizing discovery by any party, “[u]nless otherwise limited by order of the court in accordance with this title”], 2017.020, subd. (a) [authorizing court’s issuance of protective order to “limit the scope of discovery if it determines that the burden, expense, or intrusiveness of that *107 discovery clearly outweighs the likelihood that the information sought will lead to the discovery of admissible evidence”], 2025.420, subd. (b) [authorizing court to issue protective order to protect deponent “from unwarranted annoyance, embarrassment, or oppression, or undue burden and expense”], 2031.060, subd. (b) [authorizing court to protect party to whom inspection demand is propounded “from unwarranted annoyance, embarrassment, or oppression, or undue burden and expense”], 2033.080, subd. (b) [authorizing court to protect party to whom requests for admissions have been made “from unwarranted annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden and expense”].) In the case of the production of documents, the court’s power, upon a showing of good cause, to “make any order that justice requires to protect [a responding party] from unwarranted annoyance, embarrassment, or oppression, or undue burden and expense” includes the issuance of an order “[t]hat the items produced be sealed and thereafter opened only on order of the court.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 2031.060, subd. (b)(6).)
Here, as a result of the parties’ having followed the procedure specified in the stipulated protective order, documents produced by Mercury that it designated confidential were filed with the court under seal. The court was specifically empowered to address Mercury’s designation, both under the protective order and under the Civil Discovery Act, from which the initial justification for the entry of the protective order derived. We believe that it is appropriate under the circumstances presented here to afford the media the opportunity to challenge the confidentiality designation of discovery material that is filed under seal, where the filing is not embraced by the sealed records rules. By so holding, we construe the provisions of the California Civil Discovery Act, and specifically Code of Civil Procedure section 2031.060, both broadly in furtherance of a right of public access and narrowly to the extent they limit such access right. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 3, subd. (b)(2).)
Therefore, on remand, the media shall be afforded the opportunity to challenge Mercury’s confidentiality designations with respect to the exhibits to the Complaint by following the procedures identified in paragraph 11 of the stipulated protective order. In the event the media makes such a challenge and the meet-and-confer efforts required under the protective order prove unsuccessful, Mercury and/or defendants may make application to the court within 25 days after the termination of the meet-and-confer discussions to designate any or all of the exhibits to the Complaint confidential. Said application shall include a specific showing establishing that the documents are entitled to confidential treatment.
*108 DISPOSITION
The order unsealing the exhibits to the Complaint is reversed and the matter is remanded for further proceedings that are consistent with this opinion. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
Premo, Acting P. J., and Elia, J., concurred.
Notes
All further references to rules are to the California Rules of Court. The predecessors to rules 2.550 and 2.551 were former rules 243.1 and 243.2, respectively; they were amended and renumbered effective January 1, 2007. Rules 2.550 and 2.551 do not differ materially from the sealed records rules as originally adopted, and the matter at issue here was decided in January of this year. Accordingly, we will refer throughout this opinion to the rules as they are currently numbered.
Only one of the respondents, The Recorder, originally sought an order unsealing the complaint and its exhibits. Prior to the court ruling on the motion, respondents San Francisco Chronicle and Bloomberg News joined in the motion to unseal. For simplicity here, the actions taken and arguments advanced by one or more of the respondents shall be referred to collectively as those of the media.
The February 7, 2007 notice of appeal filed by defendants also included Smith as an appellant. Smith filed neither an opening brief nor a joinder in the opening brief filed on behalf of defendants. After Smith failed to file a brief following our giving of notice under rule 8.220(a), this court dismissed the appeal only as to Smith on November 13, 2007.
For the reasons explained below, we address the propriety of the order only insofar as it concerns the unsealing of the Complaint’s exhibits.
As explained post, the full text of the Complaint subsequently became public. Therefore, there is no confidentiality restriction preventing us from summarizing the allegations of the Complaint here.
In our discussion of the proceedings below (Procedural Background, pts. I. and II.), the term “defendants” shall refer to all four of the individual defendants (i.e., Klein, Skaer, Abrams, and Smith). Elsewhere in this opinion, “defendants” refers to the three individual defendants whose appeals remain pending here. (See fn. 3, ante?)
A number of lengthy briefs were submitted by the parties on whether the hearing concerning the unsealing of the Complaint should occur before the disposition of defendants’ demurrer. The court determined that it would hear the motion to unseal before it heard the demurrer.
After this ruling by the trial court below, United States District Court Judge Jeremy Fogel similarly dismissed consolidated federal derivative actions that had been filed nominally on behalf of Mercury, because the plaintiffs there lost standing after HP’s acquisition of all Mercury stock. (See
In re Mercury Interactive Corp. Deriv. Litigation
(N.D.Cal. 2007)
We note that on April 10, 2007, plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal from the judgment entered on the court’s order sustaining demurrer. That appellate proceeding is pending in this court (Morillo v. Klein (H031435, app. pending)), but its pendency has no impact upon our disposition of this matter.
The media have filed a request for judicial notice of (1) a complaint filed in federal court on May 31, 2007, by the SEC against Mercury, its former chief executive officer (Amnon Landan), Abrams, Smith, and Skaer, and (2) an SEC press release of the same date announcing the suit’s filing and a settlement between SEC and Mercury. Based upon our discussion,
ante,
those materials for which judicial notice is requested do not have a bearing on the legal issues we decide here. Accordingly, we deny the media’s request for judicial notice.
(Mangini
v.
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
(1994)
We granted defendants’ request for judicial notice of certain pleadings filed and a reporter’s transcript of a hearing in a related federal securities class action suit involving Mercury and some of the individual defendants, In re Mercury Interactive Corp. Securities Litigation (N.D.Cal., July 30, 2007, No. C05-3395 JF) 2007 U.S.Dist. Lexis 59171. These pleadings reflect the fact that the federal court there also issued multiple orders temporarily staying the superior court’s order unsealing records.
While Mercury filed a separate notice of appeal and a joinder in defendants’ opening brief, it did not join in most of defendants’ legal arguments. Specifically, Mercury did not join in defendants’ claims on appeal that (1) there is no constitutional right of public access to court-filed discovery materials under these circumstances; (2) the sealed records rules do not apply here; and (3) the order below undermines the integrity of the judicial process and discourages the resolution of discovery issues. Accordingly, we will attempt to distinguish between arguments made by defendants only from those made by all appellants.
Klein had filed a motion for a protective order staying discovery on August 28, 2006, approximately one month before plaintiffs filed the Complaint. In the motion, Klein argued, inter alia, that discovery propounded by plaintiffs would serve no useful purpose because the pending merger under which HP was to acquire all of the stock of Mercury, when consummated, would divest plaintiffs of standing to sue.
In its order, the court below took “judicial notice of the following extensive judicial proceedings involving [Mercury]: [fjederal class action, In re Mercury Interactive Corp. Sec. Litig., N.D. Cal. 05-3395; [fjederal derivative action, In re Mercury Interactive Corp. Derivative Litig., N.D. Cal. 05-4642; [fjederal 16(b) action, Klein v. Landan, N.D. Cal. 06-2971, and [two] Delaware state derivative actions (Delaware Court of Chancery)[,] Schwartz v. Landan, Civil Action No. 1755[,] and Cropper v. Landan, Civil Action No. 1938-N.”
This is a recital of defendants’ arguments as presented in their appellate briefs. After the close of briefing, there was publicity concerning the court’s dismissal without prejudice, and pending settlement of, the federal securities litigation that caused this court to request supplemental briefing from the parties as described more fully in part III of the Discussion, post.
The media took a position below that is arguably contrary to their claim here that the order is not an appealable order on a collateral matter. In briefs filed in connection with their motion to unseal, the media argued that their motion was “completely unaffected by the pendency of the [d]emurrer and should still be heard even if the action [were] dismissed.”
Defendants did not include the exhibits to the Complaint in the appellate record, noting that they had chosen not to “[i]n an effort to minimize exposure” of the documents they contend are confidential. They indicated, however, in opposition to the motion to dismiss that they had no objection to this court’s in camera review of the documents. And the media stated that they “encourage the Court to accept that offer and look at the exhibits before deciding” the motion to dismiss. Accordingly, we ordered that the record be augmented to include the sealed exhibits to the Complaint and directed the court below to deliver those records under seal for our in camera review in connection with the appeal.
As we have noted above, even if the appeal has been rendered moot because the Complaint is now part of the public domain and/or because the related federal securities suit has settled—a finding we do not make here—we have the discretion to decide important questions even if they have been rendered moot by subsequent events.
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
Various federal appellate courts have agreed that the de novo standard is appropriate for the review of legal issues pertaining to trial court orders sealing or unsealing records or concerning the issuance of protective orders. (See, e.g.,
Phillips ex rel. Estates of Byrd v. G.M. Corp.
(9th Cir. 2002)
“Except as provided in Section 214 of the Family Code or any other provision of law, the sittings of every court shall be public.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 124.)
Because it served as the basis for the Judicial Council’s subsequent adoption of the sealed records rules, the construction of which is critical to our decision in this case, we set forth that footnote here in its entirety: “Numerous reviewing courts likewise have found a First Amendment right of access to civil litigation documents filed in court as a basis for adjudication. (See
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp.
v.
F.T.C.
(6th Cir. 1983)
“An order sealing the record must: HQ (A) Specifically state the facts that support the findings; and HQ (B) Direct the sealing of only those documents and pages, or, if reasonably *85 practicable, portions of those documents and pages, that contain the material that needs to be placed under seal. All other portions of each document or page must be included in the public file.” (Rule 2.550(e)(1).)
Mercury in its initial opposition also focused on the potential harm that would result from an order unsealing the Complaint because of the pending federal litigation. But Mercury did argue briefly that under NBC Subsidiary, the presumption of public access did not apply to the circumstances here, where the Complaint that attached the exhibits was neither used at trial nor submitted as a basis for adjudication.
After the trial court found that Wal-Mart had not waived its right to assert confidentiality, it granted in part and denied in part Wal-Mart’s motion to seal; approximately 17,000 pages of documents were ordered to remain under seal. (Savaglio, supra, 149 Cal.App.4th at pp. 595-596.)
Indeed, counsel for the media argued below that “once [any discovery] is filed with the court it is public . . . .”
There is, we suppose, a third potential interpretation, under which there is access to discovery filed with the court when the filing party intends that it be used “as a basis for adjudication” of some matter other than a discovery motion. We reject that interpretation. Neither defendants nor the media suggest that the Supreme Court held that public access to court-filed documents was to be determined by an examination of the subjective intent of the filing party. We are aware of no authority so holding, and, obviously, such a standard requiring a determination of a litigant’s intent would be cumbersome and would lead to uncertain and contradictory results.
In
Tavoulareas
v.
Washington Post Co., supra,
In addition to the three cases cited after the second sentence of footnote 25, the California Supreme Court also cited the following: “Fenner & Koley,
supra,
16 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L.Rev. at p. 434 [‘The presumption of access does not apply until the documents or records of such
*95
proceedings are filed with the court or are used at a judicial proceeding’].)”
(NBC Subsidiary, supra, 20
Cal.4th at p. 1209, fn. 25.) The media argue that this citation supports their position that the filing of discovery in civil litigation, regardless of whether it is used in any fashion, results in its becoming presumptively subject to public access. The court below agreed with this position. We reject the media’s contention. The focus of the article—written three years before the Supreme Court decided
Seattle Times, supra,
Those later decisions utilizing Justice Brennan’s two-part test include the following three cases, each of which was discussed at length in the
NBC Subsidiary
decision:
Press-Enterprise Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1986)
For instance, a party responding to document requests may move the court for a protective order, upon a showing of good cause, “to protect any party or other natural person or organization from unwarranted annoyance, embarrassment, or oppression, or undue burden and expense. This protective order may include, but is not limited to, one or more of the following directions: [][] (1) That all or some of the items or categories of items in the inspection demand need not be produced or made available at all. Q] (2) That the time *99 specified in Section 2030.260 to respond to the set of inspection demands, or to a particular item or category in the set, be extended. [][] (3) That the place of production be other than that specified in the inspection demand. [® (4) That the inspection be made only on specified terms and conditions. H] (5) That a trade secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial information not be disclosed, or be disclosed only to specified persons or only in a specified way. [ffl (6) That the items produced be sealed and thereafter opened only on order of the court.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 2031.060, subd. (b).)
We acknowledge that the quoted language from the advisory committee does not precisely track the language in the second sentence of footnote 25.
(NBC Subsidiary, supra,
At the time the case was decided, the applicable rule for sealing appellate court records was former rule 12.5, which was amended and renumbered rule 8.160, effective January 1, 2007. Rule 8.160 does not differ materially from its predecessor and we will therefore for simplicity use the current rule number to refer to the rule concerning the sealing of appellate court records.
We of course express no opinion concerning the correctness of the trial court’s order sustaining defendants’ demurrer to the Complaint without leave to amend, the judgment entered on that order being the subject of a separate appellate proceeding pending in this court. (See fn. 9, ante.)
In so concluding, we acknowledge—as do defendants—that there may exist instances in which an attachment to a complaint to which a demurrer is interposed may constitute a document submitted as a basis for adjudication and thereby fall within the presumption of public access discussed in NBC Subsidiary. For instance, a challenged complaint in which a contract is attached and in which the demurrer concerns the viability of the contract would probably pose such a case. Under the circumstances here, however, where the exhibits attached to the Complaint have no bearing on the dispositive issues in the demurrer, there is no such presumed right of public access.
We observe that in this instance, the Complaint’s exhibits appear to have been entirely unnecessary to the pleading and that the sealing controversy could have been avoided by either a stipulation or an order amending the Complaint to strike the exhibits and to strike any quotes from, or references to them. The required contents of a complaint are “[a] statement of the facts constituting the cause of action,
in ordinary and concise language[,
and] [][]... [a] demand for judgment for the relief to which the pleader claims to be entitled.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 425.10, subd. (a)(1), (2), italics added.) It is obvious from a review of the 35-page Complaint
*105
and attached 48 pages of exhibits that the pleading contains far more than simply an allegation of the ultimate facts “in ordinary and concise language” setting forth the cause of action. The Complaint almost certainly contains “irrelevant, ... or improper matter” (Code Civ. Proc., § 436, subd. (a)), and/or was a “pleading not drawn or filed in conformity with the laws of this state . . .” (Code Civ. Proc., § 436, subd. (b)). Therefore—without intending to be overly critical of plaintiffs—the attached exhibits, as well as the quotes and references to them in the body of the Complaint, could have been stricken by the court either upon a motion by defendant or on its own motion. (Code Civ. Proc., § 436; see also
Quiroz
v.
Seventh Ave. Center
(2006)
Because we have concluded that the court erroneously applied the sealed records rules to the question of the media’s motion to unseal records, we do not address the remaining contentions of the parties concerning whether the court erred in concluding that defendant and Mercury established an overriding interest under the rules that warranted the continued sealing of records.
The protective order at paragraph 5 provides that “[a]bsent a specific order by the Court, once designated as ‘Confidential,’ such Confidential Discovery Material and any information contained therein or derived therefrom shall not be disclosed except as provided herein.”
