Appellants Arthur Andersen and John Does I and II (collectively, “Arthur Andersen”) appeal the grant of intervention given to Appellee Texas Board of Public Accountancy (“Board”) in In re Enron for the purpose of accessing discovery protected by court order. For the reasons stated below, we hold that we have jurisdiction to hear this interlocutory appeal and that the district judge did not abuse her discretion in allowing the Board to intervene.
*418 I
Due to the magnitude and complexity of In re Enron, the parties in that case agreed to accept service via a website (“ESL website”). The parties stipulated that access to the website would be limited to judges, parties, and the parties’ attorneys in In re Enron. The district court later issued an order requiring the confidentiality of deposition transcripts and exhibits, prohibiting disclosure of protected information to anyone other than “parties, counsel for the parties, employees of the parties or their counsel, witnesses, experts retained by the parties, the Depository Administrator, and the Court-appointed mediator.” These instruments are confidential for 30 days after the close of the deposition, and certain types of information are automatically protected even after 30 days have passed. Parties or witnesses also may seek broader protection for information that is proprietary or for which there is good cause.
On February 24, 2005, the Board filed its motion for permissive intervention in In re Enron pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(b)(2), for the purpose of gaining access to discovery protected by court order in In re Enron. On June 6, 2005, the district court entered an Opinion and Order (“Order”) granting the Board’s motion to intervene to gain access to the ESL website and ordered that the Board comply with the court’s July 2, 2004 confidentiality order for deposition testimony and exhibits and all subsequent orders granting confidential treatment to specified exhibits and testimony. Arthur Andersen LLP (“Andersen”), the former auditor of Enron Corporation, filed an appeal on June 12, 2005; and, on June 13, 2005, it filed a motion to stay the Order pending appellate review with the district court. At the hearing for the motion to stay, the Board agreed not to access the website or use its party status to access the depositions and related exhibits. The Board extended its agreement through February 7, 2006, after which this Court granted Arthur Andersen’s motion to stay pending appeal.
John Does I and II, two former Andersen Certified Public Accountants (“CPAls”) who participated in the Enron audits, moved to intervene in the appeal on July 13, 2005. Their motion was granted on August 22, 2005. Andersen and the John Does are the only parties objecting to the Board’s intervention in In re Enron.
II
The Board is a state regulatory authority charged under the Texas Public Accountancy Act (“Act”) with the duty of licensing and disciplining Texas CPAs as well as promulgating accounting rules. 22 TEX. ADMIN. CODE §§ 501.51, 505.2; TEX. OCC. CODE § 901.151. 1 The Board may initiate disciplinary proceedings against a Texas licensed CPA for violations of rules of professional conduct adopted by the Board as well as for conduct indicating lack of fitness to serve the public as a professional accountant. TEX. OCC. CODE § 901.502(6), (11) and (12). Furthermore, the Board is authorized to open investigations if it determines that there is a potential violation of its rules, regula *419 tions, or orders. 22 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 519.21; see also id. § 519.20.
The Act contemplates that the Board will gather and receive information from third parties regarding licensees. See TEX. OCC. CODE § 901.160. 2 The Board must keep information it gathers or receives regarding disciplinary actions confidential before a public hearing on the matter. Id. § 901.160(c).
Texas Occupations Code section 901.166 grants the Board subpoena power. In pertinent part, the statute states:
(a) The board may issue a subpoena to compel the attendance of a relevant witness or the production ... of relevant documents ....
(c) If a person fails to comply with a subpoena, the board, acting through the attorney general, may file suit to enforce the subpoena in a district court in Travis County or in a county in which a hearing conducted by the board may be held.
Id. § 901.166.
Texas Administrative Code section 501.93 dictates that individuals must substantively respond in writing to any communication from the Board requiring a response and provide copies of documents pursuant to the Board’s requests. It states, “Failure to timely respond substantively to written board communications, or failure to furnish requested documentation and/or working papers constitutes conduct indicating lack of fitness to serve the public as a professional accountant.” TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 501.93.
The Board is currently investigating suspected audit failures that may have led to the financial collapse of Enron and its eventual bankruptcy to determine if any violations of the Act or the Board’s rules were committed by Texas licensees.
Ill
On August 22, 2005, a motions panel of this Court denied the Board’s motion to dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction in a one sentence order; still, the Board urges dismissal of this case. “In this circuit, an oral argument panel is not bound by a motions panel’s denial of a motion to dismiss.”
In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
The Board argues that the district court’s order granting its motion to intervene is not a final judgment and that we are without jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. section 1291 to consider this appeal.
3
The Board relies on a Fifth Circuit opinion from 1978: “It is well settled that ‘[a]n order allowing intervention is interlocutory and may not be appealed immediately.’ ”
In re 1975-2 Grand Jury Investigation of Associated Milk Producers, Inc.,
Arthur Andersen argues that the district court’s order granting intervention is appealable under the collateral order doctrine. The collateral order doctrine applies only when there is “an order, otherwise nonappealable, determining substantial rights of the parties which will be irreparably lost if review is delayed until final judgment.”
See, e.g., United States v. Wood,
The general rule articulated in
Associated Milk Producers, Inc.
against appeala-bility of grants of intervention is not applicable to the instant case.
See
The proposition, invoked by the Board, that “a discovery order incident to a pending action is not subject to appeal,”
Honig v. E.I. duPont de Nemours & Co.,
The district court order granting intervention is effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment. An appeal from a final judgment in the underlying securities fraud action will not bear on the Board for the reason that the Board is not a principal party to that underlying action. In the meantime, the Board will have had access to the ESL website. Thus, it is appropriate to hear Arthur Andersen’s appeal of the order granting intervention at *421 this stage of the litigation. We turn to the merits.
IV
The decision to permit intervention under Rule 24(b)(2) requires a threshold determination that the “applicant’s claim or defense and the main action have a question of law or fact in common.”
Howse v. S/V “Canada Goose I”,
Arthur Andersen argues that, under
Deus v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
In Deus, an insurance agent brought suit against his employer for breach of contract and workers’ compensation benefits. Id. at 511-12. First, the plaintiffs original attorneys sought to intervene in order to collect on their retainer contract with plaintiff. Id. at 520-21. The district court did not address the pending intervention in a ruling that set aside the jury verdict against the employer and granted the employer’s Rule 50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law. Id. at 521. The intervenors filed a motion to amend the court’s order, but the court denied their motion “because the intervention issue was collateral for the purpose of the finality of the judgment.” Id. The Court reasoned that “[a]n order that adjudicates fewer tha[n] all the claims or rights of fewer than all the parties does not terminate the action as to any claims or parties” and that “[a] claim for attorneys’ fees generally is not part of the merits to which the fees pertain.” Id. Thus, the Court held that its order was merely interlocutory and not appealable until final judgment was entered. Id. at 522.
Meanwhile, the National Neighborhood Office Agents’ Club (“NNOAC”), a program of the employer, also sought to intervene so that it could unseal the record. Id. at 525. The district court record was sealed during most of the discovery process and throughout the trial. Id. The district court denied' NNOAC’s motion to intervene, claiming it lacked jurisdiction because it mistakenly thought that its order in which it set aside the jury verdict was a final judgment. Id. On appeal, the Court decided that while it usually would remand for the district court to consider the intervention on the merits, as a matter of law it would be an abuse of discretion to grant the intervention to NNOAC. Id. The Court reasoned that NNOAC had no rights or claims that it wanted the district court to adjudicate. Id.
The only purpose of the attempted intervention was to gain access to documents and testimony that are subject to the protective order. The desire to intervene to pursue the vacating of the protective order and/or the unsealing of the record is not a justiciable controversy or claim, absent some underlying right creating standing for the movants.
Id.
Arthur Andersen maintains that Deus establishes that, as a matter of law, it is an abuse of discretion to allow intervention merely to obtain access to discovery-even if the objective is to use that discovery in a similar or related lawsuit. However, the Court in Deus arrived at its holding, with respect to the latter intervening parties, in light of its having just dismissed the plain *422 tiffs claims. 4 Thus, the Court summarized “[the parties seeking intervention] have no personal interest affording them standing to intervene.” Id. at 526. In the absence of a live controversy in a pending case, an intervenor would need standing to intervene.
In contrast, there is no Article III requirement that intervenors have standing in a
pending
case. Therefore,
Deus
is inapplicable. In
Ruiz v. Estelle,
Arthur Andersen further argues that the Board, through its statutory grant of authority, has other means of obtaining the information it seeks. Again, it relies on
Deus:
“Intervention generally is not appropriate where the applicant can protect its interests and/or recover on its claim through some other means.”
Deus,
The Board has questions of fact and law in common with the
Enron
litigation since it is investigating alleged audit failures that may have led to Enron’s collapse to determine whether any Texas-licensed CPAs violated the Public Accountancy Act or the Board’s rules. This holding comports with the observation that the “claim or defense” portion of Rule 24(b)(2) has been construed liberally.
In re Estelle,
*423
V
We now address Arthur Anderson’s contention that the district judge improperly granted the Board intervention. We review the district court’s grant of intervention for abuse of discretion.
Stallworth v. Monsanto Co.,
In addition to the aforementioned arguments, Arthur Anderson puts forth several policy arguments contending that the district judge abused her discretion. It claims the district court abused its discretion by disregarding the policies of federalism and comity that Arthur Andersen alleges are implicated in the Order granting intervention. Arthur Andersen contends that, prior to its intervention in In re Enron, the Board had already used its state law investigative powers to conduct exhaustive investigations of Appellant Andersen and numerous individual Texas CPAs relating to the alleged abuses resulting in the In re Enron litigation. Andersen maintains that it has repeatedly allowed the Board to access its document storage facility, resulting in the Board’s filing and settling an administrative action against Andersen that resulted in the revocation of its license to practice accounting in Texas. Andersen further maintains that, after the revocation of its license, the Board continued making additional discovery demands on it and acquired electronic documents. In addition, the Board required Appellants John Doe I and II, and other third-party witnesses who have been or will be deposed in In re Enron, to provide written responses to questions; required these individuals to appear before the Board for questioning under oath; and has access to the “massive public record” compiled by other governmental bodies.
Arthur Andersen complains that despite this four-year investigation, the Board has not filed any formal complaint against the Does or any other third-party witness. 6 Arthur Andersen further complains that the Board filed its motion of intervention in this case days after a state court in Travis County refused its motion to enforce subpoenas it served on the Does and others. Later, as part of a settlement, the Board withdrew its investigatory subpoenas and agreed that it would not reissue those subpoenas or seek testimony from the CPAs unless it later filed an administrative complaint pursuant to Texas state law. 7 As a result, Arthur Andersen argues that the district court’s order granting intervention to the Board effectively expanded the investigative powers of a state agency beyond those granted by state law, and interfered with the ability of Texas state courts to oversee the agency’s exercise of such powers.
The Board contends that the Order granting intervention is strictly within the *424 province of the district court and in no way impedes the ability of any state court to effectively enforce state law governing the Board. We agree. State law governing the Board’s investigatory powers does not comment on what tactics the Board may not take in conducting its investigations. In granting the Board subpoena powers, Texas Occupations Code section 901.166 states that a person may .challenge a subpoena issued by the Board in state court. It does not create any other substantive limit on the Board’s investigatory power.
Further, Arthur Andersen argues that the Order is contrary to important federal policies. It claims that protective orders are often entered by the court pursuant to a stipulation among the parties so that the parties and the court can forego discovery disputes. Arthur Andersen emphasizes that it had settled expectations of confidentiality. However, we have previously addressed modification of protective orders, supporting the district court’s exercise of discretion here. In
United States v. United Fruit Co.,
Finally, the Board argues that this Court owes deference to the district court since the district court is best situated to determine if anyone would be harmed by the Board’s access to this information. The Board emphasizes that the district judge has overseen this case for several years, knows the common issues of law and fact presented by the main action and the claims of the Board, and found no prejudice or harm. It also urges deference to the district judge’s evaluation of whether the Board’s intervention will unduly delay or prejudice the adjudication of the rights of the original parties. United Fruit supports the proposition that this court should defer to the district court’s judgment in deciding whether to enforce the protective order, given the judge’s detailed knowledge of the record. Id. at 557.
Nonparties to a case routinely access documents and records under a protective order or under seal in a civil case through motions for permissive intervention under Rule 24(b)(2).
See, e.g., San Jose Mercury News, Inc.,
For the foregoing reasons we AFFIRM the district court’s Order.
Notes
. The Public Accountancy Act ("Act”) states, "[tjhe policy of this state and the purpose of this chapter are to provide that ... a person licensed as a certified public accountant: (A) maintain high standards of professional competence, integrity, and learning; and (B) demonstrate competence and integrity in all dealings with the public .... ” TEX. OCC. CODE § 901.005(e)(3). The Board is authorized to administer the Act. Id. § 901.151(a)(1); 22 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 505.2.
. Texas Occupations Code section 901.160 states in pertinent part, "(a) The board shall make available at the board’s offices in Austin any file maintained or information gathered or received by the board from a third party regarding a license applicant or current or former license holder .... ”
. Section 1291 states, in pertinent part, "The court of appeals ... shall have jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts of the United States ...." 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
. The Court in
Deus
illustrated its point with
Cunningham v. Rolfe,
. Rule 24(a)(2) states:
Intervention of Right. Upon timely application anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action ... (2) when the applicant claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action and the applicant is so situated that the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede the applicant's ability to protect that interest, unless the applicant’s interest is adequately represented by existing parties.
FED. R. CIV. P. 24(a)(2).
. After the close of briefing in this appeal, the Board in fact issued a complaint in which it alleges violations of the Board's rules and statutes in connection with audits of the financial statements of Enron and related entities.
. The settlement order resulting from the state court litigation is severely redacted, and it is unclear if the Board agreed to these terms. In any event, the Board has filed an administrative complaint pursuant to Texas state law. Thus, it appears that the Board may reissue those subpoenas pursuant to the settlement order.
.
Ex Parte Uppercu,
. Moreover, the Texas Court of Appeals has found the statute to be constitutional, “not amount[ing] to an unwarranted regulation of private business.”
Texas State Bd. of Pub. Accountancy v. Fulcher,
