MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
Presently before me are a Motion for Reargument (Docket Item [“D.I.”] 431) filed by defendants John W. Hechinger, Jr., John W. Hechinger, S. Ross Hechinger, W. Clark McClelland, Kenneth J. Cort, Ann D. Jordan, Melvin A. Wilmore, Alan J. Zakon, and Robert S. Parker (collectively, “the Individual Defendants”) and a Motion for Reconsideration (D.I.434) filed by defendant Fleet Retail Finance, Inc. (“Fleet”). 1 Also before me is a Motion for a Protective Order (D.I.425) filed by the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Hechinger Investment Company of Delaware, Inc., et al., on behalf of Hechinger Investment Company of Delaware, Inc. (“Hechinger”). For the reasons that follow, the Individual Defendants’ Motion will be denied, Fleet’s Motion will be granted, and Hechinger’s Motion for a Protective Order will be granted.
II. BACKGROUND
Because I write mainly for the benefit of the parties, and given the lengthy discovery period in this litigation, I will recount only the facts relevant to the instant Motions.
During the course of discovery, He-chinger subpoenaed numerous third parties to produce documents. (D.I. 444 ¶ 2.) Sometime in 2001, defendants complained that Hechinger was not producing to them with sufficient speed the documents He-chinger had received in discovery from third parties. (D.I. 444 ¶ 4.) Thereafter, Hechinger instituted a procedure whereby its paralegals, immediately upon receipt of a third-party’s document production, would duplicate the documents and produce them to defendants. (Id.)
Hechingеr issued a subpoena to the consulting firm of Wasserstein Perella & Company (“Wasserstein”) for documents
In a letter dated February 4, 2002, He-chinger asked defendants to return the Wasserstein Documents, claiming that the documents were privileged аnd inadvertently produced. (D.I.439, Exh. A.) However, Hechinger withdrew that request, without explanation, on March 1, 2002. (Id., Exh. B.) On November 8, 2002, Fleet filed a motion to compel the production of additional documents related to the Was-serstein Documents, claiming that He-chinger’s production of the Wasserstein Documents constituted a waiver of any privilege as to the Wasserstein Documents and all related documents. 3 (D.I.325.) Hechinger took the position that, because the production was inadvertent, any waiver • of privilege extended only to the Wasser-stein Documents. (D.I.334.) On April 17, 2003, defendants issued three testimonial and documentary subpoenas to individuals who prepared the Wasserstein Documents. (D.I.427, Exhs.A-C.) Hechinger filed a Motion for a Protective Order on May 6, 2003, seeking to quash these subpoenas. 4 (D.1.425.)
On May 7, 2003, I issued an order denying Fleet’s motion to compel production of documents relating to the Wasserstein Documents. (D.I.428.) I ordered Fleet to return all-of the Wasserstein Documents to Hechinger, stating that Fleet had “failed to demonstrate that the inadvertently disclosed attorney work product documents at issue were used by Hechinger unfairly to the disadvantage of Fleet.”
(Id.
at 2 (citing
Thorn EMI North Am. Inc. v. Micron Tech. Inc.,
On May 16, 2003, the Individual Defendants filed their Motion for Reargument, stating that Hechinger had not sustained its burden of proving that its production of the Wasserstein Documents was inadvertent. (D.I. 431 at 2.) Fleet then filed a Motion for Reconsideration on May 20, 2003, pertaining to the portion of the May 7, 2003 Order which required defendants to return the Wasserstein Documents to Hechinger.
5
(D.I.434.) Hechinger re
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Motions for reconsideration or reargument should be granted only “sparingly.”
Karr v. Castle,
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c) provides that, “[u]pon motion by a party or by the person from whom discovery is sought ... and for good cause shown ... on matters relating to a deposition, the court ... may make any order which justice requires to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense, including ... that the disclosure or discovery not be had.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c)(1) (2003).
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Reconsideration of the May 7, 2003 Order is Appropriate
Reconsideration of my May 7, 2003 Order is appropriate because, in holding that defendants were required to return the Wasserstein Documents to Hechinger, I decided an issue that was “outside of the adversarial issues presented by the parties.”
Brambles USA,
B. Hechinger’s Inadvertent Production of the Wasserstein Documents Does Not Constitute a Broad Subjеct Matter Waiver
In their papers, both parties have argued that the Wasserstein Documents are generally “privileged.” However, it is important to clarify whether the attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, or both, apply to the Wasserstein Documents.
See Rhodia Chimie v. PPG Industries, Inc.,
In framing their arguments, the parties rely on case law that discusses, almost exclusively, the scope of waiver of the attorney-client privilege when a party inadvertently produces documents during discovery. Fleet states that “[t]he
Westinghouse
case held that the waiver rules are the same for both attorney-client privileged and work product protected documents.” (D.I. 325 at 2 n. 2.) I disagree. In
Westinghouse,
Westinghouse Electric Corporation voluntarily disclosed information protected by the attorney-client privilege and the work product doctrine in order to cooperаte with the government.
Westinghouse Elec. Corp. v. Rep. of the Philippines,
Though there may be a tendency on occasion for courts to treat the attorney-client privilege and work product doctrine as indistinguishable,
Data General Corp. v. Grumman Sys. Support Corp.,
Though Fleet relies on
Westinghouse
to support its arguments, that decision is inapposite, as it deals with the voluntary disclosure of attorney-client privileged and work product protected documents, and I remain persuaded that Hechinger’s production of the Wasserstein Documents was inadvertent, in the sense that no informed decisionmaker meant for the production to take place. Quite simply, Heehinger did not intend to produce the Wasserstein Documents to defendants.
See Ciba-Geigy Corp. v. Sandoz Ltd.,
I will not comment further on Hechinger’s conduct prior to the production of the Wasserstein Documents, as the proper focus “in the case of inadvertent or involuntary disclosures” is whether “the party asserting the work product doctrine. . ,pursue[d] all reasonable means to restore the confidentiality of the materials and.. .prevent further disclosures within a reasonable period to continue to receive [work product] protection...”
In re Grand Jury (Impounded),
The more difficult and more pertinent issue, of course, is whether defendants arе entitled to broader discovery pertaining to the subject matter of the Wasserstein Documents. Courts have previously addressed the concept of subject matter waiver in the attorney-client privilege context.
See, e.g., Metzger v. City of Leawood,
The work product doctrine, in general, allows a party to discover material prepared in anticipation of litigation or for trial only when the requesting party has shown a substantial need for the material and cannot obtain the material or
When considering the scope оf waiver of the attorney-client privilege, other courts have adhered to the following standard: “The general rule that a disclosure waives not only the specific communication but also the subject matter of it in other communications is not appropriate in the case of inadvertent disclosure.... In a proper case of inadvertent disclosure, the waiver should cover only the specific document in issue.”
Parkway Gallery Furniture,
C. Hechinger’s Motion for a Protective Order
Because I find that Hechinger has not waived work product protection as to the
D. Fleet and the Individual Defendants Are Not Required to Return the Wasserstein Documents to Hechinger
It is undisputed that, on March 1, 2002, Hechinger withdrew its initial request for return of the Wasserstein Documents. (D.I. 432, Exh. C; D.I. 443 at 1; D.I. 475 at 17:4-8.) The Wasserstein Documents will therefore remain in defendants’ possession, and Fleet’s Motion (D.I. 434) will be granted to that extent.
Notes
. Defendants Leonard Green & Partners, L.P. and Green Equity Investors II, L.P. (collectively, "the LGP Defendants”) filed a Joinder in the Individual Defendants' Motion for Reargument on June 12, 2003. (D.I.449.) The discussion herein of the Individual Defendants' Motion should be understood to also address the merits of the LGP Defendants’ Joinder in that Motion.
. None of this, of course, answers the question of why Hechinger was subpoenaing its own consultants. While there may be a logical answer to that question, I am not aware of it.
. The Individual Defendants joined in Fleet’s motion to compel on December 6, 2002. (D.I. 431 at 2 n. 1; D.I. 432, Exh. B.)
. In the meantime, defendants state, and He-chinger does not dispute, that certain Wasser-stein Documents have been used routinely as deposition еxhibits. (D.I. 438 at 13.)
. The parties have submitted a proposed Order on Consent to resolve Fleet’s Motion for Reconsideration. (D.I.574.)
. I have previously held that the Wasserstein Documents are "attorney work product," and neither party has asked me to reconsider that part of my May 7, 2003 Order. (D.I. 428 at 2.) When Hechinger initially requested that defendants return the Wasserstein Documents in its February 4, 2002 letter, it asserted both the attorney-client privilege and the work product doctrine. (D.1.439, Exh. A.) Yet throughout their subsequent submissions to the court, Hechinger and defendants have based their arguments on the assertion that the Wasserstein Documents are generally privileged, despite having ample opportunity to specify whether I should look to the attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, or both. Therefore, I will proceed on the basis of my holding that the Wasserstein Documents are subject to the work product doctrine only, as neither party has argued that I should proceed otherwise.
. Had a paralegal or an attorney reviewed the Wasserstein Documents before they were duplicated and produced to defendants, the fact that they were confidential, attorney work product would have been apparent, as many of the pages are clearly marked as such. (See, e.g., D.I. 352, Exhs. A, B and E.)
. At oral argument, counsel for the Individual Defendants stated that one of plaintiff's experts, David Yurkerwich, used сertain of the Wasserstein Documents in preparing his expert report. (D.I. 475 at 31:1-9.) Plaintiff represents that Mr. Yurkerwich prepared a rebuttal report responding to the opinions of Robert J. Rock, an expert retained by the Individual Defendants. (D.I. 481 at 1 n. 1.) In preparing his rebuttal, Mr. Yurkerwich was provided with the documents reviewed and relied upon by Mr. Rock, which hаppened to include some of the Wasserstein Documents. (Id.) Plaintiff also states that the Wasserstein Documents in question were previously introduced by the Individual Defendants in various depositions. (Id.) This is not persuasive evidence to demonstrate offensive use of the Wasserstein Documents by plaintiff.
. Of course, should it become apparent that Hechinger is taking unfair advantage of the documents by using them offensively while shielding other information, the defendants are not foreclosed from bringing that to the court's attention.
