Samuel PETER, Sr., individually and as father and next friend of Samuel Peter, Jr., Petitioners, v. The PROGRESSIVE CORPORATION and Progressive Northwestern Insurance Company, Respondents.
No. S-8608.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
Aug. 27, 1999.
988 P.2d 865
Gary A. Zipkin and Susan M. West, Guess & Rudd, P.C., Anchorage, for Respondents.
Before MATTHEWS, Chief Justice, EASTAUGH, FABE, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.
OPINION
FABE, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
After receiving a total of twelve interrogatories from the plaintiffs in a lawsuit alleging bad faith in the delay of underinsured motorist payments, the defendant insurer asked the superior court to appoint a discovery master to handle all future discovery disputes. The court granted the request and ordered that the master‘s fees be paid by the losing party in each discovery dispute. The plaintiffs appeal, claiming that use of discovery masters is unfair to financially disadvantaged parties. We vacate the superior court‘s order and remand for determination of whether a master is appropriate in this case in light of various factors that we outline below.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In March 1995 an automobile driven by Cynthia Pack struck eight-year-old Samuel Peter, Jr. while he was crossing the street.
The Peters have an automobile insurance policy with Progressive Northwestern Insurance Company. In December 1997 Samuel Sr., on his own behalf and on behalf of Samuel Jr., sued Progressive, Progressive‘s agent Dan Woodruff, and Last Frontier Insurance, their insurance broker, alleging that Progressive committed bad faith and breach of fiduciary duty by denying knowledge that Donita was insured in the hopes that the Peters would not make a claim. Progressive denied all allegations.
One day after filing their complaint, the Peters served Progressive and its agents with three discovery requests consisting of a total of twelve interrogatories. One month later, in February 1998, Progressive moved for a protective order precluding the Peters from disclosing “any confidential or proprietary information produced by Progressive” to third parties. The Peters filed a forty-one-page opposition with over one hundred pages of exhibits. The next day, Progressive moved for appointment of a discovery master to resolve disputes. Progressive requested that the losing party pay the master‘s fees within ten days of the resolution of each individual discovery dispute. The Peters opposed the motion, arguing that appointment of a master would give Progressive a strategic advantage and would deprive the Peters of meaningful access to the justice system.
In April 1998 Superior Court Judge Harold M. Brown issued an order granting Progressive‘s motion and asked the parties to submit the name of a mutually acceptable discovery master. We granted the Peters’ petition for review from this order.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1, 2] We review the appointment of special masters pursuant to
When interpreting the Civil Rules we exercise our independent judgment,5 adopting the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of reason, precedent, and policy.6 Similarly, we review constitutional questions de novo.7
IV. DISCUSSION
The Peters’ central argument in this appeal is that imposition of masters’ fees unfairly infringes on nonwealthy litigants’ access to civil justice. As the Peters point out, the text of
A. Overview of Authority to Appoint Discovery Masters
1. Alaska law
(a) Appointment and Compensation. The presiding judge of the superior court for each judicial district may appoint one or more standing masters for such district.... [T]he word “master” includes a referee, an auditor and an examiner, and a magistrate or a deputy magistrate. The compensation, if any, to be allowed to a master shall be fixed by the court, and shall be charged upon such of the parties or paid out of any fund or subject matter of the action which is in the custody and control of the court, as the court may direct....
(b) Powers. The order of reference to the master may specify or limit the master‘s powers and may direct the master to report only upon particular issues or to do or perform particular acts.... Subject to the specifications and limitations stated in the order, the master has and shall exercise the power to regulate all proceedings in every hearing before the master and to take all measures necessary or proper for the efficient performance of the master‘s duties under the order.
Although we have not previously set forth guidelines for the use and appointment of special masters to supervise the discovery process, we have addressed generally the use of referees in lieu of judges for various purposes in civil trials. In Dean v. Firor,10 the seminal Alaska case regarding the use of masters, we noted that the language in
Nevertheless, we decided that “[w]hile some jurisdictions may give trial judges a great deal of liberty in referring cases, we find a more restrictive view to be more appropriate.”14 We reasoned that the judiciary should be solely responsible for resolving questions of law, such as the claim for fraudulent conveyance at issue in Dean, and that a trial court should not reduce itself to the role of a “quasi-appellate court by simply reviewing the findings of the master.”15
This case law, albeit limited, provides Alaska state courts with authority under
2. Sources other than Alaska law
Some jurisdictions set forth criteria for determining the propriety of referring a discovery dispute to a master. For example, California‘s rule gives courts discretion to appoint a master over one party‘s objection only when “it is necessary for the court to appoint a referee to hear and determine any and all discovery motions and disputes.”21 California courts have interpreted this rule “to permit reference over the parties’ objection where that procedure is necessary, not merely convenient.”22 A recently proposed Michigan rule would allow courts to appoint discovery masters only if “there are complex or numerous discovery issues and a master‘s assistance would facilitate a more speedy and economical determination of those issues.”23
assist the parties in the speedy and economical conduct of discovery and resolution of discovery disputes. As a condition of such appointment, and especially in complex cases involving numerous, significant disputes, the court may require the parties to pay the fees of the discovery master.
(Emphases added.) This provision discourages courts from forcing parties to pay for a referee unless the case is complex or time consuming, although the decision remains within the court‘s discretion. The Manual for Complex Litigation counsels that judges should reserve the use of masters for cases “where the financial stakes justify imposing the expense on the parties and where the amount of activity required would impose undue burdens on a judge. It is generally preferable to appoint special masters with the parties’ consent.”25 Special masters are “sometimes appointed” during discovery in “complex [federal] cases to limit massive discovery requests, to rule on claims of privilege and to make factual determinations necessary to rule on the admissibility of evidence.”26 A referee may be appropriate “where disclosure is complicated by an intractable opponent, discourteous and uncooperative attorneys, [or] constant rulings on disclosure disputes.”27
Our research uncovers no universally applied list of factors for determining when a court‘s appointment of a discovery master is appropriate. Still, certain principles repeatedly surface in those authorities that have considered the issue. Based on a review of our own case law, the law of other jurisdictions, academic literature, and policy considerations, we believe that appointment of a discovery master should generally be reserved for cases (1) where the issues are unusually complex or specialized; (2) where discovery is particularly document intensive; (3) where resolving discovery disputes will be especially time consuming; (4) where the parties are particularly contentious or obstructionist; or (5) where a master will facilitate a more speedy and economical determination of the case. We believe that these factors reflect a respect for the immense and often unreasonable burdens placed on trial courts’ time and resources, while avoiding an undesirable shift in the role of trial courts to that of “quasi-appellate” courts.32 Perhaps more importantly, the guidelines attempt to ensure nonwealthy litigants’ access to the courts.
B. Appointment of a Master as a Discovery Sanction
The factors we have just set forth are remedial and managerial in nature: Their goals are to assist parties having difficulty resolving discovery conflicts absent court intervention and to ensure a prompt resolution of a complicated or contentious discovery process by using masters to ease the burden on trial judges with hectic daily court schedules. Although courts may reasonably take into account parties’ contentiousness when deciding to appoint a discovery master, the purpose for such an appointment should not be punitive. We agree with the Peters that the use of masters as a sanctioning tool potentially runs afoul of the procedural requirements of
Failure to Cooperate in Discovery or to Participate in the Framing of a Discovery Plan. If a party or a party‘s attorney engages in unreasonable, groundless, abusive, or obstructionist conduct during the course of discovery ... the court may, after opportunity for hearing, require such party or attorney to pay to any other party the reasonable expenses, including attorney‘s fees, caused by the conduct.
(Emphasis added.) Similarly, a court may not force a losing party to pay for fees and costs with respect to a
The Peters argue that any appointment of a discovery master is a back-door sanction without the attendant safeguards of
Progressive contends that appointment of a master does not work as a sanction at all because both parties are subject to paying a master‘s fees if they lose a dispute. Progressive also notes that one could make a similar argument against forcing parties to pay fees upon losing a good-faith motion to compel. But paying fees upon losing a single motion to compel is qualitatively different from paying a master to oversee the rest of the discovery process. Whereas the former is subject to
Some courts appear cautiously willing to use the discovery master as a sanctioning tool in certain circumstances. One federal court required an attorney, in response to his “Rambo Litigation” technique during a deposition, to pay for a new deposition as well as for a discovery master to supervise the deposition.35 One commentator has suggested, albeit in a tongue-in-cheek article, that discovery masters should be used more often as a threat to quell discovery abuse.36 Even so, given the language and spirit of
C. Circumstances in Which Courts May Require Parties to Pay a Discovery Master‘s Fees
In addition to identifying general principles that should guide a trial court‘s decision to appoint a master, this case also requires us to decide when imposition of master‘s fees on one or both parties is appro-
The court may appoint a discovery master if the court finds ... it is fair to impose the cost of a discovery master on the parties, taking into account the nature of the case, the means of the parties, the conduct of the parties that contributes to the need for a master, and the degree to which appointing a discovery master would facilitate a more speedy and economical determination of the case.38
Similarly, the California Court of Appeal recently held that trial courts must consider a party‘s financial condition in determining whether to refer discovery disputes to a master if referral would require imposition of master‘s fees.39 One commentator expressed concern that
[t]he risk of imposing unfair costs on a party is a particular concern in determining whether to appoint a pretrial master.... Parties are not required to defray the costs of providing public judicial officers, and should not lightly be charged with the costs of providing private judicial officers.40
We agree with these jurisdictions; courts should logically consider the possibility of economic hardship on one or more parties when fashioning a plan to compensate a discovery master.
Progressive claims that the Peters must make a showing of indigency before the court can consider financial hardship in appointing a master. But in cases involving parties of “modest means,” California courts must still determine a “fair and reasonable apportionment of reference costs before issuing [their] order.”41 Indeed, given the fees normally charged by many private referees,42 even a relatively small number of good-faith disputes could be financially devastating to even a non-indigent party.43
More fundamentally, all potential litigants—not just those who are indigent—have a constitutional right in Alaska of meaningful access to the justice system.44 Prohibitively high master‘s fees could potentially jeopardize such access. In Malvo v. J.C. Penney Co.,45 we invalidated an attorney‘s fees award that compensated the defendant for the full amount of his attorney‘s fees, noting that when a plaintiff risks such a high potential liability, “the size of a party‘s bank account will have a major impact on his access to the courts.”46 Even if an imposi-
The Peters argue that any imposition of master‘s costs on a financially disadvantaged party violates
Of course, any added cost to the litigants for paying master‘s fees may be offset by the time and money saved “in the long run by the more efficient progress of discovery and the elimination of time spent in motions to compel.”52 The implications of these long-term savings extend beyond a particular case:
The cost of a private referee ... must also be weighed against the ... cost of having to seek repeated judicial intervention through motions and Court appearances to resolve disputes and compel compliance with discovery, and the potential prejudice due to delay of the case.... In addition, there is the hidden cost to all users of the judicial system from the waste of scarce judicial resources and increased calendar congestion.53
Thus, to determine whether master‘s fees in any given case infringe upon the guaranteed
Although trial courts should not be burdened with performing an elaborate analysis of the total amount of master‘s fees as a percentage of each party‘s annual income, courts should not choose a means of compensation without considering whether the parties can reasonably afford the fees and whether potentially viable alternatives exist to the appointment of a private referee. Such alternatives include appointment of masters for a limited purpose or duration or placing a cap, proportionate to a litigant‘s annual income, on the amount of master‘s fees imposed on them.54 To determine whether a party can afford a private referee, trial courts could rely upon financial affidavits similar to those used to determine waiver of filing fees and bonds. In the end, the burden on trial courts from having to consider parties’ financial means is minimal compared to the burden on indigent or “modest means” litigants of having to pay prohibitively high masters’ fees in order to have their claims adjudicated.
From the point of view of low-income litigants, a “loser pays” system, in which the loser of each discovery dispute pays the master‘s fees for that dispute, may be preferable to equal distribution of costs. As the dissent points out, the trial court in this case most likely chose the “loser pays” system in an attempt to minimize the financial hardship on the Peters.55 But the fact that such a system is preferable to equal distribution does not make it fair and reason-
In short, trial courts have an implied obligation under both the Civil Rules and the Alaska Constitution to consider the parties’ financial status before issuing an order of reference and to choose a method of compensation that does not restrict litigants’ meaningful access to discovery or, more generally, to the justice system.
D. Necessity of a Remand
The record does not reveal whether the Peters are of sufficiently modest means or whether the discovery master‘s fees will be sufficiently high as to call into question the Peters’ meaningful access to the justice system. For example, it is unclear from the record to what extent any benefit or settlement payments already made by Progressive to the Peters have affected the Peters’ ability to pay master‘s fees.56 Although the Peters did include financial hardship as an issue in their opposition to Progressive‘s motion for appointment of a master, it is unclear whether the superior court considered the parties’ financial status before issuing the order. Accordingly, we remand to give the court an opportunity to evaluate the Peters’ claim of economic hardship and to determine a fair and reasonable means of compensating the discovery master should the court determine that a master is appropriate in this case.57
Judge Brown arguably could have viewed the debate regarding Progressive‘s motion for a protective order, during which the Peters filed an opposition with over one hundred pages of exhibits, as a harbinger of future contentiousness between the parties. Indeed, such a prediction is borne out by the vast number of post-appointment discovery requests submitted by the Peters.58 Thus, we cannot say that the trial judge abused his discretion in appointing a master given the circumstances of this case. But because we have not previously articulated factors for trial courts to consider when appointing a discovery master, and because a remand is necessary in any event to resolve the Peters’ claim of financial hardship, we believe the superior court should have an opportunity on remand to review its referral order in light of the basic principles we have articulated to determine whether a master is appropriate in this case. In doing so, the superior court may find it necessary to review the entire course of discovery, including post-appointment requests.
V. CONCLUSION
By articulating guidelines for courts to consider when appointing discovery masters, we do not wish to discourage use of such masters. Rather, we hope to ensure both that trial courts have the time and resources they need to adjudicate disputes while still protecting the ability of persons of modest means to gain access to the judicial system. Because we have not previously set forth these factors, we VACATE the superior court‘s order of reference and REMAND to give the court an opportunity to consider the factors we have suggested. On remand, the superior court should also determine a fair and reasonable compensation method after considering the impact of master‘s fees on the parties’ meaningful access to the courts.
CARPENETI, Justice, dissenting.
This court has previously held,1 and repeats today,2 that the appointment of a discovery master is left to the sound discretion of the trial court. The trial court in this case, accurately anticipating that the discovery disputes would quickly degenerate into near-chaos,3 appointed a discovery master. In a clear attempt to meet any concern that an individual litigant suing a large company might be disadvantaged by the order of appointment, the trial court provided that the master‘s fees for any particular dispute would be borne by the party losing the dispute. I would leave undisturbed the trial court‘s management of this case.
The court justifies its interlocutory intrusion into this case by referring to “our judicial duty to determine whether appointment of a master was appropriate in this case.”4 With respect, I disagree: our inquiry is limited to whether the trial court abused its discretion in appointing a master. And the court‘s justification for acting now—the need for “timely” resolution of this issue given that the trial court stayed all discovery pending the outcome of this petition5—must seem ironic indeed to litigants whose case has been
That is not to say that
Such an approach would have the advantage of informing more fully this court‘s analysis in an area of today‘s opinion which I regard as potentially problematic. That is, in determining “whether master‘s fees in any given case infringe upon the guaranteed right of access to the justice system,” trial courts are told only that they “may take into account the possibility that the costs to the litigants are offset by the efficiency of master-assisted litigation.”7 This is problematic for several reasons.
First, the “costs to the litigants“—that is, the master‘s fees—will be entirely unknown at the beginning of the case. That amount will be a function of several factors truly unknowable to the trial court from its pre-litigation perspective: the amount of contentiousness to come, the future willingness of opposing counsel to try to work within the spirit of the rules, the complexity of legal issues which arise in the course of discovery, and the like.
Second, whether those costs will be “offset by the efficiency of master-assisted litigation” is likewise extremely difficult to assess. If by “the efficiency of master-assisted litigation” the court means, for example, savings to the parties in lower attorney‘s fees resulting from quicker discovery decisions, how can the trial judge even remotely quantify those calculations?
Third, the court refers to “potentially viable alternatives” to the appointment of a master,8 but they are not true alternatives. Instead, in suggesting that the trial court might limit the purpose or duration of the appointment or the amount of money to be spent on it, the court merely posits limiting the appointment in various ways. Trial courts presently have that authority and presumably exercise it.
Last, and most importantly, I do not know that the court‘s assumption that the expense of the discovery master would or should be borne by the parties—as opposed to counsel—is necessarily correct.9 In the great majority of instances, the client does not participate actively in the formulation and execution of discovery strategy. Because counsel make the decisions which lead to increased expenses, it appears neither unfair nor punitive to require counsel to bear those expenses. The assumption that the master‘s costs would be borne by the parties rather than counsel—an assumption almost completely unexamined by the court today—should be referred to the Civil Rules Advisory Committee. Reference would allow a full airing of the relevant facts and an examination of the assumptions underlying the various positions which have been presented to the court.10
Notes
Shortly after appointment of the discovery master, plaintiffs within a ten-day period filed a total of 125 requests for admission and 238 requests for production.
(b) Reference. A reference to a master shall be the exception and not the rule. In actions to be tried by a jury, a reference shall be made only when the issues are complicated; in actions to be tried without a jury, save in matters of account and of difficult computation of damages, a reference shall be made only upon a showing that some exceptional condition requires it.Op. at 875.
