ORDER
• The Plaintiff brought this action after he was injured when the cab of the crane he was operating became disengaged from its pedestal mounts. Now pending before the Court is the Plaintiffs Motion to Compel the Defendant to respond to certain Interrogatories and Requests for Production. For the reasons, set forth below, the Motion is hereby GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
The discovery requests involved in this dispute seek information about statements taken from witnesses, investigative reports compiled by or on behalf of the Defendant, and surveillance evidence of the Plaintiff taken by the Defendant. The “work product doctrine” lies at the heart of the Defendant’s objections to the Plaintiffs requests.
I.
The work product doctrine, first articulated by the Supreme Court in Hickman v. Taylor,
open to opposing counsel on mere demand, much of what is now put down in writing would remain unwritten. An attorney’s thoughts, heretofore inviolate, would not be his own. Inefficiency, unfairness and sharp practices would inevitably develop in the giving of legal advise and the preparation of eases for trial. The effect on the legal profession would be demoralizing. And the interests of the clients and the cause of justice would be poorly served.
Hickman,
The work product doctrine is now embodied in Rule 26(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Under Rule 26, if documents and other tangible things otherwise discoverable were prepared in anticipation of litigation by or for the other party or by or for the other party’s representative, a
II. Statements from Witnesses and Investigative Reports
The Defendant tendered to the Court for in camera inspection all documents in its possession not previously provided to the Plaintiff that are responsive to the Plaintiff’s requests for statements from witnesses and investigative or accident reports. After examination of the documents, the Court concludes that the witnesses’ statements must be produced to the Plaintiff, but that the investigative reports are protected.
A. Statements from Witnesses
The statements at issue in this case are transcripts of recorded interviews of certain employees of the Defendant who witnessed the Plaintiffs accident. The interviews were conducted by an investigator for the Defendant three days after the accident. Clearly, the statements were taken in anticipation of litigation and thus fall within the scope of the work product doctrine.
In Southern Railway Co. v. Lanham,
While the court in Lanham was considering the “good cause” requirement then included in Fed.R.Civ.P. 34 rather than the substantial need and undue hardship requirements now included Rule 26, the Court believes the Lanham analysis is nonetheless applicable in this ease. As in Lanham, the statements sought by the Plaintiff in this case were taken just a few days after the accident, and, consequently, will be more accurate than any statements that could now be obtained from the same witnesses. Be
B. Investigative Reports
The reports that the Defendant contend are protected work product are memoranda prepared by the Defendant’s investigator. One report is dated two days after the accident, and the other is dated approximately two weeks after the accident. Again, it is clear that the reports were prepared in anticipation of litigation; thus, the question is whether the Plaintiff has established its entitlement to the reports under Rule 26(b)(3).
The investigative reports contain analysis of the Plaintiffs accident, including the investigator’s on-scene attempt to verify the boom angle of the crane and the crane’s load handling capacity as reported by the Plaintiff at the time the accident occurred. In addition, the reports contain the investigator’s summaries of his interviews with various witnesses. Thus, because they are suffused with the investigator’s mental impressions and conclusions, the investigative reports are “opinion work product” rather than ordinary work product materials.
Some courts treat opinion work product as absolutely protected and never subject to discovery. See, e.g., Duplan Corp. v. Moulinage et Retorderie de Chavanoz, 509 F.2d 730, 734 (4th Cir.1974) (“no showing of relevance, substantial need or undue hardship should justify compelled disclosure of an attorney’s mental impressions, conclusions, opinions or legal theories.”), cert. denied,
Nonetheless, assuming that opinion work product is discoverable under some circumstances, the Plaintiff here has not made a showing of compelling or extraordinary need that would justify disclosure of the investigative reports. Cf. Hickman,
III. Surveillance Evidence
The biggest point of contention between the parties in this case is the extent to which Defendant may be required to disclose
In a personal injury case, surveillance of the plaintiff can be a very important aspect of the defendant’s ease, if the surveillance tends to discredit the plaintiffs description of the extent and effects of his injuries. Obviously, surveillance evidence is gathered in anticipation of litigation and thus is generally protected as work product. See, e.g., Wegner v. Cliff Viessman, Inc.,
Nonetheless, recognizing that the impeachment value of surveillance evidence may well be lessened or lost by disclosure to the plaintiff, many courts have held that surveillance evidence must be disclosed only after the plaintiffs deposition has been taken. See, e.g., Ward,
While the Court realizes that surveillance films may often provide compelling and persuasive impeachment of a plaintiffs evidence, surveillance evidence also provides substantive evidence of the extent of the plaintiffs injuries, often corroborating rather than impeaching the plaintiffs testimony. See Chiasson,
Moreover, if defendants are not required to disclose the existence of surveillance evidence, plaintiffs will be forced to chose between mitigating their damages by attempting to work and go on with their lives in spite of their injuries, or being ambushed at trial by creatively-edited or otherwise manipulated surveillance evidence purporting to show that the plaintiffs injuries are not as severe as claimed. The defendant, however, often is not exposed to a parallel risk. For example, in cases where the plaintiff is injured on the defendant’s property, the plaintiff generally must receive the defendant’s permission before entering the property to inspect the condition of equipment or the site of the accident. The defendant, therefore, has an
Accordingly, the Court believes that a reasonable compromise between the Plaintiffs interests and those of the Defendant is to require the Defendant to disclose, before the taking of the Plaintiffs deposition, the existence of any surveillance evidence of the Plaintiff and the date on which the surveillance was obtained, and to indicate whether the surveillance is in the form of film, videotape, or still photographs.
The Defendant, however, contends that requiring it to divulge whether or not surveillance evidence exists requires it to reveal its strategy and thought processes to the Plaintiff; therefore, the fact of the existence or non-existence of surveillance is protected under the work product doctrine. The Court disagrees. It may well be that the decision about if, when, or how surveillance of a plaintiff should be conducted does reveal something about how the defendant’s attorney investigates and prepares a case for trial. However, not every action that reveals, to some minimal degree, an attorney’s general strategy or approach to a case amounts to protected opinion work product. For example, the manner in which an attorney phrases his answers to interrogatories may reveal, to some degree, the attorney’s strategy in defending against the plaintiffs claims. Nonetheless, the attorney could not refuse to answer the interrogatories on the grounds of the work product doctrine. Thus, while requiring the Defendant to disclose whether or not surveillance evidence exists may reveal the general strategy of the Defendant’s attorney, “[i]t is simply too great a stretch to say, however, that opinion work product is also revealed.” Wegner,
Because surveillance films or photographs constitute substantive as well as impeachment evidence, the Plaintiff has a interest in timely learning of their existence so that he can properly prepare his case. However, because of the potential for surveillance films to provide compelling impeachment evidence, the Defendant has an interest in preserving their impeachment value by avoiding premature disclosure. The procedure outlined herein serves the Plaintiffs need to learn about relevant evidence in the hands of the Defendant, yet also preserves the impeachment value of the evidence. Moreover, this level of disclosure does not punish the Plaintiff for attempting to recover from his injuries and mitigate his damages, but does put the Plaintiff on notice that he will be called on to explain any actions that appear to be inconsistent with his claimed injuries. The •Court believes that the procedure announced herein is consistent with the policies guiding the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Chiasson, and represents the best compromise between the rights and interests of the parties. See Wegner,
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. At the hearing previously held on the Plaintiff's Motion to Compel, the Court ruled from the bench on the issues raised in Motion. This Order simply memorializes the rulings previously issued by the Court.
. As to the other points raised in the Plaintiff's Motion to Compel, the Defendant stated at the hearing that it had fully complied with the Plaintiff's discovery requests, producing all requested information and documents in existence. The Court accepted the Defendant's assertions, and, consequently, the remaining portions of the Motion to Compel are MOOT.
. The Court notes that the Plaintiff's discovery requests generally sought information received or generated before the commencement of this lawsuit. The fact that a document may have been created before a complaint was actually filed does not exempt it from the scope of the work product doctrine. Instead, the doctrine protects materials gathered "in anticipation of litigation.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(3). The fact that a lawsuit has not yet been filed is irrelevant— "litigation need not necessarily be imminent ... as long as the primary motivating purpose behind the creation of the document was to aid in possible future litigation." United States v. Davis,
. In this case, the Plaintiff propounded discovery requests seeking information about any surveillance. By its ruling here, the Court is not requiring a defendant in another case to reveal the existence of surveillance evidence absent a proper discovery request from the plaintiff.
