Frontier International Group, LLC, Witness-Appellant. v. TEXAS BRINE COMPANY, LLC, Defendant-Appellant, and OCCIDENTAL CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 17-6075, No. 17-6076
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.
Filed January 19, 2018
879 F.3d 1224
AFFIRMED.
Frontier International Group, LLC, Witness.
Texas Brine Company, LLC, Defendant,
and
Occidental Chemical Corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
Jeremy K. Beecher (Bethany W. Kristovich with him on the briefs), Munger, Tolles & Olsen LLP, Los Angeles, California, for Defendant-Appellee.
Geren T. Steiner (Anton J. Rupert with him on the briefs), Rupert & Steiner, PLLC, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Witness-Appellant.
Before LUCERO, BALDOCK, and HARTZ, Circuit Judges.
BALDOCK, Circuit Judge.
I.
Defendant Texas Brine Company, LLC (Texas Brine) operates brine wells on land owned by Co-Defendant Occidental Chemical Corporation (Oxy) in Louisiana. In August 2012, a sinkhole appeared near one of these wells. After the sinkhole appeared, Texas Brine began clean-up efforts. To manage this crisis, Texas Brine consulted with others. In December 2012, Texas Brine retained Frontier International Group, LLC (Frontier), an Oklahoma-based consulting firm, for “emergency management, state and local government relations, community relations, litigation settlement strategy, and media communications.” Some time later, Texas Brine retained Brooks Altshuler, an attorney and Frontier‘s owner, in his individual capacity to advise the company on response and remediation efforts and to negotiate with government agencies. Later, Texas Brine retained Frontier as a consulting expert for trial preparation.
Litigation began soon after the sinkhole appeared, with multiple plaintiffs suing Texas Brine and Oxy in the Eastern District of Louisiana. In that suit, the plaintiffs alleged the negligent operation of a brine well resulted in the sinkhole and caused damage to the plaintiffs’ properties. In this underlying litigation, Texas Brine filed a cross-claim against Oxy seeking indemnity for $100 million spent responding to the sinkhole crisis, $6.5 million of which Texas Brine claims is for the work Frontier performed. To verify the work Frontier performed and the cost of such work, Oxy issued a subpoena duces tecum to nonparty Frontier, requesting production of eight categories of documents related to services Frontier provided Texas
In a written order, the district court granted the motion in part and denied it in part, Leblanc v. Texas Brine Co., No. 16-1026, 2017 WL 913801, at *1 (W.D. Okla. Mar. 7, 2017). In its order, the court noted that Texas Brine failed to comply with
Texas Brine also argued the work product doctrine governed the subpoenaed communications. The court reached a simi
The district court concluded its order by again emphasizing “Texas Brine‘s conclusory, blanket assertions of privilege are insufficient to quash the subpoena.” Id. (emphasis added). The court required Texas Brine to produce a privilege log for any communications that it believed were protected. With respect to the eight categories of subpoenaed documents, the court ruled as follows: Frontier need not produce category (1) because the request was overbroad; Frontier must produce the documents requested in categories (2), (3), (4), (5), and (7) “subject to privilege screening and production of a log consistent with
Texas Brine filed a timely notice of appeal.4 Texas Brine then filed a motion to stay the district court‘s order pending these proceedings, which the district court denied. Frontier complied with the district court‘s order and has, at this point, produced around 20,000 documents and a privilege log regarding the confidentiality of the withheld documents.
II.
At the outset, Oxy claims this dispute is not ripe for adjudication because the district court did not actually order production of any allegedly privileged material. Instead, the court ordered production of non-privileged material to Oxy subject to a privilege log. Until the district court orders production of privileged material, Oxy forcibly argues, there is no dispute to resolve. In response, Texas Brine asserts the court erred in defining the scope of the privilege too narrowly and “order[ing] production of documents that are arguably privileged communications.” Appellant Reply Brief, 2. In other words, Texas Brine argues in a vacuum that the court construed Louisiana law too narrowly.
But the court has yet to apply Louisiana law to any contested document. We will not resolve a dispute “if it rests upon ‘contingent future events that may not occur as anticipated or indeed may not
First, in determining the fitness of the issue for review, this Court considers “whether determination of the merits turns upon strictly legal issues or requires facts that may not yet be sufficiently developed.” Id. (emphasis added) (quoting Kan. Judicial Review v. Stout, 519 F.3d 1107, 1118 (10th Cir. 2008)). Texas Brine characterizes the issue before us as a legal one, arguing the district court interpreted Louisiana‘s attorney-client privilege statute too narrowly. Assessing a claim of attorney-client privilege, or even a claim of work product doctrine, when a person withholds subpoenaed information, however, necessarily requires a sufficient factual record. “Only when the district court has been exposed to the contested documents and the specific facts ... can it make a principled determination as to whether the attorney-client privilege in fact applies. Any attempt to make this type of determination without this factual foundation amounts to nothing more than a waste of judicial time and resources.” Holifield v. United States, 909 F.2d 201, 204 (7th Cir. 1990) (citations omitted). This is why
While the district court could have ruled otherwise, the court gratuitously allowed Texas Brine a second chance to produce a privilege log regarding the withheld documents.5 Texas Brine instead appealed, effectively arguing it should not have to produce any documents or a privilege log. Why Texas Brine believes it can assert a blanket claim of privilege over its communications with Frontier without complying with
Because both the factual record is insufficient and the court did not require production of protected documents, Texas Brine‘s appeal is not ripe for our review. Accordingly, Frontier‘s appeal, No. 17-6075, is DISMISSED for want of jurisdiction, as Frontier did not properly become involved in this litigation at the district court level; Texas Brine‘s appeal, No. 17-6076, is DISMISSED for lack of ripeness.8
Notes
- Documents concerning the Napoleonville Salt Dome in Louisiana;
- Documents concerning the sinkhole occurrence in 2012;
- Documents concerning the events leading up to the sinkhole occurrence;
- Communications with Texas Brine concerning the sinkhole occurrence and any aspect of the ongoing litigation pertaining to the sinkhole occurrence;
- Communications with Sonny Cranch or any employee of Cranch Hardy & Associates concerning the sinkhole occurrence and any aspect of the ongoing litigation pertaining to the sinkhole occurrence;
- Communications with members of the media or public concerning the sinkhole occurrence and the ongoing litigation pertaining to the sinkhole occurrence;
- Public statements generated by or on behalf of Texas Brine or any other entity in connection with the sinkhole occurrence and any aspect of the ongoing litigation pertaining to the sinkhole occurrence; and
- Any interview transcripts, video footage, newspaper clippings, online articles, or other published, printed or distributed media concerning the sinkhole occurrence and any aspect of the ongoing litigation pertaining to the sinkhole occurrence.
