155 F.R.D. 193 | D. Ariz. | 1994
MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs seek a court order compelling Defendant Touche Ross & Co. to produce internal audit manuals, which include the following: Audit Process Manual, Audit Practice Policies Manual, Accounting and Auditing Report Writing Manual (Appendix C, Personal Financial Statements), and Accounting Standards Manual. Touche contests the production of these manuals and has moved for a protective order.
The Plaintiffs’ motion for production is denied. Touche’s motion for a protective order is granted.
DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs assert that the internal manuals are relevant, particularly with respect to the issue of scienter. Plaintiffs further argue that the manuals presumably contain Touche’s official interpretation of GAAS (generally accepted auditing standards). To support their position, the Plaintiffs cite Fields v. Oliver’s Stores, Inc., No. CIV 87-0894, 1991 WL 44845, 1990 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 2271 (S.D.N.Y.1990).
In Fields, a ease that also involved a discovery request for internal auditing manuals, the court noted that the manuals represented the single best source of information available to the plaintiffs on how the defendant conducted audits. Id. at *1, 1990 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 2271 at *2. The court further commented that, although internal auditing procedures might be irrelevant at trial, “understanding them could be vital to conducting meaningful depositions and might aid in learning whether or not [defendant’s] auditors acted with scienter by conducting the audits in an irregular way.” Id. at *1, 1990 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 2271 at *2-3. According to the court, any confidentiality concerns could be handled with a protective order.
Responding to the Plaintiffs’ arguments in this case, Touche contends that its internal manuals are highly confidential and constitute proprietary trade secrets. Any disclosure of these materials, Touche contends, may damage its competitive standing in the accounting industry. Even a protective order, Touche explains, is unlikely to prevent the manuals from being disclosed to Touche’s competitors, who are most likely to be retained as Plaintiffs’ experts.
Additionally, Touche asserts that the manuals would add nothing to the information already disclosed through workpapers, audit programs, and deposition testimony. Touche also notes that the Plaintiffs have not demonstrated any need, much less a compelling need, for the manuals.
Touche relies on In re Worlds of Wonder Sec. Litig., 147 F.R.D. 214 (N.D.Calif.1992) (order re discovery). Finding, one, that the defendant’s internal auditing manuals were closely guarded trade secrets whose disclosure to competitors would most likely be harmful and, two, that the plaintiffs had not establish that the manuals were relevant and necessary to the case, the Worlds of Wonder court refused to compel production. Id. at 216. The court reasoned that workpapers, not the manuals, showed how the audit was conducted. Id. at 216. Further, the court found that GAAS and GAAP, not the manuals, established the standards against which the audit was to be measured. Id. Concerning the use of the internal manuals to define professional standards, the court stated: “It is also unfair to use professionals’ self-imposed standards, which may exceed industry standards, against them to try to prove fraud.” Id. at 217.
Upon review of both eases, this Court finds the opinion in Worlds of Wonder to be more persuasive when considering the facts of the instant case. Plaintiffs have not identified any situation in which the manuals could be helpful in understanding Touche’s audit procedures or the meaning of its workpapers. Touche’s auditors repeatedly testified that they relied on GAAS and GAAP and not on internal manuals. Since 1991, Plaintiffs have had access to Touche’s audit programs, which contain step-by-step checklists outlining the procedures an accountant may follow in performing an audit. Plaintiffs also have had full access to the Avanti workpapers and the recollections of the auditors who worked on the Avanti engagements.
Touche’s internal manuals are highly confidential and proprietary trade secrets. Disclosure of the manuals could damage Touche’s competitive standing in the accounting industry. The Plaintiffs have not demonstrated any need for the manuals nor convinced the Court of the manuals’ relevance. The Plaintiffs do not dispute that the appropriate standard of care is defined by GAAS and GAAP and not by internal guidelines. Accordingly, the Court will not compel production of Touche’s internal auditing manuals at this time. In the event that future discovery determines that Touche relied on standards contained in internal manuals and not GAAS and GAAP, the Plaintiffs may renew their motion.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ Memorandum re Production of Touche Ross Manuals, filed October 15, 1993 (# 533), is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendant Touche Ross & Co.’s Motion for a Protective Order to bar disclosure of the manuals, filed November 8, 1993 (#542), is GRANTED.