The Department of Energy (DOE) petitions this Court for a writ of mandamus requiring the district court to vacate certain discovery orders in the case of Cotton Petroleum Corp. v. DOE, No. 79-C-217-B (N.D.Okla.), and to reconsider claims of evidentiary privilege raised by DOE.
In the action underlying this mandamus proceeding, DOE asserted the “deliberative process” privilege in over 100 documents which Cotton Petroleum sought to discover. In the fourth of a series of discovery orders (March 30, 1981), the district court rejected DOE’s claim of privilege. In a fifth discovery order (June 30, 1981), the district court refused DOE’s requests for a reconsideration and stay of the fourth order. (The fifth order also rejected certain claims of work-product privilege. That ruling is not challenged here.)
The district court’s grounds for rejecting DOE’s claim of the deliberative process privilege were that the claim was made by the wrong person, and too late. We conclude that the court erred in ruling that this privilege may be asserted only by the head of an agency. United States v. Reynolds,
The requirements for properly asserting this latter privilege are set forth in Vaughn v. Rosen,
Courts have in numerous cases required that governmental privileges be asserted by senior officials. See, e. g., Crawford v. Dominic,
In the present case, DOE offered a detailed and specific justification of its claims of privilege in its counsels’ lengthy submissions of Nov. 3, 1980, Dec. 15, 1980, and Jan. 12, 1981. We hold that these documents met the relevant requirements of Vaughn. The submissions were timely, coming before Jan. 23, 1981, the date of the latest discovery hearing in the trial court. It is this date that the trial court itself considered the time limit for asserting evidentiary privileges.
For the reasons above, the writ of mandamus shall issue. The trial court is directed to vacate its fourth and fifth discovery orders, and to reconsider DOE’s assertions of the deliberative process privilege.
