F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
NOV 9 1999
TENTH CIRCUIT
________________________________ PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
THOMAS R. HUTCHINSON, Personal
Representative of the Estate of Robert
W. Hutchinson, deceased,
Plaintiff - Appellant, No. 98-5043
v. (N.D. Oklahoma)
RICHARD PFEIL; MARY JO PFEIL, (D.C. No. 92-C-1088-E)
Defendants - Appellees.
JOAN GODLOVE; TODD
ALEXANDER,
Attorneys - Appellants,
and
SONA JOHNSTON,
Nonparty Witness -
Appellee.
_______________________________
ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
_______________________________
*
This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of
law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The Court generally disfavors the
citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited under
the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
Before ANDERSON and BRISCOE, Circuit Judges, and KIMBALL,** District Judge.
________________________________
Plaintiff-Appellant Thomas R. Hutchison (“Plaintiff”) appeals two discovery
orders issued in the proceedings below. First, Plaintiff, together with his counsel, appeals
the district court's affirmation of the magistrate judge's imposition of sanctions against
him and his counsel under Rule 37(a)(4) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Second, Plaintiff appeals the district court's affirmation of the magistrate judge's order
denying Plaintiff's motion to lift a protective order restricting the use and dissemination of
documents and information obtained from a nonparty witness, Appellee Sona Johnston
(“Johnston”). We consider each matter in turn, and AFFIRM the district court's rulings.
This Court has issued a prior decision in this case, Hutchison v. Pfeil, 105 F.3d 562
(10th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 118 S.Ct. 298 (1997), which describes the underlying
dispute. For that reason, only facts pertinent to the issues now before the Court are
repeated here.
A. Rule 37(a)(4) Sanctions.
1. Background.
Because Plaintiff attacks the procedural underpinnings of the sanctions award, a
detailed background account is necessary. Plaintiff filed this action in the United States
District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma against Defendant-Appellees
**
The Honorable Dale A. Kimball, United States District Judge for the District of
Utah, sitting by designation.
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Richard B. Pfeil and Mary Jo Pfeil (together, “Defendants”) to recover an interest in a
painting known as “Summer Hillside,” by Theodore Robinson. Plaintiff asserted that
personal jurisdiction over Defendants existed in Oklahoma because of contacts that arose
when the painting was displayed at the Philbrook Museum of Art in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for
ten weeks in 1992. Defendants moved to dismiss on the ground that the district court
lacked personal jurisdiction over Defendants, or, in the alternative, that venue was
improper. Plaintiff was given the right to conduct discovery limited to the issues raised
by Defendants' motion and did so.
The sanctions at issue were imposed on Plaintiff and his counsel by the magistrate
judge at the conclusion of a hearing held on August 11, 1993, on motions filed by
Plaintiff challenging the sufficiency of Defendants' responses to the discovery Plaintiff
requested. Review of the transcript of that hearing shows that, over the repeated
protestations of the magistrate judge, Plaintiff's counsel insisted on arguing in response to
Defendants' initial discovery responses, as opposed to Defendants' revised responses, and
argued at length on requests that were clearly outside the scope of the discovery allowed.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the magistrate judge denied Plaintiff's motions and, sua
sponte, awarded Defendants their reasonable expenses, including attorney fees, incurred
in resisting the motions pursuant to Rule 37(a)(4). The stated basis for the magistrate
judge's decision was that he “was unprepared to make a finding that the award of
expenses, including attorney's fees in this case, is unjust.” Defendants were directed to
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file an application for fees by August 20, 1993; Plaintiff was given until August 27, 1993,
to respond as to the reasonableness of the fees requested.
Intending to file a motion to reconsider the award, Plaintiff asked Defendants if
Defendants would agree to defer Plaintiff's response to their fee application until after the
motion was decided. Defendants agreed. On August 19, 1993, Plaintiff's counsel filed a
motion requesting the magistrate judge to reconsider and vacate the award on the ground
that Plaintiff's counsel had not been afforded adequate notice and an opportunity to be
heard before the sanctions had been imposed.
On August 26, 1993, the district court entered an order, prepared by Plaintiff for
the magistrate judge's signature, extending the due date for Plaintiff's response to the fee
application to ten days after Plaintiff received notice of any adverse ruling on his motion
to reconsider.
The magistrate judge then granted the motion to reconsider and scheduled a
hearing for October 13, 1993. At the hearing, Plaintiff's counsel stated that she was
unprepared to argue the substantive sanctions issues, namely, whether the making of the
discovery motion was substantially justified or whether other circumstances made an
award of expenses unjust. Instead, Plaintiff's counsel stated that she wished to argue the
“due process” issues, which had been rendered moot by the fact that Plaintiff's motion to
reconsider had been granted. Plaintiff was given additional time to file a written brief
addressing the propriety of the sanctions award and the reasonableness of Defendants' fee
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application, and a show cause hearing was scheduled for December 16, 1993.
Following the hearing, the magistrate judge issued an order, dated December 22,
1993, awarding Defendants attorney fees incurred in responding to Plaintiff's discovery
motions in the amount requested. Plaintiff appealed the order to the district court, which
affirmed the award on February 18, 1998.
2. Standard of Review.
Magistrate judges have the power to award attorney fees as non-dispositive
discovery sanctions under 28 U.S.C. § 636. This Court will not overturn a sanctions
award unless this Court finds that the district court abused its discretion in finding that the
magistrate judge's order imposing the sanction was not clearly erroneous or contrary to
law. See Ocelot Oil Corp. v. Sparrow Indus., 847 F.2d 1458, 1465 (10th Cir. 1988)
(finding district court appropriately applied clearly-erroneous or contrary-to-law standard
in reviewing magistrate judge's imposition of non-dispositive discovery sanction); see
also GWN Petroleum Corp. v. OK-Tex Oil & Gas, Inc., 998 F.2d 853, 858 (10th Cir.
1993) (applying abuse-of-discretion standard to district court's discovery rulings).
3. Discussion.
Rule 37(a)(4)(B) provides that, if a motion to compel discovery is denied, the court
shall, “after affording an opportunity to be heard,” require the moving party or the
attorney filing the motion, or both of them, to pay the reasonable expenses incurred in
opposing the motion “unless the court finds that the making of the motion was
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substantially justified or that other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.”
Whether a discovery motion is “substantially justified” depends on the particular
facts of each case. The controlling definition of “substantially justified” is set forth in
Pierce v. Underwood, 487 U.S. 552, 564-65 (1988), where the Supreme Court explained:
“Substantially justified” is the test the statute prescribes, and the issue
should be framed in those terms. That being said, there is nevertheless an
obvious need to elaborate upon the meaning of the phrase. The broad range
of interpretations described above is attributable to the fact that the word
“substantial” can have two quite different — indeed, almost contrary —
connotations. On the one hand, it can mean “[c]onsiderable in amount,
value, or the like; large,” Webster's New International Dictionary 2415 (2d
ed.1945) — as, for example, in the statement, “He won the election by a
substantial majority.” On the other hand, it can mean “[t]hat is such in
substance or in the main,” ibid. — as, for example, in the statement, “What
he said was substantially true.” Depending upon which connotation one
selects, “substantially justified” is susceptible of interpretations ranging
from the Government's to the respondent's.
....
We are of the view, therefore, that as between the two commonly
used connotations of the word “substantially,” the one most naturally
conveyed by the phrase before us here is not “justified to a high degree,”
but rather “justified in substance or in the main” — that is, justified to a
degree that could satisfy a reasonable person.
Applying this standard, the magistrate judge assessed fees and expenses against Plaintiff
and his counsel.
In Plaintiff's first line of attack, Plaintiff argues that his discovery motions were
erroneously denied in toto, identifying ten discovery requests that he asserts were decided
wrongly by the magistrate judge.
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With respect to Interrogatories 8, 9, and 10 and Document Requests 14 and 15,
Plaintiff asserts that the magistrate judge erroneously sustained Defendants' relevancy
objections. The requests sought information concerning the objectives and goals of the
Pfeils in collecting and exhibiting the art works displayed at the Philbrook and preparing
an exhibition catalog. Plaintiff claims such information was placed at issue by
Defendants when they argued that their forum-related activities were not commercial. As
support for his position, Plaintiff cites Benally v. Amon Carter Museum of Western Art,
858 F.2d 618 (10th Cir. 1988).
Benally does not support Plaintiff's position. In Benally, this Court decided
whether the activities of a nonprofit organization constitute “transacting business” within
the meaning of New Mexico's long-arm statute, concluding that “[w]hen a wrong results
from purposeful, organized activity, in terms of a state's interest in redressing harm to its
citizens, it makes little difference whether the activity was of a commercial character or
not.” Id. at 623. Benally makes clear that a nonresident's activities in the forum are
determinative, and not the nonresident's motives for engaging in them. Plaintiff makes
the same failing argument for Interrogatories 14, 18, and 19, which also sought
information about Defendants' motives.
With respect to Request for Admission 18, which asked Defendants to admit that
they “purposefully availed themselves of the privilege of conducting activities within
Oklahoma, thus invoking the benefits and protection of its laws,” Plaintiff asserts that the
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magistrate judge erroneously denied his motion to determine the sufficiency of
Defendants' answer and objection. Defendants denied the request and objected on the
ground, among others, that the request asserted a legal conclusion. This objection was
clearly proper.
Finally, with respect to Interrogatory 4, which asked Defendants to describe the
ties certain listed individuals had with Oklahoma in connection with the exhibition of the
Pfeil's collection at the Philbrook, Plaintiff asserts that the magistrate judge erroneously
characterized Defendants' answer as “a fair response to the inquiry under the
circumstances,” rather than treating the answer as a failure to answer under Rule 37(a)(3).
Defendants answered, with respect to Paul Swisher, Defendants' business agent, that he
visited the Philbrook during the exhibition on September 26, 1992. In fact, as Plaintiff
learned after the sanctions award had been entered, Swisher attended the Philbrook's
opening gala the night before, on September 25, 1992.
Hindsight shows that the magistrate judge's characterization of Defendants' answer
to Interrogatory 4 was erroneous. Under Pierce, however, one inadvertent and
insignificant error does not invalidate the sanctions award or necessarily require
apportionment. The magistrate judge found that the discovery motions were not
substantially justified because many of the requests were irrelevant and many of Plaintiff
counsel's arguments and objectives were inappropriate, e.g., attempting to compel
different responses to requests for admission.
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In Plaintiff's second line of attack, Plaintiff argues that the sanctions award is void
ab initio because the magistrate judge contradicted the district judge in directing Plaintiff
to file a brief addressing the reasonableness of Defendants' fee application when the
district judge had previously signed an order extending the due date for such briefing until
10 days after being notified of any adverse ruling on Plaintiff's motion to reconsider. This
procedural inconsistency has no legal significance, having had no effect on Plaintiff's
opportunity to have a full and fair opportunity to be heard. Essentially, the magistrate
judge issued a superceding scheduling order concerning a matter that was, as the district
court found in rejecting this argument, “well within his authority.”
In a third and related line of attack, Plaintiff asserts that the sanctions award is
void because the magistrate judge exceeded the scope of his authority in reconsidering the
issue of whether to award sanctions in response to Plaintiff's motion to reconsider, as
opposed to vacating the sanctions award on Fifth Amendment “due process” grounds, the
relief Plaintiff specifically requested. This argument is without merit. Magistrate judges
clearly have the power to award sanctions pursuant to Rule 37(a)(4). Scheduling and
conducting show cause hearings to determine whether to do so are merely subsidiary
aspects of that power.
In Plaintiff's final line of attack, Plaintiff claims that the sanctions award is invalid
because he was never given the independent right to appeal the magistrate judge's
decision denying his discovery motions. Plaintiff's request that the magistrate judge be
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compelled to enter a written order denying the motions was ultimately denied by the
district court as moot because Defendants' motion to dismiss for lack of personal
jurisdiction had been denied.
Insofar as Plaintiff alleges that a written ruling was necessary in order to challenge
the sanctions award, Plaintiff misapprehends the applicable standard of review. In
reviewing the sanctions award, the relevant question is whether the discovery motions
were substantially justified. An erroneous discovery ruling could lead a judge to
erroneously conclude that a discovery motion was not substantially justified, but Plaintiff
argues that his inability to appeal the discovery ruling in and of itself precluded Plaintiff
from challenging the sanctions award. As this appeal itself evinces, such is simply not the
case. The magistrate judge held two hearings on the sanctions award. Plaintiff had full
and fair opportunity to challenge any of the bases underlying the magistrate's conclusion
that Plaintiff's discovery motions were not substantially justified. The fact that he did not
have the opportunity to do so in an additional, independent proceeding has no legal
consequence.
For these reasons, we conclude that the district judge did not abuse his discretion
in finding that the sanctions award entered by the magistrate judge was not clearly
erroneous or contrary to law.
B. Protective Order.
1. Background.
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Johnston is an art curator, scholar, and specialist in the works of Theodore
Robinson. Presumably because of her expertise, Plaintiff issued a subpoena to her,
commanding her to appear for a deposition on January 5, 1995, and to produce
documents. Johnston moved to quash and moved for a protective order. On December
30, 1994, the magistrate judge granted the motions in part, issuing a blanket protective
order restricting the use and dissemination of any documents or information obtained by
Plaintiff from Johnston, or her employer, the Baltimore Museum of Art, to use in this case
(the “1994 Order”). The magistrate judge did so in recognition of the proprietary interests
of Johnston in her scholarship and research.
Neither Johnston nor Plaintiff appealed the 1994 Order. Johnston gave testimony
and the Baltimore Museum of Art produced documents. Then, over three months later,
Plaintiff filed an application to lift the protective order. The magistrate judge denied
Plaintiff's motion on April 20, 1995 (the “1995 Order). The 1995 Order also places the
deposition transcript under seal. Plaintiff appealed the 1995 Order, which the district
court affirmed.
2. Standard of Review.
A decision by the district court to enter, lift, or modify a protective order is subject
to review only for abuse of discretion. United Nuclear Corp. v. Cranford Ins. Co., 905
F.2d 1424, 1427 (10th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1073 (1991).
3. Discussion.
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Rule 26(b)(1) allows a party to obtain information from a person, including a third
party to the litigation, concerning “any matter, not privileged, which is relevant to the
subject matter involved in the pending action.” Rule 26(c)(7) authorizes a court, “for
good cause shown,” to make “any order which justice requires to protect a party or person
from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden,” including that
“confidential research, development, or commercial information not be revealed or be
revealed only in a designated way.”
To resist discovery under Rule 26(c)(7), a person must first establish that the
information sought constitutes confidential research, development, or commercial
information and then demonstrate that its disclosure might be harmful. Centurion Indus.,
Inc. v. Warren Steurer & Assocs., 665 F.2d 323, 325 (10th Cir. 1981).
Concerning the 1994 Order, Plaintiff argues that Johnston did not meet her burden
to establish that the sought-after information was confidential within the meaning of Rule
26(c)(7) because Johnston's position was substantiated only by arguments made by
counsel. Specifically, Plaintiff argues that the magistrate judge could not have been
guided by common sense because he had no understanding of the background facts,
inasmuch as, at that time, Johnston had not yet given her testimony or produced any
documents and there were no background facts in the record. Concerning the 1995 Order,
Plaintiff argues that the magistrate judge still could not have had an understanding of the
background facts because he opted not to review the deposition transcript or exhibits,
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which were then available.
As support, Plaintiff cites Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, 467 U.S. 20 (1984). In
Seattle Times, the Supreme Court held that a protective order entered pursuant to a state
law patterned after Rule 26(c) does not offend the First Amendment. Id. at 37. Seattle
Times does not address the showing required to establish good cause. On the contrary,
the Supreme Court noted that “Rule 26(c) confers broad discretion on the trial court to
decide when a protective order is appropriate and what degree of protection is required.”
Id. at 36.
Plaintiff does not challenge the merits of the arguments made by Johnston's
counsel or the merits of the rationale of the magistrate judge in accepting such arguments.
Plaintiff asks this Court, essentially, to hold that good cause cannot, as a matter of law,
be established on the basis of arguments made by counsel alone. We decline to do so,
finding such a holding to be inconsistent with the broad discretion afforded trial judges
under the rule. In other words, the fact that good cause for the protective order was
established solely on the basis of arguments made by counsel does not by itself compel
the conclusion that the magistrate judge abused his discretion in refusing to lift the
protective order.
Plaintiff also argues that the protective order offends the First Amendment, an
argument that is premised upon Plaintiff's ability to persuade this Court that the protective
order was entered without good cause. Having failed in that endeavor, this argument
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similarly fails.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM both the district court's affirmation of the
magistrate judge's imposition of sanctions under Rule 37(a)(4) and the district court's
affirmation of the magistrate judge's order denying Plaintiff's motion to lift the protective
order restricting the use and dissemination of documents and information obtained from
Sona Johnston.
Entered for the Court
Dale A. Kimball
District Judge
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