Constantinos P. Angelopoulos v. Theodore P. Angelopoulos, Neptunia Incorporated, Transmar Corporation, Didiac Establishment, Beta Steel Corporation, and Top Gun Investment Corporation, II.
Oct 29 2013, 5:37 am
FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
BETA STEEL CORPORATION AND
TOP GUN INVESTMENT CORP., II:
BRIAN W. WELCH BRIAN E. CASEY
KARL L. MULVANEY D. MICHAEL ANDERSON
RAFAEL A. SANCHEZ Barnes & Thornburg, LLP.
Bingham, Greenbaum, Doll, LLP. South Bend, Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
ABIGAIL A. CLAPP
Greenberg, Traurig, LLP.
Chicago, Illinois
JEFFERY R. MANN
Greenberg, Traurig, LLP.
New York, New York
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
THEODORE P. ANGELOPOULOS
NEPTUNIA INCORPORATED,
TRANSMAR CORPORATION, AND
DIDIAC ESTABLISHMENT
JON LARAMORE
DAVID K. HERZOG
ANNE K. RICCHIUTO
Faegre, Baker, Daniels, LLP.
Indianapolis, Indiana
LARRY G. EVANS
Hoeppner, Wagner & Evans, LLP.
Merrillville, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
CONSTANTINOS P. ANGELOPOULOS, )
)
Appellant-Plaintiff, )
)
vs. )
)
THEODORE P. ANGELOPOULOS, )
NEPTUNIA INCORPORATED, ) 64A04-1211-PL-594
TRANSMAR CORPORATION, )
DIDIAC ESTABLISHMENT, )
BETA STEEL CORPORATION, and )
TOP GUN INVESTMENT CORPORATION, II. )
)
Appellees-Defendants. )
APPEAL FROM THE PORTER SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Mary R. Harper, Judge
Cause No. 64D05-0811-PL-10838
October 29, 2013
OPINION – FOR PUBLICATION
MATHIAS, Judge
Constantinos P. Angelopoulos (“Constantinos”) appeals the orders of the Porter
Superior Court dismissing his claims against Theodore P. Angelopoulos (“Theodore”),
Neptunia Inc. (“Neptunia”), Transmar Corp. (“Transmar”), Didiac Establishment
(“Didiac”), Beta Steel Corp. (“Beta Steel”), and Top Gun Investments Corp. II (“Top
Gun”). All of Constantinos’s claims are based on his allegation that he is entitled to a
portion of the shares of Beta Steel as an heir under his late father’s estate, which was
2
administered in Greece. The trial court concluded that this issue had been decided
against Constantinos in prior litigation in the Greek court system and dismissed
Constantinos’s claims. Constantinos appeals and presents several issues, which we
restate as:
I. Whether the trial court erred in concluding that Constantinos’s claims were
precluded by previously-entered judgments in the courts of Greece, and
II. Whether the trial court erred by concluding that certain materials obtained
by Constantinos during discovery and filed in court should remain
confidential.
Concluding that the prior rulings of the Greek courts have conclusively established that
Theodore is the sole owner of Beta Steel, we affirm the trial court’s order dismissing
Constantinos’s claims. We also conclude, however, that the trial court erred in declaring
that the materials filed in court should automatically remain confidential, and we
accordingly reverse the trial court’s order on this issue and remand for further
proceedings on the issue of confidentiality and public access.
Facts and Procedural History
Both Constantinos and Theodore are the sons of Panayiotis Angelopoulos,1 and
both are Greek citizens who live in Greece. Panayiotis and his brothers, John and
Demetrios, were Greek citizens who founded several companies that owned the assets of
the brothers’ combined business activities. John Angelopoulos died in 1974, and
Demetrios Angelopoulos was murdered in 1986, leaving Panayiotis as the sole owner of
1
The parties refer to Constantinos as “CPA” and to Theodore as “TPA.” They refer to their father as
“P.A.”, whose Greek name is Παναγιώτης, which is transliterated in the record as both “Panagiotis” and
“Panayiotis.”
3
the family’s business assets. Panayiotis died intestate in 2001, leaving a substantial estate.
Pursuant to Greek intestacy laws, Panayiotis’s widow was entitled to two-eighths of the
estate, and his two sons, Constantinos and Theodore, were each entitled to three-eighths
of the estate.
At issue in the present case is the company Beta Steel, which Panayiotis founded
in 1989. Beta Steel’s main facility is in Portage, Indiana. Beta Steel was owned by three
companies: Neptunia, a Liberian corporation; Transmar, also a Liberian corporation; and
Didiac, a Liechtenstein-based foundation. The parties refer to these three companies as
“the Offshore Entities.” Simply put, Constantinos claims that these companies, including
Beta Steel, were part of his father’s estate. Theodore claims that his father transferred
ownership of Beta Steel to him by way of an inter vivos gift.
In 1999, prior to Panayiotis’s death, Constantinos filed suit in Greece claiming that
he, Theodore, and his father were in a “community of interests” and that he was entitled
to one-third of the assets of this partnership, which included the Offshore Entities and
therefore, Beta Steel. This suit was settled by the parties and Constantinos agreed to
waive his claims against Theodore. However, Constantinos again filed suit seeking to
claim one-third interest in his father’s companies. While this case was pending,
Panayiotis died. After his father’s death, Constantinos again settled his claim and waived
his right to future claims in exchange for considerable consideration.
Undeterred by his two settlements and their accompanying waivers, Constantinos
filed three new suits in Greece, claiming that his earlier waivers were invalid. In these
cases, Constantinos claimed that he had a one-third ownership interest in Beta Steel under
4
the same theory he had pleaded earlier, and also that he had a three-eights interest under
Greek intestacy laws. Constantinos’s claims were tried to the Athens Multi-member
Court of First Instance. On March 20, 2006, the Athens Court found in favor of
Theodore, dismissed Constantinos’s claims, and ordered Constantinos to pay damages to
Theodore and his wife for defamation. Constantinos appealed this judgment to the Greek
Court of Appeals, which affirmed the dismissal and damages award on June 14, 2007.
Constantinos then appealed to the Greek Supreme Court, which also affirmed the
dismissal on July 8, 2008. Specifically, the Greek Supreme Court affirmed the Court of
Appeals’ rejection of both Constantinos’s claim regarding the partnership and his claim
based on inheritance under Greek intestacy law.
Constantinos then brought a criminal action against Theodore, claiming that
Theodore had “grabbed” certain assets, including Beta Steel. Appellant’s App. p. 1405.
Constantinos also brought a civil action against Theodore in conjunction with this
criminal case. The Greek prosecutors, however, declined to pursue the criminal case,
which was terminated by the Athens First Instance Criminal Board. Constantinos
appealed this termination to the Athens Appeals Board, which issued a lengthy decision
affirming the lower decision, concluding that “while Panayiotis Angelopoulos was alive,
he had ceded (before 1989) to his son [Theodore] the shares of the companies “BETA
STEEL” and “ALPHA STEEL.” Appellant’s App. p. 1405.
Meanwhile, in September 2008, Constantinos filed an inheritance action, which he
now refers to as an “accounting action,” in the Athens Multi-Member Court of First
Instance. Here again, Constantinos claimed that Beta Steel was an asset of his father’s
5
estate to which he was entitled to a three-eights share under Greek intestacy law. On
April 11, 2009, the court rejected Constantinos’s claims, specifically finding credible the
testimony that “[Panayiotis] granted – while alive – to the claimant [Constantinos] the
steel works in Switzerland (Ferrowohlen) and to the defendant [Theodore] the other two
steel works plants of the group and more specifically the shares of the companies –
shareholders Beta Steel Corp. (USA) and Alpha Steel Ltd. (England).” Id. at 384. The
court also stated that “the lawsuit is rejected as substantially unfounded.” Id. at 387.
The Greek Court of Appeals affirmed this decision on September 9, 2011. In so
doing, the Greek Court of Appeals specifically noted that the lower court “deemed that
the legal action was specific and legitimate (except the claim for the acknowledgement of
the share of the plaintiff in the estate of his father in Greece, which claim it deemed to be
unacceptable due to lack of legal interest) and rejected said action, although it deemed it
to be legal, as unfounded on its merits.” Id. at 1828. The Court of Appeals also wrote:
It was further proven [at the lower court] that the father of the litigants,
Panagiotis Angelopoulos, for the time that he was alive, had transferred, as
gifts, most of his assets to his children (the litigants) and had assigned to
them managerial duties in various enterprises of his, however, without ever
establishing with them a silent company, as the plaintiff alleges, and
making them his partners with the same share (1/3 each) in the enterprises
and his overall property. Among other things, the plaintiff became the
exclusive owner of the capital stock of the Steel Mill that is based in Zurich
Switzerland, and with [the] company name “FERROWOHLEN”, five (5)
commercial ships and the legal entity (ESTABLISH MGMT) with the
name “CASSIDRA”, and the defendant became the exclusive owner of
the Steel Mill with the name “BETA” which is based in the U.S.A. and
the Steel Mill “ALPHA STEEL” which is based in England.
6
Id. at 1838-39. The court affirmed the lower court’s rejection of Constantinos’s claims
“on their merits.” Id. at 1839.2
In October 2008, the “Offshore Entities” (Neptunia, Transmar, and Didiac), which
were owned by Theodore, sold the shares of Beta Steel to Top Gun, which is a Delaware
Corporation owned by OJSC Novolipetsk Steel, a Russian corporation headquartered in
Moscow. Top Gun purchased Beta Steel from the Offshore Entities for $350,000,000.
On November 3, 2008, shortly after filing the inheritance action in the Greek
courts, Constantinos filed a complaint against Theodore, Beta Steel, and the Offshore
Entities in Porter Superior Court, initiating the instant case
Again, Constantinos claimed that he had a three-eighths interest in Beta Steel
under Greek inheritance laws; he also sought a prejudgment attachment of three-eighths
of the shares of Beta Steel and sought orders from the trial court directing Beta Steel “to
not transfer 3/8ths of the issued and outstanding shares of its stock on the books and
records pending the further order” and requiring the defendants to deposit with the trial
court clerk a check equal to the monetary value of Constantinos’s alleged three-eighths
interest of Beta Steel.3 Lastly, Constantinos’s complaint alleged that, in the event that the
shares of Beta Steel had already been transferred, that such transfer was fraudulent and
entitled him to an order of attachment.
2
The Greek Supreme Court rejected Constantinos’s appeal in this action, again stating that Panayiotis
had made inter vivos transfers of Ferrowohlen to Constantinos and of Alpha Steel and Beta Steel to
Theodore. Appellee’s Addendum p. 7.
3
Three eighths of $350,000,000, which was the purchase price of Beta Steel, is $131,250,000.
7
On December 1, 2008, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss. Before the trial
court ruled on the motion to dismiss, Constantinos filed an amended complaint on
February 17, 2010, adding Top Gun as a defendant. Theodore, the Offshore Entities, and
Beta Steel moved to dismiss the amended complaint on April 13, 2010. On that same day,
Top Gun also filed a motion to dismiss.
During the discovery process, the parties entered into a stipulated protective order
providing that some of the documents subject to discovery would contain “trade secrets
or other confidential research, development or commercial information described in Rule
26(C) of the Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure.” Appellant’s App. pp. 226-27. Pursuant
to this agreed protective order, the parties could designate certain documents as
confidential and could only be disclosed to: (1) the parties, (2) the trial court, (3) U.S. and
Greek counsel for the parties, (4) experts retained by the parties, (5) employees or
representatives of the parties responsible for the conduct of the case, (6) court reporters
and/or stenographers, as necessary, (7) a deponent or witness, and (8) such persons as the
parties might stipulate. Id. at 228. The trial court approved this agreed protective order.
Constantinos subsequently deposed Theodore, and Theodore’s counsel designated several
portions of the deposition as confidential. On October 26, 2010, Constantinos filed a
motion to initiate an Administrative Rule 9(H) proceeding in which he claimed that
Theodore’s deposition should be made public. The trial court held a hearing on the
motion on March 23, 2011 and denied it on June 9, 2011.
The trial court then held a hearing on the defendants’ motions to dismiss on April
30, 2012, and entered detailed orders granting the motions to dismiss on October 29,
8
2012. The trial court concluded that the earlier Greek court decisions should be afforded
comity and that these prior decisions acted as res judicata to bar Constantinos’s current
claims. The trial court also concluded in the alternative that Constantinos’s claims should
be dismissed on the grounds of forum non conveniens. The trial court also dismissed
Constantinos’s claims against Beta Steel and Top Gun, concluding that it had no personal
jurisdiction over Top Gun and that Constantinos failed to state a claim upon which relief
could be granted. The trial court also concluded that its comity/res judicata analysis
applied to Beta Steel and Top Gun. Constantinos now appeals.
I. Preclusive Effect of Prior Greek Court Rulings
Constantinos first claims that the trial court erred in concluding that it should
afford comity to the Greek court decisions and that these decisions act as res judicata to
bar Constantinos’s current claims. The decision of whether to dismiss an action out of
comity is left to the discretion of the trial court. Brightpoint, Inc. v. Pedersen, 930
N.E.2d 34, 39 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010). An abuse of discretion occurs only when the trial
court’s judgment is against the logic and effects of the facts and circumstances before it,
and we will not reweigh the evidence most favorable to that judgment. Id.
As this court explained in Brightpoint, under principles of comity, Indiana courts
may respect the final decisions of sister courts as well as proceedings pending in those
courts. Id. Unlike the constitutional requirement to give full faith and credit to the public
acts, records, and judicial proceedings of our sister states, comity is a rule of convenience
and courtesy. Id. Comity has been described as representing a willingness to grant a
privilege, not as a matter of right, but out of deference and good will, and the primary
9
value of comity is to promote uniformity of decision by discouraging repeated litigation
of the same question. Id.
Generally, where an action concerning the same parties and the same subject
matter has been commenced in another jurisdiction capable of granting prompt and
complete justice, comity should require staying or dismissing of a subsequent action filed
in a different jurisdiction. Id. at 39-40. Factors to be considered in addressing comity
questions include: (1) whether the first filed suit has been proceeding normally, without
delay, and (2) whether there is a danger the parties may be subjected to multiple or
inconsistent judgments. Id. at 40. As explained in Brightpoint:
[I]t is appropriate to look for guidance from cases interpreting Indiana Trial
Rule 12(B)(8), which expressly permits dismissal of a lawsuit where
another action already is pending in another Indiana state court. Under that
rule, a second action “should be dismissed, where the parties, subject matter,
and remedies are precisely or even substantially the same in both suits.”
930 N.E.2d at 40 (quoting Vannatta v. Chandler, 810 N.E.2d 1108, 1110-11 (Ind. Ct. App.
2004)).
Constantinos claims that the trial court erred by concluding that comity justified
dismissal of his claims against the defendants. Theodore claims that the cases already
decided by the Greek courts against Constantinos should be afforded comity and
therefore bar Constantinos’s claims under the doctrine of res judicata. The doctrine of res
judicata acts to prevent repetitious litigation of disputes that are essentially the same.
Indianapolis Downs, LLC v. Herr, 834 N.E.2d 699, 703 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005), trans.
denied. The principle of res judicata is divided into two branches: claim preclusion and
issue preclusion. Id.
10
The first of these branches, claim preclusion, applies where a final judgment on
the merits has been rendered and acts as a complete bar to a subsequent action on the
same issue or claim between those parties and their privies. Id. When claim preclusion
applies, all matters that were or might have been litigated are deemed conclusively
decided by the judgment in the prior action. Id. The following four requirements must
be satisfied for claim preclusion to apply as a bar to a subsequent action: (1) the former
judgment must have been rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction; (2) the former
judgment must have been rendered on the merits; (3) the matter now in issue was, or
could have been, determined in the prior action; and (4) the controversy adjudicated in
the former action must have been between the parties to the present suit or their privies.
Id.
The second branch of the principle of res judicata is issue preclusion, also known
as collateral estoppel. Issue preclusion bars the subsequent litigation of a fact or issue
that was necessarily adjudicated in a former lawsuit if the same fact or issue is presented
in the subsequent lawsuit. Id. If issue preclusion applies, the former adjudication is
conclusive in the subsequent action, even if the actions are based on different claims. Id.
The former adjudication is conclusive only as to those issues that were actually litigated
and determined therein. Id. Thus, issue preclusion does not extend to matters that were
not expressly adjudicated and can be inferred only by argument. Id. In determining
whether issue preclusion is applicable, a court must engage in a two-part analysis: (1)
whether the party in the prior action had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue
and (2) whether it is otherwise unfair to apply issue preclusion given the facts of the
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particular case. Id. at 704-05. The non-exhaustive factors to be considered by the trial
court in deciding whether to apply issue preclusion include: (1) privity, (2) the
defendant’s incentive to litigate the prior action, and (3) the ability of the plaintiff to have
joined the prior action. Id.
In the present case, Constantinos claims that res judicata does not act to bar his
current action because none of the prior rulings of the Greek courts determined the
precise issue he currently seeks to litigate. That is, he claims that the Greek courts did
not decide the issue of ownership of the shares of Beta Steel. He also claims that
Theodore admitted that the Greek courts did not decide this issue. Lastly, he claims that
he presented evidence from experts in Greek law which created a factual issue as to what
the Greek courts did or did not decide and that the trial court improperly resolved this
factual issue.
We disagree with each of these arguments. First, it is clear from the language of
the Greek court rulings that the issue of the ownership of the shares of Beta Steel was
decided. Second, Theodore’s alleged admission cannot alter the question of law
regarding what the Greek courts decided. Similarly, the question of what the Greek
courts did or did not decide is a question of law for the courts, and the opinion of experts
cannot turn this legal question into a factual question.4
4
Constantinos also complains that the trial court improperly considered matters outside the pleadings in
ruling on the motion to dismiss. Generally, in ruling on a motion to dismiss, the trial court should
consider only the pleadings. If, however, the trial court considers matters outside the pleading, the motion
should be treated as one for summary judgment. Azhar v. Town of Fishers, 744 N.E.2d 947, 950 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2001) (citing Ind. Trial Rule 12(B)). Where a trial court treats a motion to dismiss as one for
summary judgment, the court must grant the parties a reasonable opportunity to present summary
judgment materials. Id. Here, it is clear that Constantinos was able to present materials in support of his
12
In the Greek inheritance action, which Constantinos now refers to as an
accounting action, the Athens Multi-Member Court of First Instance found credible the
testimony that Panayiotis, while he was still alive, granted to Theodore the shares of Beta
Steel. Appellant’s App. p. 384. In affirming this ruling, the Greek Court of Appeals
noted that it was proved before the lower court that “Panagiotis Angelopoulos, for the
time that he was alive, had transferred, as gifts, most of his assets to his children . . . and
[Theodore] became the exclusive owner of the Steel Mill with the name ‘BETA’ which is
based in the U.S.A. . . .” Id. at 1838-39. This ruling was later affirmed by the Greek
Supreme Court. This is a clear ruling on the ownership of the shares of Beta Steel.
Still, Constantinos claims that Theodore admitted in a pleading before the Greek
Supreme Court that the ownership of Beta Steel was not at issue in the Greek court
inheritance action. Specifically, Constantinos claims that Theodore admitted that the
inter vivos transfer of Panayiotis’s assets and the manner in which these transfers were
made did not “fall within the subject matter of the [Greek court] trial.” Id. at 1965. As
Theodore points out, however, Constantinos takes his statements out of context.
The pleading which contains the alleged admission stated that Constantinos’s
claim of cassation should be dismissed because the Greek trial court’s decision
sufficiently: (1) established the inheritance acquired by Constantinos and Theodore from
their father; (2) described the assets that were given to the parties while they were alive,
(3) held that Theodore was not the administrator of Panayiotis’s estate abroad, and (4)
position, and he does not adequately explain how he was prejudiced by the trial court’s consideration of
matters outside the pleadings. Therefore, the trial court’s actions do not amount to reversible error. See
id.
13
recognized that Theodore did not misappropriate Constantinos’s inheritance rights. Id.
The pleading then states, “The above facts are the only critical [facts] for this instance.
The inter vivos provisions [of assets] of our father to us the litigants, the way these
transfers were made and other related information [about such transfers] do not fall under
the subject matter of this trial.” Id. (brackets in original).
We agree with Theodore that this pleading admitted that Panayiotis’s action of
giving Beta Steel to Theodore as an inter vivos gift was critical to that case, but that the
specific manner of how this was accomplished was not critical. The fact remains that the
Greek courts specifically and explicitly found that Panayiotis gave the shares of Beta
Steel to Theodore when he was still alive.
Moreover, we disagree with Constantinos that the affidavits of his experts
establish that there was a question of fact regarding what the Greek courts did or did not
decide. The import of these prior decisions is a question of law to be decided by the
courts, not a question of fact to be litigated. Indeed, Constantinos’s own complaint in the
inheritance action specifically claimed that Panayiotis’s estate included Beta Steel and
that Constantinos was entitled as Panayiotis’s heir to three-eighths of this estate,
including Beta Steel. See Appellant’s App. pp. 424-30. And in his response to
Theodore’s motion to dismiss, Constantinos admitted that the Indiana action was “subject
to a final determination of the ownership in the [Greek] Inheritance Action[.]” Id. at
1025.
In terms of comity, there is no allegation that the prior Greek court inheritance
action did not proceed normally and without delay, and if we were to come to a contrary
14
conclusion, i.e. that Constantinos was entitled to a portion of shares of Beta Steel as an
heir to Panayiotis, this would directly conflict with the holding of the Greek courts. And
in terms of claim preclusion, the former judgment was rendered by a court of competent
jurisdiction, the matter was determined in the prior action, and the controversy
adjudicated was between the same parties, at least as far as Constantinos and Theodore
are concerned. With regard to issue preclusion, Constantinos had a full and fair
opportunity to litigate the issue all the way to the Greek Supreme Court and there is just
reason to preclude re-examination of this issue.
By the clear language of the Greek court decision, Constantinos’s inheritance
action resolved the issue of whether Panayiotis transferred ownership of the shares of
Beta Steel to Theodore while Panayiotis was still alive or whether these shares were part
of Panayiotis’s estate to which Constantinos is entitled to a share as Panayiotis’s heir.
The Greek courts clearly rejected Constantinos’s claim on its merits. Pursuant to the
doctrines of both comity and res judicata, Constantinos cannot now relitigate this issue in
Indiana courts. And as Constantinos’s claims against the other defendants were all
derivative of his claim of ownership in the shares of Beta Steel, these claims also fail.
We therefore affirm the trial court’s order dismissing Constantinos’s claims.
II. Confidentiality of Court-Filed Materials
During the course of this case, the parties entered into an agreed order regarding
discovery, which the trial court approved on March 3, 2009. Pursuant to this agreed
order, the parties could make good-faith designations of certain discovery materials as
15
confidential. Such confidential information could be disclosed only to the parties, the
court, counsel, experts, and deponents or witnesses. See Appellant’s App. p. 228.
Constantinos deposed Theodore on September 8, 2010, but Theodore refused to
answer certain questions. This caused Constantinos to file a motion to compel his brother
to answer these questions, and in support of this motion, Constantinos filed in court the
transcript of the first deposition wherein Theodore refused to answer the questions.
Because much of this deposition had been labeled as confidential by Theodore,
Constantinos filed a request that the trial court conduct a hearing under Indiana
Administrative Rule 9(H) to determine whether the deposition warranted protection from
public access. The trial court responded by ordering Theodore to appear for a second
deposition and to answer the questions he had refused to answer in the first deposition.
The trial court also found that the earlier agreed-to protective order operated to protect
the depositions from public access. Constantinos then took a second deposition of
Theodore on September 9, 2011. Constantinos filed this deposition with the trial court in
support of his response to Theodore’s motion to dismiss.
On appeal, Constantinos claims that the trial court erred in concluding that the
matters marked by Theodore as confidential were still excluded from public access even
though Constantinos had filed them in court. This requires us to examine Indiana
Administrative Rule 9(G), which provides: “(1) Case records: The following information
in case records is excluded from public access and is confidential . . . (c) Information
excluded from public access by specific court order.” The trial court accepted
Theodore’s argument that the earlier agreed-to protective order constituted a “specific
16
court order” excluding information from public access under Administrative Rule
9(G)(1)(c) and that such information is automatically excluded from public access. We
disagree.
A similar situation was before our supreme court in Travelers Casualty & Surety
Co. v. U.S. Filter Corp., 895 N.E.2d 114 (Ind. 2008). In that case, as here, the parties had
entered into a “Confidentiality Stipulation and Order” that provided a framework under
which information shared by the parties could be deemed confidential. Id. at 115. The
parties then tendered various documents to the trial court (and the court on appeal) under
seal. However, there was no indication that the trial court had complied with the
provisions of Indiana Administrative Rule 9 when it approved the confidentiality order.
Id. Our supreme court noted, “[a]greements between litigants governing the treatment of
information exchanged between them are well recognized as fostering multiple objectives,
including reduction of litigation costs, protection of legitimate trade secrets, and
protection of recognized forms of privilege. Trial court orders confirming such
agreements can likewise help secure these benefits.” Id.
But the court also noted that “[m]aterials that litigants tender to a court stand on a
very different footing”:
Both the Indiana General Assembly and this Court have adopted public
accessibility as the default rule for information submitted to government
entities, including the state’s courts. The legislature has declared that “all
persons are entitled to full and complete information regarding the affairs
of government.” Ind. Code § 5-14-3-1. Likewise, this Court has adopted
rules on public access to court records, “taking into account public policy
interests that are not always fully compatible with unrestricted access.”
Id. (quoting Ind. Administrative Rule 9(A) (Commentary)).
17
The court further note that Rule 9(G) enumerates the documents and information
that are exceptions to the general rule of public access, including information excluded
“by specific court order” under Rule 9(G)(1)(c). Id. at 116. But instead of suggesting
that these documents are automatically excluded from public access, the court held that
“[t]he mechanism for seeking to exclude information of this last sort appears in Rule
9(H).” Id. The court specifically noted that simply because something is privileged and
shielded from discovery does not mean that it is also excluded from public access if it is
submitted to a court.
Instead, a party or a non-party who tenders documents or information that
would be otherwise privileged must request that the court exclude that
particular information from public access. Administrative Rule 9(H)
provides a process by which any person affected by the release of
information may ask the court to exclude it from public access, requires a
public hearing before the trial court can grant such exclusion, and lists the
grounds on which the court can do so (such as “significant risk of
substantial harm”).
Id. Because the party claiming protection in that case had not offered any reason why the
privileged materials in that case should be excluded from public access, the court vacated
the trial court’s order excluding the materials from public view. Id.
Under this holding, even if a trial court has ordered certain materials to be deemed
confidential for purposes of discovery, these materials will still be subject to public
access unless the trial court complies with Administrative Rule 9(H). This rule states:
Prohibiting Public Access to Information in Court Records.
(1) A verified written request to prohibit public access to information in a
court record, may be made by any person affected by the release of the
information. The request shall demonstrate that:
(a) The public interest will be substantially served by prohibiting access;
18
(b) Access or dissemination of the information will create a significant risk
of substantial harm to the requestor, other persons or the general
public;
(c) A substantial prejudicial effect to on-going proceedings cannot be
avoided without prohibiting public access, or;
(d) The information should have been excluded from public access under
section (G) of this rule.
The person seeking to prohibit access has the burden of providing notice to
the parties and such other persons as the court may direct, providing proof
of notice to the court or the reason why notice could not or should not be
given, demonstrating to the court the requestor’s reasons for prohibiting
access to the information. A party or person to whom notice is given shall
have twenty (20) days from receiving notice to respond to the request.
(2) A court may deny a request to prohibit public access without a hearing.
If the court does not initially deny the request, it shall post advance public
notice of the hearing. A court may grant a request to prohibit public access
following a hearing if the requestor demonstrates by clear and convincing
evidence that any one or more of the requirements of (H)(1)(a) through
(H)(1)(d) have been satisfied. An order prohibiting public access to
information in a court record may be issued by the court having jurisdiction
over the record. An order prohibiting public access to information in bulk
or compiled records, or in records under the jurisdiction of multiple courts
may be issued only by the Supreme Court.
(3) The court shall balance the public access interests served by this rule
and the grounds demonstrated by the requestor. In its order, the court shall
state its reasons for granting or denying the request. If the court prohibits
access, it will use the least restrictive means and duration. When a request
is made to prohibit public access to information in a court record at the time
of case initiation, the request and the case information will remain
confidential for a reasonable period of time until the court rules on the
request. When a request is made to prohibit public access to information in
court records that are already publicly accessible, the information may be
rendered confidential for a reasonable period of time until the court rules on
the request. . . .
Ind. Admin. Rule 9(H) (emphasis added).
Theodore claims that the deposition materials should have remained confidential
because the trial court had already approved of the agreed-to protective order, which he
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claims would qualify as excludable from public access under Rule 9(G)(1)(c). Our
supreme court implicitly disagreed with this position in Travelers, where despite a similar
protective order, the court made no indication that this would constitute a specific court
order for purposes of Rule 9(G)(1)(c). See 895 N.E.2d at 115-16. Indeed, to hold
otherwise would conflate the issue of confidentiality and privilege during discovery with
the issue of public access to materials filed in open court, which the Travelers court noted
are very different questions. See id. at 115.
Here, however, unlike in Travelers, the trial court did enter a specific order in
which it concluded that the materials marked confidential during discovery should not be
available to the general public. Theodore claims that we should affirm the trial court’s
order because public access to his depositions would “create a significant risk of
substantial harm” to Theodore because of Constantinos’s apparent intent to use these
depositions to support further legal action in Greece. According to the parties, pre-trial
depositions are not permitted in Greece. Thus, Constantinos could use our generous
discovery procedures to find out information from Theodore as fuel for further suits
overseas. Theodore also claims that information in the depositions regarding how he
negotiated the price for Beta Steel should be protected as confidential because it has
value to his competitors. He therefore argues that his depositions should remain excluded
from public access under Administrative Rule 9(H)(1)(b) because access to this
information will create a significant risk of substantial harm to him.
The trial court, however, did not make any such conclusions in its order. Instead,
it proceeded from the presumption that exclusion of these materials was “automatic”
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because of its earlier protective order. As explained in Travelers, this is incorrect.
Moreover, Theodore now admits that much of what was covered in the protective order is
not excluded from public access and even goes so far as to designate those portions of the
depositions he now believes should remain confidential. We therefore reverse the trial
court’s order regarding public access to Theodore’s depositions and remand with
instructions that the trial court hold another hearing at which the burden will be on
Theodore to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence to prove how public access to
these specific portions of his depositions will create a significant risk of substantial harm
to him pursuant to Administrative Rule 9(H).
Conclusion
The prior rulings of the Greek courts conclusively establish that Panayiotis gave
ownership of Beta Steel to Theodore when Panayiotis was still alive, and Constantinos
cannot now relitigate this issue in Indiana courts. As all of Constantinos’s legal claims
are based on his claim of a right to a portion of Beta Steel as an heir to Panayiotis’s estate,
all of his claims were properly dismissed. The trial court, however, erred in conflating
the issue of confidentiality for purposes of discovery with the issue of restricting public
access to materials filed in court, and we therefore reverse the trial court’s order
regarding public access to Theodore’s depositions and remand with instructions that the
trial court hold a hearing at which Theodore must prove by clear and convincing evidence
that portions of his depositions should not be open to public access pursuant to Indiana
Administrative Rule 9.
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Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
NAJAM, J., and BROWN, J., concur.
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