SUPERIOR COURT
OF THE
STATE OF DELAWARE
PAUL R. WALLACE LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
JUDGE 500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 10400
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801
(302) 255-0660
Date Submitted: November 21, 2023
Date Decided: December 7, 2023
David A. Dorey, Esquire Kevin R. Shannon, Esquire
James G. Gorman III, Esquire Christopher N. Kelly, Esquire
BLANK ROME, LLP Abraham C. Schneider, Esquire
1201 N. Market St., Suite 800 Emma K. Diver, Esquire
Wilmington, Delaware 19801 POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP
1313 N. Market St., 6th Floor
James T. Smith, Esquire Wilmington, Delaware 19801
Brian S. Paszamant, Esquire
Gregory S. Bergman, Esquire Walter C. Carlson, Esquire
BLANK ROME, LLP Nilofer Umar, Esquire
130 North 18th Street Heather Benzmiller Sultanian, Esquire
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 Kendra Stead, Esquire
SIDLEY AUSTIN LLP
One South Dearborn
Chicago, Illinois 60603
RE: BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD
Plaintiffs’ Exceptions to the Special Magistrate’s1 November 7, 2023 Ruling
Dear Counsel:
This Letter Order disposes of Plaintiffs’ Exceptions to the Special
1
Re-designated from “Special Master” to “Special Magistrate,” per the Superior Court’s recent
adoption of this nomenclature in concert with its sister courts.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD
December 7, 2023
Page 2 of 12
Magistrate’s November 7, 2023 Ruling2 that resolved Plaintiffs’ Motion for Order
Vacating Defendant’s Deposition Transcript Confidentiality Designations.3 For the
reasons explained below, the Exceptions are DENIED.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In 2015, the parties entered into a Stock and Asset Purchase Agreement (the
“SAPA”) with Plaintiffs as the buyers and Defendant Brunswick Corporation
(“Brunswick”) as the seller.4 In their Complaint, Plaintiffs allege Brunswick
intentionally failed to disclose material facts regarding a sales ban, recall, and fine
issued by the Swedish Work Environmental Authority for one of its products.5
Plaintiffs seek indemnity for losses it allegedly incurred in connection with the sales
ban, recall, and fine, along with litigation costs and related expenses.6
2
Letter Ruling by Special Magistrate Addressing Plaintiffs’ Motion for Order Vacating
Defendant’s Deposition Transcript Confidentiality Designations (“Ltr. Ruling”) (D.I. 491).
3
Plaintiffs’ Motion for Order Vacating Defendant’s Deposition Transcript Confidentiality
Designation (“Pltfs.’ Mot.”) (D.I. 437).
4
See BBP Holdco, Inc. v. Brunswick Corp., 2022 WL 1178468, at *1 (Del. Super. Ct. Apr. 21,
2022).
5
See id.
6
See id.
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Pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rules 5(g)7 and 26(c),8 the parties agreed to,
and this Court entered, a Stipulation and Order Governing the Production and Use
of Confidential and Highly Confidential Information (the “Confidentiality Order”).9
Section 1 of the Confidentiality Order states, in pertinent part:
[a]ny Producing Party may designate any Discovery Material as
“Confidential” under the terms of this Stipulation if such party in good
faith reasonably believes that such Discovery Material contains non-
public, confidential[,] personal, proprietary, or commercially sensitive
information that requires the protections provided in this Stipulation
(“Confidential Discovery Material”).10
Section 2 governs the procedure for designating confidential discovery material. It
states that, “[i]n the case of depositions or other pre-trial testimony,” such
designation shall be made:
(i) by a statement on the record, by counsel, at the time of such
disclosure or before the conclusion of the deposition or testimony; or
(ii) by written notice, sent to all Parties within ten (10) business days of
the deposition or other pre-trial testimony; provided that only those
portions of the transcript designated as Confidential Discovery Material
or Highly Confidential Discovery Material shall be deemed
Confidential Discovery Material or Highly Confidential Discovery
7
“[E]xcept as otherwise provided by statute or rule, including this Rule 5(g) and Rule 26(c), all
pleadings and other papers of any nature filed with the Prothonotary, including . . . deposition
transcripts . . . shall become a part of the public record of the proceedings before this Court.” Del.
Super. Ct. Civ. R. 5(g).
8
Rule 26(c) allows courts to grant protective orders “upon motion by a party or by the person
from whom discovery is sought” and “for good cause shown . . . .” Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 26(c).
9
Confidentiality Order (D.I. 19).
10
Id. ¶ 1.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD
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Material.11
On June 11, 2021, the Court entered an order of reference appointing
William D. Johnston, Esquire, as Special Magistrate for discovery matters.12
Plaintiffs recently filed a Motion for Order Vacating Defendant’s Deposition
Transcript Confidentiality Designations.13 Through their motion, Plaintiffs sought
an order vacating Defendant’s designation of all 23 deposition transcripts as
“Confidential.”14 Brunswick opposed.15 And neither party requested argument.16
The Special Magistrate issued a Letter Ruling on November 7, 2023, granting
Plaintiffs’ motion, in part, and denying it, in part.17 In his ruling, the Special
Magistrate found that Brunswick had not met Delaware’s governing standard of
“good cause” to keep the entire collection of deposition transcripts confidential.18
The Special Magistrate acknowledged that the language of the Confidentiality Order
11
Id. ¶ 2.
12
D.I. 76.
13
Pltfs.’ Mot.
14
Id.
15
Defendant’s Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Order Vacating Defendant’s Deposition
Transcript Confidentiality Designations (D.I. 474).
16
See Ltr. Ruling at 2 (quoting ID BioMedical Corp. v. TM Techs., Inc., 1994 WL 384605, at *2
(Del. Ch. July 20, 1994)).
17
Id.
18
Id. at 12-13.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
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permits a party to broadly designate a deposition transcript as “Confidential” if it
“contains” “Confidential Discovery Material,” and that “portions of the transcript
designated” can be understood to mean all portions of a transcript if a blanket
designation is made.19 But the Special Magistrate granted Plaintiffs’ motion, in part,
because he found that Brunswick’s designations were not sufficiently precise to meet
the applicable standard.20
The Special Magistrate also denied Plaintiffs’ motion, in part. Specifically,
the Special Magistrate found he was:
. . . not convinced that Defendant’s obligation to provide more targeted
designations has been triggered at this time because of the procedural
posture presented, namely, that deposition transcripts and exhibits have
not yet been lodged with the court and there is no present statement of
an intention (by Plaintiffs or Defendant) to do so. If and when that
occurs, it will be incumbent upon the lodging party (or the party
otherwise using the deposition testimony in court proceedings) to de-
designate testimony as may be appropriate, with good faith review by
counsel as required by paragraph 3 of the Confidentiality Order. But,
at present, [he] agree[d] that the effort and cost associated with such an
exercise would be unwarranted.21
The next day, Plaintiffs sent an email asking that the Special Magistrate reconsider
19
Id. at 12.
20
Id. at 12-13.
21
Id. at 14.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD
December 7, 2023
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his ruling.22 The Special Magistrate denied Plaintiffs’ request for reconsideration on
November 10, 2023.23 In that denial, the Special Magistrate further clarified his
Letter Ruling, explaining that: (1) Brunswick’s initial designation of deposition
transcripts as confidential was not improper; (2) Brunswick has a good faith
obligation to undertake good faith review and line-by-line designations in
connection with exhibits to the Amended Complaint and any other motions filed;
and, (3) the burden in no way falls on Plaintiffs to trigger Brunswick’s obligations
to initiate such review.24
II. PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
Plaintiffs have taken exception to the Special Magistrate’s Ruling.25 Plaintiffs
believe that the Confidentiality Order “obligates Defendant to revisit all of its
designations now.”26 They contend that no requirement exists that the transcripts
first be “lodged with the court” before Brunswick is obligated to revisit its
22
Letter Ruling of Special Magistrate Addressing Plaintiffs’ Request for Reconsideration
(“Reconsideration Ltr. Ruling”), Ex. A (D.I. 492).
23
Reconsideration Ltr. Ruling.
24
Id. at 5-6 (emphasis added).
25
See Opening Brief in Support of Plaintiffs’ Exceptions to the Special Magistrate’s November
7, 2023 Ruling (“Pltfs.’ Open. Br.”) (D.I. 493).
26
Id. at 9.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD
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confidentiality designations.27 In addition, Plaintiffs argue that the transcripts have
already been lodged, both as attachments to the Amended Complaint as well as
exhibits to this motion.28
Brunswick counters that the Special Magistrate properly determined that (1)
the Confidentiality Order permits the designation of discovery material containing
confidential information, and (2) when deposition testimony is used in public court
filings, Brunswick will be obligated to determine more precisely the portions that
require confidential treatment and the portions that don’t.29 Brunswick further states
that the process of making line-by-line confidentiality designations is already
underway for deposition transcripts Plaintiffs filed with their Amended Complaint,
and will be followed for future summary judgment and pre-trial filings.30 And
Brunswick echoes the Special Magistrate observation that the obligation to do such
a review for all deposition transcripts isn’t yet triggered.31
27
Id.
28
Id. at 9-10. Plaintiffs also contend that the ruling is errant because it incorrectly states that
Plaintiffs have designated entire deposition transcripts as “Confidential,” when they have not done
so. Id. at 10. That argument is immaterial to the resolution of the present motion.
29
Defendant’s Answering Brief in Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Exceptions to the Special
Magistrate’s November 7, 2023 Ruling (“Def.’s Ans. Br.”) at 7-8 (D.I. 496).
30
Id at 8.
31
Id at 7.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
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III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A Special Magistrate’s ruling is subject to de novo review by this Court.32
IV. DISCUSSION
The agreed-upon Confidentiality Order allows for either party to designate
“any Discovery Material” as “Confidential” “if such party in good faith reasonably
believes that such Discovery Material” is deserving of confidential treatment.33
Delaware law also provides, “where designations of confidentiality have been made
pursuant to a protective order, the burden is on the designating party to show good
cause.”34 And that requires a showing that “disclosure of the information would
work a clearly defined and serious injury.”35 Such injury “must be shown with
specificity.”36
Here, the Special Magistrate found that Brunswick has not met the good cause
standard prescribed by this Court. But the Special Magistrate also determined that
an immediate review of all 23 deposition transcripts was neither appropriate nor
needed at this time. Instead, the Special Magistrate instructed Brunswick make
32
See Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 122(c); DiGiacobbe v. Sestak, 743 A.2d 180, 184 (Del. 1999) (“the
standard of review for a [magistrate]'s findings—both factual and legal—is de novo”).
33
Confidentiality Order ¶ 1.
34
ID BioMedical Corp., 1994 WL 384605, at *2.
35
Id.
36
Id.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD
December 7, 2023
Page 9 of 12
particularized showings and line-by-line designations for deposition transcripts once
they are “lodged with the court.”37
The Special Magistrate’s ruling is sound. “Under the First Amendment of the
United States Constitution and as a matter of common law, the public has a
presumptive right of access to judicial records.”38 Indeed, “[t]he public's right of
access to court documents and proceedings ‘is considered fundamental to a
democratic state and necessary in the long run so that the public can judge the
product of the courts in a given case.’”39
Yet, courts have clarified that “no public right of access exists with respect to
materials produced during the initial stages of discovery.”40 “[T]he public’s right of
access to discovery material only encompasses access to ‘judicial documents’” that
are “relevant to the performance of the judicial function and useful in the judicial
process.”41 Conversely, “[d]ocuments that play no role in the performance of
37
Ltr. Ruling at 14.
38
Twitter, Inc. v. Musk, 2023 WL 4995738, at *1 (Del. Ch. Aug. 4, 2023) (quoting In re Appraisal
of Columbia Pipeline Gp., Inc., 2018 WL 4182207, at *1 (Del. Ch. Aug. 30, 2018)).
39
Id. (quoting Al Jazeera Am., LLC v. AT & T Servs., Inc., 2013 WL 5614284, at *3 (Del. Ch.
Oct. 14, 2013)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
40
In re Terrorist Attacks on September 11, 2001, 454 F. Supp.2d 220, 222 (S.D.N.Y. 2006)
(citing United States v. Amodeo, 71 F.3d 1044, 1050 (2d Cir. 1995)).
41
SEC v. TheStreet.com, 273 F.3d 222, 231 (2d Cir. 2001) (quoting Amodeo, 44 F.3d at 145);
see also Olson v. Major League Baseball, 29 F.4th 59, 87 (2d Cir. 2022) (“[A]s a threshold
question, the court determines whether the record at issue is a judicial document—a document to
which the presumption of public access attaches.”) (cleaned up). Judicial documents “directly
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
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[adjudicative] functions, such as those passed between the parties in discovery, lie
entirely beyond the presumption’s reach and stand on a different footing . . . .”42 As
the United States Supreme Court has observed: “pretrial depositions . . . are not
public components of a civil trial” and are generally “conducted in private as a matter
of modern practice.”43
At present, the deposition transcripts in question are documents “passed
between the parties in discovery.”44 The Special Magistrate made the judicious
determination that a particularized review of those documents now is unwarranted.
The Court agrees.
All that said, any party filing deposition transcripts with the Court will need
affect an adjudication,” such as “those relating to the decision of a motion for summary judgment.”
Gambale v. Deutsche Bank AG, 377 F.3d 133, 140 (2d Cir. 2004).
42
Amodeo, 44 F.3d at 145 (emphasis added); see also Bank of America Nat. Trust and Sav. Ass’n
v. Hotel Rittenhouse Associates, 800 F.2d 339, 343-44 (3d Cir. 1986) (distinguishing between a
disputed settlement agreement filed with the court (a judicial document) and the products of
pretrial discovery (not judicial documents)); United States v. Smith, 776 F.2d 1104, 1111–12 (3d
Cir. 1985) (differentiating between a bill of particulars (a judicial document) and civil discovery
materials (not judicial documents)); Joy v. North, 692 F.2d 880, 893 (2d Cir. 1982) (concluding
that deposition discovery materials are “[d]ocuments that play no role in the performance of Article
III functions”); Martindell v. Int'l Tel. & Tel. Corp., 594 F.2d 291, 295-96 (2d Cir. 1979)
(establishing a presumption against public disclosure of pretrial discovery materials placed under
seal by a protective order of a court) (emphasis added); S.E.C. v. TheStreet.Com, 273 F.3d 222,
232-33 (2d Cir. 2001) (ruling that pretrial deposition transcripts are not judicial documents).
43
Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart, 467 U.S. 20, 33 (1984) (citing Gannett Co. v. DePasquale, 443
U.S. 368, 389 (1979)).
44
See Amodeo, 44 F.3d at 145.
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
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December 7, 2023
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to satisfy the good cause standard for any part thereof to retain confidential
designation. Brunswick’s initial designation of deposition transcripts as confidential
was in accordance with the Confidentiality Order’s requirements, and Brunswick
was under no immediate obligation to de-designate deposition transcripts not yet
submitted in relation to a filing seeking adjudication of the merits of substantive
issues.45
Moreover, the ruling of the Special Magistrate—whom, as the parties well
know, has been “enlisted for these parties’ benefit”46—in Plaintiffs’ favor is not
merely a device through which Plaintiffs can extract an even more favorable result
from the Court.47 Instead, the ruling is a sound exercise of discretion promoting
efficient discovery.48 Evidently, Brunswick has already initiated a particularized
45
Plaintiffs contend that all deposition transcripts are now judicial documents because they were
filed with the Court as exhibits to the present motion. Pltfs.’ Open. Br. at 9-10. That makes little
sense. The present motion does not “directly affect [the] adjudication” nor does it significantly
“determin[e] litigants’ substantive rights.” Amodeo, 71 F.3d at 1049.
46
BBP Holdco, Inc., 2022 WL 1178468, at *3.
47
Be assured, the Court will not allow the mere filing of a discovery dispute motion or exceptions
to resolution thereof to facilitate an end run on the rather simple concepts explicated above. See
Pltfs.’ Open. Br. at 9 (Plaintiffs suggesting first that the in-question transcripts were made part of
the adjudicative phase of the case when they attached them as exhibits to the instant motion to
vacate confidentiality designations).
48
The application of discovery rules is subject to the exercise of this Court’s sound discretion,
Dann v. Chrysler Corp., 166 A.2d 431, 432 (Del. Ch. 1960), and the Special Magistrate’s “[work
and] decisions [on these subjects] are [no] less thoughtful or worthy than those of a trial judge.”
BBP Holdco, Inc., 2022 WL 1178468, at *3 (quoting DiGiacobbe, 743 A.2d at 184).
BBP Holdco, Inc. et al. v. Brunswick Corp.
C.A. No. N20C-10-135 PRW CCLD
December 7, 2023
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review of those deposition transcripts attached as exhibits to Plaintiffs’ Amended
Complaint. Further, the deadline for summary judgment filings looms; presumably,
this will occasion deposition transcripts needing de-designation where appropriate.
Such prescribed procedures promote efficient discovery—Plaintiffs’ additional
exercise of litigious muscle here does not.
Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ exceptions to the Special Magistrate’s November 7,
2023 Ruling are DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
_______________________
Paul R. Wallace, Judge
cc: All Counsel via File and Serve
Special Magistrate William D. Johnston