H. RUSSEL HOLLAND, District Judge.
Defendants Afognak Native Corporation and Alutiiq, Inc. renew their motion to compel relator Ben Ferris to produce unredacted copies of the disclosure statements that he provided to the government.
On June 15, 2015, defendants served their first requests for production on relator.
Relator had provided two formal disclosures to the government. On May 24, 2013, relator provided a pre-filing disclosure statement; and on May 24, 2013, he provided his mandatory § 3730(b)(2) disclosure statement. In response to RFP No. 13, relator produced copies of these two disclosure statements from which he redacted all the content except for the cover letters, caption pages, headers, exhibit lists, and signature blocks.
On June 7, 2017, defendants moved to compel relator to more fully respond to RFP No. 13.
In an August 23, 2017, order, the court found that relator had not waived the work product privilege.
Defendants had deposed relator in July 2017, concluding the deposition on July 20, 2017. Defendants contend that relator refused to answer any questions concerning any evidence or information that he provided to the government. Specifically, relator was asked if he had ever met with anyone from the SBA and he responded that he had one meeting with individuals from the SBA sometime in 2014 in Washington, D.C., that the meeting involved the allegations in his complaint, and that his attorneys and attorneys for the Department of Justice and the SBA were at the meeting, but that he did not remember the names of anyone.
On February 15, 2018, relator filed his third amended complaint.
On April 11, 2018, defendants served a subpoena on the SBA, in which defendants requested that the SBA produce any of relator's disclosure statements that were in its possession. The SBA has confirmed that it has in its possession an email to which relator's mandatory disclosure statement is attached.
On April 11, 2018, defendants also served their third set of requests for production on relator.
On May 17, 2018, relator responded to defendants' third set of requests for production.
On June 4, 2018, the court entered its order on relator's motion to quash, and relator was ordered to answer, among others, Request for Admissions Nos. 3 and 4.
In his supplemental response served on July 5, 2018, relator objected to responding to RFP Nos. 33 and 34 in part because the information being sought was "protected by attorney/client privilege, the joint prosecution privilege, the common interest privilege, and the work-product doctrine[.]"
Defendants now move to compel relator to respond more fully to RFP Nos. 13, 33, and 34 by producing unredacted copies of his May 23, 2013 pre-filing disclosure statement, his May 30, 2013 mandatory § 3730(b)(2) disclosure statement, and "any other documents comprising, recording, or reflecting his disclosure of information to the government, including the SBA, about this lawsuit."
"Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permits a discovering party to move for an order to compel a complete response to properly submitted interrogatories or requests for production."
As an initial matter, relator argues that the instant motion should be construed as a motion for reconsideration because defendants are asking for the same relief that they asked for in their original motion to compel, namely that he be compelled to produce unredacted copies of his pre-filing and mandatory disclosure statements. If the instant motion is construed as a motion for reconsideration, relator argues that it is untimely.
"Reconsideration is appropriate if the district court (1) is presented with newly discovered evidence, (2) committed clear error or the initial decision was manifestly unjust, or (3) if there is an intervening change in controlling law."
Relator contends that defendants' instant motion is based primarily on testimony that he gave during his deposition, which was concluded on July 20, 2017, more than one month before the court issued its order on defendants' original motion to compel (but after the briefing on the motion had been completed). Relator argues that if defendants believed that his deposition testimony was not adequate for them to determine whether he was an original source, then they should have moved for reconsideration of the court's August 23, 2017, order denying their motion to compel within fourteen days, rather than waiting for ten months. Moreover, relator argues that if defendants believed that his responses to questions at his deposition were inadequate, then defendants could have moved to challenge relator's attorney's instructions not to answer questions about his disclosure statements. Relator also points out that defendants did not issue a subpoena to the SBA requesting the disclosure statements until April 11, 2018. Relator suggests that if defendants believed that the other means identified by the court for obtaining his disclosure statements were inadequate, they should have, and could have, sought such discovery from the SBA much sooner.
"`A motion for reconsideration is not an opportunity to renew arguments considered and rejected by the court, nor is it an opportunity for a party to re-argue a motion because it is dissatisfied with the original outcome.'"
In support of their renewed motion compel, defendants argue that they have shown that they are entitled to discover relator's formal and informal disclosure statements to the government. There is no dispute that the work-product doctrine applies to relator's disclosure statements.
Relator's disclosures are ordinary work product. Thus, in order for the disclosures to be discoverable, defendants must show that they have a substantial need for the information in the disclosure statements and that they cannot obtain this information by other means.
In the order on defendants' original motion to compel, the court determined that defendants had a substantial need for relator's pre-filing and mandatory disclosure statements "because the statements may show whether relator qualifies as an `original source.'"
The February 15, 2018, filing of relator's third amended complaint confirms defendants' substantial need for his formal disclosure statements. In his third amended complaint, relator added non-8(a) contracts to the scope of his claims. But, John Abbett, another
The
31 U.S.C. § 3730(e)(4)(B). One of the means for defendants to determine whether relator is an original source as to his claims, in particular his newly added non-8(a) claims, is by reviewing his formal disclosure statements. Relator's formal disclosure statements are highly relevant evidence on the original source issue. Defendants need to know what information relator provided to the government and when he did so in order to adequately defend against relator's claims.
Relator's argument that
Because defendants have shown a substantial need for relator's formal disclosure statements, the next question is whether defendants can obtain the substantial equivalent of the information in relator's formal disclosure statements through other means. As set out above, defendants' attempts to discover the information in relator's formal disclosure statements have thus far been unsuccessful. But, relator argues that defendants can still find out whether he qualifies as an original source by other means. Relator contends that defendants have not argued that they have no other means to find out information as to whether he qualifies as an original source. Rather, he contends, they are arguing that they have no other means to find out the content of his disclosure statements. Relator argues that these are not one and the same thing. Relator contends that defendants have sufficient information about whether he is an original source, without obtaining his disclosure statements, in large part because he contends that defendants asked him questions about this at his deposition.
In reply, defendants contend that they were not able to obtain sufficient information from relator at his deposition about whether he was an original source, in large part, because relator was not able to describe his claims with any specificity. For example, relator was asked what SBA regulations his claims were based on and he testified that he did not recall the specific regulations.
In response, relator argues that his deposition testimony is not the only other means. Relator contends that defendants have other evidence in their possession as to whether he is an original source, but the exhibit that relator offers in support of this contention does not bear this out. The exhibit is a deposition testimony excerpt of one of defendants' Rule 30(b)(6) experts that discusses affirmative defenses, but it says nothing specific about the original source defense.
The court is unconvinced that defendants can obtain the information in relator's formal disclosure statements by other means. Defendants have attempted to do so and those attempts have failed. Relator shall produce unredacted copies of his pre-filing disclosure statement and his mandatory disclosure statement.
The final question is whether relator should also be compelled to produce his informal disclosures. Defendants are seeking to compel relator to produce any information or material evidence provided to the government. Relator argues that defendants have not shown that they have a substantial need for this information. He also argues that his informal disclosures may be subject to the work-product and attorney-client privileges and the common interest or joint prosecution protection against waiver, issues that the court has not had occasion to consider.
"[T]he `common interest' or `joint defense' rule is an exception to ordinary waiver rules designed to allow attorneys for different clients pursuing a common legal strategy to communicate with each other."
But even if relator has not waived the work product privilege as to his informal disclosures, relator shall produce unredacted copies of these disclosures. To the extent that these informal communications are privileged work product, they are discoverable for the same reasons that relator's formal disclosures are discoverable. As for relator's contention that these informal communications are protected by attorney-client privilege, relator could have provided some support for this contention in connection with the instant motion, but he did not.
Defendants' renewed motion to compel