ALLISON D. BURROUGHS, District Judge.
Defendant EMC Corporation filed a letter requesting the Court to compel production of (1) withheld settlement communications based on an overbroad assertion of mediation privilege; (2) withheld redacted business documents that contain no legal advice; and (3) withheld information based on attorney-client privilege where no attorney is identified. [ECF Nos. 200, 214]. Plaintiff ACQIS opposes the request. [ECF No. 204].
In a patent case with no state law issues, state law does not "suppl[y] the rule of decision" for the particular "claim or defense" implicated by the privilege dispute, and claims of privilege are therefore governed by federal common law, unless the U.S. Constitution, federal statute, or rules prescribed by the Supreme Court provides otherwise.
That being said, the precise scope of the federal mediation privilege remains unclear even where courts recognize such a privilege.
This Court holds that communications to which a mediator was personally privy, communications that were directly made at a mediator's explicit behest, or communications undertaken with the specific intent to present them to a mediator for purposes of mediation are protected by the federal mediation privilege. Settlement negotiations in which a mediator is not actively and directly involved that follow a formal mediation are not protected by the mediation privilege, even when they contain information learned during the mediation or where they occurred in light of mediation, and such communications must therefore be produced barring any other applicable rules.
Non-party IBM filed a letter with this Court requesting an opportunity to intervene regarding any order compelling the production of documents being withheld by ACQIS on the basis of a jointly held mediation privilege with IBM. [ECF No. 219]. The Court orders parties to provide notice to IBM of this order. This portion of the Court's order—regarding the settlement communications—will take effect fourteen days following the entry of this Order to allow IBM an opportunity to intervene.
Attorney-client privilege only protects: (1) communications that relate to (2) the seeking of legal advice of any kind (3) from a professional legal adviser in his capacity as such, and that (4) were made in confidence (5) by the client (6) with the expectation that they be protected from disclosure by himself or by the legal adviser, (7) except if the protection is waived.
Despite the testimony of some of its witnesses to the contrary, ACQIS asserts that the redactions to certain disputed business documents are based on attorney-client privilege because they contain legal advice. In its response letter, ACQIS has not explained how it was able to conclude that "[t]he redacted portions contain legal advice that could only have come from attorneys," particularly where it is unable to identify any attorney involved in the communication and in light of its witnesses' contrary assertions. It states only that ACQIS employed two other firms prior to Cooley LLP's involvement. The testimony of ACQIS's witnesses to which EMC cites to strongly suggests that the redacted business documents did not actually contain legal advice. ACQIS also offers the same argument in support of its claim of attorney-client privilege over hundreds of other documents that do not seem to include any attorney whatsoever, asserting, for example, that they contain information that "only could have come from legal counsel." Many of the entries appear to reference patent prosecution and licensing and portfolio strategy, but the Court is nonetheless unable to conclude based on the information in the privilege log that these documents manifest the essential elements of attorney-client privilege. It is equally possible, based on the information in the privilege log, that such communications involved business strategy rather than privileged legal advice. ACQIS's conclusory assertions of "privileged legal advice" are therefore insufficient.
ACQIS shall provide further support for its assertion of attorney-client privilege beyond what is already included in the privilege log and beyond the seemingly speculative argument in its letter that the documents contain information that "could only have come from attorneys." This could be satisfied with, for example, information showing a connection between the information in the communication and a particular attorney or law firm, or information showing that the disputed document contains information from another undisputed document that is privileged. The parties may also consider whether affidavits or declarations could satisfy ACQIS's burden. If the parties are still unable to then resolve this dispute, the Court will conduct an in camera review of a sampling of these documents.