BARRY S. SELTZER, Magistrate Judge.
THIS CAUSE is before the Court on Plaintiff's Motion to Enforce Defendant Building Materials Corp. of America d/b/a GAF Materials Corporation to Comply with Court Order and for Sanctions (DE 103)
This action arises out of an allegedly defective roofing adhesive. Plaintiff Thermoset Corporation ("Thermoset") is a roofing contractor that was hired to install a roof system at the Lynden Pindling International Airport in Nassau, Bahamas (the "Project"). Defendant Building Materials Corp. of America d/b/a GAF Materials Corporation ("GAF") is a manufacturer of roofing materials and systems that Thermoset allegedly consulted to obtain specifications of appropriate materials to use for the Project. Defendant Roofing Supply Group Orlando LLC ("RSG") is a distributor of GAF's roofing products. Thermoset purchased certain roofing materials and components, including a particular water-based adhesive, from GAF, through RSG. Thereafter, the roofing material failed, allegedly as a result of a defective adhesive recommended by GAF and RSG. Thermoset alleges that it incurred substantial expense to repair and modify the roof. In its Amended Complaint, Thermoset asserts claims for breach of express and implied warranties and for violation of Florida's Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act ("FDUTPA"). GAF and RSG have denied the material allegations of the Amended Complaint and have asserted various affirmative defenses.
During the course of discovery, Thermoset propounded written discovery requests to GAF; GAF responded to these requests. Thereafter, Thermoset moved the Court to overrule GAF's objections and to compel better responses to certain of these requests, including Interrogatory No. 17 and Request for Production No. 34. Interrogatory No. 17 sought information as to "any complaints, demands, or allegations of defects, deficiencies or failures" on other projects of the same bonding adhesive that was used at the subject Project. Request No. 34 sought production of documents relating to the same defects and deficiencies. In ruling on Thermoset's motion to compel, the Court found that the information and documents sought by these discovery requests were highly probative of Thermoset's claim that the subject roofing system's failure was attributable to the (alleged) defective adhesive. Accordingly, on November 18, 2014, the Court entered an Order (DE 79) requiring GAF to fully and completely answer Interrogatory No. 17 and to produce documents responsive to Request No. 34 by November 25, 2014. Thermoset subsequently agreed with GAF to extend this deadline to December 5, 2014.
On December 5, 2014, GAF served on Thermoset its answer to Interrogatory No. 17 and produced a spreadsheet and approximately 1,000 pages related to 21 other alleged roof failures caused by the same adhesive at issue herein. Two weeks later, on December 19, 2014, Thermoset requested (by email) a conference to discuss information it believed was missing or incomplete; that conference occurred on December 22, 2014. Following the conference, Thermoset's counsel sent GAF's counsel an email outlining the missing information and the documents they had discussed.
The following day, on December 23, 2014, GAF supplemented its discovery responses and produced additional documents responsive to Request No. 34. These documents related to 3 other projects that it had previously identified, in addition to documents relating to one or two other projects identified by GAF's corporate representative in her deposition.
Subsequently, Thermoset requested that by December 29, 2014, GAF supplement its responses with respect to the two discovery requests at issue and/or confirm that no other information or responsive documents existed. On December 30, 2014, GAF's counsel (by email) informed Thermoset's counsel that it was searching for additional information identified by Thermoset. More specifically, GAF's counsel clarified certain information relating to its prior responses, directed Thermoset to other previously produced documents, and advised that counsel was conducting a second search of guarantee files to determine whether other responsive documents existed. Thermoset then agreed to permit GAF until January 2, 2015, to produce information and responsive documents to fully comply with the Court's November 18, 2014 Order.
On January 6, 2015, GAF's counsel notified Thermoset's counsel that he had discovered additional archived documents relating to 4 projects that GAF had not previously believed to exist; GAF agreed to produce those documents by January 7, 2015.
On January 8, 2015, Thermoset filed the instant Motion to Enforce Defendant Building Materials Corp. of America d/b/a GAF Materials Corporation to Comply with Court Order and for Sanctions (DE 103). Thermoset requests that the Court compel GAF to comply with the Court's November 18, 2015 Order, which required GAF to fully and completely answer Interrogatory No. 17 and to produce all documents responsive to Request No. 34. According to Thermoset, GAF has failed to provide sworn interrogatory answers, has failed to provide documents relating to the resolution or settlement of claims for 6 projects, and has failed to clarify the specific additional documents that exist with respect to 11 projects. Thermoset also seeks monetary sanctions against GAF.
On that same date (January 8, 2015 — presumably after the filing of Thermoset's motion), GAF produced an additional 1,500 pages relating to 11 projects. According to GAF, these documents did not relate to new projects; rather, they contained supplemental information with respect to previously identified projects. On January 16, 2015, GAF produced an additional 3,900 pages relating to another previously identified project.
In its January 20, 2015 Response to the Motion, GAF asserts: "Since the filing of Plaintiff's Motion, Plaintiff's counsel has reviewed GAF's supplemental Responses, and agrees that absent a few follow-up items, which the parties have agreed to resolve without involvement of the Court, GAF's supplemental Responses satisfy Interrogatory 17 and Request for Production 34." Response at 3-4 (DE 112). According to GAF, therefore, the only issue remaining for the Court's consideration is Thermoset's requests for monetary sanctions. In its Reply (DE 113), Thermoset does not dispute GAF's assertions. Accordingly, to the extent that Thermoset's Motion requests that the Court compel GAF to comply with its November 18, 2014 Order, the Motion is DENIED as moot. The Court will address only the portion of Thermoset's Motion that requests monetary sanctions against GAF for failing to timely comply with the Court's Order.
GAF argues that no basis exists for the imposition of sanctions because it timely served its responses and produced documents regarding other claims/projects. It additionally argues that upon discovering that additional responsive information existed, it supplemented its responses, as contemplated by Rule 26(e).
Thermoset counters that GAF's argument that it "did not fail to timely comply with the Court's order . . . because it produced a substantial amount of information and documentation in its Responses, which it believed to be fully and completely responsive [and a]fter discovering that additional information existed, however, GAF quickly notified Plaintiff, and served supplemental responses" is misleading. Reply at 4 (DE 113) (quoting GAF's Response at 6 (DE 112)). Thermoset explains the misleading nature of the argument:
Reply at 4-5 (DE 113).
The Court agrees with Thermoset. It was GAF's, not Thermoset's, responsibility to ensure that its document search was complete and that all documents were produced by the deadline set by the Court and then graciously extended by Thermoset. By the extended deadline, GAF produced approximately 1,000 pages responsive to Request No. 34. GAF conduced no further search for additional documents until Thermoset notified it that its initial production was incomplete. In at least 3 subsequent supplemental productions (on December 23, 2014, January 8, 2015, and January 16, 2015), all prompted by Thermoset, GAF produced approximately 4,400 additional pages — more than 4 times the initial amount produced by the (extended) deadline. Thermoset and its counsel were required to expend considerable time and expense in seeking to verify that GAF had complied fully with the Court's November 18, 2014 Order. The Court, therefore, finds that sanctions are warranted. Accordingly, Thermoset's Motion for Sanctions (DE 103) is GRANTED. Within 14 days of the date of this Order, GAF shall pay to Thermoset attorney's fees in the amount of $500.
As part of its December 5, 2014 production of documents (to comply with the Court's November 18, 2014 Order), GAF provided to Thermoset (via a Dropbox link), documents organized into (electronic) folders, which were organized by project or contractor name. One of these folders was labeled "China Lake" and contained 3 documents, 2 which are at issue here — GAF 000745 ("GAF 745") and GAF 000815 ("GAF 815"). GAF 745 consists of a one page document with an email from GAF's in-house counsel Jean Marcus to GAF's Chief Executive Officer ("CEO") Bob Tafaro with a carbon copy to Helene Pierce, GAF's Vice President of Technical Sales, Codes & Industry Relations ("VP of Technical Services"). GAF 815 consists of a one page document with two separate emails between Tafaro and Pierce with a carbon copy to attorney Marcus. On February 2, 2015, GAF's counsel contacted Thermoset's counsel, asserting that GAF 745 and GAF 815 were protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege and that these documents had been inadvertently produced. February 2, 2015 email (DE 119-1). GAF additionally requested that Thermoset destroy the documents. Thermoset subsequently removed the documents from the case database and sequestered them. On February 13, 2014, Thermoset's counsel requested that GAF provide a privilege log for the documents and explain the circumstances surrounding the "inadvertent" disclosure. February 13, 2014 email (DE 119-2).
As part of its January 8, 2015 supplemental document production, GAF provided to Thermoset 9 emails, substantially redacted, relating to the China Lake project. On January 20, 2015, Thermoset inquired about the redacted pages. On February 16, 2015, GAF confirmed that it had redacted information protected by the attorney-client privilege and informed Thermoset that it would be serving a supplemental privilege log.
The next day (February 17, 2015), GAF did serve on Thermoset a Supplemental Privilege Log (DE 119-3), identifying GAF 745 and GAF 815, as well as the 9 redacted emails,
Seven of the nine redacted emails are identified on the Supplemental Privilege Log as communications between GAF's in-house attorney (Marcus) and outside attorneys hired by GAF to represent it on an unrelated (non-suit) complaint about a project in China Lake, California, located in the Mojave Desert. According to the Supplemental Privilege Log, all of these emails were related to settlement negotiations, legal strategy, and/or resolution of the China Lake claim. The two remaining redacted emails are identified as communications between the same outside attorneys and a GAF employee regarding settlement of the China Lake complaint. And GAF 745 is identified as an email communication from GAF's outside attorney to GAF's in-house attorney regarding settlement negotiations and legal strategy pertaining to China Lake. Thermoset acknowledges that these documents appear from the descriptions in GAF's log to be privileged.
GAF 815, however, merits closer attention. Unlike the emails discussed above, the two emails that comprise GAF 815 are not communications between GAF attorneys or communications between GAF's attorney and its corporate executives. Rather, they are communications between two GAF employees — GAF's VP of Technical Services (Pierce) and GAF's CEO (Tafaro). A copy of one of these emails was sent to GAF's in-house attorney (Marcus), and a copy of the other was sent to attorney Marcus and to GAF's Chief Financial Officer ("CFO) (John Rebele). Copying an attorney on an email does not necessarily render the communication privileged. Because the Court does not have sufficient information to determine whether GAF 815 is protected by the attorney-client privilege, it will inspect these two emails in camera.
Additionally, Thermoset argues that even were the Court to find that the documents at issue are protected by the attorney-client privilege, GAF has waived the privilege by failing to timely file a privilege log. Nothing in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, this District's Local Rules, or this Court's November 18, 2014 Order required GAF to serve a privilege log within a specific time period or risk waiving the privilege for an untimely filing of a privilege log.
As one district court has noted:
In determining whether GAF has waived the attorney-client privilege with respect to the 12 documents identified on its February 17, 2015 Supplemental Privilege Log, Thermoset urges the Court to apply the
With respect to the first
After carefully considering the parties' respective arguments and the totality of the
Finally, Thermoset argues that GAF has waived the attorney-client privilege as to GAF 745 and GAF 815 by producing those documents. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 502(b) governs waiver of inadvertently produced documents.
The first element of Rule 502(b) requires that the disclosure of privileged documents be "inadvertent"; the rule, however, does not define that term. Courts considering whether a disclosure of privileged documents is inadvertent have taken two different approaches. Some courts considering the question have ruled that a party's subjective intent is not sufficient to establish that a disclosure is inadvertent; rather, these courts look at several factors to determine whether the "inadvertent" element has been satisfied, including the total number of documents reviewed, the procedures used to review the documents before production, and the actions of the producing party after discovering that the documents had been produced.
Other courts have taken a simpler approach, "essentially asking whether the party intended a privileged or work-product protected document to be produced or whether the production was a mistake."
The second Rule 502(b) element requires that the producing party take reasonable steps to prevent disclosure of privileged documents. In determining whether this element has been satisfied, courts consider several factors, including the methodology of precautions used to review for privileged documents, the scope of discovery, the number of documents to be reviewed, and any time constraints for production.
The final element of Rule 502(b) requires that the producing party take prompt remedial efforts to rectify the inadvertent disclosure. Rule 502(b)(3) "does not require the producing party to engage in a post-production review to determine whether any protected communication or information has been produced by mistake." Fed. R. Ev. 502(b) Advisory Committee Notes. But "the rule does require the producing party to follow up on any obvious indications that a protected communication or information has been produced inadvertently."
GAF having met all elements of Rule 502(b), the Court finds that the inadvertent disclosure of GAF 745 and GAF 815 did not act as a waiver of the attorney-client privilege.
Based on the foregoing, Thermoset's Motion for In Camera Review to Determine Whether Attorney-Client Privilege Applies to Certain GAF Documents and Whether GAF Waived the Privilege by Violating This Court's Order and Request for Hearing (DE 119) is GRANTED only to the extent that the Court will conduct an in camera review of GAF 815. Accordingly, on or before April 10, 2015, GAF shall submit GAF 815 to the undersigned's chambers located at the United States Courthouse, Room 109, 299 East Broward Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301. Thermoset's Motion is DENIED in all other respects, including Thermoset's request for a hearing.
DONE AND ORDERED.