KATHRYN H. VRATIL, District Judge.
John Meyer brings suit against UNUM Life Insurance Company of America and UNUM Group (collectively "UNUM") for recovery of benefits under a long-term disability insurance policy. This matter comes before the Court on the parties'
In their joint motion (Doc. #65), the parties ask the Court to enter an order allowing them to file under seal certain exhibits to their summary judgment briefs. The first exhibit is the administrative record, which they seek to file under seal to prevent disclosure of plaintiff's medical information not relevant to this case and of numerous personal identifiers of plaintiff. The parties concede that they could redact such information but conclusively state that it would be unwieldy and burdensome to do so. They also state that irrespective of the sealed nature of the filing, the parties and the Court could freely discuss the relevant medical information in their public filings. The parties seek to file under seal three additional exhibits for the stated reason that defendants have designated them confidential under the terms of the protective order.
In defendants' motion (Doc. #74), UNUM asks the Court to enter an order allowing them to file under seal Exhibits 4 and 5 to their brief in opposition to plaintiff's motion for summary judgment. Both exhibits contain excerpts of UNUM's claims manual, and UNUM designated both documents confidential under the protective order. UNUM asserts that its claims manual represents proprietary or trade secret information, the disclosure of which would give its competitors an unearned competitive advantage by disclosing methods and practices for how UNUM conducts its business.
Federal courts have long recognized a common law right of access to judicial records.
The parties concede that they could redact the personal identifiers and irrelevant medical records contained in the administrative record, but that doing so would be unwieldy and burdensome. The task of redacting does not rise to a significant interest that outweighs the public's right of access. Moreover, the parties undercut their argument by agreeing that they and the Court could freely discuss the relevant medical information in public filings, thereby negating any notion that the documents should be shielded from public view. As for plaintiff's Exhibits C and H, the parties' conclusory statement that UNUM has designated them confidential does not suggest why this information, if disclosed, might be harmful to either party. Finally, as for defendants' Exhibits 4 and 5, the Court does not accept UNUM's conclusory and speculative statement that their competitors would have an unearned competitive advantage if excerpts of UNUM's claims manual are not filed under seal. The Court has reviewed Exhibits 4 and 5 and finds that UNUM has not met its burden of showing a significant interest which outweighs the public's right of access.
As in