TERENCE P. KEMP, Magistrate Judge.
On March 3, 2015, Albert J. Lucas, one of Venezuela's attorneys, signed a subpoena duces tecum commanding attorney Pierce E. Cunningham to produce a number of documents at Calfee, Halter & Griswold's Cincinnati office by March 16, 2105. The subpoena contained 28 definitional paragraphs and included nineteen separate categories of documents to be produced, but, because of the fact that several of the requests specified a large number of people with whom Mr. Cunningham may have communicated, the request easily encompassed over 100 different sets of documents. A second, virtually identical, subpoena was sent to one of Mr. Cunningham's clients, Venospa, LLC, an entity which had attempted to intervene in this case to assert a claim based on Bandagro notes which it owns. Apparently, there was no advance communication between any of Venezuela's lawyers and Mr. Cunningham about these subpoenas.
Ten days later, Mr. Cunningham filed a document entitled "Notice of Compliance with Subpoena and Motion of Trial Counsel, Pierce E. Cunningham and Venospa, LLC for Sanctions Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 45." (Doc. 496). The gist of that document is Mr. Cunningham's assertion (bolstered by a "Report" attached as Exhibit B) that he had spent a good deal of time reviewing the responsive documents and that all were either work product or attorney client communications and could not be produced. He also asserted in his memorandum that the subpoenas were burdensome and vexatious and that it would take many more attorney hours to determine whether any production of documents were possible.
Venezuela's response is, unfortunately but predictably, another attempt on the part of its attorneys to paint every party they deal with in this case — from the Plaintiff and its principal to a host of non-party targets of discovery — as criminals, liars, and frauds. The Court has observed, but has refrained from commenting upon until now, this approach, which only serves to obscure the legal issues being presented to the Court for resolution and which reflects poorly on the authors of these diatribes. Just as an example, Venezuela's opposing memorandum and motion to compel (Doc. 520) describes, in the very first paragraph, Carlos Delgado Morean, Venospa's principal, as a "politically connected Venezuelan double-dealer," and it accuses both Mr. Delgado and Mr. Cunningham of being "not interested in complying with the subpoena" but instead "interested in stymying Venezuela's discovery efforts and preventing the Court from discovering the full history of the duplicitous Delgado and his involvement with Gruppo Triad's efforts to dupe the Ministry of Finance into finding in Gruppo Triad's claim for payment on bogus Bandagro notes."
After peeling away the layers of name-calling contained in Venezuela's briefs, two key issues have emerged. The first is whether the privilege log prepared by Mr. Cunningham is sufficiently detailed. A subissue relating to that question is how the "common interest" doctrine might apply here. The second issue is whether the crime-fraud exception — which the Court found potentially applicable here to certain actions taken by Gruppo Triad and its former principal, James Pavanelli, with respect to the notes at issue in this case — can also be used to compel, at a minimum, an in camera inspection of some or all of the documents which Mr. Cunningham has withheld. The Court addresses each of these separately.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 45(e)(2) reads as follows:
The privilege logs in this case, which are attached to Doc. 529, are fairly generic. Each identifies, by numbers corresponding to the document categories set forth in the subpoenas, which privilege is being asserted by two characterizations: either "Attorney Client" or "Common Interest." Where no documents exist, the word "None" appears on the log. No additional information about dates, senders, or recipients is provided.
Venezuela's reply memorandum asserts these logs do not comply with Rule 45's requirements. It also asserts, somewhat conflictingly, that the logs do not delineate how the common interest doctrine applies here, and that Mr. Cunningham's and Venospa's claim of a common interest with others whom Venezuela has accused of fraud is evidence that the crime-fraud exception applies here. The Court agrees with the first contention; the privilege logs do not, with the possible exception of listing of persons or entities who were actually Mr. Cunningham's clients or Venospa's lawyers, provide sufficient information to permit the Court to assess the validity of the claim of privilege.
The Court has previously ruled that Venezuela made out a prima facie case of fraud with respect to Gruppo Triad and its efforts to redeem the notes which are the subject of this case. Venezuela asserts that even though the documents it seeks from Mr. Cunningham and Venospa did not come into existence until years later, they are part and parcel of the same scheme to present "bogus" notes to the Venezuelan government for redemption, and that the crime-fraud exception therefore trumps any privilege that might otherwise exists with respect to these documents.
In its various filings on this issue, Venezuela does not appear to assert that Mr. Delgado was part of any effort to forge Bandagro notes, something which Venezuela accuses Gruppo Triad of. Rather, its theory appears to be that when Mr. Delgado assisted in the effort to validate the notes which Skye now holds (which are a different series of notes from the ones which Mr. Delgado and, later, Venospa acquired) he was induced by the promise of a reward to slant his efforts toward validation. According to Venezuela, his conclusions from his inspection of Gruppo Triad's notes that they were genuine led to the initially favorable report by Venezuelan authorities about those notes, but Mr. Delgado's conflict of interest — his working for Gruppo Triad at the same time — improperly influenced that decision. Venezuela claims that in exchange for his work, Gruppo Triad gave Mr. Delgado $100 million worth of notes from another series (not the same series involved in his investigation or the same series owned by Skye), and it is those notes he attempted to sue on when he moved to intervene in this case. Venezuela claims that this conduct was all part of a single fraudulent scheme and that Mr. Cunningham's otherwise privileged communications with his clients (including Mr. Delgado and Venospa) about the litigation effort are sufficiently related to Gruppo Triad's original alleged fraud — the forging of the notes, or the acquisition and attempted redemption of notes which Gruppo Triad knew to have been forged — that the privilege has been overcome.
Boiled down to its essence, Venezuela is asserting that once someone completes a course of fraudulent or criminal conduct that results in, as here, the creation of some document which purports to give the holder of the document the right to sue upon it, every communication the holder has with an attorney about that right, including communications leading up to the filing (or attempted filing) of a legal action is an unprivileged communication. That simply is not the law.
As the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit stated in
Given the timing and apparent scope of Mr. Cunningham's representation of Mr. Delgado and Venospa, which did not begin until 2009, Venezuela cannot be asserting that these communications assisted Mr. Delgado or any of his alleged partners in fraud, including Gruppo Triad, in activities such as forging the notes or attempting to persuade entities within the Venezuelan government that the notes were genuine. In fact, by the time Mr. Cunningham had been retained, whatever influence Mr. Delgado may have had on the governmental approval process had ended, and it was absolutely clear that the Venezuelan government took the position that no Bandagro notes, and particularly ones which had ever been possessed by Gruppo Triad, were authentic or valid. The crime or fraud which Venezuela alleges had long been completed by that time and had proven, to that point, unsuccessful, and there is no evidence that communications between Mr. Delgado, Venospa, and Mr. Cunningham played any part in the creation, execution, or unsuccessful completion of the alleged scheme.
Following the language in
The Court is mindful, when considering this issue, of the basic premise upon which the crime-fraud exception rests. "It is the purpose of the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege to assure that the `seal of secrecy,' ... between lawyer and client does not extend to communications `made for the purpose of getting advice for the commission of a fraud' or crime."
Based on the foregoing, Mr. Cunningham and Venospa shall, within fourteen days, supplement their privilege logs with respect to the claim of common interest, providing additional information to "enable the parties to assess the claim" as required by Rule 45. Any disagreements about the adequacy of the logs, as supplemented, or the legal sufficiency of the claim of common interest, shall be brought to the Court's attention by way of a request for an informal discovery conference. Any non-privileged responsive documents shall also be produced within fourteen days to the extent that has not yet occurred. The Court denies the motions relating to this issue, including Doc. 496, in all other respects, but reserves the right to shift costs of compliance with the subpoenas to Venezuela should that appear appropriate under Rule 45.
Any party may, within fourteen days after this Order is filed, file and serve on the opposing party a motion for reconsideration by a District Judge. 28 U.S.C. §636(b)(1)(A), Rule 72(a), Fed. R. Civ. P.; Eastern Division Order No. 14-01, pt. IV(C)(3)(a). The motion must specifically designate the order or part in question and the basis for any objection. Responses to objections are due fourteen days after objections are filed and replies by the objecting party are due seven days thereafter. The District Judge, upon consideration of the motion, shall set aside any part of this Order found to be clearly erroneous or contrary to law.
This order is in full force and effect even if a motion for reconsideration has been filed unless it is stayed by either the Magistrate Judge or District Judge. S.D. Ohio L.R. 72.3.