Opinion
23-cv-03417-VC (TSH)
08-22-2024
DISCOVERY ORDER Re: Dkt. No. 105
THOMAS S. HIXSON UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
The present discovery dispute concerns certain communications made by a former parttime Meta employee, Tim Dettmers, on two Discord channels (the “Subject Communications”). The Court has reviewed the Subject Communications in camera. The Court held a hearing on August 22, 2024, and now issues the following order.
A. Were the Subject Communications Attorney-Client Privileged in the First Place?
Plaintiffs weakly contend that the Subject Communications were not privileged in the first place, saying they were not requests for legal advice or responses thereto, and that they are disclosures of facts not entitled to privilege protection. Those arguments are wrong. The Subject Communications contain or reveal legal advice from Meta's attorneys and requests to them for legal advice by Meta employees. This is evident from the Subject Communications themselves, and is further supported by the Dettmers and Zettlemoyer Declarations (ECF Nos. 105-1 & 1052). It is true that Dettmers was communicating with EleutherAI, but his communications plainly reveal privileged legal advice given to him by Meta's attorneys. Accordingly, the Subject Communications were privileged in the first place.
B. Did Meta Waive the Privilege?
“[T]he power to waive the corporate attorney-client privilege rests with the corporation's management and is normally exercised by its officers and directors.” United States v. Chen, 99 F.3d 1495, 1502 (9th Cir. 1996) (quoting Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n v. Weintraub, 471 U.S. 343, 348 (1985)). Plaintiffs say Chen is distinguishable because it involved a former employee. However, the Ninth Circuit reasoned as follows: “[W]hen control of a corporation passes to new management, the authority to assert and waive the corporation's attorney-client privilege passes as well. It follows a fortiori that since a corporate employee cannot waive the corporation's privilege, that same individual as an ex-employee cannot do so.” Id. (cleaned up). Thus, the Ninth Circuit's explanation for why a former employee cannot waive the privilege took as its starting assumption that a current employee cannot waive the corporation's privilege, which is the principle Meta seeks to apply here.
Still, both Chen and the Supreme Court decision it cited say that the power to waive a corporate privilege is “normally” exercised by its officers and directors. As other courts have observed, also after citing Chen, “[s]ometimes, however, the privilege can be waived by lower-level employees [who] inadvertently yet voluntarily disclose privileged material while acting within the scope of their authority.” Vans, Inc. v. Walmart, Inc., 2023 WL 4291986 (C.D. Cal. June 5, 2023) (cleaned up). See also Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Diamond Plastics Corp., 2020 WL 4261419, *4 (W.D. Wash. July 24, 2020) (“The Supreme Court said nothing about what happens if lower-level employees inadvertently yet voluntarily disclose privileged material while acting within the scope of their authority. When faced with such disclosures, many courts have held that the disclosure waives the corporation's attorney-client privilege if the corporation took inadequate steps to prevent the disclosure.”). “To exempt corporations from this general rule ‘would be unfair' because then ‘corporations would have no responsibility to monitor how their low-level employees handle privileged communications even though those employees are covered by modern expansions of the attorney-client privilege.'” Vans, 2023 WL 4291986, *6 (quoting Phoenix Ins., 2020 WL 4261419, *4).
Here, however, Meta has established that Dettmers did not have authority to waive the privilege over the Subject Communications and that Meta did take adequate steps to prevent the disclosures. Zettlemoyer Decl. ¶¶ 3, 5, 6, 7; Dettmers Decl. ¶¶ 4, 5, 12. Plaintiffs emphasize that Dettmers made the disclosures intentionally and held himself out as a representative of Meta. But the relevant inquiry is what Meta did. In Vans, relied on heavily by Plaintiffs, the court found a waiver by a lower level employee after finding a delegation of authority over certain types of communications to that employee and knowledge by others at the company that he was having those kinds of communications. 2023 WL 4291986, *6. In Truckstop.net, L.L.C. v. Sprint Corporation, 2005 WL 8166195 (D. Idaho July 28, 2005), also relied on by Plaintiffs, the court found a waiver by an employee who was an enterprise account executive at the time he disclosed the privileged material, and he served as the “main point of contact” between the recipient company and the company he worked for. Id. *6. In this case, by contrast, there is no indication that Meta expressly or impliedly gave Dettmers any authority to conduct any external communications, nor that Meta had any awareness of or reason to be aware of external communications he was having. Plaintiffs essentially ask the Court to infer this delegation of authority from the communications themselves. However, that is not a reasonable inference, particularly in view of Meta's contrary showing that Dettmers did not have this authority.
To be clear, the Court is not demanding evidence that Meta (then, Facebook) specifically gave authority to Dettmers to disclose privileged materials. Rather, the relevant inquiry is whether Dettmers acted within the scope of the authority Meta gave him. At oral argument, Plaintiffs used the example of two companies working on a deal, where the lead negotiator for company A asks the lead negotiator for company B why she won't agree to something, and she says “our legal department says we can't do that.” That's a voluntary waiver of the privilege by an employee who is acting within the scope of the authority the company gave her, namely, to negotiate a deal. See Jonathan Corp. v. Prime Computer, 114 F.R.D. 693, 700 (E.D. Va. 1987) (“Prime cannot now disclaim the voluntary disclosure of the document to Jonathan by the very individual Prime had designated to deal with Jonathan on the matter ....Prime both intentionally put the individual in a position to make the disclosure as well as gave him the information to disclose.”). Plaintiffs argue that Dettmers was similarly charged by Meta to collaborate with EleutherAI, but there is no evidence Meta did that. To be sure, paragraph 8 of Dettmers' declaration says that he “sought to communicate (and potentially collaborate) with EleutherAI.” ECF No. 15-1. But Dettmers could not give himself authority to waive Meta's privilege. There is nothing to suggest that Meta designated Dettmers to communicate or collaborate with EleutherAI, or was even aware he had any such communications until they showed up in Plaintiffs' First Consolidated Amended Complaint.
In addition, Meta took all reasonable steps to protect the privilege, including following the discovery of this disclosure, and Plaintiffs' arguments that Meta was not diligent enough are unsupported and meritless. ECF Nos. 104-4 (Hartnett Decl.), 105-2 (Zettlemoyer Decl.).
C. Conclusion
Meta's motion for a protective order is GRANTED, and Plaintiffs' motion to compel is DENIED. The Court finds that the Subject Communications are privileged and that Meta has not waived the privilege. Plaintiffs therefore cannot use the Subject Communications and must return them to Meta or destroy them.
IT IS SO ORDERED.