Opinion
No. 04 Civ 8180 (SAS) (DFE) This is an ECF case.
May 12, 2005
OPINION AND ORDER
This is a discovery dispute about document requests and proposed non-party depositions pertaining to Plaintiff's claims that Defendants wrongfully withheld severance benefits.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
From 1981 until February 17, 2004, Plaintiff worked for Sotheby's International Realty, Inc. ("SIR"), which was in the business of selling luxury real estate. In 1997, he became an Executive Vice President of SIR. He participated in the Sotheby's Inc. Severance Plan (the "Plan"), which is funded by Sotheby's Inc.
On February 17, 2004, SIR was sold by Sotheby's Holdings, Inc. (hereinafter "Sotheby's") to NRT Incorporated ("NRT"), a wholly owned subsidiary of Cendant Corporation ("Cendant"), a non-party to this litigation. After the purchase, Plaintiff became an employee of Cendant's Real Estate Franchise Group, which planned to sell the SIR brand as a franchise to brokerages. On several occasions in February and March 2004, he met with Michael Good, the new President of SIR, to discuss Plaintiff's new responsibilities and new compensation package under Cendant.
On March 17, 2004, Plaintiff, through counsel, submitted a claim for benefits under the Plan and a letter stating that he expected to terminate his employment with Cendant by March 31, 2004. According to Plaintiff, Cendant "had not offered him a comparable position (or any defined position at all) with comparable compensation under the terms of the Plan." (Compl. ¶ 41.) His claim for severance benefits was routed to the Sotheby's, Inc. Severance Plan Committee (the "Committee").
The Pertinent Individuals
The Committee was "a group of Sotheby's employees designated by the Administrator to decide eligibility for Plan benefits, including interpreting and construing Plan provisions." (4/19/05 Joint Letter, Defs. at 7.)
The Chair of the Committee was Susan Alexander, who also was Executive Vice-President for Human Resources of Sotheby's. Defendants have not told me who else was on the Committee. But it is undisputed that all of the Committee meetings held to discuss Plaintiff's claim were attended by Donaldson Pillsbury, Esq. (General Counsel of Sotheby's), Stacey Chervin, Esq. (Associate General Counsel of Sotheby's parent), and Karen Wahle, Esq. of O'Melveny Myers LLP (outside counsel to the Administrator). ( Id., Pl. at 1-2.)
The Complaint (at ¶ 3) names the Committee members as Ms. Alexander, Richard Buckley, Jerry Kasdan, Alean Timm, and George Wachter. But the Answer denies those allegations.
William Sheridan was Chief Financial Officer ("CFO") of Sotheby's.
The Withheld Documents
The First Valuation E-Mail. On March 31, 2004, Ms. Alexander sent an e-mail to Mr. Pillsbury, copying Ms. Chervin and Mr. Sheridan. She discussed a valuation of the severance benefit demanded by Plaintiff.
The Indemnification E-Mail. A short time later, also on March 31, 2004, Mr. Pillsbury sent an e-mail to Ms. Alexander, Mr. Sheridan, and Ms. Chervin. He discussed indemnification issues between Sotheby's and Cendant; he also discussed a possible settlement value of Plaintiff's claim.
The Second Valuation E-Mail. On April 13, 2004, Ms. Alexander wrote another e-mail discussing a valuation of the severance benefit. She sent this e-mail to Mr. Pillsbury and Ms. Chervin.
The Interview Notes. On July 6 and July 7, 2004, Ms. Alexander and Ms. Wahle interviewed Cendant employees about Plaintiff. Ms. Wahle took notes and prepared summaries.
On April 12, 2004, Ms. Wahle wrote to Plaintiff, inviting him to submit the factual basis for his claim. On May 10, 2004, Plaintiff submitted a letter and declaration in support of his claim. On July 16, 2004, the Committee denied the claim. On July 20, 2004, Plaintiff appealed and requested certain documents. On August 20, 2004, Ms. Wahle sent Plaintiff a partial response and wrote that "additional documents" would be forthcoming, "includ[ing] . . . notes of interviews with Cendant employees." On August 21, 2004, Ms. Wahle sent the Interview Notes to Ms. Chervin and Mr. Pillsbury but not to Plaintiff. The Committee, acting for the Administrator, denied the appeal on September 20, 2004.
On October 18, 2004, Plaintiff filed the complaint in the case at bar. He alleges that Defendants "have denied . . . his claimed benefits under the Plan, in violation of the Employment Retirement Security Act, as amended ("ERISA")." (Compl. at 1.) He also alleges that "Sotheby's has wrongfully withheld compensation earned by [him] between January 1, 2004 and his February 17, 2004 termination." ( Id. at 1-2.)
In March 2005, Defendants produced documents to Plaintiff and served a privilege log stating the reasons why they were withholding certain documents. Specifically, they withheld the Interview Notes on work product grounds, and withheld the Valuation E-Mails and the Indemnification E-Mail on grounds of work product and attorney-client privilege.
Plaintiff subpoenaed four Cendant employees for deposition and reserves the right to subpoena a fifth. The five Cendant employees are:
1. Stuart Siegel. He was the President and CEO of SIR when it was owned by Sotheby's. He was Plaintiff's supervisor at SIR. Mr Siegel is still President at SIR now that it is a sub-subsidiary of Cendant.
2. Michael Good. He is the President and CEO of another Cendant subsidiary known as Sotheby's International Realty Affiliates, Inc. ("SIRA").
3. Maria Perez-Brau. She is the Vice President of Human Resources for Cendant's Real Estate Franchise Group.
4. George Ballantyne. He was a co-worker of Plaintiff at both SIR and Cendant. Mr. Ballantyne works and lives in Massachusetts and is Senior Vice President, Northern Region for SIRA.
5. Richard Meisner, Esq. He is Cendant's Vice President, Corporate-Legal.
(4/27/05 Joint Letter at 8.)
Before the denial of Plaintiff's claim for benefits, Ms. Wahle and Ms. Alexander interviewed all these individuals except Mr. Ballantyne. Ms. Wahle and Ms. Alexander have agreed to be deposed. Cendant asks me to preclude depositions of the Cendant employees.
Pursuant to my Standing Order for Discovery Disputes, I have received two joint letters. Regarding the Withheld Documents, Plaintiff and Defendants sent me a joint letter dated April 19, 2005. Defendants also submitted the declaration of Ms. Alexander. Regarding the depositions, Plaintiff and Cendant sent me a joint letter dated April 27, 2005. On May 3, 2005, I issued an order directing Defendants to submit the two Valuation E-Mails and the Indemnification E-Mail for my in camera review. I received them on May 6, 2005.
THE DISPUTE ABOUT THE WITHHELD DOCUMENTS
Defendants make three arguments for why they should not have to produce the Withheld Documents: (1) the Withheld Documents impermissibly exceed the scope of the administrative record; (2) the Withheld Documents are protected by the work-product doctrine; and (3) three of the documents are also protected by the attorney-client privilege. I will analyze each of these arguments in turn.
The Scope of the Administrative Record
Plaintiff claims that, as a court of equity, our Court should treat the Interview Notes as part of the administrative record. Plaintiff does not contend that the Committee reviewed the Interview Notes. Rather, Plaintiff states that (a) the Committee's July 8, 2004 meeting minutes say that Ms. Alexander and Ms. Wahle "relayed the details and contents of the interviews" but (b) the minutes do not describe those "details and contents." (4/19/05 Joint Letter at 3.) Plaintiff also states that "Ms. Wahle promised to produce the Interview notes in August 2004 as part of [the administrative] record. She has offered no explanation for the change of heart." ( Id.) Defendants have not rebutted these statements. Moreover, if courts were to permit documents such as the Interview Notes to remain outside the administrative record, then plan administrators would have an incentive to direct investigators to report everything to them orally, thus sparing themselves a potentially messy record. Nevertheless, Plaintiff has offered no authority that squarely supports an equitable enlargement of the record to include the Interview Notes, nor have I uncovered such authority. Accordingly, I will now consider whether I should permit discovery of the Interview Notes (as well as the Indemnification E-Mail and the Valuation E-Mails), assuming arguendo that all of them fall outside the administrative record.
Before I determine whether Plaintiff is entitled to see the Withheld Documents, I will discuss three threshold questions regarding our Court's role in reviewing the decision of the Committee that acted for the Administrator.
Question 1. What is the appropriate standard of review?
Depending on the individual case, a district court may review an ERISA administrator's decision with (a) a broad de novo review, or (b) a deferential review under the "arbitrary and capricious" standard. "The plan administrator bears the burden of proving that the deferential standard of review applies." Fay v. Oxford Health Plan, 287 F.3d 96, 104 (2d Cir. 2002).
An eventual ruling on the standard of judicial review may affect the extent to which a district court may consider documents outside the administrative record. The Second Circuit has held that when undertaking de novo review, the decision "to admit additional evidence is one which is discretionary with the district court, but which discretion ought not to be exercised in the absence of good cause." DeFelice v. American Int'l Life Assurance Co. of New York, 112 F.3d 61, 66 (2d Cir. 1997) (emphasis added). Yet even when the standard of review is deferential, the Second Circuit has relied on deposition testimony to support its finding that an administrator's decision was arbitrary and capricious. Miller v. United Welfare Fund, 72 F.3d 1066, 1072 (2d Cir. 1995). Moreover, in a recent unpublished decision lacking precedential authority, the Second Circuit wrote: "Notwithstanding defendant's contention that such discovery is precluded by our general statement that `under the arbitrary and capricious standard [a district court] is limited to the administrative record,' Miller v. United Welfare Fund, 72 F.3d 1066, 1071 (2d Cir. 1995), discovery may be appropriate in some cases where a petitioner seeks to show a conflict of interest." Wagner v. First Unum Life Ins. Co., 100 Fed. Appx. 862, 864 n. 1 (2d Cir. June 14, 2004) (emphasis added). Wagner provides no guidance on how strong a showing a plaintiff must make to convince a court that it should consider a document outside the administrative record when it is conducting a deferential review. Logically, though, that showing ought to be greater than the "good cause" showing necessary under de novo review. For ease of reference, I will label this putatively greater showing as "good-cause-plus."
Turning to the case at bar, what is the appropriate standard of review — De novo review (in which event DeFelice requires "good cause" to go beyond the record)? Or deferential review (in which event I would require "good-cause-plus")? Defendants claim that our Court should undertake a deferential review, using the "arbitrary and capricious" standard. (4/19/05 Joint Letter at 8.) Based on the record before me, it would be premature for me to make a finding on the standard of review; this is a decision more appropriately reserved for Judge Scheindlin, either at trial or upon a dispositive motion.
Accordingly, I rephrase the question to read: With the standard of review uncertain, how should I approach a request for discovery outside the administrative record? I believe the most sensible approach is for me to rule on Plaintiff's requests under a requirement of good cause as opposed to good-cause-plus. My reasoning is as follows: If I require good cause-plus and deny discovery to Plaintiff, and if Judge Scheindlin later rules that her review will be de novo, then Plaintiff might have good grounds to petition Judge Scheindlin to re-open discovery, citing DeFelice and arguing that I unduly limited discovery. Conversely, if I require only "good cause" and grant discovery, and if Judge Scheindlin later rules that her review will be deferential, then she could simply refuse to consider such evidence unless she ruled that Plaintiff's showing amounted to good-cause-plus. Hence, I will require only "good cause." This approach will give Judge Scheindlin more information and easier options; this will best serve judicial economy.
Question 2. What could constitute good cause?
The Second Circuit grappled with this issue last year in Locher v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of America, 389 F.3d 288, 296 (2d Cir. 2004). Prior to Locher, district courts had interpreted DeFelice as holding that a conflicted administrator constituted per se good cause to consider evidence beyond the administrative record. The Second Circuit repudiated those earlier cases, and warned that "a per se rule would allow additional evidence to be presented at the district court level in almost every circumstance on the basis of a presumed conflict." Id. at 295. The Second Circuit did not reverse Judge Swain, however, because she had also found that the insurance company had "no written procedure for claims review" or "for evaluating and processing appeals." Id. at 296. According to the Second Circuit, those factors, in tandem with the conflict of interest, constituted good cause. Id. Conflicts of interest and shoddy procedures are not the only factors that might satisfy the good cause requirement. However, Locher provides a good guidepost: A plaintiff must make a showing that is similar in degree, if not in kind, to the plaintiff's showing in Locher. On the other hand, a plaintiff cannot satisfy the good cause requirement simply by arguing that the plan administrator acted in clear error. Otherwise, every ERISA case would include documents outside the record.
Question 3. Should a plaintiff have to demonstrate good cause before he becomes entitled to discovery? Or is his burden at the discovery stage somewhat lower?
Cases such as DeFelice, Miller, and Locher arose in the context of dispositive motions or trials, not discovery disputes. A discovery ruling was made by Judge Haight in Sheehan v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 2002 WL 1424592 (S.D.N.Y. June 28, 2002). After discussing the case law, Judge Haight wrote:
. . . Even if the Court conducts a deferential review, the existence of a conflict of interest is a relevant factor for the Court to weigh in determining whether MetLife abused its discretion. Firestone [ Rubber and Tire Co. v. Bruch], 489 U.S. [101], 115 [(1989)]; DeFelice, 112 F.3d at 66. Plaintiff may therefore seek information tending to show that Bear Stearns influenced MetLife's decision to terminate Plaintiff's benefits. Plaintiff may also seek information concerning whether MetLife or Bear Stearns was the payor of benefits granted under the Disability Plan.Id. at *4 (footnote omitted). This discovery ruling was later cited by the Second Circuit with apparent approval. Krizek v. Cigna Group Ins., 345 F.3d 91, 98 n. 2 (2d Cir. 2003). After the close of discovery, the Second Circuit suggested, "[a] more prudent and judicially efficient approach would be for district courts to resolve the conflict issue in advance and, only upon finding `good cause,' permit the parties to introduce evidence beyond the administrative record." Id. at n. 3.
A very recent discovery order was made by Magistrate Judge Wall in Allison v. Unum Life Ins. Co., 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3465 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 11, 2005). The opinion is very instructive. In Allison, the defendant insurance company terminated the disability benefits of the plaintiff. After an unsuccessful administrative appeal, the plaintiff sued in district court, alleging that the insurance company was conflicted because it had acted as both the payor of the plaintiff's benefits and as the claim administrator. Before getting to the conflict issue, Judge Wall ruled that plaintiff was entitled to de novo review because the employer had not given any discretion to the claim administrator First Unum. Id. at *14-*26. Judge Wall then proceeded to discuss whether plaintiff was entitled to take discovery outside the administrative record. He prefaced his discussion with the following words:
. . . The court notes that the decision as to whether to allow discovery is distinct from the decision as whether to allow consideration of additional evidence. If discovery is allowed, the plaintiff can then apply to the district judge [Judge Seybert] for a determination as to whether she will expand the record to include information that discovery yielded, the nature of which is not yet known.Id. at *34. Judge Wall went on to rule that:
. . . Allison should be entitled to discovery about whether First Unum and/or Dr. Schwartz [First Unum's medical consultant regarding the plaintiff's benefits] had a conflict when the claim was determined, and whether that conflict influenced the determination. As to First Unum, there is little doubt there was a conflict, inasmuch as First Unum was both the payor and the entity that determined entitlement, but the plaintiff may conduct appropriate discovery to determine whether First Unum was in fact influenced by the conflict. As to Dr. Schwartz, it is not clear whether he operated under a conflict of interest or if such conflict affected his decision. Thus, the plaintiff may depose Dr. Schwartz as to those issues and seek relevant documents from him. The plaintiff is also entitled to discovery on issues relating to the procedures used by First Unum in determining her claim, including the identities of the people who made the decision, the criteria used by First Unum in making decisions and determining appeals, and its practice in regard to maintenance of the appeal records, all factors that were significant to the court in DeFelice and noted in Locher.
The court reiterates that allowing discovery is not tantamount to a ruling that the information gleaned from discovery will be considered by the court in its de novo review. That determination will be made by the district judge at her discretion. The discovery is intended only to give the plaintiff an opportunity to show that good cause exist for going outside the administrative record.Id. at *39-*40 (emphasis added). I agree with Judge Wall's analysis. If a plaintiff were forced to make a full good cause showing just to obtain discovery, then he would be faced with a vicious circle: To obtain discovery, he would need to make a showing that, in many cases, could be satisfied only with the help of discovery.
Accordingly, I rule that Plaintiff need not make the thorough showing of good cause that he must make later before Judge Scheindlin. However, he must show a reasonable chance that the requested discovery will satisfy the good cause requirement. Otherwise, he could indulge in fishing expeditions by summarily stating that any requested discovery might help to show good cause.
Here, Plaintiff lists three grounds, which I will call "Plaintiff's Good Cause Grounds":
In this case, Mr. Anderson contends that the Administrator had a clear conflict of interest. Several facts lead to that conclusion. First, Mr. Anderson's severance claim and his appeal of the denial of that claim were decided by a committee entirely composed of employees of Sotheby's Inc., the entity which would be financially responsible for paying his benefits. Second, the Plan maintains only the barest of procedures, with no specific procedures for the Administrator's consideration of a claim or its consideration of an appeal of the denial of a claim, other than a one-paragraph description in the Summary Plan Description of the timing of notice of determinations. Third, the committee apparently did not keep records of much of the evidence they considered in determining Mr. Anderson's claim and his appeal of the denial of the claim. Stunningly, the Administrator contends that the statements of the Cendant representatives interviewed and relied on by the Administrator are not part of administrative record. The Chair of the Committee, Ms. Alexander, took no notes of those interviews, and the Administrator asserts that Ms. Wahle's notes are protected work product prepared in anticipation of litigation against Mr. Anderson. Furthermore, although Mr. Alexander and Ms. Wahle supposedly reported to the full committee on the content of those interviews, the minutes of the committee's meetings contain no record of what they reported to the committee. See July 8, 2004 Minutes (stating only that "Susan [Alexander] and Karen [Wahle] relayed the details and contents of the interviews" but not describing "the details and contents"). The committee's recordkeeping was even more negligent during the appeal process, as no notes exist of comments solicited from the Cendant representatives prior to the determination on review, which apparently were delivered only orally.
(4/19/05 Joint Letter at 3, emphasis in original, stated in more detail in 4/27/05 Joint Letter at 3-5.) I find that these grounds are similar in degree to the good cause factors identified by the Second Circuit in DeFelice and Locher and applied by the discovery rulings in Sheehan and Allison.
Defendant argues that Plaintiff has made these allegations "[w]ithout any factual support whatsoever[.]" (4/19/05 Joint Letter at 13.) This objection is not compelling. It is undisputed that the Committee was composed of employees of the company that would stand to pay Plaintiff's benefits. It is also undisputed that Cendant has refused to indemnify any such benefit payment. (Plaintiff was a highly paid executive, and his claim for severance is well in excess of $1 million.) With discovery, there is a reasonable chance that Plaintiff could show that (a) the Cendant employees shaded their statements for fear that Cendant might be forced to indemnify, or (b) the Committee was influenced by a conflict of interest. It is also undisputed that Ms. Wahle once agreed to supply the Interview Notes to Plaintiff, yet they remain outside the record and the denial letter included only a minimal written summary of the interviews of the Cendant employees. With discovery, there is a reasonable chance that Plaintiff could show that Defendants' procedures for decisions and appeals were inadequate and did not reasonably assure that the Committee was receiving accurate information.
Hence, I find that Plaintiff has made a showing sufficient to obtain discovery now so that he can use it when he argues to Judge Scheindlin that she should consider matters beyond the administrative record.
Having answered the three threshold questions, I am finally ready to determine whether Plaintiff may obtain discovery of the Withheld Documents, even assuming arguendo that all of them fall outside the administrative record. Each of them could illuminate at least one of Plaintiff's Good Cause Grounds. The Indemnification E-Mail and Valuation E-Mails (and deposition questions about them) may support Plaintiff's conflict argument by fleshing out a motive for Defendants to deny Plaintiff benefits (Cendant refused to indemnify Defendants). Likewise, the Interview Notes (and deposition questions about them) may support Plaintiff's arguments about conflicts of interest and inadequate procedures. Accordingly, I find that the Withheld Documents are relevant to the claims and defenses in the case at bar. I will now determine whether the withheld documents are protected by the work-product doctrine or attorney-client privilege.
The Work-Product Doctrine
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(3) codifies the work-product doctrine as follows:
. . . a party may obtain discovery of documents and tangible things otherwise discoverable under subdivision (b)(1) of this rule and prepared in anticipation of litigation . . . only upon a showing that the party seeking discovery has substantial need of the materials in the preparation of the party's case and that the party is unable without undue hardship to obtain the substantial equivalent of the materials by other means.
(emphasis added). When a document was prepared for multiple purposes, United States v. Adlman, 134 F.3d 1194 (2d Cir. 1998), is the seminal Second Circuit case in determining whether the document was "in anticipation of litigation." In Adlman, a corporation (through its Vice-President for Taxes) claimed work-product protection for a memorandum detailing the potential litigation consequences of a proposed merger. Id. at 1195. At the time the memorandum was drafted, no litigation yet existed, but the corporation viewed litigation as inevitable if it were to finalize the merger. This memorandum served both business and litigation purposes. The Second Circuit grappled with the proper test to apply to such dual-purpose documents. After considering and rejecting an alternative test, the court adopted the following formulation:
The formulation of the work-product rule used by the Wright Miller treatise, and cited by the Third, Fourth, Seventh, Eighth, and D.C. Circuits, [where a] document should be deemed prepared "in anticipation of litigation" and thus within the scope of the Rule, if "in light of the nature of the document and the factual situation in the particular case, the document can fairly be said to have been prepared or obtained because of the prospect of litigation."Id. at 1202, quoting Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller and Richard L. Marcus, 8 Federal Practice and Procedure § 2024 at 343 (1994) (emphasis added by Second Circuit). Importantly, though, the Second Circuit continued:
Conversely it should be emphasized that the "because of" formulation that we adopt here withholds protection from documents that are prepared in the ordinary course of business or that would have been created in essentially similar form irrespective of the litigation.Id. (emphasis added).
All of the Withheld Documents appear to be documents that Defendants would have created in the ordinary course of assessing an employee's beneficiary's claim for a large severance benefit. They would have investigated the claim by conducting interviews to see whether the claimant's new responsibilities and new compensation were comparable to those at his old job. Also, Defendants would have run some numbers to assess the value of the severance, and they would have negotiated with Cendant about the possibility of indemnification. As Plaintiff points out, if the work-product doctrine protected these documents, "no ERISA plan beneficiary could ever obtain discovery into records of an Administrator's investigations of the claim" because an administrator could almost always claim that it anticipated possible litigation. (4/19/05 Joint Letter at 5-6.)
During my in camera review, I noticed that the Indemnification E-Mail also discusses possible settlement numbers. The numbers themselves are "core" work product which must be protected under Rule 26(b)(3) — an attorney's mental impressions and opinions concerning a potential litigation. Accordingly, Defendants may redact the second sentence of the Indemnification E-Mail. I request defense counsel to place an ex parte telephone call to me on May 16 at 10:00 A.M. to discuss whether Defendants should produce some portions of the second sentence (or possibly a paraphrase). However, I will not hold this telephone call if Plaintiff faxes an objection to me by May 13. In all other respects, I deny Defendants' claim of work-product protection for the Withheld Documents.
Attorney-Client Privilege
Defendants argue that the Indemnification E-Mail and the Valuation E-Mails are protected by the attorney-client privilege. Plaintiff counters that the so-called "fiduciary exception" nullifies the attorney-client privilege here. (4/19/05 Joint Letter at 4.) According to the Second Circuit, the fiduciary exception states that:
. . . an employer acting in the capacity of ERISA fiduciary is disabled from asserting the attorney-client privilege against plan beneficiaries on matters of plan administration.In re Long Island Lighting Co., 129 F.3d 268, 272 (2d Cir. 1997). The Ninth Circuit discussed that case and explained two rationales for the fiduciary exception:
The fiduciary exception is rooted in two distinct rationales. . . . First, some courts have held that the exception derives from an ERISA trustee's duty to disclose to plan beneficiaries all information regarding plan administration. See, e.g., Long Is. Lighting, 129 F.3d at 271-72. Viewed in this light, the fiduciary exception can be understood as an instance of the attorney-client privilege giving way in the face of a competing legal principle. Other courts have focused instead on the role of the trustee and have endorsed the notion that, "as a representative for the beneficiaries of the trust which he is administering, the trustee is not the real client in the sense that he is personally being served." [ United States v.] Evans, 796 F.2d [264,] 266 [(9th Cir. 1986)] (quoting Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, Local 35 v. Washington Star Co., 543 F. Supp. 906, 909 (D.D.C. 1982)). Understood in this fashion, the fiduciary exception is not an "exception" to the attorney-client privilege at all. Rather, it merely reflects the fact that, at least as to advice regarding plan administration, a trustee is not "the real client" and thus never enjoyed the privilege in the first place. See Evans, 796 F.2d at 266.United States v. Mett, 178 F.3d 1058, 1063 (9th Cir. 1999). The Second Circuit, however, has stressed:
Under ERISA, an employer may perform both fiduciary and non-fiduciary functions. In line with other circuits, we have held that an employer acts as an ERISA fiduciary only in plan management or administration, not in the plan's design or amendment.In re Long Island Lighting, 129 F.3d at 271. Thus, for the fiduciary exception to apply here, I must determine whether the Indemnification E-Mail and Valuation E-Mails pertain to the "management or administration" of the Plan. Otherwise, the fiduciary exception will not apply. See Hudson v. General Dynamics, 73 F. Supp. 2d 201, 202 (D. Conn. 1999) (refusing to apply fiduciary exception to documents concerning amendment of ERISA plan). Drawing this distinction can be difficult. As Magistrate Judge Treece noted in Henry v. Champlain Enters., Inc., 212 F.R.D. 73, 86 (N.D.N.Y. 2003):
. . . case law provides little guidance as to how to distinguish between fiduciary and non-fiduciary activities. The discussions therein tend to blur the demarcation between the two even more. A more reliable yardstick, when considering this exception to the attorney-client privilege, would be to look at the purpose for which the legal advice is sought.
In Henry, participants in an employee stock ownership plan ("ESOP") brought an action, including an ERISA claim, against the directors, officers, and shareholders of the employer (who acted as the ESOP's ERISA fiduciaries), for causing the ESOP to purchase over-inflated shares of the employer's stock. Defendants sought to use the attorney-client privilege to shield documents pertaining to the employer's tax audits. Judge Treece found these documents "related to the tax audits to be highly relevant to the administration of the ESOP and must be disclosed under `this fiduciary exception.'" Id.
In Mett, the Ninth Circuit explained that:
. . . the case authorities mark out two ends of a spectrum. On the one hand, where an ERISA trustee seeks an attorney's advice on a matter of plan administration and where the advice clearly does not implicate the trustee in any personal capacity, the trustee cannot invoke the attorney-client privilege against the plan beneficiaries. On the other hand, where a fiduciary retains counsel in order to defend herself against the plan beneficiaries . . . the attorney-client privilege remains intact.178 F.3d at 1064.
I have not found any cases within our Circuit that parse the specific issue of whether attorney-client documents pertaining to an administrator's grant or denial of ERISA benefits, created prior to the administrator's decision, fall under the fiduciary exception. Several cases from other circuits have addressed the issue, however, and provide guidance here. See Lewis v. Unum Corp. Severance Plan, 203 F.R.D. 615, 620 (D. Kan. 2001); Coffman v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 204 F.R.D. 296, 299 (S.D.W. Va. 2001); Geissal v. Moore Med. Corp., 192 F.R.D. 620, 625-26 (E.D. Mo. 2000). In Geissal, the court held:
Then plan administrator Herbert Walter states in his affidavit that the plan obtained a legal opinion from attorney Mlynarczyk before the decision to terminate Mr. Geissal's COBRA coverage was finally made, to determine "whether we had a sound legal basis for terminating COBRA coverage. . . ." That legal advice was initially oral and was reduced to writing in a letter dated January 31, 1994. All beneficiaries, including the ultimately disappointed beneficiary, are entitled to know what the legal opinion was, in its oral and written forms. For the purposes of learning this information, Mr. Geissal and the other beneficiaries of the plan were the clients of the retained law firm, not the administrator. Therefore, the attorney-client privilege is inapplicable to bar the production of counsel's communications with the plan administrator upon which this decision of the plan depended.192 F.R.D. at 625 (citations omitted). See also Coffman, 204 F.R.D. at 299 ("[t]here is no indication upon review of these documents that [the attorney] was consulted for the purpose of defending [the administrator in a personal capacity] against any decision made as to Plaintiff's claim."). Even if a defendant were to claim that he created the withheld documents in anticipation of litigation, the fiduciary exception may still apply. As the Lewis court persuasively held:
If the Court finds, as Defendants appear to allege, that the pre-decisional legal advice was secured for the purpose of defending against the disagreement and claims of Plaintiff in prospective post-decisional litigation against the plan, then it follows that whenever the administration of a plan involves the denial of a beneficiary's claim [f]or benefits under a plan, all of the pre-decisional legal advice of counsel would not be subject to the attorney-client privilege and not available for review of the beneficiaries of the plan, including the disappointed beneficiary. This contradicts the principle that the Plan's Administrator administers the Plan in the beneficiaries' best interests. Because denying benefits to a beneficiary is as much a part of the administration of a plan as conferring benefits to a beneficiary, the prospect of post-decisional litigation against the plan is an insufficient basis for gainsaying the fiduciary exception to the attorney-client privilege.203 F.R.D. at 620.
Against this legal background, the Valuation E-Mails clearly fall under the fiduciary exception. In her declaration, Ms. Alexander claims that the Valuation E-Mails (as well as the Indemnification E-Mail):
. . . reflect communications made solely for the purpose of seeking legal advice concerning the interpretation of the Stock Purchase Agreement's provisions regarding employee benefits, the company's rights under the agreement with respect to Cendant, and the company's options for enforcing those rights, and for no other purpose.
(Alexander Decl. ¶ 4.) I have undertaken an in camera review of the Valuation E-Mails and I find Ms. Alexander's description to be inaccurate. The indemnification issue may have been a motivation for the drafting of these e-mails, but it cannot be said fairly that their sole purpose was to seek advice concerning indemnification. The Valuation E-Mails run some numbers for the ordinary business purpose of figuring out how many dollars are at stake. Ms. Alexander sent the First Valuation E-Mail to the CFO. She sent both e-mails to her in-house lawyers, because she anticipated that the lawyers would divulge them to Cendant and (at least in part) to Plaintiff. Such requests fall under the heading of plan "administration" and are exactly the sort of documents covered by the fiduciary exception in Lewis, Coffman, and Geissal.
In the Indemnification E-Mail, Mr. Pillsbury writes about his brief further discussion with Cendant's in-house HR lawyer. It appears that Mr. Pillsbury has just provided Cendant with the dollar valuation set forth by Ms. Alexander in the First Valuation E-Mail. In the discussion, the two in-house lawyers agreed to disagree on Sotheby's indemnity claim against Cendant. Mr. Pillsbury simply reports this to the CFO and Ms. Alexander and Ms. Chervin. He does not give them any legal advice. Subsequently, Ms. Alexander chaired the Committee considering Plaintiff's claim and Mr. Pillsbury and Ms. Chervin attended the relevant meetings of the Committee. The indemnification issue simply concerns whether Sotheby's or Cendant will pay if Plaintiff is awarded a severance benefit. If we apply the spectrum discussed in Mett, the indemnification issue does not concern the personal liability of Mr. Pillsbury or Mr. Sheridan or Ms. Alexander or Ms. Chervin. Thus, I find that the Indemnification E-Mail is unprotected by the attorney-client privilege.
Accordingly, I deny Defendants' claim of attorney-client privilege for the two Valuation E-Mails and the Indemnification E-Mail. However, I repeat that Defendants may redact the second sentence of the Indemnification E-Mail. In all other respects, I direct Defendants to produce the Withheld Documents by May 17, 2005.
THE DISPUTE ABOUT DEPOSITIONS OF CENDANT EMPLOYEES
Cendant, a non-party, makes three arguments for why it should not have to produce its employees for deposition: (1) the depositions would impermissibly exceed the scope of the administrative record; (2) the depositions would be unduly burdensome; and (3) the depositions would seek confidential business information. I will now analyze Cendant's arguments.
The Scope of the Administrative Record
As I discussed above, Plaintiff is entitled to undertake discovery that would bolster his effort to establish good cause for Judge Scheindlin to review evidence beyond the administrative record. Depositions of Mr. Siegel, Mr. Good, Ms. Perez-Brau, and Mr. Meisner would fall under the rubric of the Good Cause Grounds. The Chair of the Committee interviewed all four of these witnesses prior to the Committee's decision. The Committee's denial letter relied heavily on its understanding of what those four witnesses had said. ( See 4/19/05 Joint Letter, Ex. E at 9-12.) True, these four witnesses were not employees of Sotheby's, and three of them had never been. But the crucial question for the Committee was whether Plaintiff's responsibilities were comparable to those at his old job. Accordingly, depositions of these witnesses could explore the breadth and adequacy of the Committee's review process, and also the question of whether any of Cendant's employees shaded their statements for fear that Cendant would be forced to indemnify. Thus, I deny Cendant's request to preclude the depositions of these four witnesses as being outside the administrative record.
Plaintiff also seeks to depose Mr. Ballantyne. Plaintiff writes:
. . . Like Mr. Anderson, Mr. Ballantyne was an Executive Vice President of SIR in charge of affiliate relationships for two regions of SIR. According to documents produced in discovery, Mr. Ballantyne was the only other SIR employee eligible for severance benefits under the Plan. Based on Cendant's statements to him after the Febraury 17, 2004 sale of SIR, Mr. Ballantyne also filed a claim for benefits, asserting that Cendant had not offered him comparable responsibilities or compensation. Mr. Anderson expressly asked the Administrator to consider that Mr. Ballantyne, who was similarly situated, also regarded his duties and compensation at Cendant not to be comparable. The Administrator, however, chose not to interview Mr. Ballantyne and stated in its determination that it did not consider Mr. Ballantyne's situation. The Court [Judge Scheindlin] must assess the reasonableness of the Administrator's decision to ignore Cendant's treatment of Mr. Anderson's fellow Executive Vice President. Mr. Ballantyne's testimony is also relevant to the likelihood that Mr. Anderson would have earned the contingent elements of his compensation package, as he has first-hand knowledge of the willingness of SIR affiliates to convert to franchise. He can also corroborate Mr. Anderson's testimony about representations by Cendant officials concerning the nature of the duties offered by Cendant to the former SIR Executive Vice Presidents.
(4/27/05 Joint Letter at 7-8.) The topics in the last two sentences are only marginally relevant, and I am not sure Plaintiff presented them to the Committee.
The Committee's denial letter set forth reasons why the Committee had declined to consider Mr. Ballantyne:
Finally, we address the assertion in your July 20 letter that the committee failed to consider that George Ballantyne, a similarly situated employee, was not offered a comparable position by Cendant as of March 22, 2004. Apparently, your argument is that if Ballantyne was not offered a comparable position as of this date, then neither could Mr. Anderson have been offered a position. It is accurate that the committee did not consider Cendant's history of negotiation with Mr. Ballantyne — or any other employee or former employee — in its determination of whether Mr. Anderson is entitled to benefits under the terms of the Plan, nor do we believe that consideration of other individual's employment situations would be either appropriate or relevant. Ballantyne withdrew his claim for benefits under the Plan before this committee began considering it. Accordingly, the committee undertook no investigation of the factual assertions in his attorney's March 22 letter. Moreover, even if the author of the March 22 letter was Mr. Anderson's authorized representative, which he is not, nothing in the March 22 letter refers to or relates to Mr. Anderson in any fashion. Therefore, the committee has undertaken no research concerning, is not aware of, and has not considered Ballantyne's employment history in its determination of Mr. Anderson's claim for Plan benefits.
(4/19/05 Joint Letter, Ex. E at 12.)
I will ask Defendants to confirm, by May 13, 2005, that neither Ms. Alexander nor any other attendee at the pertinent Committee meetings interviewed Mr. Ballantyne about Mr. Anderson prior to the September 20, 2004 denial. If they so confirm, then I preclude Plaintiff from deposing Mr. Ballantyne. I find that Plaintiff is receiving enough discovery to make his argument to Judge Scheindlin that it was unreasonable for the Committee not to consider Mr. Ballantyne or interview him.
Whether the Depositions Are Unduly Burdensome
In seeking to preclude the depositions, Cendant also argues:
. . . Mr. Anderson has taken no steps to avoid imposing undue burden on Cendant. In particular, Plaintiff has not yet deposed any of the individuals who made the decision to deny his claim for severance, yet has sought to take the deposition of third parties before even ascertaining whether such testimony would be unnecessarily redundant of testimony he is seeking from Defendants or evaluating the admissibility of such third-party testimony.
(4/27/05 Joint Letter at 9.) Plaintiff says that "in principle, he is agreeable to deposing the party defendant witnesses before the Cendant employees, but he does not control when Defendants will make its witnesses available." ( Id. at 7 n. 4.) I suggest, but do not require, that Plaintiff depose Ms. Alexander and/or Ms. Wahle for three hours each, and then depose the Cendant employees, and then, if necessary, depose Ms. Alexander and Ms. Wahle again for a grand total of no more than seven hours each. By May 19, 2005, all depositions should be scheduled with firm dates. All fact discovery must be completed by June 21, 2005.
Alternatively, Cendant requests:
. . . [A] protective order limiting the scope of testimony to (i) information related to the plan administrator and (ii) information pre-dating the [2/17/04] sale of SIR to NRT Incorporated concerning the bonuses Mr. Anderson received while at SIR, the method of calculating such bonuses, the net profits of the Mid-Atlantic and Tri-State regions for the period January 1-February 17, 2004, the net profits of the Greenwich Office for the period January 1-February 17, 2004 as compared to its profits for the same period in 2003, and sales closed in the mid-Atlantic and Tri-State regions from January 1-February 17, 2004, subject to a stipulation of confidentiality that is mutually acceptable to Cendant and Mr. Anderson.
( Id. at 9.)
I reject the suggestion that the pertinent cut-off date is February 17, 2004. For the next several weeks, Plaintiff worked for a Cendant subsidiary. His compensation was directly linked to the number of affiliates that could be converted to franchises in 2004. He is entitled to discovery on that topic, and on Cendant's views as to whether it might be required to indemnify (to the extent such views were expressed to Sotheby's or to any of the four witnesses prior to September 20, 2004). He is entitled to explore any communications between Cendant and Sotheby's concerning him prior to September 20, 2004. He is also entitled to explore whether any of those communications was inaccurate. He is also entitled to explore the bases and motivations for Cendant's job offer to him.
Finally, Cendant requests "that such information be protected pursuant to a stipulation and order of confidentiality that is mutually acceptable to Mr. Anderson and Cendant." (4/27/05 Joint Letter at 14.) Cendant specifically notes:
. . . [it] has concerns that at least some of the confidential information that Mr. Anderson is seeking is not being sought in connection with his claim for severance or his claim for a pro rata bonus at all. It has these concerns because the business plaintiff has an interest in (Washington Fine Properties) is currently negotiating a potential purchase of two franchise locations from SIRA, and because Mr. Anderson is personally negotiating this potential deal.
( Id. at 13-14.) Plaintiff responds:
Mr. Anderson does not seek confidential business information from Cendant except to the extent that information relates to (1) the calculation of his 2004 bonus from SIR, or (2) the number of affiliates that converted to franchises, as his compensation was directly linked to the number of such conversions. Contrary to Cendant's assertion, Mr. Anderson is not "negotiating a potential purchase of two franchise locations from SIRA" on behalf of his company, Washington Fine Properties ("WFP"). WFP has been in negotiations with former SIR affiliates, but has had no such dealings with SIRA franchises.
( Id. at 8 n. 5.) As soon as possible, Cendant should draft a proposed stipulated protective order to protect any confidential business information that may arise during the depositions of the Cendant witnesses. I direct Plaintiff to serve his comments on that proposal within three business days from receipt. If there is no agreement, I will rule on the basis of a new joint letter.
In all other respects, any further discovery disputes should be addressed to Judge Scheindlin.