Opinion
3:22-cv-00270-MMD-CSD
11-10-2022
RESNICK & LOUIS, P.C. Matthew B. Beckstead TROY A. CLARK, ESQ MATTHEW B. BECKSTEAD, ESQ Attorneys for Defendant Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. RICHARD HARRIS LAW FIRM JONATHAN B. LEE, ESQ Attorney for Plaintiff Martina Morales-Rios
RESNICK & LOUIS, P.C. Matthew B. Beckstead TROY A. CLARK, ESQ MATTHEW B. BECKSTEAD, ESQ Attorneys for Defendant Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
RICHARD HARRIS LAW FIRM JONATHAN B. LEE, ESQ Attorney for Plaintiff Martina Morales-Rios
STIPULATED CONFIDENTIALITY ORDER
COME NOW Defendants WAL-MART STORES INC. (collectively “Walmart” or “Defendants”), by and through their attorneys of record, Troy A. Clark, Esq., and Matthew B. Beckstead, Esq., of the law firm Resnick & Louis, P.C., and Plaintiff MARTINA MORALES RIO (“Plaintiff”), by and through her attorney of record, Jonathan B. Lee, Esq., of the law firm RICHARD HARRIS LAW FIRM, (collectively with Defendant, the “Parties”), and hereby submit their Proposed Stipulated Confidentiality Order.
The Parties have agreed to and have submitted, and for good cause shown the Court hereby enters, the following Confidentiality Order:
1.This Order shall govern the disclosure of materials designated as Confidential Materialin this litigation. “Confidential Material,” as used in this Order, shall refer to any document or item designated as Confidential or Highly Confidential - Attorneys' Eyes Only, including, but not limited to, documents or items produced during discovery, all copies thereof, and the information contained in such material. Nothing in this Order shall require any party to produce any specific documents or category of documents which a party deems inappropriate for production.
Definitions of Confidential Material
2. “Confidential Material,” as used in this Order, also consists of the following materials and categories of materials:
a. Materials relating to any privileged, confidential, or nonpublic information, including, but not limited to, trade secrets, research design, development, financial, technical, marketing, planning, personal, or commercial information, as such terms are used in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c)(1)(G), and any applicable case law interpreting FRCP 26(c)(1)(G); contracts; non-public compilations of retail prices; proprietary information; vendor agreements; personnel files; claim/litigation information; and nonpublic policies and procedures shall be deemed “Confidential.”
b. Materials containing corporate trade secrets, nonpublic research and development data, including, but not limited to, cost data, pricing formulas, inventory management programs, and other sales or business information not known to the public; information obtained from a non-party pursuant to a nondisclosure agreement; and customer-related Protected Data shall be deemed “Highly Confidential - Attorneys' Eyes Only.”
Part 164 (individually identifiable health information). Certain Protected Data may compel alternative or additional protections beyond those afforded Highly Confidential - Attorneys' Eyes Only material, in which event the Parties shall meet and confer in good faith and, if unsuccessful, shall move the Court for appropriate relief.The Parties shall not designate as “Confidential” or “Highly Confidential - Attorneys' Eyes Only” information that is already public knowledge.
3. The Parties agree that such Confidential Material as described in Paragraph 2 should be given the protection of an Order of this Court to prevent injury through disclosure to persons other than those persons involved in the prosecution or defense of this litigation.
Procedure for Designating Information as Confidential or Highly Confidential
4. To designate information as confidential, the producing party shall mark Confidential Material with the legend “CONFIDENTIAL” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL -ATTORNEYS' EYES ONLY.” Parties shall submit confidential discovery responses, such as answers to interrogatories or answers to requests for admissions, in a separate document stamped with the appropriate legend designating those responses as Confidential Material. The Receiving Party may make copies of Confidential Material and such copies shall become subject to the same protections as the Confidential Material from which those copies were made.
a. Information on a disk or other electronic format (e.g., a native format production) may be designated confidential by marking the storage medium itself (or the native file's title) with the legend “CONFIDENTIAL” or“HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL - ATTORNEYS' EYES ONLY.” The Receiving Party shall mark any hard-copy printouts and the storage medium of any permissible copies of such electronic material with the corresponding legend contained on the original and such copies shall become subject to the
same protections, as the Confidential Material from which those copies were made.
b. Information disclosed at any deposition of a party taken in this action may be designated by the party as confidential by indicating on the record at the deposition that the information is confidential and subject to the provisions of this Order. Alternatively, the party may designate information disclosed at the deposition as confidential by notifying the court reporter and other parties in writing, within fifteen (15) business days of receipt of the transcript, of the specific pages and lines of the transcript which are designated as confidential. The parties may agree to a reasonable extension of the 15-business-day period for designation. Designations of transcripts will apply to audio, video, or other recordings of the testimony. During such 15-business-day period, the entire transcript shall receive confidential treatment. Upon such designation, the court reporter and each party shall affix the “CONFIDENTIAL” or “HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL - ATTORNEYS' EYES ONLY” legend to the designated pages and segregate them as appropriate.
5. A producing party may change the confidentiality designation of materials it has produced, as follows: (1) The producing party must give the receiving parties notice of the change by identifying the documents or information at issue. Once notice is given, the receiving party must make good-faith efforts to ensure that the documents or information are accorded treatment under the new designation. (2) Within a reasonable period after giving notice, the producing party must reproduce the documents or information in a format that contains the new designation. (3) If such information has been disclosed to persons not qualified pursuant to paragraphs 12-13 below, the party who disclosed such information shall (a) take reasonable efforts to retrieve previously disclosed Confidential Material; (b) advise such persons that the material is Confidential; and (c) give the producing party written assurance that steps (a) and (b) have been completed.
Data Security
6. The Parties agree to provide adequate security to protect data produced by the other party(ies) or by non-parties. This includes secure data storage systems, established security policies, and security training for employees, contractors and experts. Adequate security also includes such measures as data encryption in transit, data encryption at rest, data access controls, and physical security, whether hosted/outsourced to a vendor or on premises. At a minimum, any receiving party subject to the terms of this Confidentiality Order, will provide reasonable measures to protect non-client data consistent with the American Bar Association Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility, Formal Opinion 477R.
Clawback Provisions
7. The production of privileged or work-product protected documents, electronically stored information (ESI) or information, whether inadvertent or otherwise, is not a waiver of the privilege or protection from discovery in this case or in any other federal or state proceeding.
8. This Order shall be interpreted to provide the maximum protection allowed by Federal Rule of Evidence (FRE) 502(d) and shall be enforceable and granted full faith and credit in all other state and federal proceedings by 28 U.S.C. § 1738. In the event of any subsequent conflict of law, the law that is most protective of privilege and work product shall apply.
9. Nothing contained herein is intended to or shall serve to limit a party's right to conduct a review of documents, ESI or information (including metadata) for relevance, responsiveness and/or segregation of privileged and/or protected information before production. inform the producing party of the beginning BATES number of the document or, if no BATES number is available, shall otherwise inform the producing party of the information.
11. A producing party must give written notice to any receiving party asserting a claim of privilege, work-product protection, or other ground for reclaiming documents or information (a “clawback request”). After a clawback request is received, the receiving party shall immediately sequester the document (if not already sequestered) and shall not review or use that document, or any work product containing information taken from that document, for any purpose. The parties shall meet and confer regarding any clawback request.
Who May Receive Confidential and Highly Confidential Information
12. Confidential. Any Confidential material and the information contained therein shall be disclosed only to the Court, its staff, in-house counsel and outside counsel of record for each party, and also shall be disclosed on a need-to-know basis only to the parties, counsel's staff personnel, employees of a party to whom disclosure is necessary in connection with the preparation for and trial of this action, and any witnesses in the case (including consulting and testifying experts) as may from time to time reasonably be necessary in prosecution or defense of this action.
13. Highly Confidential-Attorneys' Eyes Only Material. Material and information designated as “Highly Confidential-Attorneys' Eyes Only” shall only be disclosed to the Court, its staff, in-house and outside counsel of record for each party, the secretarial, clerical, and paralegal staff of each, and consulting and testifying experts retained by a party in this action. any Confidential Material to a current or former employee, consultant, advisor, or agent of that entity, the Receiving Party's counsel must confer with counsel for the Producing Party.
15. Persons Receiving Confidential Material Must Sign Exhibit A. Counsel for each party shall advise all persons to whom Confidential Material is disclosed pursuant to this Order of the existence of this Order and shall provide all such persons (other than the Court and its staff) with a copy of this Order. Counsel shall also require such persons to execute the Declaration attached as Exhibit A, prior to the disclosure of Confidential Material.
16. Duties in the Event of Unauthorized Disclosures. It shall be the obligation of counsel, upon learning of any unauthorized disclosure or threatened unauthorized disclosure of Confidential Material or information contained therein, or any other breach or threatened breach of the provisions of this Order, to promptly notify counsel for the Producing Party. The notification shall be supplemented with reasonable details of the circumstances of the disclosure in order to permit the Producing Party to understand and take appropriate steps. Each party and its counsel agree to take reasonable and good-faith efforts to contain or limit any breach promptly upon receiving notice of it, and to make reasonable and good-faith attempts to retrieve any unauthorized disclosure of documents or information. This provision does not limit the producing party's entitlement to damages resulting from any breach of this Order.
Authorized Uses of Confidential Material
17. Confidential Material shall only be used for the purpose of litigating the above-captioned lawsuit and may not be used in other lawsuits.
18. Persons having knowledge of Confidential Material and information contained therein, due to their participation in the conduct of this litigation, shall use such knowledge and information only as permitted herein, and such persons shall not disclose such Confidential Material, their contents, or any portion or summary thereof to any person(s) not involved in the conduct of this litigation.
19. If any person having access to the Confidential Material herein shall violate this Order, he/she may be subject to sanctions by the Court and may be liable to pay for the damages caused to the Producing Party by his/her violation.
Challenges to the Designation of Confidential Material
20. Any party or interested member of the public may move the Court to modify the designation of any documents or information produced in this litigation (either to include additional protection with respect to confidentiality or to remove a confidential designation). Before making such a motion, the party or an interested member of the public shall first attempt to resolve such dispute with the producing party's counsel. Pending resolution of any challenges to the designation of documents or information, the material at issue shall continue to be treated as Confidential Material until ordered otherwise by the Court. The burden shall be on the party seeking to modify the designation to show that the producing party's designation is inappropriate.
Withholding of Information
21. Non-relevant Attachments. The parties will not produce non-relevant attachments that are attached to relevant emails. When an attachment is withheld, either for privilege or non-responsiveness, the producing party shall produce a one-page PDF image in place of the withheld attachment, correspondingly stating “Attachment Withheld-Privileged” or “Attachment Withheld-Nonresponsive” and bearing a sequential BATES number within the family BATES range. If any attachment to an email contains responsive content, then the cover email shall be produced for context, regardless of the cover email's responsiveness. The cover email may be redacted in part to remove sensitive information, as described below. information, trade secrets, or information regarding products, data, or people. Privilege redactions will state, over the redacted portion, “Redacted-Privileged,” and all other redactions will state, “Redacted-Nonresponsive.” Redactions of emails will not redact the names of recipients or the subject line of the emails, unless the subject line is itself privileged or contains the sensitive information described above, in which case only so much of the subject line will be redacted as may be needed. The parties will produce redacted documents in PDF format (or in native format for file types that do not convert well to PDF, such as Excel files) with corresponding searchable OCR text and the associated metadata for the document, ensuring the redacted content is fully protected from disclosure.
Confidential Material in Filings, Hearings, and Trial
23. Confidential Material in Filings. Without written permission from the Producing Party or a court order secured after appropriate notice to all interested persons, a party may not file Confidential Material in the public record in this action (or in any other action, e.g., an appeal). A party that seeks to file under seal any Confidential Material must comply with LR IA 10-5 and LR IC 4-1(c). Confidential Material may only be filed under seal in a manner prescribed by the Court for such filings.
24. Manner of Sealing. In the event Confidential Materials or portions of transcripts are sealed as confidential by the Court or as described in paragraph 23 above, they shall be filed in an envelope bearing the following designation when deposited:
CONFIDENTIAL
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONFIDENTIALITY ORDER OF THE COURT, THE CONTENTS OF THIS ENVELOPE SHALL BE TREATED AS CONFIDENTIAL AND MUST NOT BE SHOWN TO A PERSON OTHER THAN THE COURT, ATTORNEYS IN THIS CASE, OR TO PERSONS ASSISTING THOSE ATTORNEYS. contained therein at any hearing that is open to the public, the party seeking to use the Confidential Material must give at least seven (7) days advance notice to the producing party of the intent to use the Confidential Material so that the Producing Party may seek an appropriate Court Order to protect the Confidential Material.
Continuing Effect of This Order and Duty to Destroy
26. This Order shall continue to be binding throughout and after the conclusion of this litigation, including all appeals. Within thirty (30) days of settlement or final adjudication, including the expiration or exhaustion of all rights to appeal or petitions for extraordinary writs, each party or non-party to whom any materials were produced shall, without further request or direction from the Producing Party, promptly destroy all documents, items or data received including, but not limited to, copies or summaries thereof, in the possession or control of any expert or employee. This requirement to destroy includes all documents designated as Confidential Material. The Receiving Party shall submit a written certification to the Producing Party by the 30-day deadline that (1) confirms the destruction/deletion of all Confidential Material, including any copies of Confidential Materials provided to persons required to execute Exhibit A (Affidavit), and (2) affirms the Receiving Party has not retained any copies, abstracts, compilations, summaries, or any other format reproducing or capturing any of the Confidential Material. Notwithstanding this provision, outside counsel is entitled to retain an archival copy of filings, depositions, and deposition exhibits.
Procedure if Confidential Material Is Required to Be Produced receipt of such Demand to the party or non-party who produced or designated the material as Confidential Material, and shall object to the production of such materials on the grounds of the existence of this Order. At the request of the party or non-party who produced or designated the material as Confidential Material, the Receiving Party shall refuse to comply with the Demand unless (a) ordered to do so by a court with jurisdiction over the Receiving Party; or (b) released in writing by the party or non-party who designated the material as Confidential Material. The burden of opposing the enforcement of the Demand shall fall upon the party or non-party who produced or designated the material as Confidential Material. Compliance by the Receiving Party with any order of a court of competent jurisdiction, directing production of any Confidential Material, shall not constitute a violation of this Order.
Application of This Order to Productions by Third Parties
28. This Order may be used by third parties producing documents in connection with this action. Third parties may designate information as Confidential or Highly Confidential - Attorneys' Eyes Only.
29. If a third party produces (or intends to produce) documents and does not designate (or does not intend to designate) those documents as Confidential Material, then any party to this action may seek to designate that third party's documents or categories of documents as Confidential Material. In that case, it will be the burden of the party seeking protected status to move for a court order designating the materials as Confidential Material after the parties confer.
30. In the event additional parties join or intervene in this litigation, the newly joined party(ies) shall not have access to Confidential Material until its/his/her/their counsel has executed and, at the request of any party, filed with the Court the agreement of such party(ies) and such counsel to be fully bound by this Order.
31. The Parties agree that nothing in this Order shall be deemed to limit the extent to which counsel for the Parties may advise or represent their respective clients, conduct discovery, prepare for trial, present proof at trial, including any document designated Confidential Material as set forth herein, or oppose the production or admissibility of any information or documents which have been requested.
32. This Order shall remain in full force and effect until such time as it is modified, amended, or rescinded by the Court.
ORDER
Paragraph 23 is modified to reflect that any motion regarding filing confidential information and motions to seal shall also comply with the requirements of Kamakana v. City and County of Honolulu, 447 F.3d 1172 (9th Cir. 2006). See also, Center for Auto Safety v. Chrysler Group, LLC, 809 F.3d 1092, 1097 (9th Cir. 2016).
Paragraph 26 is modified to reflect that although the parties may agree to be bound by the confidentiality terms of this Order beyond the conclusion of this lawsuit, the dismissal of this action will terminate the jurisdiction of this court.
DECLARATION OF COMPLIANCE WITH CONFIDENTIALITY ORDER
___1. My name is___ . I live at___ . I am working on behalf (or at the direction and engagement) of___ .
2. I am aware that a Confidentiality Order has been entered in the above-captioned lawsuit. A copy of this Confidentiality Order has been given to me, and I have read and understand the provisions of same.
3.I acknowledge that documents and information designated as confidential and/or highly confidential pursuant to such Confidentiality Order (“Confidential Materials”) are being disclosed to me only upon the conditions that I agree (a) to be subject to the jurisdiction of this Court, and (b)to comply with that Order. I hereby agree to abide by such Order, subject to all penalties prescribed therein, including contempt of Court, for disobedience of said Order. I promise that the documents and information given confidential treatment under the Confidentiality Order entered in this case will be used by me only to assist counsel for the parties in preparing for litigation of the above-captioned matter. I understand that any use of such Confidential Material in any manner contrary to the provisions of the Confidentiality Order may subject me to the sanctions of this Court for contempt and to liability for any damages caused by my breach of the Confidentiality
4. I shall not disclose nor permit to be reviewed or copied said Confidential Materials, or any information derived from, by any person other than the parties and counsel for the parties or members of their staff.
5. Within 30 days after the above-captioned lawsuit ends in a final non-appealable order, I agree to destroy all Confidential Materials in my possession.
I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of Nevada that the foregoing is true and correct.
Exhibit A, Declaration of Compliance with Confidentiality Order