Griffith, Charlena v. University Hospital , 249 F.3d 658 ( 2001 )


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  • In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 00-2936
    CHARLENA GRIFFITH, FANNIE BOOKER,
    CAROLYN RUSSEL, et al.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    v.
    UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL, L.L.C., UNIVERSITY
    HOSPITAL LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, UNIVERSITY
    HEALTH SYSTEMS, INCORPORATED, et al.,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    FREDERICK T. ALT, ALAN BERGER,
    NORMAN BERGER FAMILY TRUST, et al.,
    Proposed Intervenors-Appellants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 97 C 7370--Robert W. Gettleman, Judge.
    Argued FEBRUARY 14, 2001--Decided May 4, 2001
    Before POSNER, COFFEY and RIPPLE, Circuit
    Judges.
    COFFEY, Circuit Judge. This appeal
    concerns an attempt by the Appellants to
    intervene in this class-action suit for
    purposes of modifying a protective order
    and settlement agreement that preclude
    them from reviewing materials obtained by
    the plaintiffs through discovery.
    Appellants are the claimants in an
    arbitration proceeding with similar
    parties and issues, and they wish to
    avoid the expense of duplicating the
    discovery that has taken place in this
    suit. The district court denied the
    Appellants’ motion to intervene, finding
    that modification of the confidentiality
    provision of the settlement agreement
    posed a danger to the settlement--the
    details of which had already been
    distributed to the class members.
    Appellants contend that the district
    court abused its discretion in denying
    the motion because it did not identify a
    substantial right that would be tangibly
    prejudiced by allowing an intervention
    solely to modify the proposed
    settlement’s confidentiality provisions.
    We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    On May 29, 1997, approximately 225
    employees of a Chicago psychiatric
    hospital lost their jobs when the
    facility was permanently closed. The
    hospital (University Hospital, L.L.C. and
    its corporate predecessor, University
    Hospital, Inc.) had been operating under
    a lease from University Hospital
    Association Limited Partnership
    (hereinafter "UHALP"), which was formed
    in 1989 specifically to purchase,
    renovate and lease the facility for use
    as a psychiatric hospital.
    UHALP consisted of a general partner and
    four classes of limited partners,
    including the Class A partners who are
    the proposed intervenors in this action.
    The partnership agreement named Ling
    Corporation as the general partner and
    Ling’s owner, Michael C. Markovitz, as
    the Class C partner. The partnership
    agreement contained a "sell-back option"
    under which the general and Class C
    partners were required to repurchase
    other partners’ shares if one or more
    "triggering events" occurred. One such
    triggering event was the closing of the
    hospital for a period in excess of thirty
    days.
    In March 1997, the hospital closed for
    more than thirty days. Pursuant to their
    rights under the partnership agreement,
    Appellants (representing a majority of
    the Class A partners) issued a sell-back
    demand to Ling and Markovitz. This demand
    was not honored, and Ling also refused to
    furnish an equitable partnership
    accounting requested by certain
    Appellants. On October 31, 1997, the
    Class A partners filed a complaint with
    the American Arbitration Association
    against Ling and Markovitz seeking
    enforcement of the sellback provision and
    an equitable accounting.
    Meanwhile, former hospital employees
    (hereinafter Griffith Plaintiffs) filed
    the underlying class-action suit on
    October 21, 1997, seeking damages against
    the hospital, UHALP, Markovitz and
    others, under statutory and common law,
    including a claim arising under the
    Worker Adjustment and Retraining
    Notification Act, 29 U.S.C. sec. 2102, et
    seq. This claim alleged that the
    hospital’s failure to give employees 60-
    day prior notice before closing the
    hospital was a violation of federal law.
    During discovery in Griffith v. UHLLC,
    counsel for the plaintiffs deposed
    fourteen witnesses and obtained 11,000
    documents related to the reasons for
    closing the hospital, the hospital’s
    billing practices, and its financial
    problems. The district court issued two
    protective orders regarding matters under
    discovery, one on July 8, 1998, and one
    on July 15, 1999.
    Due to the similarity of issues in the
    arbitration and the instant case,
    discovery information obtained from the
    hospital in this case was shared between
    attorneys for the Griffith Plaintiffs and
    the Class A partners in the Alt v.
    Markovitz arbitration (hereafter Alt
    Claimants). On March 1, 2000, however,
    the Griffith parties reached a settlement
    that included an agreement providing that
    the parties were required to maintain the
    confidentiality of "any information
    produced during the course of the
    Griffith litigation . . . except that
    filed in the public Court record." The
    district court preliminarily approved the
    agreement on March 22, 2000, and directed
    that members of the class be notified of
    the settlement, including the
    confidentiality provision.
    Following approval of the settlement,
    Baum Sigman, counsel for the Griffith
    plaintiffs, notified counsel for the Alt
    claimants that pursuant to the
    confidentiality provision of the
    settlement agreement he could no longer
    share information he obtained during
    discovery. Because the Alt Claimants had
    not completed their review of Sigman’s
    files, they responded in May 2000 by
    obtaining a subpoena duces tecum against
    Sigman in the arbitration proceeding.
    After Markovitz and Ling Corporation
    objected to the subpoena and requested
    that it be quashed, the arbitrator
    ordered Sigman to release information not
    rendered confidential either by the
    settlement agreement or the Griffith
    court’s protective orders. However, the
    arbitrator declined to enforce the
    subpoena as it related to information
    rendered confidential by the district
    court in Griffith, and suggested the Alt
    Claimants bring a motion for intervention
    before the Griffith court. The motion to
    intervene, including a proposed motion to
    modify the protective orders and the set
    tlement agreement’s confidentiality
    clause, was filed on June 19, 2000.
    At a hearing held three days later, the
    district court denied the motion, fearing
    that intervention could potentially
    derail the settlement and "change the
    rules of the game for the class members,"
    who had already been notified of all
    provisions in the agreement (including
    the confidentiality clause) two months
    before. The court believed that interven
    tion on the terms requested by the Alt
    Claimants could upset the finality of the
    settlement, thereby affecting the
    Griffith Plaintiffs adversely. Although
    sympathetic to the Alt Claimants’ desire
    to avoid having to undertake extensive
    discovery already performed by the
    Griffith Plaintiffs, the court placed a
    higher value on protecting the interests
    of class members who had relied on the
    notice of settlement they received:
    "[T]hat is paramount here. It’s more
    important than avoiding some duplication
    in discovery efforts."
    Thus, even though the court acknowledged
    that it would normally be inclined to
    allow intervention, the court found that
    the potential for prejudice resulting
    from a change in the agreement’s terms of
    confidentiality outweighed the Alt
    Claimants’ interest in avoiding duplicate
    discovery. In July 2000, the district
    court granted final approval for the set
    tlement agreement and ordered
    disbursement of the settlement funds that
    had been deposited in escrow.
    DISCUSSION
    The Alt Claimants appeal the district
    court’s decision to deny their motion to
    intervene. A district court’s denial of a
    motion for permissive intervention is
    reviewed under the abuse of discretion
    standard. Shea v. Angulo, 
    19 F.3d 343
    ,
    346 (7th Cir. 1994).
    The rule of law applicable to a decision
    in this case provides as follows: "Where
    an appropriate modification of a
    protective order can place private
    litigants in a position they would
    otherwise reach only after repetition of
    another’s discovery, such modification
    can be denied only where it would
    tangibly prejudice substantial rights of
    the party opposing modification." Wilk v.
    American Medical Association, 
    635 F.2d 1295
    , 1299 (7th Cir. 1981). "Once such
    prejudice is demonstrated, however, the
    District Court has broad discretion in
    judging whether that injury outweighs the
    benefits of any possible modification of
    the protective order." Id.
    We have recognized that intervention is
    "the procedurally appropriate course for
    third-party challenges to protective
    orders." Grove Fresh Distrib. Inc. v.
    Everfresh Juice Co., 
    24 F.3d 893
    , 896
    (7th Cir. 1994). Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 24(b), governing permissive
    intervention, is "sufficiently broad-
    gauged to support a request of
    intervention for the purposes of
    challenging confidentiality orders." Jes
    sup v. Luther, 
    227 F.3d 993
    , 998 (7th
    Cir. 2000) (applying Rule 24(b)(2) to
    newspaper’s motion to intervene in
    settlement agreement that included a
    confidentiality provision). However, Rule
    24(b) vests district courts with
    "considerable discretion" when deciding
    whether to permit intervention by third
    parties seeking to protect their
    interests in a particular action. EEOC v.
    National Children’s Center, Inc., 
    146 F.3d 1042
    , 1048 (D.C. Cir. 1998). Given
    this board discretion, reversal of a
    court’s denial of a Rule 24(b) motion for
    permissive intervention "is a very rare
    bird indeed." Id., (citing United States
    v. Pitney Bowes, Inc., 
    22 F.3d 66
    , 73 (2d
    Cir. 1994)).
    The Alt Claimants rely on Wilk for their
    position that the district court erred in
    denying their motion to intervene for the
    limited purpose of modifying the
    protective orders and confidentiality
    agreement. Wilk involved two very similar
    antitrust suits against the American
    Medical Association, one brought by a
    group of Illinois chiropractors and one
    brought by the State of New York. Wilk,
    635 F.2d at 1296. After an Illinois
    district court issued a protective order
    covering most of the discovery materials
    obtained in the case brought by the
    chiropractors, the State of New York
    moved to intervene for the limited
    purpose of modifying that protective
    order. Id. at 1297. The Illinois court
    ultimately denied New York’s motion to
    modify the protective order. Id. This
    Court reversed, noting that allowing the
    use of discovery "in aid of collateral
    litigation on similar issues . . .
    materially eases the tasks of courts and
    litigants and speeds up what may
    otherwise be a lengthy process." Id. at
    1299. We held that these policy
    considerations justify intervention for
    the purpose of modification of protective
    orders unless such modification "would
    tangibly prejudice substantial rights of
    the party opposing modification." Id.
    The Wilk test requires a district court
    to determine, when faced with a motion to
    intervene to modify a protective order,
    (1) whether the party opposing
    intervention has any substantial right at
    stake, and (2) whether the proposed
    modification would "tangibly prejudice"
    that right. Id. at 1299; see also Grove
    Fresh, 24 F.3d at 896 (remanding denial
    of motion to modify a protective order
    for reconsideration in light of Wilk);
    Jepson, Inc. v. Makita Elec. Works, Ltd.,
    
    30 F.3d 854
     (7th Cir. 1994). If tangible
    prejudice is established, the court must
    decide "whether that injury outweighs the
    benefits of any possible modification of
    the protective order." Wilk, 635 F.2d at
    1299.
    The Alt Claimants argue that the
    district court abused its discretion in
    holding that the Griffith parties
    possessed a substantial right that would
    be prejudiced by modifying the settlement
    agreement and protective orders to allow
    the Alt Claimants access to the discovery
    material. They contend that a substantial
    right is not at stake here merely because
    the discovery materials might be harmful
    to the Griffith defendants. They further
    argue that the only possible substantial
    right which could be raised in a Wilk
    analysis of this case is one of
    protection from transfer based on the
    privileged nature of the discovery
    materials. Since discovery in the
    arbitration proceeding could recreate the
    information, the Alt Claimants submit
    that the materials are not privileged and
    thus no substantial right of the parties
    in Griffith is at stake.
    These arguments ignore the district
    court’s clear identification of the
    substantial right at issue in this case--
    the right of class members affected by
    the settlement to rely on its provisions,
    including the confidentiality provisions.
    The court also found that the proposed
    intervention would tangibly prejudice
    that right and might very well upset the
    settlement. As the district court judge
    noted at the June 22, 2000 motion
    hearing, "[I]n managing a class action,
    to change the rules after notice has gone
    out [and] preliminary approval has been
    given . . . could upset potentially that
    settlement and change the rules of the
    game for the class members."
    The district court recognized the Alt
    Claimants’ presumptive right to intervene
    and modify the settlement agreement and
    protective orders, but believed that such
    action would undermine the parties’
    reliance on the confidentiality provision
    of the settlement agreement and possibly
    compromise the agreement altogether.
    Indeed, the settlement agreement was
    reached only after three years of complex
    litigation, extensive negotiation, and
    presentation to the district court for
    approval. At the very late date on which
    the Alt Claimants brought their motion
    for intervention, in excess of 200
    settlement notices had already been sent
    to class members notifying them of the
    terms of the settlement. Permitting
    intervention on the terms requested by
    the Alt Claimants, would, at the very
    least, require revised notices to be
    prepared and sent to all class members.
    We conclude that the district court did
    not abuse its discretion in denying the
    Alt Claimants’ motion to intervene and in
    ruling that the Griffith parties’
    reliance on the negotiated terms of its
    settlement was a substantial interest
    that would be prejudiced by permitting
    intervention on the terms requested by
    the Alt Claimants.
    Our conclusion is buttressed by the fact
    that the Alt Claimants make no claim that
    the discovery materials obtained in the
    Griffith suit, which are now rendered
    confidential by the settlement agreement,
    cannot be obtained through discovery in
    the arbitration. While it is true that
    the rule of Wilk is intended to avoid the
    wastefulness of duplicating discovery
    already made, this consideration,
    standing alone, must not take precedence
    over a court’s detailed identification of
    substantial rights that would be
    prejudiced by intervention for
    modification purposes. Once prejudice has
    been found, the district court enjoys
    broad discretion to weigh such prejudice
    against the benefits of permitting
    modification of a protective order. Wilk,
    635 F.2d at 1299. Where, as here, the
    benefit to be obtained by permitting
    modification consists solely of the
    convenience of the moving party, as
    opposed to the preservation of or access
    to information otherwise unattainable, we
    cannot say that the district court abused
    its broad discretion in finding that
    intervention was not appropriate. The
    burden imposed on the Alt Claimants by
    denial of their motion to intervene is no
    greater than what they would have
    experienced if the Griffith suit had
    never been filed, or had been settled
    before substantial discovery had taken
    place. In light of this fact, we cannot
    say that the benefit to be conferred by
    granting the motion to intervene in any
    manner outweighs the prejudice to the
    Griffith parties identified by the
    district court.
    Because we affirm the district
    court’s decision to deny intervention
    based on the authority of Wilk, we need
    not address Appellees’ additional
    argument that the Alt Claimants’ motion
    to intervene and modify the settlement
    agreement and protective orders was
    untimely.
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that the district court did not
    abuse its discretion in determining that
    the Appellees possessed a substantial
    right that would have been prejudiced by
    permitting intervention for purposes of
    modifying the settlement agreement and
    protective orders. The decision of the
    district court is AFFIRMED.