Court Opinion

ID: 9276079
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-28 22:02:39.617563+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:12:56.138946
License: Public Domain

COURT OF CHANCERY
                                    OF THE
                              STATE OF DELAWARE
NATHAN A. COOK                                             LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
VICE CHANCELLOR                                              500 N. KING STREET, SUITE 11400
                                                            WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801-3734

                                 November 28, 2022

Philip Trainer, Jr.                           Michael A. Barlow
Marie M. Degnan                               Abrams & Bayliss LLP
Ashby & Geddes                                20 Montchanin Road, Suite 200
500 Delaware Avenue                           Wilmington, DE 19807
Wilmington, DE 19801

         Re:   Thermo Fisher Scientific PSG Corporation v. Arranta Bio MA, LLC
               C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC

 Dear Counsel:

         Plaintiff has moved pursuant to Court of Chancery Rule 59(f) for reargument

(the “Motion”)1 of my November 15, 2022 order in this matter (the “Order”). 2 For

the reasons explained herein, I largely deny Plaintiff’s motion, with certain limited

exceptions set forth below.

                                  BACKGROUND

         This matter involves highly expedited consideration of a non-compete

provision, which is set for trial in less than three weeks. The parties have fought

over discovery in advance of trial on multiple fronts.

1
    Dkt. 149 (“Mot.”).
2
    Dkt. 140 (“Order”).
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 2 of 12

         Plaintiff served its privilege log on Defendant on October 6, 2022, and

Defendant filed a Motion to Compel relating to Plaintiff’s Wrongful Privilege

Designations and Failure to Produce Termination Documents on November 7, 2022

(the “Motion to Compel”). 3 Following the filing of opposition and reply papers, I

held argument on Defendant’s Motion to Compel on November 15, 2022.

         In support of its Motion to Compel, Defendant identified multiple troubling

aspects of Plaintiff’s production and log that, according to Defendant, point to an

inference of gamesmanship. Defendant explained that numerous documents one

would reasonably expect to have been produced were absent from Plaintiff’s

production. According to Defendant, it was quite likely that, rather than producing

the documents, Plaintiff sprinkled the documents somewhere on its log with

descriptions so deficient that they all but ensured Defendant would not be able to

obtain the documents for use at the December trial. With respect to Plaintiff’s 1,974

total log entries, approximately 95% repeated one of three generic phrases to

describe the purported topic of legal advice. 4 Nearly 80% of Plaintiff’s 1,974 entries

were entirely withheld (rather than redacted). 5 And Plaintiff failed to identify any

3
    Dkt. 123 (“Mot. to Compel”).
4
    Ex. 1 to Mot. to Compel (“Pl.’s Pre-Order Log”); Mot. to Compel at 2–5.
5
    Pl.’s Pre-Order Log; Mot. to Compel at 5, 9.
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 3 of 12

attorney involved for over 33% of the documents that Plaintiff had entirely

withheld. 6

      Without recounting all of Defendant’s arguments here, it suffices to say that

Defendant argued there was ample basis to find Plaintiff’s log grossly deficient, with

the appropriate remedy being waiver of privilege as to the entirety of the log.

      Following a hearing on November 15, 2022, I entered the Order that evening,

granting Plaintiff’s proposed order in part and denying it in part. My comments to

Plaintiff’s proposed order follow:

      Having reviewed the papers and heard today’s argument, I deny Defendant’s
      motion in part, including the request for a blanket waiver of privilege. I find
      good cause, however, to grant the motion in limited part as follows: Within
      five business days, Plaintiff is directed to produce to Defendant in unredacted
      form the 563 documents from its log that Plaintiff has entirely withheld and
      for which Plaintiff has identified no attorney. Plaintiff bears the burden here,
      and its failure to identify an attorney for these documents—which comprise
      over 25% of its total logged documents—falls well short of satisfying
      Plaintiff’s burden. See Stilwell Associates, L.P. v. HopFed Bancorp, Inc.,
      C.A. No. 2017-0343-JTL, Tr. at 118 (Del. Ch. Aug. 28, 2017) (“When you
      don’t list an attorney for a document, that is not a good-faith log. If there’s
      one thing that you have to have for attorney-client privilege or work product
      doctrine, it’s an attorney. Now, you could be passing along an attorney’s
      advice. That is theoretically possible. But there still has to be an attorney. It
      is simply too easy—and there’s a lot of law on this, particularly in the Third
      Circuit's Teleglobe decision—it is too easy and too convenient for clients just
      to claim that whatever their communications between themselves happened
      to be involved attorney advice, to give credit to log entries that simply don’t

6
 Pl.’s Pre-Order Log; see also Mot. to Compel at 5, 9 (noting that “563 of those 1,560
entirely withheld documents do not identify any attorney”).
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 4 of 12

      list anyone. So I am requiring those items to be produced.”); Pfizer, Inc. v.
      Amgen Fremont Inc., C.A. No. 10667-VCL, Tr. at 23 (Del. Ch. July 10, 2015);
      see also Navient Sols., LLC, et al. v. Conduent Educ. Servs., LLC, C.A. No.
      2019-0316-JTL, Tr. at 87 (Dec. 5, 2019). During oral argument, Plaintiff
      pointed to “the time crunch” and argued that, “if we had more time, we could
      have added the name of the lawyer.” Yet, expedition intensifies the need to
      take basic steps to prepare logs correctly precisely because there is no time for
      a “do over.”

Plaintiff filed its Motion on November 20, 2022; as a result, I pushed back the

production deadline to November 29, 2022. Defendant filed its opposition on

November 23, 2022, the day before the Thanksgiving holiday.

                                     ANALYSIS

      A party seeking reargument “bears a heavy burden.”7 “The Court will deny a

motion for reargument ‘unless the Court has overlooked a decision or principle of

law that would have a controlling effect or the Court has misapprehended the law or

the facts so that the outcome of the decision would be affected.’”8 A motion for

reargument “may not be used to relitigate matters already fully litigated or to present

arguments or evidence that could have been presented before the court entered the

7
 Neurvana Med., LLC v. Balt USA, LLC, 2019 WL 5092894, at *1 (Del. Ch. Oct. 10,
2019).
8
 Nguyen v. View, Inc., 2017 WL 3169051, at *2 (Del. Ch. July 26, 2017) (quoting Stein v.
Orloff, 1985 WL 21136, at *2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 26, 1985)).
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 5 of 12

order from which reargument is sought.” 9 “Where the motion merely rehashes

arguments already made by the parties and considered by the Court when reaching

the decision from which reargument is sought, the motion must be denied.” 10

          Plaintiff seeks reargument of the Order “because the naming requirement was

not fully briefed or argued, nor were the consequences of a ruling requiring the

production of those documents.” 11 Plaintiff argues that the Order would require

Plaintiff to produce core privileged documents, including draft complaints and draft

regulatory filings.12 Plaintiff also asks that, as an alternative, I either allow Plaintiff

to amend its log or review documents in camera.13 For the reasons set forth below,

I largely deny Plaintiff’s Motion, with the exception that Plaintiff may withhold draft

complaints and draft regulatory filings.

          First, Plaintiff’s assertion that “the naming requirement was not fully briefed

or argued” is misplaced. Defendant raised its argument concerning the need to

9
 Standard Gen. Master Fund L.P. v. Majeske, 2018 WL 6505987, at *1 (Del. Ch. Dec. 11,
2018).
10
     Wong v. USES Hldg. Corp., 2016 WL 1436594, at *1 (Del. Ch. Apr. 5, 2016).
11
     Mot. at 1.
12
     Id. at 1, 6–7.
13
     Id. at 2–3.
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 6 of 12

identify an attorney in the privilege log throughout its Motion to Compel. 14 Plaintiff

squarely addressed Defendant’s argument on this point in its opposition papers.15

And the issue was a significant topic of discussion during the November 15

hearing.16 The fact that Plaintiff now regrets that it did not make different arguments

in response to Defendant’s Motion to Compel is not sufficient to carry Plaintiff’s

“heavy burden” on reargument.

         Second, Plaintiff argues that I misapprehended the law by holding that every

entry on the privilege log must name an attorney. 17 This is also incorrect. To be

sure, a document does not have to be sent to or from an attorney to be properly

withheld, and the Order does not hold otherwise—but an attorney needs to be

involved somehow and identified.18 There can be no dispute that, while Plaintiff is

14
  Mot. to Compel at 9 (arguing that Plaintiff’s failure to identify any attorney involved is
“improper and constitutes an independent basis for waiver of privilege over these
documents”).
15
  Dkt. 132 at 10 (Pl.’s Opp’n to Mot. to Compel) (arguing that “Arranta is wrong that
every entry on a privilege log must name an attorney” and purporting to distinguish cases
Defendant cited).
16
  Ex. 1 to Dkt. 158 at 28 (Tr. of Oral Arg. on Mot. to Compel) (“THE COURT: Well, what
about the arguments that, number one, there are numerous entries without an attorney listed
at all and there’s no reference in the description to the specific attorney from whom the
legal advice is either provided or sought; and then, second, that these documents are
withheld in their entirety as opposed to being provided in redacted form?”).
17
     Mot. at 4–8.
18
  Indeed, the passage from Stilwell Associates, L.P. that I quoted in the Order specifically
acknowledges these points.
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 7 of 12

entitled to withhold responsive documents on the basis that such documents are

privileged or subject to work product protection, “[t]he burden of proving that the

privilege applies to a particular communication is on the party asserting the

privilege.”19

       Here, Plaintiff decided to stand on a log that was troubling in multiple ways.

As already noted, Plaintiff’s log repeated one of three generic topic descriptions for

approximately 95% of its entries and entirely withheld nearly 80% of its entries.20

Rather than entering an order waiving privilege as to the entire log, however, I

directed the Order to a substantially smaller subset of documents between non-

lawyers that plainly failed to meet basic requirements for logging.

19
   Moyer v. Moyer, 602 A.2d 68, 72 (Del. 1992). To be clear, if the attorney involved for
a log entry truly cannot be identified after diligent inquiry, the party seeking to withhold
the document on privilege or work-product grounds is not out of options—far from it.
There are many ways that a party could still seek to satisfy its burden. For example, at a
minimum, the party could set forth the identifying information it does have for the log entry
and the reason why no further detail can be provided. But to do none of this—as Plaintiff
chose to do here—fails to meet even the most basic logging requirements. Plaintiff’s
“catch-me-if-you-can” approach to logging and withholding communications between
non-lawyers is not something that I believe should be condoned, particularly in the context
of expedited litigation.
20
   Pl.’s Pre-Order Log (repeating the phrases “regarding negotiation of the supply
agreement with Arranta to manufacture plasmids for Thermo Fisher;” “regarding the
termination of the supply agreement with Arranta to manufacture plasmids for Thermo
Fisher;” and “regarding the acquisition of Arranta by Recipharm”).
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 8 of 12

         Third, Plaintiff says that, within days after issuance of the Order, it “re-

reviewed and amended its privilege log” and dropped nearly 20% of the 563

documents at issue from Plaintiff’s log.21 If that is meant to be comforting, it is not.

That error rate is, if anything, eyebrow-raising at this stage. In addition, I have

reviewed Plaintiff’s amended log and compared its entries to Plaintiff’s original log.

First, I note that, contrary to the “time crunch” excuse offered at oral argument,

Plaintiff has now put a name to the attorney involved for a great many entries in just

a handful of days. 22 Second, with respect to the now-removed log entries, it is

difficult to read the prior descriptions for those withheld documents without

becoming yet more concerned about Plaintiff’s log. Defendant’s opposition also

describes a litany of previously withheld documents that have now been produced

and whose contents are hard to square with Plaintiff’s prior log entries. 23 None of

this suggests to me that the Order was in error.

21
     Mot. at 2, 12.
22
  Indeed, it appears that the same one or two attorneys were involved for a quite substantial
number of the documents at issue.
23
   In addition, some entries now seem to describe a different document altogether. E.g.,
compare Pl.’s Pre-Order Log at Entry 1235 (describing withheld document as “[n]otes
reflecting legal advice from counsel”), with Ex. 2 to Mot. (“Pl.’s Revised Log”) at Entry
1235 (describing document as a “[p]resentation”); and compare Pl.’s Pre-Order Log at
Entry 1321 (describing withheld document as an “[e]mail” having no “to,” “from” or “cc”
information), with Pl.’s Revised Log at Entry 1321 (describing document as “meeting
notes”).
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 9 of 12

         Plaintiff further argues that the Order relied on cases involving “extreme

circumstances” that are not present here.24 I disagree. The circumstances presented

at the time of the Order raised troubling concerns of possible gamesmanship in

expedited litigation, and Plaintiff’s material revisions to its log since entry of the

Order only serve to amplify those concerns. Indeed, as already noted, Defendant’s

Motion to Compel presented grounds to consider granting Defendant’s request for

waiver of the entirety of Plaintiff’s log.

         Fourth, having now revised its log and listed one or more attorneys for the

bulk of the subject entries, Plaintiff asserts that, for the remaining entries, it has

determined that it is “not reasonably practicable” to identify the attorney involved

or that the subject document is a “loose document” and identifying the attorney

involved would be “difficult.” 25       Yet, in making these arguments, Plaintiff

improperly “seeks to present arguments or evidence that could have been presented

before the court entered the order from which reargument is sought.”26 To be sure,

Defendant’s opposition raises a number of reasons why, according to Defendant,

Plaintiff’s revised log remains deficient. More fundamentally, however, Plaintiff

24
     Mot. at 10.
25
   Id. at 8, 10. Notably, Defendant states that, while now revealing that the log includes
“loose documents,” Plaintiff still fails to identify those documents.
26
     Standard Gen. Master Fund L.P., 2018 WL 6505987, at *1.
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 10 of 12

could have conducted its re-review and modified its log in response to Defendant’s

meet and confer correspondence, or in response to Defendant’s Motion to Compel.27

And Plaintiff could have presented its arguments to the Court before issuance of the

Order. At bottom, the Order found that Plaintiff failed to comply with basic logging

requirements, and Plaintiff now argues for a “do-over,” which the Order already

rejected. This is highly expedited litigation involving sophisticated parties and

counsel with substantial litigation resources. Even setting aside the concerns over

gamesmanship, I would still reject the request.

           Finally, with respect to a handful of entries reflected on Exhibit 3 and a single

entry on Exhibit 4, Plaintiff claims that the Order would require Plaintiff to produce

“core” privilege items involving a draft complaint and draft regulatory filing.28

Plaintiff argues that, although the corresponding log entries do not identify an

attorney, the entries at issue plus other entries that do identify a lawyer appropriately

reflect attorney involvement. 29 Although it does not appear that Plaintiff advised the

Court of this point in its briefing or during argument, I did not intend the Order to

27
  If anything, Plaintiff has demonstrated that it was entirely capable of quickly revising its
log and specifying, where appropriate, that the attorney involved for a particular entry
could not be identified and why.
28
     Mot. at 6–7
29
     Id.
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 11 of 12

require the production of drafts of complaints and regulatory filings. Accordingly,

I will grant the Motion as to these items. Plaintiff is not required to produce these

documents.

          Beyond the single entry concerning a draft regulatory filing addressed above,

Plaintiff appears to assert that certain log entries identified in Exhibits 4 and 7 to its

Motion similarly demonstrate privilege without any need to identify lawyer

involvement. 30 In contrast to draft complaints, it is unclear why Plaintiff believes

that presentations and draft correspondence are so obviously privileged that Plaintiff

should be excused from satisfying basic logging obligations. Plaintiff fails to

explain its argument here in any significant depth and, even if it had, the argument

comes too late. The motion is denied as to these entries. 31

30
     Id. at 7.
31
   Plaintiff also vaguely states that “[t]here are attachments” to produced emails and that
Defendant—or presumably the Court—can determine that the attachment is privileged by
comparing both “the face of the log and the produced portion of the emails[.]” Mot. at 7.
This “argument” comes too late; is made without citation to case law; and, if anything,
seems to concede that the log entries are deficient. In addition, I note that even the single
example Plaintiff briefly discusses in the Motion appears to show Plaintiff having withheld,
until issuance of the Order, a financial presentation on privilege grounds. Compare Pl.’s
Pre-Order Log at Entry 401 (describing document withheld on attorney-client privilege
grounds as “[p]resentation reflecting legal advice from counsel regarding negotiation of
the supply agreement with Arranta to manufacture plasmids for Thermo Fisher”), with Ex.
6 to Mot. (underlying email referenced in Motion) (listing attachment as “Presentation –
Financial review deck for both Arranta and [other entity]”), with Pl.’s Revised Log at Entry
C.A. No. 2022-0608-NAC
November 28, 2022
Page 12 of 12

                                       ***

      In conclusion, Plaintiff’s Motion is DENIED in large part because Plaintiff

has failed to meet its heavy burden to show that reargument is warranted and instead

seeks to relitigate matters that have been fully litigated. Plaintiff’s Motion is

GRANTED in part such that Plaintiff may withhold draft complaints and draft

regulatory filings that would otherwise be required to be produced pursuant to the

Order.

      IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                      Sincerely,

                                      /s/ Nathan A. Cook

                                      Nathan A. Cook
                                      Vice Chancellor

cc:   All counsel of record (by File & ServeXpress)

401 (stating that the document is no longer being withheld, with the notation “Entry
removed”).