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Brown v. Advantage Engineering, Inc., 960 F.2d 1013 (1992)
20 Media L. Rep. 1252
15 Cases that cite this headnote
96o F.2d 1013
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
Antonio BROWN, Plaintiff,
v.
ADVANTAGE ENGINEERING, INC.,
Defendant—Third—Party Plaintiff—Appellee,
Westlands Water District, Movant—Appellant,
Square Butte Electric Cooperative, et al., Movants,
Amoco Chemical Company, Defendant—
Third—Party Defendant—Appellee,
Union Carbide Corporation, et al.,
Defendants—Third—Party Defendants.
No. 91—8675.
I
May 20, 1992.
Plaintiff in civil case moved for permissive intervention
for purposes of unsealing record in previous unrelated case
against defendant brought by another party. The United
States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia,
No. 1:87-CV-1165-RHEL Robert H. Hall, J., denied motion
as untimely. Plaintiff appealed. The Court of Appeals, Fay,
Circuit Judge, held that district court abused its discretion in
sealing court record in previous litigation without showing of
extraordinary circumstances as required by Eleventh Circuit
Wilson decision.
Vacated and remanded.
Edmondson, Circuit Judge, dissented and filed opinion.
West Headnotes (3)
[1]
Records
Court records
District court abused its discretion in sealing
court records in civil suit without showing
of extraordinary circumstances as required by
Eleventh Circuit Wilson decision, and thus.
different plaintiff in subsequent unrelated suit
against same defendant was entitled to obtain
copies of summary judgment motion and other
related documents in previous action.
[2]
Records
ea Court records
Once matter is brought before district court
for resolution, it is no longer solely parties'
case, but also public's case; absent showing of
extraordinary circumstances set forth by district
court in record, as required by Eleventh Circuit
Wilson decision, i.e., that sealing of record
is necessitated by compelling governmental
interest and is narrowly tailored to that interest,
court file must remain accessible to public.
58 Cases that cite this headnote
131
Records
e• Court records
Any member of public has standing to view
documents in court file that had not been
sealed in strict accordance with requirements of
Eleventh Circuit Wilson decision.
31 Cases that cite this headnote
Attorneys and Law Firms
•1013 Robert S. Windholz, Atlanta, Ga., Phillip S. Cronin,
Young, Wooldridge, Paulden, Self & Farr. Bakersfield, Cal.,
and Carolyn Oill, Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, Wendy
D. Brooks and Timothy T. Coates, Beverly Hills, Cal., for
appellant.
•1014 Donald M. Fain, Fain, Major, & Wiley, Atlanta, Ga.,
for Advantage.
James A. Orr, and Nicholas DeWitt, Paul, Hastings, Janofsky
& Walker, Atlanta, Ga., for Amoco.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern
District of Georgia.
Before FAY and EDMONDSON, Circuit Judges, and
ATKINS • , Senior District Judge.
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1
EFTA00614311
Brown v. Advantage Engineering, Inc., 960 F.2d 1013 (1992)
20 Media L. Rep. 1252
Opinion
FAY, Circuit Judge:
This appeal once again concerns the public's right of access
to judicial records in a civil case. The appellant seeks to
review pleadings, motions, and evidence openly submitted
in district court that were subsequently sealed pursuant to
a court monitored settlement. Because we conclude that the
district court abused its discretion in sealing court records
without a compelling reason, we VACATE the district court's
protective order sealing the file in this case and REMAND for
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
On July 30, 1986, Antonio Brown suffered severe injuries
from scalding oil resulting from an explosion at the Amoco
Torlon Products' ("Torlon") plant in Atlanta, Georgia. Brown
recovered workers' compensation benefits for his injuries
from Torlon. In 1987, Brown brought a personal injury suit
against Amoco Chemical Company ("Amoco Chemical"),
Torlon's parent company. At the close of discovery, Amoco
Chemical moved for summary judgment on the ground
that it was immune from suit under Georgia's workers'
compensation law because Amoco Chemical was Torlon's
alter-ego at the time Brown was injured.
The district court rejected Amoco Chemical's alter•ego
defense, holding that there remained material issues of
fact with respect to the alter-ego issue. I Amoco Chemical
subsequently reached a settlement with Brown. One of the
key negotiated elements of the settlement agreement was a
provision that the record would be sealed. Amoco Chemical
apparently agreed to settle the case for an amount exceeding
any of its previous settlement offers in exchange for Brown's
agreement that the record be sealed. The district court entered
an order on July 27, 1990. sealing the record and dismissing
the case.
On October 13, 1989, in an unrelated action, Westlands Water
District ("Westlands") sued Amoco Chemical and Amoco
Reinforced Plastics Company ("ARPCO"), in the United
States District Court for the Eastern District of California.
ARPCO, like Torlon, is a subsidiary of Amoco Chemical. The
complaint alleged that ARPCO designed, manufactured, and
sold defective pipe to Westlands for use in an underground
water system. In its suit, Westlands seeks to show that Amoco
Chemical is the alter•ego of ARPCO.
After extensive discovery in the California action, Westlands
contacted Amoco Chemical directly to obtain copies of
Amoco Chemical's summary judgment motion and other
related documents from the Georgia action. Westlands agreed
to be bound by the blanket protective order of the United
States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia if
Amoco Chemical would provide the requested documents.
Amoco Chemical refused Westlands' request. 2 On December
14, 1990. the district court issued an order permitting the
destruction of the sealed documents in the absence of any
•1015 objection from counsel to preserve the record.
(R8:I82 at I). Due to several letters in response from counsel,
the record remained intact.
On February 7, 1991, Westlands filed a Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 24(b) motion for permissive intervention in
the Georgia action for the purpose of unsealing the record.
Westlands explained that the requested documents reportedly
contained admissions by Amoco Chemical regarding Torlon
that could prove helpful in Westlands' action against Amoco
Chemical and ARPCO in California. Amoco Chemical
principally objected on the grounds that no pending action
existed in which Westlands could intervene, and that the
motion to intervene was untimely because it was filed more
than one year after Amoco Chemical's summary judgment
was denied.
The district court denied Westlands' motion to intervene
under Stalhvorth v. Monsanto Co., 558 F.2d 257 (5th
Cir.1977), which set forth four factors for use as guidelines in
determining the timeliness of a motion to intervene pursuant
to Rule 24(b).3 Moreover, the district court stated that "Ulf
[Westlands] had tried to intervene at the time of the summary
judgment order, [Amoco Chemical] could have factored
[Westlands'] request into its settlement decision. But because
[Westlands] waited until after the court sealed the record, their
intervention would deprive [Amoco Chemical] of a crucial
benefit of the settlement." (R8:200 at 8).
Westlands appeals the district court's denial of its motion
to intervene on the ground that the record in the Georgia
action should never have been sealed absent a compelling
reason, and the district court abused its discretion in finding
Westlands' motion to intervene untimely even if the record
was properly sealed. Amoco Chemical argues that the district
court actively participated in the settlement of the dispute
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EFTA00614312
Brown v. Advantage Engineering, Inc., 960 F.2d 1013 (1992)
20 Media L. Rep. 1252
memorializing the condition that the record be sealed, and
that the district court properly followed Stallworth regarding
a motion to intervene.
II. DISCUSSION
[1]
We squarely addressed the central issue presented in
this case in Wilson v. American Motors Corp., 759 F.2d 1568
(I Ith Cir.1985). The facts in Wilson are strikingly similar
to the case at hand: a plaintiff who had filed a wrongful
death action against a jeep manufacturer in California state
court requested that the judicial records in a federal district
court action in Georgia be unsealed in order to permit the
plaintiff to invoke offensive collateral estoppel against the
jeep manufacturer in the California action. Id. at 1569. As
here, all pleadings, motions, and evidence were filed with the
Clerk of the Court and open to the public. The only distinction
of note between Wilson and the instant case is that in Wilson
the record was sealed after a jury verdict and here the record
was sealed prior to trial, but it is a distinction without a
difference.
In Wilson, we took great pains "weighing the competing
interests of preserving the district court's authority in
encouraging settlement agreements and the public's right to
access to public trials." Id. We found that "[t]he starting
point in such a discussion is the proposition that, absent some
exceptional circumstances, trials are public proceedings." Id.
After discussing the strong common law presumption in favor
of access, we applied the following standard:
'We do not hold that every hearing,
deposition, conference or even trial in
a case of this kind must be open to
the public. We do hold that "where, as
in •1016 the present case, the [court]
attempts to deny [ .
aorns in order
to inhibit the disclosure of sensitive
information, it must be shown that the
denial is necessitated by a compelling
governmental interest, and is narrowly
tailored to b..) that interest." '
Id., at 1571 (quoting Newman v. Graddick, 696 F.2d 796, 802
(I I th Cir.1983) (quoting Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior
Court, 457 U.S. 596, 606-07. 102 S.Ct. 2613, 2619-20, 73
L.Ed.2d 248 (1982))) (emphasis added).
[2]
It is immaterial whether the sealing of the record
is an integral part of a negotiated settlement between the
parties, even if the settlement comes with the court's active
encouragement. Once a matter is brought before a court
for resolution, it is no longer solely the parties' case, but
also the public's case. Absent a showing of extraordinary
circumstances set forth by the district court in the record
consistent with Wilson, the court file must remain accessible
to the public.
[3]
Thus, because it is the rights of the public, an absent
third party, that are at stake, any member of the public has
standing to view documents in the court file that have not
been sealed in strict accordance with Wilson, and to move the
court to unseal the court file in the event the record has been
improperly sealed. As we find nothing in the record to support
the sealing of the court file, we treat the appellant's motion to
intervene as a motion to unseal the file.
Accordingly, we VACATE the district court's protective
order sealing the record and REMAND for proceedings
consistent with Wilson and this opinion.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
The strange things about today's court's opinion are how
easily it assumes that the public interest in civil litigation
generally differs from the interests of the litigants (themselves
members of the public) in a particular case, how little
significance is given to the fact that this case was settled
before trial (unlike Wilson v. American Motors Corp.. 759
F.2d 1568 (11th Cir.1985), upon which today's court relies
so heavily), and how the considerable jurisprudence on
deference in reviewing motions to intervene goes mostly
unmentioned.
Because the case involves in no way the public nature of trials
occurring in open court, this case is materially different from
Wilson. I This case permits us to look at the law on opening
the sealed files of cases that settle before trial to scrutiny by
persons not party to the litigation when there is no claim or
reason to believe that the files need to be seen to check on
either the honesty or the efficiency of the judicial system's
handling of the case and when the procedural mechanism
used to gain access is a Rule 24(b) motion for permissive
intervention filed many months after the case was ended by
settlement.
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EFTA00614313
Brown v. Advantage Engineering, Inc., 960 F.2d 1013 (1992)
20 Media L. Rep. 1252
For permissive intervention, the standard of review is abuse
of discretion. Stallworth v. Monsanto Co., 558 F.2d 257, 263
(5th Cir.I 977). And intervention after settlement or entry of
judgment is not favored. See, e.g., McDonald v. E.J. Lavino
Co., 430 F.2d 1065, 1071 (5th Cir.I 970) (recognizing well-
established principle that intervention after judgment usually
not granted); Reeves v. Wilkes, 754 F.2d 965, 971 ( I 1th
Cir.1985) (affirming intervention denial in part because time
and effort spent to formulate settlement of case would be for
naught); cf. also Engra, Inc. v. Gabel, 958 F.2d 643. 645
(5th Cir.1992) (viewing as untimely motion to intervene filed
eight months after settlement); Aleut Corp. v. Tyonek Native
Corp., 725 F.2d 527, 530 (9th Cir.1984) (finding no abuse
of discretion *1017 where court denied intervention motion
filed on eve of settlement). 2 Timeliness is important when
moving to intervene. Given just the delay in filing the motion
and the importance of finality in litigation, that is, a case's
being over for all purposes at some reasonable, definite time,
there is no abuse of discretion here. But, there is more that
supports the district court's judgment.
For the purpose of civil litigation, courts exist chiefly as a
public service to persons who cannot work out their private
disputes and need the intervention of an unbiased entity to
help bring the controversy to an end. Briefly stated, the public
interest in civil litigation is mainly that these private disputes
be concluded peacefully, fairly and without too much cost to
society as a whole. Voluntary settlements are peaceful, less
costly to society than full litigation and, because parties are
making their own choice, usually will be as fair to both parties
as the results reached following full litigation. Court practices
facilitating, as opposed to obstructing, settlements advance
generally the public's goals for civil litigation.3
Allowing private parties in civil litigation in federal court to
seal the terms of their settlements and other parts of pretrial
records significantly promotes voluntary settlements in some
cases. For example, no one disputes that the settlement
reached in this case depended on the record being sealed.
The linchpin of today's opinion is this idea: "Once a matter
is brought before a court for resolution, it is no longer the
parties' case but also the public's case "This statement is true
in a sense; but it does not seem to help us much in deciding
whether the district court abused its discretion in denying a
motion to intervene in this case. Nor does it lead directly to
the conclusion that pretrial records in civil cases that have
been concluded by settlement ought to be easily opened by
nonparties to the litigation.
It seems plain to me that the public wants civil cases involving
private litigants to be concluded fairly, peacefully and without
too much cost to the general public. It is nowhere as nearly
plain to me that the public wants much or needs much to know
about every dispute settled between private parties so long
as no one claims that the court, as a public institution, acted
wrongfully in the pertinent case. And, in this case, no one
even hints at judicial wrongdoing or inefficiency or anything
else negative about the court.
Let us recall that litigants are not wholly separate from the
public. Litigants are part of the public, and I am unwilling
to assume too quickly that the public wants something very
different from what litigants in a given case want. Defendants
rarely have much say about being hauled into court. I
doubt that they somehow waive all or most of their privacy
privileges simply because someone—justifiably or not—files
suit against them. Plaintiffs also often come to court as a
last resort, sometimes forced to do so by the arbitrariness of
others. They ought not to have to surrender much of their
privacy as a condition of making use of the institutions the
public provides for the peaceful settlement of disputes. Given
the sweep of pretrial discovery, it is easy to understand that
much private information about litigants can be dredged up in
the pretrial process. All of this information may become part
of the court record. I doubt that the public, each of whom may
be a litigant tomorrow, believes all that information ought to
be fair game once a person becomes a litigant, especially if
the pertinent case is settled and never goes to trial.
*1018 Turning to this case, I see no good reason to allow
Westlands to intervene in a case that did not, in fact, involve
Westlands in any way and which had been over for seven
months before Westlands sought to intervene.4 The public's
right to know is a captivating phrase; but this case is, in reality,
about Westlands convenience. If Westlands were allowed
to intervene and then to look at the sealed pretrial records
it might be easier for Westlands to prevail in its own civil
lawsuit against Amoco. I understand Westlands' desire. I do
not think poorly of Westlands' efforts. But Westlands remains
free to conduct discovery in its own suit against Amoco. And
I do not see Westlands' convenience as a compelling public
interest that overrules the privacy expectations of the litigants
in this case, the public interest in promoting settlements that
would be diminished if Westlands prevailed, the value of
finality that would be undercut if this case were reopened for
any purpose, and the timeliness rule that intervention after
settlement or judgment is unfavored.
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EFTA00614314
Brown v. Advantage Engineering, Inc., 960 F.2d 1013 (1992)
20 Media L. Rep. 1252
The issue before us is whether the district court abused its
discretion by denying permissive intervention. I cannot say
the district court abused its discretion in denying Westlands'
motion to intervene. Wilson v. American Motors Corp..
759 F.2d at 1569 ("This appeal raises important issues
regarding the public's right of arri-cs to civil trials.") is
not controlling: no motion to intervene was even involved
in Wilson, and no trial is involved here. See also Nixon
v. Warner. 435 U.S. 589, 98 S.Ct. 1306. 55 L.Ed.2d 570
(1978) (no absolute right of access to judicial records); Belo
Broadcasting Corp. v. Clark. 654 F.2d 423 (5th Cir.1981)
(less than the most compelling circumstances is enough
to prevent access to judicial records not involving trial
proceedings); and FDIC v. Ernst & Ernst, 677 F.2d 230,
232 (2d Cir.1982) (once confidentiality order is entered
and relied upon, it can be modified only if "extraordinary
circumstances" or "compelling need" warrants modification).
I would affirm the district court's judgment.
Parallel Citations
20 Media L. Rep. 1252
Footnotes
Honorable C. Clyde Atkins. Senior U.S. District Judge for the Southern District of Florida. sitting by designation.
1
For the district court's opinion denying Amoco Chemical Company's motion for summary judgment. see Brown v. Advantage
Engineering. Inc.. 732 F.Supp. 1163 (N.D.Ga.1990).
2
Had the district court found that Amoco Chemical was the alter-ego of Torlon in the Georgia action. Amoco Chemical would have
been immune from suit because of Georgia's workers' compensation exclusivity provisions. However, in the California action, an
alter-ego relationship would be detrimental to Amoco Chemical as ARPCO is apparently an unfunded subsidiary in terms of paying
judgments. exposing Amoco Chemical as the parent company.
3
The four factors are: (I) "Dille length of time during which the would-be intervenor actually knew or reasonably should have known
of his interest in the case before he petitioned for leave to intervene"; (2) "(tjhe extent of the prejudice that the existing parties to the
litigation may suffer as a result of the would-be intervenors failure to apply for intervention as soon as he actually knew or reasonably
should have known of his interest in the case": (3) "Mire extent of the prejudice that the would-be intervenor may suffer if his petition
for leave to intervene is denied": and (4) "(t]he existence of unusual circumstances militating either for or against a determination
that the application is timely."Stallworth v. Monsanto Co.. 558 F.2d 257.264-66 (5th Cir.1977).
1
A case is authority only for what it actually decides. Wilson dealt with disclosure of trial proceedings and actually distinguished itself
from earlier circuit precedent less favorable to easy access to court material on the ground that Wilson was dealing with a trial. See
Wilson v. American Motors Corp.. 759 F.2d 1568. 1571 (1 I th Cir.1985). Language such as "What transpires in the courtroom is
public property" is stressed throughout Wilson. See, e.g., id. at 1570. The court in Wilson had no authority to decide any case other
than Wilson. and the facts of this case are not much like Wilson.
2
The idea that intervention can occur after settlement or final judgment also raises worrisome jurisdictional questions. See. e.g.. Tosco
Corp. v. Node!. 804 F.2d 590.592 (10th Cir.1986) (concluding that settlement deprived court of jurisdiction to hear nonparties'
motion to intervene).
3
If fewer cases settled and more cases went to trial, the court system would not be able to handle the additional work without significant
changes—probably costly changes—in the court system. This is another public benefit to having cases settle.
4
Westlands waited for more than three months after it knew about this case's existence before moving to intervene.
End of Document
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