Crime Fraud Exception Order
Crime Fraud Exception Order
Crime Fraud Exception Order
UNITEDSTATESDISTRICTCOURT
SOUTHERNDISTRICTOFFLORIDA
MIAMIDIVISION
CASENO.1321158CIVLENARD/GOODMAN
MONICABARBA,etal.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
SHIREUS,INC.,etal.,
Defendants.
_______________________________/
ORDERCONCERNINGCRIMEFRAUDEXCEPTION
Undersignedagreedtoundertakeanincamerareviewoftwentydocumentsconcerning
privilegeissues.[ECFNo.184].TheUndersignedorderedDefendantstosubmitunder
sealthedocumentsatissue,andIalsodirectedthepartiestosubmitmemoranda.[Id.].
The Undersigned issued an Order [ECF No. 201] ruling on the privilege question
concerningalltwentydocuments,butIreservedrulingontheapplicationofthecrime
fraud exception to seven of the documents: Doc. ID 262448462; Doc. ID 002976869;
Doc.ID262859860;Doc.ID335254255;Doc.ID319749768;Doc.ID262411425;Doc.
ID262847848.1
Concerningthecrimefraudexception,Plaintiffsattachedmorethan800 pages of
exhibits in support of their memorandum. As noted in the previous Order [ECF No.
TheUndersignedruledthatallsevendocumentsweresubjecttoattorneyclient
privilege.[ECFNo.201,p.11].
201, p. 12 n. 4] Plaintiffs took significant liberties with the Undersigneds Order [ECF
No. 184] allowing them to submit a memorandum of law on the privilege issues that
was to be no longer than ten doublespaced pages, excluding signature block and
certificate of service. The Undersigned did not and will not strike the exhibits,
however.
factual and legal issues concerning the ultimate substantive determinations on which
thecaseitselfturnsandtheunderwhelmingpresentationofcaselawonthesubject,the
Undersigned required [ECF No. 201] additional briefing from both parties. Having
reviewed the original briefing, the supplemental briefing and the documents at issue
themselves, the Undersigned sustains Defendant Shire US, Inc.s (Shire) claim of
attorneyclient privilege and denies with prejudice Plaintiffs request to apply the
crimefraudexception(andtorequireShiretoturnoverthedocuments).
LegalStandardforCrimeFraudException
The attorneyclient privilege does not protect communications made in
furtheranceofacrimeorfraud.U.S.v.Cleckler,265F.Appx850,853(11thCir.2008)
(internal quotation marks omitted). This Circuit applies a twopronged test for the
crimefraudexception:
First, there must be a prima facie showing that the client was engaged in
criminalorfraudulentconductwhenhesoughttheadviceofcounsel,that
he was planning such conduct when he sought the advice of counsel, or
thathecommittedacrimeorfraudsubsequenttoreceivingthebenefitof
2
Id.at853(quotingCoxv.AdmrU.S.Steel&Carnegie,17F.3d1386,1416(11thCir.1994)).
The attorney need not be aware he is assisting in a fraud for the exception to
apply. In re Grand Jury Investigation (Schroeder), 842 F.2d 1223, 1227 (11th Cir. 1987);
Gutterv.E.I.DuPontDeNemours,124F.Supp.2d1291,130001(S.D.Fla.2000).[T]he
party opposing the privilege on the crime/fraud exception has the initial burden of
producingevidencewhich,ifunexplained,wouldbeprimafacieproofoftheexistence
oftheexception.Theburdenofpersuasionthenshiftstothepartyassertingtheprivilegeto
giveareasonableexplanationofitsconduct.Gutter,124F.Supp.2dat1307(emphasis
added).
Theprimafaciestandardissatisfiedbyashowingofevidencethat,ifbelievedby
atrieroffact,wouldestablishtheelementsofsomeviolationthatwasongoingorabout
tobecommitted.Schroeder,842F.2dat1226.Suchashowingmusthaveafoundation
in fact, and cannot rest upon mere allegation. Gutter, 124 F. Supp. 2d at 1299 (citing
Schroeder,842F.2dat1226).2
Thefederalcourtshavenotdefinitivelydeterminedtheamountofproofneeded
toestablishthecrime/fraudexception.SeeGutter,124F.Supp.2dat1306.TheEleventh
Circuitstandardforthemeaningofprimafacieisestablishedinthegrandjurycontext,
andtherehasbeensomeargumentthatastricterpreponderancestandardshouldapply
outsideofthegrandjurycontext.Seeid.ButtheEleventhCircuithasmadenodefinitive
determinationthatastricterstandardisrequired,andthusthisCourtmustcontinueto
abidebytheSchroederrule.Seeid.UnitedStatesDistrictJudgeAlanGolddiscussedthis
3
Analysis
Uponincamerainspectionofthedocumentsatissue,theUndersignedsustained
Shires claim of attorneyclient privilege. Plaintiffs, however, contend that despite the
existence of attorneyclient privilege, the documents are subject to the crimefraud
exception, arguing that: (1) Shire engaged in a reverse payment scheme; (2) this
scheme violated antitrust law, constituting a fraud; and (3) this scheme was
furthered with the advice of counsel. Accordingly, Plaintiffs argue that the advice
counsel provided concerning the alleged reverse payment scheme including
documentation of advice concerning litigation, negotiation and, ultimately, settlement
withtwogenericdrugproducersgeneratesthecrimefraudexceptiontoprivilegeand
thus requires Shire and its counsel to produce the (supposedly) nolongerprivileged
documents.
As the Undersigned noted in the Order requiring additional briefing [ECF No.
201], the core of Plaintiffs argument for the crimefraud exception mirrors their
substantive claims in this lawsuit; specifically, that Shire engaged in anticompetitive
behaviortomaintainitsmonopolyoverpricesofcertainprescriptiondrugs.Thus,the
ultimate determination as to whether the crimefraud exception should apply
seeminglyrequirestheresolutionofsomeoftheverysamefactualandlegalissuesthat
havenotyetbeendecidedbyajuryand/orthepresidingDistrictCourtjudge.
issue in Gutter and ultimately upheld the opinion of a Special Master appointed to
decidecrimefraudissues.Id.at130410.
4
While it is true that there is a different standard of proof required for the
application of the crimefraud exception than the standard used to establish liability
undertheShermanAct(i.e.,Plaintiffsneednowtopresentonlyprimafacieevidenceof
the crime or fraud in this circumstance, at which point the burden shifts to Shire to
rebuttheshowingbyapreponderanceoftheevidence),thepartieseffortstopersuade
theCourttoadopttheirviewofthecrimefraudexceptionherehaveessentiallycaused
thisdiscoverydisputetomorphintowhatamountstoatrialonthepapers.SeeInre
MethodforProcessingEthanolByproductsandRelatedSubsystemsPatentLitigation(Iroquois),
No. 1:10ml2181, 2015 WL 2345635, at *2 (S.D. Ind. May 15, 2015). As noted above,
Plaintiffsattachedmorethan800pagesofexhibitstotheirtenpagememorandumand
areaskingthe Court,inessence,todeterminethe viabilityof partof theirsubstantive
antitrustclaim.
In Iroquois, the district court was reluctant to engage in such a trial on the
papersinacasewheretheverysameconduct,evidence,andinferencesonwhich[the
movant]reliestomakeitscaseforthecrimefraudexceptionarethefoundationofthe
[movants substantive] defense[;] thus, the motion to compel attempt[ed] to
demonstrateindiscoverybriefingtheveryabusethatmustbeshowntothesatisfaction
of the judge at the . . . trial. Id. (quoting Clark v. United States,289 U.S. 1, 16 (1933)).
The district court noted that the persuasive value or strength (or lack thereof) of
certainevidenceidentifiedby[themovant]asindicativeoffraud,includingtheintent
5
The district courts ultimate solution was to deny the motion without prejudice
until the factual predicate for the crimefraud exception [could] be determined in an
adversarialproceedingmostlikelyduringthe...trialitselfgiventhenearidentityof
theissues.Id.at*4.
TheUndersignedispersuadedbytheIroquoisrulingtoapoint.However,the
present situation differs in important respects from Iroquois, which leads the
Undersignedtodenythemotionwithprejudice.
First, the district court here must still make casedeterminative legal rulings
not just factual determinations that also apply to the application of the crimefraud
exception:eveniftheCourtweretoacceptallofPlaintiffsfactualallegationsastrue,itis
uncertain that the complainedof conduct was even potentially illegal at the time it
occurred.
Shire notes that the alleged reverse payments scheme which it denies
committingasafactualmatterwouldnothaveevenviolatedtheantitrustlawsinthe
6
EleventhCircuitatthetimetheseallegedactivitiestookplace.Thislegalargumenthas
notyetbeendeterminedbytheDistrictCourtinthiscase.Theissueofallegedreverse
paymentsisprominentinthepartiesbriefingonShiresrenewedsummaryjudgment
motion. [ECF No. 247]. In particular, Plaintiffs opposition to the motion contains
substantial argument and analysis on that point. [ECF No. 290]. Such an intricate and
casedeterminative matter requires a thorough adversarial process beyond the
discoverycontexttobeadequatelyadjudicated,astheIroquoiscourtnoted.
ThisisreasonenoughfortheCourttoatleastwaituntilcertainissueshavebeen
fully aired out in summary judgment and potentially at trial (for the factual issues)
before deciding whether the attorneyclient privilege should be deemed waived.
However, there is another significant difference between the present situation and
Iroquois: in this case, the Undersigned possesses the documents at issue and thus can
actuallyreviewthemincameratodetermineifthereisevidenceofcrimeorfraudinthe
advicebeingsoughtandgiven.
example of an overlap between the alleged crimefraud and the substantive antitrust
claiminacasealsoinvolvingallegationsofshamlitigation.168F.3d69(2dCir.1999).
InRichardRoe,theSecondCircuitnotedthat[w]heretheveryactoflitigatingisalleged
as being in furtherance of a fraud, the party seeking disclosureunder the crimefraud
exceptionmustshowprobablecausethatthelitigationoranaspectthereofhadlittleor
7
nolegalorfactualbasisandwascarriedonsubstantiallyforthepurposesoffurthering
the crime or fraud. Id. at 71. Where a party may violate antitrust laws by bringing
baseless litigation intended to delay entry into a market by a competitor[,] . . . some
communicationsorworkproductgeneratedinthecourseofsuchlitigationmight,after
a rigorous in camera review by a court for relevance, fall within the crimefraud
exception.Id.at72(emphasissupplied).
TheSecondCircuitdidinfactreviewthedocumentsatissueinRichardRoe.The
reviewultimatelydeterminedthat[n]odocumentsuggestsabeliefthatthedefenseof
the litigation had no legal or factual support or that the act of litigating was for an
improperpurpose.Id.
Because Shire submitted the documents at issue to the Court, the Undersigned
canassesssubstantivelywhethertherewasanefariouspurposebyreviewingtheactual
text. The Undersigneds in camera review finds no evidence of illegal or fraudulent
intentbyeithertheattorneyortheclient.Theadvicebeingsoughtandgivenprovides
no support to Plaintiffs claim that the act of litigating here was for an improper
purpose. In the words of the Second Circuit in Richard Roe, the documents do reflect
varying degrees of optimism or pessimism over particular issues and the ultimate
outcome of the case[s]. . . . [However, n]one [of the communications] suggest[] a
hopelessness as to the merits of the agreements or the legal theories underlying the
litigationstrategies.Id.
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documents be turned over to Plaintiffs, as it is clear that Shire and its counsel were
engaging in attorneyclient communication concerning litigation strategy, not an
intentionalschemetoviolatetheantitrustlawsthroughlitigation.WhilePlaintiffshave
atheorythatthelitigationstrategyatissuemaypotentiallyviolatetheShermanActand
therefore be considered a crime or fraud, the Undersigneds review does not find
evidenceofsuchanintentinthedocuments.
Conclusion
The Undersigned denies with prejudice Plaintiffs request to apply the crime
fraudexceptiontothesevendocumentsDoc.ID262448462;Doc.ID002976869;Doc.
ID 262859860; Doc. ID 335254255; Doc. ID 319749768; Doc. ID 262411425; Doc. ID
262847848.
DONEANDORDEREDinChambers,inMiami,Florida,November12,2015.
Copiesfurnishedto:
HonorableJoanA.Lenard
AllCounselofRecord