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Public Interest May Outweigh Consent Request To File Motion Under Seal
(November 2011) By Lydia S. Hu, Associate
For more information, contact Paul
Farquharson.
Feldman’s Med. Ctr. Pharm., Inc. v. Carefirst, Inc.,
SKG-10-254 (D. Md. 2011) | View pdf
This case originated with the Circuit Court for Baltimore
County, which signed a Stipulation and Order Regarding Confidentiality
(“Confidentiality Stipulation”) on September 22, 2009. The Confidentiality
Stipulation identified certain categories of documents to be held confidential,
including certain trade secrets, HIPAA-protected information, and medical
records. The case was subsequently removed to the United States District Court
for the District of Maryland.
Plaintiff sought to file its Motion for Summary Judgment
under seal pursuant to the Confidentiality Stipulation entered by the state
court. Plaintiff argued that the motion and related documents, including the
memorandum in support and statement of undisputed material facts, were
confidential pursuant to the Confidentiality Stipulation. Defendant consented to
filing the motion under seal.
The District Court reviewed the documents to be filed
under seal and learned that the documents in question were already redacted
to conceal sensitive information. Thus, the Court was not convinced that the
information needed to be protected under seal. While courts will allow
parties to conduct discovery under seal, the bench is reluctant to allow
litigation under seal. “There is an acknowledged public interest and
thus public right of access to documents filed in conjunction with a
dispositive motion in a civil case.”
In light of the questionable need to file the documents
under seal and the public interest in access to the motion, the District
Court deferred ruling on the request and granted the parties an additional
two weeks within which they were to provide additional justification for the
need to seal the documents.
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