Butler Snow LLP v. Estate of Mayfield

Decision Date11 June 2019
Docket NumberNO. 2018-CA-00591-COA,2018-CA-00591-COA
Citation281 So.3d 1214
Parties BUTLER SNOW LLP and Donald Clark Jr., Appellants v. ESTATE OF Mark Stevens MAYFIELD, Robin Mayfield, William Mayfield, and Owen Mayfield, Appellees
CourtMississippi Court of Appeals

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: ALAN W. PERRY, STEPHEN L. THOMAS, SIMON TURNER BAILEY

ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: DORSEY R. CARSON JR., JULIE SKIPPER NOONE

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., TINDELL AND McCARTY, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This is a case about discovery—how it is initiated, how it is conducted, and who is privy to it. In the chancery court, a plaintiff sought information pursuant to a bill of discovery. The case was then sealed. The information obtained in the case was used to support a lawsuit against defendants in a separate federal action. The defendants then sought to intervene in the state court case, but the chancery court denied their request.

¶2. Finding that the defendants should have been allowed to intervene, we reverse and render. We likewise reverse and render the decision to seal the case, because it was not done in accord with recent Mississippi Supreme Court precedent to conduct a balancing test, and there is nothing in this record warranting a seal.

BACKGROUND

¶3. A federal district court has provided a detailed examination of the facts giving rise to this appeal. See Mayfield v. Butler Snow LLP , 341 F. Supp. 3d 664, 666 (S.D. Miss. 2018). It began during the 2014 Senate race between then-incumbent and the late United States Senator Thad Cochran, and a challenger, State Senator Chris McDaniel. Certain supporters of Senator McDaniel, not directly affiliated with his campaign, were convinced that Senator Cochran was straying from his marriage of many years to Mrs. Rose Cochran. The supporters developed a plan to "out" Senator Cochran for having an affair. This plan would be supported by "exposing" that Mrs. Cochran was incapacitated and bedridden in a private care home located in Madison, Mississippi.

¶4. Individuals gained access to Mrs. Cochran's room in the private care home. They took a video of her and later posted it on YouTube. The video ignited a fire, although not in the way that the devisers of the plan had hoped. The video, and those who were believed to have recorded it or aided in its recording, were reported to various law enforcement agencies in Madison County. Counsel for Senator Cochran, the Butler Snow law firm, "told the Mayor of the City of Madison, Mary Hawkins-Butler, that the incident should be treated criminally, as it was a possible case of exploitation of a vulnerable adult." Id. at 667.

¶5. Law enforcement began to investigate, and ultimately arrested four different suspects for a variety of crimes, including burglary and conspiracy. One of the persons arrested was attorney Mark Mayfield. The police executed search warrants on his home and office, and afterward the lawyer lost at least one major client. A little over a month later, he committed suicide.

¶6. His family retained lawyers to investigate whether they had claims against Butler Snow, among others. The family's counsel used a tool of investigation called a bill of discovery to seek information about what had happened leading up to the arrest of the men. The family filed two bills of discovery—one in the Hinds County Chancery Court and one in the Madison County Chancery Court.

¶7. During oral argument, counsel for Mayfield's family described the receipt of massive amounts of information from the bill of discovery. Several thousand pages of documents were received in response to subpoenas duces tecum issued under the bill of discovery, and multiple depositions were taken, including those of minors.

¶8. Counsel then used this data as a basis for a lawsuit against Butler Snow, a partner at the law firm, the mayor of Madison, various law enforcement personnel, and others. Id. at 668. The theory of liability against Butler Snow was that it should not have reported the video to law enforcement because there was not probable cause to suspect a crime had been committed. Id. at 669.

¶9. Once the federal suit was filed, Butler Snow learned about the two bills of discovery that had been used to dig up information. The proceeding in Hinds County Chancery Court had previously been sealed after motion by counsel for the family. The family asserted that "[g]iven the underlying matters' sensitivity in that they involve political campaigns, a suicide, criminal prosecutions, and may involve pleadings referring to current or former elected officials," the case should be sealed, in order to "protect the integrity of the case from attention and media coverage that might hamper the investigation."

The chancery court granted the motion and sealed the case to "protect[ ] from public dissemination" all that had happened.

¶10. The firm sought to intervene in the Hinds County Chancery Court proceeding and to have the case unsealed. The chancery court denied both requests. As to the request for intervention, the chancery court ruled that "because Butler Snow and [its partner] were not parties to the case, they shall not be heard on the Motion to Intervene and to Unseal Court Record."

¶11. Subsequently, the federal district court dismissed every claim asserted against Butler Snow and its partner. Id. at 670-71. "The bottom line is that [the partner] and Butler Snow had probable cause to believe that a crime had been committed," the district court held, and as a result "[t]hey are not liable for their report to the Madison Police Department." Id. at 671.

¶12. Seeking to determine what exactly had been obtained under the sealed bill of discovery, Butler Snow appealed the chancery court's rulings.

DISCUSSION
I. The appeal is not moot.

¶13. As an initial matter, the Court must first determine if it has a dispute before it. Without a live controversy, an appeal will be dismissed as moot. Gartrell v. Gartrell , 936 So. 2d 915, 916 (¶ 7) (Miss. 2006).

¶14. During the briefing of this case, the Mayfield family argued that the appeal was moot because the Butler Snow defendants had been dismissed from the federal lawsuit. Although Butler Snow and its partner were dismissed from the lawsuit, not all parties were dismissed. Under this scenario the case is still in controversy because the district court's ruling can be "modified or rescinded at any time before final judgment [is] entered," and under the Federal Rules "a district court retains jurisdiction over a case after a decision which is merely interlocutory and thus can reexamine its initial decision until final judgment[.]" Braswell v. Invacare Corp. , 760 F. Supp. 2d 679, 682 (S.D. Miss. 2010). Furthermore, during oral argument, counsel for the Mayfield family was emphatic that they would appeal the district court's ruling to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.

¶15. As a result, there remains a live controversy between the parties, and so the case is not moot. See also Morgan v. XLK Int'l LLC , 255 So. 3d 1271, 1277 (¶ 22) (Miss. 2018) (holding that a dispute over the sealing or unsealing of a matter provided sufficient controversy to defeat the doctrine of mootness).

II. The law firm is a proper intervener.

¶16. Our Rules of Civil Procedure allow intervention both as a matter of right and in those instances when a trial court might grant permission. M.R.C.P. 24(a)-(b). The language of the Rule is broad: "Upon timely application, anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action" as a matter of right, given certain conditions. M.R.C.P. 24(a) (emphasis added). First, "when a statute confers an unconditional right to intervene," and second, "when the applicant claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action and he is so situated that the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede his ability to protect that interest, unless the applicant's interest is adequately represented by existing parties." Id.

¶17. As to permissive intervention, the Rule again states that "anyone may be permitted to intervene in an action ... when a statute confers a conditional right to intervene," or in a situation "when an applicant's claim or defense and the main action have a question of law or fact in common." M.R.C.P. 24(b) (emphasis added).

¶18. The two subsections of the Rule have different standards of review; by its nature intervention as a matter of right is a legal question, and permissive intervention requires the insight of a trial court. Accordingly, "permissive intervention receives an abuse-of-discretion review ...." Kinney v. S. Miss. Planning & Dev. Dist. Inc. , 202 So. 3d 187, 196 (¶ 25) (Miss. 2016). "However, intervention of right receives a de novo review because the Court is reviewing a question of law." Id.

¶19. Butler Snow urges that it can travel either path toward intervention, although it does not claim that a statute allows an unconditional or conditional right to intervene. Instead, it argues that it has an interest in the discovery, and that no existing party can adequately represent it.

¶20. The action at hand is a bill of discovery, which "is an original action that may be pursued when there is no other remedy ...." Kuljis v. Winn-Dixie Montgomery LLC , 214 So. 3d 283, 285 (¶ 5) (Miss. 2017). "The bill of discovery is a viable equitable action and remedy in chancery court" but cannot be used in certain situations, such as a precursor to a personal injury suit where the discovery could be obtained in the suit itself. Id. at (¶ 4). Although the bill of discovery initiates a lawsuit, it does not seek damages like a complaint in circuit court; nor does it seek equitable relief, like a request for an injunction in chancery court. The cause of action for a bill of discovery seeks only information.

¶21. Although common law and the pre-Rules era had looser standards for gathering data, for decades now our Rules of Civil Procedure have governed discovery. As Mississippi Civil Rule...

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