in Re Cooper Tire & Rubber Company ( 2018 )


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  •                                 Fourth Court of Appeals
    San Antonio, Texas
    OPINION
    No. 04-18-00005-CV
    IN RE COOPER TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY
    Original Mandamus Proceeding 1
    Opinion by:       Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
    Sitting:          Sandee Bryan Marion, Chief Justice
    Karen Angelini, Justice
    Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
    Delivered and Filed: March 28, 2018
    PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS CONDITIONALLY GRANTED
    The trial court signed a “Protective Order of Confidentiality” submitted by the plaintiffs
    below/real parties in interest here (hereinafter, the plaintiffs). Cooper Tire & Rubber Company,
    the relator, filed a petition for writ of mandamus complaining about the trial court’s entry of the
    plaintiffs’ order, as opposed to a proposed protective order submitted by Cooper Tire. We
    conditionally grant Cooper Tire’s petition.
    BACKGROUND
    The plaintiffs were involved in an automobile accident, which they contend was caused by
    the defective design and manufacture by Cooper Tire of the tires on the plaintiffs’ vehicle.
    Plaintiffs allege the tires are Sierradial A/S Plus, size 265/75R16 tires. Plaintiffs served Cooper
    1
    This proceeding arises out of Cause No. DC-16-306, styled Juan Jose Salazar, et al. v. Delta Tire & Wheel, et al.,
    pending in the 229th Judicial District Court, Duval County, Texas, the Honorable Jose Luis Garza presiding.
    04-18-00005-CV
    Tire with requests for admissions, interrogatories, and production of documents. Cooper Tire
    objected to the discovery based on the trade secret privilege. Both sides submitted proposed
    protective orders. After the parties attempted, but failed, to reach an agreement on the terms of
    the protective order, the trial court signed the protective order submitted by the plaintiffs. Cooper
    Tire filed a petition for writ of mandamus, to which the plaintiffs responded and Cooper Tire
    replied.
    THE PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
    Cooper Tire asserts the protective order signed by the trial court fails to provide adequate
    protections to maintain the secrecy of its trade secrets and confidential information. More
    specifically, Cooper Tire contends the order allows plaintiffs to reveal Cooper Tire’s confidential
    and trade secret information to any witness without a showing that the disclosure is relevant and
    necessary to a fair adjudication of plaintiffs’ claims and even if that witness refuses to agree to
    maintain secrecy. Cooper Tire also asserts the order permits the wide-spread dissemination and
    use of its confidential information and trade secrets at the discretion of plaintiffs’ counsel, without
    a showing of relevance and necessity. Finally, Cooper Tire complains about several “procedural
    traps” it contends make protecting its trade secrets more difficult.
    The plaintiffs respond to each of these arguments in turn, but, as a preliminary matter, they
    also assert Cooper Tire has an adequate remedy via an interlocutory appeal, and the petition for
    writ of mandamus is not ripe for review because the trial court has not yet compelled discovery.
    We address the plaintiffs’ preliminary arguments first.
    AVAILABILITY OF MANDAMUS RELIEF
    To obtain mandamus relief, a relator generally must show both that the trial court clearly
    abused its discretion and that the relator has no adequate remedy by appeal. In re Prudential Ins.
    Co. of Am., 
    148 S.W.3d 124
    , 135 (Tex. 2004) (orig. proceeding). A trial court clearly abuses its
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    discretion if it reaches a decision so arbitrary and unreasonable as to amount to a clear and
    prejudicial error of law, or if the trial court clearly fails to analyze the law correctly or apply the
    law correctly to the facts. In re Cerberus Capital Mgmt. L.P., 
    164 S.W.3d 379
    , 382 (Tex. 2005)
    (orig. proceeding) (per curiam). No adequate appellate remedy exists if a trial court orders a party
    to produce privileged trade secrets absent a showing of necessity. In re Bass, 
    113 S.W.3d 735
    ,
    745 (Tex. 2003) (orig. proceeding).
    Cooper Tire asserts the trial court abused its discretion because the protective order (1)
    permits dissemination of protected materials to witnesses without a showing of necessity and who
    refuse to agree to be bound by the protective order, and (2) allows plaintiffs’ attorneys to
    disseminate Cooper Tire’s trade secrets to third parties who have not established a viable exception
    to the trade secret privilege.
    The plaintiffs assert Cooper Tire has an adequate remedy through an interlocutory appeal
    via Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 76a, which sets the procedure for sealing court records. That
    section provides:
    Any order (or portion of an order or judgment) relating to sealing or
    unsealing court records shall be deemed to be severed from the case and a final
    judgment which may be appealed by any party or intervenor who participated in
    the hearing preceding issuance of such order. The appellate court may abate the
    appeal and order the trial court to direct that further public notice be given, or to
    hold further hearings, or to make additional findings.
    TEX. R. CIV. P. 76a(8).
    We do not agree with plaintiffs’ argument that Cooper Tire may raise its complaints in an
    interlocutory appeal under Rule 76a(8) because this case involves the scope of a protective order
    and not a sealing order.
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    RIPENESS
    Plaintiffs next assert this court does not have jurisdiction to consider the scope of the
    protective order because no discovery has yet been compelled. We disagree. Several appellate
    courts have considered the scope of protective orders. See Garcia v. Peeples, 
    734 S.W.2d 343
    ,
    345-47 (Tex. 1987) (orig. proceeding) (considering whether trial court abused its discretion by
    issuing the protective order, by failing to modify the order, and by not prohibiting GMC from
    enforcing several protective orders issued by courts in other states); Am. Honda Motor Co., Inc. v.
    Dibrell, 
    736 S.W.2d 257
    , 258 (Tex. App.—Austin 1987, orig. proceeding) (“In this mandamus
    proceeding, Honda requests this Court to order Judge Dibrell to vacate or modify his order to deny
    plaintiffs the right to disseminate discovered material to anyone not connected with this action or
    in the alternative to require the limitations requested by Honda in lieu of paragraph nine.”); In re
    State Farm Lloyds, 09-03-311 CV, 
    2003 WL 22149155
    , at *1 (Tex. App.—Beaumont Sept. 18,
    2003, orig. proceeding) (per curiam) (mem. op.) (relator asked appellate court “to vacate a
    protective order and to issue a different protective order that restricts the use and disclosure of
    certain privileged documents to the specific case before the trial court”); see also In re Cont’l Gen.
    Tire, Inc., 
    979 S.W.2d 609
    , 613 (Tex. 1998) (orig. proceeding) (“The issue there was not whether
    trade secret documents should be produced, but rather the scope of the protective order
    accompanying the production.”).
    Therefore, we conclude this court is not required to wait for the trial court to compel
    discovery before determining whether this protective order adequately protects the information
    sought. Accordingly, we next address Cooper Tire’s arguments.
    PLAINTIFFS’ BURDEN TO PROVE NECESSITY
    Cooper Tire argues the trial court’s protective order allows the plaintiffs to obtain trade
    secret information without satisfying their burden as set forth in Continental General Tire. Cooper
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    Tire contends it “has been willing to agree that disclosure is relevant and necessary as to certain
    persons, but Plaintiffs wish to expand that group.” Cooper Tire appears to argue that a party
    seeking disclosure of trade secrets must satisfy their burden on a witness-by-witness basis.
    Texas Rule of Evidence 507 provides a privilege entitling a party to refuse to disclose its
    trade secrets “if the allowance of the privilege will not tend to conceal fraud or otherwise work
    injustice.” TEX. R. EVID. 507(a); Cont’l Gen. 
    Tire, 979 S.W.2d at 610
    . Under Rule 507, the party
    resisting discovery of trade secrets must first establish the information sought constitutes a trade
    secret. Cont’l Gen. 
    Tire, 979 S.W.2d at 610
    , 613. Once the party resisting discovery establishes
    the information is a trade secret, the burden shifts to the requesting party to establish the
    information is “necessary for a fair adjudication of its claims.” 
    Id. If the
    requesting party meets
    that burden, the court should compel disclosure of the information subject to an appropriate
    protective order. 
    Id. at 613.
    However, “[t]hat a trial court has ordered the parties to enter into a
    protective order with respect to trade secret information does not dispense with the requesting
    party’s burden to establish the necessity for the discovery of the trade secret information to fairly
    adjudicate a claim or defense.” In re Hewlett Packard, 
    212 S.W.3d 356
    , 364 (Tex. App.—Austin
    2006, orig. proceeding).
    Cooper Tire contends the protective order in this case allows plaintiffs’ attorney to bypass
    the above test for all witnesses plaintiffs choose to designate. According to Cooper Tire, the
    plaintiffs in this case must “demonstrate with specificity exactly how the lack of the information
    will impair the presentation of the case on the merits to the point that an unjust result is a real,
    rather than a merely possible threat.” 2 See In re Bridgestone/Firestone, Inc., 
    106 S.W.3d 730
    , 733
    (Tex. 2003) (orig. proceeding). We do not interpret the order as allowing the plaintiffs to
    2
    Cooper Tire makes the same complaint regarding the sharing of its trade secrets with non-parties, which we address
    later in this opinion.
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    automatically obtain documents designated as trade secrets. The protective order contains two
    provisions: (1) a “Designation” provision that states how a party may designate a document or a
    portion of a document as a “Protectible Document,” and (2) a “Challenge Designation” provision
    that sets forth how a party may challenge the other party’s designation.
    The “Challenge Designation” section places the burden on the parties to resolve a dispute
    over how a document is designated or obtain a ruling from the trial court resolving the dispute.
    But, the burden to obtain a court ruling in the absence of an agreement is placed on the party
    seeking confidential treatment of its material. Pursuant to the protective order, that party bears the
    burden to show “good cause” exists “for confidential treatment pursuant to” Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 26(c). In other words, here, Cooper Tire bears the burden to obtain a hearing and show
    “good cause” under Federal Rule 26(c) if the plaintiffs challenge Cooper Tire’s designation.
    However, the order does not place any burden on the plaintiffs as the party seeking disclosure, nor
    does the order expressly state the shifting burdens annunciated in Continental General Tire.
    Nevertheless, although the protective order neither expressly places a burden on the plaintiffs who
    seek disclosure nor requires application of the Continental General Tire test, it does not expressly
    allow plaintiffs to automatically obtain documents designated as trade secrets.
    We conclude that, although the protective order does not expressly state the Continental
    General Tire test, the order does not—as argued by Cooper Tire—allow plaintiffs to obtain
    protected documents without meeting their Continental General Tire burden. In other words, if
    relator objects to disclosing protected documents, all parties must satisfy their burden at a later
    hearing before the trial court. See Hewlett 
    Packard, 212 S.W.3d at 364
    (holding, “[t]hat a trial
    court has ordered the parties to enter into a protective order with respect to trade secret information
    does not dispense with the requesting party’s burden to establish the necessity for the discovery of
    the trade secret information to fairly adjudicate a claim or defense.”).
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    DISSEMINATION OF PROTECTED DOCUMENTS
    In somewhat related complaints, Cooper Tire argues the protective order allows for
    dissemination of its trade secrets to an unlimited number of people who need not satisfy the
    necessity test, and allows witnesses to obtain its trade secrets without agreeing to abide by the
    terms of the order.
    A.     Permitted Disclosures
    Cooper Tire’s first complaint involves the people to whom disclosure is permitted. The
    protective order states as follows:
    7. Permitted Disclosures
    Confidential Material may be shown, disseminated, or disclosed only to the
    following persons:
    (a) all attorneys of record for the parties in this case, including members of their
    respective law firms, and any other attorney associated to assist in the preparation
    of this case for trial;
    (b) all employees of parties’ counsel assisting in the preparation of this case for
    trial;
    (c) experts and consultants retained by the parties for the preparation or trial of this
    case;
    (d) translators retained by the parties for the preparation or trial of this case;
    (e) the court, its staff, witnesses, and the jury in this case, or in other present or
    future cases in any court in the United States against the producing party alleging
    claims involving allegations of tread separations in Delta Sierradial A/S Plus tires
    manufactured by Cooper Tire & Rubber Company; [Emphasis added.]
    (f) any attorney, expert, or consultant representing a party in other present or future
    cases in any court in the United States against the producing party alleging claims
    involving allegations of tread separations in Delta Sierradial A/S Plus tires
    manufactured by Cooper Tire & Rubber Company; and
    (g) employees of the producing party.
    Cooper Tire contends the order allows an unlimited category of people—all witnesses—to
    have access to its trade secrets, and it does so without demonstrating with specificity why these
    unidentified persons have a need to review Cooper Tire’s trade secrets. Again, Cooper Tire argues
    this violates Continental General Tire. Cooper Tire appears to argue that for every witness to
    whom plaintiffs wish to show the trade secrets, plaintiffs must establish whether that witness needs
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    the information for the fair adjudication of the case. However, the two cases on which Cooper
    Tire relies do not support its argument that each individual witness must establish his/her need for
    the information.
    Cooper Tire first cites to 
    Bridgestone/Firestone, 106 S.W.3d at 731-32
    , in which the trial
    court ordered that the information be provided only to three attorneys and one expert. Firestone
    then sought mandamus relief. The Texas Supreme Court held, “a party seeking such information
    cannot merely assert unfairness but must demonstrate with specificity exactly how the lack of the
    information will impair the presentation of the case on the merits to the point that an unjust result
    is a real, rather than a merely possible, 
    threat.” 106 S.W.3d at 733
    . The Court was not stating a
    witness-by-witness standard; instead, the Court was stating what the party seeking information had
    to show to obtain trade secret information.
    Cooper Tire also cites to Continental General 
    Tire, 979 S.W.2d at 613
    , n.3, in which the
    trial court limited access to the parties in the lawsuit, their lawyers, consultants, investigators,
    experts, and other necessary persons employed by counsel to assist in the preparation and trial of
    the case. Each person given access to the documents had to agree in writing to keep the
    information confidential, and all documents had to be returned to Continental at the conclusion of
    the case. The issue before the Court was not whether each individual person had to show he or
    she needed the information before being given access. Instead, the issue was whether the plaintiffs
    needed the information for a fair adjudication of their 
    claims. 979 S.W.2d at 613
    . The Court held
    that, “[i]f the requesting party meets this burden, the trial court should ordinarily compel disclosure
    of the information, subject to an appropriate protective order.” 
    Id. By way
    of an example, the
    Court noted in a footnote:
    In this case, for example, the trial court limited access to the information to the
    parties in this lawsuit, their lawyers, consultants, investigators, experts and other
    necessary persons employed by counsel to assist in the preparation and trial of this
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    case. Each person who is given access to the documents must agree in writing to
    keep the information confidential, and all documents must be returned to
    Continental at the conclusion of the case.
    
    Id. at 613,
    n.3.
    Neither of the cases relied on by Cooper Tire held the necessity test had to be satisfied on
    a witness-by-witness basis. We therefore hold the “necessary to a fair adjudication” test is not
    applied on a witness-by-witness basis. Instead, the party seeking to discover a trade secret must
    make a particularized showing that the information is necessary to the proof of one or more
    material elements of the claim and it is reasonable to conclude that the information sought is
    essential to a fair resolution of the lawsuit. See 
    Bridgestone/Firestone, 106 S.W.3d at 732-33
    ;
    Cont’l Gen. 
    Tire, 979 S.W.2d at 613
    .
    B.      Agreement Not to Disclose
    Cooper Tire also complains that witnesses may refuse to sign an agreement to abide by the
    terms of the protective order. The protective order provides the following safeguards:
    8. Agreement by Disclosures
    Before being given access to Confidential Material, each person described in
    paragraphs 7(a), (b), (c), (d), (f) or (g) shall be advised of the terms of this Order,
    shall be given a copy of this Order, and shall agree in writing to be bound by its
    terms and to submit to the jurisdiction of this Court.
    A deponent who refuses to sign the attached Exhibit A will be advised before the
    start of his or her deposition the following terms of this Order:
    “A witness who fails to agree to the terms of this Protective Order
    and who does not sign the attached Exhibit A, will after the
    conclusion of the deposition, not be provided access to any of the
    exhibits to the deposition which are designated Confidential in this
    matter.
    Further, a witness who fails to sign the attached Exhibit A may only
    be permitted to keep a redacted copy of his or her deposition, which
    omits any portions of the transcript that are designated Confidential
    in this matter.
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    A witness who refuses to sign the attached Exhibit A, but who
    wishes to read and sign the transcript of his or her deposition, will,
    if any Confidential documents were utilized in the course of the
    deposition, be required to conduct such review of the transcript in
    its electronic form, viewed at the office of the court reporter, so that
    the witness is not permitted to possess a copy of his or her
    testimony.”
    Nothing in this Order prevents any party from asking any witness to sign this
    protective order prior to the date of their deposition.
    Nothing in this order prevents any party from seeking a hearing prior to the date of
    the deposition of any witness (a) if the witness fails to sign the protective order, or
    (2) if additional reasonable protections or restrictions are desired with regard to any
    deponent.
    Cooper Tires contends the above language allows the plaintiffs to argue that their experts
    may refuse to sign the agreement because their experts are also “witnesses.” Cooper Tire contends
    “[i]t does not protect Cooper’s trade secrets to provide them to a witness and then take them away
    after the witness has reviewed, studied, and analyzed them.” However, Cooper Tire’s argument
    ignores the final paragraph of this section of the protective order, which states: “Nothing in this
    order prevents any party from seeking a hearing prior to the date of the deposition of any witness
    (a) if the witness fails to sign the protective order, or (2) if additional reasonable protections or
    restrictions are desired with regard to any deponent.” Therefore, we conclude the order builds in
    a safeguard that allows Cooper Tire to object prior to a deposition if any witness, including an
    expert, refuses to agree in writing to the terms of the protective order.
    SHARING PROVISIONS
    Cooper Tire asserts the protective order contains a sharing provision that does not require
    the recipients of its trade secrets to satisfy Texas law regarding preservation of the trade secret
    privilege, and (2) allows sharing of confidential materials relating to the subject tires with other
    non-parties without any showing that all similarly branded tires are substantially similar to the
    subject tires in design and manufacture. The protective order contains the following provisions:
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    4. Use of Confidential Material Limited
    Confidential Material and the portion of all writings, including the portion
    of pre-trial court papers, that quote from, summarize, or comment upon such
    materials shall be treated as confidential and used (l) by counsel in this case solely
    for the litigation of this case or (2) by counsel in other actions involving allegations
    of tread separations in Delta Sierradial A/S Plus tires manufactured by Cooper Tire
    & Rubber Company, solely for the litigation of such similar actions. [Emphasis
    added.]
    7. Permitted Disclosures
    Confidential Material may be shown, disseminated, or disclosed only to the
    following persons:
    ...
    (e) the court, its staff, witnesses, and the jury in this case, or in other present
    or future cases in any court in the United States against the producing party alleging
    claims involving allegations of tread separations in Delta Sierradial A/S Plus tires
    manufactured by Cooper Tire & Rubber Company;
    (f) any attorney, expert, or consultant representing a party in other present
    or future cases in any court in the United States against the producing party alleging
    claims involving allegations of tread separations in Delta Sierradial A/S Plus tires
    manufactured by Cooper Tire & Rubber Company . . . . [Emphasis added.]
    In support of these provisions, the plaintiffs rely on Garcia v. Peeples, 
    734 S.W.2d 343
    ,
    346 (Tex. 1987), in which Garcia argued the terms of the protective order constituted an abuse of
    discretion because they prevented him from sharing with non-parties the information he secured
    from discovery. Garcia sought to exchange the discovery information with other persons involved
    in similar suits against automakers. He argued allowing information exchanges between similarly
    situated litigants would enhance full disclosure and efficiency in the trial system. 
    Id. at 346-47.
    The Supreme Court held:
    Shared discovery is an effective means to insure full and fair disclosure.
    Parties subject to a number of suits concerning the same subject matter are forced
    to be consistent in their responses by the knowledge that their opponents can
    compare those responses.
    In addition to making discovery more truthful, shared discovery makes the
    system itself more efficient. The current discovery process forces similarly situated
    parties to go through the same discovery process time and time again, even though
    the issues involved are virtually identical. Benefiting from restrictions on
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    discovery, one party facing a number of adversaries can require his opponents to
    duplicate another’s discovery efforts, even though the opponents share similar
    discovery needs and will litigate similar issues.
    
    Id. at 347.
    Cooper Tire contends this language in Garcia is mere dicta, and Garcia has been
    superseded by Continental General Tire. However, Continental General Tire did not consider a
    sharing provision and did not expressly supersede Garcia. The Continental General Tire Court
    noted, “Garcia likewise does not speak to the scope of Rule 507. The issue there was not whether
    trade secret documents should be produced, but rather the scope of the protective order
    accompanying the 
    production.” 979 S.W.2d at 613
    ; see also Idar v. Cooper Tire & Rubber Co.,
    C-10-217, 
    2011 WL 688871
    , at *2-3 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 17, 2011) (noting same). 3
    Although the Garcia Court held the trial court abused its discretion by issuing an overly
    broad protective order, it did so, in part, because “[t]here [was] no indication from GMC’s
    affidavits in support of the motion, nor [was] there any reason to believe, that GMC [would] be
    harmed by the release of this information to other litigants.” 
    Id. at 348.
    The Court held the trial
    court should have balanced the parties’ “competing needs and rendered an order preventing
    dissemination of GMC’s true trade secrets only to GMC’s competitors.” 
    Id. “Out of
    an abundance
    of caution, the trial court, after determining which documents are true trade secrets, can require
    those wishing to share the discovered material to certify that they will not release it to competitors
    or others who would exploit it for their own economic gain. Such an order would guard GMC’s
    proprietary information, while promoting efficiency in the trial process.” 
    Id. The Court
    also noted
    3
    The Idar court noted, Continental General Tire “did not overrule Garcia. Rather, the Court suggested Garcia’s
    holding regarding the scope of an appropriate protective order accompanying production of trade secrets was still
    sound law. . . . The Texas Supreme Court’s holding in In re Continental merely clarifies the steps a court must take
    in deciding whether to compel discovery of trade secrets. While it indicates that a protective order limiting access to
    discovered information to parties in the present lawsuit might be appropriate, . . . it does not explicitly address the
    scope of an appropriate protective order once discovery is compelled and does not overrule Garcia’s holding that a
    protective order allowing shared discovery is an effective and appropriate means to balance relevant interests.”
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    GMC’s proprietary information was several years old. The Court acknowledged federal courts
    have dealt with protective orders involving “stale” information, and encouraged “Texas courts [to]
    follow their example in drafting protective orders to take into account the age, usefulness, and ease
    by which competitors could gain access to the information without an anti-dissemination order.”
    
    Id. at 348,
    n.3.
    We conclude Garcia is still good law but is limited by Continental General Tire. We agree
    with Cooper Tire’s arguments that the protective order here is not narrowly tailored because (1) it
    does not require the “other present or future cases” recipients to satisfy the necessity test and be
    bound by the protective order; (2) it does not prevent dissemination of Cooper Tire’s true trade
    secrets to its competitors; and (3) it does not require “those wishing to share the discovered material
    to certify that they will not release it to competitors or others who would exploit it for their own
    economic gain.” 4 See 
    Garcia, 734 S.W.2d at 348
    . Therefore, we hold the sharing provision must
    be more limited in scope.
    PROCEDURAL PROTECTIONS AND TRAPS
    In addition to the above substantive complaints about the protective order, Cooper Tire
    contends the order lacks procedural protections. First, Cooper Tire contends the following
    provision of the order creates “an unfairly short time crunch” for designating deposition testimony
    as confidential:
    A party may, on the record of a deposition or by written notice to opposing
    counsel not later than seventy-two hours after receipt of the deposition transcript,
    designate any portion(s) of the deposition as “CONFIDENTIAL” based on a good
    faith determination that any portions so designated constitute a Protectible
    Document. To the extent possible, any portions so designated shall be transcribed
    separately and marked by the court reporter as “CONFIDENTIAL.” Until
    expiration of the above seventy-two-hour period, all deposition transcripts and
    information therein will be deemed “Confidential Material.”
    4
    Here, Cooper Tire attached an affidavit to its motion for entry of a protective order stating its reasons for protecting
    its trade secrets and the harm that might result if those secrets were improperly disseminated.
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    Although a longer time period may, as urged by Cooper Tire, allow for a more careful and
    complete review, nothing in the trial court’s order prevents Cooper Tire, or the plaintiffs, from
    requesting additional time.
    Cooper Tire also contends the following provision requires it to obtain “serial protective
    orders” every time plaintiffs elect to file its trade secrets:
    Confidential Materials, when filed with the Court, shall be filed under seal.
    Documents filed under seal in this manner will remain under seal for fourteen days,
    at which time the seal will be automatically lifted, subject to the following
    procedure: Within five days of the filing under seal, the party who has designated
    the sealed document(s) confidential may file a motion requesting that the Court
    continue to maintain the filing under seal. Any party or intervenor opposing that
    request shall have five days to respond in writing. When this procedure is invoked,
    the seal will not be automatically lifted but will remain in effect until further order
    of the Court.
    Other than posing a possible inconvenience, Cooper Tire’s complaint does not explain how
    this provision of the protective order amounts to an abuse of discretion.
    Cooper Tire next contends the process for challenging a designation does not require
    plaintiffs to explain the basis for their challenge or alters the standard for granting an exception to
    the trade secret privilege by referencing the federal “good cause” standard. However, as we have
    already held, if a party objects to disclosing protected documents, all parties must satisfy their
    burden under Continental General Tire at a later hearing before the trial court.
    Finally, Cooper Tire contends the order does not provide for “the unambiguous return of
    all of the materials” or provide for the secure storage of the materials. Contrary to Cooper Tire’s
    first contention, the order requires counsel of record to ensure that “any person . . . who has
    received copies of Confidential Materials . . . destroys such Confidential Materials or returns such
    Confidential Materials to counsel of record for the producing party.” As to Cooper Tire’s
    complaint regarding storage of any Confidential Material, the order does not contain any
    provisions regarding the storage of such material during the pendency of the case. However,
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    Cooper Tire does not explain how the lack of such a provision amounts to an abuse of discretion,
    nor does any party contend the order cannot or should not be amended to include such safeguards.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we conditionally grant Cooper Tire’s petition for writ of
    mandamus and order the trial court to amend, within fifteen days, those provisions of its
    “Protective Order of Confidentiality” that allow the sharing of Cooper Tire’s trade secrets to
    protect those trade secrets in a manner consistent with Garcia v. Peeples as limited by In re
    Continental General Tire. The writ of mandamus will issue only if the trial court fails to comply
    within fifteen days from the date of our opinion and order.
    Patricia O. Alvarez, Justice
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