Research on Fed. R. Civ. P. 53 from subcommittee member Greg Whitehair June 24, 2016

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Research on Fed. R. Civ. P. 53 from subcommittee member Greg Whitehair June 24, 2016 The Subcommittee on Special Masters was asked to address why Fed. R. Civ. P. 53 s standard for court review of a master s findings shifted in 2003 from clearly erroneous to de novo. Greg Whitehair volunteered to research the issue and report back to the full Committee. The Committee is urged to reread as background Ms. Moore s fine summary of the 2003 Amendments to the Rule. HISTORY OF THE RULE The use of special masters originated in English chancery practice and continued via federal equity practice in the 1800s; it was extended to matters of law by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1920, 1 and was introduced into the Trial section of the federal rules in 1938. 2 From 1938 to 2003 at the federal level (and presently in Colorado), the Rule focuse[d] on masters as trial participants, 3 a use somewhat frowned upon after the U.S. Supreme Court decided La Buy v. Howes Leather in 1957. 4 Despite that, the non-trial use of masters in the federal courts expanded substantially (and without regulation) in the 1970s and after. For example, settlement masters, discovery masters, privilege reviewers, foreign-law experts, patent claim constructionists, technology masters, class-action and claims administrators, and out-of-court decree monitors, to name a few. 5 1 Ex parte Peterson, 253 U.S. 300, 364-65 (1920) ("[C]ourts have inherent power to provide themselves with instruments required for the performance of their duties. This power includes authority to appoint persons unconnected with the court to aid judges in the performance of specific judicial duties, as they may arise in the progress of a cause."). 2 See D. Fergleger, Special Masters Under Rule 53: The "Exceptional" Becomes "Commonplace," at 5 (2007), found at www.fergleger.com. 3 Committee Notes on Rules 2003 Amendment, Fed. R. Civ. P. 53, at 1 (hereinafter "2003 Committee Notes"). 4 La Buy v. Howes Leather Co., 352 U.S. 249 (1957) (finding that two standard antitrust cases with anticipated lengthy trials did not meet the "exceptional conditions" trigger of Rule 53). 5 D. Fergleger, supra note 2, at pp. 6-29.

As Ms. Moore s memo notes, a wholesale revision of Rule 53 was undertaken in 2003 to absorb these widely accepted expansions in pre-trial and post-trial matters. The federal Civil Rules Advisory Committee, relying upon extensive nationwide assessments by the Federal Judicial Center, came to a consensus that a milder hurdle should be placed in front of these non-trial appointments: matters that cannot be effectively and timely addressed by available jurists. 6 The provision that a reference shall be the exception and not the rule was literally deleted from the body of the Rule. 7 The Advisory Committee saw as equivalent the exceptional condition language for trial masters; and, for all other uses, they felt it sufficiently restrictive to apply the limitation that the matter cannot be effectively and timely addressed. 8 THE ADVISORY COMMITTEE TAKES PUBLIC COMMENT The Advisory Committee put two draft options out for public comment: one version called for de novo review of all fact-finding (unless the court dictated clear-error review in the appointment order, or the parties stipulated to no review); the other for de novo review on substantive fact issues and for clear error on non-substantive findings. According to the final Advisory Committee minutes of May 2002, [b]oth versions reflected the growing concern expressed by several courts of appeal that Article III courts should not and perhaps may not surrender fact-finding responsibilities to non-article III court adjuncts. 9 (Federal insiders will recognize a similar nervousness in allowing Magistrate Judges to tackle dispositive factfinding). 6 See Fed. R. Civ. P. 53(a)(1)(C) (2003). The Advisory Committee was not proposing any further enlargement of the use of pre-and post-trial special masters; indeed, the Notes urge that "a pretrial master should be appointed only when the need is clear," and that special caution should apply to any reference involving "important public issues or many parties." 2003 Committee Notes, Pretrial Masters at 2. Post-trial matters were expected to involve mainly complex decrees with complex policing. Id., Post-Trial Masters at 1-2. 7 Notably, the Committee Note reads "[t]he core of the original Rule 53 remains, including its prescription that appointment of a master must be the exception and not the rule." Id. at 1 (emphasis added). However, this writer struggles to find any such "prescription" in the body of the new Rule, at least as it relates to non-trial masters. 8 2003 Committee Notes, Pretrial and Post-Trial Masters at 1. 9 Civil Rules Advisory Committee Minutes of May 6-7, 2002, at 9 (found at www.uscourts.gov/files/15155/download). 2

All-party consent with court approval was thought to address the bulk of these constitutional issues (as it does now with Magistrate Judge consent jurisdiction), but was not thought to resolve the issue should one or both parties resist the reference. Especially given the skepticism expressed back in 1957 in the La Buy decision. 10 Consequently, to avoid this issue altogether, the subcommittee proposed a new version, which was ultimately adopted: de novo review of all fact issues UNLESS the parties stipulate with court consent to clear-error review OR the parties waive review by deeming the master s findings final. 11 CONCERNS WITH DE NOVO REVIEW As Ms. Moore s memo notes, concern was expressed about the value of a non-deferential fact-finding if an objecting party could force a complete do-over. The Advisory Committee was satisfied (a) that many issues would fall by the way and (b) perhaps naïvely, that parties would think ahead and agree to stipulate to clear-error review for non-substantive findings. 12 In any event, the Notes make clear that an objections hearing could be held wholly on paper, thus avoiding evidentiary duplication unless desired by the court. 13 For consistency, legal determinations were also to be reviewed de novo, if only to ensure that judges not be boxed in by consenting parties. 14 The more deferential abuse of discretion standard would apply to a master s procedural choices, though the subordinate role of the master might mean that the trial court s review would be more searching than the review an appellate court makes of a trial court. 15 10 Id. 11 Id. 12 Id. at 10. 13 2003 Committee Notes, Subdivision (g) 1 ("The requirement that the court must afford an opportunity to be heard can be satisfied by taking written submissions when the court acts on the report without taking live testimony."). 14 Committee Minutes, supra note 9, at 10. 15 2003 Committee Notes, Subdivision (g) 5. 3

CONCLUSION It appears that the main engine driving de novo review in the federal version of Rule 53 was the fear of Article III overreach. Given the difference in Colorado state constitutional law and policy, this reasoning may not apply to our deliberations. However, in the event the Committee undertakes a 2016 revision of Rule 53, departing much from the federal rule may complicate our ability to rely on the federal Notes and case law developing around Rule 53. ENDNOTE ON COST SHIFTING AND PROPORTIONALITY The Subcommittee was also asked to spotlight the cost issue, particularly in light of access-to-justice concerns and the challenge of fronting fees for many parties, as well as proportionality concerns. The present federal Rule provides as follows: F.R.C.P. 53(h) Compensation. (3) Allocation. The court must allocate payment of the master s compensation among the parties after considering the nature and amount of the controversy the means of the parties, and the extent to which any party is more responsible than other parties for the reference to a master. An interim allocation may be amended to reflect a decision on the merits. The Notes for Subdivision (h) state: The need to pay compensation is a substantial reason for care in appointing private persons as masters. Payment of the master's fees must be allocated among the parties and any property or subject-matter within the court's control. The amount in controversy and the means of the parties may provide some guidance in making the allocation. The nature of the dispute also may be important parties pursuing matters of public interest, for example, may deserve special protection. A party whose unreasonable behavior has occasioned the need to appoint a master, on the other hand, may properly be charged all or a major 4

portion of the master's fees. It may be proper to revise an interim allocation after decision on the merits. The revision need not await a decision that is final for purposes of appeal, but may be made to reflect disposition of a substantial portion of the case. The basis and terms for fixing compensation should be stated in the order of appointment. The court retains power to alter the initial basis and terms, after notice and an opportunity to be heard, but should protect the parties against unfair surprise. Interestingly, the original 1994 discussion draft tendered by the Reporter, Prof. Ed Cooper, proposed to go much farther than the final Note that made it into print: Pretrial masters should be appointed only when needed. The parties should not be lightly subjected to the potential delay and expense of delegating pretrial functions to a pretrial master. The risk of increased delay and expense is offset, however, by the possibility that a master can bring to pretrial tasks time, talent, and flexible procedures that cannot be provided by judicial officers. Appointment of a master is justified when a master is likely to substantially advance the Rule 1 goals of achieving the just, speedy, and economical determination of litigation. The risk of imposing unfair costs on a party is a particular concern in determining whether to appoint a pretrial master. Appointment of a trial master under Rule 53 will be an exceptional event, and a post-trial master is likely to be appointed only in large-scale litigation in which the costs can fairly be imposed on parties able to bear them or be paid from a common fund. Pretrial masters may seem desirable across a broader range of litigation, more often involving one or more parties who cannot readily bear the expense of a master. Parties are not required to defray the costs of providing public judicial officers, and should not lightly be charged with the costs of providing private judicial officers. Disparities in party resources are not automatically cured by disproportionate allocations of fee responsibilities there is some risk that a master may appear beholden to a party who pays most or all of the fees. Even when all parties can well afford master fees, appointment is justified only if the expense is reasonable in relation to the character and needs of the litigation. The character and needs of litigation cannot be assessed in a vacuum. Appointment of a master may be justified when economically powerful adversaries conduct their litigation in a manner that threatens to consume an unfair share of the limited resources of public judicial officers. Consent of all parties may significantly reduce these concerns, although even then courts should strive to avoid situations in which consent is constrained by the unavailability of reasonable attention from a judge or magistrate judge. 16 * * * 16 E. Cooper, Civil Rule 53: An Enabling Act Challenge, 76 Tex. L. Rev. 1607, 1623 (1998). 5