Topics: Product Liability, General Liability, Toxic Torts
The California legislature is poised to pass Public Right to Know Act of 2022
(Senate Bill 1149). If
this bill becomes law, it will have a significant impact on settlement agreements and protective
orders in product liability and toxic tort cases because it will essentially prohibit the use of
confidentiality to restrict the disclosure of case-related information.
The Public Right to Know Act of 2022 (the “Proposed Act”) would apply to all civil actions
involving “a defective product or environmental hazard that poses a danger to public health or
safety.” More specifically, it applies to all defective products and environmental hazards that have
“caused, or [are] likely to cause, significant or substantial bodily injury or illness, or death.” As such,
the Proposed Act would encompass—at a minimum—all California product liability and toxic tort
cases.
In addition, the Proposed Act bars any attempt to restrict the disclosure of discoverable information
related to a covered action. A defendant therefore cannot use a confidential settlement agreement
or protective order to prevent the disclosure of (1) admissible evidence and (2) information that
appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.
But there are a few exceptions. For example, settlement amounts can remain confidential. So can
information related to trade secrets. There is also a balancing catchall exception. But this exception
only applies if, for example, the defendant can show that the “disclosure is clearly outweighed by a
specific and substantial overriding confidentiality interest.”
Given the prevalent use of confidentiality provisions in settlement agreements as well as the use of
protective orders to govern and limit disclosure of confidential information and documents, the
Public Right to Know Act of 2022 will have a profound impact on California product liability and
toxic tort cases if it passes.
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