OPINION AND ORDER
Terra Nova Insurance Company Limited (“Terra Nova”) seeks an order compelling disclosure of certain documents that Bank of America, N.A. (the “Bank”) has withheld from discovery as privileged. For the reasons stated below, the motion is granted.
BACKGROUND
The 1999 Reinsurance Contracts and Letter of Credit Agreements
In 1999, Palladium Insurance Limited and some of its affiliates, including Platinum Indemnity Limited, (collectively, “Palladium”) entered into a series of weather derivative contracts with various third parties under which Palladium accepted certain weather related risks at locations throughout the United States. In connection with these contracts, the Bank entered into letter of credit agreements with Palladium pursuant to which the Bank extended letters of credit, for Palladium’s account.
In the letter of credit transactions between the Bank and Palladium, the Bank was represented by the law firm of Winston & Strawn. Palladium was represented by the firm of Conyers, Dill & Pear-man. Pursuant to the letter of credit agreements, the Bank issued letters of credit for Palladium’s account. Also pursuant to these agreements, Palladium purported to procure reinsurance policies from Terra Nova and other insurance companies in order to provide security for the Bank’s potential obligations on draws that might occur under the letters of credit. Under these reinsurance policies, Terra Nova and the other companies had to indemnify the Bank and Palladium for any payments they were required to make in connection with the underlying weather derivative contracts.
Ultimately, payments were required to be made to the third parties under the weather derivative contracts and thus under the reinsurance policies as well. The dispute in these cases centers on the authority of the individual who allegedly acted as the agent of Terra Nova (and the other insurance companies) in issuing the reinsurance policies: Harold Mollin of the *495 Customized Worldwide Weather Insurance Agency, Inc. Terra Nova alleges that Mol-lin acted without authority in purporting to bind Terra Nova to the reinsurance policies and that the policies are therefore invalid. The Bank asserts that the insurance policies are binding. Mollin has since fled the country.
The Subpoenas At Issue
On March 17, 2002, Terra Nova served Loren Weil of Winston & Strawn, the Bank’s counsel in its dealings with Palladium, with a subpoena duces tecum requiring him to testify and produce documents concerning the 1999 letter of credit agreements between the Bank and Palladium. In response, the Bank provided Terra Nova with documents to which it has asserted no privilege and also provided Terra Nova with a privilege log identifying a number of communications between Weil and Palladium in 1999 that the Bank claims to be privileged under the “common interest” doctrine. See Privilege Log, reproduced as Exhibit B to Letter from John M. Aerni, dated May 17, 2002 (“May 17 Letter”), at 1. Terra Nova seeks to compel production of these documents (hereinafter, the “Disputed Documents”) on the ground that the relationship between Weil and Palladium was not one of attorney and client but merely “debtor and creditor” and that therefore the common interest doctrine does not apply.
DISCUSSION
Applicable Choice of Law
At the outset, the parties disagree as to which law of privilege applies to this case. The Bank claims that the Court should apply the federal law of privilege, while General Star Indemnity Company (“General Star”) — an insurance company in a related case that seeks similar documents from the Bank — argues that New York law should apply. Rule 501 of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides that although federal common law generally governs federal court proceedings, “in civil actions and proceedings, with respect to an element of a claim or defense as to which State law supplies the rule of decision, the privilege ... shall be determined in accordance with State law.”
The Bank argues that because subject matter jurisdiction is based on the Edge Act, 12 U.S.C, § 632, the federal law of privilege applies. General Star argues that while the Edge Act provides federal jurisdiction for claims involving international or foreign banking, it does not provide a rule of decision but merely acts as a “pass-through to state law principles.”
Lloyds Bank PLC v. Republic of Ecuador,
The Court need not reach this issue because, as described below, the result is the same under either body of law. Indeed, “New York law governing the attorney-client privilege is generally similar to accepted federal doctrine.”
Bowne of New York City, Inc. v. AmBase Corp.,
Privilege Law Generally
The attorney-client privilege is “the oldest of the privileges for confidential communications known to the common law,”
Upjohn Co. v. United States,
The Common Interest Doctrine Under Federal Law
The doctrine under which the Bank claims attorney-client privilege for the Disputed Documents — known as the “common interest” doctrine or “joint defense” privilege — is an exception to the general rule that the attorney-client privilege is waived when a protected communication is disclosed to a third party. The doctrine “serves to protect the confidentiality of communications passing from one party to the attorney for another party where a joint defense effort or strategy has been decided upon and undertaken by the parties and their respective counsel.”
United States v. Schwimmer,
The Bank states that the Disputed Documents involve “communications with Palladium and/or its counsel with respect to the structuring and effectuation of the letter of credit agreement and the supporting reinsurance •policies.” Letter from Adam K. Hollander, dated May 28, 2002 at 1. Thus, according to the Bank, the “common interest” the Bank shared with Palladium was “structuring and effectuating a credit agreement that was appropriately supported by reinsurance policies.”
Accepting the Bank’s characterization of the interest it shared with Palladium, its argument that the common interest doctrine applies must be rejected. First, in structuring the credit agreement, the parties’ interests were not identical; the Bank was issuing letters of credit on behalf of its debtor, Palladium. While the Bank explains that there was a “collaborative effort” to structure a deal, such an effort is present in many negotiated commercial transactions. The mere fact that the parties were working together to achieve a commercial goal cannot by itself result in an identity of interest between the parties.
See, e.g., SR Int’l Bus. Ins. Co. Ltd.,
The Bank points out that Palladium paid the Bank’s attorneys’ fees in connection with the negotiation of the letter of credit agreement, arguing that this demonstrates an identity of interest. But this payment resulted only because the Bank required it as part of the letter of credit agreements. Indeed, it is common for lenders to require borrowers to pay the lenders’ attorneys’ fees without there being some identity of interest between these parties. If anything, the fact that the Bank could require Palladium to pay the Bank’s fees provides further evidence of the divergence of interests between the parties. Because the interests of the parties were not identical, the common interest doctrine does not apply.
See SR Int’l Bus. Ins. Co. Ltd.,
Second, the Bank has supplied no evidence that the letter of credit agreements constituted anything more than a business transaction — that is, a commercial endeav- or. The existence, of a “legal” — rather than a commercial — venture, however, is a critical component of the common interest doctrine.
SR Int’l Bus. Ins. Co. Ltd.,
It is of no moment that the parties may have been developing a business deal that included as a component the desire to avoid litigation. As noted in
Walsh v. Northrop Grumman Corp.,
The lack of a common interest is further highlighted by the actual “Common Interest/Joint Prosecution and Defense Agreement” that was ultimately executed by the Bank and Palladium. The document is undated but its text states that the two entities did not enter into the agreement until April 24, 2000.
See
May 17 Letter, Ex. C, at unnumbered second page. Thus, there was “no joint defense effort or strategy,”
Schwimmer,
The case of
United States v. United Techs.,
For these reasons, the Bank has not met its burden of establishing privilege under federal law.
The Common Interest Doctrine Under New York Law
The Bank fares even worse under New York law. The only New York Court of Appeals case on the common interest doctrine deals with a criminal proceeding.
See People v. Osorio,
CONCLUSION .
Terra Nova’s request'for an order compelling the production of the Disputed Documents is granted.
