The defendant Shields & Company has moved for the production of certain documents under Rule 34, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A., and under Rule 37(a), to compel answers to certain questions propounded to a witness upon his deposition. The discovery proceedings occur in connection with three unconsolidated actions by investors to rescind their purchases, in November of 1950, of an amount of revenue bonds pertaining to a bridge in Nebraska, on the ground of material misrepresentation. In June of 1953 the plaintiff Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company turned its file over to one of the attorneys in its legal department for investigation, with the statement that the problem was one of a legal nature. The attorney, Mr. Hook, made two separate trips to the bridge area, and rendered reports of his investigations and conclusions. He also made an intermediate report to the Committee on Valuation of Securities, in the form of a revision of his first report. There are also in existence correspondence and memoranda referring to communications had between Hook and others than his employer, relating to his trips. These reports and documents are the subject of the motion to produce, as is a memorandum prepared by the financial secretary of Connecticut Mutual for the president of that company. The questions for which answers are sought relate to a discussion of Hook’s reports in which he took part, and apparently call for the substance of the reports.
Production of the reports and of the peripheral correspondence and memoranda is resisted on the ground that they constitute the work product of an attorney, within the rule of Hickman v. Taylor,
But defendant contends that even though his reports are work product, the fact that they have been displayed to third persons constitutes a waiver of any privilege which attaches, on the ground that the same facts which constitute a waiver of the attorney-client privilege also effect a waiver of any “work product immunity”. Since the reports and surrounding correspond
The work product rule does not, however, render a lawyer’s files inviolate. Where the production of relevant and non-privileged facts in an attorney’s file is “essential to the preparation of one’s case, discovery may properly be had.” Hickman v. Taylor, supra,
Accordingly, the motion to compel production of the reports and peripheral memoranda and correspondence will be denied. Likewise, the motion to compel the answers to questions of Hook’s deposition, calling for similar material, in non-documentary form will be denied. If an attorney need not produce his files, he ought not to be compelled to give oral testimony involving their contents. For the report of the financial secretary to the president of Connecticut Mutual, there has not even been an attempt to show good cause, assuming the relevancy of the report, and .its production will also be denied.
