delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Leonard Davis, appeals pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 308 (87 Ill. 2d R. 308) from an order of the circuit court of Lake County which imposed sanctions on his failure to comply with discovery. The trial court certified two questions of law concerning those sanctions, and we allowed leave to appeal. Plaintiff seeks to have the sanctions reversed.
The action from which this interlocutory appeal arises involved a personal injury suit filed by plaintiff, a bus driver, alleging that a vehicle owned and operated by defendant, John Hinde, struck the rear of a bus operated by Davis while the bus was stopped. Before plaintiff’s discovery deposition was taken, defendant requested the names of clients represented by plaintiff’s attorney within the last three years who were also treated by plaintiff’s physicians. Although plaintiff did not object within 28 days, he did so thereafter, claiming that the names were privileged. The trial court ordered disclosure within 14 days. Plaintiff did not comply with the order and filed a motion to reconsider which was denied. When plaintiff’s attorney continued to refuse to comply, defendant filed a motion for sanctions which was granted. Plaintiff’s second motion for reconsideration was also denied, and pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 308 (87 Ill. 2d R. 308) two questions of law were certified. Plaintiff was granted leave to appeal by this court.
The questions of law presented are: (1) Whether the recent Illinois Supreme Court decision of Sears v. Rutishauser (1984),
In Sears v. Rutishauser (1984),
In the present case, for the purposes of discovery, pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 214 (87 Ill. 2d R. 214) defendant requested plaintiff’s attorney to produce a list of the names of every client represented by his firm who had also been treated by plaintiff’s treating doctors. Defendant’s stated purpose was to try to establish the existence of a lucrative business relationship between a Chicago based law firm and Lake County clients receiving treatments for soft-tissue injuries in Lake County and that the opinion of the testifying doctor was the natural and expected result of his employment. Asserting both the attorney-client and physician-patient privilege, plaintiff’s attorney declined to turn over the requested material, even though the court ordered him to do so. Although the rationale of the Sears court’s decision was similar to the stated purpose of the production request in the present case, namely to provide a safeguard against errant expert testimony, we conclude that the present court’s ruling exceeded the boundaries set forth in Sears. This court has recently reasserted that generally the identity of a lawyer’s client is outside the scope of the attorney-client privilege except in those cases when application is shown to be in the public interest, or will harm the client in some substantial way. (Shatkin Investment Corp. v. Connelly (1984),
In People v. Florendo (1983),
In Lebrecht v. Tuli (1985),
Although it is arguable that the revelation of an arrangement between attorneys and doctors, such as defendant suggests, would be in the public interest, the matter is collateral to the issue of plaintiff’s immediate action. Furthermore, even if the names were supplied, other patients contacted and their waivers and records obtained, it would be impossible to determine from a cursory questioning of the doctors either at a deposition or at trial whether each particular case varied in any way from plaintiff’s problem so as to validly establish the generalization defendant seeks. In our opinion, this would necessarily result in the time consuming subtrials remote from the subject of the lawsuit as warned against by the Sears court. We conclude, therefore, that the request for production in its present form was too broad and that for the purpose of showing bias and attacking credibility it should have been limited to the number and frequency of referrals from plaintiff’s attorney and any financial benefit derived therefrom.
Since we have concluded that the order compelling production of the names in question was not proper under Sears, the second certified question no longer applies.
For the reasons stated, we conclude that the production requested by defendant was beyond the limits set forth in Sears v. Rutishauser (1984), 102 DI. 2d 402, and based on this conclusion, the sanctions were incorrectly imposed by the trial court.
The judgment of the circuit court of Lake County is reversed and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
SCHNAKE and STROUSE, JJ., concur.
