Plаintiffs used to be employees of Country Club Hills, a city in Illinois. They contend in this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that Mayor Dwight Welch fired them for political reasons, violating the first amendment as it has been understood since
Elrod v. Burns,
The document in question was written by IRMa’s lawyers after it asked them to investigate whether Country Club Hills is doing enough to curtаil litigation exposure. This is a vital question, for insurance creates moral hazard: when someone else pays the tab, the insured will take additional risks and may incur costs deliberately. The other 72 members of irma do not want to make it cheap for the Mayor of Country Club Hills to violate the Constitution, knowing that only % of the consequences will be borne by the local taxpayers. Plaintiffs believe that the report contains information that will help them prеvail against the City, iema responded to the plaintiffs’ subpoena, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 84(c), 45, by invoking the attorney-client privilege. Because plaintiffs’ claim arises under federal law, this assertion of privilege also depends on fеderal law. See Fed. R.Evid. 501.
Federal law extends the privilege to communications about legal subjects, and it is hard to see why a business evaluation meets that description. Hiring lawyers to do consultants’ work does not bring a privilege into play. But the district judge did not decide whether this report had a component of legal advice, because he held that irma had waived any claim of privilege by sharing the report with the Mayor&emdash;the defendant in this suit. Knоwing disclosure to a third party almost invariably surren- ders the privilege with respect to the world at large; selective disclosure is not an option. See, e.g.,
Dellwood Farms, Inc. v. Cargill, Inc.,
Instead of either comn1vina~ or re a citation in contempt of court, the normal way to obtain appellate review of such an order, see
United States v. Ryan,
When documents are sought from the entity that claims the privilеge, there is every reason to insist that it go through the contempt process, which by raising the stakes helps the court winnow strong claims from delaying tactics that, like other interlocutory appeals, threaten to complicate and prolong litigation unduly. See
Powers v. Chicago Transit Authority,
Despite all of this, irma still holds a trump card:
Dellwood Farms
holds that non-parties always may appеal immediately when they contest discovery orders. The discussion is brief — just a single sentence — but it is a square holding. We wrote: “When the order . is directed against a nonparty, as it is here, [the non-party] has no appellate remedy at the end of the litigation, so he is entitled to appeal immediately.”
Ivey
did not entail a discovery dispute; instead a warden was appealing from a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum, and to the extent the issues were relatеd to discovery it was cousin to
Perlman
(for the warden, having no interest in the underlying suit, was not about to risk a contempt citation).
Frazier
likewise did not concern the assertion of privilege by a party resisting discovery; it took up an appеal by a lawyer sanctioned for violating
*901
Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. What is more, after we issued
Dellwood Farms
the Supreme Court scuttled
Frazier
(and decisions like it in other circuits) by holding that an attorney may
not
appeal immediately from an award of sanctions. See
Cunningham v. Hamilton County,
The most one can say for
Dellwood Farms
is that
Covey Oil
and similar cases in the Tenth Circuit, though questioned in
Boughton,
have not bеen overruled. That may not have been enough (given
Ryan
and the many decisions in other circuits applying it beyond the grand jury context) to justify our adopting the approach of
Covey Oil,
but it counsels against our overruling
Dellwood Farms
— for, unless the Tenth Circuit also overrules decisions along
Covey
Oil’s lines, a conflict will remain. Indeed, no matter what we (or the Tenth Circuit) do, a conflict will persist— for in recent years some circuits have allowed even
parties
to appeal immediately from orders rejecting assertions of privilege. Non-parties, which cannot appeal from the final decision following sanctions, other than contempt, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37, logically have appellate rights at least as extensive as parties do. Thе most recent of these decisions is
United States v. Philip Morris Inc.,
The merits are not complex: the district judge was on the mark, for the reasons he gave. When IRma showed the Mayor a copy of the report, it waived any privilege it possesses — which makes it unnecessary to decide whether a “self-critical analysis privilege” exists or (if it does) covers criticism of an organization’s members. Many deсisions caution against the creation of new privileges, even for what appear to be good reasons, see
University of Pennsylvania v. EEOC,
IRMA contends that each of its members is really pari of irma, and that passing a document around within an organization (say, to a corporation’s board of directors, or the executive committee of a partnership) does not relinquish any privilege otherwise available. That’s true enough for *902 dissemination within the top echelon of a single organization, but Welch is Mayor of Country Club Hills, not Mayor (or any other officer) of irma. Welch does not wield any еxecutive authority in irma either ex officio or otherwise.
Illinois treats irma as a public entity rather than an insurer and thinks of the municipalities more like members of a reinsurance pool than like normal insureds. See
Lombard v. IRMA,
Affirmed
