Subpoenas seeking documents were issued to an attorney and his law firm who are not parties to this lawsuit. They filed a third-party motion to quash on work product grounds. After the district court denied their motion, instead of producing the subpoenaed documents, they appealed and also filed a petition for a writ of mandamus. The defendants in the underlying lawsuit filed their own appeal from the denial of the motion to quash even though the subpoenas were not addressed to them and they did not object in the district court. As you might imagine, this appeal presents a number of issues of appellate jurisdiction.
I.
Over a number of years, attorney Terrance P. Collingsworth and his law firm, Conrad & Sherer, LLP (collectively, Coll-ingsworth) have filed a series of lawsuits on behalf of Colombian plaintiffs against Alabama-based oil company Drummond Company, Inc. under the Alien Tort Statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1350. Those lawsuits claim that Drummond has attempted to maintain control of its coal mining operations-in Colombia by conspiring with paramilitary groups there, making Drummond complicit in scores of human rights violations including a number of murders. So far none of those lawsuits has been successful.
In 2011 Drummond filed a defamation lawsuit against Collingsworth in federal district court in the Northern District of Alabama based on a-series of letters that Collingsworth sent to Drummond’s customers and business- partners describing Drummond’s alleged role in those human rights violations. Collingsworth contended that the statements in those letters were based on the testimony of former Colombian paramilitary fighters. According to Drummond, however,' Collingsworth had paid those witnesses a total of- well over $100,000. Drummond argues that those payments call into question the veracity of the witnesses’-testimony and, in turn, the legitimacy of Collingsworth’s- defense to the defamation suit. '
To prove that Collingsworth paid the witnesses, Drummond served' Florida' attorney Jack Scarola and his law firm, Se-arcy, Denney, Scarola, Barnhart, & Ship-ley, P.A. (collectively, Scarola), with two subpoenas to produce documents. The connection to Scarola arises from the fact that he serves along with Collingsworth as counsel for plaintiffs in another lawsuit, which is a multi-district" litigation against Chitquita Brands International, Inc., premised on Chiquita’s alleged involvement in similar human rights violations. As co-counsel in that other case, Collings-worth and Scarola have shared information related to it under confidentiality and common interest agreements. - The subpoenas
Scarola filed a motion to quash Drummond’s subpoenas in the Southern District of Florida. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 45(d)(3)(A) (providing that a motion to quash should be directed to-the district court “where compliance is . required”). His motion contended that the. subpoenas sought materials protected by the work product privilege and that they imposed an undue burden on him as a nonparty to the defamation case. He did not submit a privilege log.
The district court denied Scarola’s motion to quash, concluding-that the work product privilege did not apply because the documents Drummond sought “were prepared for different parties in a different case in which Drummond was -not involved,” The court , declined to rule on the undue burden issue because the parties had said that they would “continue efforts to limit the burden that the present production request would impose.” The court directed the clerk of court to close the motion to, quash case (the only matter pending before it).
, Scarola appealed the district court’s decision. Collingsworth also appealed, asserting his own work product privilege in the subpoenaed documents for the first time.
II.
The threshold issue is whether we have jurisdiction to decide the appeals from the denial of Scarola’s motion to quash the subpoenas. See Adams v. Monumental Gen. Cas. Co.,
There are, of course, exceptions to the final judgment rule. A district court can certify for appeal, and the court of appeals can accept, an order that “involves a controlling question of law as to which there is a substantial ground for difference of opinion” where “immediate appeal ... may materially advance the ultimate termination . of the litigation.” 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). But the district court in this case did not do that. Or an aggrieved person can defy a district court’s order and then appeal directly from court-imposed
And a privilege holder can appeal from an order that directs a disinterested third party to produce materials over which the privilege holder claims a privilege of nondisclosure, if he would have no other means of appellate review. See Int’l Horizons, Inc. v. Comm. of Unsecured Creditors (In re Int’l Horizons),
A.
We turn first to Collingsworth, who contends that we have jurisdiction over his appeal because the district court’s disclosure order demands that Scarola turn over Collingsworth’s own privileged work product. “Ordinarily, a'litigant seeking to overturn a discovery order has two choices. Either he can comply with the order and challenge it at the conclusion of the case or he can refuse to comply with the order and contest its validity if subsequently cited for contempt for his refusal to obey.” Rouse,
But that concern arises only when the privilege holder is not a party to the underlying litigation from which the subpoena came. The Supreme Court made that clear in Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter,
Collingsworth attempts to distinguish Mohawk in two ways, neither of which is
We also explained in Doe No. 1 that Mohawk “foreclosed an interlocutory appeal of an order requiring the disclosure of [privileged] materials” when “the claimant [of the privilege] [is] a party who could appeal a final judgment.” Id. at 1007. A number of our sister circuits have reached the same conclusion. See United States v. Copar Pumice Co.,
Collingsworth’s second attempt to distinguish Mohawk points out that his challenge to the district court’s disclosure order is based on the work product privilege instead of the attorney-client privilege, which was involved in Mohawk. He insists that requiring him to wait until after final judgment to appeal the disclosure order will force him to expose his mental impressions and legal strategies to Drum-mond, irreparably destroying the adversarial process in the underlying case. We are sympathetic with that concern, but courts “routinely require litigants to wait until after final judgment to vindicate valuable rights, including lights central to our adversarial system.” Mohawk,
The Mohawk Court acknowledged that “an order to disclose privileged material may, in some situations, have implications beyond the case at hand.” Id. at 112,
Finding insufficient basis for distinguishing Mohawk, we will dismiss Coll-ingsworth’s interlocutory appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
B.
Scarola, for his part, argues that we have jurisdiction over his appeal under the collateral order doctrine, which recognizes that appellate jurisdiction under § 1291 “encompasses not only judgments that terminate an action, but also a small class of collateral rulings that, although they do not end the litigation, are appropriately deemed final.” Mohawk,
Discovery orders generally do not present “important questions” warranting collateral order review. See Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
Scarola argues that this longstanding rule doesn’t apply to him because he is a nonparty who cannot appéal from final judgment. We disagree. Although the Mohawk Court explained that “post-judgment appeals generally suffice to protect the rights of litigants and ensure the vitality of the attorney-client privilege^]” it also emphasized that aggrieved privilege holders have a number of “established mechanisms for appellate review” other than interlocutory appeal under the collateral order doctrine. Id. at 109-12,
In support of his position,- Scarola cites a few of our pre-Mohawk decisions. Some dicta in those decisions (does suggest that we might review discovery orders directed at nonparties before final judgment under the collateral order doctrine. But none of those decisions actually hold as much because the issue was not presented; they did not actually apply the collateral order doctrine. See In re Novak,
Scarola also points us to Ariel v. Jones,
We have never applied that reasoning to a case like Scarola’s, where the district court has..denied—instead of granted—a nonpar.ty’s motion to quash. That’s because, in those cases, the nonparty has another means of obtaining appellate review: he can defy the order and risk a contempt citation. See Mohawk,
As the Supreme -Court reminded us in Mohawk, “the class of collaterally appeal-able orders must remain narrow and selective in its membership”.
III.
Scarola also filed a petition for a writ of mandamus challenging the district court’s disclosure order. Mandamus can be an “appropriate avenue to seek review of discovery orders involving claims of privilege,” because it “strikes an appropriate balance between the concerns of [the policies] to be furthered by the privilege and the concerns of judicial efficiency,” Carpenter,
In his response to the mandamus petition, the district court, judge acknowledged that his disclosure order was “incomplete for not explaining that the common-law protections for attorney workproduet extend beyond the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” That may be so, but the central premise of his ruling was correct: the generalized, blanket assertion of work product' privilege does not entitle Scarola to the wholesale protection from Drummond’s subpoenas that he sought. See In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
Given the district court judge’s explanation and his stated intent, we remand the case to the court so that Scarola can assert any work.product privilege he may have on a specific, item-by-item basis, through a privilege log or other procedure the district court specifies,, and the district court may rule on those assertions of privilege and enter any protective order it determines is appropriate.
The appeals are DISMISSED, the mandamus petition is DENIED, and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Collingsworth never filed a motion to intervene in this Southern District of Florida proceeding. Nor did he otherwise participate in it before he filed his notice of appeal from the order denying Scarola’s motion to quash. After Collingsworth filed his notice of appeal, he also filed in the district court his own motion to quash the subpoenas issued to Scarola. Collingsworth did that almost a month sifter the district judge denied Scarola’s motion. That motion to quash was assigned to a different district judge, and it has been stayed pending the outcome of this appeal.
. “It is the law of this circuit that one who unsuccessfully asserts a governmental privilege may immediately appeal a discovery order where he is not a party to the lawsuit.” In re Hubbard,
. The district court may also address on remand any number of oilier issues that- it has not considered yet, including whether the subpoenas pose an undue burden; whether the parties have waived their right to assert the work product privilege; or whether future discovery, motions should be transferred under Fed.R.Civ.P, 45(f). We express no view on those issues.
