MEMORANDUM OPINION
The plaintiffs in most of these actions are or were customers of the Bank of New York Mellon (“BNYM” or the “Bank”)
The matter now is before the Court on the motion of the Customer Class Plaintiffs (“Plaintiffs”) for an order compelling the Bank to produce in unredacted form a document (the “Robeco document”) that contains a legal memorandum (the “Groom Memo”) originally prepared for BNYM but that the Bank later forwarded to some third-party investment managers, including Robeco Investment Management (“Ro-beco”), that were associated, with BNYM’s pension plan.
The Bank argues that the Groom Memo is “protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege and work product doctrine” and that “BNYM did not waive the privilege by sharing the Memo with its existing investment managers.”
Facts
On June 10, 2009, Andrée St. Martin, an attorney at the Groom Law Group and thus among the Bank’s outside counsel, sent the Groom .Memo to BNYM.
Years later, after the initiation of these actions, BNYM issued a subpoena to Ro-beco, which produced 91 documents to the Bank, including those at issue here.
Discussion
The Attorney-Client Privilege and the Common Interest Doctrine
The attorney-client privilege, which had its origins in the 16th century, is among the oldest common law privileges.
The common interest doctrine is a notable exception to this waiver rule.
The Bank contends that disclosure of the Groom Memo to Robeco (among others) did not waive the attorney-client privilege because BNYM originally shared the document “to promote the common legal interests” of the Bank, its pension plan, and its investment managers with respect to ERISA compliance.
Plaintiffs insist that the common interest doctrine is inapplicable, in large part because the Bank, they contend, did not conceive of the Groom Memo as an attorney-client communication when it circulated the document to its investment managers.
In resolving this dispute, the Court recognizes that the outer limits of the common interest doctrine — as far as the nature of the interest that must be shared by the client whose attorney communication is at issue (here BNYM) and the non-party to whom the communication has been divulged (here the pension plan investment managers) — are not clear.
The weight of the rather limited authority on this issue suggests that the common interest doctrine is narrow — that it shields from discovery confidential attorney-client communications voluntarily disclosed to a third party only if that third party shares with the disclosing party some identifiable and concrete legal interest.
On the other hand, some courts have taken a more expansive view of the common interest doctrine — one that protects confidential attorney-client communications voluntarily disclosed to a third party even if that third party shares only a commercial or financial interest with the
This case falls somewhere along the spectrum between the poles represented by the views thus summarized. Certainly the Bank and its pension plan’s investment managers had more than a simple commercial interest in the subject addressed by the Groom Memo. The Bank was concerned with ensuring that its pension plans complied with ERISA, it obtained legal advice on that issue, and it communicated that legal advice to the investment managers who invested plan assets. It did so coupled with the imperative that the managers ensure compliance in circumstances where it was reasonable to suppose that both the Bank and the investment managers would encounter liability in the absence of compliance with the statute. On the other hand, the Bank and the investment managers did not face existing or imminently threatened litigation. They did not enter into a joint defense agreement, certainly not explicitly and probably not implicitly. ■ And the Bank’s threat to seek indemnity from the investment managers if they failed to comply with ERISA coupled with the Bank’s disclosure of the advice it received laid down a marker that was in some degree commercial in nature — it effectively told the investment managers that the Bank would hold them responsible if they did not handle the compliance issues in at least as exacting a manner as the Groom Memo had recommended.
In the last analysis, the resolution of this problem must consider whether application of the common interest doctrine on these facts would serve the policies that underlie the attorney-client privilege better than a different conclusion. On the one hand, extension of the common interest doctrine here would do nothing to protect the ability of the Bank to engage in full and candid communication with its attorneys about the subject in question. That communication took place when the Bank received the Groom Memo in the first instance.
On the other hand, we live in a very complex society. The Bank and its pension plans are obliged to comply with ERISA, a very complicated statute, and to do so in the context of a complicated investment world. The division of functions that characterizes every sector of our economy is reflected by the Bank’s delegation of at least some investment responsibilities to the investment managers. And society in general has an important interest in ensuring that those involved in such heavily regulated and complicated activities act in the fullest possible knowledge of the legal implications of what they do. Indeed, the Supreme Court adverted to this interest in Upjohn Co. v. United States,
“The narrow scope given the attorney-client privilege by the court below ... threatens to limit the valuable efforts of corporate counsel to ensure their client’s compliance with the law. In light of the vast and complicated array of regulatory
The same considerations are at work here. Accordingly, this Court holds that the Bank’s disclosure of the Groom Memo to its pension plan’s investment managers, aimed as it was at securing compliance with the requirements of ERISA, was protected by the common interest doctrine and the attorney-client privilege.
Conclusion
Plaintiffs’ letter motion [DI 515] is denied in all respects.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. “BNYM” and the “Bank” refer collectively to the Bank of New York Mellon and its various predecessors and affiliates.
. The Court assumes familiarity with previous opinions that set out the nature of the dispute. See, e.g., In re Bank of N.Y. Mellon Corp. Forex Transactions Litig.,
. See Plaintiffs’ Mot. to Compel [DI 515],
. Defendants’ Brief in Opp’n [DI 504], at 1.
. See DI 515, at 2-3; see also Plaintiffs’ Reply [DI 508], at 1.
. DI 515, at 3; see also Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(3). .
. See DI 515, Ex. A, at 4.
. See DI 504, at 1. Plaintiffs ask the Court to “undertake an in camera review of the Robe-co document (and the Groom Memo contained therein) in connection with its consideration of this matter,” and the Bank agreed to such a review. DI 515, at 5. The Court has done so.
.See DI 515, Ex. A, at 2-3.
. Letter from Daniel P. Chiplock, Partner, Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, to the Court (Sept. 9, 2014) [DI 462], Ex. A, at 2.
. See DI 504, at 4; DI 515, at 4.
. See DI 515, at 1.
. See DI 515, at 1,4; DI 462.
. Letter from Reid M. Figel, Partner, Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Evans & Figel, to the Court (Sept. 9, 2014) [DI 464], at 1.
. See Upjohn Co. v. United States,
. Upjohn,
. Upjohn,
. Upjohn,
. In re Horowitz,
. See Fox News Network, LLC v. U.S. Dep’t of Treasury,
. See Denney v. Jenkens & Gilchrist,
. DI 504, at 1.
. Id. at 1-3.
. See DI 515, at 2.
. DI 462, Ex. A, at 4-5.
. DI 515, at 2.
. DI 462, Ex. A, at 2.
. DI 515, at 3.
. See, e.g., Duplan Corp. v. Deering Milliken, Inc.,
. See id. (“The key consideration is that the nature of the interest be identical, not similar, and be legal, not solely commercial.”); see also, e.g., Fox News Network,
. See, e.g., SEC v. Wyly, No. 10-cv-5760,
. Denney,
. Id. (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
. See, e.g., Hewlett-Packard. Co. v. Bausch & Lomb, Inc.,
.
. Id. at 392,
. This conclusion renders the parties’ disagreement concerning the work product doctrine academic. Further, the Bank stoutly maintains that its March 11, 2014 production of an unredacted copy of the Groom Memo to Plaintiffs and the United States Attorney’s Office production was inadvertent, and there is no evidence to the contrary. Accordingly, that production did not waive the privilege.
