Petitioner Frederick R. Weisman seeks a writ of mandamus directing the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Robert W. Sweet, J., to vacate in part a discovery order that compelled Weisman to produce certain documents that Weisman claims are protected by the attorney-client privilege. The judge’s ruling was based upon a finding that Weisman had waived his right to assert the privilege as to the papers in question. Petitioner claims that under this court’s recent opinion in
In re von Bulow,
I. Facts
The relevant facts in this hotly-contested diversity case are as follows. Petitioner Weisman is a wealthy businessman who for about 15 years had a close personal and business relationship with Sachiko Bower. The relationship ended in the summer of 1985. In November 1985, Bower sued Weisman and two corporations he controls in New York State Supreme Court. The complaint alleged that Weisman had breached his agreement to provide Bower with an interest in his business affairs and with financial security, even after their relationship ended, as long as Bower, a Japanese citizen, did not remarry or leave the United States. Defendants removed the action to the federal courts. As might be expected given the nature of the allegations, the litigation has been bitter. It has already produced extensive motion practice and discovery and three opinions in the district court (two of them reported at
In the proceedings before Judge Sweet, Bower produced a letter, dated July 15, 1983, that allegedly contained the understanding of the parties regarding various transactions to be effected. According to this document, Bower would receive an ownership interest in a home, financial security even after Weisman’s death, including the benefit of a substantial irrevocable trust, and an interest in a business venture. The letter appears to be signed by both Weisman and Bower. Weisman claimed that the letter was merely a draft for discussion and that his signature on this and other documents was forged. To support this defense, Weisman voluntarily produced over 20 pages of handwritten notes of his attorney, Richard Gilbert, arguably showing that negotiations over the substance of the matters referred to in the July 15, 1983 document took place in late 1983 and throughout 1984, well after the date of the alleged “agreement.” The notes reflect, among other things, attorney-client communications about Weisman’s will and various trust agreements then allegedly in contemplation. Weisman also voluntarily produced a series of documents that relate to understandings and draft property settlement agreements discussed in August 1984. The papers included letters from Weisman’s attorney to Weisman’s financial consultant, stating the purpose of the agreements and the reasons for various changes, e.g., that the documents represent “an attempt to take the first step toward protecting [Weisman’s] interest from any claim by [Bower] after his death.”
Bower moved thereafter to compel discovery of, among other things, various testamentary trust instruments and a codicil to Weisman’s will and various communications in the files of Weisman’s attorneys relating to proposed property agreements drafted in 1982-84. Bower argued before Judge Sweet that these documents “would tend to establish the pattern of conduct between Bower and Weisman” and “may be relevant in describing the nature” of the relationship. Weisman refused to produce them on the ground of attorney-client privilege. Bower argued that the privilege had been waived by Weisman’s voluntary production of attorney Gilbert’s extensive handwritten notes and letters to Weisman’s financial consultant.
Judge Sweet agreed with Bower in part. In an 11-page opinion, the judge held that Weisman, by producing copies of Gilbert's notes, had waived his privilege with respect to the subject matter of the trust agreements and codicil and ordered production of those documents. The judge also held that, by producing documents relating to the draft property settlement agreements, Weisman had waived his privilege with respect to papers in Gilbert’s files bearing on “the issue of protecting Weisman’s interest from claims by Bower after his death.” *25 However, the judge denied discovery of all the other communications from Weisman in Gilbert’s files and discovery of communications between Weisman and another attorney. Almost five weeks later, on October 14, petitioner filed in this court his petition for a writ of mandamus and, two weeks later, shortly before the scheduled trial date of November 2, his motion for a stay pending determination of the petition for mandamus. As indicated above, we denied both applications shortly thereafter.
II. Appropriateness of Mandamus
In his petition for mandamus, petitioner argues that under this court’s recent decision in In re von Bulow, mandamus is an appropriate procedure for obtaining review of Judge Sweet’s order and that, upon such review, this court should find that the judge erred by construing Weisman’s waiver of the attorney-client privilege much too broadly. As will be seen, we do not find it necessary to consider the merits of Judge Sweet’s order because we conclude that the requirements for mandamus relief are not met.
Mandamus is an extraordinary writ, and, when applied to an interlocutory discovery order, runs directly contrary to the philosophy of the federal final judgment rule. That rule is not only statutory, see 28 U.S.C. § 1291, but is a fundamental characteristic of federal practice and one of the chief distinctions between the operation of federal and some state courts, e.g., New York,
1
the state whose substantive law Judge Sweet applied.
2
The policies behind the final judgment rule and the general refusal of federal courts to allow interlocutory review of discovery orders have been stated many times. Thus, in
American Express Warehousing, Ltd. v. Transamerica Ins. Co.,
an appellant’s ultimate right of review upon an appeal from a final judgment in the action; the elimination of unnecessary appeals, since the complaining party may win the case or settle it; the absence of irreparable harm from the vast majority of orders requiring production of documents; the potential for harassment of litigants by nuisance appeals, and the fact that any appeal tends to delay or deter trial or settlement of a lawsuit; the burden on the reviewing court’s docket from appeals of housekeeping matters in the district courts; and the slim chance for reversal of all but the most unusual discovery orders.
A long line of precedent in this court has echoed these observations. See, e.g.,
In re Attorney General of the United States,
We realize, of course, that petitioner does not directly attack the federal final judgment rule and the policies it embodies. Indeed, his argument rests in large part on language quoted from our opinion in
American Express.
He claims that he is entitled to what that opinion called one of the “escape hatches from the finality rule: ... an extraordinary writ.” Id. at
Petitioner argues, however, that even though we denied mandamus in the context of a claim of loss of work-product protection in
American Express
and have followed that course since in the face of similar claims involving the attorney-client privilege, e.g.,
Xerox Corp. v. SCM Corp.,
We do not agree.
In re von Bu-low
is apparently the first case in which this court has issued a writ of mandamus to review a discovery order rejecting a claim of attorney-client privilege.
3
But cf.
International Business Machines Corp. v. United States,
In determining the appropriateness of mandamus relief in
In re von Bulow,
the panel applied this circuit’s well-settled standard. See
In re International Business Machines Corp.,
The panel in
In re von Bulow
closely scrutinized the legal questions presented by the district court’s discovery order and determined that the case presented a legal question of first impression of “extraordinary significance.”
The petition for the writ of mandamus is denied.
Notes
. Cf. R. MacCrate, J.D. Hopkins & M. Rosenberg, Appellate Justice in N.Y. 86-88 (1982) (recommending that New York consider a change to limit review of interlocutory orders).
. Weisman is apparently a resident of California. The parties apparently agree that New York and California law do not differ on the issues presented to Judge Sweet, and the judge so assumed.
. Other circuits, often applying a more expansive view of mandamus than recognized in this circuit, have granted mandamus to review discovery orders rejecting claims of attorney-client privilege. See, e.g.,
Diversified Industries, Inc. v. Meredith,
