David Cherney was informed by the government that he would be subpoenaed to testify before the Grand Jury for the Southern District of Illinois regarding the identity of the individual who paid legal fees to him to represent an individual charged in a drug conspiracy. Cherney filed a motion to quash the subpoena claiming that the fee payer’s identity was protected by the attorney-client privilege. After reviewing relevant documents in camera, the district court held that the information was protected by the privilege and granted the motion to quash. The government appeals. We affirm.
I.
David Cherney, the appellee, is an attorney. In 1985 he represented an individual named Jack Hrvatin in a conspiracy-narcotics trial in the District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. Hrvatin’s legal fees were paid by an unknown third party. The identity of the fee payer is at the center of this dispute as apparently the fee payer was also involved in the drug conspiracy and consulted Cherney for legal advice concerning such involvement. Following Hrvatin’s conviction, Cherney was advised by the United States Attorney’s Office that he was to be served with a subpoena to appear before the 1988-2 Grand Jury for the Southern District of Illinois to answer questions regarding the identity of the individual who paid Cherney to represent Hrvatin. Cherney then filed a motion to quash the subpoena pursuant to Fed.Crim. P.R. 17(c) on the grounds that the identity of the fee payer was protected by the attorney-client privilege. Both parties briefed the issue and Cherney submitted documents for in camera review. The district *567 court found that the in camera documents submitted by Cherney established that the fee payer sought personal legal advice from Cherney in advance of Cherney’s representation of Hrvatin. The district court then granted the motion to quash, holding that the fee payer’s identity was protected by the attorney-client privilege. The government appeals claiming that fee information is generally not protected by the privilege, and that the limited exception to this rule where the disclosure of such information would reveal confidential communications is inapplicable to this case.
The underlying theory of the attorney-client privilege is based on the premise “that encouraging clients to make fullest disclosure to their attorneys enables the latter to act more effectively, justly, and expeditiously, and that these benefits outweigh the risks posed by barring full revelation in court.” J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Evidence, ¶ 503(02) 1982.
See Fisher v. United States,
The government’s principal claim on appeal is drawn from a two sentence quote at the conclusion of the district court’s opinion that “[t]here is a strong probability that disclosure of the fee payer’s identity and fee arrangements would implicate that client in the very criminal activity for which legal advice was sought. The Court therefore finds that the identity of the fee payer and the fee arrangement is protected by the attorney-client privilege.” Based on this excerpt, the government argues that the court “lost sight of the general purpose of the attorney-client privilege and misapplied the law.” In a nutshell, the government argues as follows: The attorney-client privilege is limited to protecting confidential communications. In its memorandum opinion, as demonstrated by the quote above, rather than finding that the disclosure would reveal a confidential communication, the court found that the privilege attached solely because the information would tend to incriminate the fee payer in criminal activities. As our case law makes clear, however, incrimination has been rejected as a sufficient basis for invoking the privilege. The government concludes that while disclosure of the fee payer’s identity may link that individual with others involved in criminal activity, it will not reveal a privileged communication. Therefore, since the district court failed to properly apply the privilege, we should reverse its decision to grant the motion to quash.
*568
We begin our analysis of the government’s claim by examining the theory underlying the application of the attorney-client privilege to a client’s identity and legal fee arrangement. In
Matter of Witnesses,
we identified two competing rationales for the privilege in this context: the “incrimination” rationale and the “confidential communications” rationale. In that case, the district court held that the attorney-client privilege applies to any fee information in an attorney’s possession which might tend to incriminate the client. On review, this Court rejected the incrimination rationale for the privilege and held that “the application of the privilege turns not upon incrimination
per se
but upon whether disclosure would in effect reveal information which has been confidentially communicated.”
The government conceded at oral argument that an attorney-client relationship existed between the fee payer and Cherney prior to Cherney’s representation of Hrvatin and the purpose for which the fee payer sought advice was his involvement in the underlying drug conspiracy. The government argues that, regardless of the formation of this relationship, information concerning the payment of fees simply cannot be considered a confidential communication. In the circumstances of this case, we must disagree. A client’s motive for seeking legal advice is undeniably a confidential communication.
See, e.g., Matter of Walsh,
The government makes the overbroad argument that disclosure of the fee payer’s identity would do no more than prevent a culpable individual from using his attorney- *569 client relationship as a shield against incrimination. The privilege may well at times serve to preclude an attorney from incriminating his client but this is the price we pay for a system that encourages individuals to seek legal advice and to make full disclosure to the attorney so that the attorney can render informed advice. Invading the privilege may allow the government to prosecute more criminals but will have a grave effect on our justice system as clients, knowing that their confidential communications may be subject to disclosure, will eventually be less than candid with their attorneys or will consider foregoing legal advice altogether. This cannot be a desired result.
In affirming the district court’s grant of the motion to quash the subpoena, we pause to note that the government’s attack on the district court’s opinion is unjustified. Any fair reading of the opinion reveals that the district court premised its order on the well-supported proposition that where disclosure of the unknown client would, in effect, reveal the client’s motive for seeking legal advice, the privilege precludes disclosure. The government acts disingenuously by offering a two sentence excerpt from a four page opinion to support a misleading interpretation of the trial court’s reasoning. The government ends up arguing that the disclosure of the fee payer’s identity is not a confidential communication — a position which does not require such a distortion of the lower court’s holding.
In its brief, the government adamantly asserts that protecting the fee payer’s identity will serve to open Pandora’s box by creating and promoting moral, ethical and professional problems in the attorney-client relationship. Specifically, we are told that protecting the client’s identity will encourage attorneys to take on multiple representation, ignore their ethical duties, and “become conduits in furtherance of criminal schemes.” We refuse to indulge in the government’s unwarranted forecast that our holding today will lead to the imminent demise of the ethical base of our adversary system. The attorney-client privilege is essential “to the proper functioning of our adversary system of government.”
United States v. Zolin,
— U.S. -,
II.
The fee payer sought legal advice from Cherney concerning potential criminal charges. As such, disclosure of the fee payer’s identity would convey the substance of a confidential communication. Accordingly, under the special circumstances of this ease, the privilege attaches and the opinion of the district court is AFFIRMED.
