OPINION
This case presents the issue of whether the attorney-client privilege may attach to preliminary drafts of a document, exchanged between a client and a lawyer, when the final version is published to a third party. Pursuant to the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota sought to obtain two earlier drafts of a letter in which the university conveyed its decision to deny him tenure. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the
The facts of this case are not disputed; hence, we review the matter de novo.
See A.J. Chromy Constr. Co. v. Commercial Mech. Servs., Inc.,
Kobluk appealed the denial of tenure to the university’s senate judicial committee. The committee recommended that the tenure file be reviewed again, this time solely on the basis of academic and scholarly qualifications. In July 1995, the university’s president affirmed many of the committee’s recommendations and assigned a provost the task of evaluating the file anew. At that,time, the provost was notified that an attorney from the university’s office of general counsel would serve as his legal advisor in the matter. 1 The provost and counsel had at least a brief conversation about the matter shortly thereafter.
After reviewing the tenure file, the provost prepared a first draft of a letter denying tenure. 2 On September 5, 1995, he forwarded the draft to counsel for her review, along with a cover memorandum addressed to her and marked “CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT.” According to the provost, he.sent the first draft to counsel because he anticipated that the letter denying tenure would “becom[e] a legal document.”
Counsel reviewed the memorandum and first draft, jotting suggested revisions in the margins. She and the provost then met to discuss the draft and its legal implications. On September 13, 1995, counsel sent a second draft of the letter to the provost. After making some changes to this second draft, the provost sent the third and final version of the letter to Kobluk on September 19, 1995. Kobluk does not assert that anyone outside the provost’s and counsel’s offices saw either of the first two drafts.
Kobluk again appealed the denial of tenure to the senate judicial committee. During this proceeding, Kobluk sought to discover the two drafts of the September 19 letter; 3 however, the committee ruled that the' drafts were privileged.
Kobluk then requested copies of the drafts pursuant to the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, Minn.Stat. ch. 13 (1996). In rejecting the request, the university claimed the documents were shielded by the attorney-client privilege and thus exempt from production under the Data Practices Act. See Minn.Stat. § 13.08, subd. 4 (1996).
On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that the first draft and accompanying cover memorandum were privileged and exempt from disclosure; however,
The court of appeals affirmed the district court’s decision as to the second draft but reversed and remanded as to the first draft.
See Kobluk v. University of Minn.,
This court has described the attorney-client privilege by reference to its statutory formulation, 4 as well as Wigmore’s classic explication:
(1) Where legal advice of any kind is sought (2) from a professional legal adviser in his capacity as such, (3) the communications relating to that purpose, (4) made in confidence (5) by the client, (6) are at his instance permanently protected (7) from disclosure by himself or by the legal adviser, (8) except the protection be waived.
8 John Henry Wigmore,
Evidence
§ 2292, at 554 (McNaughton rev.1961),
quoted in Brown v. Saint Paul City Ry. Co.,
The privilege, however, is not without limits. For example, courts have held that the privilege may not be used to shield communications regarding a future crime or fraud.
See, e.g., Kahl v. Minnesota Wood Specialty, Inc.,
The university and Kobluk agree that if the attorney-client privilege attaches to the preliminary drafts of the letter denying tenure, the' drafts are exempt from disclosure under the Data Practices Act.
See
Minn.Stat. § 13.03, subd. 6 (1996).
5
However, Kobluk
Thus, the issues presented by this appeal are: 1) whether the drafts of the letter denying tenure constituted “communications relating to th[e] purpose” of seeking or rendering legal advice; and 2) if so, whether they were communications “made in confidence.” 8 Wigmore,
supra,
§ 2292, at 554. In other words, we must decide whether preliminary versions of a document can “come into existence * ⅜ * by reason of’ the attorney-client relationship,
Brown,
241 Minn, at 33-34,
I.
In asserting that the provost routed the first draft to counsel merely to shield it from discovery, Kobluk correctly observes that an otherwise unprivileged, preexisting document does not become privileged upon delivery by the client to the attorney.
See, e.g., Fisher v. United States,
A distinction must be drawn, however, between documents that exist independently of the attorney-client relationship and those that “com[e] into existence * * ⅜ as a communication” between the client and the attorney:
Where the document already had an independent existence and the communication consists in bringing its contents to the attorney’s knowledge, that knowledge is not to be disclosed by his [or her] testimony * * *. But the physical possession of the document is distinct from that knowledge, and to compel production of the document is not to compel the disclosure of the communication.
* * * Where the document is itself the client’s written communication, coming into existence merely as a communication to the attorney, the situation is obviously different. This communication itself is not to be produced, whether it was made by the ehent by word of mouth or by writing. Since a document which is itself a communication is within the privilege, the test is whether the document first came into existence as a part of a communication to the attorney.
8 Wigmore,
supra,
§ 2307, at 594. For example, tapes and computer diskettes containing a murder suspect’s “thoughts on his defense” constituted attorney-client communications even though they were seized before delivery to the suspect’s lawyer, because the materials had been prepared at the lawyer’s behest.
In re Death of Van-Slooten,
Whether a document embodies an attorney-client communication may not always be readily apparent.
See Brown,
In this case, the district court reviewed the preliminary drafts of the letter denying tenure, and it found that the provost wrote and sent a document to counsel in one form and that she returned it in a different form. Notably, the district court characterized these exchanges as “a conversation between” the provost and the associate general. The facts support this characterization: (1) the first draft followed a preliminary conversation between the provost and counsel regarding the tenure matter; (2) the second draft followed a meeting in which the two discussed the first draft; and (3) the two preliminary drafts were viewed .only by the provost, counsel, and members of their respective staffs.
The question remains, however, as to whether the preliminary drafts can be construed as a request for, and the communication of, legal advice, in light of Kobluk’s contention that counsel instead provided personnel or literary advice to the provost. Because the district court did not specifically find that the first draft was created for the purpose of seeking and conveying legal advice, the court of appeals remanded for additional findings.
See Kobluk,
From the district court’s characterization of the preliminary drafts as “communications between an attorney and client,” one may fairly infer that the drafts constituted a request for, and the rendition of, legal advice. Furthermore,
a matter committed to a professional legal adviser is prima facie so committed for the sake of the legal advice which may be more or less desirable for some aspect of the matter, and is therefore within the privilege unless it clearly appears to be lacking in aspects requiring legal advice.
8 Wigmore, supra, § 2296, at 567.
This prima facie evidence is not overcome by Kobluk’s mere assertion that counsel’s advice to the provost was of a nonlegal character. Moreover, the record and the drafts negate this contention. First, the record shows that the university assigned an attorney to the matter solely because Kobluk was represented by counsel. Second, although
Accordingly, we hold that as a matter of law, the two preliminary drafts of the letter “c[a]me into existence * * ⅜ by reason of’ the attorney-client relationship, and they represent, respectively, a request for and the rendition of legal advice.
Brown,
II.
In holding that the privilege attached to the first draft of the tenure letter but not the second, the district court reasoned that the provost and his counsel “un-derst[oo]d that the information communicated in [the second draft] was to be conveyed to others,” but they had no such understanding as to the first draft. Thus, the district court based its ruling in this ease on what it perceived to be the university’s subjective intent to keep the drafts confidential. Remanding for additional findings as to the first draft, the court of appeals declared,
[C]onfidentiality is not determined solely by the client and attorney’s stated intent.
The factfinder must also consider the nature and form of the document and the circumstances of the exchange. Further, if that inquiry results in a finding of confidentiality, then the fact finder must address the purpose for creating the document.
Kobluk,
Courts in other jurisdictions have differed as to whether the requisite confidentiality is present when the information communicated between client and attorney eventually will be disclosed to third parties. 8 The Second Circuit has expressed what is, in our view, the better line of reasoning:
[I]t is important to bear in mind that the attorney-client privilege protects communications rather than information; the privilege does not impede disclosure of information except to the extent that * * * disclosure would reveal confidential communications. Thus, the fact that certain information in the documents might ultimately be disclosed ⅜ * * did not mean that the communications to [counsel] were foreclosed from protection by the privilege as a matter of law. Nor did the fact that certain information might later be disclosed to others create the factual inference that the communications were not intended to be confidential at the time they were made. ⅜ * * Confidentiality may also, of course, be waived; but we see no indication that a waiver has yet occurred.
In re Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum (Marc Rich),
A client should not be foreclosed from having counsel review a preliminary draft of a document and provide legal advice via another draft, when the drafts are created to facilitate the efficient and complete exchange of information between lawyer and client and when the drafts are kept strictly private.
See, e.g., Amoss v. University of Wash.,
40 Wash-App. 666,
The court of appeals unnecessarily complicated the analysis in this case by conflating the elements of communication and confidentiality.
See Kobluk,
However, if that issue is resolved in the affirmative, a presumption of confidentiality arises as to that draft, evaporating only if “the client does not appear to have been desirous of secrecy.” Wigmore, supra, § 2311, at 599 (“The privilege assumes ⅜ *• * that the communications are made with the intention of confidentiality.”). Where confidentiality is disputed, a court need only ascertain whether the client intended to keep the specific draft confidential and whether the client and attorney took all steps reasonably necessary to prevent disclosure. 9 Other drafts in the series are irrelevant to this inquiry.
Under this analysis, the party who asserts that a preliminary draft is privileged retains the burden of proving the most difficult element: that the particular draft was created as an implicit request for, or as a means of rendering, legal advice. The party seeking production remains free to use all available methods of discovery to inquire into the facts conveyed in the communication.
Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the district court for proceedings consistent with this decision. Because of our holding, we need not reach the issue of whether the district court properly denied Kobluk’s request for attorney fees, and we vacate the court of appeals’ order awarding attorney fees and costs on appeal to Kobluk.
Notes
. As a matter of course, the university - assigns attorneys from its office of general counsel to employment matters involving employees who are represented by counsel. Kobluk had been represented by counsel since the autumn of 1992, when he sought advice regarding the first allegation of misconduct.
. The university’s tenure regulations provide that "[l]he University may not act contrary to the recommendation of the academic unit which made the initial recommendation except for substantive reasons which must be stated in writing * * * to the faculty member * * * .” University of Minn. Regulation Concerning Faculty Tenure 7.63.
.In his quest to obtain the drafts, Kobluk has argued that the drafts are relevant to his appeal because they may show whether the provost considered impermissible factors in making the tenure decision.
. By its express terms, the statutory attorney-client privilege pertains only to disclosures by lawyers: "An attorney cannot, without the consent of the attorney’s client, be examined as to any communication made by the client to the attorney or the attorney’s advice given thereon in the course of professional duty * * *, without the client's consent.” Minn.Stat. § 595.02, suhd. 1(b) (1996).
. The university refused to produce the two drafts on the ground they were "not public” under the Data Practices Act. These documents fall squarely within the statutory definition of "personnel data.” See Minn.Stat. § 13.43, subd. 1 (1996) ("[P]ersonneI data’ means data on individuals collected because the individual is or was an employee of * * * a state agency * * * .’’). While some basic personnel data — such as employees' names, job titles, and salaries — are public, see id. § 13.43, subd. 2, "[a]ll other personnel data is [sic ] private data on individuals,” id. subd. 4. See also id. § 13.02, subd. 8a (defining "not public data” to include private data).
. The court of appeals reasoned that “a document which would have been created regardless of the attorney-client relationship will not become privileged upon its delivery to an attorney.”
Kobluk,
. The court of appeals took the position that a court should first analyze the element of confidentiality, rather than the nature of the communication, when deciding whether a document is privileged.
See Kobluk,
.
Compare In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
. While a party's subjective intent to maintain a document's secrecy is relevant, his or her conduct may be so objectively unreasonable as to negate the presumption ol confidentiality (e.g., the client intends to have a private conversation with counsel but does so in a place where others are likely to overhear). The district court’s memorandum was somewhat imprecise in this respect; however, the reasonableness of the university's efforts to keep the preliminary drafts confidential was not questioned in this case.
. The district court’s and court of appeals' opinions lead one to the inescapable conclusion that they viewed the second and final drafts of the letter denying tenure as one and the same document, perhaps because a comparison of those drafts does not implicitly reveal an altomey- * client communication. However, the character of the changes between the second and final drafts is wholly irrelevant to the issue of whether the provost and counsel kept the second draft confidential.
