OPINION
In this case plaintiff sues his insurance carrier for the excess liability which is imposed on him because of a verdict exceeding his insurance coverage. Such suits are now becoming common. [See Appendix A to Article on Excess Coverage, Vol. XXXVI Insurance Counsel Journal, Jan. 1969, p. 68, Bibliography p. 75.] The plaintiff alleges bad faith or negligent handling of the prior suit in failure to achieve settlement. Plaintiff now seeks the production of the entire file of the insurance company relating to the prior suit under Fed.R. of Civ.P. 34. Defendant is willing to produce everything but the correspondence between it and counsel. We do not see how defendant can withhold this material.
In such cases courts have found demands for such material supported by good cause. These files are obviously relevant to the cause of action and useful to the plaintiff, and otherwise unobtainable. The agency and fiduciary relationship between the insurer and its insured supports the necessary showing of good cause. See Bell v. Commercial Insurance Co. of Newark,
The Courts have found no attorney-client privilege barring such a demand. It has long been held that where an attorney acts for two parties, communications from either are not privileged from disclosure to the other. Popovitch v. Kasperlik,
Manning v. State Farm,
“The modern trend is for our courts to scrutinize closely the conduct of the insurer and defense counsel in this area. Their files are subject to discovery and defense counsel will often be the star witness in a suit directly against his original client for the amount of the judgment in excess of the named insurance coverage, [citation omitted].” Vol. XXXVI Insurance Counsel Journal, Jan. 1969, p. 61.
ORDER
And now, March 11, 1969, on motion of plaintiff, and after hearing, good cause having been shown, it is ordered that defendant produce for inspection and copying its entire file of the matter involved in the action of Auler v. LaRocca at Civil Action No. 9-67 ERIE in this District Court. It is intended by this Order that the file of the insurance carrier, maintained by its Claims Department including all correspondence between it and its legal counsel be produced.
SUPPLEMENTAL OPINION
This is a suit by an insured against his carrier to recover damages for the excess verdict which plaintiff is obligated to pay above the limits of his insurance coverage. The cause of action is based on allegations of failure of the defendant to make good faith settlement or attempts to settle within the policy limits. We have previously ordered counsel for defendant, who was counsel for the insured in the prior action, to produce his file for inspection under F. R.C.P. 34, over defendant's objection because of the agency and fiduciary capacity in which counsel acted for plaintiff in the prior action. We now face defendant’s demand for production of the file of the attorney for the plaintiff in the prior action which resulted in the verdict against the present plaintiff. Neither the attorney, Will J. Schaaf, Esq., nor his client, are parties or counsel in the present action.
We previously denied a motion for Production under F.R.C.P. 34 addressed to Atty. Schaaf by the present defendant because we believe Rule 34 to be applicable only to parties to the action in which the motion is filed. A deposition of Atty. Schaaf was noticed under F.R.C.P. 30 and a subpoena duces tecum was served on him for production of the file. He and his former client appeared and testified but his client invoked the attorney-client privilege and Atty. Schaaf refused to hand over the file for inspection. We now have a motion to compel him, as a witness, to produce the file.
At the hearing on the motion Atty. Schaaf produced the file for inspection by the Court in camera.
Applying a strict interpretation of the attorney-client privilege as stated in the Pennsylvania statute, 28 P.S. § 321, we would only consider as privileged a communication from the client to the attorney. The statute reads “communications made to him by his client”. A lower court case in Pennsylvania supports the argument that the privilege is a one-way street. Eisenman v. Hornberger, 44 Pa. Dist. & Co. R.2d 128. The file contains only one such document. We do not find it in any sense a “confidential” communication. There are other doubts as to the applicability of the attorney-client privilege here; the client is not a party to the present cause of action, Hamilton v. Neel, 7 Watts, Pa., 517; the privilege may have been waived by the extensive testimony of the client and her attorney in the deposition being taken, United States v. Weinberg,
For these reasons we will disregard the claim of privilege because we believe another important consideration of policy supports the refusal of the witness to turn over the file.
The material in the file examined by the Court consists mostly of work product of the attorney. We feel that there are serious impediments to compelling an attorney to divulge his work product, even though the prior action is ended and his client is not a party to the present action. The rationale of the protection of an attorney’s work, product, as set forth in Hickman v. Taylor,
“The attorney work product, if privilege it is, is the privilege of the attorney and not that of the client, its rationale is based upon the right of a lawyer to enjoy privacy in the course of preparation of his suit.” United States v. 38 Cases, etc., labelled Mr. Enzyme,
Hickman v. Taylor, supra, and the cases dealing with the production of papers or documents contained in an attorney’s file all stress the importance of the showing of good cause. Although discovery should not be denied if adequate reasons appear, Hanover Shoe Inc. v. United Shoe Machinery Corp.,
We cannot accept a demand for examination of an entire file as meeting the requirement of good cause. We believe that the elements of good cause include a showing that a specific item of evidence exists, that it is not otherwise available to a party, and that it is necessary for the preparation of a party’s case. An inquiring party is not-barred from learning if such papers or documents exist, and in whose custody they are, even though such papers or documents may not themselves be subject to a disclosure order, Cities Service Oil Co. v. Celanese Corp.,
Because the file is voluminous, because it consists largely of the work product of the attorney in the preparation of his case for trial, because some of the material therein may be entirely irrelevant to the present cause of action even in the broad sense of relevancy for discovery, because no specifically identifiable documents or reports are being requested, we conclude that no good cause has been shown for the production and inspection of the entire file.
Defendant’s motion will be denied.
