LG Elеctronics, U.S.A., sued Whirlpool Corporation for infringing its trademark in a dryer that uses steam to reduce wrinkles. When it asked Whirlpool to produce communications between its attorneys and its outside advertising agencies relаting to the purportedly infringing dryer, Whirlpool objected that the communications were protected by the attorney-client privilege. Whirlpool argued that the advertising agents were not third parties, to whom the privilegе typically does not apply, but de facto employees of the compаny. Whirlpool alternatively contended that the communications should be kept confidential on the ground that the advertising agencies shared with it а common legal interest in producing lawful advertisements. In a lengthy and thoughtful decision, the district court rejected both arguments and ordered Whirlpool to disclose the communications.
Whirlpool immediately sought relief in this court. At the time there was uncertainty about whether rulings on the attorney-cliеnt privilege could be appealed as collateral orders, because
Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter,
— U.S. -,
*860
The Supreme Court held in
Mohawk
that rulings that allegedly infringe upon the attorney-client privilege are not appealable as collateral orders.
Id.,
In its petition for a writ of mandamus, to which LG Electronics has responded, Whirlpool submits that the unavailability of collateral appeal requires us to relax our standards for issuing writs of mаndamus. We reject this argument. A petitioner seeking a writ of mandamus must show both thаt the challenged district court order will be effectively unreviewable if thе petitioner is forced to wait until the end of the case and also thаt the order is patently erroneous or usurpative in character.
United States v. Vinyard,
This is not suсh a case. The district court carefully considered Whirlpool’s arguments that communications between its counsel and outside advertising agencies should be protected by the attorney-client privilege, either bеcause agency staff functioned as de facto Whirlpool employees or because the agencies and Whirlpool shared a common legal interest. And the cases Whirlpool cites, most of them from district courts, fail to establish that the district court’s rejection of Whirlpoоl’s position was patently erroneous or usurpative in character — in other words, a serious error. Without that, mandamus is inappropriate, regardless of whether Whirlpool has any other opportunities for appellate review, such as refusing to turn over the documents and then using the еnsuing sanctions under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2) as the basis of an appeal. Accordingly, Whirlpоol’s petition for writ of mandamus is Denied.
The conclusion that we have reached makes it unnecessary to act on other pending motions. The clerk of this court shall return all of the sealed envelopes to the district court under seal.
