delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner, J. E. Losavio, District Attorney in and for the Tenth Judicial District, filed a petition for a Writ of Prohibition against the District Court in and for the Tenth Judicial District and the Honorable Matt J. Kikel, the Chief Judge thereof, to enjoin the holding of a hearing on motions to quаsh grand jury subpoenas or in the alternative for protective orders. We issued a rule to show cause why the relief prayed for should not be granted. The respondents have answered and the matter is now at issue.
The issue here arose out of the following set of facts: Jay E. Flick and Tuck Young, duly licensed attorneys in Colorado, were subpoenaed to appear and testify before the 1974 Pueblo County Statutory Grand Jury on August 29, 1974. On the return day both attorneys filed separate motions to quash the subpoenas, “claiming that their testimony before the aforesaid grand jury would violate the attorney-client privilege.” Alternatively, the motion asked for protective orders, alleging that their appearances before the grand jury would be observed and reported by the press and would cause damage to the attorney-client relationship and the administration of justice. This latter allegation was supported by a multi-page exhibit containing newspaper clippings tending to prove the charge.
In each of the motions filed by the subpoenaed witnesses it was alleged, inter alia,
“that upon information and belief and pursuant to the statements made by Joseph E. Losavio, Jr., District Attorney, ... the purpose of subpoenaing the petitiоner is to question him with regard to what arrangements were made to pay the legal expenses and services including meals and lodging for the petitioner and his client, Joe I. Torres, in Golden, Colorado, during the trial of his client in the People of the State of Colorado v. Joe I. Torres, in District Court in and for the County оf Jefferson, State of Col *130 orado” [where it was tried by virtue of an order for change of venue].
The respondent judge on August 29, 1974, entered an order relieving both Flick and Young “from appearing and/or testifying before the Grand Jury,” pursuant to the command оf the subpoenas. The court further ordered that the motion to quash and the alternative motions for protective orders be heard on August 30, 1974. On August 30, 1974, the court continued the hearing to September 24, 1974, which, the district attorney alleged,
“further hindered, delayеd and unduly interferred with the expeditious discharges of the Grand Jury’s duties and its orderly proceedings.”
The district attorney, as legal advisor to the grand jury, on August 30, 1974, moved the respondent to dismiss the motions to quash and the alternative motions for protective orders as premature. The motion was denied. The district attorney, then asked for time in which to seek a writ of prohibition, which was denied. The court continued the hearing on the original petition until September 24, 1974. The petition here under consideration wаs then filed in this court.
As noted, we issued the rule to show cause and stayed further proceedings until the further order of this court. We now make the rule absolute.
The petitioner recognizes that the respondent court has “the jurisdiction, obligation and duty to supervise grand jury proceedings,” but argues that the court acted prematurely in setting the hearing on Flick and Young’s motions to quash before their appearance and interrogation by the grand jury. The petitioner contends that the district court is not suffiсiently apprised of the nature of the grand jury investigation to make a determination that a recognized attorney-client privilege exists as to the subject of inquiry which would preclude the attorneys from appearing before the grand jury.
Petitiоner asserts that Flick and Young should be first interrogated and that they should raise the question of privilege when specific questions call for answers which would infringe upon matters protected by the attorney-client privilege. As authority for this position, the рetitioner cites
Blair v. United States,
250
*131
U.S. 273,
In Blair the court reviewed the history of compulsory process by grand juries and then held that:
“it is clearly recognized that the giving of testimony and the attendance upon court or grand jury in order to testify are public duties which every pеrson within the jurisdiction of the Government is bound to perform upon being properly summoned .... The personal sacrifice involved is a part of the necessary contribution of the individual to the welfare of the public. The duty, so onerous at times, yet so necessary to the administration of justice according to the forms and modes established in our system of government
(Wilson v. United States,
“But, aside from exceptions and qualifications — and none such is asserted in the present case — the witness is bound not only to attend but to tell what he knows in answer to questions framed for the purpose of bringing out the truth of the matter under in quiry. ” (Emphasis added.)
Thus the universal rule is that citizens genеrally are not immune from grand jury subpoenas.
Branzburg v. Hayes,
On the other hand, the respondent, advancing the position of Flick and Young, сontends that the grand jury subpoena power is not unlimited and that the trial court is obligated to hold a pre-appearance hearing to determine whether the privilege would be
*132
violated by the grand jury. In the main, the respondent cites as authоrity
United States
v.
Calandra,
At first blush it appears that we are confronted with two conflicting matters of public policy: first, that which holds that “the public has the right to every man’s evidence, particularly in grand jury proceedings,” 1 and second, that arising out of the attorney-client рrivilege. Actually, the issue is more restricted. The true issue is whether the court may entertain the motions to quash or in the alternative, for protective orders prior to the witnesses’ appearance, or must the issue of attorney-client privilege be raised at the time of interrogation before the grand jury when the questions seek to elicit information which the witness asserts is within the privilege.
The purpose of the attorney-client privilege is to secure the orderly administration of justice by insuring сandid and open discussion by the client to the attorney without fear of disclosure.
Fearnley v. Fearnley,
“(1) There are particular relations in which it is the policy of the law to encourage confidence and to preserve it inviolate; therefore, a person shall not be examined as a witness in the follоwing cases:
“(b) An attorney shall not be examined without the consent of his client as to any communication made by the client to him or his advice given thereon in the course of professional employment; . . . .”
As defined by the legislature and courts of this stаte, the attorney-client privilege is personal with the client.
Mauro v.
*133
Tracey,
The public policy expressed in the attorney-client privilege may, as it does here, come into conflict with other prevailing public policies. As stated by Justice Cardozo in
Clark
v.
United States,
‘ ‘The recognition of a privilege does not mean that it is without conditiоns or exceptions. The social policy that will prevail in many situations may run foul in others of a different social policy, competing for supremacy. It is then the function of a court to mediate between them, assigning, so far as possible, а proper value to each.”
The public policy favoring the grand jury’s elicitation of testimony has often been found to conflict with other claims of privileged communications. In each instance, the ruling court has been required to align thе two policies. Frequently, the potential targets of grand juries’ investigations have attempted to avoid appearing as witnesses at grand jury hearings on the basis of the privilege against self-incrimination,
e.g. United States
v.
Corallo,
In re Kinoy,
These cases are representative of the manner in which the courts have resolved challenges, based on privilege, to the grand jury’s subpoena.power. In each case, the determinative factor was whether the privilege was intended to be all encompassing thereby precluding the possibility of any fruitful interrogation. As *135 discussed earlier, the attorney-client privilege only applies to communications which satisfy certain requisites of confidentiality and subject mаtter relatedness. Hence, to quash the grand jury’s subpoena of a witness is to foreclose the grand jury from legitimately interrogating an attorney-witness on matters which quite possibly are not protected by the privilege. This is an impermissible curtailment of thе grand jury’s investigátory function.
We hold, therefore, that an attorney-witness must, except in the most exceptional of circumstances, honor a properly issued subpoena by appearing before the grand jury. It is then for the trial court to determinе whether a specific interrogatory posed by the grand jury or the district attorney calls for an answer which falls within or without the privilege; or, whether the information sought to be elicited is so inextricably intertwined with confidential communications that if untangled, that which is not within the privilege would be meaningless without that which is privileged. In the latter event the privilege should also be respected.
See In re Verplank,
We note, paranthetically, that if the district attorney subpoenas the lawyers here to answer only questions which he knows or should know will require the attorney to assert the privilege, a serious question of ethics arises.
The rule is made absolute.
MR. JUSTICE GROVES and MR. JUSTICE ERICKSON concur in the result.
Notes
Branzburg v. Hayes,
