Dеfendants Cotter Corporation and Commonwealth Edison Company appeal from a district court order denying their motion for reconsideration of a magistrate judge’s discovery order. The magistrate judge’s order requires defendants to produce 112 documents in response to a discovery request by plaintiff Lynn E. Boughton and more than 500 coplaintiffs in this suit involving thе Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) and other claims. Defendants assert that these documents, created in preparation for an administrative licensing proceeding and to address subsequent license compliance measures, are protected from discovery under the attorney-client privilege, the attorney work product doctrine, and/or the non-testifying expert privilege of Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(4).
We consider whether the particular circumstances of this case allow us to break with the normal strictures of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and exercise jurisdiction over the interlocutory appeal of a discovery order under the
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
I
In 1989, plaintiffs filed suit in the District of Colorado asserting claims arising from defendants’ operation of a uranium mill in Canon City, Colorado. Discovery began, and defendants willingly produced thousands of documents. However, when plaintiffs sought to discover 125 documents pertaining to state and federal uranium mill licensing issues— eighty created by defendants in preparation for a 1979 licensing hearing regarding defendants’ Canon City mill and forty-five dealing with subsequent license compliance issues— defendants refused to produce the requested materials on the grounds that they were privileged. Plaintiffs moved to compel production of the disputed documents, and following an in camera review, the federal magistrate judge ruled that only thirteen documents were shielded from discovery by the attorney-client privilege and that the remaining 112 items should be turned over to the plaintiffs. Defendants moved for reconsideration of the magistrate judge’s discovery order and their motion was denied by the district court. When the district court dеnied 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) certification defendants filed this appeal. We issued a temporary stay pending briefing, argument, and decision by this court on whether we have jurisdiction to decide the merits of defendants’ claims.
Final decision jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 typically “depends on the existence of a decision by the District Court that ‘ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the сourt to do but execute the judgment.’ ”
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
II
Defendants argue that the challenged discovery order is properly classified as an appealable “collateral order” under
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
This circuit has repeatedly held that discovery orders are not appealable under the
Cohen
doctrine.
See Hooker v. Continental Life Ins. Co.,
This circuit has not directly addressed the question whether a discovery order compelling disclosure of documents claimed to be privileged can be appealed before final judgment under
Cohen.
2
But in virtually every
*750
case in other circuits involving similar attorney-client privilege claims, the courts have refused to take jurisdiction.
See Texaco Inc. v. Louisiana Land & Exploration Co.,
Judge Feinberg, writing for the Second Circuit in
American Express Warehousing,
We do not think that the mere possibility of erroneous applicаtion of the Hickman principle to a given set of documents raises a spectre of such dire consequences that immediate appellate review as of right must follow. For such would be the ines-
capable conclusion if this appeal were allowed. Work-product protection is not so absolute that disclosure can never be justified .... Unlikе the case of a trade secret, erroneous disclosure of work-product does not make almost certain the immediate destruction of a protected property right [citing Covey Oil ]. The interest protected is not only qualified but intangible and difficult to relate to immediate harm. ... It is true that if reversal is obtained, the disclosure has already been madе. To the extent that trial strategy is thus uncovered, the harm occasioned resembles that suffered in any retrial because of error in the first.... Moreover, there are, after all, some matters which must rest primarily in the wise discretion of experienced trial judges — and when they do, the probability of recurring error is not very great. We do not suggest that the policies in ■ support of the work-product doctrine are unimportant; we have no hesitancy in endorsing the values it protects.... But we are loath to elevate those values and those policies above many others already referred to by revising the normal federal rule on appealability.
Id. at 281-82. We agree with those comments and believe thеy apply equally to the attorney-client and expert witness privileges asserted before us. Thus, we hold that the instant appeal is not permissible under the Cohen exception.
Ill
On four occasions we have granted writs of mandamus to review claims of privilege which were granted or denied by the district court during the course of particular proceedings. And, upon occasion, we have construed an appeal as a petition for a writ of mandamus.
See, e.g., Skeen v. Chase Manhattan Bank (In re American Cable Publica
*751
tions, Inc.),
In
Usery v. Ritter,
We once granted the writ when the district court ordered a discharged attorney to relinquish client materials in his possession contrary to a state statute establishing the attorney’s retaining lien over client papers until he is paid for any legal services he had performed for the client.
Jenkins v. Weinshienk,
We also granted writs of mandamus in
Winner,
which involved constitutional rights, secrecy of grand jury proceedings, and separation of powers questions,
see
It may be, as defendants assert, that the application of attоrney-client and work product privileges to licensing proceedings is an unsettled issue of law. Nevertheless, we note that the magistrate judge and the district court based their rulings upon findings after in camera review that the attorney documents constituted business advice and the work was not performed in anticipation of litigation. These rulings may be wrong, but they do- not amount to clеar abuse of discretion, or the abdication or usurpation of judicial power. The rulings can be reviewed upon appeal after a final judgment in the case. Thus, we would have to deny the writ even if we were to construe the instant appeal as a petition for a writ of mandamus.
IV
As an alternative basis for jurisdiction, defendants invoke the “pragmаtic finality” doctrine. In contrast to the body of precedent that has developed and defined the
Cohen
test, the “pragmatic finality” doctrine involves more subjective, “ad hoc adjustments to the final decision requirement of [ ] § 1291.” 15A Charles A. Wright et al.,
Federal Practice and Procediere
§ 3913, at 464 (1992). In their respected treatise, Profes
*752
sors Wright, Miller, and Cooper suggest that the' application of “pragmatic finality” principles reflects “an understandаble desire of appellate courts to bolster or replace district court justice with appellate justice,” and they indicate the doctrine has been the subject of “increasing criticism.”
Id.
at 464-65. In
Daiflon, Inc. v. Bohanon,
Five years later, however, in
Bender v. Clark,
The Bender and Cotton Petroleum cases must be narrowly construed and “pragmatic finality” invoked only in truly “unique instances” if we are to preserve the vitality of § 1291. “Formality ... is not always sterile. Although well-established rules of appealability might at times cause an action to be determined unjustly, slowly, and expensively, they have nonetheless the great virtue of forеstalling the delay, harassment, expense, and duplication that could result from multiple or ill-timed appeals.” Wright et al., supra, at 462. Although we acknowledge that defendants may have raised unsettled questions about the application of privileges in the context of state and federal licensing proceedings, the questions are not of the magnitude that justify an еxception to the traditional “final order” requirement. Defendants’ contention that the issue should be resolved immediately because they have asserted the same claim of privilege in other litigation is not persuasive, particularly because the dispute can be adequately reviewed on direct appeal from a final judgment. In Bender, this court relied heavily on our belief that a refusal to take jurisdiction would have foreclosed future appellate scrutiny of the unsettled issue. That is not the situation before us, and the instant discovery order does not fall within the parameters of the “pragmatic finality” exception.
Because we hold that we do not have jurisdiction to review the challengеd discovery order at this stage in the proceedings, we do not reach the merits of defendants’ arguments disputing the magistrate judge’s construction and application of the attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, and Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(4) in the context of state and federal licensing proceedings. The appeal is DISMISSED for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
.
See also Westinghouse Elec. Corp. v. Adams,
. We have reviewed appealability of discovery orders when the attorney-client or work product privilege has been invoked under the
Perlman v. United States,
. We note, however, that the Seventh Circuit has found jurisdiction under the Cohen exception when a district court ordered release to newspapers of a report of derivative suits subject to the attorney-client privilege compiled in connection with derivative actions pending in the district court. In re Continental Ill. Sec. Litig., 732 F.2d 1302, 1307 (7th Cir.1984).
