Opinion
Plаintiff appeals from the denial of its motion to disqualify counsel for defendant H. Dan Izumi. We find this appeal to be without merit and affirm.
Facts
Plaintiff Toshiba Semiconductor Inc. (formerly known as Maruman Integrated Circuits, Inc.) is a corporation engaged in the development and manufacture of sеmiconductors, with its principal place of business in Sunnyvale, California. From 1975 to February 1980, defendant Izumi was the president, chief executive officer, director and shareholder of plaintiff corporation.
On March 7, 1980, plaintiff filed an action seeking a declaration that a long term lease purportedly executed on its behalf by defendant Izumi was *446 void and had no force or effect. 1 Plaintiff claimed defendant Izumi had no authority to execute the lease and that by entering into such an agreement he breached his fiduciary duty. 2 The law firm of Fenwick, Stone, Davis & West (Fenwick) was counsel for plaintiff in this action. Defendant Izumi retained thе law firm of Dinkelspiel, Donovan and Reder (Dinkelspiel) to represent him in the matter.
From 1975 to 1980, G. Tipton Canty (Canty) was employed by plaintiff corporation. In April 1980 she terminated her employment and went to work for defendant Izumi. At the time of her departure from plaintiff, she was an administrator and assistant to the corporate secretary.
In September and October 1981 plaintiff deposed Canty. At the depositions Canty was represented by the Dinkelspiel law firm. In response to plaintiff’s questions, she stated that she had dealings with attorneys from the Fenwick law firm during the course of hеr employment with plaintiff. She specifically identified five Fenwick attorneys with whom she had. come into contact. Canty further stated that after the termination of her employment with plaintiff, she spoke with the Dinkelspiel firm two or three times concerning her prior conversations with attorneys in the Fenwick law firm. In addition, Ms. Canty revealed that she delivered two letters, written between the Fenwick law firm and plaintiff, to the Dinkelspiel law firm. 3
On October 23, 1981, plaintiff filed its motion to disqualify the Dinkelspiel law firm, arguing that Canty had disclosed “confidential communications” between plaintiff and its attorneys. In support of its motion, plaintiff submitted a declaration by William Fenwick of the Fenwick law firm, stating that “G. Tipton Canty was personally involved in assisting my firm in the prosecution of this action on behalf of MIC during March and a portion of April 1980 and was a party to confidential communications between my firm and MIC.”
In opposition to this motion, defendant Izumi argued (1) the communications were not “confidential” (2) plaintiff waived its privilege; and (3) as a matter of law disclosure by a lay employee did not require disqualification. *447 In support of the waiver argument defendant submitted a declaration from Steven Mayen, an attorney in the Dinkelspiel law firm. Mayen stated that in October 1981 he deposed Donald Davis, an attorney in the Fenwick law firm. Before the deposition, he entered into a stipulation with the Fenwick law firm that certain subjects within the attorney-client privilege would be wаived. 4 The scope of this waiver included all matters otherwise subject to the privilege but excluding any settlement discussions, litigation strategy and factual developments occurring subsequent to February 29, 1980.
The disqualification motion was heard on November 3, 1981, one day before trial was scheduled to commence. The trial court denied the motion. In reaching this conclusion, the court stated: “I don’t think there is any merit in your motion. I think this is just some picky point you picked up at the last minute to delay the trial, so I am going to deny your motion.”
Discussion
Claiming that Canty disclosed confidential communications between plaintiff and its attorneys, plaintiff contends the lower court abused its discretion in failing to disqualify the Dinkelspiel law firm from continued representation of defendant. We disagree.
It is the obligation of every attorney in this state “to maintain inviolate the confidence, аnd at every peril to himself, to preserve the secrets of his clients.” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 6068, subd. (e);
In re Charles L.
(1976)
In
Cooke
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In rejecting the husband’s contention, the court stated: “The issue before us is simply whether exposure of an attorney to confidential and privileged information requires, as a matter оf law, the disqualification of that attorney and his associates. We have found no cases, and we are cited to none, that establish so broad a rule. We have examined the cases wherein trial counsel was disqualified because of exposure to confidential or рrivileged information. In each of those cases, the attorney sought to be disqualified had been in a confidential relationship as an attorney for the party seeking the disqualification or the attorney had been in such a relationship to another attorney with whom the confidential relationship had existed that there existed a rational suspicion that the confidentially acquired information might have been passed along to the trial attorney.”
{Cooke
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In addition, the
Cooke
court found the policies underlying the rule рrotecting confidential communications did not warrant an extension of the rule. The rule is designed to protect “a relationship of confidence and entrustment” between client and attorney.
{Cooke
v.
Superior Court, supra,
at p. 591; accord
Goldstein
v.
Lees
(1975)
We find the reasoning in Cooke to be both reasonable and persuasive. We believe it is fully applicable to the instant case. Here, Canty dealt with Fenwick attorneys during the course of her employment. After her employmеnt ended, she spoke with the Dinkelspiel law firm two or three times about her prior conversations with Fenwick attorneys. However, here, as in Cooke, the communications at issue were not acquired by the Dinkelspiel law firm during the course of an attorney-client relationship with plaintiff. There was nо prior representation of plaintiff by the Dinkelspiel firm. Plaintiff cannot complain that the Dinkelspiel firm breached its duty to maintain its confidences, where the attorney-client privilege never existed between them.
Notwithstanding
Cooke,
appellant argues there is ample authority for requiring disqualification of an attorney despite the absence of prior representation. For this contention appellant cites
Hull
v.
Celanese Corporation
(2d Cir. 1975)
In
Hull
v.
Celanese Corporation, supra,
It is our opinion the facts critical to the Hull court’s decision are absent in the instant case. Here, the former employee was not an attorney аnd therefore was never in an attorney-client relationship with her former employer. Therefore, unlike the situation in Hull, the possibility that information conveyed within a former attorney-client relationship was never *450 present. (See Cooke v. Superior Court, supra, 83 Cal.App.3d at pp. 590-591.) The Hull decision is limited to its peculiar fact situation.
The other cases cited by plaintiff are also inappositе because they do not involve the disclosure of confidential communications. For example, in
Comden
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Appellant additionally asserts that the lower court’s decision cannot be upheld because the court denied the motion on improper grounds: i.e., that (1) plaintiff had not shown what communications had been disclosed and (2) the motion was made shortly before trial. We find this contention to be without merit.
It is well settled that a lower court decision will not be overturned merely because it is given for a wrong reason. “ ‘If right upon any theory of the law applicable to the case, it must be sustained regаrdless of the considerations which may have moved the trial court to its conclusion. ’ [Citation.]”
(D’Amico
v.
Board of Medical Examiners
(1974)
Applying these principles to the instant case, and for the reasons previously stated, it is our opinion that the trial court’s order was correct on the merits. Here the court did consider the motion on the merits and did not deny it solely because plaintiff refused to reveal the contents of the alleged communications at issue. Moreover, the court properly took into consideration the possibility that plaintiff brought the motion as a tacticаl device to delay the trial when it was heard the day before the trial was to commence. 6 Accordingly, we find the trial court properly exercised its discretion in denying the motion. 7
The judgment is affirmed.
Agliano, J., and Brauer, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied April 18, 1985, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supremе Court was denied June 19, 1985.
Notes
In addition to Izumi, plaintiff named as defendants the developers of the facility contemplated by the lease. During the pendency of the instant appeal, the issues relating to these defendants were severed for purposes of trial.
We do not set out the specific facts underlying this dispute because they are not relevant to the resolution of the instant appeal.
At the deposition, she explained that while she worked for plaintiff she regularly took documents out of the office to work on at home. Although she returned most of the documents to the office some of them were inadvertently kept at home. Among these documents were the two letters written between the Fenwick law firm and plaintiff.
The reason for the waiver was that the Fenwick law firm anticipated presenting testimony from Mr. Davis at trial.
Earl Scheib, Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
At the hearing, the court observed “this case involves people from Oregon and Toyko, and I assume they are all here in San Jose now ready for the trial and you come in the day before and want me tо disqualify the attorney for one side. Why did you wait [a year and a half].”
At oral argument, appellant cited the case of American Pro. Ins. v. MGM Grand Hotel (9th Cir. 1984). Our previous opinion mentioned appellant’s reference to the MGM Grand case. This case has now been withdrawn from the bound volume, upon the request of the court. Accordingly, at present, the opinion is no longer extant as authority for appellant’s position.
