MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
At issue before the court are Employers Insurance Company of Wausau’s Motions to Quash the Subpoenas Duces Tecum that MSBAIT served on CNA and Aon.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff, Minnesota School Board Association Insurance Trust (“MSBAIT”) and Defendant, Employers Insurance Company of Wausau (“Wausau”) are engaged in an insurance coverage dispute in federal court in Minnesota. MSBAIT is seeking coverage under an excess insurance policy by Wausau for loss and damages that occurred as a result of an April 25, 1994 fire at Burnsville High School in Burnsville, Minnesota.
MSBAIT seeks resinsurance documents pursuant to subpoenas served on Wausau’s resinsurers, CNA Resinsurance (“CNA”) and Aon Re, Inc. (“Aon”)'
1. April 18, 1997 letter from Mark Fein-berg, a Wausau litigation attorney, to Federal Magistrate Boylan regarding the status of the litigation and Wau-sau’s position;2
2. April 23, 1997 letter from attorney Feinberg to Raymond Charleston, a Wausau employee, regarding the status of the litigation; and
3. May 15, 1997 letter from Phillip W. Gjevre, a Wausau employee, to Marge Hubbard, an Aon employee, regarding communication with counsel on' the status of the litigation.
At issue before the court are Wausau’s Motions to Quash the Subpoenas Duces Te-cum that MSBAIT served on CNA and Aon. For the reasons set forth below, Wausau’s motions are hereby granted.
ANALYSIS
Wausau makes four arguments in support of its motion to quash the subpoenas directed at Aon and CNA, including: (1) Wausau has standing to move to quash the subpoenas; (2) Wausau’s objections to the subpoenas were timely; (3) the three documents at issue are protected by the work product privilege; and (4) Wausau did not waive the work product privilege when it communicated with CNA and Aon. Each of these arguments will be addressed below.
I. Wausau Has Standing to Move to Quash the Subpoenas
Wausau first argues that it is-well-settled that a party has standing to object to a subpoena directed at a nonparty when the party claims a “personal right or privilege”regarding the documents sought. Hunt Int’l Resources Corp. v. Binstein,
II. Wausau’s Objections Were Timely
MSBAIT contends that Wausau waived its work product objections because it did not provide a privilege log within fourteen days after the subpoena was served on Aon.
Wausau argues that because it served written objections to the .subpoenas within fourteen days, in accordance with F.R.C.P. 45(c)(2)(B), it has in fact objected in a timely
Specifically, Rule 45(c)(2)(B) provides in part:
Subject to paragraph (d)(2) of this rule, a person commanded to produce and permit inspection and copying may, within 14 days after service of the subpoena or before the time specified for compliance if such time is less than 14 days after service, serve upon the party or attorney designated in the subpoena written objection to inspection or copying of any or all of the designated materials or of the premises. If objection is made, the party serving the subpoena shall not be entitled to inspect and copy the materials or inspect the premises except pursuant to an order of the court by which the subpoena was issued.
In support of its position that the fourteen-day time frame does not apply to the provision of privilege logs, Wausau accurately argues that privilege logs are governed by Rule 45(d)(2), not Rule 45(c)(2)(B). Courts interpreting Rule 45(d)(2) have held that a party claiming a privilege may provide a privilege log within a “reasonable time” as long as objections are asserted within the fourteen-day time frame. See, e.g., Tuite v. Henry,
In this case, Wausau provided MSBAIT with a privilege log on September 9, 1998, which is certainly within a reasonable time as required under Rule 45(d)(2) (the fourteen day objection period only having expired on September 4, 1998), and as a result, Wausau did not waive its right to object to the subpoena.
III. The Three Documents At Issue Are Protected By The Work Product Privilege
The work product privilege is an important limitation on the scope of discovery. It exists so that one party does not gain an unfair advantage over another party by learning the other party’s counsel’s strategies and legal theories. Allendale Mut. Ins. Co. v. Bull Data Systems, Inc.,
“Although Rule 26 makes ‘ordinary’ work-product accessible where there is substantial need, the Rule specifically protects ‘opinion’ work-product from disclosure even in the face of undue hardship.” Ziemack v. Centel Corp.,
Wausau has met its burden of showing that all three of the documents at issue constitute opinion work product, and that they are entitled to protection from disclosure. As to the letter from Mark Feinberg to Magistrate Boylan, Wausau points out that it contains attorney Feinberg’s opinions and mental impressions on the status of the litigation and Wausau’s position. As to the letter from Mr. Feinberg to Raymond Charleston, Wausau points out that it contains attorney Feinberg’s opinions and mental impressions on the status of the litigation. Finally, as to the letter from Phillip Gjevre of Wausau to Marge Hubbard, Wausau affirms that it contains attorney Feinberg’s opinions and mental impressions on the status of the litigation and Wausau’s position. Thus, as stated, the court concludes that the documents in question do in fact constitute opin
IV. Wausau Did Not Waive The Work Product Privilege When It Communicated With CNA and Aon
MSBAIT, essentially, contends that Wau-sau waived the work product privilege by communicating the subject documents to CNA and Aon.
Wausau argues that waiver only occurs if the disclosure of work product to a third party “is inconsistent with the maintenance of secrecy from the disclosing party’s adversary.” United States v. American Tel. & Tel. Co.,
MSBAIT claims that Aon is not a reinsurer of Wausau. MSBAIT points to a list prepared by Aon, which allegedly listed all of Wausau’s reinsurers, but which did not include Aon. MSBAIT draws the conclusion that Aon is not a reinsurer at all, but rather a reinsurance broker.
Wausau contends that it is irrelevant that Aon is actually Wausau’s reinsurance broker as opposed to one of its actual reinsurers. In reliance on United States Fire Ins. Co. v. General Reinsurance Corp.,
MSBAIT also alleges that even if Aon was a reinsurer, Wausau’s communication to its reinsurers (CNA and Aon) of the information provided by counsel does not constitute a waiver. Therefore, the documents should be produced. A waiver only occurs, however, if the disclosure to a third party “is inconsistent with the maintenance of secrecy from the disclosing party’s adversary.” United States v. American Tel. & Tel.,
Allendale Mutual Ins. Co. v. Bull Data Systems, Inc.,
[t]he vast majority of the documents are simply the private musing of non-lawyer employees of a non-party, which on their face do not appear to be related to preparation for litigation other than in an incidental manner. In other words, these documents are mere insurance business material.
Id. at 136-37.
The Allendale court went on to discuss the common interest doctrine and its application to the facts before it. “The general rule is that material which is otherwise privileged is discoverable if it has been disclosed to a third party.” Id. at 139. See also United States v. Lawless,
Imperial Corp. of America v. Shields,
CONCLUSION
In view of the foregoing, Wausau’s Motions to Quash Subpoenas directed at Aon Re, Inc. and CNA Reinsurance are granted.
. This letter was written pursuant to a court order requiring counsel for Wausau to submit confidential settlement statements to the court in advance of a settlement conference with the expectation that they not be disclosed to opposing counsel. (See Def. Reply Aff. of Eugene Sheih.)
. MSBAIT has not argued or set forth any basis for departing from the “nearly absolute protection” for the opinion work product herein. In the alternative, Wausau argues that the documents at issue are protected from discovery as ordinary work product, in any event, because they were created in anticipation of litigation (six months after suit was commenced), are precisely the sort of materials that the work product doctrine seeks to protect from disclosure, and because there has been no showing by MSBAIT of substantial need for the documents in question. This court agrees.
. MSBAIT relied on Aon's homepage on the internet, on which Aon describes itself as a reinsurance broker. Nowhere on the page does Aon discuss itself as a reinsurer.
. Other courts have held that the work product privilege is not waived when an insurer forwards work product information to its reinsurer. See United States Fire Ins. Co. v. General Reinsurance Corp.,
