MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs Michael and Marilyn Stopka (“the Stopkas”), and Chateau Arlington, LLC (“Chateau Arlington”) (together, “Plaintiffs”) have sued Defendant American Family Mutual Insurance Company, Inc. (“American Family”) for negligence, breach of contract, and promissory estoppel related to its handling of the remediation of fire damages to the Stopkas’ home. Currently before the Court is American Family’s motion to compel. The Court rules on this motion under District Judge John W. Darrah’s referral for a decision pursuant to N.D. Ill. Rule 72.1. On June 29, 2011, the Court held a hearing on the motion and found that Plaintiffs’ privilege log was not sufficient to determine if the privileges they asserted could be applied to the documents Plaintiffs sought to withhold. The Court ordered Plaintiffs to submit the disputed documents for an in camera review, which they have now done. Based on the Court’s examination of these materials, it finds that American Family’s motion is granted in part and denied in part.
I. Background Facts
On September 29, 2008, Chateau Arlington, which is held by Plaintiffs Michael and Marilyn Stopka, obtained title to a piece of real property in Barrington Hills, Illinois on which the Stopkas planned to build a single-family home. In 2006, Chateau Arlington entered an agreement with Augustine Custom Homes, Inc. to construct the home, and Augustine then contracted with various subcontractors, including Complete Flashings, Inc., to complete aspects of the home’s construction. According to Plaintiffs, Complete Flashings caused a fire to start on the roof of the building on September 10, 2008 that led to significant fire, smoke, and water damage. Cоnstruction then ceased so that remediation work could begin on the damaged portions of the house.
Plaintiffs claim that American Family had issued a $2,000,000 pre-occurrence insurance policy to Complete Flashings as of the date of the fire. Plaintiffs’ second amended complaint alleges that American Family communicated directly with the Stopkas and their accountant, Jerry Wolowicki (“Wolowicki”), through its agent Gerald Hayes and agreed to undertake the remediation required to repair the home. Plaintiffs further claim that Mr. Hayes subsequently communicated primarily through Wolowicki, who also acts as the Stopkas’ financial advisor. Various contractors and sub-contractors were retained to do the work, and Amеrican Family eventually returned control over the construction site to Augustine Homes in November, 2008. American Family also hired a third-party company to conduct indoor air quality surveys to assess the possible presence of mold.
Unhappy with the results of the third-party’s efforts, the Stopkas hired their own consultant, who concluded that American Family’s remediation work had not
II. Legal Standard
When a civil action arises under a court’s diversity jurisdiction, a court determines most privileges in accordance with state lаw. Budinich v. Beaton Dickinson & Co.,
The attorney-client privilege promotes open discussions between attorneys and their clients by preventing the disclosure of certain kinds of communications. Upjohn v. United States,
Unlike federal common law, Illinois has also created a statutory accountant-client privilege.
III. Discussion
The twenty-two documents in Plaintiffs’ privilege log involve email communications between a variety of individuals related to American Family’s handling of the remediation of the Stopkas’ home. The individuals sending and receiving the emails vary, but all the messages contain one common element: the Stopkas’ accountant, Jerry Wolowicki, was either the recipient, directly or by carbon copy, or the sender of them. All but five of the emails also involve at least one of the Plaintiffs’ attorneys. Setting aside the colorful, and altogether unhelpful, expressions of indignation each side directs at the other’s alleged perfidy, the main points of dispute are whether Wolowicki’s participation in the communications gives rise to the accountant-client privilege, and whether the communications are protected by the attorney-client privilege or the work product doctrine.
A. The Work Product Doctrine
Plaintiffs claim that six of the twenty-two entries in their privilege log are protected by the work product doctrine. For its part, American Family has overlooked this privilege by mistakenly
B. The Accountant-Client Privilege
Unlike the attorney-client privilege, which belongs to the client but can be asserted by an attorney on the client’s behalf, In re Marriage of Decker,
Even if they could invoke the privilege on Wolowicki’s behalf, Plaintiffs make no argument as to how it would cover any of the emails in their privilege log. Illinois courts have not clearly set forth the burden of proof for showing that the accounting privilege applies, but this Court sees no reasonable basis why it should not be the same as that for the attorney-client privilege. This accords with the willingness of other courts to rely on the State’s attorney-client privilege as a means of interpreting the Illinois accountant statute. See, e.g., PepsiCo, Inc. v. Baird, Kurtz & Dobson LLP,
The accounting privilege only protects “accounting services involving opinions on financial statements” and does not extend to nonfinancial services. PepsiCo,
C. The Attorney-Client Privilege
Plaintiffs also rely on the attorney-client privilege to protect all the items in their privilege log, which includes some emails in which an attorney was not a party to the message in question, and many mоre involving an attorney.
1. The Non-Attorney Emails
The first category of documents involves emails between Wolowicki and either Michael or Marilyn Stopka. As the privilege log states, and the documents themselves confirm, each of these emails involves some form of communication Wolowicki
The Court finds this argument unpersuasive as an absolute rule. The fact that an email may not involve an attorney as a direct sender or recipient does not necessarily mean that the attorney-client privilege cannot apply. This Court has already found that “the claim thаt the privilege cannot extend to communications between non-lawyers is false” under federal law, Heriot v. Byrne,
The Court need not determine whether Illinois courts would reach the same result as this Court did in Heriot, however, because even if the privilege ex-ténds to communications between non-attorneys, Plaintiffs have not shown why it would apply to the documents at issue here. Like federal law, Illinois’ attorney-client privilege extends only to communications madе in confidence that either seek or give legal advice. Lama v. Preskill,
STP-PRIV0001: This message from Wolowicki to the Stopkas refers to an “agreement” that attorney John O’Connor stated would be sent to Wolowicki and the Stopkas later the same evening. Plaintiffs do not state what the agreement refers to, whether its terms were intended to be confidential, or why O’Connor’s statement to Wolowicki that the agreement would be forwarded several hours later involves legal advice or a confidential communication. The agreement is not part of the email, and nothing in STP-PRIV0001 itself reveals any legal advice or suggests that the parties intended the communication to be confidential. In the absence of any explanation by Plaintiffs, the Court finds that they have not shown why this email is protected.
STP-PRIV0003: The second email states that Wolowicki spoke with O’Connor concerning changes to a “waiver” — which is not explained — and that Wolowicki was attempting to contact American Family’s agent, Gerald Hayes, to
STP-PRIV007: This communication involves a message from Wolowicki to Mr. Stopka asking for his thoughts on an attached message from Plaintiffs’ attorney Chris Hennessy. Hennessy underlying message to Wolowicki merely states that an environmental consultant would be available to test the Stopkas’ home on a certain date and that Hennessy would make sure that someone named Tоdd Augustine would also be present at the site. As noted earlier, Augustine Homes, which is a third-party defendant in this ease, constructed the home for the Stopkas, and the Stopkas undertook their own environmental assessment of American Family’s remediation efforts before filing this suit. Plaintiffs provide no explanation of why this message involves confidential legal advice or who Todd Augustine is. The Court will not speculate on his relation to Augustine Homes, but the fact that Hennessy intended to communicate his message, which does not involve any legal advice, to a third-party shows that no confidentiality was intended. Thus, the Court finds that STP-PRIV0007 is not privileged.
STP-PRIV008h: The final email involves a message from Wolowicki to Stopka stating, “Mike — have you received the letter from Peаrson?” The privilege log identifies Pearson as attorney Steven Pearson, one of Plaintiffs’ attorneys. Here, once more, the Court has no information concerning the underlying letter referred to, which may or may not have involved confidential legal advice. Wolowicki’s email itself does not reveal the substance of any such advice, and the mere reference to an unidentified letter is insufficient for Plaintiffs to invoke the attorney-client privilege.
For these reasons, the Court finds that STP-PRIY0001, STP-PRIV0003, STPPRIV0007, and STP-PRIV0034 are not protected by the attorney-client privilege. American Family’s motion is granted as it relates to these entries in Plaintiffs’ privilege log.
2. The Attorney Emails
The remaining emails in Plaintiffs’ privilege log involve a communication either sent to or by one of Plаintiffs’ attorneys to Wolowicki and/or the Stopkas. The Court notes that Plaintiffs have not presented any argument supporting the privilege’s application to any specific item in their privilege log. Instead, Plaintiffs appear to assume that the participation of one of their attorneys in the various messages is sufficient, without more, to establish that the attorney-client privilege applies. This is not the case under either Illinois or federal law because “[s]imply funneling communications past an attorney will not make them privileged.” Equity Residential,
The bulk of the parties’ arguments concerns whether Wolowicki acted as Plaintiffs’ agent and, assuming that he was, whether his participation in the emails waived the attorney-client privilege. In support, both sides discuss at some length this Court’s decision in Heriot v. Byrne, supra, as well as caselaw from the Second,
In Illinois, privileges can be waived under certain circumstances, just as they can under federal law. Fischel & Kahn, Ltd. v. van Straaten Gallery, Inc.,
[w]hen an agent communicates with the principal’s attorney, the agent speaks as the client, or principal, and his or her communications are protected to the same extent as though the principal was speaking.... Generally, communications made to a legal advisor through one serving as an agent of the client will be privileged.
Lama,
Relying on the Second Circuit’s decision in United States v. Kovel,
a. Agency
The first question, therefore, is whether Wolowicki acted as Plaintiffs’ agent in matters that relate to the commu
Plaintiffs argue that Wolowicki was both their accountant as well as their financial advisor and that he served as “the central cog” in their communications with American Family. The Court’s examination of various non-privileged emails, as well as the deposition testimony of Michael Stopka, confirms this characterization of the role Wolowicki played in the events that ensued after the home was damaged in September, 2008. An Initial Investigation Report filed by American Family’s adjuster, Gerald Hayes, shows that Wolowicki was already present at the homesite when Hayes arrived on the day of the fire and that Hayes spoke to both Stopka and Wolowicki. Although Plaintiffs have not provided a clear piсture of Wolowicki’s function, the Court can infer from the record that Wolowicki played at least as large a role in communicating with American Family and Plaintiffs’ attorneys as Stopka himself did. Indeed, Stopka appears to have handed over to Wolowicki a considerable portion of the responsibility for resolving issues related to the home. Hayes and Wolowicki, for example, had a series of communications and meetings concerning American Family’s handling of the insurance payout that extended from an October 30, 2008 email concerning claims submitted to the insurance company through January 6, 2010. The two met in Wolowicki’s office on August 21, 2009 to discuss American Family’s proposed $1,659,380 payout, and they exchanged a number of follow-up emails concerning payment, the liability policy, and what appears to have been a release of liability. (Pltfs. Resp. at Ex. D). These communications were made directly between Hayes and Wolowicki, with Stopka included only as a carbon copy recipient.
Stopka’s testimony also supports a conclusion that Plaintiffs intended Wolowicki to act on their behalf in both financial and legal issues. For example, when pressed on matters related to both the insurance company’s review of claims, as well as legal advice given by Stopka’s attorney, Stopka disavowed any personal knowledge and referred the questioner to Wolowicki. (Id. at Ex. B, 74-75, 103). Stopka also testified that on the dаy of the fire “I said, ‘Jerry, just take care of the situation for me.’ I mean, he’ll state he’ll do anything.” (Id. at 80). Stopka allowed Wolowicki to conduct discussions concerning the insurance settlement, to determine which attorney to work with in settling the claims, to meet with attorneys, and to write official
This testimony strongly indicates that Plaintiffs not only considered Wolowicki to be their agent and held him out to be so to others, they relied heavily on his advice and judgment. American Family itself appears to have recognized Wolowicki’s role as an agent because, in denying that his role gave rise to the accountant-client privilege, it conceded that “[h]e was really acting as the Stopkas’ agent.”
b. The Application of the Privilege
Having spent their ammunition on the agency and waiver issues, neither party discusses the remaining emails in Plaintiffs’ privilege log, assuming instead that the privilege applies but either is, or is not, waived by Wolowicki’s participation. To some degree, American Family is unable to do otherwise because its arguments are nеcessarily limited to the information provided by Plaintiffs’ privilege log. Accordingly, the Court undertakes its own examination of the emails and finds that the attorney-client privilege applies to some, but not all, of them.
STP-PRIV0002: This email was sent from attorney O’Connor to Mr. Stopka and was carbon copied to Wolowicki. It provides legal advice on matters relating to issues that would later become integral to this lawsuit and is protected from discovery.
STP-PRTV0006: This email from Wolowicki to O’Connor concerns changes to a release agreement between the Stopkas and American Family. The email notes that the changes were requested by American Family’s adjustor, Gerald Hayes, and were being forwarded to O’Connor at Hayes’ request. As such, thе message shows that the communication was not intended to be confidential. Indeed, Wolowicki asked O’Connor to forward the changes that O’Connor made to the agreement to Hayes himself. The lack of confidentiality means that the attorney-client privilege does not apply to this communication.
STP-PRIV0008: This email from attorney Hennessy to Stopka tells Stopka that Hennessy has received a bill from the environmental consultant discussed above and recommends that Stopka pay it. Nothing suggests that this communication involves confidential legal advice or anything more than a routine payment of bills. Accordingly, it is not privileged.
STP-PRPV0009-0010: These pages include an email string in which attorney Hennessy forwarded to Plaintiffs a message from their еxternal environmental consultant. Hennessy’s message states only that the report is attached to the
Insofar as these documents include the consultant’s report itself, Plaintiffs fail to show why it should be protected from discovery. First, Plaintiffs do not claim that the report is privileged; the privilege log refers only to the emails related to a “review of the environmental consultant report,” not to the report itself. Second, Plaintiffs neither explain what role the consultant played in this matter nor make any reference in their brief to the underlying report. Assuming for the sake of argument that the investigator was a consulting expert, Illinois courts have rejected the application of the attorney-client privilege to a report submitted to a corporations’ counsel, absent a showing that the consultant falls within the company’s control group. Midwesco-Paschen Joint Venture for Viking Projects v. IMO Inds., Inc.,
STP-PRTV0011: This email from Wolowicki to attorney Steve Pearson notes that it is sent with an attachment that includes the certificates of insurance issued by American Family. As documents generated by American Family and presumably already available to it, the certificates are not confidential, and nothing in Wolowieki’s message is intended to obtain legal advice. No privilege applies to this email.
STP-PRIV00U, STP-PRIV00150025, & STP-PRPV0027: These sets of documents include a retention agreement between Plaintiffs and their attorney as well as various emails forwarding the agreement to one person or another. The emails themselves are not privileged because they clearly show that no legal advice was sought or given as part of signing the fee agreement. Instead, the emails concern mundane issues regarding the agreement’s execution, the availability of Plaintiffs, and the fact that Mrs. Stopka had recently undergone a surgical procedure.
As before, moreover, Plaintiffs make no argument as to why the agreement itself is protected by the attorney-client privilege. “It is well-recognized that information regarding a client’s fees generally is not a ‘confidential communication’ between an attorney and client, and thus is not protected by the attorney client privilege.” People ex rel. Ulrich v. Stukel,
Stukel involved billing vouchers instead of a retention agreement, but the Court believes that similar reasoning applies here. Few Illinois cases address this issue directly, but Stukel’s reliance on federal caselaw suggests that Illinois courts would follow federal rules on the protection of litigation agreements. Generally, such agreements are not covered by the attorney-client privilege unless they disclose confidential communications between
STP-PRIV0028 & STPPRIV0029: The privilege log states that these two emails concern a follow up to an earlier email. Plaintiffs provide no explanation of what that underlying message concerned or why these communications, which merely confirm that a prior message was sent, are protected.
STP-PRIV0030: This email sent from Wolowicki to Plaintiffs’ attorney states that it is sending “contact information” about Mr. Stopka’s insurance agent as well as “miscellaneous paperwork.” No specific information concerning these references is provided in the email, and Plaintiffs have not argued that the email involves legal advice. Thus, the privilege does not apply.
STP-PRIV0031: Here, Wolowicki forwarded the insurance policy covering the Stopkas’ home to Plaintiffs’ attorneys. Again, no legal advice is sought in the email itself, and Plaintiffs have presented no argument as to why the insurance agreement should be protected. Indeed, like the environmental report discussed above, Plaintiffs brief omits any reference to the insurance agreement. “The party claiming the attorney-client privilege bears the burden of presenting factual evidence that establishes the privilege.” Pietro v. Marriott Senior Living Servs., Inc.,
American Family’s motion is denied on STP-PRIV0002 and granted concerning STP-PRIV0006, STP-PRIV0008, STPPRIV0009-0010, STP-PRIV0011, STPPRIV0014, STP-PRIV0015-0025, STPPRIV0027, STP-PRIV0028, STPPRIV0029, STP-PRIV0030, and STPPRIV0031.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, American Family’s motion to compel [Dckt. 35] is granted in part and denied in part. Within twenty-one days of the entry of this Order, Plaintiffs shall produce the following items included in their privilege log: STP-PRIV0001, STP-PRIV003, STPPRIV0006, STP-PRIV0007, STPPRIV0008, STP-PRIV0009-0010, STPPRIV0011, STP-PRIV0014, STPPRIV0015-0025, STP-PRIV0027, STPPRIV0028, STP-PRIV0029, STPPRIV0030, STP-PRIV0031, and STPPRIV0034.
Notes
. "A licensed or registered certified public accountant shall not be required by any court to divulge information or evidence which has been obtained by him in his confidential capacity as a licensed or registered certified public accountant. This Section shall not apply to any investigation or hearing undertaken pursuant to this Act.” 225 ILCS 450/27.
. Similar statutes in many states make the client the holder of the privilege. See FMC Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
. The Court notes that most of the emails in Plaintiffs’ privilege log include either Michael or Marilyn Stopka as a sender or recipient. Plaintiffs admit that they have already produced hundreds of pages of email communications, and it is unclear why they do not possess the sixteen emails in the privilege log to which they were a party.
. The Court does not consider here those documents already found to be privileged under the work product doctrine.
. Unlike federal courts, Illinois courts recognize the control group test for privileged communications. This protection extends to employees who act in an "advisory role to top management.” Archer Daniels Midland Co. v. Koppers Co., Inc.,
. American Family states in its reply that this does not indicate an agreement with Plaintiffs’ argument because Plaintiffs had not yet produced their privilege log. The log, however, is not determinative on this issue, which depends on the nature of the relationship between Plaintiffs and Wolowicki at the time the emails in the privilege log were generated. The Court recognizes that American Family disagrees that Wolowicki was Plaintiffs’ agent, and its finding is based on the evidence surrounding the events at issue, not on American Family’s comment noted above.
