*1
preserve both the attorney-client and attorney-work-product privileges and that a limited disclosure pursuant to a government agency's investigatory request ought not waive the privileges as to all other parties, I respectfully dissent from the court's affirming of the district court's order compelling discovery of the otherwise privileged material in question.
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
ELECTRONIC CITATION:
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
In re: Columbia/HCA HEALTHCARE CORPORATION BILLING PRACTICES LITIGATION.
TENNESSEE LABORERS HEALTH &; WELFARE FUND; Board of Trustees Of the CARPenters &; Millwrights of Houston &; Vicinity HEALTH AND WELFARE TRUST FUND; BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE PIPEFITTERS LOCAL 522 HOSPITAL, MEDICAL AND LIFE BENEFIT FUND; OPERATING ENGINEERS LOCAL 312 HEALTH &; WELFARE FUND; UNITED PAPERWORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION; CORDULA BOYSEN, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v.
*2
Columbia/HCA
HeAlthCARE CORPORATION,
Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee at Nashville. No. 98-01227-Thomas A. Higgins, District Judge.
Argued: January 22, 2002 Decided and Filed: June 10, 2002 Before: BOGGS and MOORE, Circuit Judges; RUSSELL, District Judge.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Richard P. Bress, LATHAM &; WATKINS, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. David S. Stellings, LIEFF, CABRASER, HEIMANN &; BERNSTEIN, New York, New York, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Richard P. Bress, Peter L. Winik, LATHAM &; WATKINS, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. David S. Stellings, Erik L. Shawn, Richard M. Heimann, LIEFF, CABRASER, HEIMANN &; BERNSTEIN, New York, New York, Morris A. Ratner, LIEFF, CABRASER, HEIMANN &; BERNSTEIN, San Francisco, California, Jane B. Stranch, BRANSTETTER, KILGORE, STRANCH &; JENNINGS, Nashville, Tennessee, for Appellees.
B. Waiver of the Attorney-Work-Product Privilege
The court also holds today that Columbia's voluntary disclosure to the government of materials protected by the attorney-work-product privilege waives that privilege as well. Op. at 29-30. I believe that the reasons why the attorneyclient privilege should not be waived by a disclosure to the government are also sufficient to bar waiver of the attorney-work-product privilege under similar circumstances. Some courts have decided that the requirements for waiver of the attorney-client and the work-product privileges are different. See, e.g., In re Permian Corp.,
The court contends that the only difference between the two standards is that attorney work product may be disclosed to non-adversaries, through the so-called "common interest exception," without waiving the privilege. Op. at 29-30. Other courts, however, have explicitly rejected the claim that the two waiver standards are identical, except for the "common interest exception." For example, the District of Columbia Circuit has held that "the purposes of the work product privilege are more complex, and they are not inconsistent with selective disclosure - even in some circumstances to an adversary." In re Sealed Case,
In any event, I would also hold that the public interest in easing government investigations counsels against holding the attorney-work-product privilege waived when the holder of the privilege discloses privileged information to the government. Because I believe that Columbia intended to
*3
Plus, the exception is as rule-like as this court makes it, and thus the cure for this defect lies in our own hands. If the jurisprudence that this exception would produce contains a series of "difficult and fretful" exercises in "linedrawing," Op. at 24 , this court would have no one to blame but itself.
Because of a similar concern for the preservation of rulelike values in the field of privilege, I would make the exception categorical. There would undoubtedly be some voluntary disclosures to the government that would occur without the exception. The benefits of such a disclosure to the government may, in some cases, be so great for the private party that they would outweigh the massive costs of a full subject matter waiver of privilege. [4] Nevertheless, a rule removing the penalty of waiver from all disclosures of privileged information to the government would provide the certainty necessary to encourage cooperation with the government.
Another problem with the rule-like features of the exception is that the exception may have limited efficacy absent uniformity among courts. It would be difficult to remove the disincentive to cooperate with the government if protection from waiver depended on the circuit in which a party would be eventually involved in litigation. The mere split between our sister circuits should not dissuade us from adopting the exception. This court should follow the legal position that it finds most meritorious and leave the problem of uniformity to a higher court.
OPINION
RUSSELL, District Judge. This action is an interlocutory appeal from an order of the district court compelling Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation ("Columbia/HCA") to produce certain otherwise privileged documents. Columbia/HCA having previously produced the documents to the Department of Justice ("DoJ"), the Health Care Finance Administration and other related governmental agencies, the district court concluded that the company had waived any privilege associated with the documents. Because the Court agrees that the district court properly rejected the selective waiver argument presented by Columbia/HCA, we AFFIRM.
BACKGROUND
The underlying facts of this action, at least as they pertain to the instant appeal, are relatively simple. The Department of Justice began investigating Columbia/HCA in the mid 1990s for possible Medicare and Medicaid fraud. Columbia/HCA, either in response to the investigation or in anticipation of it, conducted several internal audits [1] of its Medicare patient records. The Coding Audits pertained not only to Columbia/HCA itself, but nearly all of its subsidiary and related corporations. The audits examined the various billing codes assigned to the patients in order to receive reimbursement from the Medicare program, and any possible miscoding (deliberate or otherwise) of the Medicare patients. When DoJ attempted to obtain the audits, Columbia/HCA
*4 rebuffed the request based on attorney-client privilege and the work product doctrine.
A change in corporate control at Columbia/HCA led the company to engage in negotiations with the Government about a possible settlement of the fraud investigation. In coordination with this effort, Columbia agreed to produce some of the Coding Audits and related documents to the Government. In exchange for this cooperation, DoJ agreed that certain stringent confidentiality provisions would govern its obtaining of the documents. As relevant to the instant appeal, the agreement provided that: [t]he disclosure of any report, document, or information by one party to the other does not constitute a waiver of any applicable privilege or claim under the work product doctrine. Both parties to the agreement reserve the right to contest the assertion of any privilege by the other party to the agreement, but will not argue that the disclosing party, by virtue of the disclosures it makes pursuant to this agreement, has waived any applicable privilege or work product doctrine claim. [2]
Ultimately, DoJ and Columbia/HCA reached a settlement of the fraud investigation, which resulted in Columbia/HCA paying a fine to the Government. The sum represented criminal penalties as well as civil remuneration to the Government for overcharges incurred due to the miscoding of Medicare patients.
Once the nature, extent and results of the DoJ investigation came to light, private insurance companies and private individuals undertook to evaluate the billing they received from Columbia/HCA. This review resulted in the filing of numerous lawsuits around the country, which the Panel on Multidistrict Litigation transferred to the Middle District of
The court's argument is more sophisticated, however. It claims that it would be difficult to distinguish between the government and several types of private parties who act particularly in the public interest. Op. at 24. A qui tam plaintiff, for example, brings a suit in the government's stead. See 31 U.S.C. 3730(b)(1). More tenuously, a plaintiff in a shareholder derivative action seeks recovery for the corporation, at least in addition to himself. The claimed risk of attempts to stretch the exception seems tenuous to me. At least the Eighth Circuit has had the exception in place for twenty-four years, see Diversified Indus., Inc. v. Meredith,
*5 the silent premise of the court's argument: private parties would disclose privileged material to the government regardless of the existence of an exception. If the holders of the privilege did not disclose privileged information to the government, the material would still be protected by the privilege. In short, the choice presented in this case is not one whether or not to release privileged information to private parties that has already been disclosed to the government, but rather one to create incentives that permit voluntary disclosures to the government at all. In the run of cases, either the government gets the disclosure made palatable because of the exception, or neither the government nor any private party becomes privy to the privileged material.
The court finally makes a type of moral argument. Why should the government sully its hands, the court asks, by assisting in "obfuscating the 'truth-finding process'"? Op. at 24. The government is not about cover-ups, rather it should "act to bring to light illegal activities." Ibid. I wonder what exactly the court thinks the government would be doing if permitted to encourage voluntary disclosure through confidentiality agreements. The government either could use the information to find additional evidence or could present the privileged information if it decided to initiate a criminal prosecution or civil action. In any event, the court's argument misses the mark. It is not the government's confidentiality agreement that shields the information from civil discovery by private parties, but instead the privilege itself. Without the exception, much otherwise disclosed material would stay completely in the dark, under the absolute cover of privilege. The exception aids the government in bringing violations of the law to light.
The theoretical merits of the exception aside, the court questions the administrability of the rule that it rejects. Op. at 24. In essence, the court suggests that the exception lacks rule-like features and that, as a result, the exception would dramatically increase judicial decision and private litigation costs. At first glance, it not entirely clear why the exception at issue would be more standard-like, threaten certainty, and
Tennessee. [3] The various plaintiffs [4] contend that like the Health Care Finance Administration, Columbia/HCA overbilled them for various services. The litigation seeks the recovery of excess sums tendered by the Private Payors to Columbia/HCA.
The Private Payors sought an order from the district court compelling Columbia/HCA to produce the Coding Audits. According to the Private Payors, the billing codes used by Columbia/HCA for Medicare billing were also used in calculating charges paid by the Private Payors. Thus, the Coding Audits would contain highly relevant information pertaining to alleged overbilling by Columbia/HCA to these persons and insurance funds. Importantly, the Private Payors alleged that notwithstanding whatever privilege the Coding Audits may have once held, Columbia/HCA waived the protections of those privileges by disclosing the materials to the Government.
As it had initially with DoJ, Columbia/HCA refused to produce the Coding Audits on grounds of the work product doctrine and attorney-client privilege. It argued that based on case law from other jurisdictions, disclosing the information to the Government did not waive the protections of the two privileges. See generally Diversified Industries, Inc. v.
[3]
The court below entered a stay pursuant to the All-Writs Act, 28 U.S.C.
, staying any actions remaining in state court pending the outcome of the instant appeal. The stay also applies to the MDL actions pending before it. See In re Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation Billing Practices Litigation,
*6
Meredith,
In a published opinion, the court below granted the motion to compel. In re Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation Billing Practices Litigation,
However, the court did find that the case presented a "controlling question of law as to which there is a substantial ground for difference of opinion," and certified its decision on the issue for interlocutory appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
. A previous panel of this Court ruled that immediate appeal was proper in this case. The panel found that the resolution of the issue presented "may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation." Cardwell v. Chesapeake &; Ohio Railway Co.,
In its appeal, Columbia/HCA renews the arguments it presented to the court below. It contends that this Circuit should adopt the approach of the Eighth Circuit in Diversified Industries and reject the "all-or-nothing" methodology
Why should we minimize the cost and maximize the accuracy of government investigations? After all, as the court notes, private litigants also seek the truth and could benefit from the decreased costs of discovery and the increased accuracy of their positions and arguments. Op. at 24. They too, through the adversarial process, serve the truth-seeking mission with which courts are charged.
The government's investigations are generally more important. Government officials, with finite litigative resources and no individual monetary stake in the outcome of litigation, generally are more selective regarding the matters they choose to pursue than are private parties. Because of these incentives, government investigations are more likely to be in the public interest. Private litigants, often encouraged by large potential liability, on balance will have a greater incentive to press the legal envelope and to pursue legal actions less certainly within the public interest.
The differential remedies available to public and private parties also reflect the greater importance of government investigations. The government has the authority to seek imprisonment and punitive fines. The costs and benefits of government investigations are diffuse, and therefore managing those costs and benefits most efficiently is definitionally in the public interest. On top of all this, government investigators and prosecutors start at a tactical disadvantage to private plaintiffs given the procedural protections afforded criminal defendants against the government, such as a higher burden of proof and the privilege against self-incrimination. I am comfortable, therefore, providing a clear exception for government investigations, and leaving private litigants out.
Throughout its opinion, the court suggests that recognition of an exception would deprive private parties of evidence to which they would otherwise be entitled. See Op. at 24 (characterizing the exception as a government investigatory tool "which effectively prevents future litigants from obtaining the same information"). It is important to identify
*7
privileged information to a third party. Plus, the waiver covers not just the documents disclosed, but all privileged documents "pertaining to the subject matter of the disclosure." See, e.g., Collis,
Contrary to the court's argument, increased access to privileged information increases the absolute efficacy of government investigations, regardless of increased investigatory costs to the government. There is some evidence provided by privileged information for which there is no non-privileged substitute or to which there is no path without the privileged evidence. The court, as well as other courts addressing this question, argues that the government has "other means" to secure the information that they need, while conceding that those other means may consume more government time and money. Op. at 24; Massachusetts Inst. of Tech.,
STANDARD
"The question of whether the attorney-client privilege applies is a mixed question of law and fact, subject to de novo review." Reed v. Baxter,
The work product doctrine "is distinct from and broader than the attorney-client privilege." In re Antitrust Grand Jury,
*8
relevant from the irrelevant facts, prepare his legal theories and plan his strategy without undue and needless interference . . . to promote justice and to protect [his] clients' interests." Hickman v. Taylor,
DISCUSSION
I. ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE
As a general rule, the "attorney-client privilege is waived by voluntary disclosure of private communications by an individual or corporation to third parties. See In re Grand Jury Proceedings October 12, 1995,
However, as evidenced by the instant case, some courts have recognized that a client may "selectively" waive the privilege. [8] And, unfortunately, "the case law addressing the
The preference against selective use of privileged material is nothing more than a policy preference, and really also has very little to do with fostering frank communication between attorney and client. The question for this court is one of policy: Whether the benefits obtained by the absolute prohibition on strategic disclosure outweigh the benefits of the information of which the government has been deprived by the rule? As the harms of selective disclosure are not altogether clear, the benefits of the increased information to the government should prevail.
The court's rule does nothing more than increase the cost of cooperating with the government. The third-party waiver rule, if enforced in disclosures to the government, would require an investigated party to withhold the requested information, lest she lose the privilege entirely. While it is hard to say exactly how high the marginal costs of the waiver would be without facts in an individual case, the scope of the waiver sheds some light on the general magnitude of the costs. Under the current operation of the rule, the holder of the privilege waives it as to everyone when he discloses
*9
circumstances under which they are waived, are conferred to the "reason and experience" of federal courts. Fed. R. Evid. 501. In exercising this authority, federal courts have regularly analyzed whether particular rules are "in the public interest," or whether the rules regarding the privilege would have undesirable side effects. These questions of "policy," like the deleterious impact of a waiver rule on government investigations, are at the heart of the privilege inquiry. See Jaffee v. Redmond,
Moreover, the second justification generally offered for the third-party waiver rule - preventing the selective invocation of the privilege - contradicts the court's premise. Reducing the client's choices to two, the complete abandonment of the privilege or preserving total confidentiality, the third-party waiver rule prevents parties from strategically deploying the most favorable privileged material while jealously guarding the most damaging. See United States v. Workman,
Preventing the distortion of the record only justifies the topical scope of the waiver. By waiving the privilege as to the entire subject matter of the disclosure, United States v. Collis,
A. NO SELECTIVE WAIVER
The Eighth Circuit became the first court to recognize selective waiver in Diversified. The next circuit court opinion to evaluate the issue found the "'limited' waiver theory wholly unpersuasive." Permian Corp. v. United States,
*10
officials and concomitant income tax fraud. The SEC and Occidental reached an agreement
[6]
that the information would be held confidential prior to its disclosure by the petroleum company. Permian,
The Department of Energy, interested in investigating whether Occidental's activities had violated certain federal energy laws, sought to obtain the documents. Occidental, notified by the SEC that it intended to comply with the request, responded by filing suit to prevent the handover. Relying on Diversified, Occidental argued that a "limited" waiver had occurred when it tendered the information to the SEC. The district court agreed with Occidental, and enjoined the Department of Energy from obtaining the information from the SEC. Id.
The D.C. Circuit reversed. It began by noting that "we cannot see how the availability of a 'limited waiver' would serve the interests underlying the common law privilege for confidential communication between attorney and client." Id. at 1220 .
The Eighth Circuit's "limited waiver" rule has little to do with this confidential link between the client and his
A more pragmatic approach would evaluate the impact of the waiver rule on the client's incentives at the time of the putative disclosure. I introduce now, and will detail later, what I believe to be an uncontroversial behavioral prediction: Faced with a waiver of the attorney-client privilege over the entire subject matter of a disclosure and as to all persons, the holder of privileged information would be more reluctant to disclose privileged information voluntarily to the government than if there were no waiver associated with the disclosure. This prediction raises at least one question: Is the effect on governmental investigations the type of concern of which the waiver rule may take account?
The court suggests that the proper analysis of the waiver rule cannot include mere "public policy" considerations like the efficient dissemination of information to the government. Op. at 23. Yet, the court's analysis ignores the common law nature of the privilege inquiry in the hands of courts. The construction and interpretation of privileges, including the
*11
and client. See Commodity Futures Trading Comm'n v. Weintraub,
Courts explaining the waiver rule note that once a client or his lawyer voluntarily reveals privileged information, the basic justification for the privilege no longer obtains. The disclosure indicates that the privilege was not a necessary incentive for the privileged communication to occur, by demonstrating that "the client does not appear to have been desirous of secrecy." Permian,
The court's opinion also hints strongly at this type of reasoning, suggesting that the "uninhibited approach" of recognizing an exception "has little, if any, relation to fostering frank communication between a client and his or her attorney." Op. at 22. The analysis of these courts does not account for the element of time. Clients do not communicate with their attorneys with perfect knowledge of the future. Without the premise of perfect, or at least very good, predictive information in the hands of attorneys and their clients, there is no basis for the inference from a later disclosure to the motivation behind the privileged communication. That a client is willing to disclose privileged information to the government at time T2 indicates very little legal advisor. Voluntary cooperation with government investigations may be a laudable activity, but it is hard to understand how it improves the attorney-client relationship. If the client feels the need to keep his communications with his attorney confidential, he is free to do so under the traditional rule by consistently asserting the privilege, even when the discovery request comes from a "friendly" agency.
Id. at 1220-21 (footnote omitted). The court concluded that the "client cannot be permitted to pick and choose among his opponents, waiving the privilege as to some and resurrecting the claim of confidentiality to obstruct others, or to invoke the privilege as to communications whose confidentiality he has already compromised for his own benefit." Id. at 1221 (citations omitted).
[9]
The D.C. Circuit reaffirmed this position in In re Subgoenas Duces Tecum,
The Southern District of New York, looking to Permian, Westinghouse, In re John Doe Corp., and other cases, rejected selective waiver in any form, even if attempted through a confidentiality agreement. Bowne of New York City, Inc. v. AmBase Corp.,
*12
privilege should be available only at the traditional price: a litigant who wishes to assert confidentiality must maintain genuing confidentiality." Id. (quoting Permian,
As noted previously, the Third Circuit rejected the concept of selective waiver in Westinghouse. Like Occidental, Westinghouse found itself under investigation for problematic dealings with foreign governments (in this case, bribes to a cohort of Ferdinand Marcos to obtain a nuclear power plant contract). Westinghouse,
The Third Circuit rejected this argument. It found that the
Eighth Circuit's sole justification [in Diversified] for permitting selective waiver was to encourage corporations to undertake internal investigations. Unlike the two widely recognized exceptions to the waiver doctrine we discussed at page 1424,
[12]
selective waiver does not serve the purpose of encouraging full disclosure
[11]
The Federal Circuit relied on both Permian and In re Weiss in holding that it "has never recognized such a limited waiver [of attorney client privilege]." Genentech, Inc. v. United States International Trade Commission,
A. The Attorney-Client Privilege
I am unpersuaded by the court's reasoning for its rejection of the exception. First and most generally, the court claims that the "attorney-client privilege [is] narrowly construed" and suggests that we should start with a presumption against Columbia's claim of privilege. Op. at 7. It is certainly true that the application of the privilege to certain communications is to be "narrowly construed," in part because it "reduces the amount of information discoverable in a lawsuit." United States v. Collis,
Second, the court suggests that the exception is "unrelated to" the justification for the attorney-client privilege, that is, encouraging "frank communication" between attorney and client. Op. at 22. Therefore, the court contends, the exception ought to be rejected.
It is not clear why an exception to the third-party waiver rule need be moored to the justifications of the attorney-client privilege. More precisely, we ought to seek guidance from the justifications for the waiver rule to which the exception is made. Those justifications are not exactly coincident with the justifications for the privilege itself. Although the philosophical pedigree of the rule is unclear, I can discern at least two frequently articulated justifications for the thirdparty waiver rule.
The first justification draws on the reasons behind the attorney-client privilege itself. The attorney-client privilege is designed to foster frank communication between attorney
*13
agreement. Permian Corp. v. United States,
I would have resolved this open question by holding that there is a government investigation exception to the thirdparty waiver rule. I address the existence of this exception with regard to the attorney-client and the attorney-workproduct privileges separately below.
Westinghouse,
Finally, in United States v. MIT, supra, the First Circuit rejected selective waiver as well. MIT performed contract work for the Department of Defense ("DoD") to perform certain research projects. In coordination with this work, DoD audited, from time to time, the billing statements submitted by MIT. MIT,
*14
After the district court upheld a petition filed by the IRS to obtain the documents, MIT appealed to the First Circuit. Following a review of caselaw from other circuits, the MIT court chose to reject the Diversified approach. It held: [a]nyone who chooses to disclose a privileged document to a third party, or does so pursuant to a prior agreement or understanding, has an incentive to do so, whether for gain or to avoid disadvantage. It would be perfectly possible to carve out some of those disclosures and say that, although the disclosure itself is not necessary to foster attorney-client communications, neither does it forfeit the privilege. With rare exceptions, courts have been unwilling to start down this path - which has no logical terminus - and we join in this reluctance.
MIT,
B. SELECTIVE WAIVER IN ALL SITUATIONS
The selective waiver doctrine stems from the Diversified opinion alluded to seriatim above. Diversified, a Delaware corporation operating in Missouri, manufactured and processed nonferrous metals. During a proxy fight, it became apparent that Diversified had engaged domestically in the type of activities that Westinghouse and Occidental had engaged in abroad; i.e., it was paying bribes to obtain business. Diversified,
One of the customers bribed by Diversified brought suit, and sought to obtain the audit report (prepared by Arthur Anderson &; Co.), as well as the minutes of the board meeting where outside counsel presented it to Diversified. Id. at 596, 601. The district court ordered the production of the documents in question, finding they were not covered by
DISSENT
BOGGS, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The court's opinion today unnecessarily raises the cost of cooperating with a government investigation. For the court, the existence of a government investigation exception to the third-party waiver rule is an impediment to the truth-seeking process. Op. at 24. After all, under the court's rule more participants in the criminal and civil justice systems have access to privileged information, and the courts' task of making accurate factual determinations is eased. Realistically speaking, the choice before this court today is not between narrower and wider disclosure, but between a disclosure only to government officials and no disclosure at all. Because I am convinced that a government investigation exception to the third-party waiver rule would increase the information available over that produced by the court's rule and would aid the truth-seeking process, I respectfully dissent.
The court undertakes an exhaustive review of the other federal decisions which have addressed this question. The court's analysis of the extant law is largely accurate. I would make clear, however, that the authority arrayed in favor of the court's rule is not overwhelming. It is true that only one circuit court of appeals has implemented a government investigation exception to the third party waiver rule. See Diversified Indus., Inc. v. Meredith,
*15
in Hickman, supra, for the work product protections, has little to do with talking to the Government. Even more than attorney-client privilege waiver, waiver of the protections afforded by the work product doctrine is a tactical litigation decision. Attorney and client both know the material in question was prepared in anticipation of litigation; the subsequent decision on whether or not to "show your hand" is quintessential litigation strategy. Like attorney-client privilege, there is no reason to transform the work product doctrine into another "brush on the attorney's palette," used as a sword rather than a shield. Steinhardt,
Again, like our discussion of the attorney-client privilege above, preserving the traditional confines of the rule affords both an ease of judicial administration as well as a reduction of uncertainty for parties faced with such a decision. These and other reasons "persuade us that the standard for waiving the work-product doctrine should be no more stringent
[30]
than the standard for waiving the attorney-client privilege" - once the privilege is waived, waiver is complete and final. Westinghouse,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the decision of the district court, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
On rehearing en banc, the full Eighth Circuit found that the information in question was covered by the attorney-client privilege. It then turned to the issue of waiver:
We finally address the issue of whether Diversified waived its attorney-client privilege with respect to the privileged material by voluntarily surrendering it to the SEC pursuant to an agency subpoena. As Diversified disclosed these documents in a separate and nonpublic SEC investigation, we conclude that only a limited waiver of the privilege occurred. See Bucks County Bank and Trust Co. v. Storck,
15
Bucks County Bank pertains to the fact that testimony given in a suppression hearing is not admissible at a subsequent criminal trial. Bucks County Bank,
A subsequent Eighth Circuit opinion not referred to by the parties calls into question Diversified. In In re Grand Jury Proceedings Subpoena,
*16
Following Diversified,
[16]
several district courts held that disclosures to government agencies (typically the SEC in a voluntary disclosure program situation) do not waive the protections of the attorney-client privilege. Citing Diversified, the court in In re Grand Jury Subpoena Dated July 13, 1979,
Id. at
The Northern District of California adopted the reasoning employed in Westinghouse to reject selective waiver in the work product context. See In re Worlds of Wonder Securities Litigation,
Other than the fact that the initial waiver must be to an "adversary," 29 there is no compelling reason for differentiating waiver of work product from waiver of attorney-client privilege. Many of the reasons for disallowing selective waiver in the attorney-client privilege context also apply to the work product doctrine. The ability to prepare one's case in confidence, which is the chief reason articulated
[28]
The First Circuit upheld the "prevailing rule that disclosure to an adversary, real or potential, forfeits work product protection." MIT,
*17
As noted by the court below, In re Columbia Healthcare,
When a party discloses protected materials to a government agency investigating allegations against it, it uses those materials to forestall prosecution (if the charges are unfounded) or to obtain lenient treatment (in the case of well-founded allegations). These objectives, however rational, are foreign to the objectives underlying the work-product doctrine.
Id.
Westinghouse rejected the argument that under In re Sealed Case and In re Subpoena Duces Tecum a confidentiality agreement could preserve the work product privilege. While noting that had Westinghouse and the SEC not been adversaries the court "might reach a different result," the Third Circuit found that "because Westinghouse deliberately disclosed work product to two government agencies investigating allegations against it," it could not rely on the confidentiality agreement to salvage work product protections. Westinghouse,
C. SOME SELECTIVE WAIVER
The final approach to this issue, adopted by some courts overtly and suggested by others, has its roots in Teachers Insurance &; Annuity Association of America v. Shamrock Broadcasting Co.,
Teachers, as a shareholder of Shamrock, sought to obtain the information disclosed to the SEC. The SEC subpoena expressly stated that the information sought was to be used "principally for the purpose of investigating possible violations of the federal securities laws"; and that the information might also be used "[i]n any proceeding where the Federal securities laws are in issue or in which the Commission or past or present members of its staff is a party or otherwise involved in an official capacity."
Id. In other words, Shamrock did not enter into any limiting confidentiality agreement with the SEC (nor did it fight the subpoenas on the grounds of privilege when the SEC issued them).
The court reviewed the case law published as of the date of the opinion, including Diversified, In re Grand Jury Subpoena Dated July 13, 1979, In re Weiss, and others, and arrived at the following conclusion: "I am of the opinion that disclosure to the SEC should be deemed to be a complete waiver of the attorney-client privilege unless the right to
*18
assert the privilege in subsequent proceedings is specifically reserved at the time the disclosure is made." Teachers Insurance,
While the Bowne opinion (which rejected selective waiver) purported to overrule Teachers Insurance, both were followed by the Second Circuit's opinion in In re Steinhardt Partners, L.P.,
After declining to determine whether or not the analysis constituted "ordinary" or "opinion" work product, the court concluded "that Chrysler waived any work product protection by voluntarily disclosing the computer tape to its adversaries, the class action plaintiffs, during the due diligence phase of the settlement negotiations." Id. at 846 . The court continued "[d]isclosure to an adversary waives the work product protection as to items actually disclosed, even where disclosure occurs in settlement." Id. (quoting Grumman Aerospace Corp. v. Titanium Metals Corp. of America,
Id. at 847 (quoting Chubb,
*19
("We conclude, then, that while the mere showing of a voluntary disclosure to a third person will generally suffice to show waiver of the attorney-client privilege, it should not suffice in itself for waiver of the work product privilege." (footnote omitted) (quoting United States v. AT&;T,
However, other circuits have been more willing to recognize waiver of the work product doctrine. The Eighth Circuit, which so strongly protected attorney-client privilege in Diversified, easily found waiver of the work product doctrine. See In re Chrysler Motors Corp. Overnight Evaluation Program Litigation,
Shields v. Sturm, Ruger &; Co.,
On appeal, Steinhardt raised the issue of selective waiver. Making no mention of In re John Doe Corp., the court noted "[t]he circuits have . . . split on this issue [of selective waiver]." Steinhardt,
Establishing a rigid rule would fail to anticipate situations in which the disclosing party and the government may share a common interest in developing legal theories and analyzing information, or situations in which the SEC and the disclosing party have entered into an explicit agreement that the SEC will maintain the confidentiality of the disclosed materials.
Id. (citing In re Sealed Case,
Following the decision in Steinhardt, the Southern District of New York returned to the approach set out in Teachers Insurance. The In re Leslie Fay Companies, Inc. Securities Litigation opinion involved disclosures of an audit report to the Office of the United States Attorney (as well as certain other individuals related to the ongoing audit). In re Leslie Fay Companies, Inc. Securities Litigation,
*20
"were made pursuant to confidentiality agreements intended to preserve any privilege applicable to the disclosed documents." Id. The agreements provided that "production of these documents 'shall not be deemed to be a breach of any available attorney/client or work product privilege." Id. (citation omitted). The Court noted that in "Steinhardt, the Second Circuit indicated that the disclosure of privileged information to the government may not constitute a waiver if the government agrees to maintain the confidentiality of the disclosed materials. We think that the [confidentiality] agreement satisfies the standard articulated in Steinhardt." Id. (footnote omitted)(citing Steinhardt,
Two other circuit court opinions left the door open to selective waiver conditioned on the presence of a confidentiality agreement. In Dellwood Farms, Inc. v. Cargill, Inc.,
Id. at 37 (emphasis added). [20]
Finally, the District of Colorado adopted the Teachers Insurance approach as "a compromise position." In re M&;L Business Machine Company, Inc.,
MIT,
II. WORK PRODUCT
"Even if [Columbia/HCA] is deemed to have waived the attorney-client privilege [], this does not necessarily mean that [Columbia/HCA] also has waived work product immunity." Picard Chemical Inc. Profit Sharing Plan v. Perrigo Co.,
The district court in Picard Chemical held that the disclosure of work product in one case by order of a court, where the party had undertaken considerable efforts to protect the disclosure, did not waive the privilege "before another court." Picard Chemical,
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waiver would improve the ability of the Government and private parties to settle certain actions.
However, this argument has several flaws. As noted by the First Circuit, it "has no logical terminus." MIT,
A countervailing policy concern, heretofore not discussed, is whether the Government should assist in obfuscating the "truth-finding process" by entering into such confidentiality agreements at all. The investigatory agencies of the Government should act to bring to light illegal activities, not to assist wrongdoers in concealing the information from the public domain. Governmental agencies "have means to secure the information they need" other than through voluntary cooperation achieved via selective waiver (albeit at a higher cost in time and money). MIT,
The decision to enter into settlement negotiations, and to disclose otherwise confidential information in the process, is a tactical one made by the client and his or her attorney. All litigation-related tactical decisions have an upside and a downside. By refusing the doctrine of selective waiver, the Court agrees with the First Circuit that the 1993). M&;L Business Machine pertained to an agreement between a bank and the Office of the United States Attorney investigating the bankruptcy of M&;L. The bank agreed to give the U.S. Attorney certain information, provided the information would be held in confidence by the U.S. Attorney and the grand jury. Id. at 691. Subsequently, the bankruptcy trustee attempted to obtain the same information pursuant to a subpoena. The bank filed a motion to quash, arguing (in part) that only a selective waiver as to attorney-client privilege occurred. Id. at 693.
The court found that "the Teachers Insurance view strives to balance the policy goal of encouraging cooperation with the government noted in [Diversified] with the strict requirement of confidentiality held paramount in Permian." Id. (citing Fox v. California Sierrę Financial Services,
D. CONCLUSION
As pointed out by Columbia/HCA, this Court recently alluded to the Diversified opinion, stating "[t]hough we need not decide whether we would approve of 'selective' waiver in
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this case, we believe that some of the interests considered in Diversified Indus. are similar to those in the instant case." In re Perrigo Co.,
First, the uninhibited approach adopted out of wholecloth
[22]
by the Diversified court has little, if any, relation to fostering frank communication between a client and his or her attorney. As pointed out by the Third Circuit in Westinghouse, the Diversified approach "merely encourages voluntary disclosure to government agencies." Westinghouse,
Upjohn,
Secondly, any form of selective waiver, even that which stems from a confidentiality agreement, transforms the attorney-client privilege into "merely another brush on an
Moreover, attorney-client privilege is a matter of common law right, "the oldest of the privileges for confidential communications known to the common law." Upjohn,
There is considerable appeal, and justification, for permitting selective waiver when the initial disclosure is to an investigating arm of the Government. Undoubtedly, by waiving privilege as to the Government, a client furthers the "truth-finding process." Permian,
NOTES
Notes
*The Honorable Thomas B. Russell, United States District Judge for the Western District of Kentucky, sitting by designation.
RUSSELL, D. J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MOORE, J., joined. BOGGS, J. (pp. 31-44), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
Or, in some cases, the costs of subject matter waiver just may not be so high that it is not a significant deterrent to cooperation with the government.
Columbia/HCA refers to these internal audits as the "Coding Audits," and for reasons of convenience and consistency, the Court adopts this term as well.
raise decision costs. It would only apply when the disclosure was made to a government agency. It seems pretty simple to know what government agencies are. We might place a confidentiality agreement requirement on the exception.
Really, the exception seems clear and predictable.
Other paragraphs contained in the agreement grant DoJ the ability to transfer the information to other governmental agencies as well as to congressional committees for certain purposes.
A word about the relevance of the confidentiality agreement seems appropriate. I agree with the other courts addressing this issue that parties cannot create a privilege against civil discovery by mere written agreement. See Westinghouse,
Of particular concern here is the feature of the waiver rule that eliminates the privilege not only with regard to the adversary to whom the information is revealed, but also with regard to all other parties. The policy justification for this feature is much more conclusory. As the court notes, the holders of a privilege ought not have the capacity to select among their opponents. Op. at 23; In re Permian Corp.,
Other courts refer to this as "limited" waiver. Unless quoting another case, we will refer to the issue as "selective" waiver for the reasons set forth by the Third Circuit in Westinghouse:
Weiss also rejected Diversified, but did so without analysis.
Although the rule in Diversified is often referred to as the "limited waiver rule," we prefer not to use that phrase because the word "limited" refers to two distinct types of waivers: selective and partial. Selective waiver permits the client who has disclosed privileged communications to one party to continue asserting the privilege against other parties. Partial waiver permits a client who has disclosed a portion of privileged communication to continue asserting the privilege as to the remaining portions of the same communications.
Westinghouse,
indeed about whether she would have communicated with her attorney, absent the promise of the privilege, at time T1. In the meantime, the client certainly has learned more about intervening events and perhaps has become more legally sophisticated (through the informed legal advice arising from her candid communication with her attorney). It seems clear to me that ex ante the attorney-client privilege is generally quite important in producing the communication, and that later disclosures provide only the weakest evidence to contradict that conclusion.
During the mid 1970s, information came to light that many of the largest corporations in the United States had paid numerous bribes to foreign officials (as well as made secretive domestic political contributions) to obtain overseas business. The SEC initiated a "voluntary disclosure program" to encourage corporate America to reveal past misdeeds and publicly disclose the accounting and tax fraud used to hide the payments. In exchange for "coming clean," the SEC agreed not to pursue certain enforcement actions. In most situations, the companies created internal auditing committees which, with the assistance of outside legal counsel, prepared reports documenting the full extent any illegal practices at the company. It is against this background that many of the reported cases discussed herein arose.
Notably, this agreement provided that the SEC would not disclose the documents "to any third-party unless prior notice of such proposed disclosure has been given to Occidental." Id. at 1216. In other words, the confidentiality agreement did not absolutely prevent disclosure.
The court also contends that the attorney-client privilege has nothing to do with protecting communication between "a client and the government." Op. at 22. Of course, no one is contending that communications between the government and a private individuals are protected by the attorney-client privilege. The only situation in which the attorney-client privilege would be relevant is when a private individual discloses already privileged information to the government. The question then is whether the communication between the government and the holder of the privilege waives the already existing privilege. To me, the court's argument seems inapposite.
to one's attorney in order to obtain informed legal assistance; it merely encourages voluntary disclosure to government agencies, thereby extending the privilege beyond its intended purpose.
Even in Westinghouse, the court doubted that the disclosing party actually had entered into comprehensive confidentiality agreement for all of its disclosures to government agencies. See Westinghouse,
attorney-client privilege. A panel opinion of the Eighth Circuit then affirmed that decision. Id. at 602-03.
This is especially true as to "fact" work product, since it may be obtained even absent waiver by a showing of substantial need and hardship. (footnote added). See Toledo Edison Co.,
cooperation with law enforcement militates in favor of a no waiver [of the privilege as to other parties] finding.").
Westinghouse found that the work product doctrine "promotes the adversary system by protecting the confidentiality of papers prepared by or on behalf of attorneys in anticipation of litigation. Protecting attorneys' work product promotes the adversary system by enabling attorneys to prepare cases without fear that their work product will be used against their clients." Westinghouse,
program came to light, both private plaintiffs and the Government launched lawsuits against Chrysler. Id., at 845. Chrysler undertook to prepare an audit of the program to determine its full extent; i.e., how many cars left Chrysler facilities under these circumstances, which employees drove the cars, etc. Chrysler then provided the analysis to counsel for a class action group pursuant to a confidentiality agreement, but refused to turn it over to the Government. Id.
Schnell v. Schnall,
Thus, this case notably differs from the instant dispute in that the policy considerations undergirding selective waiver in favor of the Government were not present. However, as noted previously, several of the same policy considerations apply to private litigants, especially in the type of situation presented by the Chrysler dispute.
Recently, the Second Circuit has returned again to In re John Doe Corp. for the proposition that "where a corporation has disseminated information to the public that reveals parts of privileged communications or relies on privileged reports, courts have found the privilege waived." In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
Fox adopted the Teachers Insurance approach explicitly. Fox,
attorney's palette, utilized and manipulated to gain tactical or strategic advantage." Steinhardt,
As indicated in note 15 , supra, the two cases relied upon by the Eighth Circuit in Diversified pertain to the protections of the Fifth Amendment, not attorney-client privilege.
