The threshold issue in this appeal is a rather straightforward question: Do we have appellate jurisdiction under the collateral order doctrine to review a district court’s interlocutory order addressing whether an inadvertently disclosed e-mail is protected by the attorney-client privilege? We hold that because the allegedly privileged information has already been disclosed we do not have jurisdiction and thus dismiss this appeal.
I.
In 2003, Truckstop.net (“Truckstop”) entered into an agreement with Sprint Communications Company L.P. (“Sprint Communications”), a subsidiary of Sprint Corporation. Under this agreement, Sprint Communications was to design, install, and test standardized wireless local area networks (“WLANs”) at certain truck stops and provide data circuits that would allow Truckstop’s customers to access the Internet through those WLANs. Truckstop filed the instant lawsuit over a dispute regarding Sprint Communications’ design and installation of the WLANs.
During the course of pretrial discovery, Sprint Communications produced more than 470,000 electronic images to Truck-stop. In its sixteenth supplemental production of documents, Sprint Communications inadvertently disclosed a September 2004 e-mail from Sprint employee Deborah Neal to three of her co-workers (“Neal email”). The e-mail discusses Neal’s impressions and recollections of a meeting with Sprint Communications’ legal department, along with statements of facts derived from other sources. Once Sprint Communications realized that it had inadvertently disclosed this e-mail, it filed a Motion to Determine Privilege.
The district court ordered redacted as protected by the attorney-client privilege those portions of the Neal e-mail that either directly related to, or gave impressions based on, attorney advice, and those that recollected attorney advice for the purpose of informing others in need-to-know positions so that they could implement the attorney advice. The court found that the remaining portions of the email were not protected by the attorney-client privilege because they consisted of statements that were either factual in nature or did not directly relay impressions based on or recollections of attorney advice. Sprint Communications then filed this interlocutory appeal.
II.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, our jurisdiction is typically limited to “final decisions” of the district courts. Accordingly, the general rule is that discovery orders are interlocutory in nature and nonap-pealable under section 1291.
KL Group v. Case, Kay & Lynch,
III.
We have recognized that a district court’s order requiring the disclosure of privileged material is often “irreparable by any subsequent appeal.”
UMG Recording, Inc. v. Bertelsmann AG (In re Napster, Inc. Copyright Litig.),
However, irreparable harm from the disclosure of the allegedly privileged material has already taken place when the material has been inadvertently disclosed. In
Bank of America v. Feldman (In re Nat’l Mortgage Equity Corp. Mortgage Pool Certificates Litig.),
Our position that a district court’s order concerning inadvertently disclosed documents is generally not appealable under the collateral order doctrine is also reflected in our decision in
KL Group v.
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Case, Kay & Lynch,
The Third Circuit has taken a similar position. In
ADAPT of Philadelphia v. Philadelphia Housing Authority,
Moreover, our decision does not conflict with the District of Columbia Circuit’s decision in
In re Grand Jury Investigation of Ocean Transp.,
Sea-Land must [be able to] pursue its claim of attorney-client privilege at [that] time in order to ensure that its claim not later become moot by reason of the documents’ disclosure to third parties. Absent the present appeal, these documents could be read or shown in the course of the grand jury proceedings to witnesses who would then be free under Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e) to disclose them.
Id. at 674. The appeal fell within the collateral order doctrine because the alleged irreparable harm was not the initial disclosure of the privileged materials to the government, but their possible disclosure to third parties. The appeal was Sea-Land’s only opportunity for appellate review of its privilege claim. The underlying case was a grand jury proceeding to which Sea-Land was not a party and there was no final judgment from which Sea-Land could appeal. The fact that Sea-Land’s disclosure to the government took place during a grand jury proceeding and that the harm Sea-Land sought to avoid was further disclosure to third parties presents a much different scenario than the instant case. 2
*1070 Following our prior precedent, we hold that this court lacks appellate jurisdiction under the collateral order doctrine to consider Sprint Communications’ appeal. Although Sprint Communications’ inadvertent disclosure during the course of discovery of the Neal e-mail may be unfortunate, the chicken has already flown the coop — the alleged harm from disclosure has already occurred. Sprint Communications has already produced the allegedly privileged document and has not alleged any additional harm that is not effectively reviewable on appeal from a final judgment. The Supreme Court has cautioned that
the ‘narrow’ exception [provided by the collateral order doctrine] should stay that way and never be allowed to swallow the general rule, that a party is entitled to a single appeal, to be deferred until final judgment has been entered, in which claims of district court error at any stage of the litigation may be ventilated.
Digital Equip. Corp.,
Notes
. The District of Columbia Circuit more recently decided that it had appellate jurisdic-lion under the collateral order doctrine to
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consider an emergency stay pending an expedited appeal of the district court’s discovery order requiring that a party produce an allegedly privileged document that had been partially disclosed by an opinion issued by the Supreme Court of Victoria, Australia.
United States v. Philip Morris Inc.,
