OPINION
Regardless of the way this case is captioned, the real dispute is between the City of Memphis (the “City”) and its former police director, Walter Crews, who has also been sued in his individual capacity. The City asserts the attorney-client privilege as to the content of conversations between Crews, while he was police director, and various attorneys employed by the City. However, in the present lawsuit, Crews has raised the advice of counsel as the basis of his qualified immunity defense. Thus, we are asked to determine whether Crews’s invocation of the advice of counsel impliedly waives the attorney-client privi *598 lege held by the City. To answer this question, we must first decide whether a municipality can hold the attorney-client privilege. Holding that a municipality can maintain the privilege and that Crews’s litigation choices cannot waive the City’s privilege, we reverse the district court and remand for further proceedings.
I
This case is an interlocutory appeal from an ongoing suit in federal district court. Herlancer Ross, a black police officer employed by the City, took part in the 2000 promotion process in hope of becoming a sergeant. The test included a component for which some officers were able to procure the answers in advance of taking the test. Plaintiff was one of these officers, but it remains unclear whether she knew at the time that the questions and answers she was given would appear on the test. Because this component of the test had been compromised, the City eliminated it from the process and evaluated the applicants on the other three components: a written test, performance evaluations, and seniority. Ross was not promoted. In September 2000, she joined fifty-one other officers in suing the City, challenging the promotion processes used in 2000, and later the process in 2003, under Title VII. This case is still ongoing.
See Johnson v. City of Memphis,
The suit that is the subject of this appeal arises from events related to the Johnson litigation. Ross filed an affidavit in support of plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and was deposed in the case. She also filed a complaint with the EEOC in January 2001. However, because Ross was one of the officers who had been given test answers in advance, she was also a target in internal disciplinary proceedings. On April 24, 2001, the City initiated disciplinary proceedings against Ross and thirteen other officers. On May 15th, Ross, through counsel, informed defendants that she was a plaintiff in Johnson and had provided testimony. She warned them not to retaliate and threatened to sue the City and individual officers if they did.
The City proceeded to hold a hearing on June 11, 2001. Following the hearing, defendant Alfred Gray, Crews’s deputy, demoted Ross from her then-current rank of “Patrol Officer II” to “Patrol Officer II Probationary,” which resulted in a loss of pay and seniority. The Civil Service Commission reviewed plaintiffs demotion in October 2001. It unanimously rejected the City’s reasoning and ordered it to restore plaintiff to her previous position.
On June 7, 2002, plaintiff brought suit against the City, Crews, and Gray. Both Crews and Gray were sued in their individual capacities. She alleged that the defendants violated her rights under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983, and 2000e-3, as well as provisions of the Tennessee Constitution and Tennessee Code § 4-21-401 (prohibiting racial discrimination in employment). Crews retired in March 2003.
During discovery, Crews’s defense theory emerged. He admitted reviewing Ross’s May 15, 2001 letter. He claimed to have talked to attorneys either employed by the City or hired by the City to work on the Johnson case about how to proceed. Relying on their advice, Crews claimed, he decided to proceed with Ross’s hearing. Crews argues that his reliance on their advice renders his behavior reasonable, *599 thus entitling him to a defense of qualified immunity. However, Crews has also consistently declined to reveal the content of the advice he received because it is protected by attorney-client privilege.
The magistrate judge ordered Crews to reveal the contents of the conversations for the reason that Crews had injected the attorney’s advice into litigation. The City objected to the magistrate judge’s order on the grounds that it held the privilege as to those conversations and, therefore, Crews could not impliedly waive its privilege. The district court held that Crews could not assert the privilege after having injected into the litigation the content of legal advice. It issued an opinion ordering Crews to disclose the contents of the conversations.
Ross v. City of Memphis,
II
The City filed an interlocutory appeal, which is the present case, and a petition for a writ of mandamus. Though two of our sister circuits allow immediate review of discovery orders involving claims of privilege under the collateral order doctrine articulated in
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
Appellee continues to contest this court’s jurisdiction, arguing that the attorney-client privilege has not been established and, thus, this court lacks jurisdiction. Appellee’s argument misunderstands the nature of this court’s jurisdiction. Our jurisdiction does not depend on the validity of the appellant’s underlying claims for relief. In
Perlman v. United States,
the Supreme Court reviewed the interlocutory motion even though it ultimately found against the petitioner.
See
Ill
“The attorney-client privilege protects from disclosure ‘confidential communications between a lawyer and his client in matters that relate to the legal interests of society and the client.’ ”
In re Grand Jury Subpoena (United States v. Doe),
This privilege is “the oldest of the privileges for confidential communications known to the common law.”
Upjohn Co. v. United States,
A
This court has twice assumed without deciding that a government entity such as a municipal corporation can invoke the attorney-client privilege.
See Reed v. Baxter,
Review of both our sister circuits’ precedents and outside authority confirm that a government entity can assert attorney-client privilege in the civil context. Though there is surprisingly little case law on the issue,
In re Witness Before Special Grand Jury 2000-2,
Influential secondary literature further confirms that government entities can assert the attorney-client privilege in civil proceedings. Proposed Federal Rule of Evidence 503 would have codified the attorney-client privilege. While Congress did not adopt any of the proposed rules concerning various privileges, courts have observed that Proposed Rule 503 is “‘a useful starting place’ for an examination of the federal common law of attorney-client privilege.”
Subpoena Duces Tecum,
Though citation to outside authority is no substitute for our independent judgment, we find these authorities persuasive. As the Supreme Court has observed regarding the corporate privilege, “[b]oth for corporations and individuals, the attorney-client privilege serves the function of promoting full and frank communications between attorneys and their clients. It thereby encourages observance of the law and aids in the administration of justice.”
Weintraub,
Recently, a split has emerged among several of our sister circuits regarding whether a state or federal government entity can assert attorney-client privilege in grand jury proceedings.
Compare id.
at 533-35 (holding governor’s office could assert privilege in grand jury proceeding)
with Witness,
B
Having concluded that a municipality can assert the attorney-client privilege in civil proceedings, we now hold that a municipal official’s assertion of the advice of counsel defense does not require the City to relinquish the privilege it holds. In reaching the contrary conclusion, the district court improperly balanced the competing interests of the former official and the City.
The district court began from the premise that the City would normally hold the privilege as to the communications between Crews and his attorneys.
Ross v. City of Memphis,
In
Swidler & Berlin v. United States,
the Supreme Court rejected an exception to the attorney-client privilege when information protected by someone who is deceased would have “substantial importance to a particular criminal case.”
In addition, we question whether fairness dictates that the City should be barred from asserting the attorney-client privilege in this case. Leaving aside whether one can expect a rule such as the attorney-client privilege to be equitable in each case in which it is asserted,
see Grand Jury Investigation,
C
Of course, the above analysis assumes that the City does have a privilege as to the relevant communications between its attorneys and Crews. This assumption is in all likelihood correct. The district court recognized that generally in conversations between municipal officials and the municipality’s counsel, the municipality, not any individual officers, is the client.
Ross,
In this case, however, there is some chance that Crews clearly indicated he sought individual legal advice.- The record for this case contains a document purporting to be a memorandum from Crews to *606 the City’s attorneys. This document suggests that Crews may have clearly indicated he wanted to talk to the attorneys in his individual capacity. Because the record is not developed on this point, we encourage the district court to consider this issue on remand.
IV
We therefore hold both that municipalities can assert attorney-client privilege and that Crews’s decision to claim qualified immunity based on advice he received from the City’s counsel does not prevent the City from asserting attorney-client privilege. Having removed these obstacles from the City’s attempt to assert attorney-client privilege, we note that the City still bears the burden of proving the existence of the privilege,
Dakota,
Notes
. Though these cases usually concern claims of privilege made by federal or state officials as opposed to local officials, other courts' reasoning generally does not differentiate among the levels of government asserting privilege.
See Subpoena Duces Tecum,
. Our sister circuits that would not apply the privilege in the grand jury setting also noted that government lawyers have a higher duty to act in the public interest, and take an oath to that effect.
Witness,
. Thus, reliance on counsel’s legal advice only constitutes a qualified immunity defense under "extraordinary circumstances.”
York v. Purkey,
.
Swidler &
Berlin's rationale is also fatal to the reasoning of
Hearn v. Rhay,
.It seems to us that this phrase, while elegant, is perhaps a mixed metaphor. Litigants rarely use the attorney-client privilege itself as an offensive tool. Rather the contents of a privileged communication may be injected *605 into litigation either by making the content of communications a factual basis of a claim or defense or by disclosing the communication itself. Thus, it is the content of privileged communications that is used as a sword, while the privilege is used as a shield to prevent either testing of the claim or, if some privileged communications have been revealed, amplification or impeachment of the material.
