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Fiduciary Exception May Allow Access to Otherwise Privileged DocumentsFiduciary Exception May Allow Access to Otherwise Privileged Documents

New York court allows minority owner to obtain information despite attorney-client privilege.

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In certain circumstances, shareholders of corporations and members of limited liability companies can obtain confidential communications between corporate management and the company’s attorney that would otherwise be protected by the attorney-client privilege. 

Similarly, in a few jurisdictions, trust beneficiaries may be able to obtain privileged communications between trustees and their counsel relating to routine trust administration.

Both of these exceptions to the usual privilege rules are known as the “fiduciary exception,” but they’re different.

Celia v. Celia, No. EF20202282, 2023 WL 2777945, 2023 NY Slip Op 30995(U) (Sup. Ct. Mar. 31, 2023), recently issued by the New York Supreme Court, illustrates the fiduciary exception in the corporate context. The court ruled that the fiduciary exception to the attorney-client privilege enabled the minority owner of a multicompany family business to obtain information about communications between corporate management and the companies’ attorney. Under the fiduciary exception, a shareholder or member can obtain the company’s otherwise-privileged information by satisfying a fact-intensive, multifactor analysis to establish that “good cause” exists to disregard the attorney-client privilege. The fiduciary exception may apply when a minority owner alleges breach of fiduciary duty or similar wrongdoing against corporate management.

Factors Considered

The court in the New York case considered several factors in concluding that the minority owner could obtain communications between management and the companies’ attorney and between the companies’ attorney and their accountant:

  • The business didn’t have any disinterested owners or managers to investigate the alleged wrongdoing because one of the owners was the plaintiff and the only other two owners were defendants.

  • The information sought concerned the key transactions at issue in the lawsuit, including management’s refusal to provide books and records to the plaintiff, management’s decision to remove the plaintiff as a director, and management’s elimination of the plaintiff’s ownership of one of the companies. The companies’ attorney advised management throughout these transactions, and management may have relied on that advice in undermining the plaintiff’s interests.

  • The information sought may have been the only available evidence of whether management acted in the interests of the plaintiff and the companies or in their own personal interests.

  • The plaintiff’s claims of self-dealing and conflict of interest were at least “colorable.”

  • The information sought was specific; the plaintiff was not “blindly fishing.”

  • None of the information sought related to advice concerning the lawsuit.

Because the court found that the fiduciary exception applied, the minority owner had the right to obtain information that corporate management expected was protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege.

Trusts Are Different

A similar doctrine that’s recognized in a handful of jurisdictions (and is also known as the fiduciary exception) may enable trust beneficiaries to obtain information about communications between trustees and their lawyers. This exception applies only to advice about the routine administration of the trust, not advice about adversity between the trustee and the beneficiaries (such as a claim for breach of fiduciary duty). Notably, in the trust context the fiduciary exception doesn’t involve the same multifactor test that applies in the corporate context. Instead, in jurisdictions that recognize the exception, beneficiaries may obtain privileged information relating to trust administration without making a further showing.

Corporations and LLCs

As we previously have discussed, not all jurisdictions recognize the fiduciary exception in the corporate context, and not all jurisdictions that recognize it apply the same test. Members of Illinois LLCs generally have a better chance of obtaining privileged communications between management and the company than members of LLCs in most other jurisdictions and shareholders of corporations organized in any jurisdiction.

To avoid application of the fiduciary exception, majority owners should consider engaging their own attorneys—and not seeking advice from company attorneys—when considering actions that a minority owner could challenge as self-dealing or a breach of fiduciary duty.

Trusts

In the trust context, only a few jurisdictions recognize the fiduciary exception; more don’t and many are undecided. Trustees and their lawyers should know what privilege law applies to their relationship. They should also be aware of the possibility that future litigation will occur in a state that recognizes the exception even if the trust is currently being administered in a state that has rejected it. If counsel is being engaged because of adversity with the beneficiaries, the trustee should consider paying the fees itself to blunt an argument that the lawyer was really serving the trust and its beneficiaries, and as always fiduciaries and their lawyers should be careful to avoid intemperate comments in their written communications in case they do end up being discoverable in litigation.

About the Authors

David C. Blickenstaff

Partner, ArentFox Schiff

Dave helps beneficiaries vindicate their rights, advises individual fiduciaries in discharging their duties, and represents trust companies in their most significant and sensitive cases, including “rescue” situations in which he is called upon to assist or replace prior counsel.

Dave is a vigorous advocate. Calm and no-nonsense, he defuses difficult situations while making the strongest case for his clients. He has applied this approach successfully in scores of trust disputes, contested estates, and related matters.

In the Chambers High Net Worth Guide, a respected independent rating service, Dave is one of only five lawyers who received the highest "Band 1" ranking for Private Wealth Disputes in Illinois. According to Chambers, clients describe Dave as “wonderful to work with, incredibly responsive,” “exquisite,” and “very thoughtful, very knowledgeable about trust law and ... just has a really well thought-out way of dealing with difficult clients, lowering the temperature and getting to the right resolution.”

Recognized as a leader in his field, Dave is regularly invited to speak about topics relating to fiduciary litigation and managing fiduciary risk. He also serves as a mediator in complex trust and estate disputes.

Dave is a Fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC), whose members are elected by their peers based on their skill, integrity, and contributions to the profession. He is an active member of ACTEC’s Fiduciary Litigation Committee and its Fiduciary Administration Task Force.

Adam Diederich

Partner, ArentFox Schiff

Adam helps clients resolve disputes involving:

  • ownership and control of privately held businesses, including derivative and direct claims, breach of fiduciary duty claims, requests to inspect books and records, and breach of shareholder agreements and LLC agreements;

  • sports, media, and entertainment law;

  • restrictive covenants (noncompete and nonsolicitation agreements), trade secrets, and confidential information; and

  • business torts and complex contract claims.

His experience also includes drafting restrictive covenant agreements, representing professional associations, Freedom of Information Act requests, student discipline hearings, professional liability (malpractice) claims, trust and estate litigation, and animal law.

Adam strives to understand each client’s business to help advance their legal and business interests. He helps his clients solve problems through advice and counseling, mediation, arbitration, and litigation in state and federal courts. He has experience representing plaintiffs and defendants at all stages of litigation, from temporary restraining orders and preliminary injunctions to summary judgment, arbitration hearings, bench and jury trials, and appeal.

Before beginning his law career, Adam taught fourth grade as a Teach For America corps member.

Kirstie Brenson

Associate, ArentFox Schiff

Kirstie concentrates her practice on the media, entertainment, and sports industries and on avoiding and resolving disputes among owners of privately held businesses. She has successfully represented clients at all stages of litigation – in state and federal trial courts, in arbitrations, and on appeal, including in the Seventh Circuit and the Illinois Supreme Court.

Kirstie puts her curiosity to work for her clients by identifying issues before they become problems and by proposing strategic solutions consistent with her clients’ ultimate objectives. Kirstie has uncovered issues with clients’ internal practices and helped clients to correct those issues to avoid significant liability.

During law school, Kirstie was a student attorney with the Exoneration Project, where she gained experience with fact investigation, oral advocacy, and complex research regarding novel legal arguments.