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Confession, While Good for the Soul, May be Subject to DisclosureConfession, While Good for the Soul, May be Subject to Disclosure

Courts consider whether the attorney-client privilege applies to a law firm’s internal loss prevention efforts

6 Min Read
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John T. Brooks, partner, and Jena L. Levin, associate, Foley & Lardner LLP, Chicago

In 1999, 10-year-old Alexis Burns was awarded a judgment of approximately $2.5 million in a medical malpractice lawsuit in Massachusetts. Thereafter, together with her then-lawyer, she entered into an agreement with a law firm to create a trust for her benefit with the judgment proceeds to form the res of the trust. The law firm engaged its affiliate, an investment advisor firm, to manage the trust funds and appoint trustees to make distributions for the benefit of Alexis during her lifetime. Without ever executing a declaration of trust, the investment firm began distributing funds to Alexis’ father, the individual whom the firm intended to act as trustee. In fact, over the next four years, the firm distributed over $1.5 million to Alexis’ father.

Unsurprisingly, the plot thickened. In the spring of 2003, the investment firm learned that Alexis’ father was incarcerated. The trust had been depleted down to $640,000 and Alexis’ father hadn’t properly expended the funds he received.

Alexis sued the law firm and the affiliated investment firm in the U.S. District Court in Massachusetts. During the course of the litigation, Alexis sought documents and deposition testimony regarding an internal investigation that the law firm had conducted during the time period when it continued to manage her trust fund. The firm moved for nondisclosure of the documents and communications in question, arguing that the documents were prepared, and the communications made, in anticipation of a possible lawsuit by Alexis. Thus, their argument went, the documents in question were protected by the attorney-client privilege.

The court disagreed, holding that under Massachusetts law, because the firm owed a fiduciary duty to Alexis as the trust beneficiary, it shouldn’t be allowed to invoke the attorney-client privilege to withhold disclosure of information relevant to her claim. The court opined that the “purposes of the attorney-client privilege are threefold: 1) to encourage clients who might otherwise be deterred from seeking legal advice altogether, 2) to promote full disclosure by clients to their attorneys, and 3) to enable attorneys to act more effectively, justly, and expeditiously.”1 Finding that none of these purposes were served by applying the privilege in that case, the court granted Alexis’ motion to compel.

Withdrawal From Representation Approach

Courts around the country have generally come to the same conclusion: When a law firm seeks legal advice in anticipation of a possible lawsuit by one of its clients, but seeks the advice while continuing to represent that client, the communications aren’t privileged. The reasoning behind these decisions is essentially that a law firm owes a fiduciary duty to its clients and preparing for litigation adverse to a client while at the same time representing that client creates an impermissible conflict of interest that destroys the privilege normally afforded to that type of communication.

In Koen Book Distributors v. Powell, Trachtman, Logan, Carrle, Bowman & Lombardo, P.C., et al., 2 the court recognized the predicament that firms face in these situations. It advised firms to promptly withdraw as counsel or, if the firm believes that it can continue representing the client while also potentially representing itself against the client, it suggested that the firm at least secure the client’s informed consent before doing so. In Koen Book Distributors, the defendant law firm sought to withhold internal emails regarding how to continue representing the client and how to respond to the client’s communications in light of a possible malpractice action. The central concern driving these communications was how best to position the firm in the event that the client filed suit. Finding a conflict of interest between the firm’s concurrent representation of the client and its own interests, the court found that the attorney-client privilege was inapplicable and the communications were discoverable.3

A New Approach

A recent decision out of the Southern District of Ohio takes a new and different approach, diverging from the general rule stated by courts across the country that had ruled before it on this issue. In TattleTale Alarm Sys., Inc. v. Calfee, Halter & Griswold, LLP,4 the court, applying Ohio law, held that a law firm’s internal loss prevention communications relating to the firm’s potential malpractice in a matter for an existing client are protected by the attorney-client privilege absent a showing of good cause by the client to justify disregarding the privilege.

In TattleTale, the court weighed several factors in determining that the privilege should be honored. For example, the court considered that the client in a legal malpractice action will often have other sources of proof obviating the necessity of disclosing the firm’s loss prevention communications. The court reasoned that it “is hard to conceive of a case where the only evidence of legal malpractice is found within the firm’s loss prevention communications.”5 For example, if a law firm missed an important filing deadline causing a client’s claim to be barred on statute of limitations grounds, the client would be able to point to the clear fact that the firm missed the deadline to prove its cause of action. Access to internal discussions about why it happened or when the firm realized its mistake wouldn’t likely make or break the client’s claim.

Additionally, the court noted that actions constituting malpractice if not alleged to be criminal, illegal or fraudulent, don’t evoke the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege.6 Finally, the TattleTale court emphasized that the “recognition of the privilege promotes the affected attorneys’ ability promptly to seek advice and to obtain it based on a complete disclosure of the circumstances which led them to believe that some loss prevention communication was warranted.”7 Weighing all of these factors together, the court was unwilling to disregard the privilege absent a showing of good cause.

It’s unclear under the TattleTale court’s analysis whether Alexis Burns would have been able to show good cause to justify disregarding the privilege protecting documents prepared by the firm in anticipation of her lawsuit. But a lawyer’s ability to seek internal advice from others within his firm at the first indication of potential malpractice will often benefit both the lawyer and the client if the lawyer is able to quickly and successfully rectify the mistake. The TattleTale court’s divergence from the majority rule of courts across the nation marks what may be the beginning of an important shift toward protecting law firm’s internal loss management efforts against disclosure to clients seeking retribution through the courts.

Endnotes

1. Burns ex rel. Office of Public Guardian v. Hale & Dorr LLP, et al., 242 F.R.D. 170, 173 (D. Mass. 2007).
2. Koen Book Distributors v. Powell, Trachtman, Logan, Carrle, Bowman & Lombardo, P.C., et al., 212 F.R.D. 283, 286 (E.D. Pa. 2002).
3. Ibid. at p. 286-87.
4. Tattletale Alarm Sys., Inc. v. Calfee, Halter & Griswold, LLP, No. 2:10-cv-226, 2011 WL 382627 (S.D. Ohio Feb. 3, 2011).
5. Ibid. at *6.
6. Ibid. at *9-10.
7. Ibid. at *10.

About the Authors

John T. Brooks

Partner, Foley & Lardner LLP

http://www.foley.com/

John T. Brooks is a partner with Foley & Lardner LLP focusing his practice in the area of estate, trust and fiduciary litigation. He has been Peer Review Rated as AV® Preeminent™, the highest performance rating in Martindale-Hubbell's peer review rating system and was recently re-elected by his peers for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America® 2007-2012 in the field of trusts and estates. He was also selected for inclusion in the 2005-2012 Illinois Super Lawyers® lists and Leading Lawyer in 2003-2009.*

Mr. Brooks began his legal career in estate planning and administration and subsequently transferred the substantive knowledge he acquired in those areas into a successful practice litigating contested estate and trust matters. His practice encompasses all aspects of estate and trust litigation including breach of fiduciary duty issues, judicial constructions of wills and trusts, will and trust contests, tax litigation, contested heirship, adoption and paternity issues, charitable pledge disputes, guardianship matters, estate planning malpractice, and wrongful death actions. He also handles appeals of these matters as well.

Mr. Brooks is a frequent speaker on topics related to estate and trust litigation and fiduciary risk management. He has lectured to the Chicago Bar Association, the Illinois Institute for Continuing Legal Education (IICLE), ALI-ABA, the Heckerling Institute, the American Bankers Association, Chicago Estate Planning Council and the Chicago Council on Planned Giving. Besides the numerous publications listed below, Mr. Brooks is the general editor of IICLE’s 2009 Handbook for Lawyers: Litigating Disputed Estates, Trusts, Guardianships and Charitable Bequests. He also authors a monthly e-mail newsletter for and serves on the Advisory Board to Trusts & Estates magazine.

Mr. Brooks' professional activities include membership in the Chicago Bar Association and the American College of Trust & Estate Counsel.

Mr. Brooks earned both his B.S. (business administration) and law degree (magna cum laude) from the University of Illinois. He is admitted to the bar in both Illinois and Florida and is admitted to practice before the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He represents individuals as well as banks and trust companies.

Jena L. Levin

Jena L. Levin is an associate with Foley & Lardner LLP in Chicago and is a member of the Firm’s Business Litigation & Dispute Resolution Practice.

 

Ms. Levin concentrates a substantial portion of her practice on litigating contested estate and trust matters on behalf of individual clients, banks and non-profit corporations.  Her practice involves all aspects of estate and trust litigation including will and trust contests and judicial constructions, contested heirship and adoption issues, disputes over the enforcement of charitable pledges, and breach of fiduciary duty issues.  Ms. Levin is a frequent author on topics related to estate and trust litigation.  In addition to articles for the Trusts & Estates Magazine e-newsletter, she co-authors several chapters in the Illinois Institute for Continuing Legal Education’s attorney practice handbooks.

 

Ms. Levin is a member of the Chicago Bar Association, the Illinois State Bar Association, and the American Bar Association.  She earned her law degree from Duke University School of Law (J.D., 2009). She received her bachelor's degree, with highest distinction, from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (B.A., 2005), where she was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society.