Inadvertent disclosure of privileged
information in discovery
has become more common as we grow more
voluminous document production due to increased
use of electronic media. lawyers are
increasingly being called upon - or, more
appropriately be forced - to produce millions of
documents that at some earlier point in time
were disorganized, existed only in computer hard
drives and / or backup tapes, or never before
had been in a physical examination form. Lawyers
not only have to deal with the volume, but also
to judicial decisions that sometimes argue that
an inadvertent production of privileged
documents constitutes a waiver of the matter as
a collection of the entire document.
Consequently, there is tremendous pressure on
the privilege holder to review all the data of
privilege.
Under Rule 501 of the Federal Rules of Evidence,
the question of whether a particular document is
privileged or otherwise protected is usually a
matter of state law. State courts and federal
courts interpreting state law, generally have
had three different approaches to determine
whether there has been a waiver of
attorney-client privilege when privileged
documents are inadvertently produced. The first
is a "strict liability" approach, so that any
disclosure, no matter how caused, constitutes a
waiver of attorney-client confidentiality. See
In re Sealed Case, The second view emphasized
that a customer intends to withdraw the
attorney-client privilege rule. See Berg Elecs.,
Inc. v. National, Inc., This "no waiver"
approach often leads to the conclusion that no
inadvertent disclosure can result in the waiver
and inadvertent disclosure is, by definition,
unwanted. The third view is a "balancing test"
which requires the court to make a case by case
determination of whether the behavior is
excusable. See FH Chase, Inc. v. Clark Gilford.
When documents are inadvertently produced, the
receiving lawyer may face an ethical quagmire.
Currently, under federal law, there is no
requirement that a lawyer who receives
inadvertently produced documents to return the
documents to the production and therefore not a
waiver of the privilege. Neither the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure require the receiving
lawyer to stop reading the documents once it is
determined that the documents were potentially
privileged. Similarly, federal law does not
require a receiving lawyer to tell the holder of
the privilege of inadvertent production of
privileged documents.
Although there is no duty to disclose imposed by
law, the American Bar Association (ABA) requires
such disclosure. ABA Formal Opinion and Rule
ABA Model "A lawyer who receives a document
relating to the representation of clients of the
lawyer knows or should know that the document
was inadvertently sent shall promptly notify the
sender.") And while the ABA previously forbidden
to counsel inadvertently review of privileged
material, the ABA withdrew the opinion in favor
of formal opinion 05-437, which is intentionally
silent on the subject. ABA Formal Opinion
92-368. Therefore, it seems that the only
obligation to remain a lawyer ABA Model Rule 4.
4 (b) is to notify opposing counsel of that
produced by chance when the lawyer knows or
should know that a document was sent
inadvertently.
Under a proposed amendment to Rule 26 (b) (5)
(B), which may become law later this year, a
lawyer who receives inadvertently produced
documents must "return, sequester or destroy"
the documents once production reported by the
attorney. Supreme Court Orders, 2006-15 (April
12, 2006). In addition, the proposed rule
provides that the lawyer refrain from receiving
the use or disclosure of the materials to third
parties until the privilege claim is resolved.
The rule operates as a temporary stay pending
the court's determination of waiver, and
assuming that the holder of the privilege to
know about the inadvertent production. Unlike
the ABA Model Rule, proposed that Rule 26 (b)
(5) (B) does not require a receiving lawyer to
notify opposing counsel.
In the past, courts these ethical issues raised
seemed reluctant to transform the ethical
obligation of ABA in the substantive legal duty.
Aerojet General Corp. v. Transp. INDEM. Sec, no
duty to inform opposing counsel inadvertently
produced privileged document); In re United Mine
Workers of America Employee Benefit Plan
Litigation, conflict strict liability approach
to ABA Formal Ethics Opinion, which has no
previous weight), in Resolution Trust Corp. v.
First Bank of America, (ABA opinion is not
binding on the court, but could be mandatory for
members of ABA). The ABA itself refers the
matter to court. ABA Model Rule, Comment 2 ("if
the lawyer has an obligation to take additional
measures, such as returning the original
document, is a question of law beyond the scope
of this Regulation). Consequently, a lawyer who
receives privileged documents through
inadvertent production can not be subject to the
law s the ABA 'disclosure.
So what can lawyers protocol in place to create
an enforceable right of disclosure? Parties
should consider incorporating the obligations in
ABA Rule (b) and Rule 92-368 of former ABA "stop
reading" providing a "make moves of this"
agreement. The proposed Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, Rules 16 (b) and 26 (f), encode the
longstanding practice of stipulated "make moves"
agreements that the parties can adopt as part of
an order management cases. . Once the order is
signed by the judge, a lawyer who has the
obligation to notify opposing counsel when the
receiving lawyer receives a document that the
lawyer knows or reasonably should know was
inadvertently sent. tight-lipped attorney could
face sanctions from the court for violating
ethical obligations to this end case management.
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