United States Court of
Appeals
FOR
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Argued September 3, 2002
Decided January 7, 2003
No. 02-5210
United States of America,
United States Department of Justice,
Appellee
v.
Philip Morris Incorporated, et
al.,
Appellees
British American Tobacco (Investments) Ltd.,
Directly and as Successor to
British-American
Tobacco Company, Ltd.,
Appellant
Appeal from the United States
District Court
for the District of Columbia
(99cv2496)
On Motion for Stay Pending Expedited
Appeal or,
in the alternative,
a Petition for a Writ of Mandamus
---------
Bruce G. Sheffler argued the cause
for appellant. With
him on the
motion/petition was Garyowen P. Morrisroe.
Timothy M. Hughes entered an appearance.
Sharon Y. Eubanks, Director, U.S.
Department of Justice,
argued the cause for federal appellee. With her on the
opposition were
Stephen D. Brody, Deputy Director, and
Daniel K. Crane-Hirsch, Trial
Attorney.
Before: Ginsburg, Chief Judge, and Sentelle and
Randolph, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge Sentelle.
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge
Randolph.
Sentelle,
Circuit Judge: British American Tobacco
(In-
vestments) Ltd. ("BATCo"), seeks an emergency stay
pend-
ing expedited appeal of the district court's discovery orders
requiring
BATCo to produce an allegedly privileged docu-
ment. In the alternative, BATCo seeks a writ of
mandamus
vacating the orders. BATCo contends that this Court has
jurisdiction
over its appeal under the collateral order doc-
trine. See Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
337 U.S.
541 (1949). On the
merits, BATCo argues that the district
court erred by ruling that BATCo
waived the attorney-client
privilege, without first considering BATCo's
pending objec-
tions to the request for the allegedly privileged
document.
Because we agree that
BATCo has demonstrated jurisdiction
under the collateral order doctrine
and satisfied the require-
ments for a stay, we grant its motion for a
stay and dismiss
the petition for mandamus as moot.
I. Background
Appellee, the United States of America,
initiated this law-
suit against BATCo and five other tobacco companies in
September 1999 alleging that defendants violated the civil
provisions
of RICO, 18 U.S.C. ss 1961-68 (2000), by engaging
in "a pattern of
racketeering activity" to "conceal the health
risks of
cigarette smoking and the addictiveness of nicotine."
The government further alleges, in
relevant part, that defen-
dants have "destroy[ed] and conceal[ed] documents" and tak-
en
"other steps to shield documents and materials from
discovery." As to remedy, the government seeks, inter
alia,
disgorgement of defendants' profits and recovery of the medi-
cal
costs of the tobacco companies' customers.
The parties exchanged Comprehensive Requests
for Pro-
duction on August 22, 2000.
The government requested that
the defendants produce "[a]ll
documents relating to record-
creating, record-keeping, record-retention,
record dissemina-
tion or distribution, and/or record-destruction
policies, prac-
tices, and procedures ... in any part of your organization
that has or had responsibility for ... research concerning
smoking
and health or addiction." On
November 6, 2000,
BATCo responded to the government's document requests,
and objected, inter alia, to producing any documents created
prior
to August 19, 1994, except those contained in the
Guildford Depository in
England (the "Guildford objection").
The Depository was established in response to a parallel
action
filed against the same defendants by the State of
Minnesota and contains
over one million documents. State of
Minnesota v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
No. C1-94-8565 (Minn.
Super. Ct. 1994).
BATCo also objected to producing any
documents in the possession
of third parties if the documents
were not also in BATCo's possession,
custody, or control (the
"third-party objection").
In March 2002, the Supreme Court of
Victoria, Australia,
publicly released a decision regarding discovery in
a case
involving W.D. & H.O. Wills ("Wills"), an Australian
subsid-
iary of British American Tobacco Australia Services Limited
("BATAS"),
in which BATCo has a minority ownership inter-
est. McCabe v. Brit. Am. Tobacco Austl. Servs.,
Ltd., (2002)
V.R. 73. The
decision quotes extensively from a March 1990
memorandum prepared for
Wills by an attorney at the British
law firm Lovell, White & Durrant
("Lovell"), in its capacity as
counsel for Wills and BATCo (the
"Foyle Memorandum" or
"the memo"). See id.
The Foyle Memorandum advises Wills
on modifying its document
retention policy in light of increas-
ing litigation against tobacco
companies in the United States
and Australia.
Subsequent to the McCabe decision's
release, the govern-
ment requested by letter that BATCo produce the Foyle
Memorandum. BATCo responded that it had been "unable to
locate
the document[ ], or any evidence that plaintiff selected
[it] for
production."
On May
28, 2002, during the deposition of former BATCo
CEO Ulrich Herter,
government counsel requested the "im-
mediate production" of the
Foyle Memorandum so it could be
used to refresh Herter's
recollection. When BATCo's counsel
declined, government counsel initiated an emergency telecon-
ference
with the district court to determine whether BATCo
was required to
immediately produce the Foyle Memoran-
dum. During the teleconference, BATCo contended that the
document
was covered by the Guildford objection and in-
formed the Court that it
did not even know if the document
was in its possession. Moreover, BATCo argued that the
Foyle
Memorandum was protected by the attorney-client
privilege. The district
court did not address BATCo's Guild-
ford and third-party objections.
Instead, the court ruled that
BATCo had waived any claim of
attorney-client privilege
because the memo had not been listed in BATCo's
privilege
log. The court added
that BATCo was free to re-litigate the
underlying facts of the order
before the Special Master in the
case.
The following day, the district court issued a written
order
memorializing the telephone ruling and requiring
BATCo to produce the
memo "if the document is in the
control or possession of
BATCo," and to make "all reasonable
effort to locate"
it. United States v. Philip Morris
Inc., No.
99-2496 (D.D.C. May 29, 2002) ("Order 157").
On May 30, 2002, BATCo and the government
twice ap-
peared in telephonic conferences before the Special Master in
which BATCo sought to attack Order 157.
Although the
argument in the first conference is not part of the
record,
BATCo appears to have raised its Guildford and third-party
objections
in this conference. See Oral Rep. and
Recom. 56
at 35 (BATCo counsel raising objection in context of
"reit-
erat[ing] what I said this morning"). It definitely raised
them in the
second conference. See id. at 35,
43. Like the
district court, the
Special Master did not address these
objections. Instead he concluded that,
because the Foyle
Memorandum was in the possession of Lovell, it was
"within
the control and possession of BATCO" and thus required
to
be logged in the privilege log.
Oral Rep. and Recom. 55 at
11. The Special Master therefore
recommended that the
district court issue an "order of further
compliance" so that
BATCo would immediately produce the memo. Id.
BATCo then submitted to the district court a sealed copy of
the Foyle Memorandum and moved the district court to
reconsider its
orders compelling production. BATCo
again
urged the court to consider its Guildford and third-party
objections
before requiring BATCo to produce or log the
Foyle Memorandum. See BATCo Br. in Supp. of Mot. for
Recons.
at 14. On July 2, 2002, the court
denied the motion
to reconsider and ordered BATCo to produce the memo
within two days. United States v.
Philip Morris Inc., No.
99-2496 (D.D.C. July 2, 2002) (order compelling
production).
The court held that
because BATCo had "knowledge and
possession" of the Foyle
Memorandum "by at least February
of 2002," BATCo was required
under Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 26(e), to "identify and/or
designate the document"
as privileged at that time. Philip Morris, No. 99-2496, slip
op.
at 4 (D.D.C. July 2, 2002) (memorandum opinion accompa-
nying order). Thus, the court concluded that BATCo's
failure
to list the memo on the privilege log waived BATCo's attor-
ney-client
privilege claim. Id. at 4-5. The court
did not
further address BATCo's objections.
BATCo requested that the district court
stay its orders
pending appeal.
On July 10, 2002, the district court denied
the motion for stay,
reasoning that BATCo had not estab-
lished appellate jurisdiction nor
shown that it was likely to
prevail on its challenge to the waiver
ruling. Philip Morris,
No. 99-2496, slip op. (D.D.C. July 10, 2002). The court also
noted that BATCo would
not suffer irreparable harm absent
a stay, particularly given that many
portions of the Foyle
Memorandum have already been made public in
McCabe. Id.
at 2. By contrast, the district court found that a
stay would
substantially harm the government and undermine the public
interest by jeopardizing the "extremely demanding" discovery
schedule
and July 15, 2003 trial date set by the court.
Id. at
2-4.
BATCo timely filed this appeal and sought an emergency
stay pending
expedited review, claiming that the district court
should have ruled on
its pending objections to producing the
Foyle Memorandum, and at that
time, given BATCo a chance
to log the memo.
II. Analysis
In seeking a stay pending appeal, BATCo
must show (1)
that it has a substantial likelihood of success on the
merits;
(2) that it will suffer
irreparable injury if the stay is denied;
(3) that issuance of the stay will not cause substantial harm to
other parties; and (4) that the
public interest will be served
by issuance of the stay. Washington Metro. Area Transit
Comm'n
v. Holiday Tours, Inc., 559 F.2d 841, 843 (D.C. Cir.
1977).
We first consider our jurisdiction over
BATCo's appeal and
then address, in turn, the requirements for an
emergency
stay.
A.
Jurisdiction
BATCo argues that this Court has jurisdiction over its
appeal
under the collateral order doctrine, first enunciated by
the Supreme
Court in Cohen, 337 U.S. 541. The
collateral
order doctrine is a narrow exception to the general rule that
appellate review is only available for final orders. Quacken-
bush
v. Allstate Ins. Co., 517 U.S. 706, 712 (1996). For
jurisdiction to lie
under Cohen's collateral order doctrine,
BATCo must show that (1) the
order from which it appeals
conclusively determines the disputed
question; (2) appellate
review
will resolve an important issue completely separate
from the merits of
the action; and (3) the order will be
effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.
Puerto
Rico Aqueduct & Sewer Auth. v. Metcalf & Eddy,
Inc., 506 U.S.
139, 144 (1993); Nat'l Ass'n of
Criminal Def.
Lawyers v. United States Dep't of Justice, 182 F.3d 981,
984
(D.C. Cir. 1999).
The first requirement is satisfied
because the district
court's order conclusively and finally determined
that the
Foyle Memorandum is not protected by the attorney-client
privilege. In no way does the record suggest that the
district
court's conclusion is tentative or subject to revision.
The second requirement has two
prongs-separability and
importance.
Clearly, the privilege question is separable from
the merits of
the underlying case. As to importance,
"for the
purposes of the Cohen test, an issue is important if the
interests that would potentially go unprotected without imme-
diate
appellate review of that issue are significant relative to
the efficiency
interests sought to be advanced by adherence
to the final judgment
rule." In re Ford Motor Co., 110 F.3d
954, 959 (3d Cir. 1997); see also
Digital Equip. Corp. v.
Desktop Direct, Inc., 511 U.S. 863, 878-79 (1994)
("[T]he third
Cohen question ... simply cannot be answered without a
judgment about the value of the interests that would be lost
through
rigorous application of a final judgment require-
ment."). Thus, the considerations underlying the
final judg-
ment rule--the costs of piecemeal review--must be weighed
against the costs of delay.
Johnson v. Jones, 515 U.S. 304,
315 (1995); Ford, 110 F.3d at 959. The Supreme Court
explained that
" 'important' in Cohen's sense [means] being
weightier than the
societal interests advanced by the ordinary
operation of final judgment
principles." Digital Equip., 511
U.S. at 879. For example,
collateral order review is available
to decide, inter alia, issues of
federal court abstention,
Quackenbush, 517 U.S. 706, Eleventh Amendment
immunity,
Puerto Rico Aqueduct, 506 U.S. 139, and qualified immunity,
Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 U.S. 511 (1985).
In Ford, the Third Circuit addressed the
issue before this
court today and held that collateral order review is
also
available to challenge an attorney-client privilege ruling. 110
F.3d at 957-64. The Ford court
analogized to Supreme
Court precedent and held that the attorney-client
privilege
was the type of "institutionally significant status or
relation-
ship" that justifies collateral order review. Id. at 960.
We
agree, consistent with our decision In re Grand Jury
Investi-
gation of Ocean Transportation, 604 F.2d 672 (D.C. Cir.
1979), in which we allowed interlocutory appeal of a privilege
claim that
arose after the appellant inadvertently produced
allegedly privileged
documents. Id. at 674.
The attorney-client privilege rests at
the center of our
adversary system and promotes "broader public
interests in
the observance of law and administration of justice"
and
"encourage[s] full and frank communication between attor-
neys
and their clients." Upjohn Co. v.
United States, 449
U.S. 383, 389 (1981). The privilege promotes sound
legal
advocacy by ensuring that the counselor knows all the infor-
mation
necessary to represent his client.
Id. Only by ensur-
ing that
privileged information is never disclosed will these
important interests
be advanced. Ford, 110 F.3d at 962.
Even though enforcement of the privilege often results in the
suppression
of probative evidence, our jurisprudence has
determined that its value
outweighs these costs. Similarly,
we today conclude that the institutional benefits of allowing
interlocutory
review of attorney-client privilege claims out-
weigh the costs of delay
and piecemeal review that may
result.
The government proposes two reasons why
BATCo's privi-
lege claim differs from the immediately appealable
privilege
claims in Ford and Ocean Transportation. First, the govern-
ment argues that
BATCo is not asserting a privilege claim
because the district court did
not reject a timely asserted
claim of privilege, but merely held that
BATCo waived the
privilege by failing to log the Foyle Memorandum. On these
facts, this is a distinction
without a difference. The only
reason
the district court did not reach the merits of BATCo's
privilege claim is
because of the court's allegedly erroneous
waiver ruling. A decision defining the contours of a waiver
of
privilege is no less "important" for Cohen purposes than a
ruling on the contours of the privilege itself. An erroneous
finding of waiver, like an erroneous ruling
denying a claim of
privilege, eviscerates the same important
institutional inter-
ests in preserving privileged information, and
derivatively,
full and frank communication between client and
attorney.
Second, the
government argues that the privilege issue is
not important because so
much of the Foyle Memorandum
has already been released in the McCabe decision. This
argument misconstrues Cohen's importance
requirement.
The importance prong
requires weighing the "institutionally
significant status or
relationship" at stake, Ford, 110 F.3d at
960, not the individual
circumstances of each case. Johnson,
515 U.S. at 315 ("We of course
decide appealability for
categories of orders rather than individual
orders. Thus, we
do not now in
each individual case engage in ad hoc balancing
to decide issues of
appealability.") (citation omitted).
The
attorney-client privilege protects an important status or
rela-
tionship regardless of whether some portion of the privileged
material
has already been lost. Total disclosure
of the Foyle
Memorandum would unquestionably further impair the
attor-
ney-client privilege. See
Ocean Transp., 604 F.2d 672 (allow-
ing collateral order review of
privilege ruling even though
allegedly privileged documents had
inadvertently been pro-
duced to prosecution). Therefore, we conclude that BATCo's
appeal of the district
court's ruling satisfies Cohen's impor-
tance requirement.
To satisfy Cohen's final requirement for
jurisdiction under
the collateral order doctrine, BATCo must also show
that the
district court's discovery order will be effectively
unreview-
able on appeal from a final judgment. Puerto Rico Aqueduct,
506 U.S. at 144; Criminal Def. Lawyers, 182 F.3d at 984. An
order is effectively unreviewable if it "involves an asserted
right
the legal and practical value of which would be de-
stroyed if it were not
vindicated before trial." Lauro
Lines
S.R.L. v. Chasser, 490 U.S. 495, 499 (1989) (quotation omit-
ted). While BATCo could appeal the discovery order
after
final judgment, the appellate court would merely send the
case
back for re-trial without use of the privileged materials.
By that point,
the entirety of the Foyle Memorandum will
have been disclosed to third
parties, making the issue of
privilege effectively moot. See Ocean Transp., 604 F.2d at
674; see also In Re Papandreou, 139 F.3d 247, 251
(D.C. Cir.
1998) (stating in dictum that "[d]isclosure followed by
appeal
after final judgment is obviously not adequate in [privilege]
cases-the cat is out of the bag").
In this case, the right
sought to be protected--BATCo's
privilege--would be de-
stroyed if interlocutory appeal is not allowed. Moreover, the
United
States' attorneys could gain valuable new leads from
the Foyle
Memorandum. See Chase Manhattan Bank,
N.A.
v. Turner & Newall, PLC, 964 F.2d 159, 165 (2d Cir. 1992). It
would be impossible for a court to sort out and redress the
harm
caused by the incorrect disclosure.
Some of our sister circuits have suggested that a party
might
obtain effective review of an adverse privilege order by
refusing to obey
the district court's discovery order and
thereby standing in contempt or
incurring some other sanc-
tion.
By appealing the sanction, they suggest, a party may
have an
adverse privilege ruling reviewed upon final judg-
ment without disclosing
the privileged document. See FDIC
v. Ogden Corp., 202 F.3d 454, 458 n.2 (1st Cir. 2000); see also
Reise v. Bd. of Regents of
Univ. of Wisconsin, 957 F.2d 293,
295-96 (7th Cir. 1992) (discussing this
method of obtaining
review of order to submit to medical
examination). It is
principally
because of the availability of the disobedience
route to review that a
majority of the circuits to have
considered the issue have held that
adverse privilege rulings
are not appealable. See Ogden, 202 F.3d at 458 n.2;
Dell-
wood Farms, Inc. v. Cargill, Inc., 128 F.3d 1122, 1125 (7th
Cir. 1997) (in case involving "law enforcement investigatory
privilege,"
holding discovery order not within collateral order
doctrine "even
if it is an order denying a claim of privilege");
Simmons v. City of Racine, 37 F.3d
325, 327 (7th Cir. 1994)
(in case involving "informer's
privilege," noting that discovery
orders are not appealable under
Cohen even if "issued over
an objection that the information at
issue is privileged");
Boughton
v. Cotter Corp., 10 F.3d 746, 750 (10th Cir. 1993);
Texaco, Inc. v. Louisiana Land & Exploration Co., 995
F.2d
43 (5th Cir. 1993) (enforcing general inapplicability of
collat-
eral order doctrine to discovery orders in case involving
attorney-client
privilege claim); Chase Manhattan Bank,
N.A. v. Turner & Newall, PLC, 964 F.2d 159, 161-63 (2d Cir.
1992)
(same but issuing writ of mandamus);
Reise, 957 F.2d
at 295 ("even orders to produce information
over strong
objections based on privilege are not appealable"); Quantum
Corp. v. Plus Dev. Corp., 940
F.2d 642, 644 (Fed. Cir. 1991);
see also American Express Warehousing, Ltd. v. Trans-
america Ins. Co.,
380 F.2d 277, 280-83 (2d Cir. 1967) (work-
product privilege).
Although these authorities are weighty,
we cannot follow
them. At least
some of the holdings are based in part upon
the assumption that
disobedience may lead to a contempt
citation that would itself be an
appealable order. See Ogden,
202
F.3d at 458 n.2. In this circuit,
however, it is settled that
a civil contempt citation is not appealable
as a collateral
order. Byrd v.
Reno, 180 F.3d 298 (D.C. Cir. 1999). In
the
related context of determining whether a petitioner for man-
damus
has adequate alternative means of relief, we have
expressed concern that
a party that seeks review does not
know in advance "whether refusal
to comply with the discov-
ery order will result in a civil contempt order
or a criminal
contempt order."
In re Sealed Case No. 98-3077, 151 F.3d
1059, 1065 (D.C. Cir.
1998); see also 15B C. Wright, A.
Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice & Procedure
s 3914.23,
at 146 (2d ed. 1992). Although there
may be other
sanctions that the district court could impose, such as
striking
all or a portion of the party's pleadings, see Fed. R. Civ. P.
37(b)(2), these are in the district court's discretion and are
therefore
not reliable avenues to appeal.
Moreover, they
may be of such severity that a reasonable party
would not
risk incurring them, even in order to preserve a clearly
meritorious
privilege claim.
The
dissent argues that our decision in Byrd requires us to
hold that a
privilege ruling is not appealable because a
privilege ruling is merely a
"predicate" ruling to an unappeal-
able civil contempt
citation. See Dissent at 1-2, 3. Since
BATCo could not appeal the
contempt citation under Byrd,
the dissent reasons, it should not be able
to appeal the
"predicate" privilege ruling either. We do not think that the
dissent's
conclusion follows from our holding in Byrd.
In Byrd, we held that a general class of
orders--civil
contempt citations--are not final orders under 28 U.S.C.
s 1291. That is an entirely different
question than the one
we face today:
whether attorney-client privilege rulings--a
narrow subset of the rulings that might eventually lead to a
contempt
citation--fall within Cohen's collateral order excep-
tion to the final
order rule. Neither this Court in Byrd
nor
the Supreme Court has held that certain types of rulings are
excluded
from Cohen's collateral order exception merely be-
cause they may lead to
an unappealable civil contempt cita-
tion. Rather, an order is appealable under Cohen if it meets
the
three prong test of conclusiveness, separability and im-
portance, and
effective unreviewability. This inquiry
requires
careful examination of the type of order at issue to determine
whether the benefits of immediate appealability outweigh the
costs
that may result from piecemeal adjudication, see John-
son v. Jones, 515
U.S. 304, 315 (1995), not merely a cursory
glance to determine whether
the order could lead to an
unappealable civil contempt citation, as the
dissent suggests.
Finally, the Byrd Court itself recognized that its central
holding--that
civil contempt orders are not final orders under
s 1291--did not
eliminate the need for the particularized
Cohen inquiry. Indeed, the Byrd Court separately addressed
the issue of whether the underlying discovery order and civil
contempt
order were immediately appealable under the col-
lateral order
doctrine. See 180 F.3d at 302. If the dissent's
reading were correct,
the Byrd Court would not have needed
to address the collateral order
doctrine because that issue
would have been precluded by the Court's
holding that civil
contempt orders are not final orders. For all of these
reasons, we are
unpersuaded by the dissent's argument that
this Court lacks jurisdiction
over BATCo's appeal.
Therefore, we hold that BATCo has demonstrated jurisdic-
tion under
the collateral order doctrine. We turn
now to
BATCo's likelihood of success on the merits of its claim.
B. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
BATCo contends that it is likely to
succeed on the merits
because the district court failed to consider
BATCo's pending
objections to producing the Foyle Memorandum and thus
incorrectly found that BATCo waived its privilege claim by
failing
to log it. BATCo argues that even if
the district court
overruled its objections, BATCo should have been
given, at
that time, an opportunity to place the Foyle Memorandum on
its privilege
log.
In considering the
merits of BATCo's claim, we begin at
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
26(b)(5). The rule provides
that any party claiming privilege for a
document requested
during discovery shall log the document on a privilege
log.
Fed. R. Civ. P.
26(b)(5). The 1993 Advisory Committee
Notes
explain the application of the rule when a party has pending
objections
to the document request. See Fed. R.
Civ. P.
26(b)(5) advisory committee's note. The Notes provide that
the court should first rule on the
pending objections and then,
if it overrules those objections, give the
party claiming privi-
lege an opportunity to log the allegedly privileged
documents.
Id. In short, if a party's pending objections
apply to alleged-
ly privileged documents, the party need not log the
document
until the court rules on its objections.
BATCo claims that its Guildford and
third-party objections
apply to the Foyle Memorandum. Although there is some
doubt whether
these objections apply to the Foyle Memoran-
dum, the United States did
not raise this argument in oppos-
ing the present motion for stay. Moreover, there is no
question that
the objections were timely raised and at least
facially seem to apply to
the memo. If these objections are
found to apply to the Foyle Memorandum, then the district
court's
failure to address the objections, or if it overruled
them, then its
failure to give BATCo the opportunity to log
the memo, was error. Therefore, under these circumstances,
we
find that BATCo is likely to succeed on its claim that the
district court
should have considered these objections before
ruling that BATCo had
waived its privilege. If BATCo
succeeds
on its appeal, it would be entitled to a remand for
the district court to
address BATCo's objections as applied to
the Foyle Memorandum.
C. Irreparable Injury
BATCo would suffer irreparable injury if
a stay is denied.
Although BATCo "has not asserted any specific
irreparable
injury that would occur" if it produced the Foyle
Memoran-
dum, Philip Morris, No. 99-2496, slip op. at 2 (D.D.C. July
10, 2002), the general injury caused by the breach of the
attorney-client
privilege and the harm resulting from the
disclosure of privileged
documents to an adverse party is
clear enough. The government argues that we should disre-
gard this harm
because parts of the Foyle Memorandum have
already been disclosed in the
McCabe opinion. We disagree.
The release of the McCabe opinion does
not diminish the
harm that would result from releasing additional
privileged
information. Moreover,
the attorneys for the United States
would be able to use the Foyle
Memorandum to pursue new
leads on discovery and witness questioning. Chase Manhat-
tan Bank, 964 F.2d at
165. The implications of this use of
privileged material would be very difficult to remedy on
appeal.
D. Substantial Harm to Other Parties
The government argues that a stay would
delay the trial
schedule set by the district court and harm the
government's
ability to conduct discovery in this case. A mere assertion of
delay does not
constitute substantial harm. Some delay would
be occasioned by almost all
interlocutory appeals. Further,
any
delay will be minimized by our expedition in hearing
BATCo's appeal. In
short, there is no reason to believe a
minor delay will substantially
harm the United States.
E.
Public Interest
Finally, we consider whether the public interest would be
served
by granting a stay. As discussed above, supra at 8, the
attorney-client
privilege is an "institutionally significant sta-
tus or
relationship" with deep roots in our nation's adversary
system. Ford, 110 F.3d at 960. As such, the privilege
advances
"broader public interests in the observance of law
and
administration of justice."
Upjohn, 449 U.S. at 389. We
conclude that granting a stay to allow BATCo to defend its
claim of
privilege will serve these same public interests.
III. Conclusion
Because we are satisfied that we have
jurisdiction over this
appeal under the collateral order doctrine and
that BATCo
has met all of the requirements for an emergency stay, we
grant its
motion for emergency stay, expedite the underlying
appeal, and dismiss
its petition for mandamus as moot.
So
ordered.
Randolph, Circuit Judge, dissenting: I do not believe we
have appellate jurisdiction over the
district court's discovery
orders and I would therefore deny the
stay.
The question is
whether the orders are "final decisions"
within the meaning of 28
U.S.C. s 1291. The court holds that
an order requiring a party to produce a document allegedly
protected
by the attorney-client privilege is immediately ap-
pealable under s 1291,
pursuant to the interpretation of that
provision in Cohen v. Beneficial
Indus. Loan Corp., 337 U.S.
541, 546 (1949). See Firestone Tire &
Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
449 U.S. 368, 373-75 (1981).
If the underlying action here had been a
grand jury
proceeding, we would not have appellate jurisdiction over
BATCo's appeal. The law is
settled that if a district court
requires a grand jury witness to produce
documents over the
witness's objections, the witness may not immediately
appeal
under s 1291, but must first subject himself to contempt and
appeal the contempt citation.
United States v. Ryan, 402
U.S. 530, 532-33 (1971), so holds and
we have consistently
followed this rule in grand jury cases involving
attorney-client
privilege claims.
See, e.g., In re Sealed Case, 162 F.3d 670,
672-73 (D.C. Cir.
1998); In re Sealed Case, 107 F.3d 46,
48
n.1 (D.C. Cir. 1997); In re
Sealed Case, 737 F.2d 94, 97 (D.C.
Cir. 1984).
This is a civil case, but s 1291 also
governs appeals in
criminal cases.
Cobbledick v. United States, 309 U.S. 323, 324
(1940); United States v. MacDonald, 435 U.S. 850,
853 (1978).
Why then is it that
in a grand jury proceeding the witness
must disobey the order to produce
and be held in contempt
before appealing, but--as the court now holds--in
a civil
action a party may appeal the order forthwith? Byrd v.
Reno, 180 F.3d 298 (D.C. Cir.
1999), the majority explains,
holds that civil contempt orders are not
final under s 1291.
Thus BATCo
could not appeal if it refused to produce the
document and were held in
civil contempt. But it seems to
me
that this is a reason against--not in favor of--taking
jurisdiction of an
appeal from an order that would serve as
the predicate for holding the
party in contempt. At issue in
both
appeals would be whether the district court correctly
rejected a
privilege claim and ordered the party to disclose
attorney-client communications. Of the
two cases, civil con-
tempt is far more serious; a party may be imprisoned for
violating a court's
disclosure order, as Hickman v. Taylor,
329 U.S. 495, 500 (1947),
illustrates.
In any
event, the majority's distinction cannot account for
the difference
between civil cases and grand jury proceed-
ings. In both types of proceedings a person may be
held in
civil contempt, rather than criminal contempt, for refusing to
obey a district court order to testify or produce documents.
See 28 U.S.C. s 1826; Shillitani v. United States, 384 U.S.
364,
371 n.9 (1966). In fact, the Supreme
Court has instruct-
ed the district courts to prefer civil contempt as a
sanction to
force compliance with their orders even in criminal
proceed-
ings. See id. The prospect of civil contempt, in other
words,
looms as much in grand jury proceedings as in civil cases.
I believe there is another
explanation. One of the policies
underlying
the final judgment rule of s 1291 is "avoid[ing]
the obstruction to
just claims that would come from permit-
ting the harassment and cost of a
succession of separate
appeals from the various rulings to which a
litigation may
give rise, from its initiation to entry of
judgment." Cobble-
dick, 309
U.S. at 325. "The purpose is to
combine in one
review all stages of the proceeding that effectively may
be
reviewed and corrected if and when final judgment results."
Cohen, 337 U.S. at 546. But in grand jury proceedings a
recalcitrant
witness usually can obtain review of his attorney-
client privilege claim
only on review of a criminal or civil
contempt order. See 2 Sara Sun Beale et al., Grand Jury
Law and Practice s 11:18, at 11-65 (2d ed. Supp. 2001). The
same is true regarding non-party
witnesses in civil cases.
See
Byrd, 180 F.3d at 300. There will be no
other final
judgment from which an appeal may be brought. Civil
contempt orders against grand
jury witnesses are therefore
appealable, see Beale, Grand Jury Law s
11:18, at 11-65, and
so are civil contempt orders against non-party
witnesses in
civil cases, see Byrd, 180 F.3d at 300; United States v.
Johnson, 801 F.2d
597, 599 (2d Cir. 1986). That is why
the
Court in Ryan, 402 U.S. at 532, after saying that the grand
jury
witness there could appeal a contempt citation, did not
distinguish between civil and criminal contempt. (Congress
has required in 28 U.S.C. s 1826(b)--the
recalcitrant witness
statute applicable to court proceedings and grand
jury pro-
ceedings--that appeals from civil contempt orders must be
"disposed
of" no later than 30 days from the filing of the
appeal.) I do not read Byrd as holding
otherwise. See 180
F.3d at
302.
What I have written
thus far serves to distinguish In re
Grand Jury Investigation of Ocean
Transp., 604 F.2d 672
(D.C. Cir. 1979).
As the caption indicates, this was a grand
jury proceeding in
which a company, in response to a subpoe-
na, inadvertently turned over
allegedly privileged documents
to the government. The district court rejected the company's
motion to have the documents returned.
We held that the
court's order was "final" under s
1291. The appeal came
within the
doctrine of Perlman v. United States, 247 U.S. 7
(1918), because the
company could not contest the order by
refusing to comply with it, and
thus could not subject itself to
contempt. The appeal also fell within the rationale of Cohen,
not
because there was anything particularly special about the
attorney-client
privilege, but because this was the company's
only opportunity for
appellate review of its privilege claim.
No criminal trial was pending.
No final judgment other than
the denial of the motion for return
could bring up the issue.
Ocean
Transp., 604 F.2d at 673-74. That is
not the situation
here. BATCo
could raise the issue later on appeal if it lost
on the merits in the
district court, or on cross appeal if it
prevailed and the government
appealed.
I agree with
the majority that it is necessary to analyze
orders that might lead to
civil contempt, on the one hand, and
civil contempt citations themselves,
on the other, separately
under the three-prong Cohen test. Maj. op. at 12. But our
judgment in Byrd that civil contempt citations are
not appeal-
able indicates that the underlying issues--identical to those
at
the predicate order stage--fail either the importance or the
effective
unreviewability prong of Cohen. Cf.
Powers v.
Chicago Transit Auth., 846 F.2d 1139, 1142 (7th Cir.
1988).
Aside from this, there is an
entirely separate reason why
we do not have appellate jurisdiction over
this appeal. The
circuits are
split on the question whether, in civil cases,
discovery orders rejecting
a party's attorney-client privilege
claim are immediately
appealable. The Second, Fifth, and
Tenth Circuits hold that there is no appellate jurisdiction
because
such orders are not final. See Boughton
v. Cotter
Corp., 10 F.3d 746, 749-50 (10th Cir. 1993); Texaco Inc. v.
Louisiana Land &
Exploration Co., 995 F.2d 43, 44 & n.4
(5th Cir. 1993); Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. v. Turner &
Newall, PLC, 964 F.2d 159, 162-63 (2d Cir. 1992). A case
from the Seventh Circuit
indicates that it too would refuse
jurisdiction in such an appeal. See Reise v. Bd. of Regents,
957 F.2d
293, 295-96 (7th Cir. 1992). In re Ford
Motor Co.,
110 F.3d 954 (3d Cir. 1997), on which my colleagues rely, goes
the other way. I will assume
arguendo that Ford Motor is
correct, although I have severe doubts. I am willing to make
this assumption
because I do not believe this appeal is
anything other than a
run-of-the-mill discovery dispute. The
Court's assertion that "[a]n erroneous finding of waiver ...
eviscerates
the same important institutional interests" as an
erroneous
attorney-client privilege ruling, maj. op. at 8, is
incorrect. The interests protected by the
attorney-client
privilege are not threatened by requiring BATCo to await
final judgment before bringing the issue to us.
The order before us has nothing to do
with the elements of
the attorney-client privilege and everything to do
with BAT-
Co's satisfaction of discovery rules. To decide whether the
district court properly required
production of the disputed
memorandum we will not have to consider, as we
would in a
true privilege dispute, any of the elements of the
privilege--
under what conditions the memorandum was written, or for
what purpose. Instead, this
appeal will turn on whether
BATCo's attorneys complied with Fed. R. Civ.
P. 26(b)(5),
which requires that a party claiming a privilege "make
the
claim expressly and ... describe the nature of the documents
...
not produced" with some specificity.
Our decision there-
fore will have no impact on confidential
communications be-
tween clients and their attorneys. Cf. Swidler & Berlin v.
United States, 524 U.S 399, 407 (1998).
If we did not hear
the appeal, clients' incentives to communicate
frankly with
their attorneys would remain as strong as ever. The only
possible change would be that
clients might be more careful
to hire attorneys who comply rigorously
with the discovery
rules.
For good reasons, discovery orders are not usually appeal-
able
before the end of the litigation in the district court. See
McKesson Corp. v. Islamic Republic
of Iran, 52 F.3d 346, 353
(D.C. Cir. 1995). The "costs of delay via appeal, and the costs
to the
judicial system of entertaining these appeals, exceed in
the aggregate
the costs of the few erroneous discovery orders
that might be corrected
were appeals available. ... Discovery
orders ... are readily reviewable
after final decision. A
party
aggrieved by the order assures eventual review by
refusing to
comply." Reise, 957 F.2d at
295. I would there-
fore deny the
stay pending appeal. If BATCo wishes to
preserve the discovery issue, it should refuse to produce the
memorandum
and bring the question to us after final judg-
ment. It is no answer to say that the company
might be
unwilling to risk sanctions for disobeying a court order. Maj.
op. at 11. The risk of sanctions facing parties in
civil cases is
the same as that faced by recalcitrant grand jury
witnesses,
yet we require grand jury witnesses to face contempt before
appealing,
which at least gives some assurance that the claim
of privilege is
sincerely interposed.