Banner v. City of Flint

136 F. Supp. 2d 678, 2000 WL 33254403
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedDecember 18, 2000
Docket99-74600
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 F. Supp. 2d 678 (Banner v. City of Flint) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banner v. City of Flint, 136 F. Supp. 2d 678, 2000 WL 33254403 (E.D. Mich. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER SETTING ASIDE IN PART THE AUGUST 3, 2000 ORDER OF MAGISTRATE JUDGE THOMAS A. CARLSON

ROBERTS, District Judge.

A.

This reverse discrimination case is before the Court on Defendants’ and Interve-nor Vickie Rose’s ( Rose ) Objections to the Magistrate Judge’s August 3, 2000 Recommended Order 1 on Defendant’s Motion for Protective Order to Strike Interve-nor Vickie Rose’s Deposition Testimony and to Disqualify the Law Office of Glen N. Lenhoff.

As is apparent from the title of the Objections, this instant dispute arose out of the March 7, 2000 deposition of Rose. That deposition was noticed by Plaintiffs counsel Michael Freifeld of the Lenhoff law firm. Defendants and Rose contend that, in taking her deposition, attorney Michael Freifeld and his law firm committed ethical violations.

Based on the papers submitted and the evidentiary hearing held on November 3, 2000, the Court agrees.

B.

Rose is the Employee Health Clinic Coordinator for Flint. She met with Frei-feld on what he recalls to be February 4, 2000. The purpose of meeting was for Freifeld to determine whether Rose had a viable lawsuit arising out of her employment with the City of Flint. Toward that end, Rose shared information with Freifeld regarding her then supervisor, Tony Mor-olla. Rose informed Freifeld that Morolla told her that he would not follow up on white employees’ discrimination complaints. Morolla’s alleged reason was that the Flint mayor did not want Morolla to upset black employees before an election. Both of these pieces of information are relevant to Banner’s lawsuit against Defendants for reverse discrimination.

After hearing her employment complaints, Freifeld told Rose that she did not have an actionable claim. She recalls that *681 he told her that she should contact him if anything new occurred, holding out the possibility of future representation. Frei-feld, however, does not recall indicating that he might represent Rose in the future.

Both Freifeld and Rose agree that, at some point during their discussion, he asked her if she knew Banner and if she knew that Banner had filed a lawsuit against the City. Rose did know Banner, because Banner had filed a stress claim with Rose, who receives such claims in her capacity as the Employee Health Clinic Coordinator for Flint. The Freifeld/Rose discussion then turned to whether Rose would divulge the information she had shared regarding Morolla in the Banner lawsuit and in other reverse discrimination lawsuits filed by the Lenhoff firm against Flint.

Rose and Freifeld both testified that he asked Rose to sign an affidavit and that Rose indicated she would like to think about it. However, they differ on whether they discussed Rose disclosing the information in a deposition. Freifeld testified that Rose agreed to the deposition, stating that it would look more involuntary than if she signed an affidavit. Rose denies that she ever agreed to the deposition. She testified that she left Freifeld’s office with only an agreement for her to consider signing an affidavit.

Subsequently, Rose was notified by the City of Flint legal staff that her deposition had been noticed in the Banner lawsuit. Rose appeared for the March 7, 2000 deposition without notifying Flint’s attorneys about her consultation with Freifeld. However, the attorney for the City of Flint did ask Rose during her deposition whether she had met with counsel from the Lenhoff office, presumably because of the precise nature of the questioning during the deposition, Freifeld’s questions mirrored the discussion Rose had had with him during their consultation.' Following the deposition, the Flint attorney did not get any other information from Rose concerning her consultation with Freifeld.

Rose’s deposition was noticed again, by another attorney with a reverse discrimination case against the City of Flint, for May 12, 2000. Flint was represented by yet another attorney. In a discussion off record, Rose finally told Flint counsel that she had consulted with the Lenhoff firm. Thereafter, Flint counsel interjected numerous objections at the May 12th deposition. However, none of them was based on attorney-client privilege.

Thereafter, on June 27, 2000, Defendants and Rose filed their Motion for Protective Order to Strike Ms. Rose’s Deposition Testimony and to Disqualify the Law Office of Glen N. Lenhoff. They argued that Freifeld had violated Rose’s attorney-client privilege and that she did not waive her privilege by answering Freifeld’s deposition questions. Defendants and Rose requested that the ■ Court suppress Rose’s testimony, prevent that testimony from being disclosed to anyone or used in any legal or administrative proceedings, and bar Plaintiffs attorney or other counsel from inquiring into areas in which Rose asserts her attorney-client privilege at any other depositions, court or administrative proceedings.

Defendants and Rose additionally requested that the Court enter a protective order forbidding Freifeld from contacting Flint’s managerial employees. The primary managerial staff member with which Freifeld was alleged to have had improper communications was Gary Lee, one of Banner’s former supervisors.

In opposition to the Motion, Plaintiff asserted that Rose waived her attorney-client privilege when she showed for her deposition and answered questions without objection. Plaintiff then argued that her *682 attorneys should not be disqualified or sanctioned even if ethical violations occurred. Finally, Plaintiff opposed the request for a protective order and argued that her attorney’s contact with Flint managerial staff was not improper.'

Following • oral argument, Magistrate Judge Thomas A. Carlson granted Defendants and Rose’s request for a protective order, but denied their motion to strike or suppress Rose’s deposition testimony and to disqualify Plaintiffs law firm. As for his decision to allow Rose’s deposition to be used in this litigation, Magistrate Judge Carlson reasoned,

[E]ven if Ms. Rose subjectively believed her initial communications to attorney Freifeld were to be confidential, her subsequent voluntary appearance at a deposition, knowing that the deposition would be disclosed and used in this case, with no objection to the inquiries at or before the deposition, either to Mr. Frei-feld or Defendant City’s counsel, and with no attempt to seek other legal advice, constituted a voluntary waiver of any attorney-client privilege or other claim for confidentiality as to what she initially told Mr. Freifeld, and, further, that there is therefore no basis for disqualifying Plaintiffs counsel.

(Magistrate Judge Carlson’s August 3, 2000 Order).

Since Magistrate Judge Carlson granted Defendants’ request for a protective order pertaining to Flint’s managerial staff, their Objections address only the denial of their request to have Rose’s deposition testimony stricken and to have Plaintiffs attorneys disqualified.

C.

Fed.R.Civ.P. 72

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Related

Eagle v. Hurley Medical Center
292 F.R.D. 466 (E.D. Michigan, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 F. Supp. 2d 678, 2000 WL 33254403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banner-v-city-of-flint-mied-2000.