Brown v. Waco Fire & Casualty Co.
This text of 73 F.R.D. 297 (Brown v. Waco Fire & Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This Court is confronted at this time with four motions for protective orders and for orders to compel testimony from witnesses. Federal practice since 1938 has been somewhat revolutionized by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. These rules are designed and intended to provide for a better understanding and to receive a broader range and scope of application in furtherance of their announced purpose.
This case involves a suit for damages by and on behalf of these plaintiffs against these defendants. Jurisdiction is invoked here for diversity reasons. Some aspects of this same accident have been previously litigated and some are yet pending in the Southern Division of this district in Mississippi. Attorneys in these cases do not properly perform their duties to their clients, or to this Court by venting their irritations toward each other when the spirit and attitude of cooperation and coordination with each other is required and expected. In the first place, it must be noticed by any attorney acquainted with the practice here that our discovery processes when properly executed are superb. Mississippi is a common law state and most of our attorneys have been educated and experienced in the pleading and practice on the common law. Few, if any, attorneys realize the idea of giving the adversary anything unless absolutely required to do so. That circumstance has accounted for much delay and retardation in the disposition of civil suits. Under the civil rules, a litigant is simply required to file a short and plain statement of his claim and a demand for judgment. If the adversary does not understand the basis of the claim, or wishes any kind of amplification of the factual basis of the claim, the complaint may not be said to be defective but the adversary must resort to the discovery processes to ascertain exactly what the plaintiff has in mind and his factual basis for relief. That is notice pleading which is an innovation of federal pleading and practice under the 1938 rules.1
Objection is interposed to questions directed to Mr. McRae as attorney for the plaintiffs. This attorney prepared the complaint in this case and resourcefully resorted to conclusionary averments which these defendants desire and are entitled to have amplified by the attorney as the author of the complaint in the instant ease. The defendants are not entitled to elicit anything from the attorney which he confided with any of his clients. But what is written in this complaint as a charge against these defendants is simply not the proper subject matter of any confidential communication between attorney and client.2 These defendants are entitled to have the attorney answer any question propounded to him relating to anything con-[299]*299tained in the complaint which they do not understand and want amplified and are én-titled to have him tell them what proof he has, if any, to support such charges. The attorney privilege does not provide an absolute privilege against revealing anything other than information which the attorney got from his client, or which he communicated to his attorney in confidence.3
The Hickman case deals with attorney privilege and work product after a fashion in an instance where its announcement was not properly invoked. No just cause was presented to the Court for the production of any objective evidence. The plaintiff in that case did not pursue the witness under Civil Rule 26 as he may have done if he had employed the proper rule. The Hickman case has not been changed or modified or amplified since it was decided by the Supreme Court on January 13, 1947. That case, although it might be said to involve dicta, does throw some light on the problem.4 Other courts in this Circuit have experienced difficulties with some of the facts here.5 Litigants are no longer expected, or required to try their cases in the dark. Discovery processes here when properly exercised will enable a litigant to know just as much about his case as does his adversary before trial.
I have carefully examined the questions propounded to Fleecy Brown, Joe Edward Green, Billy Joe Brown, Sr., David Bender, C. R. McRae, William Gary Brown, Betty Brown, Thomas E. Bryant, Jr., and Thomas E. Bryant and am unable to approve the objections interposed with one minor exception. The wife was asked about a conversation with the husband and that, of course, is precluded by a proper exception. More time has been spent by the Court with these motions than could have been possibly expended in a full trial of the entire case. That is simply not permissible.
The attorneys request a protective order on the ground that depositions have been taken in other cases which are available for use here and that the request is burdensome and oppressive. A litigant need not answer any questions which are not relevant to the subject matter of the case. Such questions may be ignored in a discovery deposition, but all questions propounded by a litigant which shed some light on the accident in suit or the party responsible for the accident must be answered. The [300]*300defendants are not entitled to a protective order. Experienced attorneys should use their knowledge and experience in cutting short any burdensome detail connected with their obligation in a litigated case.
All nine witnesses were wantonly instructed by counsel not to answer questions propounded to them. Such instructions must be ignored in furtherance of the orderly process of discovery and enlightenment here. The plaintiffs, of course, may not divulge any information confided to them by their attorney, and their attorney need not divulge any information confided to him in confidence by any of them. But the attorney for the plaintiffs shall make a full revelation to these defendants of any information requested of him and about which he may be asked concerning, or relating to the complaint and the evidence and testimony which he may employ to prove it. The questions asked the attorneys specifically excepted anything contained in the attorney privilege area, and was and is not subject to exception. The other eight witnesses, with the exception previously noted, will answer questions propounded to them by the defendants. Incidentally, interrogatories need not be propounded to any litigant in an unfriendly atmosphere, or in the office of an adversary attorney. There will be no protective orders in this case. The day and age of any litigant trying his case in the dark has long since expired forever.
The plaintiffs and the defendants are directed to furnish this Court with one order within ten days in accordance with the dictates of this opinion.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
73 F.R.D. 297, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 1180, 1976 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-waco-fire-casualty-co-mssd-1976.