City of Coralville v. Iowa District Court for Johnson County

634 N.W.2d 675, 2001 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 185, 2001 WL 1199912
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 10, 2001
Docket99-1185
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 634 N.W.2d 675 (City of Coralville v. Iowa District Court for Johnson County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Coralville v. Iowa District Court for Johnson County, 634 N.W.2d 675, 2001 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 185, 2001 WL 1199912 (iowa 2001).

Opinion

LARSON, Justice.

The issue before us is whether the district court properly ordered the production of evidence to be used in an underlying suit by a former police officer against the City of Coralville and various other defendants. The city and two of its employees (collectively city) challenge the order to compel discovery by filing this certiorari action. We sustain the writ in part and annul it in part.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings.

Brittain B. Johnson, the plaintiff in the underlying tort case, was a police officer for the City of Coralville who arrested a man named Michael Constantino. On February 13, 1998, Constantino sued the city and Johnson under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and common law for damages allegedly arising out of the arrest. On February 20, 1998, the Coralville assistant city attorney, Kirstene Diehl, met with Johnson and told him the city and its insurance carrier, EMC, had the statutory right and duty to provide an attorney for Johnson and the city. Diehl told Johnson that EMC ordinarily hired Cedar Rapids attorney Terry Abernathy to defend the city and its employees. She also gave Johnson the address and telephone number of EMC’s claims supervisor. Diehl suggested that Johnson talk to the claims supervisor regarding legal representation. Johnson apparently did not call the claims manager but rather wrote Abernathy on February 22 to inform him that EMC should not pay the Constantino claim because it had no merit. On February. 25, 1998, Abernathy replied by letter to Johnson and said he had not been hired to represent the defendants and that EMC was apparently handling the claim internally.

On February 27, 1998, a meeting was held at the Coralville City Hall to discuss the Constantino suit and an internal investigation involving Johnson. Brian Gruhn, a Cedar Rapids attorney who frequently represented the city in employment matters, was there. At that meeting, or soon thereafter, the assistant city attorney, Kir-stene Diehl, authorized attorney Gruhn to file an appearance for the city and Johnson. Gruhn filed an appearance on March 2, 1998, and moved for additional time on *677 behalf of the city and Johnson. He filed a similar motion asking for the same relief on March 5,1998.

On March 12 a second meeting was called at city hall to discuss the Constanti-no suit and the internal affairs investigation of Johnson. At this meeting, both attorneys Gruhn and Abernathy were present. On March 19, the court granted Gruhn’s motion for additional time. Apparently no answer was ever filed, and on April 3, 1998, Constantino filed a dismissal with prejudice; the case had been settled. Johnson was upset about the insurance company’s payment of $55,000 to Constan-tino, claiming this was an admission of Johnson’s wrongdoing. He filed suit against EMC and the city, claiming if the case had been allowed to proceed to trial, a jury would have rejected Constantino’s claim and Johnson would have been exonerated. Johnson complains that the city, through EMC, failed even to file an answer denying Constantino’s allegations.

As part of Johnson’s preparation for his suit against Coralville and EMC, he deposed the individuals present at the Coral-ville meetings on February 27 and March 12, questioning these individuals as to the statements made at those meetings. The city objected to these questions on the ground of attorney-client privilege, and it instructed the witnesses not to answer. Johnson sought and obtained an order compelling discovery, and the city filed this certiorari action. See Hadjis v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 275 N.W.2d 763, 765-66 (Iowa 1979) (certiorari proper action to challenge ruling on discovery issue).

II. The Issue.

The sole issue to be resolved is whether the discussions at the city hall meetings of February 27 and March 12 are subject to discovery. The city argues these discussions are privileged as communications between attorney and client. Johnson contends, and the district court ruled, that the communications may be discovered because attorney Gruhn represented both the city and Johnson, thus the discussions fall within an exception to the attorney-client privilege, known as the joint-client exception. The principle of this exception is explained:

When two or more persons, each having an interest in some problem, or situation, jointly consult an attorney, their confidential communications with the attorney, though known to each other, will of course be privileged in a controversy of either or both of the clients with the outside world, that is, with parties claiming adversely to both or either of those within the original charmed circle. But it will often happen that the two original clients will fall out between themselves and become engaged in a controversy in which the communications at their joint consultation with the lawyer may be vitally material. In such a controversy it is clear that the privilege is inapplicable. In the first place the policy of encouraging disclosure by holding out the promise of protection seems inapposite, since as between themselves neither would know whether he would be more helped or handicapped, if in any dispute between them, both could invoke the shield of secrecy. And secondly, it is said that they had obviously no intention of keeping these secrets from each other, and hence as between themselves it was not intended to be confidential.

1 John W. Strong, McCormick on Evidence § 91, at 365-66 (5th ed.1999) (footnote omitted) [hereinafter McCormick].

While this statement of the principle has been couched in terms of clients who “jointly consult” an attorney, it is clear that actual consultation by both clients is not a prerequisite to the applica *678 tion of the joint-client exception. McCormick § 91, at 366-67. Further,

[wjhere the statement is made directly to the attorney hired by the insurer, there is no question that the privilege applies in an action brought by a third person, nor does it seem disputed that there is no privilege where the controversy is between the insured, or someone claiming under him, and the company itself or the company’s liability under the policy.

Id. at 367.

We have provided this rationale for the joint-client exception:

It is simply that if it appears the secret or imparted communication is such that the attorney is under a duty to divulge it for the protection of the others he has undertaken to represent in the involved transaction, then the communication is not privileged.

Henke v. Iowa Home Mut Cas. Co., 249 Iowa 614, 619, 87 N.W.2d 920, 924 (1958).

In Henke, as in the present case, an insurance company hired an attorney to represent itself and its insured. 249 Iowa at 616, 87 N.W.2d at 922. The insurance company involved in Henke,

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Bluebook (online)
634 N.W.2d 675, 2001 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 185, 2001 WL 1199912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-coralville-v-iowa-district-court-for-johnson-county-iowa-2001.