Magida ex rel. Vulcan Detinning Co. v. Continental Can Co.

12 F.R.D. 74, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3493
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 8, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 12 F.R.D. 74 (Magida ex rel. Vulcan Detinning Co. v. Continental Can Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magida ex rel. Vulcan Detinning Co. v. Continental Can Co., 12 F.R.D. 74, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3493 (S.D.N.Y. 1951).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, District Judge.

During the course of extended pre-trial examinations, defendant Continental Can Company, Inc. (hereafter Defendant) propounded certain questions to plaintiff and plaintiff’s lawyer which they characterized as privileged or repetitious or irrelevant and refused to answer. Defendant now moves to compel answers. Defendant has entered separate motions on each examination, but they raise identical problems.

Plaintiff, as a stockholder of Vulcan Detinning Company, brings this action under Section 16(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Title 15 U.S.C.A. § 78p (b) to recover profits realized by defendant on so-called “short-swing” transactions in Vulcan’s stock.

Defendant’s answer concedes the purchase and sale of stock on which the action is based but sets up three affirmative defenses : that the sale was in the best interest of Vulcan and with approval of Vulcan’s stockholders; that the challenged transaction was, in fact, exempted under the Securities Exchange Act; and that plaintiff was not a stockholder at the time of the transaction, hence is estopped from prosecuting this action, pursuant to Rule 23(b), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. Defendant hints darkly that plaintiff is only a “tool” or “dummy” for his lawyers and suggests that-there may be some sort of illicit agreement among them which would bar plaintiff in this equity suit.

Defendant divides the unanswered questions roughly into three groups: (1) Questions which will bring out plaintiff’s knowledge of facts and circumstances surrounding defendant’s sale of Vulcan’s stock. (2) Questions which will bring out the entire conversation between plaintiff and his attorneys, at least some part of which conversation plaintiff has already disclosed. (3) Questions which will bring out the terms of the retainer agreement between plaintiff and his attorneys.

Plaintiff claims that any conversations with his lawyers and the terms of the retainer agreement are privileged. All other questions, he asserts, are either repetitious of earlier questions which he has answered or irrelevant and immaterial. At [76]*76any rate, they are all improper, he says. Defendant urges their complete propriety.

The motions call for a hard appraisal of the privilege of confidential communication between attorney and client. As much as any privilege, it has been buffeted around our courts in recent years. There is nothing sacrosanct about it. It is a product of legislation, without Constitutional guarantee, and it is far from inviolate. Basically, it is an expression of policy, sacrificing full disclosure for the considered advantage of untrammeled attorney-client relations. .It is not a boundless right, and its limits constantly shift. “The recognition of a privilege does not mean that it is without conditions or exceptions”, Justice Cardozo once said. “The social policy that will prevail in many situations may run afoul in others of a different social policy, competing for supremacy. It is then the function of a court to mediate between them, assigning so far as possible, a proper value to each.” 1

Plaintiff’s claim to limitless privilege is as extreme under the circumstances as defendant’s intimation that practically no communications between attorney and client are privileged. Somewhere between the two, marked by guidéposts set up in our courts, the privilege exists.

These communications are not privileged, defendant says: Communications where plaintiff has waived his privilege, not necessarily expressly, but implicitly through certain acts; communications establishing the terms of retainer agreements between attorney and client; and communications from attorney to client concerning matters alleged in the complaint.

Section 353, New York Civil Prac- ■ tice Act, creates the privilege. “An attorney or counselor at law shall not be allowed to disclose a communication, made by his client to him, or his advice given thereon, in the course of his professsional employment * * The wording of the statute indicates that the privilege is much sturdier support for client-attorney con- . fidences than for attorney-client confidences. The cases reinforce this. See People ex rel. Vogelstein v. Warden of New York County, 150 Misc. 714, 270 N.Y.S. 362, affirmed 242 App.Div. 611, 271 N. Y. S. 1059, and Justice Shiéntag’s excellent discussion of the privilege generally. It is apparent that the statute primarily offers protection to confidences reposed in his attorney by the client. The words “or his advice given thereon” indicates a legislative intent to extend a kind of privileged reciprocity to the attorney, protecting those acts of his which follow directly on his client’s confidences. But matters communicated to the client by his attorney, information out of the client’s own knowledge, transmitted to him by his attorney and having a direct bearing on the suit in issue, are entitled to much less favored treatment.

Asserting the tremulous state of the attorney-to-client privilege, defendant argues that many of the questions seek to elicit exactly that information which is not privileged. Matters which go to the complaint, which have been gathered exclusively by the attorney and then communicated to the client are without privilege, defendant claims. The argument has much merit. In effect, defendant would replace the older concept of unlimited attorney-client privilege with the streamlined notion of adequate pre-trial discovery in the proper case. In the New York courts, where the system of pre-trial discovery has not yet officially reached the expansive state of Federal practice, the idea has been cited with particular approval.

The discovery techniques, outlined by the Supreme Court in Hickman v. Taylor, 1947, 329 U.S. 495, 67 S.Ct. 385, 91 L.Ed. 451, have been set up as a model to be followed wherever practicable. “The plaintiff may not be excused from furnishing required information on the theory that the facts are known only to its attorneys and that such information in their possession is privileged.” Mutual Life Insurance Co. of N.Y. v. Tailored Woman, 276 App.Div. 144, 93 N.Y.S.2d 241, 243. The abuse inherent in an over-extension of the privilege to information given the client by his attorney is apparent. ' The attorney could elicit the information from third persons, subject [77]*77to discovery, then communicate it to his client as “advice” and thereby render it privileged. This is a subversion of the whole modern trend toward appropriate pre-trial discovery. If this fact is recognized in New York State where Hickman v. Taylor is merely law by- adoption, how much more convincing is it in the Federal Courts where Hickman v. Taylor is law?

The privileged status of attorney-to-client communications has been dibilitated by the inroads of liberal discovery doctrines. The scope of the privilege contracts as the need for discovery grows. But defendant’s position here correspondingly loses effect. We may theorize thus: Granted that the matter may not be privileged, is it not necessary for defendant at least to show good cause in accordance with the rationale of Hickman v. Taylor before we allow discovery? Probably so. But on many of the questions in issue, defendant has shown no proper cause. These questions require plaintiff to indicate what facts of defendant’s stock transactions, plaintiff’s attorney communicated to him.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F.R.D. 74, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magida-ex-rel-vulcan-detinning-co-v-continental-can-co-nysd-1951.