Newsuan, K. v. Republic Services Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 20, 2019
Docket1248 EDA 2018
StatusPublished

This text of Newsuan, K. v. Republic Services Inc. (Newsuan, K. v. Republic Services Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newsuan, K. v. Republic Services Inc., (Pa. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

J-A07040-19

2019 PA Super 196

KAREN NEWSUAN : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : REPUBLIC SERVICES INC., BFI : WASTE SERVICES OF PENNSYLVANIA : LLC, BFI WASTE SYSTEMS OF NORTH : No. 1248 EDA 2018 AMERICA LLC, JOSHUA WATSON, : MILTON BAKER, CHRISTOPHER : GIOVETSIS, MARC BUCKLEY, MIKE : ROBERTS AND CHRIS JOBSON, : : Appellants :

Appeal from the Order Dated April 11, 2018 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at No(s): August Term, 2017 No. 000528

BEFORE: OLSON, J., DUBOW, J., and STEVENS*, P.J.E.

OPINION BY STEVENS, P.J.E.: Filed June 20, 2019

Appellants/Defendants (hereafter “Republic Services”) file this

interlocutory appeal from an adverse discovery-phase ruling in

Appellee/Plaintiff Karen Newsuan’s (hereafter “Newsuan”) personal injury

case in which she alleges that Republic Services’ negligence caused her serious

worksite injury. At issue is whether the court erred in ruling that neither an

attorney-client communications privilege nor an attorney work-product

privilege applied to interviews between counsel for Republic Services and 16

non-party Republic Services laborers identified by Newsuan as potential

worksite eyewitnesses.

____________________________________ * Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-A07040-19

Republic Services claims the privileges attached either because each

employee accepted corporate counsel’s offer to represent him or her

throughout this litigation or, alternatively, because the interviews between its

employees and corporate counsel had the singular purpose of preparing it for

litigation. In accordance with decisional law recognizing a corporation’s

privilege over communications solicited from its non-managerial employees

by corporate counsel in preparation for trial, we vacate that part of the order

requiring disclosure of such communications and corporate counsel’s related

work product, and we remand for further discovery consistent with this

decision.

On August 17, 2015, Karen Newsuan was working for her non-defendant

employer as a recycling center facility sorter when a front-end loader crushed

her leg, necessitating an above-the-knee amputation. On August 9, 2017,

Newsuan commenced a personal injury action against the named defendants

claiming their respective negligence as owners, supervisors, or operators

caused her injuries.

At the outset of discovery, Newsuan’s lawyer asked Republic Services

for all contact information and any documented statements of 16 named

employees1 who were working at the recycling center on the day she was

injured. Newsuan’s lawyer considered the 16 employees potential fact ____________________________________________

1 At the time Newsuan requested employee information, seven of the 16 employees had terminated their employment with Republic Services. N.T., 3/20/18, at 14. For the sake of expediency, we refer to all 16 as employee fact witnesses.

-2- J-A07040-19

witnesses who could testify to both the accident itself and any dangerous

conditions, practices, and procedures at the worksite.

Counsel for Republic Services (at times hereinafter, “corporate counsel”)

did not provide this information. Confronted with Republic Services’ consistent

refusal to produce employee contact information that it claimed was either

irrelevant or privileged, Newsuan filed a Motion to Compel Discovery.

On March 20, 2018, the trial court conducted a hearing, at which

corporate counsel began by informing the court that “all of the current [and

three of the seven former] employees for Republic Services [who] were

working that evening, including the non-supervisory positions, have agreed to

be represented by Republic Services as their counsel.” N.T. 3/20/18, at 11-

12, 14. Corporate counsel, therefore, argued that “Republic Services’

representation of the employees” precluded Newsuan from accessing any of

them ex parte, pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct Rule

4.2.2

Counsel also invoked attorney-client privilege with respect to

communications made during his interview with each employee. Newsuan

rejoined that Republic Services’ actions violated her rights under Pennsylvania

Rule of Professional Conduct 3.4, Fairness to Opposing Party and Counsel, ____________________________________________

2 Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct 4.2 provides that a lawyer shall

not communicate about the subject of a suit with a person the lawyer knows to be represented by another lawyer in the matter, unless the lawyer has consent of the other lawyer or is authorized by the court. See PA ST RPC Rule 4.2

-3- J-A07040-19

which provides, inter alia, that a lawyer shall not unlawfully obstruct another

party’s access to evidence.

The trial court denied the validity of the purported attorney-client

relationship between counsel and the employees. Initially, it opined that

Republic Services’ counsel had improperly telephoned the prospective

witnesses and offered legal services in violation of Pennsylvania Rule of

Professional Conduct Rule 7.3.3 Even more concerning to the court, though,

was corporate counsel’s failure to explain to the employee witnesses the

potential conflict that could arise during his dual representation of corporate

employer and employee. Citing Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct

1.7, discussed infra in n.4, the court explained:

[Republic Services’] lawyers admitted in court that they did not inform these current and former employees about any potential conflicts the . . . lawyers may have in representing the companies being sued and at the same time representing the current or former employee fact witnesses who may have information that is adverse to the companies being sued. The Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct require that when a lawyer represents multiple parties who may have adverse interests or loyalties, the ____________________________________________

3 Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct 7.3 acknowledges the potential

for abuse when a lawyer initiates a targeted communication to a prospective client, particularly “direct in-person, live telephone or real-time electronic contact with someone known to need legal services. These forms of contact subject a person to the private importuning of a trained advocate, in a direct interpersonal encounter. . . . The situation is fraught with the possibility of undue influence, intimidation, and over-reaching.” See PA ST RPC Rule 7.3, Explanatory Comment [2]. The explanatory comment goes on to explain, “There is far less likelihood that a lawyer would engage in abusive practices . . . in situations in which the lawyer is motivated by considerations other than the lawyer’s pecuniary gain.” Id. at [5].

-4- J-A07040-19

lawyers must disclose the conflict and make sure that all the parties they represent waive any conflict they have. ([PA ST RPC] 1.7: Conflict of Interest: Current Clients). The lawyers for [Republic Services] did not explain the potential conflict nor did they get informed consent from these fact witnesses to waive any conflicts.

Trial Court Order, 4/11/18, at ¶ 8.

In light of this record, the trial court viewed counsel’s actions with

respect to the 16 employees as an unfair discovery tactic designed to prevent

Newsuan from freely obtaining statements from fact witnesses:

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Newsuan, K. v. Republic Services Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newsuan-k-v-republic-services-inc-pasuperct-2019.