Rico v. Mitsubishi Motors Corp.

171 P.3d 1092, 68 Cal. Rptr. 3d 758, 42 Cal. 4th 807, 2007 Cal. LEXIS 13892
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 2007
DocketS123808
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 171 P.3d 1092 (Rico v. Mitsubishi Motors Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rico v. Mitsubishi Motors Corp., 171 P.3d 1092, 68 Cal. Rptr. 3d 758, 42 Cal. 4th 807, 2007 Cal. LEXIS 13892 (Cal. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

CORRIGAN, J.

Here we consider what action is required of an attorney who receives privileged documents through inadvertence and whether the remedy of disqualification is appropriate. We conclude that, under the authority of State Comp. Ins. Fund v. WPS, Inc. (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 644 [82 Cal.Rptr.2d 799] (State Fund), an attorney in these circumstances may not read a document any more closely than is necessary to ascertain that it is privileged. Once it becomes apparent that the content is privileged, counsel must immediately notify opposing counsel and try to resolve the situation. We affirm the disqualification order under the circumstances presented here.

*811 Factual Background

Two Mitsubishi corporations 1 (collectively, Mitsubishi or defendants), and the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), were sued by various plaintiffs after a Mitsubishi Montero rolled over while being driven on a freeway. Subsequently, Mitsubishi representatives met with their lawyers, James Yukevich and Alexander Calfo, and two designated defense experts to discuss their litigation strategy and vulnerabilities. Mitsubishi’s case manager, Jerome Rowley, also attended the meeting. Rowley and Yukevich had worked together over a few years. Yukevich asked Rowley to take notes at the meeting and indicated specific areas to be summarized. The trial court later found that Rowley, who had typed the notes on Yukevich’s computer, had acted as Yukevich’s paralegal. At the end of the six-hour session, Rowley returned the computer and never saw a printed version of the notes. Yukevich printed only one copy of the notes, which he later edited and annotated. Yukevich never intentionally showed the notes to anyone, and the court determined that the sole purpose of the document was to help Yukevich defend the case.

The notes are written in a dialogue style and summarize conversations among Yukevich, Calfo, and the experts. They are dated, but not labeled “confidential” or “work product.” The printed copy of these compiled and annotated notes is the document at issue here. 2

Less than two weeks after the strategy session, Yukevich deposed plaintiffs’ expert witness, Anthony Sanees, at the offices of plaintiffs’ counsel, Raymond Johnson. Yukevich, court reporter Karen Kay, and Caltrans counsel Darin Flagg were told that Johnson and Sanees would be late for the deposition. After waiting in the conference room for some time, Yukevich went to the restroom, leaving his briefcase, computer, and case file in the room. The printed document from the strategy session was in the case file. While Yukevich was away, Johnson and Sanees arrived. Johnson asked Kay and Flagg to leave the conference room. Kay and Flagg’s departure left only plaintiffs’ representatives and counsel in the conference room. Yukevich returned to find Kay and Flagg standing outside. Yukevich waited approximately five minutes, then knocked and asked to retrieve his briefcase, computer, and file. After a brief delay, he was allowed to do so.

*812 Somehow, Johnson acquired Yukevich’s notes. Johnson maintained that they were accidentally given to him by the court reporter. Yukevich insisted that they were taken from his file while only Johnson and plaintiffs’ team were in the conference room. As a result, Mitsubishi moved to disqualify plaintiffs’ attorneys and experts. The trial court ordered an evidentiary hearing to determine how Johnson obtained the document.

The court reporter was deposed and denied any specific recollection of the Sanees deposition. She could not testify what she had done with the deposition exhibits that night and could only relate her general practice. She said she generally collects exhibits and puts them in a plastic covering. She did not remember ever having given exhibits to an attorney. She also testified that she had never seen the document in question. If documents other than exhibits remain on a conference table, she leaves them there. The trial court found that the Sanees deposition took place over approximately eight hours. It was a document-intense session and documents were placed on the conference table.

Another member of plaintiffs’ legal team submitted a declaration supporting Johnson’s assertion that he received the document from the reporter. The court ultimately concluded that the defense had failed to establish that Johnson had taken the notes from Yukevich’s file. It thus ruled that Johnson came into the document’s possession through inadvertence.

The court found the 12-page document was dated, but not otherwise labeled. It contained notations by Yukevich. Johnson admitted that he knew within a minute or two that the document related to defendants’ case. He knew that Yukevich did not intend to produce it and that it would be a “powerful impeachment document.” Nevertheless, Johnson made a copy of the document. He scrutinized and made his own notes on it. He gave copies to his cocounsel and his experts, all of whom studied the document. Johnson specifically discussed the contents of the document with each of his experts.

A week after he acquired Yukevich’s notes, Johnson used them during the deposition of defense expert Geoffrey Germane. 3 The notes purportedly indicate that the defense experts made statements at the strategy session that were inconsistent with their deposition testimony. Johnson used the document while questioning Germane, asking about Germane’s participation in the strategy session.

*813 Defense Counsel Calfo defended the Germane deposition. Yukevich did not attend. Calfo had never seen the document and was not given a copy during the deposition. When he asked about the document’s source, Johnson vaguely replied that “It was put in Dr. Sanees’ file.” Calfo repeatedly objected to the “whole line of inquiry with respect to an unknown document.” He specifically said, “I don’t even know where this exhibit came from.”

Only after the deposition did Johnson give a copy of the document to Calfo, who contacted Yukevich. When Yukevich realized that Johnson had his only copy of the strategy session notes and had used it at the deposition, he and Calfo wrote to Johnson demanding the return of all duplicates. The letter was faxed the day after Germane’s deposition. The next day, defendants moved to disqualify plaintiffs’ legal team and their experts on the ground that they had become privy to and had used Yukevich’s work product. As a result, they complained, Johnson’s unethical use of the notes and his revelation of them to cocounsel and their experts irremediably prejudiced defendants.

The trial court concluded that the notes were absolutely privileged by the work product rule. 4 The court also held that Johnson had acted unethically by examining the document more closely than was necessary to determine that its contents were confidential, by failing to notify Yukevich that he had a copy of the document, and by surreptitiously using it to gain maximum adversarial value from it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 P.3d 1092, 68 Cal. Rptr. 3d 758, 42 Cal. 4th 807, 2007 Cal. LEXIS 13892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rico-v-mitsubishi-motors-corp-cal-2007.