MeHUGH, Chief Justice:
Pro se
petitioner Marie McMahon, invoking this Court’s original jurisdiction pursuant to W.
Va.Code,
53-1-3 [1933], seeks to prohibit enforcement of an order entered April 8,1996 in the Circuit Court of Morgan County by the Honorable John M. Hamilton, special judge, a respondent herein. In that order, Judge Hamilton, upon the motion of respondents Martin & Seibert, L.C., Susan R. Snowden, Daniel T. Booth and Paul B. Weiss, ordered petitioner to undergo a psychiatric examination to determine whether she is mentally competent to proceed with the underlying civil action instituted by her against respondents and others such that a guardian ad litem should be appointed to protect her interests.
This Court
has before it the petition, the responses thereto, and all matters of record. For reasons discussed below, petitioner Marie McMahon’s request that this Court prohibit enforcement of that portion of the circuit court’s order directing her to undergo a mental examination is denied. However, this Court finds that it was error for the circuit court to direct the appointed psychiatrist to transmit copies of the resulting report to the respondents herein. Accordingly, enforcement of that portion of the circuit court’s order is prohibited.
I.
A.
In 1984, petitioner, acting pursuant to a general power of attorney granted her by Bart and Alice Whirley, instituted a lawsuit against six defendants in the Circuit Court for the City of Winchester, Virginia, attacking the probate of the estate of one Ann Schrader. By order of October 15,1986, that lawsuit was dismissed.
Subsequently, Charles G. Aschmann, Jr., the attorney hired by petitioner in the above-mentioned probate action, sued petitioner and the Whirleys for payment of $7,000 in legal fees associated with that action. Petitioner filed a counterclaim against Mr. As-chmann, alleging legal malpractice. By order of February 9, 1987, the Circuit Court for the City of Alexandria, Virginia granted Mr. Aschmann’s motion for a directed verdict
as well as his motion to strike petitioner’s counterclaim. The court further ordered petitioner to pay to Mr. Aschmann $7,000 plus interest from January 5,1987. Petitioner never appealed that judgment order.
The remaining facts of this case consist primarily of a multitude of lawsuits instituted by petitioner,
pro se,
in a variety of state and federal courts against a various medley of defendants, among them, federal and circuit court judges, lawyers and clerks of court. Petitioner’s litigious behavior is rooted in her adamant belief that she was denied her constitutional right to a trial by jury when the above-described directed verdict was rendered against her for $7,000 in unpaid legal fees. Petitioner contends that the defendants against whom she has asserted, and in some cases, reasserted, this claim have all conspired to deprive her of due process. Though recitation of petitioner’s many court actions is repetitive and, at times, confusing, we believe it necessary to the ultimate resolution of this case, particularly with regard to respondents’ position that petitioner does not comprehend the meaning and effect of the
countless lawsuits she has instituted for more than a decade.
B.
Pursuant to the Full Faith and Credit clause of the
United States Constitution,
art. IV, § 1, the Circuit Court of Morgan County entered the above-described judgment of $7,000 for nonpayment of legal fees against petitioner and in favor of Mr. Aschmann. The circuit court further denied petitioner’s counterclaim that the $7,000 judgment was void on the ground that, by directing a verdict in Mr. Asehmann’s favor, the Circuit Court for the City of Alexandria, Virginia had denied petitioner her constitutional right of trial by jury.
Petitioner subsequently filed petitions for appeal with this Court regarding the Morgan County Circuit Court’s dismissal of her counterclaim against Mr. Aschmann and the entry of the $7,000 judgment for nonpayment of legal fees in favor of Mr. Aschmann. This Court denied petitioners’ petitions for appeal by orders of April 26, 1989 and July 9, 1990. By order of December 10, 1990, the Supreme Court of the United States denied petitioner’s petition for writ of certiorari of this Court’s July 9,1990 order.
In the meantime, petitioner instituted an action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia in an effort to collaterally attack the $7,000 judgment for nonpayment of legal fees. In that case, petitioner named as a defendant the Honorable Donald Kent, the judge who presided over the nonpayment of legal fees proceeding and who signed the order awarding Mr. As-ehmann $7,000 in legal fees. Petitioner also named as defendants the attorney who represented Mr. Aschmann and whose motion for a directed verdict was granted in that case, as well as the attorney who also represented Bart and Alice Whirley, on whose behalf petitioner instituted the original probate action. Petitioner alleged that these defendants conspired to deny her the constitutional right to a trial by jury. This action was dismissed as to all defendants. Petitioner’s subsequent appeal of this order to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals was denied, as was her petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of the United States.
Petitioner, at the same time,
instituted an action against Mr. Aschmann in the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia in yet another effort to attack the $7,000 judgment. This action was transferred to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia where Mr. Aschmann’s motion for summary judgment was granted. Though petitioner’s action was dismissed with prejudice, she nevertheless filed a “motion for reconsideration” and a motion to vacate the judgment awarding Mr. Aschmann $7,000 in unpaid legal fees. In its order of March 4, 1988, the district court denied petitioner’s motions, clearly stating that it “is bound to give to the prior state court judgment the same preclu-sive effect which it would receive in the courts of Virginia[,]” and that it “do[es] not have subject matter jurisdiction to review the final judgments or decisions of state courts.” Petitioner filed a “petition for rehearing” in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, which petition was denied by order of August 19,1988.
Not to be discouraged by these failed court actions, petitioner then instituted a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia against the following defendants, alleging,
inter alia,
that they had all conspired to deny her the constitutional right to a trial by jury in all of her prior claims: five of the six defendants in the original probate action in Winchester, Virginia, the presiding judge, the clerk of the court, and the four attorneys who participat
ed therein, including Mr. Aschmann; Judge Donald Kent, who ordered petitioner to pay Mr. Aschmann $7,000 in unpaid legal fees, as well as the two attorneys who participated in the unpaid legal fees case; the Honorable Albert V. Bryan, Jr. of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, who presided over and dismissed petitioner’s previous action against Judge Kent, as well as both the clerk of that court and counsel for one of the defendant attorney’s in that action. Petitioner also named as defendants Judge Patrick Henry of the Circuit Court of Morgan County, who presided over the litigation concerning attorney David Savasten,
see
n. 3,
supra,
and who accorded full faith and credit to the $7,000 judgment awarded Mr. Aschmann. Petitioner further named as defendants the Honorable William Kidd of the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia who dismissed petitioner’s previous action against attorneys Savasten, Bentley and Douglas,
see
n. 3,
supra,
as well as the Honorable Richard Williams of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, who likewise dismissed petitioner’s action against Mr. Aschmann.
Finally, petitioner named as defendants attorneys Clarence E. Martin, III and Daniel T. Booth
for their participation in both entering Mr. Aschmann’s $7,000 judgment for nonpayment of legal fees in Morgan County Circuit Court and her action against Mr. Aschmann before Judge Williams.
By order of January 14, 1993, the Honorable B. Waugh Crigler, United States Magistrate Judge, recommended dismissal of all of petitioners’ claims against all of the named defendants.
By subsequent order, entered July 27, 1993, Magistrate Judge Crigler, upon determining that petitioner “has engaged in litigation that is frivolous, unnecessary, vexatious, and oppressive to all defendants in this case[,]” recommended that monetary sanctions of approximately $42,-378.77 be levied against her pursuant to Rule 11 of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Magistrate Judge Crigler further recommended that petitioner be enjoined “from filing, instituting, continuing or prosecuting any civil action in this or in any other federal court without first obtaining leave of this court.... In no way, however, should this Order be construed as prohibiting [petitioner] from pursuing any direct appeal of the decisions by this court or by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in this case[.]” Magistrate Judge Crigler’s recommendations were adopted by orders entered by the Honorable James H. Michael, Jr., Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia. On appeal, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit affirmed both of these orders.
During the pendency of the above proceeding, petitioner instituted
another
action in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County, West Virginia, seeking to vacate the $7,000 judgment previously entered against her in the Circuit Court of Morgan County and to vacate “the lien thereinafter entered ... for the unsatisfied amount of said judgment.” Named as defendants were the Honorable Christopher Wilkes, who entered an order permitting the sale of petitioner’s home to satisfy the $7,000 judgment, and Clarence E. Martin, III and Daniel T. Booth, attorneys who participated in prior proceedings concerning that judgment. Finding,
inter alia,
that petitioner’s motion “constitutes a collateral attack on a final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction[,]” Judge Donald C. Hott
denied petitioner’s motion by order entered October 28, 1993. Petitioner’s petition for appeal of this order was refused by this Court on April 6,1994.
Upon motion by Mr. Martin and Mr. Booth, Judge Hott permanently enjoined petitioner “from instituting in any court of this State any action at law or in equity [against them] based in whole, in part, or in any manner whatsoever upon allegations that the judgment of the Circuit Court for the City of Alexandria, Virginia ... is in any manner void, voidable or otherwise invalid[.]” Judge Hott reasoned that,
[b]ased upon ... [petitioner’s] pattern of abusive and oppressive litigation, it may be anticipated that [petitioner] will accept neither the judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia nor the judgment of the Circuit Court for Berkeley County, West Virginia as final, valid, binding and dispositive of her claims against the Plaintiffs herein, but is likely in the future to embroil the Plaintiffs in further repetitious and frivolous litigation predicated upon her unfounded contention that the judgments of the Circuit Court for the City of Alexandria and the Circuit Court for Morgan County in the respective cases of
Aschmann v. McMahon
are invalid and that the Plaintiffs’ actions in obtaining or enforcing said judgments are tortious in nature.
By subsequent order entered January 13, 1994, Judge Hott further imposed sanctions against petitioner, pursuant to Rule 11 of the
West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure,
in the amount of $6,210.01.
In the meantime, petitioner was engaged in proceedings with the Morgan County Fire Board, a respondent herein, relating to her refusal to pay county fire fees. The Fire Board placed a lien upon her home for the amount of fees owed, which amount was settled from the proceeds of the sale of petitioner’s home upon foreclosure.
In an amended complaint
filed in the Circuit Court of Morgan County on March 1, 1996, petitioner instituted the underlying civil action in this case, naming as defendants John P. Adams, the Honorable Donald C. Hott,
Glen Stotler, Donald Sharp, Martin & Siebert, L.C., Daniel T. Booth, Susan Snow-den, Paul Weiss, the Morgan County Fire Board and Howard Trittipoe. In that complaint, petitioner again sought,
inter alia,
to collaterally attack the $7,000 judgment for nonpayment of legal fees on the ground that she was denied her constitutional right to a trial by jury.
By motion dated August 24, 1995, respondents Martin & Seibert, L.C., Susan R. Snowden, Daniel T. Booth and Paul B. Weiss requested that the Circuit Court of Morgan County “appoint a qualified psychiatrist to determine if [petitioner] is mentally competent to proceed with the present action or if appointment of a guardian
ad litem
to protect her interests is appropriate.” Following an April 8, 1996 hearing on the matter, the circuit court found:
There is no cause or reason to question the general sanity or mental competency of [petitioner].
However, the Court has substantial concern with regard to [petitioner’s] mental ability to rationally comprehend and accept matters relating to the present litigation and litigation that has preceded it in other cases, both here and in other venues as reflected by the pleadings and papers filed herein.
Accordingly, the Court finds that good cause has been shown for the appointment of a competent psychiatrist to examine [petitioner] and report back to the Court concerning [petitioner’s] ability to proceed with the present action in her own right or whether a guardian ad litem should be appointed.
The court appointed Dr. Bradley Soule to examine petitioner and to report his findings back to the court. The circuit court instructed Dr. Soule “that it requires no general finding of [petitioner’s] general competency. Rather, Dr. Soule
should limit his evaluation and report to the question of whether [petitioner] is competent to act responsibly with regard to this and other civil actions in which she has been involved and whether the appointment of Guardian ad litem would be in [petitioner’s] best interest.”
The circuit court further ordered the appointed psychiatrist to “report back to Court within 30 days of the date of this order his findings as to the concerns of the Court heretofore stated. Concomitantly therewith, Dr. Soule shall transmit a copy of this report to all parties hereto. Should Dr. Soule fail to do so the Clerk of the Court is authorized and ordered to provide a copy of Dr. Soule’s report to any party hereto requesting same.”
It is the enforcement of this order
that petitioner seeks to prohibit.
II.
In syllabus point 2 of
State ex rel. Reed v. Douglass,
189 W.Va. 56, 427 S.E.2d 751 (1993), we reiterated that which is necessary for this Court to grant a writ of prohibition:
‘ “A writ of prohibition will lie where the trial court does not have jurisdiction or, having jurisdiction, exceeds its legitimate powers.” Syllabus Point 3,
State ex rel. McCartney v. Nuzum,
161 W.Va. 740, 248 S.E.2d 318 (1978).’ Syllabus Point 4,
Pries v. Watt,
186 W.Va. 49, 410 S.E.2d 285 (1991).
Furthermore, in syllabus point 4 of
State ex rel. Hoover v. Berger,
199 W. Va.
12, 483 S.E.2d 12 (1996), this Court held:
In determining whether to entertain and issue the writ of prohibition for cases not involving an absence of jurisdiction but only where it is claimed that the lower tribunal exceeded its legitimate powers, this Court will examine five factors: (1) whether the party seeking the writ has no other adequate means, such as direct appeal, to obtain the desired relief; (2) whether the petitioner will be damaged or prejudiced in a way that is not correctable on appeal; (3) whether the lower tribunal’s order is clearly erroneous as a matter of law; (4) whether the lower tribunal’s order is an oft repeated error or manifests persistent disregard for either procedural or substantive law; and (5) whether the lower tribunal’s order raises new and important problems or issues of law of first impression. These factors are general guidelines that serve as a useful starting point for determining whether a discretionary writ of prohibition should issue. Although all five factors need not be satisfied, it is clear that the third factor, the existence of clear error as a matter of law, should be given substantial weight.
III.
As previously indicated, respondents filed a motion with the circuit court to determine petitioner’s mental competency to proceed with the pending civil action instituted by her and to, thereafter, determine if a guardian ad litem should be appointed to protect her interests therein. It is respondents’ contention that the circuit court’s authority to order petitioner to undergo a psychiatric examination so as to determine her mental ability to rationally comprehend and accept matters relating to the present litigation and litigation that has preceded it is derived from
West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure
17(c).
West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure
17(c)
authorizes a court to,
inter alia,
appoint a guardian ad litem for an incompetent person not otherwise represented in an action:
Infants, incompetent persons, or convicts.
— Whenever an infant, incompetent person, or convict ha[s] a duly qualified representative, such as a guardian, curator, committee or other like fiduciary, such representative may sue or defend on behalf of the infant, incompetent person, or convict. If a person under any disability does not have a duly qualified representative he may sue by his next friend.
The court or
clerk
shall appoint a discreet and competent attorney at law as guardian ad litem for an infant, incompetent person, or convict not otherwise represented in an action, or the court shall make such other order as it deems proper for the protection of any person under disability.
Id.
(emphasis and footnote added).
The purpose of “appointing a guardian ad litem is to protect the person under disability.”
Jackson General Hospital v. Davis,
195 W.Va. 74, 77, 464 S.E.2d 593, 596 (1995). Indeed,
courts should ‘appoint guardians ad litem for parties litigant when reasonably convinced that a party litigant is not competent, understandingly and intelligently, to comprehend the significance of legal proceedings and the effect and relationship of such proceedings in terms of the best interests of such party litigant.’
Buckler v. Buckler,
195 W.Va. 705, 708, 466 S.E.2d 556, 559 (1995)
(quoting Graham v. Graham,
40 Wash.2d 64, 240 P.2d 564, 565 (1952)).
A court’s “power to appoint a
guardian ad litem
[under Rule 17(c) ] ‘has been broadly interpreted and has not been limited by a narrow construction of the words “infant” or “incompetent” person.’ Wright & Miller,
Federal Practice & Procedure
§ 1570 at 776 (1971).”
Cyntje v. Government of the Virgin Islands,
95 F.R.D. 430, 432 (D.C.Vi.1982),
aff'd,
782 F.2d 1027 (3d Cir.1985).
See N.O. v. Callahan,
110 F.R.D. 637, 649 (D.Mass.1986);
Huebner v. Ochberg,
87 F.R.D. 449, 456 (E.D.Mich.1980). A party who has not been adjudicated incompetent may, nevertheless, lack the mental capacity to participate in a matter before the court. In such an instance, under Rule 17(c), a court may appoint a guardian ad litem to protect the interests of such party litigant.
See Helton v. Helton,
362 So.2d 257, 259 (Ala.Civ.App.1978);
People In Interest of M.M.,
726 P.2d 1108, 1119 (Colo.1986);
Callahan,
110 F.R.D. at 649;
Cyntje,
95 F.R.D. at 432, 433;
Matter of S.W.,
158 N.J.Super. 22, 385 A.2d 315, 317 (1978);
Bodnar v. Bodnar,
441 F.2d 1103, 1104,
cert. denied,
404 U.S. 913, 92 S.Ct. 232, 30 L.Ed.2d 186 (1971).
See also Buckler,
195 W.Va. at 708, 466 S.E.2d at 559 (without reference to Rule 17(c), guardian ad litem appointed where adult party to divorce proceeding had not been adjudicated incompetent but had been “acting in a manner potentially adverse to her interests.”);
Adoption of Kirk,
35 Mass.App.Ct. 533, 623 N.E.2d 492, 495 (1993),
review denied,
416 Mass. 1110, 629 N.E.2d 1004 (1994) (“An individual may be competent for one purpose but not for another.”).
When a substantial question exists regarding the mental competency of a party, a court must determine
whether
the party is or is not competent to proceed with the action before it.
See Krain v. Smallwood,
880 F.2d 1119, 1121 (9th Cir.1989),
aff'd,
931 F.2d 60 (1991). Only then will the court be able to determine if a guardian ad litem should be appointed under Rule 17(c).
See Id.
In
Cyntje, supra,
the court determined that
[w]hen the competency of a party is raised, a court may require that party to submit to a psychiatric examination, so that the court may have medical facts on which its decision on the necessity of appointing a
guardian ad litem
can be based.
‘The court, as a layman cannot judge the plaintiffs mental stability. It is appropriate that the court be furnished up-to-date information concerning the plaintiffs present mental condition, both in order to consider the many facets of the trial and the proposed relief, and to avoid any risk of finding that the time required for pretrial proceedings and trial might prove futile.’
(footnote added).
Id.,
95 F.R.D. at 432
(quoting Swift v. Swift,
64 F.R.D. 440, 442 (E.D.N.Y.1974)).
See Bodnar,
441 F.2d at 1104 (a court “is not powerless to ascertain whether a litigant is competent.... Where there is a showing of a substantial question of competency, the Judge with protective restrictions can, in making that determination, require a medical examination”)
In
Cyntje,
not unlike the present ease, the court was given good cause to question plaintiffs mental competency “not only because of the nature and substance of [his] complaints, but also because they [were] so numerous and, in substance, alike.”
Id.,
95 F.R.D. at 432. Of the eleven complaints filed by the plaintiff in that case, nine arose out of his allegations that the government of the Virgin Islands illegally denied him permission to operate an express bus service on the islands of St. Thomas and St. John.
Id.
The plaintiff sued various government officials, some more than once, as well as individuals who were, in some way, connected to the processing of his complaints.
Id.,
95 F.R.D. at 433.
The court in
Cyntje,
upon finding plaintiffs “mental competency to file and prosecute court actions on his own behalf [to be] subject to question[,]” scheduled a hearing in order to question plaintiff regarding the substance of his complaints and to “afford the court an opportunity to observe [his] behavior and lucidity.”
Id.,
95 F.R.D. at 433. The court concluded that, thereafter, if it determines that plaintiffs mental competency remains at issue, then it would appoint a psychiatrist to conduct a mental examination.
Id.
[4] We find that under
W. Va. R. Civ. P.
17(c), whenever an infant, incompetent person, or convict has a duly qualified representative, such as a guardian, curator, committee or other like fiduciary, such representative may sue or defend on behalf of the infant, incompetent person, or convict. If a person under any disability does not have a duly qualified representative he may sue by his next friend. The court shall appoint a discreet and competent attorney at law as guardian ad litem for an infant, incompetent person, or convict not otherwise represented in an action, or the court shall make such other order as it deems proper for the protection of any person under disability.
[5] Where a substantia] question exists regarding the mental competency of a party not otherwise represented to proceed with the litigation presently before the court, the court may, where there is good cause shown, require the party to undergo a mental examination in order to determine whether a guardian ad litem should be appointed to protect the party’s interests pursuant to
West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure
17(c).
[6] In this case, the circuit court found there to be good cause shown for appointment of a competent psychiatrist to examine petitioner to ascertain her capacity to understand the meaning and effect of the litigation she has instituted.
See Donnelly v. Parker,
486 F.2d 402, 407 (D.C.Cir.1973). We agree.
The circuit court had before it numerous pleadings in which petitioner accused various defendants of conspiring to deprive her of her constitutional right to a trial by jury with regard to the $7,000 judgment against her for unpaid legal fees. Petitioner has sued federal and circuit court judges, lawyers and clerks of court, some more than once, who have had some connection to her lawsuits. Petitioner vehemently insists that they are all participants in the constitutional conspiracy against her.
Petitioner’s litigious behavior has cost her her home, which was sold to satisfy the $7,000 judgment and from which she now faces ejectment. Moreover, her perceived deprivation of her right to due process has also resulted in monetary sanctions against her in excess of $50,000.
It is clear to this Court that petitioner either refuses to accept or is unable to understand the meaning and effect of the legal proceedings she has instituted. We find that a substantial question, exists regarding petitioner’s mental competency to proceed with the litigation she has instituted in the Circuit Court of Morgan County and that good cause was shown to warrant the circuit court’s April 8, 1996 order requiring petitioner to undergo a mental examination in order to determine whether a guardian ad litem
should be appointed to protect her interests pursuant to Rule 17(c).
IV.
As indicated above, the circuit court’s April 8, 1996 order directs the appointed psychiatrist, following examination of petitioner, to
report back to the Court within 80 days of the date of this order his findings as to the concerns of the Court heretofore stated. Concomitantly therewith, [the appointed psychiatrist] shall transmit a copy of this report to all parties hereto. Should [the appointed psychiatrist] fail to do so the Clerk of the Court is authorized and ordered to provide a copy of [the] report to any party hereto requesting same.
In syllabus point 1 of
State v. Simmons,
172 W.Va. 590, 309 S.E.2d 89 (1983), this Court held: “W. Va.Code, 27-3-1(a), provides for confidentiality of communications and information obtained in the course of treatment and evaluation of persons who may have mental or emotional conditions or disorders, subject to the exceptions set out in W. Va.Code, 27-3-1(b).”
W. Va.Code,
27-3-l(a) [1977] expressly provides that “Communications and information obtained in the course of treatment or evaluation of any client or patient shall be deemed to be ‘confidential information[.]’ ”
Id.,
in relevant part.
W. Va.Code,
27-3-1(b)(3) [1977], one of the exceptions to the confidentiality provision of
W. Va.Code,
27-3-1(a) [1977], provides that such confidential information may be disclosed “[p]ursuant to an order of any court based upon a finding that said information is sufficiently relevant to a proceeding before the court to outweigh the importance of maintaining the confidentiality established by this section[.]”
The public policy underlying the nondisclosure of such confidential information “is to enhance communications and effective treatment and diagnosis by protecting the patient/client from the embarrassment and humiliation that might be caused by the disclosure of information imparted during the course of consultation.” Syl. Pt. 2, in relevant part,
State v. Roy,
194 W.Va. 276, 460 S.E.2d 277 (1995).
Clearly, the appointed psychiatrist’s report of petitioner’s mental examination will be critical to the circuit court’s determination of whether a guardian ad litem should be appointed to protect petitioner’s interests in the underlying litigation. Thus, it is necessary that the circuit court receive a copy of the psychiatrist’s report.
Our concern is with that portion of the circuit court’s order directing the appointed psychiatrist to transmit copies of his report to the respondents herein. As indicated above, under W.
Va.Code,
27-3-1 (b)(3) [1977], such confidential information may not be disclosed unless and until the circuit court finds “that said information is sufficiently relevant to a proceeding before the court to outweigh the importance of maintaining the confidentiality established by this section.” The circuit court has obviously not yet received the appointed psychiatrist’s report regarding petitioner’s mental competence to proceed with the underlying litigation. Not until he receives such report will he be able to determine whether, under
W. Va.Code,
27-3-1(b)(1) [1977], the information therein should be disclosed to respondents as being sufficiently relevant to the proceeding before it to outweigh the importance of maintaining the confidentiality established by W.
Va. Code,
27-3-1 [1977].
Accordingly, when a court orders a party to undergo a mental examination by a psychiatrist to determine whether a guardian ad litem should be appointed to protect the party’s interests under
West Virginia Rule of Civil Procedure
17(c), the court shall receive a copy of the appointed psychiatrist’s report of such examination. Pursuant to
W. Va.Code,
27-3-1(b)(3) [1977], the court may release such report only if it finds that it is sufficiently relevant to a proceeding before the court to outweigh the importance of maintaining the confidentiality established by
W. Va.Code,
27-3-1(a) [1977].
It was, therefore, error for the circuit court to order the appointed psychiatrist to transmit copies of his report of petitioner’s
mental examination to all parties in the first instance.
Y.
For the reasons discussed above, petitioner’s petition'for a writ of prohibition is granted as moulded. The case shall proceed below in accordance with the principles set forth in this opinion.
Writ granted as moulded.
RECHT, J., sitting by temporary assignment.