State v. Keenan

771 P.2d 244, 307 Or. 515, 1989 Ore. LEXIS 114
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1989
DocketTC C8612-36601; CA A43996; SC S35311
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 771 P.2d 244 (State v. Keenan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Keenan, 771 P.2d 244, 307 Or. 515, 1989 Ore. LEXIS 114 (Or. 1989).

Opinions

[517]*517LINDE, J.

The question before us is whether a lawyer who had represented a defendant in a criminal case committed contempt of court when she refused to disclose the dates on which she conferred with her former client.

The lawyer, Nan Waller, was appointed in October 1985 to represent Charles Keenan, who was suspected of murdering Scott Webb. Waller informed the prosecutor and police that she represented Keenan, that he did not wish to talk with them, and that future communications should be with her. Keenan was not charged, and active investigation of the murder eventually ceased.

Keenan later was prosecuted on another murder charge, on which he was represented by a different lawyer. After he was convicted on that charge, Keenan in October 1986 wrote to a Portland police detective about the Webb murder. The detective interviewed Keenan in prison, and Keenan eventually confessed to that murder. He repeated his confession in a letter to the prosecuting attorney and in further interviews with police officers. Waller was not told of the interviews.

Keenan was indicted, and a new attorney, Brad Grove, was appointed to represent him. Grove moved to suppress Keenan’s confession on grounds that it had been improperly obtained in violation of the rights asserted in Waller’s letter.

At the suppression hearing, Waller testified that she had written the letter and that she still represented Keenan in the Webb investigation at the time of his confession. During cross-examination, the prosecutor asked her to specify the dates of her conversations with Keenan. Defense counsel objected, asserting Keenan’s attorney-client privilege and violation of a lawyer’s obligation to keep a client’s secrets. The trial court overruled the objections and ordered Waller to disclose the dates, although not the substance of the conversations. When Waller persisted in refusing to disclose the dates of her conversations with Keenan or whether they extended into October, November or December of 1986 (the time of Keenan’s confessions), the court adjudged her in contempt. [518]*518The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment. State v. Keenan/Waller, 91 Or App 481, 756 P2d 51 (1988).

After the affirmance by the Court of Appeals, Waller answered the questions as ordered, purging the contempt. The state therefore argues that further review of the order is moot. We agree with the state that the judgment is one of civil, not criminal, contempt. See In the Matter of Virginia Hanks, 290 Or 451, 623 P2d 623 (1981). If the trial court had vacated the judgment of contempt after Waller complied with the court’s order, the appeal would be moot. But the trial court did not vacate the judgment, because it was before this court on review. Even without imposition or enforcement of a sanction, an outstanding judgment that a lawyer has committed contempt of court can have future legal consequences for the lawyer, for instance in subsequent disciplinary proceedings in some unrelated matter. If the contemnor had no practical opportunity to challenge the court’s order before complying or refusing to comply, and the order was erroneous, the judgment of contempt should be set aside. Cf. State v. Crenshaw, 307 Or 160, 764 P2d 1372 (1988). We therefore do not dismiss the appeal on procedural grounds.

The obligations on which Waller based her refusal to answer are of two kinds. One is the evidentiary attorney-client privilege, OEC 503, which provides:

“(1) As used in this section, unless the context requires otherwise:
<<* * * * *
“(b) ‘Confidential communication’ means a communication not intended to be disclosed to third persons other than those to whom disclosure is in furtherance of the rendition of professional legal services to the client or those reasonably necessary for the transmission of the communication.
<<* * * * *
“(2) A client has a privilege to refuse to disclose and to prevent any other person from disclosing confidential communications made for the purpose of facilitating the rendition of professional legal services to the client:
“(a) Between the client or the client’s representative and the client’s lawyer or a representative of the lawyer.”

[519]*519The second is the obligation to maintain a client’s secrets that is recognized in ORS 9.460(5) and in Canon 4 of the Code of Professional Responsibility, further defined in DR 4-101 (A).1 The provisions are not coextensive. The professional obligation to “preserve” the client’s secrets “at every peril to the attorney,” ORS 9.460(5), first codified in Oregon’s Deady Code of 1865 following the Field Codes of New York and California, is not limited to the attorney’s position as a witness. Canon 4, as DR 4-101(A) spells out, does not confine the client’s “secrets” to communications; indeed, they may reach the attorney from someone other than the client. The Model Rules of Professional Conduct proposed by the American Bar Association in 1983 would forbid a lawyer to “reveal information relating to representation of a client,” which the commentary explains as including “all information relating to the representation, whatever its source.” Model Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 1.6, comment (1987). See also Wolfram, Modern Legal Ethics 297-8 (1986). However this broad rule might be applied to various problems, the fact that it reflected a majority’s rejection of more qualified recommendations of the ABA’s Kutak Commission2 shows that one cannot dismiss a literal reading of statutes like ORS 9.460(5) as unthinkable.

To hold that, except for the rules of evidentiary privilege, the general obligation to testify overrides an attorney’s professional obligation of secrecy would be too facile where, as in Oregon, the professional obligation is statutory law. The [520]*520statute would, of course, yield to an accused’s constitutional right to the lawyer’s testimony.3 In other cases, if the lawyer is under subpoena, the two demands on the lawyer call for harmonizing ORS 9.460(5) with conflicting statutes as far as possible.4 See ORS 136.555 et seq; ORCP 55; ORS 1.010 and 1.020. Few decisions give independent attention to the statutory obligation to preserve “secrets” beyond the evidentiary privilege for confidential communications; for instance, decisions requiring lawyers to produce physical evidence do not refer to such statutes. See, e.g., People v. Meredith, 29 Cal 3d 682, 175 Cal Rptr 612, 631 P2d 46 (1981).

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State v. Keenan
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
771 P.2d 244, 307 Or. 515, 1989 Ore. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-keenan-or-1989.