United States v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters

119 F.3d 210, 1997 WL 409391
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 1997
DocketNo. 2187, Docket 97-6092
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 119 F.3d 210 (United States v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. International Brotherhood of Teamsters, 119 F.3d 210, 1997 WL 409391 (2d Cir. 1997).

Opinion

JOSÉ A. CABRANES, Circuit Judge.

Appellant Jere B. Nash III (“Nash”) was the campaign manager for Ron Carey’s (“Carey”) 1996 reelection bid for the office of president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (“IBT”). We consider here whether Nash may assert an attorney-client privilege over communications with counsel for the Campaign to Re-Elect Ron Carey (“Carey Campaign” or “Campaign”) regarding Campaign matters. The Carey Campaign has waived any attorney-client privilege it possesses with respect to these [212]*212communications, wishing to disclose their content as part of its effort to cooperate with a currently pending investigation into alleged fundraising improprieties. Nash appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (David N. Edelstein, Judge) holding that Nash could not individually assert an attorney-client privilege with respect to the conversations at issue, and therefore could not prevent their disclosure by the Campaign. United States v. International Bhd. Of Teamsters, 961 F.Supp. 665 (S.D.N.Y.1997). We heard arguments on the appeal on June 12, 1997, and on that date entered a summary order affirming the order of the district court and indicating that an opinion would follow in due course. On July 1, 1997, we denied Nash’s motion for a stay pending a petition for rehearing. This opinion explains our reasons for affirming the order of the district court.

I.

The following facts drawn from the record are not disputed by the parties. This case arises from a 1989 consent decree entered into between the United States and the IBT, pursuant to which IBT elections are monitored by an Election Officer appointed by the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (David N. Edelstein, Judge), which retains jurisdiction over enforcement of the decree. On February 4, 1997, following the reelection of Carey as president of the IBT, his opponent, James Hoffa, Jr. (“Hoffa”), lodged a formal protest with the Election Officer alleging that the Carey Campaign had engaged in certain impermissible fundraising activities. The Election Officer initiated an investigation.

IBT President Carey, on behalf of the Carey Campaign, authorized Cohen, Weiss & Simon (“CW & S”), counsel to the Campaign since June 1995, to cooperate fully with the investigation and to provide the Election Officer with all necessary information. During the course of the investigation, Susan Davis (“Davis”), a partner at CW & S, informed the Election Officer that she and other attorneys at her firm had spoken with appellant Nash, who had been hired as campaign manager for the Carey Campaign in February 1996, regarding issues relevant to the investigation. She also informed the Election Officer that Carey had decided to waive the Campaign’s attorney-client privilege with respect to these conversations, and had instructed her to disclose their substance to the Election Officer. Nash thereupon sought to prevent such disclosures, arguing that he was entitled to assert a personal claim of attorney-client privilege with regard to these conversations.

Soon after becoming campaign manager in February 1996, and frequently thereafter, Nash spoke with attorneys from CW & S on a variety of Campaign matters. CW & S had served as counsel to the Campaign continuously since June 1995, and had never represented Nash or any other Campaign employee in an individual capacity. The events and conversations underlying the present dispute took place in March 1997. On March 6, a CW & S associate working under Davis, Nathaniel Charney (“Charney”), was on the fine during a telephone conversation between Nash and a representative of the Election Officer’s office regarding the investigation. When asked at the hearing before the district court why Charney had been on the line, Nash responded, “I’ve never thought about it. [Charney] said he wanted to be on the phone and I didn’t object.” Nash had also spoken with Charney in preparation for the telephone conversation to ensure that, in Nash’s words, “we did what we needed to do as a campaign in responding to their requests for information.”

On the following day, Nash received a telephone call from Davis requesting that he meet with attorneys from CW & S to discuss the Hoffa protest. The meeting took place at the offices of CW & S on March 10. Davis testified that she informed Nash at the meeting that CW & S had asked to speak with him as counsel for the Carey Campaign. She also testified that she told Nash that, because CW & S represented the Carey Campaign and Nash was the campaign manager, the conversation was “privileged.” To explain her point about privilege to Nash, Davis contrasted Nash’s situation with that of a person not employed by the Campaign with whom CW & S attorneys had met on [213]*213the previous day, a person whom they had warned that his statements were not privileged. Davis also testified that Nash was told that his comments to the CW & S attorneys would be reported to Carey, and that Nash was cautioned not to disclose the substance of the meeting to individuals outside of the Carey Campaign, since this could destroy the “privileged” nature of the conversation. The CW & S attorneys understood these references to “privilege” to mean the privilege belonging to the Carey Campaign, rather than to Nash individually, but there was never an explicit discussion between CW & S and Nash as to whose “privilege” was involved or whose prerogative it would be to waive it.

Davis asserts, and Nash does not dispute, that the substance of the March 10 meeting was limited to the allegations being made against the Campaign. Although Nash testified in the district court that he believed all along that his interests were identical to the Campaign’s, and that CW & S represented him individually in addition to representing the Campaign, at no point during his conversations with CW & S did Nash seek, nor did CW & S provide, any personal legal advice. Neither, however, did the CW & S attorneys directly inform Nash prior to or during the March 10 meeting that they did not represent him personally, or that conflicts sometimes arise between the interests of an organization and the interests of one of its employees.

Two days after the New York meeting, on March 12, Nash received a telephone call from three CW & S lawyers and again answered questions pertaining to the Hoffa protest; once again, Nash did not seek or receive any personal legal advice. At the close of the conversation, Nash asked whether the conversation had been privileged. He was informed that it was, but again there was no suggestion as to whose privilege it might be. On March 13, attorneys from CW & S consulted with the firm’s own outside counsel on a number of matters, including their concern that Nash might wish to assert a personal attorney-client privilege with regard to his comments to CW & S about the Hoffa protest. Davis testified that CW & S had raised the question with outside counsel merely in a prudent effort to cover all possible issues affecting CW & S, and not because CW & S believed at the time that Nash could reasonably assert a personal attorney-client privilege.

On March 17, Nash called Davis and requested a meeting, but Davis indicated that she could not meet on that day because she was traveling to Washington to make a full report to Carey regarding the March 10 and 12 conversations with Nash. Nash raised no objections to the disclosure of this information to Carey.

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119 F.3d 210, 1997 WL 409391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-international-brotherhood-of-teamsters-ca2-1997.