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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> United States of America v Philip Morris Inc & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 330 (23 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/330.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 330, [2004] 1 CLC 811 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
COMMERCIAL COURT
Moore-Bick J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER
____________________
UNITED STATES of AMERICA |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and – |
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PHILIP MORRIS INC & OTHERS and BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO (INVESTMENTS) LTD |
Defendants Intervener/ First Appellant |
____________________
Charles Hollander QC (instructed by Norton Rose) for Andrew Foyle the Second Appellant
Kenneth MacLean QC & James Goldsmith (instructed by Loble Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 10th, 11th & 17th February 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
No. | Heading | Para No. |
1. | Introductory | 1 |
2. | The history of the action | 3 |
3. | The application for the letter of request | 10 |
4. | The court's approach to letters of request | 16 |
5. | The application relating to Mr Foyle | 18 |
6. | The claim to legal professional privilege and the judge's order | 20 |
7. | The scope of Mr Foyle's involvement | 24 |
8. | Legal advice privilege: the judge's analysis | 40 |
9. | Litigation privilege: the judge's analysis | 47 |
10. | Oppression: the judge's approach | 58 |
11. | The appeal: litigation privilege | 59 |
12. | The appeal: legal professional privilege | 74 |
13. | Oppression and a fair balance | 84 |
Lord Justice Brooke :
1. Introductory
2. The history of the action
3. The application for the letter of request
"WHEREAS, an attorney's providing advice on how to destroy documents relevant to current and anticipated litigation, amounts to the furtherance of a crime or fraud. In the United States and other jurisdictions (including the United Kingdom), such conduct obviates any attorney-client or legal professional privilege that might otherwise attach to such advice. . . . . . . . . Likewise, an attorney's advising a client to have scientists route their contacts "through the lawyers" so that privilege could be asserted for scientific communications is an improper practice and a fraud upon any court in which such privilege is asserted. For these reasons, the legal professional and attorney-client privileges do not stand in the way of Mr Foyle's being required to give testimony."
4. The court's approach to letters of request
"A person shall not be compelled by virtue of an order under section 2 above to give evidence which he could not be compelled to give-
(a) in the part of the United Kingdom in which the court that made the order exercises jurisdiction…"
5. The application relating to Mr Foyle
6. The claim to legal professional privilege and the judge's order
7. The scope of Mr Foyle's involvement
1. The creation of the document management policy.
2. The implementation of the document management policy.
3. Rules and procedures set forth by the document management policy.
4. Destruction of smoking and health documents that pertain to BATCo's and Brown & Williamson's litigation position in the United States.
5. Transportation, routing, storage and warehousing of documents.
"which could involve the destruction of documents such as previous drafts."
8. Legal advice privilege: the judge's analysis
(i) the communication must pass between the lawyer and his client;
(ii) it must be confidential; and
(iii) it must be for the dominant purpose of obtaining or giving legal advice, that is, advice about the client's rights and obligations.
9. Litigation privilege: the judge's analysis
(i) the communication must be confidential; and
(ii) it must have been made for the dominant purpose of conducting or giving advice in relation to litigation, either pending or in contemplation.
10. Oppression: the judge's approach
11. The appeal: litigation privilege
"The cases, no doubt, establish that such documents are protected where they have come into existence after litigation, either for the purpose of obtaining advice as to such litigation, or of obtaining evidence to be used in such litigation, or of obtaining information which might lead to the obtaining of such evidence; but it has never hitherto been decided that documents are protected merely because they are produced by a third party in answer to an inquiry made by the solicitor."
"Hitherto such communications have only been protected when they have been in contemplation of some litigation, or for the purpose of giving advice or obtaining evidence with reference to it. And that is reasonable, because then the solicitor is preparing for the defence or for bringing the action, and all the communications he makes for that purpose, and the communications made to him for the purpose of giving him the information, are, in fact, the brief in the action, and ought to be protected."
"Nothing in this section shall render admissible as evidence any statement made by a person interested at a time when proceedings were pending or anticipated involving a dispute as to any fact which the statement might tend to establish."
"The privilege only obtains if litigation is 'pending or anticipated', and in that connection it is well settled that a mere vague apprehension of litigation generally is not sufficient: see The Annual Practice (1950) p 499."
"for the purpose of obtaining information to be submitted to the client's professional legal advisers for the purpose of obtaining advice upon pending or contemplated litigation."
"Litigation, apprehended or actual, is its hallmark. Referring to 'the rule which protects confidential communications from discovery as regards the other side', Sir George Jessel MR said in Anderson v Bank of British Columbia 2 Ch D 644, 649:
'The object and meaning of the rule is this: that as, by reason of the complexity and difficulty of our law, litigation can only be properly conducted by professional men, it is absolutely necessary that a man, in order to prosecute his rights or to defend himself from an improper claim, should have recourse to the assistance of professional lawyers, and it being so absolutely necessary, it is equally necessary, to use a vulgar phrase, that he should be able to make a clean breast of it to the gentleman whom he consults with a view to the prosecution of his claim, or the substantiating his defence against the claim of others; that he should be able to place unrestricted and unbounded confidence in the professional agent, and that the communications he so makes to him should be kept secret, unless with his consent (for it is his privilege, and not the privilege of the confidential agent), that he should be enable properly to conduct his litigation. That is the meaning of the rule'.
And in the Court of Appeal James LJ summed up the position, at p 656, by speaking succinctly of
'… an intelligible principle, that as you have no right to see your adversary's brief, you have no right to see that which comes into existence merely as the materials for the brief.'
Preparation with a view to litigation – pending or anticipated – being thus the essential purpose which protects a communication from disclosure in such cases as the present, what in the last resort is the touchstone of the privilege?"
"as a general rule at least, there must be a real prospect of litigation as distinct from a mere possibility, but it does not have to be more likely than not."
This does not seem to be very far from Oliver LJ's formulation, although Batt JA did not cite it in his judgment.
"The requirement that litigation be 'reasonably in prospect' is not in my view satisfied unless the party seeking to claim privilege can show that he was aware of circumstances which rendered litigation between himself and a particular person or class of persons a real likelihood rather than a mere possibility."
This, it was argued, was to set the hurdle too high.
12. The appeal: legal professional privilege
"Legal professional privilege is concerned with the interaction between two aspects of the public interest in the administration of justice. The public interest in the efficient working of the legal system requires that people should be able to obtain professional legal advice on their rights and liabilities and obligations. This is desirable for the orderly conduct of everyday affairs. Similarly, people should be able to seek legal advice and assistance in connection with the proper conduct of court proceedings. To this end communications between clients and lawyers must be uninhibited. But, in practice, candour cannot be expected if disclosure of the contents of communications between client and lawyer may be compelled, to a client's prejudice and contrary to his wishes. That is one aspect of the public interest. It takes the form of according to the client a right, or privilege as it is unhelpfully called, to withhold disclosure of the contents of client-lawyer communications. In the ordinary course the client has an interest in asserting this right, in so far as disclosure would or might prejudice him.
The other aspect of the public interest is that all relevant material should be available to courts when deciding cases. Courts should not have to reach decisions in ignorance of the contents of documents or other material which, if disclosed, might prejudice him.
All this is familiar ground, well traversed in many authorities over several centuries."
"Although originally confined to advice regarding litigation, the privilege was extended to non-litigious business. Nevertheless, despite that extension, the purpose and scope of the privilege is still to enable legal advice to be sought and given in confidence. In my judgment, therefore, the test is whether the communication or other document was made confidentially for the purposes of legal advice. Those purposes have to be construed broadly. Privilege obviously attaches to a document conveying legal advice from a solicitor to client and to a specific request from the client for such advice. But it does not follow that all other communications between them lack privilege. In most solicitor and client relationships, especially where a transaction involves protracted dealings, advice may be required or appropriate on matters great or small at various stages. There will be a continuum of communication and meetings between the solicitor and client. The negotiations for a lease such as occurred in the present case are only one example. Where information is passed by the solicitor or client to the other as part of the continuum aimed at keeping both informed so that advice may be sought and given as required, privilege will attach. A letter from the client containing information may end with such words as 'please advise me what I should do'. But, even if it does not, there will usually be implied in the relationship an overall expectation that the solicitor will at each stage, whether asked specifically or not, tender appropriate advice. Moreover legal advice is not confined to telling the client the law; it must include advice as to what should prudently and sensible be done in the relevant legal context.
It may be that applying this test to any series of communications might isolate occasional letters or notes which could not be said to enjoy privilege. But to be disclosable such documents must be not only privilege-free but also material and relevant. Usually a letter which does no more than acknowledge receipt of a document or suggest a date for a meeting will be irrelevant and so non-disclosable. In effect therefore, the 'purpose of legal advice' test will result in most communications between solicitor and client in, for example, a conveyancing transaction being exempt from disclosure, either because they are privileged or because they are immaterial or irrelevant."
"[W]hether such documents are privileged or not must depend on whether they are part of that necessary exchange of information of which the object is the giving of legal advice as and when appropriate."
13. Oppression and a fair balance
"How, it may be asked, is the issue of whether a particular question can or cannot be answered due to privilege actually to be resolved, either at the directions hearing, or at the examination? How, for example, is Mr Foyle supposed to explain to the Court why he thinks he cannot answer a particular question, once he genuinely forms that view, without himself revealing the content of his answer in the presence of BATCo's litigation adversaries? How, further, is BATCo to know whether it can properly raise a valid privilege objection to Mr Foyle answering any particular question, without first knowing in advance what his answer is?"
And so on.
Lord Justice Chadwick:
Lord Justice Scott Baker: