Privilege
LATEST
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3)'s and parallel state work product rules apply to documents and tangible things prepared "in anticipation of litigation or for trial." But the Rule does not specify the degree of required "anticipation."
Read MoreMore Privilege Articles
Privilege
Courts Differ on the Meaning of the Work Product Rule’s "Anticipation" and "Litigation" Elements: Part I
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3)'s and parallel state work product rules apply to documents and tangible things prepared "in anticipation of litigation or for trial." But the Rule does not specify the degree of required "anticipation."
Read MorePrivilege
What Is the Garner Doctrine, and Why Is It Dangerous?
Under what is called the "fiduciary exception," a fiduciary's beneficiary sometimes may access otherwise privileged communications between the fiduciary and its lawyer – based on the law's artificial identification of the beneficiary as the fiduciary's lawyer's true "client."
Read MorePrivilege
The Privilege Always Protects Communications Among Jointly Represented Corporate Affiliates, Right?
Corporate parents' in-house lawyers' joint representations of the parent and its wholly-owned subsidiaries should cinch their communications' attorney-client privilege protection. Additional grounds for such privilege protection (in a litigation setting) could also come from the obvious "common interest" between a corporate parent and its wholly-owned subsidiaries – which by definition must comply with their parent's direction.
Read More