Coito v. Superior Court , 54 Cal. 4th 480 ( 2012 )


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  • Filed 6/25/12
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA
    DEBRA COITO,                         )
    )
    )
    Petitioner,               )                            S181712
    )
    v.                        )                       Ct.App. 5 F057690
    )
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF                )                       Stanislaus County
    STANISLAUS COUNTY,                   )                     Super. Ct. No. 624500
    )
    Respondent;               )
    )
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA,                 )
    )
    Real Party in Interest.   )
    ___________________________________ )
    In California, an attorney‟s work product is protected by statute. (Code Civ. Proc.,
    § 2018.010 et seq.; all further unlabeled statutory references are to the Code of Civil
    Procedure.) Absolute protection is afforded to writings that reflect “an attorney‟s
    impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal research or theories.” (§ 2018.030,
    subd. (a).) All other work product receives qualified protection; such material “is not
    discoverable unless the court determines that denial of discovery will unfairly prejudice
    the party seeking discovery in preparing that party‟s claim or defense or will result in an
    injustice.” (§ 2018.030, subd. (b).)
    In this case, we decide what work product protection, if any, should be accorded
    two items: first, recordings of witness interviews conducted by investigators employed
    1
    by defendant‟s counsel, and second, information concerning the identity of witnesses
    from whom defendant‟s counsel has obtained statements. Defendant objected to
    plaintiff‟s requests for discovery of these items, invoking the work product privilege.
    The trial court sustained the objection, concluding as a matter of law that the recorded
    witness interviews were entitled to absolute work product protection and that the other
    information sought was work product entitled to qualified protection. A divided Court of
    Appeal reversed, concluding that work product protection does not apply to any of the
    disputed items. The Court of Appeal issued a writ of mandate directing the trial court to
    grant the motion to compel discovery.
    We conclude that the Court of Appeal erred. In light of the legislatively declared
    policy and the legislative history of the work product privilege, we hold that the recorded
    witness statements are entitled as a matter of law to at least qualified work product
    protection. The witness statements may be entitled to absolute protection if defendant
    can show that disclosure would reveal its “attorney‟s impressions, conclusions, opinions,
    or legal research or theories.” (§ 2018.030, subd. (a).) If not, then the items may be
    subject to discovery if plaintiff can show that “denial of discovery will unfairly prejudice
    [her] in preparing [her] claim . . . or will result in an injustice.” (§ 2018.030, subd. (b).)
    As to the identity of witnesses from whom defendant‟s counsel has obtained
    statements, we hold that such information is not automatically entitled as a matter of law
    to absolute or qualified work product protection. In order to invoke the privilege,
    defendant must persuade the trial court that disclosure would reveal the attorney‟s tactics,
    impressions, or evaluation of the case (absolute privilege) or would result in opposing
    counsel taking undue advantage of the attorney‟s industry or efforts (qualified privilege).
    We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal and remand the matter for further
    proceedings, consistent with our opinion, to determine whether the disputed materials
    should be produced.
    2
    I.
    On March 9, 2007, 13-year-old Jeremy Wilson drowned in the Tuolumne River in
    Modesto, California. His mother, Debra Coito, filed a complaint for wrongful death
    naming several defendants, including the State of California. The Department of Water
    Resources (DWR) is the agency defending the action for the state, represented by the
    Attorney General.
    Six other juveniles witnessed what happened. There were allegations that all of
    the juveniles, including the decedent, were engaged in criminal conduct immediately
    before the drowning. On November 12, 2008, after codefendant City of Modesto had
    noticed the depositions of five of the six juvenile witnesses, counsel for the state sent two
    investigators, both special agents from the Bureau of Investigation of the Department of
    Justice, to interview four of the juveniles. The state‟s counsel provided the investigators
    with questions he wanted asked. Each interview was audio-recorded and saved on a
    separate compact disc.
    On January 27, 2009, the City of Modesto began its deposition of one of the four
    interviewed witnesses. The state‟s counsel used the content of the witness‟s recorded
    interview in questioning the witness at the deposition.
    On February 5, 2009, plaintiff served the state with supplemental interrogatories
    and document demands. The interrogatories included Judicial Council form interrogatory
    No. 12.3, which sought the names, addresses, and telephone numbers of individuals from
    whom written or recorded statements had been obtained. The document demands sought
    production of the audio recordings of the four witness interviews. The state objected to
    the requested discovery based on the work product privilege.
    Plaintiff filed a motion to compel an answer to form interrogatory No. 12.3 and the
    production of the recorded interviews. In support of the motion, plaintiff filed
    declarations from two of the interviewed witnesses asserting that they had not intended
    their statements to be confidential. The state opposed the motion, relying primarily on
    3
    Nacht & Lewis Architects, Inc. v. Superior Court (1996) 
    47 Cal.App.4th 214
    , 217 (Nacht
    & Lewis), which held that recorded witness statements are entitled to absolute work
    product protection and that information sought by form interrogatory No. 12.3 is entitled
    to qualified work product protection.
    After an April 10, 2009 hearing, and without having reviewed the audio
    recordings, the trial court issued a written order that relied on Nacht & Lewis in denying
    plaintiff‟s motion except as to the recording used by the state to examine the witness
    during the January 27, 2009 deposition. As to that recording, the court reasoned that the
    state had waived the work product privilege by using the interview to examine the
    witness during the deposition.
    Plaintiff petitioned for a writ of mandate that the Court of Appeal granted. The
    majority, relying on Greyhound Corp. v. Superior Court (1961) 
    56 Cal.2d 355
    (Greyhound) and expressly declining to follow Nacht & Lewis, concluded that witness
    interviews and the information sought by form interrogatory No. 12.3 are not entitled as a
    matter of law to absolute or qualified work product protection. Because defendant‟s
    attorney made no showing of entitlement to work product protection in the specific
    context of this case, the Court of Appeal directed the trial court to compel discovery.
    Justice Kane wrote a concurring and dissenting opinion. While agreeing that the trial
    court‟s order denying discovery should be vacated, he concluded that the recorded
    interviews were entitled as a matter of law to at least qualified work product protection,
    whereas the information sought by form interrogatory No. 12.3 must be produced unless
    the objecting party has made an adequate showing to support a claim of qualified
    privilege.
    We granted review. As with all matters of statutory construction, our review of
    the Court of Appeal‟s interpretation of the work product statute is de novo. (Imperial
    Merchant Services, Inc. v. Hunt (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 381
    , 387.)
    4
    II.
    California‟s civil work product privilege is codified in section 2018.030.
    Subdivision (a) provides absolute protection to any “writing that reflects an attorney‟s
    impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal research or theories.” (§ 2018.030,
    subd. (a).) Such a writing “is not discoverable under any circumstances.” (Ibid.) The
    term “writing” includes any form of recorded information, including audio recordings.
    (§ 2016.020, subd. (c) [adopting the definition set forth in Evidence Code section 250].)
    Section 2018.030, subdivision (b) provides qualified protection for all other work
    product. Such material “is not discoverable unless the court determines that denial of
    discovery will unfairly prejudice the party seeking discovery in preparing that party‟s
    claim or defense or will result in an injustice.” (§ 2018.030, subd. (b).) Here, we address
    the work product privilege in the civil context only, as criminal discovery is regulated by
    a different statute. (Pen. Code, § 1054 et seq.)
    The language of section 2018.030 does not otherwise define or describe “work
    product.” Courts have resolved whether particular materials constitute work product on a
    case-by-case basis (City of Long Beach v. Superior Court (1976) 
    64 Cal.App.3d 65
    , 71),
    although they have sometimes taken different approaches. Some courts have attempted
    to answer the question by distinguishing between “derivative” or “nonderivative”
    material, or between “interpretative” and “evidentiary” material. (E.g., Fellows v.
    Superior Court (1980) 
    108 Cal.App.3d 55
    , 68-69 (Fellows); Rodriguez v. McDonnell
    Douglas Corp. (1978) 
    87 Cal.App.3d 626
    , 647 (Rodriguez); Mack v. Superior Court
    (1968) 
    259 Cal.App.2d 7
    , 10-11 (Mack).) These cases have concluded that only
    derivative or interpretive material — material created by or derived from an attorney‟s
    work reflecting the attorney‟s evaluation of the law or facts — constitutes work product.
    Examples of such material include “diagrams prepared for trial, audit reports, appraisals,
    and other expert opinions, developed as a result of the initiative of counsel in preparing
    for trial.” (Mack, at p. 10.) Nonderivative material — material that is only evidentiary in
    5
    nature — does not constitute work product. Examples of such material include the
    identity and location of physical evidence or witnesses. (Ibid.; City of Long Beach, at
    p. 73.)
    Other courts, instead of distinguishing between derivative and nonderivative
    material, have determined the scope of protected work product by relying primarily upon
    the policies underlying the work product statute and its legislative history. (E.g., Dowden
    v. Superior Court (1999) 
    73 Cal.App.4th 126
    , 130-133, 135 (Dowden).) Because those
    policies and the legislative history are instructive in resolving the instant case, we begin
    by reviewing the origins and development of California‟s work product privilege.
    A.
    The idea that an attorney‟s work product should receive protection from discovery
    was first recognized by the United States Supreme Court in Hickman v. Taylor (1947)
    
    329 U.S. 495
     (Hickman). There, the defendant‟s counsel interviewed and took statements
    from the surviving crewmembers of a tugboat accident. (Id. at p. 498.) The plaintiff
    sought the production of any written or oral statements taken from the crewmembers.
    (Id. at pp. 498-499.) After concluding that the statements were not covered by the
    attorney-client privilege (id. at p. 508), the court nonetheless affirmed the denial of the
    plaintiff‟s request. The court explained that the plaintiff‟s request was “simply an
    attempt, without purported necessity or justification, to secure written statements, private
    memoranda and personal recollections prepared or formed by an adverse party‟s counsel
    in the course of his legal duties.” (Id. at p. 510.)
    The court continued: “In performing his various duties, . . . it is essential that a
    lawyer work with a certain degree of privacy, free from unnecessary intrusion by
    opposing parties and their counsel. Proper preparation of a client‟s case demands that he
    assemble information, sift what he considers to be the relevant from the irrelevant facts,
    prepare his legal theories and plan his strategy without undue and needless interference.
    6
    That is the historical and the necessary way in which lawyers act within the framework of
    our system of jurisprudence to promote justice and to protect their clients‟ interests. This
    work is reflected, of course, in interviews, statements, memoranda, correspondence,
    briefs, mental impressions, personal beliefs, and countless other tangible and intangible
    ways — aptly though roughly termed by the Circuit Court of Appeals in this case as the
    „work product of the lawyer.‟ Were such materials open to opposing counsel on mere
    demand, much of what is now put down in writing would remain unwritten. An
    attorney‟s thoughts, heretofore inviolate, would not be his own. Inefficiency, unfairness
    and sharp practices would inevitably develop in the giving of legal advice and in the
    preparation of cases for trial. The effect on the legal profession would be demoralizing.
    And the interests of the clients and the cause of justice would be poorly served.
    “We do not mean to say that all written materials obtained or prepared by an
    adversary‟s counsel with an eye toward litigation are necessarily free from discovery in
    all cases. Where relevant and non-privileged facts remain hidden in an attorney‟s file and
    where production of those facts is essential to the preparation of one‟s case, discovery
    may properly be had. Such written statements and documents might, under certain
    circumstances, be admissible in evidence or give clues as to the existence or location of
    relevant facts. Or they might be useful for purposes of impeachment or corroboration.
    And production might be justified where the witnesses are no longer available or can be
    reached only with difficulty. . . . But the general policy against invading the privacy of
    an attorney‟s course of preparation is so well recognized and so essential to an orderly
    working of our system of legal procedure that a burden rests on the one who would
    invade that privacy to establish adequate reasons to justify production through a subpoena
    or court order.” (Hickman, 
    supra,
     329 U.S. at pp. 510-512.)
    At the time Hickman was decided, California law protected work product only
    through the attorney-client privilege. In response to Hickman, the California State Bar‟s
    Committee on Administration of Justice (Committee or State Bar Committee) in 1952
    7
    proposed an amendment to the definition of attorney-client privilege in former section
    1881. (State Bar Com., Ann. Rep., Proposals for Legislation, Evidence, 27 State Bar J.
    175, 191-192; McCoy, Cal. Civil Discovery: Work Product of Attorneys (1966) 18 Stan.
    L.Rev. 783, 787-788 (McCoy).) The proposed amendment would have provided that
    “ „an attorney‟s working papers, including, but without limitation, witness statements,
    investigators‟ reports, appraiser‟s reports, medical, scientific, economic or other reports,
    made for the attorney in preparation of or in connection with a trial, [cannot] be examined
    without the consent of the client.‟ ” (State Bar Com., Ann. Rep., supra, 27 State Bar J. at
    p. 191, italics omitted.)
    However, the proposal was dropped when this court decided Holm v. Superior
    Court (1954) 
    42 Cal.2d 500
    . In Holm, which involved allegations of driver negligence in
    connection with a city bus accident, the court held that written reports by the driver and
    photographs of the accident scene were protected by the attorney-client privilege,
    although the plaintiff‟s own signed statement to an investigator was not. (Id. at pp. 503-
    504, 508, 510.) The State Bar Committee concluded that Holm “removes many of the
    problems on „working papers‟ of the attorney; and that [the proposed amendment of
    section 1881] is not necessary at this time.” (State Bar Com., Ann. Rep., Proposals for
    Legislation, Evidence (1954) 29 State Bar J. 224, 240; Note, Attorney-Client Privilege in
    California (1958) 10 Stan. L.Rev. 297, 316, 318.)
    In 1957, the Legislature took up consideration of the Discovery Act, modeled on
    provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (McCoy, supra, 18 Stan. L.Rev. at
    p. 788.) Proposed section 2016, subdivision (b), as recommended by the State Bar
    Committee, permitted the discovery of any relevant information that was “not
    privileged.” (State Bar Com., Ann. Rep., Discovery (1956) 31 State Bar J. 204, 211;
    McCoy, at p. 788.) One concern raised during legislative hearings on the proposal was
    whether “discovery of working papers and materials collected by an attorney in
    preparation for trial would be discoverable, and whether the courts would follow
    8
    Hickman and other federal cases stating that such material was not always protected.”
    (McCoy, at pp. 788-789; Pruitt, Lawyers’ Work Product (1962) 37 State Bar J. 228, 233-
    234 (Pruitt).) In response to this concern, the enacted version of section 2016,
    subdivision (b) provided that all matters privileged under California law “are privileged
    against disclosure through any discovery procedure.” (Stats. 1957, ch. 1904, § 3,
    p. 3323.) It further provided that the legislation should not be interpreted to alter the law
    “with respect to the existence of any privilege, whether provided for by statute or judicial
    decision, nor shall it be construed to incorporate by reference any judicial decisions on
    privilege of any other jurisdiction.” (Ibid.; McCoy, at p. 789; Pruitt, at p. 233.) The text
    and enactment history of this latter provision left unclear whether California law
    incorporated Hickman‟s understanding of protected work product. (McCoy, at pp. 789-
    790.)
    Against this statutory backdrop, this court in 1961 concluded that neither the
    attorney-client privilege nor the work product doctrine protected nonparty witness
    statements from discovery. (Greyhound, supra, 56 Cal.2d at pp. 399, 401.) In
    Greyhound, the plaintiff in a personal injury suit arising from a car accident sought
    written statements that had been obtained from witnesses by the defendant‟s insurance
    adjusters and investigators. (Id. at p. 386.) In opposing the discovery request, the
    defendant argued that the statements fell within the attorney-client privilege. The court
    rejected the argument and distinguished Holm. (Greyhound, at pp. 395, 398-399 &
    fn. 20.) The defendant also argued that the statements were protected under the work
    product doctrine. (Id. at pp. 399-400.) The court rejected this argument as well, noting
    that the Legislature had not created such a privilege when it enacted the Discovery Act.
    (Id. at p. 401.) “In its essence,” the court explained, “the „work product rule‟ is a form of
    federally created privilege. [Citation.] The Legislature expressly refused to extend the
    concepts of privilege when adopting the discovery procedures. Since privilege is created
    by statute it should not be extended by judicial fiat. While the Hickman case . . . may be
    9
    persuasive, and its reasoning accepted where applicable to California [citations][,] such
    should not be accepted as creating a privilege where none existed. We are therefore
    inclined to the view that the work product privilege does not exist in this state.” (Ibid.)
    In response to Greyhound, the State Bar Committee proposed an amendment the
    following year with the purpose of codifying a work product privilege. (State Bar Com.,
    Ann. Rep., Amendments of Discovery Act (1962) 37 State Bar J. 585, 586-587 (1962
    Annual Report); Dowden, supra, 73 Cal.App.4th at p. 132.) As introduced, Senate Bill
    No. 24 (1963 Reg. Sess.) (Bill No. 24) proposed to amend former section 2016,
    subdivision (b) to provide that “it is the policy of this state (i) to preserve the rights of
    parties and their attorneys to prepare cases for trial with that degree of privacy necessary
    to encourage them to prepare their cases thoroughly and to investigate not only the
    favorable but the unfavorable aspects of such cases and (ii) to so limit discovery that one
    party or his attorney may not take undue advantage of his adversary‟s industry or
    efforts.” (Bill No. 24, as introduced Jan. 8, 1963, p. 2; see 1962 Ann. Rep., supra, 37
    State Bar J. at pp. 586-587.) Nearly identical language was ultimately enacted as section
    2016, subdivision (g). (Stats. 1963, ch. 1744, § 1, p. 3479.)
    Bill No. 24, as introduced, also proposed to amend section 2016, subdivision (b) to
    provide that “the following shall not be discoverable unless the court determines that
    denial of discovery will unfairly prejudice the party seeking discovery in preparing his
    claim or defense or will result in injustice: (1) the work product of an attorney and (2)
    except as provided in Section 2032, any opinion or report of an expert prepared for or in
    anticipation of litigation and any writing or things created by or for a party or his agent
    in preparation for or in anticipation of litigation; provided always that any writing that
    reflects an attorney‟s mental impressions, conclusions, opinions or legal theories shall not
    be discoverable under any circumstances.” (Bill No. 24, as introduced Jan. 8, 1963, p. 2,
    italics added; see 1962 Ann. Rep., supra, 37 State Bar J. at p. 587.) The italicized
    language was later deleted (Bill No. 24, as amended May 17, 1963, p. 2), but the State
    10
    Bar Committee‟s proposed language was otherwise included in the enacted version
    (Stats. 1963, ch. 1744, § 1, p. 3478; Dowden, supra, 73 Cal.App.4th at p. 133).
    Senator Cobey, who introduced Bill No. 24 at the request of the State Bar,
    explained the deletion of the italicized language above: “The bill, as amended in the
    Assembly, does not attempt to define the term „work product of an attorney‟ and
    eliminates from the bill as originally introduced certain language which partially defines
    the term. It is believed that by deleting this specific language courts will be enabled to
    interpret the term in accordance with the large body of case law that has developed in the
    Federal courts and elsewhere.” (Sen. Cobey, letter to Gov. Brown re Bill No. 24, June
    22, 1963, p. 1.) Senator Cobey‟s explanation is consistent with a provision included in
    the final version of the bill, which said: “The amendments to this act during the course of
    its passage shall not constitute evidence that the Legislature intended thereby to limit the
    courts in their interpretation of what constitutes the work product of an attorney.” (Stats.
    1963, ch. 1744, § 3, p. 3480 [uncodified provision].)
    According to the State Bar Committee‟s 1962 Annual Report, the 1963
    amendments were intended to “protect the lawyer‟s normal work processes” and “to
    establish a more desirable balance between „discovery‟ and the rights of litigants and
    prospective litigants to obtain advice of experts, make investigations and do other acts,
    without fear of unlimited or indiscriminate disclosures to, and use by adversaries.” (1962
    Ann. Rep., supra, 37 State Bar J. at p. 586.) The 1963 amendments were crafted to limit
    discovery “when the facts indicate that „one litigant is attempting to take advantage of the
    other‟ or that there is „an abusive attempt to “ride free” on the opponent‟s industry.‟
    [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 588; see Dowden, supra, 73 Cal.App.4th at p. 133 [finding 1962
    Annual Report “use[ful] as an interpretive aid” because “the Legislature enacted the State
    Bar‟s proposal almost verbatim”].) Contemporaneous commentary observed that the
    1963 amendments intended to give some work product even greater protection than the
    qualified protection afforded by Hickman. (See Pruitt, supra, 37 State Bar J. at p. 229;
    11
    Hazen L. Matthews, Legislative Representative of State Bar, letter to Gov. Brown re Bill
    No. 24, July 2, 1963, p. 2.)
    Although the work product privilege was moved first from section 2016 to section
    2018 (Stats. 1986, ch. 1334, §§ 1-2, pp. 4700-4702) and then from section 2018 to its
    present location (Stats. 2004, ch. 182, §§ 22-23, pp. 824, 830-831), the current text is
    virtually identical to the version first enacted in 1963. Section 2018.020 declares: “It is
    the policy of the state to do both of the following: [¶] (a) Preserve the rights of attorneys
    to prepare cases for trial with that degree of privacy necessary to encourage them to
    prepare their cases thoroughly and to investigate not only the favorable but the
    unfavorable aspects of those cases. [¶] (b) Prevent attorneys from taking undue
    advantage of their adversary‟s industry and efforts.” Toward that end, section 2018.030
    provides: “(a) A writing that reflects an attorney‟s impressions, conclusions, opinions, or
    legal research or theories is not discoverable under any circumstances. [¶] (b) The work
    product of an attorney, other than a writing described in subdivision (a), is not
    discoverable unless the court determines that denial of discovery will unfairly prejudice
    the party seeking discovery in preparing that party‟s claim or defense or will result in an
    injustice.” As noted (see ante, at pp. 1, 5), section 2018.030, subdivision (a) provides
    absolute protection for certain work product, while subdivision (b) provides qualified
    protection for all other work product.
    B.
    In light of the origins and development of the work product privilege in California,
    we conclude that witness statements obtained as a result of an interview conducted by an
    attorney, or by an attorney‟s agent at the attorney‟s behest, constitute work product
    protected by section 2018.030.
    As mentioned, the Legislature in enacting section 2018.030 did not define “work
    product” and instead left the term open to judicial interpretation. From the very inception
    12
    of judicial recognition of the concept, attorney work product has been understood to
    include witness statements obtained through an interview conducted by an attorney. The
    high court in Hickman specifically referred to “statements” and “interviews” in its
    nonexclusive enumeration of items comprising the “ „work product of [a] lawyer.‟ ”
    (Hickman, 
    supra,
     329 U.S. at p. 511.) And Hickman held that the district court in that
    case improperly ordered the defendant‟s attorney “to produce all written statements of
    witnesses” and other items that the attorney had obtained through his own interviews.
    (Id. at p. 509, italics added; see id. at p. 508 [plaintiff sought “discovery as of right of oral
    and written statements of witnesses whose identity is well known and whose availability
    to [plaintiff] appears unimpaired” (italics added)].)
    The closest we have come to examining the applicability of section 2018.030 to
    witness statements is our decision in Rico v. Mitsubishi Motors Corp. (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 807
     (Rico). There, we held that work product “protection extends to an attorney‟s written
    notes about a witness‟s statements” and that “[w]hen a witness‟s statement and the
    attorney‟s impressions are inextricably intertwined,” the entire document receives
    absolute protection. (Id. at p. 814.) The question in Rico was not whether a witness‟s
    statement is itself protected work product, and the document at issue was not “a verbatim
    record of the [witnesses‟] statements” but rather a summary prepared at the request of the
    defendant‟s attorney. (Id. at p. 815.) Rico thus did not speak to the issue now before us.
    Nevertheless, in finding the document protected, Rico‟s observation that “ „its very
    existence is owed to the lawyer‟s thought process‟ ” (Rico, 
    supra,
     42 Cal.4th at p. 815,
    quoting trial court) provides a useful touchstone for our present inquiry. There is no
    dispute that a statement independently prepared by a witness does not become protected
    work product simply upon its transmission to an attorney. (See Wellpoint Health
    Networks, Inc. v. Superior Court (1997) 
    59 Cal.App.4th 110
    , 119; Nacht & Lewis, supra,
    47 Cal.App.4th at p. 218.) The issue here is what protection, if any, should be afforded
    where the witness‟s statement has been obtained through an attorney-directed interview.
    13
    “In such situations,” the Court of Appeal correctly observed, “it can surely be said that
    the witness statement is in part the product of the attorney‟s work.” The witness
    statement would not exist but for the attorney‟s initiative, decision, and effort to obtain it.
    This essential fact informs our analysis of whether absolute or qualified work product
    privilege applies to such witness statements.
    Absolute privilege. It is not difficult to imagine that a recorded witness interview
    may, in some instances, reveal the “impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal research
    and or theories” of the attorney and thus be entitled to absolute protection. (§ 2018.030,
    subd. (a).) This may occur not only when a witness‟s statements are “inextricably
    intertwined” with explicit comments or notes by the attorney stating his or her
    impressions of the witness, the witness‟s statements, or other issues in the case. (Rico,
    
    supra,
     42 Cal.4th at p. 814.) It also may occur when the questions that the attorney has
    chosen to ask (or not ask) provide a window into the attorney‟s theory of the case or the
    attorney‟s evaluation of what issues are most important. Lines of inquiry that an attorney
    chooses to pursue through follow-up questions may be especially revealing. In such
    situations, redaction of the attorney‟s questions may sometimes be appropriate and
    sufficient to protect privileged material. At other times, however, it may not do to simply
    redact the questions from the record, as the witness‟s statements will reveal what
    questions were asked. Moreover, in some cases, the very fact that the attorney has
    chosen to interview a particular witness may disclose important tactical or evaluative
    information, perhaps especially so in cases involving a multitude of witnesses. (See post,
    at p. 22.) These are circumstances where absolute work product protection may apply.
    We cannot say, however, that witness statements procured by an attorney will
    always reveal the attorney‟s thought process. The Court of Appeal below posited a
    scenario in which an attorney collects statements from witnesses to an accident with no
    particular foresight, strategy, selectivity, or planning: “What, for example, of the
    situation in which an attorney sends an investigator to interview all witnesses listed in a
    14
    police report, and the investigator asks few if any questions while taking the witnesses‟
    statements? Clearly, these statements would reveal nothing significant about the
    attorney‟s impressions, conclusions, or opinions about the case.” For this reason (and
    such scenarios do not seem uncommon), we hold that witness statements procured by an
    attorney are not automatically entitled as a matter of law to absolute work product
    protection. Instead, the applicability of absolute protection must be determined case by
    case. An attorney resisting discovery of a witness statement based on absolute privilege
    must make a preliminary or foundational showing that disclosure would reveal his or her
    “impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal research or theories.” (§ 2018.030,
    subd. (a).) Upon an adequate showing, the trial court should then determine, by making
    an in camera inspection if necessary, whether absolute work product protection applies to
    some or all of the material.
    Qualified privilege. Although witness statements obtained through an attorney-
    directed interview may or may not reveal the attorney‟s thought process, we believe such
    statements necessarily implicate two other interests that the Legislature sought to protect
    in enacting the work product privilege. Based on these interests, we conclude that
    witness statements procured by an attorney are entitled as a matter of law to at least
    qualified work product protection under section 2018.030, subdivision (b).
    First, when an attorney obtains through discovery a witness statement obtained by
    opposing counsel through his or her own initiative, such discovery undermines the
    Legislature‟s policy to “[p]revent attorneys from taking undue advantage of their
    adversary‟s industry and efforts.” (§ 2018.020, subd. (b).) Even when an attorney
    exercises no selectivity in determining which witnesses to interview, and even when the
    attorney simply records each witness‟s answer to a single question (“What happened?”),
    the attorney has expended time and effort in identifying and locating each witness,
    securing the witness‟s willingness to talk, listening to what the witness said, and
    preserving the witness‟s statement for possible future use. An attorney who seeks to
    15
    discover what a witness knows is not without recourse. The attorney is free to interview
    the witness for himself or herself to find out what information the witness has that is
    relevant to the litigation. As Justice Jackson said in Hickman, it may be that the rules of
    discovery “were to do away with the old situation where a law suit developed into „a
    battle of wits between counsel.‟ But a common law trial is and always should be an
    adversary proceeding. Discovery was hardly intended to enable a learned profession to
    perform its functions either without wits or on wits borrowed from the adversary.”
    (Hickman, supra, 329 U.S. at p. 516 (conc. opn. of Jackson, J.).) Absent a showing that a
    witness is no longer available or accessible, or some other showing of unfair prejudice or
    injustice (§ 2018.030, subd. (b)), the Legislature‟s declared policy is to prevent an
    attorney from free-riding on the industry and efforts of opposing counsel (§ 2018.020,
    subd. (b)).
    Second, a default rule authorizing discovery of witness statements procured by an
    attorney would impede the Legislature‟s intent “to encourage [attorneys] to prepare their
    cases thoroughly and to investigate not only the favorable but the unfavorable aspects of
    those cases.” (§ 2018.020, subd. (a).) If attorneys must worry about discovery whenever
    they take a statement from a witness, it is reasonably foreseeable that fewer witness
    statements will be recorded and that adverse information will not be memorialized. As
    Justice Kane observed below, without work product protection, “no meaningful privacy
    exists within which an attorney may have sufficient confidence to thoroughly investigate
    and record potentially unfavorable matters.” This result would derogate not only from an
    attorney‟s duty and prerogative to investigate matters thoroughly, but also from the truth-
    seeking values that the rules of discovery are intended to promote. Accordingly, we hold
    that a witness statement obtained through an attorney-directed interview is, as a matter of
    law, entitled to at least qualified work product protection.
    16
    C.
    The protection afforded by section 2018.030, subdivision (b) to the witness
    statements in this case is essentially the same protection that the high court afforded to
    the witness statements in Hickman. There, the court held the statements protected and
    placed the burden on the party seeking discovery “to establish adequate reasons to justify
    production,” such as unavailability or inaccessibility of the witnesses. (Hickman, supra,
    329 U.S. at p. 512.) Qualified protection of this sort, the court said, is necessary if a
    lawyer is to discharge his duty “to work for the advancement of justice while faithfully
    protecting the rightful interests of his clients.” (Id. at p. 510.)
    In reaching a contrary conclusion, the Court of Appeal below relied primarily on
    Greyhound‟s conclusion that witness statements are not protected by the work product
    privilege. Such reliance on Greyhound is misplaced. As previously discussed (see ante,
    at pp. 10-12), the Legislature‟s 1963 amendments to the Discovery Act were intended as
    a corrective to Greyhound. (1962 Ann. Rep., supra, 37 State Bar J. at p. 588 [1963
    amendments “will afford substantially more protection to „work product‟ than”
    Greyhound]; Dowden, supra, 73 Cal.App.4th at p. 132.) Although the Court of Appeal
    sought to “balance” the legislatively declared policies in section 2018.020 with the
    purposes underlying the Discovery Act as a whole (e.g., truth seeking, efficiency,
    safeguarding against surprise), the 1963 amendments already represent the Legislature‟s
    considered judgment on how best to balance the competing interests. (1962 Ann. Rep.,
    supra, 37 State Bar J. at p. 586.)
    Moreover, Greyhound itself is inapt authority for denying work product protection
    in the present case. In Greyhound, the witness statements at issue were made to
    employees of the defendant, not to defendant‟s counsel or to agents of defendant‟s
    counsel. (Greyhound, supra, 56 Cal.2d at p. 386.) The statements were only later
    transmitted to defendant‟s attorney. (Id. at p. 387.) On those facts, it is unsurprising that
    Greyhound said the plaintiff had “failed to indicate that the reasons underlying [the work
    17
    product] doctrine would be applicable to this proceeding.” (Id. at p. 401; see ibid. [“Facts
    which give rise to the work product privilege in other jurisdictions may, in some
    circumstances, indicate an abusive attempt to „ride free‟ on the opponent‟s industry.
    Such facts are not even hinted at herein . . . .”].) Greyhound did not involve a witness
    statement procured by an attorney through his or her own initiative.
    The Court of Appeal also cited several cases suggesting that witness statements
    made to an attorney do not constitute work product. (E.g., Fellows, supra, 108
    Cal.App.3d at p. 69; People v. Williams (1979) 
    93 Cal.App.3d 40
    , 63-64; Rodriguez,
    supra, 87 Cal.App.3d at p. 647; Kadelbach v. Amaral (1973) 
    31 Cal.App.3d 814
    , 822.)
    But those cases address the issue in a conclusory manner without discussing the
    legislatively declared policy or the history of the work product privilege.
    In Kadelbach v. Amaral, supra, 31 Cal.App.3d at page 822, the court stated simply
    that “the view [that witness statements made to attorneys constitute work product] is not
    supported by the authorities.” It cited Mack, supra, 259 Cal.App.2d at page 10 for this
    proposition. However, Mack did not involve an attorney‟s interview of a witness, nor did
    it purport to address whether such material constituted work product. In Rodriguez,
    supra, 87 Cal.App.3d at page 647, the court said that the portion of an attorney‟s notes
    that recorded a witness‟s statements “[could] not be protected by the attorney‟s work-
    product privilege, since recorded or written statements of a prospective witness are
    considered material of a nonderivative or noninterpretative nature.” For that proposition,
    Rodriguez cited People v. Boehm (1969) 
    270 Cal.App.2d 13
    . But the court in Boehm
    merely recounted, without indicating approval, that the trial court had permitted
    discovery of witness statements. (Id. at p. 21.) Thus, Boehm did not suggest, much less
    hold, that witness statements do not constitute work product. An erroneous citation to
    Boehm for that proposition appears not only in Rodriguez but also in Jefferson, California
    Evidence Benchbook (1972) Meaning of “Work Product” for Attorney‟s Work-Product
    Privilege, section 41.2, pages 710 to 711, which in turn was cited by two other cases on
    18
    which the Court of Appeal relied. (See Fellows, supra, 108 Cal.App.3d at p. 69; People
    v. Williams, supra, 93 Cal.App.3d at pp. 63-64.)
    Underlying these assertions that witness statements do not constitute work
    product is the notion that such writings are nonderivative or noninterpretative material
    that is wholly evidentiary in nature. (Fellows, supra, 108 Cal.App.3d at p. 69; People v.
    Williams, supra, 93 Cal.App.3d at pp. 63-64; Rodriguez, supra, 87 Cal.App.3d at p. 647.)
    However, as all three justices of the Court of Appeal observed below, a witness statement
    taken by an attorney possesses both derivative characteristics (i.e., an attorney must put
    time and effort, and possibly thought and planning, into conducting the interview) and
    non-derivative characteristics (i.e., the statement may contain information regarding
    events provable at trial or the identity or location of physical evidence, or it may be
    useful for impeachment or refreshing the witness‟s recollection).
    While acknowledging that “an attorney could reveal his or her thoughts about a
    case by the way in which the attorney conducts a witness interview,” the Court of Appeal
    concluded that “competent counsel will be able to tailor their interviews so as to avoid
    the problem should they choose to do so.” However, as discussed above, a core purpose
    of the work product privilege is “to encourage [attorneys] to prepare their cases
    thoroughly and to investigate not only the favorable but the unfavorable aspects of those
    cases.” (§ 2018.020, subd. (a).) Placing the burden on attorneys to tailor witness
    interviews so as to avoid unwanted discovery is precisely what Hickman warned against
    when it said: “Were such materials open to opposing counsel on mere demand, much of
    what is now put down in writing would remain unwritten. . . . Inefficiency, unfairness
    and sharp practices would inevitably develop in the giving of legal advice and in the
    preparation of cases for trial. The effect on the legal profession would be demoralizing.
    And the interests of the clients and the cause of justice would be poorly served.”
    (Hickman, 
    supra,
     329 U.S at p. 511.)
    19
    In sum, we disapprove Fellows v. Superior Court, supra, 
    108 Cal.App.3d 55
    ,
    People v. Williams, supra, 
    93 Cal.App.3d 40
    , Rodriguez v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
    
    supra,
     
    87 Cal.App.3d 626
    , and Kadelbach v. Amaral, supra, 
    31 Cal.App.3d 814
     to the
    extent they suggest that a witness statement taken by an attorney does not, as a matter of
    law, constitute work product. In addition, Greyhound, supra, 
    56 Cal.2d 355
    , which was
    decided before the Legislature codified the work product privilege, should not be read as
    supporting such a conclusion. At the same time, we reject the dicta in Nacht & Lewis,
    supra, 47 Cal.App.4th at page 217 that said “recorded statements taken by defendants‟
    counsel would be protected by the absolute work product privilege because they would
    reveal counsel‟s „impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal research or theories‟ . . . .
    [Citation.]” Instead, we hold that a witness statement obtained through an attorney-
    directed interview is entitled as a matter of law to at least qualified work product
    protection. A party seeking disclosure has the burden of establishing that denial of
    disclosure will unfairly prejudice the party in preparing its claim or defense or will result
    in an injustice. (§ 2018.030, subd. (b).) If the party resisting discovery alleges that a
    witness statement, or portion thereof, is absolutely protected because it “reflects an
    attorney‟s impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal research or theories” (§ 2018.030,
    subd. (a)), that party must make a preliminary or foundational showing in support of its
    claim. The trial court should then make an in camera inspection to determine whether
    absolute work product protection applies to some or all of the material.
    In the present case, we remand the matter for consideration of whether absolute
    privilege applies to all or part of the recorded witness interviews. If any or all of the
    interviews are not absolutely protected, the trial court should consider whether plaintiff
    can make a sufficient showing of unfair prejudice or injustice under section 2018.030,
    subdivision (b) to permit discovery. We do not disturb the trial court‟s conclusion that
    the state waived the work product privilege as to the recording used to examine a witness
    during the January 27, 2009 deposition.
    20
    D.
    In addition to the witness statements, plaintiff sought to compel defendant to
    answer form interrogatory No. 12.3, which asked: “Have YOU OR ANYONE ACTING
    ON YOUR BEHALF obtained a written or recorded statement from any individual
    concerning the INCIDENT?” For any such statement, the interrogatory requested
    (among other things) the name, address, and telephone number of the witness and the
    date the statement was obtained.
    The Court of Appeal reasoned that, because the recorded witness statements
    themselves were not entitled to work product protection, defendant could not refuse to
    answer form interrogatory No. 12.3. In so concluding, the majority disagreed with Nacht
    & Lewis, which held that the information sought by form interrogatory No. 12.3 is
    entitled as a matter of law to qualified work product protection to the extent it consists of
    recorded statements taken by an attorney. (Nacht & Lewis, supra, 47 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 217.) Justice Kane, in his separate opinion below, identified a third approach. He
    would have adopted a default rule requiring parties to respond to form interrogatory No.
    12.3, while permitting parties to make a showing that the responsive material is entitled
    to qualified or absolute protection. As explained below, the approach suggested by
    Justice Kane is most consistent with the policies underlying the work product privilege.
    At the outset, we note that form interrogatory No. 12.3 — in asking whether a
    party or its agent has “obtained” a written or recorded witness statement — appears to
    include within its compass any statement independently prepared by a witness and
    subsequently obtained by an attorney. Such statements “neither reflect an attorney‟s
    evaluation of the case nor constitute derivative material, and therefore are neither
    absolute nor qualified work product.” (Nacht & Lewis, supra, 47 Cal.App.4th at p. 218.)
    It follows that “a list of potential witnesses who turned over to counsel their
    independently prepared statements would have no tendency to reveal counsel‟s
    21
    evaluation of the case” (id. at pp. 217-218), and compelled disclosure of such a list
    pursuant to form interrogatory No. 12.3 would invade no work product privilege.
    The issue here is whether disclosure of a list of witnesses from whom an attorney
    took recorded statements at his or her own initiative implicates the work product
    privilege. Parties in litigation typically know the full universe of witnesses, not least
    because form interrogatory No. 12.1 requires parties to provide a list of all known
    witnesses. Thus, form interrogatory No. 12.3 specifically aims to reveal which witnesses
    an attorney for one party saw fit to ask for a recorded statement.
    As discussed above (see ante, at p. 14), disclosing a list of witnesses from whom
    an attorney has taken recorded statements may, in some instances, reveal the attorney‟s
    impressions of the case. Take, for example, a bus accident involving 50 surviving
    passengers and an allegation that the driver fell asleep at the wheel. If an attorney for one
    of the passengers took recorded statements from only 10 individuals, disclosure of the list
    may well indicate the attorney‟s evaluation or conclusion as to which witnesses were in
    the best position to see the cause of the accident. (See Hickman, 
    supra,
     329 U.S. at
    p. 511 [“Proper preparation of a client‟s case demands that [the attorney] . . . sift what he
    considers to be the relevant from the irrelevant facts . . . .”].) Such information may be
    entitled to absolute privilege under section 2018.030, subdivision (a). If absolute
    privilege were inapplicable, such a list may still be entitled to qualified privilege under
    section 2018.030, subdivision (b) to the extent it reflects the attorney‟s industry and effort
    in selecting which witnesses to ask for a recorded statement. Perhaps the attorney
    devoted significant effort to tracking down bus tickets and passenger logs in order to
    determine which passengers sat in which seats, and then decided to take recorded
    statements from the 10 passengers closest to the driver. Even without obtaining the
    witness statements themselves, the bus company‟s lawyer would gain valuable
    information by free-riding on the attorney‟s identification of the most salient witnesses.
    22
    Such undue advantage-taking is precisely what the Legislature intended the work product
    privilege to prevent. (§ 2018.020, subd. (b).)
    At the same time, however, we cannot say that it will always or even often be the
    case that a witness list responsive to form interrogatory No. 12.3 reflects counsel‟s
    premeditated and carefully considered selectivity as in the scenario above. As Justice
    Kane posited in his separate opinion below: “Take, for example, a typical automobile
    accident. The police report may disclose the existence of several witnesses. If the
    attorney for one party obtains witness statements from one or more of those individuals
    whom everyone in the case knows are percipient witnesses, that fact does not show
    anything definite about the attorney‟s evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses of the
    case, attorney strategy or tactics, or even the relative strength of any particular
    witness. . . . Indeed, a particular witness statement might be in an attorney‟s file for a
    host of reasons, including that the person happened to be available when the attorney sent
    out an investigator.” Although the witness statements themselves reflect the attorney‟s
    time and effort in taking the statements and are therefore qualified work product (see
    ante, at p. 16), disclosing the list of such witnesses in Justice Kane‟s scenario does not
    implicate the problem of one attorney free-riding on the work of another, as no
    significant work or selectivity went into creating the list.
    The instant case presents another scenario in which the work product privilege
    may be inapplicable. Where it appears that an attorney has sought to take recorded
    statements from all or almost all of the known witnesses to the incident, compelling a
    response to form interrogatory No. 12.3 is unlikely to violate the work product privilege.
    As Justice Kane observed: “In our case, DWR‟s attorney sent an investigator to
    interview the eyewitnesses to the drowning. There were six eyewitnesses, although it
    appears only five were known at the time the statements were sought. DWR‟s
    investigator succeeded in interviewing four eyewitnesses and generated four recorded
    statements. These facts, had they been disclosed in a response to form interrogatory No.
    23
    12.3, would have revealed nothing of consequence regarding DWR‟s evaluation of the
    case, one way or the other.” Nor would it have implicated any time or effort expended by
    DWR‟s attorney in selecting the witnesses to interview, as it does not appear that any
    meaningful selection occurred.
    Because it is not evident that form interrogatory No. 12.3 implicates the policies
    underlying the work product privilege in all or even most cases, we hold that information
    responsive to form interrogatory No. 12.3 is not automatically entitled as a matter of law
    to absolute or qualified work product privilege. Instead, the interrogatory usually must
    be answered. However, an objecting party may be entitled to protection if it can make a
    preliminary or foundational showing that answering the interrogatory would reveal the
    attorney‟s tactics, impressions, or evaluation of the case, or would result in opposing
    counsel taking undue advantage of the attorney‟s industry or efforts. Upon such a
    showing, the trial court should then determine, by making an in camera inspection if
    necessary, whether absolute or qualified work product protection applies to the material
    in dispute. Of course, a trial court may also have to consider non-party witnesses‟
    privacy concerns. (See Weil & Brown, Cal. Practice Guide: Civil Procedure Before Trial
    (The Rutter Group 2011) ¶¶ 8:298 to 8:299.15, pp. 8C-88 to 8C-89.)
    CONCLUSION
    We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal and remand the matter for further
    proceedings, consistent with our opinion, to determine whether the disputed materials
    should be produced.
    LIU, J.
    WE CONCUR: CANTIL-SAKAUYE, C. J.
    KENNARD, J.
    BAXTER, J.
    WERDEGAR, J.
    CHIN, J.
    CORRIGAN, J.
    24
    See next page for addresses and telephone numbers for counsel who argued in Supreme Court.
    Name of Opinion Coito v. Superior Court
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Unpublished Opinion
    Original Appeal
    Original Proceeding
    Review Granted XXX 
    182 Cal.App.4th 758
    Rehearing Granted
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Opinion No. S181712
    Date Filed: June 25, 2012
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Court: Superior
    County: Stanislaus
    Judge: William A. Mayhew
    __________________________________________________________________________________
    Counsel:
    Law Offices of Carcione, Cattermole, Dolinksi, Okimoto, Stucky, Ukshini, Markowitz & Carcione, Joseph W.
    Carcione, Jr., Gary W. Dolinski and Neal A. Markowitz for Petitioner.
    Rose, Klein & Marias and David A. Rosen for Consumer Attorneys of California as Amicus Curiae on behalf of
    Petitioner.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Edmund G. Brown, Jr., and Kamala D. Harris, Attorneys General, David S. Chaney, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Manuel M. Medeiros, State Solicitor General, Gordon Burns, Deputy State Solicitor General, James M.
    Schiavenza, Assistant Attorney General, Steven M. Gevercer and Peter A. Meshot, Deputy Attorneys General, for
    Real Party in Interest.
    O‟Melveney & Myers, Paul Salvaty and Michael Reynolds for Association of Southern California Defense Counsel
    as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Real Party in Interest.
    Dennis J. Herrera, City Attorney, (San Francisco) and Danny Chou, Chief of Complex and Special Ligation, for
    League of California Cities and California State Association of Counties as Amici Curiae on behalf of Real Party in
    Interest.
    Counsel who argued in Supreme Court (not intended for publication with opinion):
    Gary W. Dolinski
    Law Offices of Carcione, Cattermole, Dolinksi, Okimoto, Stucky, Ukshini, Markowitz & Carcione
    601 Brewster Avenue, Second Floor
    Redwood City, CA 94064
    (650) 367-6811
    Steven M. Gevercer
    Deputy Attorney General
    1300 I Street, Suite 125
    Sacramento, CA 94244-2550
    (916) 322-7487
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S181712

Citation Numbers: 54 Cal. 4th 480

Judges: Liu

Filed Date: 6/25/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023