GERALD J. PAPPERT, District Judge.
Plaintiffs and Lincoln National Life Insurance Company asked the Special Master to review in camera certain documents that Lincoln claimed were privileged. The Special Master issued an Opinion ruling that all or portions of twenty-one documents were not privileged and thus must be disclosed to the Plaintiffs. Lincoln now objects to that Opinion as it relates to ten documents. The Court overrules Lincoln's Objections and adopts the Special Master's Opinion.
Before this litigation arose, Lincoln, through its outside counsel (Greenberg Traurig, LLP) retained two consulting firms to help update its mortality assumptions and set new cost of insurance (COI) rates. See (Joint Statement of Discovery Disputes Ex. 2, at ¶¶ 3-5, ECF No. 62-12) (Smith Decl.).
During discovery, Lincoln produced two reports the consultants had created but refused to turn over related documents that it claimed were privileged. See (Joint Statement of Discovery Disputes 1-2, 5-7, ECF No. 62). According to the Plaintiffs, the consultants' reports were privileged, so by producing the reports Lincoln had waived any claim of privilege covering documents of the same subject matter. See (id. at 1-5). Lincoln, however, argued that the reports were not privileged, meaning there had been no waiver. See (id. at 7-9).
The Special Master deferred ruling on whether the reports themselves were privileged. Instead, he concluded that Plaintiffs may be entitled to some of the underlying documents under both parties' theories. He then ordered the parties to work together to limit the disputed documents and then submit for in camera review only those documents about which they could not agree. See (ECF No. 77).
After the parties submitted documents for review, the Special Master concluded that twenty-one documents were not privileged and must be disclosed to the Plaintiffs. See (Special Master Op. 8-12, ECF No. 111). In ruling on ten of those twenty-one documents, the Special Master relied on BouSamra v. Excela Health, 210 A.3d 967 (Pa. 2019). See (id. at 10-11). He read that case as "declin[ing] to expand the attorney-client privilege to encompass outside consultants unless the consultants' `presence was either indispensable to the lawyer giving legal advice or facilitated the lawyer's ability to give legal advice to the client.'" (Id. at 10) (quoting BouSamra, 210 A.3d at 985). Noting that Lincoln had "disclaimed that the consultants' services were necessary for the provision of legal advice," the Special Master concluded that the ten documents were not privileged. (Id.)
Lincoln objects to the Special Master's Opinion regarding those ten documents.
The Court reviews the Special Master's findings of fact and conclusions of law de novo. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 53(f)(3), (4). Although some courts treat a Special Master's discovery recommendations as procedural matters, which are reviewed for abuse of discretion, see, e.g., Ramos v. Banner Health, 2018 WL 4700707, at *2 (D. Colo. Aug. 8, 2018) (unpublished), other courts conduct de novo review for many discovery issues, see, e.g., In re Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) Antitrust Litig., 301 F.R.D. 449 (N.D. Cal. 2014). Given the nature of the discovery disputes here, the Court concludes that de novo review is appropriate. See Callwave Commc'ns LLC v. AT&T Mobility LLC, No. CV 12-1701-RGA, 2016 WL 3450736, at *1 (D. Del. June 16, 2016) (unpublished) (reviewing de novo objections relating to attorney-client privilege).
Pennsylvania law prohibits lawyers from revealing confidential communications made by a client, unless the client waives the privilege. Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 5928. A party invoking attorney-client privilege must prove that: (1) the claimed "holder of the privilege is or sought to become a client"; (2) the communication was made to a lawyer or his subordinate; (3) "the communication relates to a fact of which the attorney was informed by his client, without the presence of strangers," to get a legal opinion, "legal services or assistance in a legal matter"; and (4) "the privilege has been claimed and is not waived." BouSamra, 210 A.3d at 983 (quotation and alterations in original omitted).
For corporations, "the attorney-client privilege `extends to communications between its attorney and agents or employees authorized to act on the corporation's behalf.'" Id. (quotation omitted). But that privilege ordinarily does not attach to communications made in the presence of a third party. See id. 984. And disclosing an originally privileged communication to a third party waives the privilege. See id. at 985. An exception exists for third parties whose "presence was either indispensable to the lawyer giving legal advice or facilitated the lawyer's ability to give legal advice to the client." Id. But evidentiary privileges—such as the attorney-client privilege—are "highly disfavored in Pennsylvania," so "the scope of such [third-party] situations must remain narrowly tailored." Id. at 986 n.15.
The Special Master correctly ruled that the ten documents here are not privileged. For the communications between Lincoln's in-house counsel and Lincoln employees, Lincoln fails to show that these intra-company communications were made to get a legal opinion, "legal services or assistance in a legal matter." Id. at 983. Regarding the communications between Lincoln's in-house counsel and the consultants, Lincoln cannot prove that the consultants' "presence was either indispensable to the lawyer giving legal advice or facilitated the lawyer's ability to give legal advice to the client." Id. at 985. To the contrary, Lincoln has claimed that it used the consultants' work "to adjust COI rates—an ordinary course business activity." (Joint Statement of Discovery Disputes 9.) Nothing in the ten documents suggests that the relevant communications involved anything other than that ordinary business activity or that the consultants in any way facilitated in-house counsel's legal advice to Lincoln.
Lincoln's objections miss the point. Although BouSamra did not reject the functional-equivalent doctrine, it clarified that the attorney-client privilege attaches to communications to third parties only if "the third-party's presence was either indispensable to the lawyer giving legal advice or facilitated the lawyer's ability to give legal advice to the client." BouSamra, 210 at 985. The consultants do not fit within that narrow exception. Lincoln's straw-man arguments on the functional-equivalent doctrine's formal status in Pennsylvania cannot distract from that fact. In the end, Lincoln asks the Court to ignore the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's guidance and expand a "highly disfavored" evidentiary privilege—all so Lincoln can withhold documents relating to reports that Lincoln itself put at issue. Id. at 986 n.15. The Court declines to do so.
An appropriate order follows.