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November 27, 2007

Comments

steve lubet

What is the Monroe Freedman view on this trilemma variation?

Monroe Freedman

I stated it in class this evening, and will post it after others have expressed views.

james Fischer

There is an argument that lengthy terms of imprisonment, particularly for an innocent individual, do constitute great bodily injury. But beyond that point is the larger issue whether the professional code should prohibit disclosure in these circumstances. Client confidentiality is an important professional ideal, but ideals can be loved too much. Voltaire put it nicely" The best is the enemy of the good. An unrelenting adherence to client confidentiality can lead to great injustice. Here the client is deceased, but an arguably innocent man remains incarcerated for a crime he didn't commit. While the duty extends beyond the termination of the lawyer-client relationship and the privilege extends in most jurisdictions beyond the death of the client, is this really an appropriate case to emphasize the ideal over the real? Hughes may have violated the technical letter of the law. I would hope the bar would recognize the justness of Hughes's effort to free an innocent man and decline to prosecute.

Andrew Perlman

Without endorsing it, I'll note a rather unusual provision in Massachusetts. Rule 1.6(b)(1) allows for the disclosure of confidential information in order "to prevent the wrongful execution or incarceration of another." The unique (?) provision served as fodder for a great episode of The Practice a few years back.

John Steele

This matter might replace Spaulding v. Zimmerman. True, in Spaulding v. Zimmerman it was "death vs. confidentiality," but under most states' confidentiality rules, under (all?) states' discovery rules, and (I am told) under all states' medical practice rules, the hidden condition in Spaulding would today be revealed. But this fact pattern remains quite plausible and modern.

David McGowan

Andy--Why the hesitance to endorse such a sensible position? I am a weak-kneed utilitarian, and the utilitarian calculus for this problem is easy: The deceased client has no reputational interest in a false impression of innocence (cf the tort rule that one cannot defame the innocent), so the cost there is likely to be trivial, while the cost to the wrongly imprisoned/convicted is extremely high. The notional cost to the state of getting the wrong person (thus possibly leaving a dangerous person at large, though apparently not in this case) is high, too. Bentham had the privilege calculus pretty much right, but even if one disagrees with his view this should be an easy case for disclosure, and thus for disclosure without discipline.

DM

David McGowan

Andy--Why the hesitance to endorse such a sensible position? I am a weak-kneed utilitarian, and the utilitarian calculus for this problem is easy: The deceased client has no reputational interest in a false impression of innocence (cf the tort rule that one cannot defame the deceased), so the cost there is likely to be trivial, while the cost to the wrongly imprisoned/convicted is extremely high. The notional cost to the state of getting the wrong person (thus possibly leaving a dangerous person at large, though apparently not in this case) is high, too. Bentham had the privilege calculus pretty much right in general, but even if one disagrees with his general view this should be an easy case for disclosure, and thus for disclosure without discipline.

DM

Andrew Perlman

David,

I agree with you in theory (I tend towards utilitarianism myself), but the Massachusetts provision is not limited to the situation where a client is deceased. The Massachusetts rule would allow me to rat out my living client in order to spring a non-client from prison. Perhaps I should have the discretion to do so, but the calculus is not entirely clear to me.

Another problem is determining what level of knowledge is necessary before revealing this sort of information. Does it have to be beyond a reasonable doubt? More likely than not? The Massachusetts rule is silent in this regard, making it possible for a lawyer to disclose a client's confidences on the mere suspicion that it will help lead to the release of an innocent person.

If pressed, I'd probably say that the Massachusetts provision is a good idea. The reality is that very, very few criminal defense lawyers will exercise their discretion under this rule, so it would likely only come up in circumstances that truly merit disclosure. Indeed, I don't know of a single reported case in Massachusetts where this Rule was cited as authority for such a disclosure.

John Steele

David,

I not necessarily disagreeing with you, but in that Berlin case (SCOTUS re the Vince Foster suicide), wasn't there a notion that once people understand that the lawyer's lips are loosed upon death, there will be less disclosure to lawyers? In other words, there is still a utilitarian objection to revealing. (I don't know how to begin to measure it. It does seem very small to me.)

David McGowan

I think the utilitarian calculus favors disclosure with the living client as well, both beause the true malefactor deserves punishment and because the falsely accused does not. Reputational constaints on the lawyer would doubtless be sufficient to reign in any excessive reporting risk. (Anyone know of any major whistleblowing under the revised 1.6/1.13, for example?) Deterrence, and thus social welfare, favors accurate punishment.

I am skeptical about the risk that clients will clam up without the privilege. It does lower the risk to them of disclosure, but you could deal with much of that by requiring a showing of need, as in work product. And the risk that the client will suffer if the lawyer is blindsided would compel a lot of disclosure without the privilege. Note that disclosure by entity constituents is common even though they have no guarantee of confidentiality, particularly if the entity wants to hang them out to dry.

DM

Bob Condlin

Andy, wasn't there a Charles Stuart case in Boston about 15 years ago that involved a strikingly similar set of considerations (a dead client's interest in the preservation of confidences versus the law enforcement interest in solving a murder)? Though, as I recall, in that case the lawyer did not want to disclose the information and a prosecutor sought to force him to testify before a grand jury. How did it come out?

I suppose it's nice to have another real life example of the "John Wilkes Booth's lawyer" problem, though if Frank Armani's experience is a guide, Hughes will have to wait another 25 years for his award from the ABA and survive a lot of trauma in the near future. I hope he's up to it.

Andrew Perlman

Bob,

Nice call. That infamous case did raise some similar issues. See here: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE6DC133BF936A35757C0A966958260

As far as I know, though, nobody raised the unusual version of 1.6. That makes sense for two reasons. First, Massachusetts did not adopt the Model Rules until several years later, and I don't know if the unusual exception that exists now existed back then.

Second, the lawyer in that case (as you note) did not want to reveal the information, so the case really only involved the issue of whether the lawyer could be compelled to testify about a conversation that he had had with his now deceased client. To put it another way, the Stuart case involved whether the attorney-client privilege survives death, not (as in the more recent case) whether the duty of confidentiality survives death. It's a subtle difference, but a notable one.

Monroe Freedman

When analyzing issues of confidentiality, we ordinarily focus on the language of the applicable rule that effectively defines confidential information. In the Model Rules, that language is “information relating to the representation of a client” (MR 1.6). In the Model Code, it included “information gained in the professional relationship” (DR 4-101). In the 1908 Canons, the reference was simply to a duty to “preserve his client’s confidences” (Canon 37).

However, there is a qualification on the protection of confidentiality which is not ordinarily material to analysis. That is, client information is not protected by a duty of confidentiality if divulging the information would not harm or embarrass the client in any significant way.

In the early Canons, for example, the specific proscription is against disclosing information “to the disadvantage of his client” (Canon 37). Similarly, in the Model Code, the information protected is limited (although very broadly) to that which the client asks to be kept confidential or to that which “would be embarrassing or would be likely to be detrimental to the client” if divulged (DR 4-101). Also, EC 4-7, in discussing cases of discretion to disclose, refers to “disclosure adverse to the client’s interest” as the ultimate consideration.

The text of MR 1.6 does not expressly include reference to information that is not disadvantageous, embarrassing, or detrimental to the client. However, it is reasonable to read the rule to include that century-old, common-sense aspect of confidentiality. Moreover, comments to other provisions of the Model Rules expressly recognize that MR 1.6 includes the qualification that there is no proscription against revealing client information if disclosure does not harm the client in any significant way.

For example, citing MR 1.6 and other rules, Comment 5 to MR 1.8 says that “[u]se of information relating to the representation to the disadvantage of the client violates the lawyer’s duty of loyalty.” The comment adds that the rule prohibits “disadvantageous use of client information.”

Also citing MR 1.6, Comment 5 to MR 2.3 distinguishes a case in which it is “reasonably likely that [disclosing the information] will affect the client’s interests materially and adversely” from a case in which disclosure “poses no significant risk to the client.”

In the case we’re discussing, therefore, I would say that the lawyer is permitted to disclose the exculpatory information about the client’s co-defendant after the client has died. Prior to that time, it is conceivable that the client could be disadvantaged by disclosure, e.g., by a change in the parole rules or the possibility of release as part of an effort to reduce the prison population. In this case, however, once the client is dead, there is not likely even to be embarrassment to his survivors (which is a legitimate concern of clients). The client has been convicted and has served 16 years of his sentence. His admission that he did not have an accomplice does not appear to pose a significant risk of affecting his interests materially and adversely. However, if he has survivors, and if I had any reason to believe that they continue to believe him to be innocent, I would not reveal the information.

steve lubet

DR 4-101(A) is disjunctive, protecting information that is "embarrassing or detrimental" *or* that the client "has requested be held inviolate." The latter presumably would apply even to non-embarrssing and non-detrimental information.

Monroe: how would your analysis apply if Cashwell had asked Hughes to keep everything inviolate?

John Steele

Steve,

thanks for your question -- a very good one.

Also, can it be true that we have no interest in our reputation after death? And what would happen to client-lawyer trust if we decided that no client has a protectable reputational interest that survives death?

Andrew Perlman

NPR recently had a nice introduction to this story: http://wunc.org/tsot/archive/sot1130a07.mp3/view

Monroe Freedman

Steve, I would follow the client's instructions. I didn't mention it because there's no indication that there were such instructions in this case.

John, I think I answered your question in the last sentence. If there were a significant reputational interest, I wouldn't reveal the information. Unless there are survivors who continue to believe Hunt to be innocent, however, there doesn't appear to be any reputational interest in this case. He's been convicted and served 16 years, and there's no indication that he has been claiming innocence.

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