129 T.C. No. 6
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
THOMAS J. AND BONNIE F. RATKE, Petitioners v.
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent*
Docket No. 9641-01L. Filed September 5, 2007.
After this Court ruled for Ps in the instant
collection case, Ps moved for an award of costs under
sec. 7430, I.R.C. 1986, and then for sanctions under
sec. 6673(a)(2), I.R.C. 1986. In connection with these
motions, Ps seek discovery of (1) a memorandum sent by
R’s initial trial counsel to R’s national office at the
time R’s answer was filed in the instant case and (2)
the unredacted version of the responding memorandum
sent a few months later by R’s national office. R
provided to Ps a redacted version of the latter
memorandum. R resists discovery of the unredacted
memoranda, claiming work product doctrine privilege.
*
This opinion supplements Ratke v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo.
2004-86.
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Ps contend (1) the memoranda are not work product
at the current stage of the litigation; (2) Ps are
entitled to discovery even if the memoranda are work
product; and (3) R waived the privilege.
1. Held: Both memoranda were work product when
prepared for the case in chief and continue to be work
product in the current stage of the litigation.
2. Held, further, having examined both memoranda
in camera, we conclude that neither memorandum contains
information sufficiently important to outweigh the
privacy and other concerns underlying the work product
doctrine.
3. Held, further, R’s brief reference in the
motion papers to the memoranda, but not to either
memorandum’s contents, does not amount to a
“testimonial” use of either memorandum that would
constitute an implied waiver of the work product
doctrine privilege.
Jack B. Schiffman, for petitioners.
Robert M. Fowler, for respondent.
OPINION
CHABOT, Judge: This matter is before us on petitioners’
Motion for Award of Reasonable Litigation and Administrative
Costs Under Section 74301 as well as petitioners’ Motion for
Sanctions Under Section 6673(a)(2) in the instant collection
proceeding. The issue for decision is whether two memoranda
1
Unless indicated otherwise, all section references are to
sections of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as in effect for
proceedings commenced on the day the petition in the instant case
was filed.
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prepared in connection with the case in chief are protected from
discovery under the work product doctrine privilege in connection
with these motions.
Background
When the petition was filed in the instant case, petitioners
resided in Glendale, Arizona.
Petitioners timely filed their 1993 Federal income tax
return. Petitioners showed a $9,238 tax liability for 1993. On
January 9, 1996, respondent sent to petitioners a notice of
deficiency that determined a $20,710 deficiency (liability of
$29,948, minus the $9,238 liability shown on petitioners’ tax
return) and a $4,142 penalty under section 6662(a). On March 29,
1996, petitioners sent a petition to the Court (docket No. 5931-
96, hereinafter sometimes referred to as the 1996 case) disputing
the entire amounts of the deficiency and penalty so determined.
Also on March 29, 1996, petitioners sent to respondent a
second amended 1993 tax return (Form 1040X, Amended U.S.
Individual Income Tax Return) showing a tax liability of $21,893,
and showing that this was $12,655 greater than the liability they
had previously reported. On May 27, 1996, respondent made an
additional assessment of the $12,655 shown on this Form 1040X,
along with interest, and notified petitioners of this additional
assessment.
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The parties settled the 1996 case and, on March 13, 1997,
the Court entered a decision pursuant to the parties’ stipulated
agreement that petitioners had a $2,931 deficiency and no
“addition to tax” under section 6662(a). On May 19, 1997,
respondent assessed this $2,931 deficiency and sent to
petitioners a notice and demand for $21,164.
On September 20, 2000, respondent sent to petitioners a
Final Notice - Notice of Intent to Levy and Notice of Your Right
to a Hearing relating to 1993. On October 17, 2000, petitioners
filed Form 12153, Request for a Collection Due Process Hearing.
On June 28, 2001, respondent mailed to petitioners a Notice of
Determination Concerning Collection Action(s) Under Section 6320
and/or 6330. On July 31, 2001, petitioners filed their petition
in the instant case. On August 7, 2001, petitioners filed an
amended petition. On September 6, 2001, respondent filed the
answer to this amended petition. This answer was signed by Ann
M. Welhaf (hereinafter sometimes referred to as Welhaf), Acting
Associate Area Counsel, and dated September 5, 2001. Welhaf also
prepared a memorandum dated September 5, 2001, addressed to:
Assistant Chief Counsel, Procedure and Administration, Collection
Bankruptcy and Summons, Attn: Alan Levine, Chief Branch 1, CBS.
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This memorandum, hereinafter sometimes referred to as the Welhaf
memorandum, is summarized by respondent as follows:2
This memorandum is a request for advice from Ms.
Welhaf to the Office of Associate Chief Counsel
(Procedure & Administration) of respondent’s National
Office concerning proposed legal arguments to be made
at trial in the pending litigation. This request was
made while this case was docketed. The author
recommends several legal arguments to be made in the
litigation subject to National Office approval. The
memorandum also sets forth the factual background
concerning this case.
Mitchell S. Hyman, Senior Technical Reviewer, Branch 1,
Collection, Bankruptcy and Summons, sent a memorandum dated
January 16, 2002 (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the Hyman
memorandum), which is summarized by respondent as follows:3
This memorandum responded to Ms. Welhaf’s
September 5, 2001 memorandum seeking advice concerning
the proposed legal arguments to be made at trial in the
pending litigation. The January 16, 2002 memorandum
concluded that: (1) the IRS was authorized by section
6201(a)(1) to make an assessment pursuant to the
amended return filed by petitioners; (2) petitioners
were equitably estopped from contesting the validity of
the assessment; (3) the stipulated settlement was a
valid contract; (4) the amended return did not
2
Pursuant to the Court’s order respondent provided the
Welhaf memorandum to the Court for in camera inspection, together
with a summary; the summary was filed and served on petitioners.
After inspecting the Welhaf memorandum, the Court concludes that
respondent’s summary is a fair description of the Welhaf
memorandum.
3
Pursuant to the Court’s order respondent provided the
unredacted Hyman memorandum to the Court for in camera
inspection, together with a summary; the summary was filed and
served on petitioners. After inspecting the unredacted Hyman
memorandum, the Court concludes that respondent’s summary is a
fair description of the unredacted Hyman memorandum.
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constitute a waiver of the restrictions on assessment;
and (5) that petitioners were not precluded by section
6330(c)(2)(B) from arguing that the assessment violated
section 6213(a).
On June 13, 2002, the Court issued a notice of trial in the
instant case. In due course: the instant case was continued,
the instant case was again set for trial, the Court dealt with
motions by both sides, the trial was held, briefs were filed, the
Court issued T.C. Memo. 2004-86 holding for petitioners, and the
Court entered decision “that respondent may collect only $2,931
for taxable year 1993 as set forth in the Court’s March 13, 1997,
decision [the decision that ended the 1996 case].”
On petitioners’ motion this decision was vacated;
petitioners then moved for an award of costs under section 7430
and later moved for sanctions under section 6673(a)(2). At some
point, respondent provided to petitioners a redacted version of
the Hyman memorandum. In connection with the latter motions, the
parties have stipulated the redacted Hyman memorandum.
Petitioners now seek to discover the unredacted Welhaf
memorandum and the unredacted Hyman memorandum. Respondent
claims that the memoranda are protected work product and refuses
petitioners’ discovery requests. We directed respondent to
submit these memoranda for in camera inspection along with an
explanation of why the memoranda should not be disclosed to
petitioners in whole or in part. (See supra notes 2 and 3.)
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Both the Welhaf memorandum and the Hyman memorandum were
prepared as part of respondent’s counsel’s efforts to prepare
legal theories and plan strategy for the instant case.
Discussion
A. Preliminary
Petitioners want to discover the Welhaf memorandum and the
unredacted Hyman memorandum. See Rules 70,4 72. Respondent
objects to discovery of these memoranda on the ground that both
memoranda are privileged. See Rule 70(b)(1). A party opposing
discovery on such a ground has the burden of establishing that
the information sought is privileged. Ames v. Commissioner, 112
T.C. 304, 309 (1999); Bernardo v. Commissioner, 104 T.C. 677, 691
(1995). The privilege respondent claims is the one resulting
from the work product doctrine. See Rules Committee Notes, 60
T.C. 1058, 1098.
If the party opposing discovery establishes that the
information sought is work product, then discovery will not be
required unless the Court determines that, in the situation
before it, the information sought should nevertheless be
disclosed. Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 512 (1947); Ames v.
Commissioner, 112 T.C. at 310-311.
4
Unless indicated otherwise, all Rule references are to the
Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure.
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B. Parties’ Contentions
Respondent contends that both (1) the entire Welhaf
memorandum and (2) the redacted portions of the Hyman memorandum
are protected from discovery pursuant to the work product
doctrine. Respondent maintains that (a) both memoranda are work
product, (b) to the extent the memoranda include “fact” work
product, petitioners cannot show a substantial need or undue
hardship because “they are well aware of all the facts in this
case”, and (c) to the extent the memoranda include “opinion” work
product the memoranda are “absolutely protected from disclosure”
or in any event are not disclosable because petitioners “have not
made a far stronger showing than the ‘substantial need’ and
‘without undue hardship’ standard”.
Petitioners assert that the work product doctrine is not
absolute, relying on rule 26(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure. They contend that (1) they need to have access to the
Welhaf memorandum in order to determine whether “Welhaf ‘cherry
picked’ the facts favorable to her position, and did not include
facts unfavorable to her position”, (2) this information would be
relevant to (a) “substantial authority under I.R.C.
§7430(c)(4)(B)” and (b) “sanctionable misconduct under I.R.C.
§6673(a)(2)”, and (3) Rule 91(a)(1) has the effect of requiring
disclosure so that the parties can stipulate to the matters
relevant to the motions before the Court. Petitioners contend
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that the same considerations apply to the unredacted Hyman
memorandum. Petitioners also maintain that the memoranda were
prepared for “the case in chief” and are not work product with
respect to “the post-decision application for litigation costs
and sanctions”. Finally, petitioners maintain that respondent’s
efforts to use the redacted version of the Hyman memorandum “as
support for its claim of substantial justification under I.R.C.
§7430(c)(4)(B)” should be treated as a waiver of the work product
doctrine privilege for the entire Hyman memorandum.
C. Summary and Conclusions
Both the Welhaf memorandum and the Hyman memorandum are work
product and so are privileged. The privilege is qualified. We
examined both memoranda in camera and conclude that (1)
exceptions to this privilege do not apply and (2) this privilege
has not been waived. Accordingly, neither memorandum is required
to be disclosed in the present proceeding.
D. Analysis
1. In General
We set forth this Court’s general view of the work product
doctrine in P.T. & L. Construction Co. v. Commissioner, 63 T.C.
404, 407-408 (1974), as follows:
The work product doctrine was given its first thorough
exposition in the Federal courts in Hickman v. Taylor,
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329 U.S. 495 (1947).[5] In that case the Supreme Court
held that materials prepared in anticipation of
litigation, including witness’ statements, were not
subject to discovery as a matter of right because such
discovery would be harmful to the orderly prosecution
and defense of legal claims in adversary proceedings.
“Work product,” as a term of art, is used to describe
such protected materials. See Hickman v. Taylor, supra
at 510.
The holding in Hickman v. Taylor, supra, has been
specifically incorporated in the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure as rule 26(b)(3). Further, the work product
doctrine is given negative recognition in the Tax Court
Rules of Practice and Procedure in that, even though it
is not mentioned in the body of the Rules, it is dealt
with in the notes of our Rules Committee to Rule 70(b).
These notes state, in pertinent part, as follows:
The other areas, i.e., the “work product” of
counsel and material prepared in anticipation
of litigation or for trial, are generally
intended to be outside the scope of allowable
discovery under these Rules, and therefore
the specific provisions for disclosure of
such materials in FRCP 26(b)(3) have not been
adopted. Cf. Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495
(1947). [60 T.C. 1098.]
2. Are the Memoranda Work Product?
The Welhaf memorandum describes Welhaf’s intended arguments
in defending the instant case and asks for concurrences or
opinions regarding these intended arguments. The Hyman
memorandum responds to the elements of the Welhaf memorandum.
The Welhaf memorandum was sent about the time respondent filed
5
For a summary of the discovery evolution that led to
Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495 (1947), and interpretations of
the law since 1947, see 8 Wright, Miller & Marcus, Federal
Practice and Procedure: Civil 2d secs. 2021-2028; that treatise
and its most recent pocket part are hereinafter sometimes
referred to as Wright, Miller & Marcus.
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the answer in the instant case. The Hyman memorandum was sent
before the instant case was first noticed for trial. Thus, both
memoranda were prepared as part of respondent’s counsels’ efforts
to “prepare * * * legal theories and plan * * * strategy” for the
instant case. Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. at 511. It follows
that both memoranda are work product for the instant case.
Petitioners contend that both memoranda were prepared for
“the case in chief” and are not work product with respect to “the
post-decision application for costs and sanctions”. We disagree.
Firstly, the instant case is the same litigation for which
the memoranda were prepared. The litigation for which the
memoranda were prepared will not be concluded, by entry of
decision, until petitioners’ motions under sections 7430 and
6673(a)(2) have been dealt with.6 We have not found, and
petitioners have not directed our attention to, any case law
indicating that one lawsuit should be segmented for purposes of
determining whether a document is work product.
Secondly, in Ames v. Commissioner, supra, we dealt with a
document prepared by the Commissioner’s counsel in anticipation
of criminal tax prosecution. The taxpayer sought production of
6
Rule 232(f) provides that the disposition of the sec. 7430
motion “shall be included in the decision entered in the case.”
Indeed, when the Court entered decision for petitioners in the
instant case after issuing T.C. Memo. 2004-86, petitioners moved
to vacate the decision so that they would be permitted to file
their sec. 7430 motion.
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that document in the civil tax proceeding that followed the
criminal tax case. We concluded in Ames that there was
sufficient nexus between the criminal litigation for which the
document had originally been prepared, and the civil litigation
before this Court, so that the document qualified as work product
in the civil litigation. Ames v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. at 309-
310.
Additionally, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
noted that “it appears every circuit to address the issue has
concluded that, at least to some degree, the work product
doctrine does extend to subsequent litigation.” Frontier
Refining Inc. v. Gorman-Rupp Co., 136 F.3d 695, 703 (10th Cir.
1998 (and cases cited therein). Compare the foregoing with Hartz
Mountain Industries v. Commissioner, 93 T.C. 521, 527-528 (1989),
in which we concluded that the fact that “the work product at
issue was prepared approximately a decade ago in distinctly
different litigation” was one of three factors that collectively
led us to rule that the work product doctrine privilege did not
protect against disclosure in that case. In this respect, the
instant case is clearly distinguishable from Hartz Mountain
Industries. A fortiori, a document prepared for the same
litigation, as in the instant case, qualifies as work product.
See discussion in Ames v. Commissioner, 112 T.C. at 310 & n.4;
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see also Bernardo v. Commissioner, 104 T.C. at 688 n.14. See
generally Wright, Miller & Marcus, sec. 2024 nn. 12-15.
We hold that both memoranda are work product for purposes of
the litigation as to petitioners’ motions under sections 7430 and
6673.
3. Extent of the Privilege
The privilege resulting from the work product doctrine7 is
qualified; it may be overcome by an appropriate showing. Ames v.
Commissioner, 112 T.C. at 310; Hartz Mountain Industries v.
Commissioner, 93 T.C. at 527 (1989). Rule 26(b)(3) of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires a showing of
“substantial need” and an inability to otherwise obtain the
substantial equivalent “without undue hardship”; that rule sets
aside “disclosure of the mental impressions, conclusions,
opinions, or legal theories of an attorney or other
representative of a party concerning the litigation.”
As to such opinion work product, the Court of Appeals for
the Ninth Circuit, to which the instant case is appealable, has
summarized the standards in Holmgren v. State Farm Mut. Auto.
Ins. Co., 976 F.2d 573, 577 (9th Cir. 1992), as follows:
A party seeking opinion work product must make a
showing beyond the substantial need/undue hardship test
required under Rule 26(b)(3) for non-opinion work
product. Upjohn Co. v. United States, 449 U.S. 383,
401-02, 101 S.Ct. 677, 688-89, 66 L.Ed.2d 584 (1981).
7
See Wright, Miller & Marcus, sec. 2025, nn. 3, 4, and 5.
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The Supreme Court, however, has so far declined to
decide whether opinion work product is absolutely
protected from discovery. Id. at 401, 101 S.Ct. at
688.
* * * * * * *
We agree with the several courts and commentators
that have concluded that opinion work product may be
discovered and admitted when mental impressions are at
issue in a case and the need for the material is
compelling. * * *
Both elements are met here. In a bad faith
insurance claim settlement case, the “strategy, mental
impressions and opinion of [the insurer’s] agents
concerning the handling of the claim are directly at
issue”. * * * Further, Holmgren’s need for the exhibits
was compelling. * * *
See generally Wright, Miller & Marcus, sec. 2026.
Petitioners contend that our Rule 91(a)(1)8 “requires
Respondent to provide Ms. Welhaf’s Memorandum in its entirety so
8
Rule 91(a)(1) provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
RULE 91. STIPULATIONS FOR TRIAL
(a) Stipulations Required: (1) General: The
parties are required to stipulate, to the fullest
extent to which complete or qualified agreement can or
fairly should be reached, all matters not privileged
which are relevant to the pending case, regardless of
whether such matters involve fact or opinion or the
application of law to fact. Included in matters
required to be stipulated are all facts, all documents
and papers or contents or aspects thereof, and all
evidence which fairly should not be in dispute. * * *
The requirement of stipulation applies under this Rule
without regard to where the burden of proof may lie
with respect to the matters involved. Documents or
papers or other exhibits annexed to or filed with the
stipulation shall be considered to be part of the
stipulation.
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that counsel can stipulate as to which facts were set forth and
which facts were not set forth (omitted) in Ms. Welhaf’s
Memorandum to the Chief Counsel’s Office.” Respondent contends:
8. As far as Ms. Welhaf’s opinion work product is concerned, it
is respondent’s view that such opinion work product is absolutely
protected from disclosure. We reject both sides’ contentions
insofar as they would preclude us from conducting an appropriate
balancing of interests in section 7430 and section 6673(a)(2)
disputes.
We decline to adopt either side’s approach. In an effort to
give meaningful effect to the relevant public policies in a
practical way in the instant case, we chose to conduct in camera
inspections of the two unredacted memoranda. We recognize that
other courses of action may be preferable in other circumstances.
4. Application to This Case
Having conducted an in camera review of the Welhaf
memorandum and the unredacted Hyman memorandum, we conclude there
is neither a substantial need to discover any of the fact-based
work product nor compelling need to discover any of the opinion
work product.
A redacted version of the Hyman memorandum was provided to
petitioners. The redacted version of the Hyman memorandum
discloses the statements about matters of fact, but not all of
the legal strategies or opinions, set forth in the unredacted
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Hyman memorandum. The statements about matters of fact presented
in the redacted memorandum are identical to those presented in
the unredacted Hyman memorandum. Petitioners have the redacted
version of the Hyman memorandum, and so we conclude that
petitioners are in possession of the fact-based work product. We
further conclude that, as to the legal strategies and opinions,
the redacted version of the Hyman memorandum and respondent’s
summary of the unredacted version of the Hyman memorandum (supra
notes 2, 3, and 7) taken together provide a fair representation
of the legal strategies and opinions in the unredacted version of
the Hyman memorandum. Because (1) petitioners were provided with
a fair representation of the unredacted legal strategies and
opinions, and (2) the redacted portions would not impact the
outcome of petitioners’ motions under sections 7430 and 6673 in
the instant case, we conclude that petitioners do not have a
compelling need to discover this opinion work product;
petitioners’ desire to discover the unredacted version of the
Hyman memorandum is outweighed by the protection afforded by the
privacy privilege under the work product doctrine.
The Welhaf memorandum presents statements about matters of
fact that are substantially similar to those presented in the
redacted version of the Hyman memorandum. Because petitioners
are already in possession of the equivalent fact-based work
product (in the form of the redacted version of the Hyman
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memorandum), we conclude that petitioners have neither a
substantial need to discover the fact-based work product in the
Welhaf memorandum nor an inability to obtain a substantial
equivalent of this fact-based work product without incurring
undue hardship.
The Welhaf memorandum suggests and analyzes various
positions respondent might take in the litigation in the instant
case. There is no “smoking gun” in the Welhaf memorandum
establishing that respondent’s position in the underlying
litigation was not substantially justified and thereby possibly
entitling petitioners to litigation costs under section 7430.
Nor is there a “smoking gun” in the Welhaf memorandum that would
prove respondent’s attorney unreasonably and vexatiously
multiplied the proceedings, and thereby entitle petitioners to
litigation costs under section 6673(a)(2). Because the Welhaf
memorandum would not impact the outcome of petitioners’ motions
under sections 7430 and 6673 in the instant case, we conclude
there is no compelling need to discover the memorandum;
petitioners’ desire to discover the Welhaf memorandum is
outweighed by the protection afforded by the privacy privilege
under the work product doctrine.
Accordingly, we sustain respondent’s contention that the
work product doctrine privilege protects both memoranda from
discovery.
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5. Waiver
Petitioners contend that, even if the memoranda were
privileged under the work product doctrine, respondent should be
treated as having waived the privilege, because:
To permit Respondent to withhold Ms. Welhaf’s factual
representation to the Chief Counsel’s Office from the
Ratkes would allow Respondent to use the work product
doctrine as both a “sword and shield litigation tactic”
in this post-decision proceeding for litigation costs
and sanctions. As opined by the Federal Circuit in
EchoStar [In re EchoStar Communications Corp., 448 F.3d
1294 (Fed. Cir. 2006)]:
We recognize that the line between “factual”
work product and “opinion” work product is
not always distinct, especially when, as
here, an attorney’s opinion may itself be
“factual” work product. When faced with the
distinction between where that line lies,
however, a...court should balance the
policies to prevent sword-and-shield
litigation tactics with the policy to protect
work product.
Id. at 1302.
* * * *
The overarching goal of waiver in such a case
is to prevent a party from using the advice
he received as both a sword, by waiving
privilege to favorable advice, and a shield,
by asserting privilege to unfavorable advice.
See Fort James Corp. [v. Solo Cup Co.], 412
F.3d [1340] at 1349 [Fed. Cir. 2005]; [In re]
Martin Marietta Corp., 856 F.2d [619] at 626
[4th Cir. 1988]; In re Sealed Case, 676 F.2d
793, 818 (D.C. Cir. 1982) (“[W]hen a party
seeks greater advantage from its control over
work product than the law must provide to
maintain a healthy adversary system[,] then
the balance of interests recognized in
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Hickman...shifts.”). To the extent the work-
product immunity could have such an effect,
it is waived.
Id. at 1303.
In Hartz Mountain Industries v. Commissioner, 93 T.C. at
527, we summarized the waiver rules as follows:
Protection derived from the work product doctrine
is not absolute. United States v. Nobles, 422 U.S.
225, 239 (1975). Further, the work product doctrine,
like the attorney-client privilege, may be waived.
United States v. Nobles, supra. Protection afforded by
the work product doctrine to “opinion work product” may
also be waived. See In re Sealed Case, 676 F.2d 793,
811 (D.C. Cir. 1982); Coleco Industries, Inc. v.
Universal City Studios, 110 F.R.D. 688, 690-691
(S.D.N.Y. 1986).
In Hartz Mountain Industries and each of the three cited
cases therein, the relevant court (1) concluded that the
proponent of the privilege attempted to present a one-sided view
of a critical matter in dispute and (2) refused to sustain the
privilege in that setting.
In Nobles, a defendant in a criminal case was not permitted
to present testimony of an investigator unless the defendant
turned over to the prosecution those portions of the
investigator’s report that related to the investigator’s expected
testimony. When the defense called its investigator as a
witness, the trial court ruled that the investigator’s report
(after inspection and editing in camera) would have to be turned
over to the prosecutor. The defense stated that the report would
not be turned over. Whereupon the trial court ruled that the
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investigator would not be permitted to testify. United States v.
Nobles, 422 U.S. 225, 229 (1975). The Supreme Court held that
the trial “court’s preclusion sanction was an entirely proper
method of assuring compliance with its [disclosure] order.” Id.
at 241.
In Hartz Mountain Industries v. Commissioner, 93 T.C. at
528, we ruled as follows:
Finally, petitioner has waived the work product
doctrine by making a “testimonial use” of work product
materials. See In re Sealed Case, supra at 817-818;
Coleco Industries, Inc. v. Universal City Studios,
supra at 691. Petitioner submitted affidavits from its
in-house counsel to support its internal position with
respect to the antitrust litigation. By offering this
selective disclosure of work product to establish its
intent, petitioner has waived all work product
protection relevant to the same issue, and fairness
requires discovery of all work product that pertains to
petitioner’s antitrust settlement intentions. Coleco
Industries, Inc. v. Universal City Studios, supra.
Thus, although partial disclosure is not necessarily fatal to a
claim of work product doctrine privilege, a “testimonial use” of
the disclosed material may result in a conclusion that in
fairness the related material must be disclosed even though it
would otherwise be protected from disclosure.9
9
This has some similarity to Fed. R. Evid. 106, under which
a party may interrupt another party’s presentation in order to
require “the introduction at that time” of certain evidence
“which ought in fairness to be considered contemporaneously with”
the other party’s evidence.
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In In re EchoStar Communications Corp., 448 F.3d 1294 (Fed.
Cir. 2006), defendants to a willful patent infringement suit
asserted the defense of reliance on advice of counsel. The Court
of Appeals ruled:
Work-product waiver extends only so far as to inform
the court of the infringer’s state of mind. * * *
The overarching goal of waiver in such a case is
to prevent a party from using the advice he received as
both a sword, by waiving privilege to favorable advice,
and a shield, by asserting privilege to unfavorable
advice.
Id. at 1303.
We note that, in response to petitioners’ section 7430
motion, respondent refers to the two memoranda and respondent’s
actions under section 6110 resulting in disclosure of the
redacted Hyman memorandum. As we view it, respondent’s
references to the two memoranda are in the course of a recital of
sequence of events. The references are not by way of a
contention that the existence of the two memoranda or the text of
the redacted Hyman memorandum is evidence showing that
respondent’s position was substantially justified, within the
meaning of section 7430(c)(4)(B)(i). Petitioners have not
directed our attention to any attempt by respondent to make a
“testimonial use” of either of the two memoranda (Hartz Mountain
Industries v. Commissioner, 93 T.C. at 528), or to use either of
the two memoranda as “a sword” (In re EchoStar Communications
Corp., 448 F.3d at 1303).
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We conclude that respondent has not waived the work product
doctrine privilege with respect to the Hyman memorandum. We do
not understand petitioners to contend that respondent waived the
privilege with respect to the Welhaf memorandum, except as a
derivative of their contention as to the Hyman memorandum. We
hold that the privilege has not been waived as to either
memorandum.
6. Conclusion
The unredacted memoranda are privileged from disclosure
under the work product doctrine privilege. Neither memorandum
includes material such that the need to discover the work product
is compelling. Finally, respondent has not waived the protection
of the work product doctrine privilege.
An appropriate order will
be issued denying petitioners’
request to discover the unredacted
memoranda.10
10
We note that the parties have stipulated the text of the
redacted Hyman memorandum as a joint exhibit relating to
petitioners’ secs. 7430 and 6673 motions. We have concluded that
respondent’s references to the two memoranda in materials filed
with the Court up to now do not constitute a use leading to
waiver of the work product doctrine privilege.