Court Opinion

ID: 866308
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-04-30 21:43:21.48517+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:10:03.676259
License: Public Domain

Filed 4/30/13 Proskauer Rose v. Superior Court CA2/1
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
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              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION ONE

PROSKAUER ROSE, LLP,                                                 No. B245624
    Petitioner,
         v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. BC384760)

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS
ANGELES COUNTY,
     Respondent;

GARY K. MICHELSON et al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.

         ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS in mandate. Mark V. Mooney, Judge. Petition
denied.
         Proskauer Rose, Lary Alan Rappaport; Davis Polk & Wardwell and Paul
Spagnoletti for Petitioner.
         No appearance for Respondent.
         Kinsella Weitzman Iser Kump & Aldisert, Dale F. Kinsella, Patricia A. Millett and
Jennifer J. McGrath for Real Parties in Interest, Gary K. Michelson and Karlin Holdings
Limited Partnership.

                                ___________________________________
       Dr. Gary K. Michelson and Karlin Holdings Limited Partnership (collectively
Michelson) are the plaintiffs in an action against the law firm of Proskauer Rose
(Proskauer), alleging that Proskauer misled Michelson into participating in two tax-
shelter investment transactions. Proskauer advised Michelson that it would provide him
with opinion letters concerning tax issues associated with the investments, and eventually
provided those opinion letters. Michelson invested about $121 million in the two tax
shelters and took deductions for the investment on his federal and state tax returns,
allegedly in reliance on Proskauer‟s opinions that the investments “should” survive IRS
scrutiny, and that their opinion letters would in any event insulate him from any IRS
penalties. However, the IRS disallowed the deductions and assessed substantial
penalties.
       In this writ proceeding Proskauer seeks relief from respondent court‟s denial of its
motion to compel responses to its request for production of documents containing
communications between Michelson and his longtime attorneys, Jeffer Mangels Butler &
Mitchell (Jeffer Mangels), about these transactions. We conclude that Proskauer‟s
petition fails to demonstrate any error in the trial court‟s rulings, and we therefore deny
the requested relief.
                                     BACKGROUND
Michelson’s Action Against Proskauer
       Petitioner Proskauer is the defendant, and Real Party In Interest Michelson is the
plaintiff, in an action pending in respondent court entitled Michelson, et al. v. Proskauer
Rose LLP, et al., Los Angeles Superior Court case No. BC384760. The operative
pleading in that action, the second amended complaint, alleges that in December 2001,
Michelson invested in two investment vehicles, known as Strategically Diversified
Investment (SDI) and Odora Limited Investment (Odora). Michelson‟s pleading alleges
that he made the investments and claimed losses with respect to them based on formal
opinion letters issued to him by Proskauer—purportedly independent attorneys acting on

                                              2
his behalf—attesting to the validity of these investments and their likelihood of
withstanding IRS scrutiny.
       Michelson‟s action alleges, however, that Proskauer knew but did not disclose to
him that Proskauer was not independent, but had been involved in structuring the SDI
and Odora investments; that Proskauer knew but did not disclose that these transactions
(or transactions very similar to them) had been identified by the IRS as abusive and
illegal tax shelters; and that Proskauer knew but did not disclose that Michelson would be
likely to be assessed penalties if the transactions were challenged by the IRS. He alleges
that Proskauer‟s misrepresentations and omissions fraudulently induced him to invest
about $121 million in SDI and Odora, and to claim losses from those investments on his
tax returns, which he would not have done but for Proskauer‟s advice and failure to
disclose these facts.
       The IRS disallowed his claimed losses and assessed substantial penalties, causing
him to incur damages alleged to exceed $20 million.
Proskauer Requests Production Of Documents
       In its first request for production of documents, Proskauer asked Michelson to
produce all documents and communications concerning the SDI and Odora transactions
and the Proskauer opinions. The requests sought communications including those
“prepared, sent, or received” by any advisers, and documents concerning fees for services
rendered by any advisers, as well as documents concerning Michelson‟s tax positions,
liabilities and benefits incurred by him, and his communications in other proceedings
arising from the transactions.
       Michelson refused to provide the documents called for by most of the production
requests, based on the attorney-client and work product privileges.1

 1  Michelson‟s objections and refusals to produce were based on both the attorney client
privilege and the work product doctrine. Proskauer does not address the work product
doctrine, either in its motion in the trial court to compel further production, or in its
petition in this court.
                                             3
Proskauer Moves to Compel Production
       Proskauer moved to compel further responses, filing exhibits to provide factual
support.2 Proskauer‟s motion relied primarily on the allegations of Michelson‟s pleading,
supplemented by facts in its supporting exhibits. According to Michelson, he was
initially contacted about the SDI investment by Ernst & Young, an accounting firm with
whom he had previously dealt. Ernst & Young represented to him that Proskauer was an
independent and nationally recognized law firm that would provide him with a “should”
tax opinion concerning the transaction, i.e., an opinion that the subject transaction, if
challenged by the IRS, “should” survive scrutiny.
       Proskauer‟s motion alleged that in November 2001, Jeffer Mangels, Michelson‟s
longtime attorneys, had contacted Proskauer on Michelson‟s behalf, seeking a tax-
opinion letter relating to the SDI and Odora investments. Jeffer Mangels handled all of
Michelson‟s substantive communications with Proskauer concerning the SDI and Odora
investments, and oversaw the SDI and Odora transactions on Michelson‟s behalf.
Michelson had no direct contact with any of the attorneys at Proskauer. Without the
protection of a “should” opinion letter, Michelson alleged, he would not have invested in
SDI or Odora.
       According to Proskauer, Jeffer Mangels and Proskauer worked together to prepare
opinion letters that were acceptable to Michelson, with Jeffer Mangels making revisions
that altered the legal and factual positions of the original draft opinions. Jeffer Mangels
controlled the final versions of the opinions and their approval by Michelson. The final
opinion letters for the SDI and Odora transactions were sent by Proskauer to Michelson
in September and October, 2002.
       Proskauer‟s motion in the trial court argued that the court should compel
production of the withheld discovery documents on two grounds: because Michelson‟s
action against Proskauer placed his privileged communications with Jeffer Mangels

 2 Proskauer‟s motion to compel sought further responses to request Nos. 1-18, 20-33,
and 35-39.
                                              4
directly at issue, and because disclosure of Michelson‟s privileged communications with
Jeffer Mangels is essential to a fair adjudication of this case.
Trial Court Refuses To Compel Production; Proskauer Seeks Writ Relief
       On October 12, 2012, the trial court refused to compel production of the requested
documents containing communications between Michelson and Jeffer Mangels. On
December 12, 2012, Proskauer petitioned this court for a writ of mandate or other
appropriate relief compelling respondent court to require production of the requested
documents. In the alternative, Proskauer seeks an order directing the trial court to
dismiss Michelson‟s complaint and enter judgment in favor of Proskauer.
       Proskauer identifies three issues raised by the respondent court‟s refusal to compel
production of the requested evidence. First, Proskauer asks us to determine that
Michelson has disclosed substantial portions of his privileged communications with
Jeffer Mangels about the SDI and Odora investments, constituting a voluntary waiver of
the attorney-client privilege with respect to the remainder of his communications with
Jeffer Mangels about that subject. Second, Proskauer contends that Michelson‟s action
against it places Jeffer Mangels‟s knowledge, state of mind, and communications with
Michelson directly at issue, impliedly waiving the attorney-client privilege with respect
to those communications. Third, Proskauer contends that it is fundamentally unfair to
permit Michelson to maintain his action against it, withholding evidence that “is at the
heart” of his claims while forcing Proskauer to defend itself without access to the
withheld evidence. Based on Proskauer‟s petition, on January 31, 2013, this court issued
an order to show cause. In response to the order to show cause, Michelson filed a return
disputing important allegations of the petition.
       The return contends that not all of Michelson‟s substantive communications with
Proskauer concerning the SDI and Odora investments were made through Jeffer Mangels.
It contends that Proskauer also made actionable misrepresentations and nondisclosures in
eight written opinion letters, signed by Proskauer and issued directly to Michelson. And
the return denies that Michelson has selectively disclosed his privileged communications

                                               5
with Jeffer Mangels, that he has placed Jeffer Mangels‟s communications, knowledge, or
state of mind directly at issue, or that he has waived his privilege with respect to his
communications with Jeffer Mangels. The return agrees that writ review is appropriate to
address discovery issues of first impression, but denies that in this case the petition
presents any such issue.
       Proskauer filed a reply to Michelson‟s return.3
Standard of Review
       “A trial court‟s [ruling on] a motion to compel discovery is reviewed for abuse of
discretion.” (Costco Wholesale Corp. v. Superior Court (2009) 47 Cal.4th 725, 733.)
“This standard of review affords considerable deference to the trial court provided that
the court acted in accordance with the governing rules of law. We presume that the court
properly applied the law and acted within its discretion unless the appellant affirmatively
shows otherwise. [Citations.]” (Mejia v. City of Los Angeles (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th
151, 158.)
       The trial court abuses its discretion if it applies an erroneous legal standard, if it
makes factual findings that are not supported by substantial evidence, or if its decision
exceeds the bounds of reason and results in a miscarriage of justice in light of the
applicable law and the relevant circumstances. (Mejia v. City of Los Angeles, supra, 156
Cal.App.4th at p. 158.) Issues of law are reviewed de novo. (HLC Properties, Ltd. v.
Superior Court (2005) 35 Cal.4th 54, 60.) We review as a question of fact, under the
substantial evidence standard, the question whether a waiver has occurred, unless the

 3  Michelson‟s return also suggests that the petition was not timely filed, because it was
filed 61 days after the challenged ruling. While it is within the court‟s discretion to deny
the matter without reaching the merits when relief has not been sought within the time
allowed for an appeal if the challenged order were an appealable order (Nelson v.
Superior Court (1986) 184 Cal.App.3d 444, 450), the absence of any record that
Proskauer was served with notice of entry of the challenged ruling makes the applicable
deadline 180 days, rather than 60 days, from the challenged ruling. (Cal. Rules of Court,
rule 8.104(a)(1)(C), (a)(3); American Property Management Corp. v. Superior Court
(2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 491, 499.) Moreover, nothing in the record suggests that
prejudice resulted from any delay in filing the petition.
                                               6
facts support just one conclusion. (St. Agnes Medical Center v. PacifiCare of California
(2003) 31 Cal.4th 1187, 1196; Kerner v. Superior Court (2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 84,
110.)
                                        DISCUSSION
        The attorney-client privilege authorizes a client in an attorney-client relationship
to refuse to disclose, and prevent others from disclosing, the client‟s confidential
communications with his or her attorney. (Evid. Code, § 954.) Privileged
communications are protected from disclosure regardless of their relevance or importance
with respect to the proceeding. (Costco Wholesale Corp. v. Superior Court, supra, 47
Cal.4th at p. 732.) “„The privilege is given on grounds of public policy in the belief that
the benefits derived therefrom justify the risk that unjust decisions may sometimes result
from the suppression of relevant evidence.‟” (Schlumberger Limited v. Superior Court
(1981) 115 Cal.App.3d 386, 392, quoting City & County of S. F. v. Superior Court (1951)
37 Cal.2d 227, 235.)
        This broad rule is subject to conditions that define and narrow its application. A
“confidential communication” that the attorney-client privilege protects from disclosure
consists of information and advice transmitted between a client and his or her lawyer in
the course of their attorney-client relationship, “and in confidence by a means which, so
far as the client is aware, discloses the information to no third persons other than those
who are present to further the interests of the client in the consultation or those to whom
disclosure is reasonably necessary for the transmission of the information or the
accomplishment of the purpose for which the lawyer is consulted.” (Evid. Code, § 952.)
However, a client‟s disclosure of a significant part of a communication that is protected
by the attorney-client privilege waives the privilege with respect to that communication;
but a disclosure that is itself privileged is not a waiver, nor is a disclosure that is
reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of the purpose for which the lawyer was
consulted. (Evid. Code, § 912.)

                                                7
       A. The Record Does Not Show That Michelson Has Waived The Attorney-
          Client Privilege With Respect To His Communications With Jeffer
          Mangels By Disclosing Significant Portions Of His Communications With
          Jeffer Mangles.
       It is communications between Jeffer Mangels and Michelson that are at issue in
this proceeding, not communications between Proskauer and Jeffer Mangels or Proskauer
and Michelson. The attorney-client privilege does not prevent disclosure of
communications between Proskauer and Jeffer Mangels, because Proskauer‟s relationship
with Jeffer Mangels was neither that of a lawyer or a client. (Evid. Code, § 954
[privilege applies to communications between lawyer and client].) No privilege is
claimed to apply to communications between Proskauer and Jeffer Mangels, both of
whom had attorney-client relationships with Michelson.4 Nor does the attorney-client
privilege prevent disclosure of communications between Proskauer and Michelson. That
is because “[t]here is no privilege . . . as to a communication relevant to an issue of
breach, by the lawyer or by the client, of a duty arising out of the lawyer-client
relationship.” (Evid. Code, § 958.)
       Communications between Jeffer Mangels and Michelson, however, are in a
different category. Michelson‟s attorney-client relationship with Jeffer Mangels provided
him with a privilege to prevent disclosure of his confidential communications with Jeffer
Mangels unless he waived that privilege. (Evid. Code, § 912.) Waiver might be shown
by a number of possible circumstances—including by a voluntary disclosure that reveals
a significant portion of a privileged communication. (Evid. Code, § 912, subd. (a).)

 4 Michelson‟s counsel confirmed in the trial court that Proskauer is entitled to discovery
“about what was communicated between Proskauer and Jeffer Mangels,” and also about
“what Dr. Michelson believed, his independent state of mind.” What they can‟t do,
Michelson argued, “is get into privileged attorney-client communications” between Jeffer
Mangels and Michelson.
                                              8
       Without such a disclosure, the fact that Michelson consulted and communicated
with Jeffer Mangels as well as Proskauer about the SDI and Odora transactions could not
alone constitute a waiver of his privilege respecting his communications with Jeffer
Mangels. Waiver of a client‟s privilege to maintain the confidentiality of
communications with his or her counsel does not result from the client‟s consultation
with other attorneys about the same subject matter. (Travelers Ins. Companies v.
Superior Court (1983) 143 Cal.App.3d 436, 445-446; Miller v. Superior Court (1980)
111 Cal.App.3d 390, 392-393 [exception stated in Evidence Code section 958 applies
only “where the alleged breach is by the attorney from whom the information is
sought”].) “Where, as here, the client has not alleged a breach by the attorney involved
in the communication in question, the privilege for that communication remains intact.”
(Miller v. Superior Court, supra, 111 Cal.App.3d at p. 393.) Michelson‟s underlying
action alleged no breach by Jeffer Mangels.
       Proskauer argues that Michelson waived his privilege by disclosing significant
portions of his communications with Jeffer Mangels “regarding the investments during
the period leading up to the investments and Michelson‟s decision to take tax deductions
with respect to them.” For that reason, Proskauer contends, “[Michelson] should be
compelled to disclose all contemporaneous communications relating to that subject.”
       The party claiming the privilege (in this case Michelson) has a threshold
obligation to demonstrate the “existence [of] an attorney-client relationship as to the
communication in question.” (Travelers Ins. Companies v. Superior Court, supra, 143
Cal.App.3d at p. 448.) The burden then shifts to the opponent (Proskauer) to establish a
basis for compelling disclosure—an exception to the privilege, a waiver of the privilege,
or a lack of confidential intent. (Evid.Code, § 917; Shannon v. Superior Court (1990)
217 Cal.App.3d 986, 996.) But a determination that the privilege has been waived
requires more than a mere assertion; it must be supported by substantial evidence. (See
Nowell v. Superior Court (1963) 223 Cal.App.2d 652, 657; Dickerson v. Superior Court
(1982) 135 Cal.App.3d 93, 100.)

                                              9
       Michelson‟s burden of establishing the prima facie existence of his attorney-client
relationship with Jeffer Mangels is satisfied by the allegations of the Petition, and its
undisputed recognition that the discovery sought by Proskauer is directed to disclosure of
communications between Michelson and attorneys at Jeffer Mangels concerning the SDI
and Odora investments. We therefore turn to Proskauer‟s attempt to show that Michelson
has waived his right to rely on the privilege to prevent disclosure of his attorney-client
communications with Jeffer Mangels.
       To establish its claim of waiver, Proskauer has tendered documentation in this
court in the form of exhibits to its petition. By permission of the trial court and this court,
Proskauer has filed these documents under seal, providing the courts also with copies
redacted to obscure portions claimed to contain confidential information. In this court
Proskauer has also filed unredacted originals and redacted copies of its petition and its
reply to Michelson‟s return.5 We therefore have undertaken to examine the proffered
documents for the purpose of determining the validity of Proskauer‟s contention that
Michelson has disclosed significant portions of his communications with Jeffer Mangels
regarding the SDI and Odora investments, thereby waiving his privilege to maintain the
confidentiality of those communications.6

 5  The trial court‟s sealing order was based on Proskauer‟s unopposed motion, alleging
that the documents submitted under seal contained arbitration testimony, documents, and
orders, which had been designated as “confidential” pursuant to an earlier protective
order because they contain proprietary business information relating to parties and non-
parties whose rights would be prejudiced by their disclosure. This court granted the
sealing order request based on a similar showing. Neither party challenges or otherwise
addresses the propriety of the sealing orders.
 6  Evidence Code section 915 provides (with certain exceptions) that a court “may not
require disclosure of information claimed to be privileged . . . in order to rule on the
claim of privilege . . . .” (Evid.Code, § 915, subd. (a); Costco Wholesale Corp. v.
Superior Court, supra, 47 Cal.4th at pp. 736, 740.) Here the privilege has been
established; we are called upon to determine whether it has been waived, by reference to
documents that Proskauer contends disclose significant portions of the otherwise-
privileged communications, but Michelson contends do not. Because no holder of the
privilege contends that the proffered documents are privileged or are beyond the authority
                                              10
       Based on our review of the proffered materials, we find no waiver.
       Many of Proskauer‟s references are to portions of the exhibits that reflect
statements by Michelson about his general intentions with respect to consultations with
Proskauer and Jeffer Mangels, and his knowledge of specific facts and documents—but
not the substance of any of his communications with Jeffer Mangels. If Michelson chose
not to communicate directly with Proskauer, but instead to use Jeffer Mangels as a
vehicle for his consultations with Proskauer about the SDI and Odora investments, that
would not constitute evidence that Michelson disclosed significant portions of his
communications with Jeffer Mangels. Nor would Jeffer Mangels‟s alleged participation
with Proskauer in making revisions to Proskauer‟s draft opinion letters waive
Michelson‟s privilege to withhold disclosure of his communications with Jeffer Mangels
about the investments.
       Neither the evidence admitted in the Michelson/Ernst & Young arbitration nor the
results of that arbitration are probative of any voluntary disclosure of otherwise-
privileged communications with Jeffer Mangels.7 Proskauer contends that Michelson
disclosed significant portions of the communications he seeks to protect when he was
compelled to produce documents reflecting them in connection with the Ernst & Young
arbitration. But the cited references are to documents authored by representatives of
Ernst & Young, not by either Michelson or anyone at the Jeffer Mangels firm. To the
extent they purport to reflect their authors‟ views about what Michelson or Jeffer
Mangels might have communicated, it is clear that their authors‟ receipt and discussion of
those communications was within the privilege, as “reasonably necessary for the

of this court to examine, Evidence Code section 915 does not apply. (See also Costco
Wholesale Corp. v. Superior Court, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 740 [party claiming privilege
may request in camera examination of communications that are claimed to be
privileged].)
 7 Michelson contends (and Proskauer does not dispute) that the results of the arbitration
with Ernst & Young have no collateral estoppel effect on these proceedings.
(Vandenberg v. Superior Court (1999) 21 Cal.4th 815, 834.)
                                             11
accomplishment of the purpose for which [Jeffer Mangels] was consulted” by Michelson.
(Evid. Code, § 912, subd. (d).) According to the return, the panel in the Ernst & Young
arbitration compelled Michelson‟s production of certain privileged attorney-client
communications between Michelson and Jeffer Mangels, and he thereafter asserted the
privilege when Proskauer sought to obtain those documents from Ernst & Young and its
attorneys.
       We find nothing in the record to impeach the conclusion of the respondent court
that no waiver resulted from Michelson‟s disclosure of portions of his privileged
communications with Jeffer Mangels.
       B. Michelson Did Not Waive His Attorney-Client Privilege With Respect To
             His Communications With Jeffer Mangels By Placing The Substance Or
             Content Of Any Privileged Communication Directly At Issue.
       A party‟s attorney-client privilege is not waived by filing a lawsuit in which his
communications with the attorney might be relevant to a disputed issue. (Miller v.
Superior Court, supra, 111 Cal.App.3d 392-393.) That is true unless the lawsuit also
places in issue the content of the communications, or the client‟s or his attorney‟s state of
mind in making them. (Lohman v. Superior Court (1978) 81 Cal.App.3d 90, 97; Merritt
v. Superior Court (1970) 9 Cal.App.3d 721, 730.) This principle does not change merely
because the party engaged in confidential communications with more than one attorney.
       In his underlying suit against Proskauer, Michelson contends that he was misled to
his detriment by Proskauer‟s misrepresentations and omissions. Undoubtedly, the advice
Michelson received from Jeffer Mangels on the same subject could be relevant to the
question whether Michelson relied upon and was misled by Proskauer‟s alleged acts or
omissions. But relevance is not enough. Mere relevance does not transform either the
state of mind of anyone at the firm of Jeffer Mangels, or the contents of their
communications with Michelson, into an issue to be proved and established in
Michelson‟s case against Proskauer.

                                             12
       Privileged communications do not become discoverable simply by being relevant
to issues raised in the litigation. (Brockway v. State Bar (1991) 53 Cal.3d 51, 63;
Schlumberger Limited v. Superior Court, supra, 115 Cal.App.3d at p. 393.) The
attorney-client privilege is not waived “„where the substance of the protected
communication is not itself tendered in issue, but instead simply represents one of several
forms of indirect evidence in the matter.‟” (Mitchell v. Superior Court (1984) 37 Cal.3d
591, 606.) Even when the attorney‟s state of mind is placed in issue by the pleading of a
party seeking disclosure of the privileged materials, the client‟s privilege to prevent
disclosure is not overcome. (Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Superior Court (1984) 153
Cal.App.3d 467, 477 [fact that attorney‟s state of mind is placed at issue by pleading of
party seeking disclosure of privileged materials does not waive privilege as to attorney‟s
advice].)8
       In Lohman v. Superior Court, the court held that a client‟s disclosure of
communications with a former attorney on a subject relevant to her current claims did not
waive her privilege to prevent disclosure of her conversations on that same subject with
other attorneys. Even assuming the client had waived her privilege as to confidential
communications with some of her attorneys, “she did not waive her privilege as to her
communications with [another attorney] during his representation of her even though
what she told [that attorney] related to the same subject matter or was identical to what
she told her prior attorneys. [Citation.].” (81 Cal.App.3d at p. 97.)

 8  In Merritt v. Superior Court, supra, 9 Cal.App.3d 721, the court found that a
plaintiff‟s allegations had placed the former attorney‟s state of mind in issue, and
therefore had waived the attorney-client privilege, by alleging that the defendant insurer
had so confused the former attorney as to render the former attorney unable to settle his
claim. (Id. at p. 730.) That decision, however, is “„limited in its application to the one
situation in which a client has placed in issue the decisions, conclusions, and mental state
of the attorney who will be called as a witness to prove such matters.‟” (Mitchell v.
Superior Court, supra, 37 Cal.3d at 605.)
                                             13
       In Miller v. Superior Court, supra, 111 Cal.App.3d 390, the petitioner had sued
her former attorney, claiming losses resulting from his negligence in undervaluing assets
in an earlier marriage dissolution proceeding. The defendant attorney sought disclosure
of her communications with her subsequent attorneys, contending that she had waived
her attorney-client privilege with respect to those communications by filing a lawsuit in
which her contact with other attorneys might show that she had discovered the alleged
malpractice beyond the statute of limitations. In that case, just as in the case of Lohman
v. Superior Court, the court held that the issue was what the plaintiff knew, not what she
was told by her attorney: “[W]hat plaintiff knew was not privileged, but what she may
have told her attorney was.” (Miller v. Superior Court, supra, 111 Cal.App.3d at p. 394.)
       In order to prevail in his underlying suit against Proskauer, Michelson‟s own state
of mind and the grounds on which he decided to invest and take deductions with respect
to the SDI and Odora investments will be at issue. But it is his state of mind that will be
at issue, not the state of mind of the attorneys with whom he communicated at Jeffer
Mangels. No privilege protects Michelson from disclosure of his own knowledge; but
what Jeffer Mangels might have told him, and what he might have told Jeffer Mangels,
remains privileged, even if Proskauer might find that information relevant and helpful to
its defense. (Miller v. Superior Court, supra, 111 Cal.App.3d at p. 394.)
       Michelson‟s pleadings do not place in issue the decisions, conclusions, or mental
state of Jeffer Mangels, or the contents of his communications with anyone at that firm.
Michelson‟s knowledge and understanding of the subject of his SDI and Odora
investments is discoverable, but the contents of his communications with Jeffer Mangels
on that subject was not put in issue by his suit against Proskauer, and therefore remains
protected by the attorney-client privilege. (Mitchell v. Superior Court, supra, 37 Cal.3d
at pp. 606-607.) The fact that Michelson‟s underlying claims place his own state of mind
at issue does not place at issue any otherwise-privileged communications that might or
might not have influenced his thinking or his conduct. If it did, little of the attorney-
client privilege would remain. (Schlumberger Limited v. Superior Court, supra, 115

                                             14
Cal.App.3d at p. 393 [“If tendering the issue of damages in a malpractice action waived
the privilege, there would be no privilege, and Evidence Code section 954 would be
meaningless.”].)9
                                      CONCLUSION
       The attorney-client privilege precludes discovery of Michelson‟s confidential
communications with Jeffer Mangels arising from their attorney-client relationship.
Because we find the attorney-client privilege was not waived, we do not consider
whether the work product doctrine would also apply to preclude discovery of
Michelson‟s communications with Jeffer Mangels. (Costco Wholesale Corp. v. Superior
Court, supra, 47 Cal.4th 725, 732.) Nor do we address the impact that Michelson‟s
assertion of the privilege will almost inevitably have on his ability to use particular items
of evidence to establish his claims against Proskauer at trial—questions that may be
addressed to the trial court by appropriate pretrial motions and objections during trial.
Plainly, Michelson‟s privilege assertions during discovery should preclude his ability to
later waive the privileges he has asserted.
       On the record before us, the trial court did not err in declining to compel
production of documents containing privileged communications between Michelson and
Jeffer Mangels.

 9  Whether the attorney-client privilege would apply also to communications (if any) in
which Jeffer Mangels‟s role is properly found to be nothing more than that of an agent for
the transmission of messages between Proskauer and Michelson is an issue not raised by
the evidence before us, and on which we express no opinion. (See CostcoWholesale
Corp. v. Superior Court, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 735 [privilege does not apply when the
attorney acts merely as a negotiator for client].)
                                              15
                                   DISPOSITION
     The petition is denied. Costs are awarded to Real Parties in Interest.
     NOT TO BE PUBLISHED.

                                                             CHANEY, J.

We concur:

             MALLANO, P. J.

             JOHNSON, J.

                                          16