Seahaus La Jolla Owners Ass'n v. Superior Court , 169 Cal. Rptr. 3d 390 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 3/12/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SEAHAUS LA JOLLA OWNERS                         D064567
    ASSOCIATION,
    (San Diego County
    Petitioner,                             Super. Ct. No. 37-2009-00095253-CU-
    CD-CTL; No. 37-2010-00092634-CU-IC-
    v.                                      CTL)
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN
    DIEGO COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    LA JOLLA VIEW LTD., LLC et al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.
    Petition for writ of mandate after superior court (Hon. John S. Meyer) granted
    motion to compel discovery responses over Petitioner's assertion of attorney-client
    privilege. Petition granted.
    Epsten Grinnell & Howell, Anne L. Rauch; Rockwood & Noziska, Brant Noziska,
    Neal Rockwood; Law Offices of William A. Bramley and William A. Bramley for
    Petitioner.
    Simpson Delmore & Greene, Paul J. Delmore, Elizabeth A. Donovan and
    Brook T. Barnes for Real Parties in Interest CLB Partners Ltd. and La Jolla View Ltd.,
    LLC.
    Gordon & Rees, Sandy M. Kaplan, R. Scott Sokol and Matthew G. Kleiner for
    Real Parties in Interest Webcor Development, Inc., Webcor Builders, Inc. and Webcor
    Construction, L.P.
    Bryan Cave, Robert E. Boone III, Edward M. Rosenfeld, Tony Tootell and David
    Harford for Real Parties in Interest Bank of America Corporation, Bank of America, N.A.
    and Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.
    Petitioner Seahaus La Jolla Homeowners Association (Association) is the plaintiff
    in a construction defect action alleging water and other damage to the common areas of a
    common interest development. The Association sued the developers and builders of the
    complex, La Jolla View Ltd., LLC et al. and Webcor Construction L.P. (Defendants),
    who, among others, are the real parties in interest in this mandamus proceeding. The
    Association contends the trial court erred and abused its discretion in overruling the
    Association's claim of attorney-client privilege in this discovery dispute over Defendants'
    efforts to depose individual homeowners regarding disclosures made at informational
    meetings about the litigation.
    2
    The record shows that counsel for the Association's board of directors (the Board)
    gave notice to the individual homeowners in June 2009 that the Board was pursuing
    mediation but was also contemplating filing construction defect litigation. (Former Civ.
    Code, § 1368.5; now see Civ. Code, § 6150.)1 Such litigation was filed in July of 2009,
    and the Board and its counsel subsequently conducted meetings with many individual
    homeowners of the 140 units, to apprise them of the status and goals of the litigation.
    Pursuant to the provisions of the governing documents, at one such litigation update
    meeting, the Board sought and obtained majority approval by the homeowners for
    pursuing the action. (Civ. Code, § 6150, subd. (b); Association's Declaration of
    Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (CCRs), § 4.4.11, "Members' Approval of
    Certain Actions.")
    By the time of the later litigation update meetings, a subgroup of individual
    homeowners had filed its own companion action in which they seek damages for
    construction defects in their private individual units, and their action was coordinated for
    1      Both former Civil Code section 1368.5 and current Civil Code section 6150 are
    provisions contained in the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Development Act (the Act),
    which was recently repealed, reenacted and renumbered by Statutes 2012, chapter 180,
    section 1, operative January 1, 2014; now see Civil Code section 4000 et seq. on
    residential properties, and Civil Code section 6500 et seq. for commercial and industrial
    properties. We utilize the current Civil Code section designations. The Association is a
    nonprofit mutual benefit corporation managing the common interest development.
    3
    discovery purposes with the Association's action. (Sarnecky v. La Jolla View Ltd., LLC
    (Super. Ct. San Diego, 2010, No. 37-2010-00092634-CU-IC-CTL)) (Sarnecky action).)2
    Defendants' contested discovery requests were made during depositions of many
    individual homeowners, and seek to inquire into the content and disclosures made at
    those informational litigation update meetings, which were conducted by the
    Association's counsel. The Association objected, invoking the attorney-client privilege
    under Evidence Code3 section 952 and the "common interest" doctrine. (See OXY
    Resources California LLC v. Superior Court (2004) 
    115 Cal.App.4th 874
    , 887-888 (OXY
    Resources) [parties who possess common legal interests may share privileged
    information without losing the protection afforded by the privilege].) However, several
    rulings by the trial court have declined to allow such a privilege to be asserted by the
    Association, or have concluded any privilege was waived, regarding the communications
    received at the meetings by individual homeowners who are not the actual clients of the
    Association's retained counsel. This petition ensued.
    "Confidential communications" between client and lawyer are defined in section
    952 as meaning "information transmitted between a client and his or her lawyer in the
    2      The Sarnecky action was brought by a group of approximately 30 unit
    homeowners against not only the developers and builders, but also the lenders and escrow
    holders. One real party in interest here, defendant Bank of America, was never sued in
    this Association action, but only in the individual homeowners' coordinated action. Bank
    of America recently obtained summary judgment in the Sarnecky action and has notified
    this court that it is no longer a real party in interest and will not be filing a return.
    However, its previous filings were properly before this court, and have been relied on by
    the other real parties in interest, and may be considered here.
    3      All further statutory references are to the Evidence Code unless noted.
    4
    course of that 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 interest 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, and includes a legal opinion formed and
    the advice given by the lawyer in the course of that relationship." (Italics and emphasis
    added.)
    We evaluate this discovery dispute in the context of the usual first principles, that
    parties may obtain discovery regarding any unprivileged matter that is relevant to the
    subject of the pending action, or motions, but subject to the rule that "the matter either is
    itself admissible in evidence or appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of
    admissible evidence." (Code Civ. Proc., § 2017.010, italics added.) Defendants' claim to
    entitlement to information about the litigation update meetings is apparently based upon
    the claim of some of the individual plaintiffs to stigma damages for their units
    (apparently in the Sarnecky action). Defendants argue that in the Association's common
    area action, they should be able to inquire into the beliefs of the individual homeowner
    plaintiffs about damages and the source of their beliefs (such as any perceptions gained
    from information given to them by the Association's attorneys at the Board's litigation
    update meetings).
    To the extent this record reveals anything about the purpose of the requested
    discovery, it shows that counsel for Defendants is seeking to develop information about
    the litigation strategy of the Association's counsel, including the legal opinions formed
    5
    and the advice given by the lawyers in the course of that relationship, and such
    disclosures would not likely lead to the discovery of admissible evidence. (§ 952; Code
    Civ. Proc., § 2017.010; Mitchell v. Superior Court (1984) 
    37 Cal.3d 591
    , 609-610
    (Mitchell) [public policy concerns outlined against unwarranted invasions of privilege].)
    In the Act governing common interest developments, the Legislature placed
    certain obligations on homeowners' association governing boards to communicate with
    individual owners about proposed construction defect litigation by the Association
    regarding the common areas. (Civ. Code, § 6150, subd. (a).) The Association may sue
    developers over common area defects, and also over alleged damage to the separate
    interests that the Association must maintain or repair, or damage to the separate interests
    that is integrally related to damage to the common areas. (Ibid.; Civ. Code, § 5980.) By
    the same token, individual owners have economic interests in the value of not only their
    own individual units, but also in the state of the development as a whole. (Ostayan v.
    Nordhoff Townhomes Homeowners Assn., Inc. (2003) 
    110 Cal.App.4th 120
    , 126-127
    (Ostayan).)
    As we will show, the challenged orders in the Association's action represent an
    overly technical definition of the attorney-client privilege, and do not account for the
    protection of client confidentiality as it operates through the common interest doctrine, in
    this factual and legal context surrounding common interest developments. We grant
    relief on the petition to allow the attorney-client privilege to be asserted under these
    circumstances.
    6
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
    A. Nature of Meetings Held by Board for Individual Homeowners; Legal Representation
    The Association's Board hired the Epsten Grinnell & Howell law firm to represent
    it in pursuing mediation with the developer and general contractor of the development.
    On June 23, 2009, the Association's counsel sent a letter to all homeowners notifying
    them that mediation was pending, no lawsuit had been filed, and a preliminary list of
    defects was enclosed, reflecting that the Association was currently investigating the
    nature, extent and severity of the defects at the site. The letter stated that if an owner was
    selling or refinancing a unit, "you may be required to provide this document to escrow,
    buyer, or a lending institution."
    The next letter from the Association's attorneys was dated August 17, 2009, and
    provided homeowners with an update regarding the status of the construction defect
    claims involving the common areas of the development. This letter notified homeowners
    that (1) the Association had just filed its lawsuit on July 31, 2009, due to limitations
    concerns and bankruptcy of one defendant, and (2) the homeowners might be required to
    disclose that filing in connection with any pending sale or refinance of a unit. Mediation
    was continuing, but the legal action filing had been deemed to be essential to preserve the
    claims. Counsel stated that members of the firm would be present at the Association's
    annual meeting on September 16, 2009, to answer questions and discuss the Association's
    legal options and the status of the investigation and mediation efforts.
    On January 13, 2010, the Board and its mediation and litigation committee sent
    out a notice of an informational meeting to all homeowners, at which counsel for the
    7
    Association would be present to provide owners with information about the status of the
    claims against the developers and builders of the complex. The meeting was scheduled
    for January 26, 2010 for presentations by the attorneys and some of the consultants
    retained to assist in connection with pursuing the claims.
    Next, counsel for the Association sent all homeowners another status update on
    the claims against the developers and builders dated March 1, 2010. This letter
    referenced the homeowner meeting held January 26, 2010, and stated that additional
    defects had been identified and were being investigated. The homeowners were told that
    additional meetings would be scheduled when the results of the current investigation
    were obtained.
    On March 20, 2012, counsel for the Association notified the individual
    homeowners that an upcoming open forum meeting was scheduled for March 24, 2012,
    to answer individual homeowners' questions regarding the litigation, particularly its
    relationship to the separate Sarnecky individual homeowners' action. Only some of the
    individual homeowners were parties to the separate action, and they were represented by
    their own attorneys (the Aguirre firm). The letter also stated that the Association's
    structural engineer would be attending the meeting to answer questions.
    B. Discovery Dispute; Referee
    Defendants pursued discovery in the Association's action, requesting that several
    individual homeowners be produced for deposition and questioned about the litigation
    meetings' content, and any basis they might have learned there about any stigma damages
    8
    being claimed for their units. Defendants argued that the meetings were not held in a
    confidential context and any applicable privileges had been waived.
    The Association objected to the questions and asserted that the information was
    protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege. The Association did not claim
    that the individual homeowners were also clients of its counsel, but rather that they were
    "third persons . . . to whom disclosure is reasonably necessary for the . . .
    accomplishment of the purpose for which the lawyer is consulted." (§ 952.) Thus, it
    claimed the individual homeowners were present to further the interests of the
    Association, as client, in the consultation.
    When Defendants continued to seek information about the content of the meetings,
    the Association brought the issue before the appointed discovery referee, James A.
    Roberts. After a tentative ruling and hearing, the referee issued a report and
    recommendations for a protective order to be issued by the court. The referee concluded
    that the information requested about the content of the meetings was not subject to
    discovery because it was neither directly relevant to the action nor reasonably likely to
    lead to relevant evidence. In his June 4, 2012 letter decision, he stated his opinion that
    the Association had the better argument as to why such communications should be
    determined to be privileged. In his formal recommendation dated July 13, 2012, issued
    after a request for reconsideration, the referee stated that even though some of the letters
    from the Association's counsel to the homeowners, about the status of the litigation and
    the claims being made, were stated on their face not to be confidential and thus could be
    shown to lenders or prospective purchasers, the public content of those letters was
    9
    different from the content of the confidential information being discussed at the
    homeowner litigation meetings.
    C. Court Proceedings on Referee's Recommendation
    Defendants brought their objections to the referee's recommendations to the trial
    court (Judge Vargas), who held several hearings. In a series of proposed orders and
    rulings, Judge Vargas stated he "sustains defendant's objection" to the recommendation,
    but also stated "[t]he court overrules all other objections." Although the order granted the
    protective order proposed by the referee, it was stamped "granted with modifications"
    (which were unclear), and the same order was stamped as "Rejected - Defective
    (Courtesy Copy Not Received by Court)." Meanwhile, some of the individual
    homeowners' depositions were proceeding, out of over 30 that were set.
    At the end of 2012, Judge Vargas retired and the case was reassigned to Judge
    Meyer. In July 2013, Defendants moved to compel further answers, claiming that the
    information sought about the meetings at the individual homeowners' depositions was not
    protected by the attorney-client privilege, since there were no attorney-client
    relationships between the Association's counsel and the individual homeowners.
    The Association responded that there was not any attorney-client relationship
    between its own counsel and the individual homeowners, but that nevertheless, its
    counsel's disclosures to those homeowners were privileged under section 952, as
    reasonably necessary for "the accomplishment of the purpose" for which the
    Association's lawyer was consulted.
    10
    At the hearing on the motion to compel, Judge Meyer stated that he could not
    understand Judge Vargas's orders, which were ambiguous and contradictory. The matter
    was taken under submission and the motion to compel granted on September 4, 2013:
    "This court cannot change Judge Vargas's order reversing the Discovery Referee's
    determination regarding an attorney-client relationship between the Association's counsel
    and individual homeowners."
    This petition followed, asserting that the court erred in granting the motion to
    compel solely on the ground that it had to follow Judge Vargas's earlier order, which was
    ambiguous. Petitioner seeks orders compelling the trial court to vacate its orders
    allowing the requested discovery, and asks that we direct the trial court to order adoption
    of the referee's report. The Association contends this privilege question is one of first
    impression that should be considered by this court, before the Association or witnesses
    are required to disclose information it claims is privileged.4
    We issued a stay, received additional briefing, and issued an order to show cause.
    Oral argument was held and the matter submitted.
    DISCUSSION
    In this context of Association litigation seeking recovery for construction defects
    in the common areas, we are asked to decide whether attorney-client privileges extend to
    communications, for which confidentiality was intended or preserved, between the
    4      We assume that only those individual homeowners who are litigants in the
    Sarnecky action could be seeking stigma damages, and that the Association is not doing
    so regarding the common areas. In any case, the parties each assume that the same
    privilege questions apply to the Association and each individual homeowner deponent.
    11
    Association's counsel and third party nonclients (individual homeowners), at Association
    update meetings about the common area litigation, which were held for the individual
    homeowners. Although there may be some differences between the procedural posture of
    some of these third party nonclients (i.e., only some of the individual homeowners have
    filed the separate Sarnecky action seeking damages to their private units), we will treat
    the Association and its litigation counsel's communications to individual homeowners at
    the meetings as raising the same legal issue. Were such communications sufficiently
    confidential, and "reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of the purpose for which
    the [Association's] lawyer is consulted," based on common interests in the subject matter
    of the Association's litigation updates? (§§ 912, 952.)
    I
    APPLICABLE STANDARDS
    A. Review of Privilege Rulings
    "Extraordinary review of a discovery order will be granted when a ruling threatens
    immediate harm, such as loss of a privilege against disclosure, for which there is no other
    adequate remedy. [Citation.] ' "We review discovery orders under the abuse of
    discretion standard, and where the petitioner seeks relief from a discovery order that may
    undermine a privilege, we review the trial court's order by way of extraordinary writ.
    [Citation.]" ' " (Zurich American Ins. Co. v. Superior Court (2007) 
    155 Cal.App.4th 1485
    , 1493 (Zurich).) Each challenged discovery ruling concerning the recognition of a
    privilege is considered on a "case-by-case" basis, and we decide only the issues before us.
    (Upjohn Co. v. United States (1981) 
    449 U.S. 383
    , 396-397.)
    12
    In this context, " '[t]he trial court's determination will be set aside only when it has
    been demonstrated that there was "no legal justification" for the order granting or denying
    the discovery in question.' " (OXY Resources, supra, 
    115 Cal.App.4th 874
    , 887.) A trial
    court has abused its discretion in determining the applicability of a privilege when it
    utilizes the wrong legal standards to resolve the particular issue presented. (Zurich,
    supra, 
    155 Cal.App.4th 1485
    , 1493-1494.)
    The party claiming privilege has the burden of establishing the preliminary fact
    that the communications were made during the course of an attorney-client relationship.
    (D.I. Chadbourne, Inc. v. Superior Court (1964) 
    60 Cal.2d 723
    , 729; Costco Wholesale
    Corp. v. Superior Court (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 725
    , 740.)
    The overarching standards for the scope and applicability of a privilege are
    statutory in nature. (§ 911.) "The privileges set out in the Evidence Code are legislative
    creations; the courts of this state have no power to expand them or to recognize implied
    exceptions." (Wells Fargo Bank v. Superior Court (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 201
    , 206 (Wells
    Fargo); Roberts v. City of Palmdale (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 363
    , 373; Zurich, supra, 
    155 Cal.App.4th 1485
    , 1494.) Public policy supports the proper scope of application of
    attorney-client privileges, to ensure " 'the right of every person to freely and fully confer
    and confide in one having knowledge of the law, and skilled in its practice, in order that
    the former may have adequate advice and a proper defense.' " (Mitchell, supra, 
    37 Cal.3d 591
    , 599.)
    The proper purposes of discovery are to obtain information on unprivileged
    matters that are relevant to the subject of the pending action, "if the matter either is itself
    13
    admissible in evidence or appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of
    admissible evidence." (Code Civ. Proc., § 2017.010.) "For discovery purposes,
    information is relevant if it 'might reasonably assist a party in evaluating the case,
    preparing for trial, or facilitating settlement.' [Citation.] Admissibility is not the test and
    information, unless privileged, is discoverable if it might reasonably lead to admissible
    evidence. [Citation.] . . . [T]he scope of discovery extends to any information that
    reasonably might lead to other evidence that would be admissible at trial. 'Thus, the
    scope of permissible discovery is one of reason, logic and common sense.' " (Lipton v.
    Superior Court (1996) 
    48 Cal.App.4th 1599
    , 1611-1612 (Lipton); italics omitted.)
    B. Procedural Status: No Reliance on Laches
    Before analyzing the record in light of the above legal principles, we acknowledge
    that the sequence of discovery referee recommendations and two sets of superior court
    rulings have created some confusion on the basis for the rulings and the exact issues to be
    resolved. Defendants complain that the Association could have sought mandamus relief
    earlier, but did not do so until well into the discovery and litigation process, and thus, the
    petition arguably should be barred by laches. (See, e.g., Johnson v. City of Loma Linda
    (2000) 
    24 Cal.4th 61
    , 68; Planned Parenthood Golden Gate v. Superior Court (2000) 
    83 Cal.App.4th 347
    , 356.)
    Writ review on the merits is appropriate to evaluate the rulings granting the
    motion to compel brought by Defendants, since they effectively disallowed the claims of
    attorney-client privilege raised by the Association with respect to the proposed
    questioning of individual homeowners. It is not necessary to enter into the debate about
    14
    what Judge Vargas meant in the rulings he made before he retired in 2012, or about Judge
    Meyer's subsequent interpretation of what Judge Vargas must have meant, when Judge
    Meyer found it determinative that there was no attorney-client relationship between the
    Association's counsel and individual homeowners. In light of the novel and important
    issues raised by the petition on the interpretation of section 952, we decline to take the
    route of relying on principles of laches to resolve this matter. (See Lipton, supra, 
    48 Cal.App.4th 1599
    , 1612.)
    Moreover, the Association has requested in its petition that this court direct the
    trial court to order adoption of the referee's report. Such an intermediate step is not
    necessary, and instead we exercise our discretion to reach the merits of the privilege
    questions presented.
    II
    ELIGIBILITY FOR PRIVILEGE COVERAGE
    A. Basic Statutory Criteria: Evidence Code
    Two basic situations arise under section 952 for determining whether a
    "confidential communication" between a client and lawyer will retain its privileged
    character. Most importantly to the case before us, section 952 provides that
    confidentiality is retained if such an attorney-client communication is transmitted in
    confidence "to no third persons other than those who are present to further the interest of
    the client in the consultation . . . ." (§ 952, italics added.) Together, sections 912 and
    952 will "permit sharing of privileged information when it furthers the attorney-client
    relationship; not simply when two or more parties might have overlapping interests."
    15
    (McKesson HBOC, Inc. v. Superior Court (2004) 
    115 Cal.App.4th 1229
    , 1237, italics
    added, citing Raytheon Co. v. Superior Court (1989) 
    208 Cal.App.3d 683
    .)
    In general, section 912, subdivision (a) provides guidance for when disclosures
    operate to waive a privilege. One of its exceptions, section 912, subdivision (d) expressly
    clarifies it is not a waiver of privilege, under the following circumstances: "A disclosure
    in confidence of a communication that is protected by a privilege provided by [attorney-
    client privilege, § 954], when disclosure is reasonably necessary for the accomplishment
    of the purpose for which the lawyer . . . was consulted, is not a waiver of the privilege."
    (OXY Resources, supra, 115 Cal.App.4th at p. 890, italics added; see First Pacific
    Networks, Inc. v. Atlantic Mut. Ins. Co. (N.D.Cal. 1995) 
    163 F.R.D. 574
    , 581 [both
    sections 912 and 952 of the California Evidence Code contain the same concept, i.e.,
    whether there is a reasonable necessity for disclosure to a third party, in order to
    accomplish the purpose of consulting the lawyer].)
    Accordingly, section 952 allows privileges to be preserved when a family
    member, business associate or joint client (and/or the attorney for same) meets with the
    client and attorney who claim privilege, in regard to a matter of joint concern, "when
    disclosure of the communication is reasonably necessary to further the interest of the
    [claimant/litigant]." (See Insurance Co. of North America v. Superior Court (1980) 108
    
    16 Cal.App.3d 758
    , 767; 2 Witkin, Cal. Evidence (5th ed. 2012) Witnesses, § 124, pp. 423-
    424.)5
    In a related situation, public policy considerations were enunciated to assist in
    defining the proper scope of statutory protections of attorney-client confidential
    communications. The Supreme Court in Mitchell, supra, 
    37 Cal.3d 591
    , 611, was
    confronted with a defendant's discovery requests that were nominally intended to produce
    evidence relating to a plaintiff's claimed damages, in the form of questioning of the
    plaintiff about the nature and content of any warnings or information she had received
    from her attorney about the potential damages she was asserting. (Id. at p. 597.) In that
    case, the plaintiff was claiming injury from the defendants' wrongful environmental
    contamination, including her emotional distress stemming from fears of future physical
    harm that might be caused from the contamination. (Id. at p. 595.)
    In the requested discovery in Mitchell, defense counsel arguably was seeking to
    inquire into whether the plaintiff and her counsel had discussed any potential physical
    harm to her from the contamination, "and if so, whether that discussion had contributed
    to plaintiff's distress." (Mitchell, supra, 
    37 Cal.3d 591
    , 610.) In considering privilege,
    the Supreme Court balanced the respective interests and concluded that such questioning
    5      Parenthetically, we need not discuss at length the other statutory concept in section
    952, that privileges remain when confidences are disclosed to persons "to whom
    disclosure is reasonably necessary for the transmission of the information or the
    accomplishment of the purpose for which the lawyer is consulted. . . ." (§ 952; italics
    added; 2 Witkin, Cal. Evidence, supra, Witnesses, § 125, pp. 424-425 [rule covers
    various kinds of agents and intermediaries, e.g., secretary, accountant, other expert, etc.].)
    The expert consultants who attended the litigation update meetings would fall into this
    category.
    17
    went too far, because it "might very well reveal much of plaintiff's investigative efforts
    and trial strategy." (Ibid.) The plaintiff's attorney-client privilege should protect against
    any such investigation by opposing counsel into confidential client communications
    about injury and damages. (Id. at pp. 610-611.)
    Moreover, allowing such proposed discovery into attorney-client discussions
    would "potentially uphold a harassment tactic whereby defendants . . . are able to shift
    the focus of the case from damages caused by [their actions] to damages caused by
    allegedly inflammatory or false information provided by self-serving attorneys. . . .
    [T]his technique not only obfuscates many of the substantive issues in a case but also
    frequently places the wrong 'defendant' on trial." (Mitchell, supra, 
    37 Cal.3d 591
    , 610-
    611.) Permitting such discovery would constitute "an unwarranted abrogation of the
    attorney-client privilege," that would unjustifiably undermine the proper functioning of
    the judicial system. (Id. at p. 611.)
    Having set forth these basic principles and policy limitations regarding the
    protected scope of the attorney-client privilege, we turn to the more specific questions
    presented about the application of the common interest doctrine in this situation.
    B. Common Interest Doctrine Definition
    "Although the protection of the attorney-client privilege is absolute, the protection
    afforded by the common interest doctrine is qualified, because it depends on the content
    of the communication. . . . [T]here is 'no absolute brightline [sic] test which
    distinguishes between the parties [sic] "adversarial" interests and their "common"
    interests.' " (OXY Resources, supra, 
    115 Cal.App.4th 874
    , 896.)
    18
    Not only the content of the communication must be considered, but also the
    circumstances of the communication. "Applying these waiver principles in the context of
    communications among parties with common interests, it is essential that participants in
    an exchange have a reasonable expectation that information disclosed will remain
    confidential. If a disclosing party does not have a reasonable expectation that a third
    party will preserve the confidentiality of the information, then any applicable privileges
    are waived. An expectation of confidentiality, however, is not enough to avoid waiver.
    In addition, disclosure of the information must be reasonably necessary for the
    accomplishment of the purpose for which the lawyer was consulted. (Evid. Code, § 912,
    subd. (d).) Thus, '[f]or the common interest doctrine to attach, most courts seem to insist
    that the two parties have in common an interest in securing legal advice related to the
    same matter--and that the communications be made to advance their shared interest in
    securing legal advice on that common matter.' [Citation.]" (OXY Resources, supra, 115
    Cal.App.4th at p. 891, italics added.)
    In Citizens for Ceres v. Superior Court (2013) 
    217 Cal.App.4th 889
    , 915, the court
    expounded on the rules regarding the nonwaiver principles of sections 912 and 952. A
    communication to a lawyer, even where made in the presence of another person (e.g., a
    business associate or joint client, who is present to further the interest of the client in the
    consultation), and on a matter of joint concern, may retain a privileged character, within
    the existing scope of the privilege statutes. "Evidence Code sections 912 and 952,
    however, make no reference to common interests or joint concerns; they refer instead to a
    reasonable necessity of disclosure. Those two sections give rise to the common-interest
    19
    doctrine. . . . [T]he alignment of the parties' common interests may mean disclosures
    between them are reasonably necessary to accomplish the purposes for which they are
    consulting counsel." (Citizens for Ceres, supra, at p. 916.)6
    In Smith v. Laguna Sur Villas Community Assn. (2000) 
    79 Cal.App.4th 639
    , 642
    (Smith), the court analyzed discovery demands for attorney-client privileged information,
    that were made by appellants as condominium owners and members of their Association,
    regarding litigation materials created by the Association. Those owners were not
    individually named as plaintiffs in the Association's construction defect litigation against
    developers, so that the owners were not equivalent to the Association client that had
    retained the attorney to bring the lawsuit, and thus the owners could not be allowed to
    access the privileged information. The court explained, "Like closely held corporations
    and private trusts, the client [Association] is the entity that retained the attorney to act on
    its behalf." (Id. at pp. 642, 643 [§ 951, defining " 'client' " as the " 'person' " who
    6       In Citizens for Ceres, supra, 
    217 Cal.App.4th 889
    , the appellate court was
    addressing an arcane question under the California Environmental Quality Act, about
    whether a developer and a municipality have any "common interest" in the creation of a
    legally defensible environmental impact report about the developer's application. The
    appellate court was analyzing whether those two entities had waived the attorney-client
    and other privileges, with respect to the communications they disclosed to each other
    before the project was approved. This required interpretation of the terms of Public
    Resources Code section 21167.6, subdivision (e) (governing the preparation of the
    administrative record). The court held that the administrative record statute does not
    impliedly abrogate the lead agency's attorney-client privilege, but any privilege is
    nevertheless waived as to any documents shared with the developer's counsel, before the
    project is approved. (See 9 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (2013-2014 supp.) § 25A:6,
    pp. 100-101.) That case is factually distinguishable. Its general statement of the
    common interest doctrine is useful, although the court's application of it has been
    criticized by commentators. (Ibid.)
    20
    " 'directly or through an authorized representative, consults a lawyer for the purpose of
    retaining the lawyer . . . . ' "].) Thus, "[w]here the association sues in its own name
    without joining with it the individual unit owners, the association, not the unit owners,
    holds the attorney-client privilege." (9 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (3d ed. 2011)
    § 25B:110, p. 25B-233.)
    In reaching its conclusions, the court in Smith, supra, 
    79 Cal.App.4th 639
    , relied
    on Wells Fargo, 
    supra,
     
    22 Cal.4th 201
    , 209, in which no "fiduciary" exception to the
    attorney-client privilege was allowed on behalf of beneficiaries of a trust, who had sought
    to discover confidential communications between their trustee and the outside trust
    counsel hired by the trustee. It was immaterial that the trust had paid the attorney; such
    payments "do not suffice to create an attorney-client relationship." (Smith, supra, at
    p. 645.) Courts "do not enjoy the freedom to restrict California's statutory attorney-client
    privilege based on notions of policy or ad hoc justification." (Wells Fargo, 
    supra, at p. 209
    .)
    In Smith, supra, 
    79 Cal.App.4th 639
    , the court colorfully addressed concerns about
    group client confidentiality and potentially conflicting loyalties of Association counsel,
    by stating: "It is no secret that crowds cannot keep them. Unlike directors, the residents
    owed no fiduciary duties to one another and may have been willing to waive or breach
    the attorney-client privilege for reasons unrelated to the best interests of the association.
    Some residents may have had no defects in their units or may have had familial, personal
    or professional relationships with the defendants. Indeed, it is likely that the developer in
    the underlying litigation itself may have owned one or more unsold units within the
    21
    complex. As [Association] points out, '[o]ne can only imagine the sleepless nights an
    attorney and the Board of Directors may incur if privileged information is placed in the
    hands of hundreds of homeowners who may not all have the same goals in mind.' With
    the privilege restricted to an association's board of directors, this is one worry, at least,
    that their lawyers can put to rest." (Id. at p. 645.)
    C. Homeowners' Associations' Obligations: Civil Code Criteria
    For purposes of evaluating the proper scope of the attorney-client privilege, we
    turn to the statutes governing the Association's obligations to its members. In former
    Civil Code section 1368.3 (now Civ. Code, § 5980), an association that was established
    to manage a common interest development is granted standing to sue in its own name, on
    matters concerning damage to the common area, or damage to separate interests that are
    affected by damage to the common areas, etc. (Civ. Code, § 5980; former § 1368.3,
    repealed by Stats. 2012, ch. 180, § 1, operative Jan. 1, 2014.)7 As previously explained,
    after the Association filed its construction defect action in 2009 alleging damage to the
    common areas, individual homeowners hired their own attorneys to file a separate but
    7       Compare Wardleigh v. Second Judicial Dist. Court In and For County of Washoe
    (Nev. 1995) 
    891 P.2d 1180
    , 1185, applying Nevada law that a homeowner's association
    lacks standing to file an action, but "when it acts as an agent or facilitator for
    homeowners who have retained counsel, Association officials so acting on behalf of the
    Association would be drawn into the privilege enjoyed by the homeowner clients,"
    despite a lack of a direct attorney-client relationship with the homeowners in litigation
    sponsored by the Association. Further, "such representation by the Association will be
    privileged only to the extent that the Association acts on behalf of the homeowner clients
    in a setting where it is clear that the communications with the homeowners' counsel were
    intended to be privileged and confidential." (Ibid.) We need not rely on out-of-state law,
    as California law is sufficient.
    22
    coordinated action for damage to individual units (the Sarnecky action). However, the
    Association can seek redress for damage to separate interests that are affected by damage
    to the common areas, etc. (Civ. Code, § 5980.)
    "The duties and powers of a homeowners association are controlled both by statute
    and by the association's governing documents." (Ostayan, supra, 
    110 Cal.App.4th 120
    ,
    126-127.) In that case, the appellate court observed that the "complex" relationship
    between the individual owners and the managing association of a common interest
    development " 'may depend on the function the association is fulfilling under the facts of
    each case.' " (Lamden v. La Jolla Shores Clubdominium Homeowners Assn. (1999) 
    21 Cal.4th 249
    , 266.) Although the individual owner " 'has an economic interest in the
    proper business management of the development as a whole for the sake of maximizing
    the value of his or her investment,' " in other ways, " 'each individual owner, at least
    while residing in the development, has a personal, not strictly economic, interest in the
    appropriate management of the development . . . .' " (Id. at pp. 126-127, quoting Lamden,
    supra, at pp. 266-267.)
    As explained already, the Act places certain obligations on an association to
    communicate with individual owners about any proposed construction defect litigation.
    Current Civil Code section 6150, subdivision (a) of the Act requires the board of an
    association to provide a written notice to each current member of the association, 30 days
    prior to the filing of any civil action by the association against the developer, "for alleged
    damage to the common areas, alleged damage to the separate interests that the association
    is obligated to maintain or repair, or alleged damage to the separate interests that arises
    23
    out of, or is integrally related to, damage to the common areas or separate interests that
    the association is obligated to maintain or repair." (Ibid.) Such a notice shall specify (1)
    a meeting will take place to discuss problems that may lead to the filing of a civil action;
    (2) what are the options available to address the problems; (3) the time and place of the
    meeting. (Ibid.) (If there are potential statute of limitations problems imminent, the
    association may give such notice within 30 days after the filing of the action; Civ. Code,
    § 6150, subd. (b); this method was evidently used here.)
    In the CCRs applicable to this property, the Association is required not only to
    give such written notice of intended litigation to Association members, but also to obtain
    a vote of approval by more than 50 percent of the members, before filing the action.
    (CCRs, § 4.4.11.) This provision implements the protections of the individual
    homeowners' economic interests in the value of not only their own individual units, but
    also the development as a whole. (Ostayan, supra, 
    110 Cal.App.4th 120
    , 126-127.) It
    anticipates that investigation of common area defects could require individual
    homeowners to permit access and testing that affect their units.
    III
    ANALYSIS; NO WAIVER FOUND
    In light of the above principles of law, we turn to the record and request for relief
    in this case.
    A. Was Confidentiality of Communications Maintained at Meetings?
    The common interest doctrine is properly characterized under California law "as a
    nonwaiver doctrine, analyzed under standard waiver principles applicable to the attorney-
    24
    client privilege and the work product doctrine." (OXY Resources, supra, 115 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 889, fn. omitted.) " '[F]or the common interest doctrine to attach, most courts seem
    to insist that the two parties have in common an interest in securing legal advice related
    to the same matter—and that the communications be made to advance their shared
    interest in securing legal advice on that common matter.' [Citation.]" (Id. at p. 891.)
    Defendants argue that any confidentiality of communications at the meetings was
    initially waived through several different sets of circumstances. First, persons employed
    by or affiliated with Defendants, and who were also individual homeowners, were
    allowed to attend, and expert consultants attended and spoke at the meetings. (But see
    fn. 5, ante.) Second, a few homeowners later discussed issues raised at the meetings with
    their relatives and friends. Third, the letters announcing the meetings stated that the
    letters could be shared with potential buyers or lenders. Also, the Association had not
    kept confidential, but had made available to others, the numerous e-mails its counsel had
    received from individual homeowners, about the defects they were experiencing in their
    units.
    In response, the Association provided the declaration of its managing agent, Nina
    McCarthy, stating that the Association and its counsel gave instructions that attendance at
    the litigation meetings was to be restricted to Seahaus owners only, not tenants,
    prospective buyers, realtors or other such third parties.
    The concerns expressed in Smith, supra, 
    79 Cal.App.4th 639
    , about the difficulty
    of preserving confidentiality when a large crowd of homeowners is involved were
    outlined by the court in that case, in response to the individual homeowners' efforts to
    25
    access privileged material created by the association's lawyers. Such access was not
    necessarily intended to further the purpose of the association's lawyers' job, but was
    adverse to it. (Id. at p. 645.) Our situation is the converse, in which the Association and
    its Board and lawyers perceive that the Board has a duty to keep all the individual
    homeowners informed about common area litigation that might affect the value of the
    individual units.
    Likewise, in Wells Fargo, supra, 
    22 Cal.4th 201
    , the individual beneficiaries were
    seeking to force disclosure of the trustee's privileged information, for their own dissident
    reasons. Again, our situation is the converse, in which the corporate entity is attempting
    to offer confidential legal information to other interested persons about matters in which
    the entity (the Association) and its members (individual homeowners) have some
    common interests, and which the attorneys for the Association are attempting to protect.
    Concededly, the interests of the Association and the individuals will not always be
    aligned, and it can be difficult to draw a line between their allied interests and their
    adverse interests. (See OXY Resources, supra, 115 Cal.App.4th at p. 896.) However, the
    Association was seeking to share its privileged information with homeowners, to the
    extent that it believes that they " 'all have the same goals in mind.' " (Smith, supra, 79
    Cal.App.4th at p. 645.)
    To determine the scope of the privilege, we look to the content of the subject
    communications, as well as the circumstances, for indications on whether the meetings
    will advance the common interests in the representation by counsel. (OXY Resources,
    supra, 115 Cal.App.4th at p. 891.) In considering the Civil Code sections listed above
    26
    about the initiation of construction defect litigation, together with the Association's
    governing documents, we conclude that the Association's duties and powers include
    communicating with those parties who have closely aligned common interests, and the
    individual homeowners at the development have such common interests in this particular
    context. On balance, these circumstances show that the Association and its counsel, and
    the individual homeowners who participated in the litigation meetings, maintained a
    reasonable expectation that information to be disclosed about the status of the litigation
    was confidential in nature. "Clearly, the fundamental purpose behind the privilege is to
    safeguard the confidential relationship between clients and their attorneys so as to
    promote full and open discussion of the facts and tactics surrounding individual legal
    matters." (Mitchell, supra, 
    37 Cal.3d 591
    , 599.) In the role of client, the Association
    could properly take into account not only its own goals of protecting the common areas,
    but also the interests of its individual member homeowners in their units, as related to the
    common areas that the Association was seeking to repair. The relationship of the two
    construction defect actions was close enough so that the individual homeowners had
    common interests in the legal status of the Association's action. (See Civ. Code, § 6150,
    subd. (a).) Moreover, the presence of some homeowners who may have had conflicting
    loyalties (homeowners who were affiliated with Defendants) did not destroy all other
    common interests.
    We conclude that the subject litigation meetings were held to accomplish the
    purpose for which the Association's lawyers were consulted. (§ 912, subd. (d); OXY
    Resources, supra, 115 Cal.App.4th at p. 891.) The common interest doctrine and its
    27
    protection of confidentiality of these communications apply as a matter of law to these
    circumstances.
    B. Was "Reasonable Necessity" Shown for Disclosures at Meetings?
    We turn to the related question of whether the record supports the conclusion that
    it was "reasonably" necessary to the purpose of the Association's attorney retention for
    such disclosures to be made at the subject meetings, to the individual homeowners.
    (§§ 952, 912, subd. (d).) Defendants appear to argue that even if the original meeting,
    seeking individual voter approval of the Board's decision to pursue the litigation, was
    required by the CCRs and therefore was reasonably necessary, any subsequent meetings
    lost that protected status. We disagree. Both the content and the circumstances of each
    set of communications made, about the Association's legal strategy or advice, support
    conclusions that each stage of these disclosures was intended to carry out the purpose of
    pursuing the Association's lawsuit (to recover for asserted damage to the common areas)
    in such a way that would be consistent with and not interfere with the rights of the
    individual homeowners.
    Although the two sets of plaintiffs involved here have some common interests in
    obtaining legal advice about their respective and distinct property rights, those rights will
    ultimately differ and are being resolved in separate lawsuits. Nevertheless, the
    Association's attorney was attempting to communicate in the subject meetings with other
    stakeholders, the individual homeowners, in a manner that would advance their shared
    interests in securing advice on similar legal and factual issues. (OXY Resources, supra,
    115 Cal.App.4th at pp. 887-888.) These circumstances were enough to connect the
    28
    disclosure of the litigation update information with the statutorily required "reasonably
    necessary" steps toward accomplishing the purpose for which the lawyers were
    consulted. (§ 912, subd. (d).)
    If we agree with the position taken by Defendants, which is that the Association's
    attorneys' communications to individual homeowners were not confidential and merely
    served to create inflated expectations of individualized stigma damages, we run the risk
    of offending the public policy considerations set out in Mitchell, supra, 37 Cal.3d at
    pages 609 through 610. Even if discovery into privileged discussions between attorneys
    and clients would nominally be intended to produce some evidence relating to the issues
    about damages, "it might very well reveal much of plaintiff's investigative efforts and
    trial strategy." (Id. at p. 610.) Such discovery about attorney-client communications
    regarding potential damage evaluations or items "would potentially uphold a harassment
    tactic whereby defendants . . . are able to shift the focus of the case from damages caused
    by [their actions] to damages caused by allegedly inflammatory or false information
    provided by self-serving attorneys. . . . [T]his technique not only obfuscates many of the
    substantive issues in a case but also frequently places the wrong 'defendant' on trial."
    (Ibid.)
    In reaching this conclusion and granting the petition, we do not expand the scope
    of statutory privileges, but instead apply recognized rules to an unusual set of facts.
    (Wells Fargo, supra, 
    22 Cal.4th 201
    , 206.) The trial court erred in granting Defendants'
    motion to compel deposition answers from individual homeowners about the content and
    strategies disclosed to them by the Association or its counsel at the litigation update
    29
    meetings, and the trial court must deny the motion and issue a protective order
    concerning the attorney-client privilege in light of the common interest doctrine.
    DISPOSITION
    Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the superior court to vacate its
    September 4, 2013 order denying assertion of the attorney-client privilege and
    compelling discovery, and enter a new order issuing a protective order and denying the
    motion to compel. The stay issued on September 17, 2013 is vacated. Petitioner is
    entitled to costs in the writ proceeding.
    HUFFMAN, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    McCONNELL, P. J.
    IRION, J.
    30