Court of Appeals of Washington, 2013

Philip D. Mckibben, Res. v. Leroy Christiansen, Pets.

Philip D. Mckibben, Res. v. Leroy Christiansen, Pets.
Court of Appeals of Washington · Decided March 18, 2013

Philip D. Mckibben, Res. v. Leroy Christiansen, Pets.

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON PHILIP D. McKIBBEN, individually and for and on behalf of LLC EVERETT I, a No. 68316-1- Washington limited liability company, and P.D. & M.K., LLC, a Washington limited DIVISION ONE liability company, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Respondent, v. O O cno rHcr LEROY CHRISTIANSEN and JUDY m : 2» CHRISTIANSEN, husband and wife and c^ "n '-n the marital community composed thereof; CO <T3r STEVEN M. FUESTON and JANE DOE P>~OfTj corn,-, FUESTON, husband and wife and the marital community composed thereof; and S —to DAVID C. EBERT and MICHELLE en O-: CD EBERT, husband and wife and the marital community composed thereof, Petitioners, FRANK COLACURCIO, JR. and JANE DOE COLACURCIO, husband and wife and the marital community composed thereof, Defendants. FILED: March 18,2013

Appelwick, J. — A trial court has broad discretion to manage the discovery process. When a party objects on the basis that documents requested during discovery are protected by the attorney-client privilege and work product doctrine, the trial court should determine whether a valid privilege exists. If so, it should evaluate whether the party waived the privilege or an exception to the privilege exists. In making those determinations, the trial court may, for instance, order the production of a privilege log, appoint a special master, or conduct in camera review. It may not, however, do what No. 68316-1-1/2

was done here: order disclosure of the allegedly privileged materials and reserve its ruling on privilege for a later date. Such a ruling irreparably frustrates the purposes of the privileges, because what is seen cannot become unseen. In other words, "it is not an easy task to unring a bell." State v. Rader. 62 Or. 37, 40, 124 P. 195 (1912). We reverse and remand for the trial court to exercise its discretion and rule on the asserted privileges prior to ordering any disclosure of the challenged materials.

WE CONCUR:

Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.