It is unlikely that the ECJ would recognize the privilege of a U.S. lawyer practicing in
Europe but not admitted to the bar of an EU-member state. In AM & S Eur. Ltd.
v. Comm’n, the
seminal case establishing the attorney-client privilege in the EU, the court stated in dicta that the
privilege “must apply without distinction to any lawyer entitled to practise his profession in one
of the member states, regardless of the member state in which the client lives. Such protection
may not be extended beyond those limits .
. . .” Case 155/79, 1982 E.C.R.
1575 ¶¶ 24-25
(E.C.J.). See also Opinion of Advocate General Kokott, Akzo Nobel Chems., Ltd. v.
Comm’n,
Case C-550/07P, ¶¶ 188-90 (rejecting argument that “EU law must extend the protection
afforded by legal professional privilege even to communications with in-house lawyers who are
members of a Bar of Law Society in a third country”).
C.
International Arbitration and Privilege
The application of privilege in arbitration is highly variable depending upon the rules
under which the arbitration takes place. Most arbitration rules do not provide guidance on the
issue of privilege. These include the rules of the ICC, SCC, WIPO and LCIA.
The arbitration
rules that do provide guidance vary widely in their specific provisions. For instance, the
International Centre for Dispute Resolution (“ICDR”) Rules of June 2014 state with respect to
privilege:
The arbitral tribunal shall take into account applicable principles of
privilege, such as those involving the confidentiality of
communications between a lawyer and client. When the parties,
their counsel, or their documents would be subject under
applicable law to different rules, the tribunal should, to the extent
possible, apply the same rule to all parties, giving preference to the
rule that provides the highest level of protection.
ICDR Rules, Article 22.
This approach is similar to the Renfield approach described supra. The
International Institute for Conflict Prevention and Resolution (“IICPR”) Rules for NonAdministered Arbitration, on the other hand, only vaguely state: “[t]he Tribunal is not required
to apply the rules of evidence used in judicial proceedings, provided, however, that the Tribunal
shall apply the lawyer-client privilege and the work product immunity.” IICPR Rule 12.2. The
specific application and scope of those privileges, however, is left to the discretion of the
arbitration panel.
Notwithstanding this variability, the widespread adoption of the IBA Rules on the Taking
of Evidence in International Commercial Arbitration (“IBA Rules on Evidence”) provides as
close to a “standard” as can be found in international arbitration.
Those rules state that
arbitrators shall, “at the request of a Party or on its own motion, exclude from evidence or
production any Document . . .
[because of] legal impediment or privilege under the legal or
ethical rules determined by the Arbitral Tribunal to be applicable.” IBA Rules on Evidence,
Article 9(2)(b).
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.