Answer to Question 1
e
Answer to Question 2
Confidentiality and privilege
The attorney-client privilege protects the confidentiality of attorney-client communications. Under this principle, an attorney cannot discuss a client's case without the client's permission or the client's waiver of this privilege, even by court order. The purpose for this protection is to encourage the client's full disclosure to the attorney of the facts of the client's case. There is an exceptionthe crime-fraud exceptionunder which a client who consults an attorney for advice that will help the client commit fraud cannot avoid disclosure.
In this case, citing the Barry e-mail and other evidence, the court ordered the disclosure of the attorney-client communications relating to the Bertelsmann-Napster loan under the crime-fraud exception. Bertelsmann appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which reversed this order and remanded the case, holding that the plaintiffs did not prove the crime-fraud exception applied. The court concluded that the plaintiffs' evidence failed to establish an intentional, material misrepresentation directly aimed at the court. Litigation expenses could fall under the general, administrative and overhead expenses clause in the loan documents. The court added that even if we were to conclude that the written terms of the loan misrepresented the parties' agreement to allow some of the funds to be used for litigation expenses, the plaintiffs' evidence nowhere suggests that Bertelsmann selected these terms with the intent to defraud the courts. The fact that a party has taken steps to structure a business transaction to limit its liability does not suffice, without more, to establish that the crime-fraud exception applies. Finally, the court reasoned that even assuming for the sake of argument that Bertelsmann's failure to spell out in the loan documents that overhead costs' included litigation expenses was an intentional misrepresentation, we do not see how it could have deceived a court into concluding that Bertelsmann provided no financial support to, or had no financial stake in, the existing Napster company. . . . If funding Napster's litigation may have helped to prolong Napster's existence, so, too, did injecting any cash into Napster.