Peter H. Burkarda
Copyright 1986 by the American Bar Association; Peter H. Burkard
685[. . .]
This is not the place to engage in a deep philosophical debate on attorney-client privilege, but one can nevertheless safely say that for several hundred years in Western civilization, the privilege has been defended as providing an important social benefit to society.23 We have moved away from the concept that the privilege exists to enhance the status of the lawyer and, instead, we now focus on the importance to society of open and uninhibited communications with legal advisors.24 One of the basic underpinnings of most legal systems, including the EEC, is the ancient axiom that everyone is presumed to know the law, and it, therefore, follows that everyone can ascertain the law by consulting a lawyer. It is also ancient wisdom that one
aA.B. Harvard College (1962); J.D. University of Michigan Law School (1965); Dr. Jur. University of Heidelberg, Germany; Counsel, European and Japanese Regions, Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, New York.
238 WIGMORE ON EVIDENCE § 2290 at 542 (McNaughton rev. 1961).
24Id. § 2291 at 545.
0A.B. Harvard College (1962); J.D. University of Michigan Law School (1965); Dr. Jur. University of Heidelberg, Germany; Counsel, European and Japanese Regions, Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, New York.
238 WIGMORE ON EVIDENCE § 2290 at 542 (McNaughton rev. 1961).
24Id. § 2291 at 545.