4.58 Legal advice in departmental documents and Cabinet papers should be protected from disclosure. The guidance in paragraphs 4.59 - 4.68 sets out the required approach to the release of legal advice.
4.59 Legal professional privilege is a term that applies to the protection of confidential communications between a lawyer and a client. If legal advice is protected by legal professional privilege, it may be protected from disclosure under the Official Information Act 1982 and the Privacy Act 1993, and will not be required to be produced for inspection during discovery in legal proceedings. (See section 9(2)(h) of the Official Information Act 1982 and section 29(f) of the Privacy Act 1993.) It is therefore important that legal professional privilege in legal advice provided to the government is maintained, and not inadvertently waived.
4.60 There are two categories of legal professional privilege:
4.61 All legal advice that is provided to Ministers or government agencies (whether it is internal advice from departmental legal advisers, advice from the Crown Law Office, or advice from outside legal firms to either Ministers or government agencies) will attract solicitor/client privilege. A document does not automatically attract solicitor/client privilege merely because a lawyer prepared it or it is labelled "legally privileged". Only those parts of a document that record legal advice (as opposed to other types of advice, such as policy advice) will attract solicitor/client privilege.
4.62 Some government documents necessarily include legal advice, so that Ministers and government agencies have all relevant information and advice before them when they make a decision. For example, a Cabinet paper may contain legal advice on a proposed transaction, or the government's proposed strategy for settling or conducting legal proceedings.
4.63 To ensure that legal advice provided to the government is properly protected by solicitor/client privilege, all those involved in preparing documents containing legal advice should follow these guidelines:
4.64 The protection of legal professional privilege may be lost in two circumstances:
4.65 As part of the Attorney-General's constitutional role, the Attorney-General represents the Crown in the courts and provides legal advice to the government. Day-to-day instructions to legal advisers are usually provided by departments, agencies, or other Ministers under the authority of the Attorney-General. Nevertheless, the constitutional responsibility of the Attorney-General remains. The Attorney-General has the right to:
4.66 When determining whether to release legal advice that has been provided to the government, or to refer to the content of that advice, and waive (or potentially waive) legal privilege, there is a need to:
4.67 Where a Minister or a government department considers that it is necessary to release legal advice or refer to the content of that advice, the matter must first be referred to the Crown Law Office. The Crown Law Office will in turn refer the matter to the Attorney-General's office for approval.
4.68 Where a request is made under the Official Information Act 1982, the decision on release must be made by the Minister or chief executive who received it. The Attorney-General (through the Crown Law Office) should be consulted about the request.