The plaintiffs brought a motion to compel the defendant, a lawyer, to answer undertakings and refusals from an examination for discovery.
The underlying action involved an alleged contract where the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiffs a 10% referral fee for clients referred to him.
The defendant refused to answer questions and produce financial records regarding the allegedly referred clients, claiming the information was irrelevant and protected by solicitor-client privilege.
The court found the information relevant to the pleadings and held that the presumptive privilege over the financial records was rebutted, as the plaintiffs were not seeking confidential communications or evidence against the clients.
The court ordered the defendant to produce the requested financial records with any solicitor-client communications redacted.