A federal magistrate judge has ruled in a bad-faith case that documents produced by an in-house attorney at an insurance company who was also acting as an adjuster — emails, letters and an uninsured motorist worksheet — are shielded by the attorney-client privilege.

The plaintiff, who is seeking benefits from a policy with Travelers Insurance after being hit by a vehicle, had argued that he would have been entitled to the documents if an in-house attorney hadn’t taken on the mantle of insurance adjuster as well.

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