A plaintiff insured waives the attorney-client privilege as to fee agreements, time sheets and the like by suing the insurer for bad faith and claiming Brandt fees as damages. A trial court may, but is not required to, bifurcate trial, leaving Brandt fees for a separate phase after the jury has determined liability for bad faith and allowing discovery of the attorney-client privileged materials only thereafter. However, the privilege waiver only applies to the lawyer’s services in establishing coverage and duty to indemnify under the policy, not to time spent on the bad faith claim itself since Brandt fees can’t be collected for that work. Here, the trial court allowed plaintiff to redact attorney time sheets, and he could redact the non-waived time spent on the bad faith claim and other time not compensable under Brandt.