Alan Chaffee v. Keller Rohrback, L.l.p.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 7, 2017
Docket76491-8
StatusPublished

This text of Alan Chaffee v. Keller Rohrback, L.l.p. (Alan Chaffee v. Keller Rohrback, L.l.p.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alan Chaffee v. Keller Rohrback, L.l.p., (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

lN THE COURT OF 'APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASH|NGTON

ALAN CHAFFEE, an individual; JEANNE Del\/lUND, an individual; YUP|NG CHEN, an individua|; lVlATTHEW WAHLMAN, an individual; LAlRD DEV|CK, an individua|; ` ASH HANLON, an individua|; NllKE SCHEFFLER, an individual; Nl|CHA|L W|LSON, an individual; NATHAN|EL HEATHCOTE, an individual; PETER HEATHCOTE, an individual; and TODD HAGER, an individual,

Respondents,

V.

) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) § KELLER ROHRBACK LLP, a Washington ) limited liability partnership; ROBERT S. OVER,) an individual; GLEN P. GARR|SON and DOES) 1-50; ) )

Appellants. )

’ ' )

)

PAC|F|C REALTY ADV|SORS, LLC, AS GENERAL RECE|VER FOR FA|RPLAY F|NANC|AL, |NC., AND FA|RPLAY FUND|NG NW, LLC,

KELLER ROHRBACK, LLP, ROBERT OVER, and GLEN GARR|SON, `

Appellants.

NO. 76491-8-|_

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F|LED: August 7, 2017

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No. 76491-8!|/2

DWYER, J. -- Pacific Realty Advisors, as general receiver for Fairplay Financial, |nc. (co|lectively Fairplay), and 11 individual investors (|nvestors) sued Keller Rohrback, LLP and its managing partners, G|en Garrison and Robert Over (co|lectively Defendants), for legal malpractice related to the acquisition of a

bank. After the separate civil suits commenced, Defendants learned of an ongoing federal criminal investigation into the acquisition Believing that they were also subjects of the criminal investigation, Defendants moved for a discovery stay in the civil proceeding pending the resolution of the criminal investigation, The trial court denied the motion. After discovering new information relating to the criminal investigation, Defendants moved for a six- month discovery stay. The renewed motion was denied. We granted discretionary review and now reverse the trial court’s order denying the motion to stay.

l

This matter relates back to Fairplay’s desire to invest in Hometown National Bank (the Bank)-a sma|l, one-branch bank in Longview, Washington. ln 2012, Fairplay retained Keller Rohrback to address certain regulatory issues relating to the investment. Keller Rohrback advised Fairplay that Fairplay itself could not acquire the Bank. ln lieu of Fairplay acquiring the Bank directly, certain investors decided to pursue the acquisition themselves-all of whom were owners, officers, board members, or investors in Fairplay. Garrison advised

Fairplay that the investment could not come from Fairplay itself: “For example,

NO. 76491-8-|/3

Fairplay cannot loan the money to the investors. Or at |east, we would have to disclose this and l think it would put an end to the application.”

Contrary to Garrison’s advice, Fairplay elected to loan money to the investors and present the aggregated funds as individual investments. Bill Widmer, who at that time served as president and chief executive officer of Fairplay, instructed the investors to conceal this fact when filling out required documentation Widmer later stated, f‘ln my mind, l believed the loan back to the investors from Fairplay achieved the same result (i.e., that the money for all practical purposes was that of the investors), but l never informed Mr. Garrison of this, and | asked the investors not to disclose this arrangement on theregulatory forms that they were filling out.” Six months after the |nvestor’s acquisition of the Bank, Widmer instructed the investors to execute false promissory notes in favor of Fairplay.

Prior to the acquisition, Garrison circulated an escrow agreement that listed Fairplay as signatory. After some of the lnvestors signed the escrow agreement, Garrison purportedly deleted Fairplay as a signatory and informed Widmer-but not the lnvestors--of the change. Garrison submitted the new escrow agreement to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)`for approval. Following an investigation led by the OCC, Fairplay brought suit against Defendants for legal malpractice and other claims.

in December 2015, counsel for Fairplay informed counsel for Defendants that Fairplay was cooperating with the Federal Bureau of investigation (FB|) and

the United States Attorneys’ Office (USAO) in connection with an investigation

-3_

No. 76491-8-|/4

into the Bank acquisition in early 2016, counsel for the receiver also informed counsel for Defendants of the criminal inquiry into the Bank acquisition

in July 2016, the USAO e-maiied Fairplay to request a copy of the August 21, 2013 Bank board minutes. The subject matter of that board meeting included attorney Garrison’s views on the bank acquisition A copy of the e-mail was sent to Defendants. in December 2016, counsel for Fairplay sent an e-mail to counsel for Defendants stating that an FB| agent planned to attend Garrison’s deposition Following receipt of this e-mail, Defendants informed Fairplay that the Garrison deposition would be rescheduled. Counsel for Defendants subsequently spoke with FB| Specia| Agent Ben Williamson, who confirmed that he planned on attending the Garrison deposition in an “offlcial capacity,” but declined to further elaborate.

Defendants moved to stay the deposition “due to an ongoing parallel criminal investigation.” The trial court performed the required Olympic Pipeline1 balancing test on the record, denied the motion, and ordered Garrison to appear for the deposition.

Garrison and Over subsequently retained independent criminal counsel, who then met with two Assistant United States Attorneys (AUSAs) to discuss the criminal investigation into the Bank acquisition The AUSAs informed Defendants’ criminal counsel that the government had yet to determine who, if anyone, would face charges. The AUSAs informed counsel that Garrison and

Over “were not being viewed as mere witnesses” and that the government’s

1 King v. O|ymgic Pige|ine Co., 104 Wn. App. 338, 16 P.3d 45 (2000). _ 4 _

No. 76491-8-|/5

investigation should be completed within six months. A subsequent e-mail to Defendants’ criminal counsel from AUSA Susan Roe stated that the USAO “could not commit" to whether Defendants were viewed “solely as witnesses.”

Criminal counsel for Defendants then discovered documents establishing that Fairplay itself had contacted the USAO to refer Garrison and Overfor criminal investigation relating to the Bank acquisition Criminal counsel for Garrison advised him that he should assert his Fifth Amendment privilege and decline to answer any questions related to the Bank acquisition during the civil proceedings 7

Based on counsel’s newly discovered evidencel Defendants filed an emergency motion to stay the trial court’s order compelling Garrison to appear for deposition and filed a renewed request to stay discovery.'2 Defendants’renewed motion asked for a limited discovery stay of six months. The trial court denied the Defendants’ renewed motion:

The Court, applying the factors in King v. Olvmpic Pipeiine to

the present motion, finds that the status and potential duration of

any criminal investigation into Defendants’ actions remains

unknown, the similarity of any possible criminal investigation to the

pending civil cases is unknown, Plaintiff and the Fairplay

Receivership creditors will be significantly prejudiced by an

indefinite stay of the pending actions, Defendants can point to no

significant or unique prejudice in proceeding with the depositions,

granting the requested stay will result in waste of judicial resources,

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