Beck v. Atlantic Coast PLC

868 A.2d 840, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 15, 2005 WL 352437
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 11, 2005
DocketC.A. 303-N
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 868 A.2d 840 (Beck v. Atlantic Coast PLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beck v. Atlantic Coast PLC, 868 A.2d 840, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 15, 2005 WL 352437 (Del. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

I regret having to write this opinion. But the plaintiffs’ lawyers have given me no choice, haying failed to acknowledge their own responsibility for wasting the time of this court and of a defendant in this purported class action by filing false pleadings and failing to produce documents clearly within the scope of a valid request for production. By their conduct, the plaintiff and his lawyers have made this litigation unduly expensive for the defendant, unnecessarily expended the limited resources of this court, and put this court in a position to potentially certify a class representative who was unfit to serve in that capacity.

In summary, this lawsuit was filed as a class action. The proposed plaintiff, Heinrich Beck, was, the complaint suggests, an unsophisticated computer user duped into buying a software product that he thought would improve the operational efficiency of his computer, but which, in reality, did not. Although Beck did not reside in Delaware, suit was filed here and the certification of a nationwide class of similarly situated consumers was sought.

After costly proceedings in the Superior Court, this case was transferred to this court. Beck filed a proposed amended complaint soon thereafter, dropping many of the original defendants, but continuing to assert claims against one particular defendant, Atlantic Coast, whose counsel had spent many hours demonstrating to Beck’s counsel why Atlantic Coast was the least culpable of the parties originally named as defendants. In the proposed amended complaint, as well as in the original complaint, Beck was specifically alleged to have purchased the product in question.

Defendant Atlantic Coast then moved to dismiss the complaint and sought an award *843 of attorneys fees on the grounds that Beck’s prosecution of the action had been in bad faith and frivolous. Extensive briefing on these motions ensued.

In the course of discovery and briefing, it became clear that, contrary to representations in the original and proposed amended complaints, Beck had not been deceived and had never purchased the product in question, “Window . Power Tools.” In actuality, Beck observed an Internet popup ad for the product, believed the product did not work, and initiated a lengthy series of e-mail communications with the software developer in which he made numerous misrepresentations in order to elicit responses on, among other premises, the false basis that he could influence a school district’s bulk purchase of the product. Beck waxed eloquent on his personal Internet web page about his triumph in duping the developer.

During this process,. Beck learned of attorney Darrell W. Scott and his law firm Lukins & Annis because of their participation in a class action lawsuit against another software company. Beck eventually contacted Scott and discussed filing a lawsuit of his own against DMI. Erie J. Roth, another Lukins & Annis attorney who worked with Scott on this case, purchased a copy of Window Power Tools to test whether or not it worked. Beck himself never obtained the software and never reimbursed the law firm for its purchase, which was undertaken solely for purposes of filing this lawsuit.

The full course of this conduct was not voluntarily disclosed by Beck or by his counsel. Beck’s counsel received discovery requests from the defendants that clearly required them to produce the content of Beck’s Internet web page in its entirety. Instead of producing that material, counsel consciously chose to withhold much of it from production. Absent a diligent Internet search by Atlantic Coast’s counsel, the full content of Beck’s web page — which was relevant to, among other material issues, Beck’s fitness to be a class representative — would have gone unnoticed by both Atlantic Coast and this court.

Shortly before the argument on the various pending motions, Atlantic Coast’s counsel — and not Beck’s counsel — revealed to the court another fact that Beck’s counsel had not revealed — that Beck’s counsel had been unable to contact Beck himself for some nine or more weeks before the hearing date. At oral argument, Beck’s counsel, Scott, admitted that the action should be dismissed but refused to agree that any of the costs of the proceedings should be borne by him, his law firm, or his Delaware correspondent counsel.

In this opinion, I conclude that Beck’s counsel violated Court of Chancery Rules 11 and 37, and that Beck and his counsel prosecuted this action in bad faith. Beck and his counsel filed false and misleading complaints with this court that misrepresented factual circumstances at the core of this case, compounding this grave misjudgment by withholding material information that bore on a matter critical to the integrity of the class action mechanism — whether Beck (and indeed, given the origins of the suit, Beck’s counsel themselves) were fit to represent in good faith the best interests of the absent class members.

This misconduct is not trifling. It resulted in the unnecessary incursion of costs not only by defendant Atlantic Coast, but also by this court, and denied the court’s time to other litigants with pending cases. If ever candor cannot be compromised, it is when a plaintiff and his counsel undertake to act as fiduciaries for a wide array of persons not present before the court. Beck and his counsel here have created an example that can be cited by *844 those' who believe that class action suits should be curtailed because of the potential misuse that may be made of those suits. Without ensuring that Beck and his counsel bear appropriate responsibility for their inappropriate conduct by awarding a substantial, but fair, sanction of fees and costs against them, this court would do a disservice not only to. Atlantic Coast and other litigants in this court, but also to those plaintiffs whose interests are well-served by the availability of class action suits to remedy harms that would otherwise go unredressed.

I. Factual Background

The plaintiff, Heinrich Beck, proposed himself as the class representative in a proposed class action lawsuit brought on behalf of certain Internet users against defendants Digital Millennium, Inc., Sala-man Zafar, and Atlantic Coast, PLC seeking injunctive relief and damages in connection with Internet-based marketing and sale of software. Although he is a resident of the state of New York, Beck filed his suit in Delaware.

Because the role of Beck’s counsel in this action is critically important, a review of the individuals and the entities involved is useful. Darrell Scott of the Spokane, Washington law firm of Lukins & Annis, is Beck’s lead counsel. Eric J. Roth of Lu-kins & Annis assisted Scott, and is listed as one of Beck’s attorneys on all of the pleadings filed with this court on his behalf. Beck’s Delaware counsel throughout these proceedings has been William D. Sullivan initially with the Wilmington, Delaware law firm of Elzufon, Austin, Rear-don, Tarlov & Mondell, but now with the Wilmington, Delaware office of Buchanan Ingersoll. 1 On November 5, 2004, Sullivan filed a motion for the admission pro hac vice of Scott, which this court granted on November 8, 2004.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
868 A.2d 840, 2005 Del. Ch. LEXIS 15, 2005 WL 352437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-atlantic-coast-plc-delch-2005.