Butler v. Sequa Corp. and Sequa Capital

250 F.3d 171, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 371, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 10645
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 2001
Docket2000
StatusPublished

This text of 250 F.3d 171 (Butler v. Sequa Corp. and Sequa Capital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Sequa Corp. and Sequa Capital, 250 F.3d 171, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 371, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 10645 (2d Cir. 2001).

Opinion

250 F.3d 171 (2nd Cir. 2001)

BUTLER, FITZGERALD & POTTER, A PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION, APPELLANT,
v.
SEQUA CORPORATION AND SEQUA CAPITAL CORPORATION, PLAINTIFFS-APPELLEES,
GBJ CORPORATION, TOPAZ CAPITAL CORPORATION AND JEFFREY J. GELMIN, DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES.

Docket No. 00-7025
August Term, 2000

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

Argued September 25, 2000
May 17, 2001

Butler, Fitzgerald & Potter, a professional corporation, appeals the December 22, 1999 order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Batts, J.) denying its motion to intervene as of right to protect its charging lien after it was discharged as counsel in an underlying action.

Affirmed.[Copyrighted Material Omitted]

Thomas Butler, New York, New York (Raymond Fitzgerald, Butler, Fitzgerald & Potter, New York, New York, of counsel), for Appellant.

Brooks R. Burdette, New York, New York (Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP, New York, New York, of counsel), for Plaintiffs-Appellees.

James C. Jones, New York, New York (Charles B. Manuel, Jr., Law Offices of Manuel & Jones, P.C., New York, New York, of counsel), for Defendants-Appellees.

Before: Cardamone, Jacobs, and Sack, Circuit Judges.

Cardamone, Circuit Judge

During the course of protracted litigation, one party discharged the law firm that had been representing it, and replaced it with two solo practitioners. Prior to its discharge, the law firm obtained a $2.9 million charging lien that will be extinguished absent a favorable disposition for its former client. It moved therefore to intervene in the continuing litigation as a matter of right. The district court denied the motion.

This appeal from the denial of that motion raises several thorny issues: whether a discharged lawyer who has a charging lien it believes is in jeopardy by ongoing litigation possesses an interest justifying intervention as of right in that litigation; whether the discharged attorney's interests are adequately represented in the ongoing litigation; and whether the former attorney moved timely to intervene. A lawyer, like a laborer, is of course worthy of his hire and is entitled to be paid for his work. Yet, since the attorney/client relationship rests on a foundation of trust and confidence, when a client loses confidence in counsel, public policy generally demands that the client have the prerogative to terminate the relationship at any time, without cause.

Although choosing between these competing notions is not required to resolve this appeal -- resolution of the other issues will resolve the case -- the conflicting policies presented by these competing notions nonetheless give context to the discussion that follows.

BACKGROUND

The underlying dispute in this case is between GBJ Corporation, formerly represented by the professional corporation Butler, Fitzgerald & Potter (Butler, law firm, or appellant) and Sequa Corporation. That dispute arose when Sequa allegedly breached a consulting contract. Under the consulting agreement, GBJ Corporation was to provide consulting services to Sequa on the use of leveraged lease transactions for Sequa to shelter its tax liability. The main suit has been litigated before the district court for the better part of nine years, and now reappears before us following the denial of Butler's motion before the district court to join the suit as a party in its own right. The sole issue is whether the Butler law firm -- GBJ's former counsel in its action against Sequa -- may intervene in the suit to protect its asserted interest in the outcome.

Three years after Butler served the initial complaint upon Sequa on behalf of GBJ, and in the midst of trial, on April 17, 1995 GBJ dismissed Butler as counsel. In June of that year a magistrate judge determined that the dismissal was without cause and, pursuant to New York law, see N.Y. Judiciary Law § 475 (McKinney 1983), fixed a charging lien in the amount of $2,934,695.33 in favor of Butler upon any recovery GBJ had in its action against Sequa. The charging lien is the subject matter of Butler's appeal.

After relieving Butler as lead counsel, GBJ retained two solo practitioners, Charles Manuel, Esq. (Manuel) and James Jones, Esq. (Jones), who tried the case before the district court for 51 days after Butler's dismissal, eventually procuring a sizable verdict for their client on the breach of contract claims. See Sequa Corp. v. Gelmin, No. 91 Civ. 8675, 1996 WL 745448, at *77-78 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 31, 1996). Attorneys Manuel and Jones subsequently appeared before us when both Sequa and GBJ appealed portions of the district court's decision on the merits, and have since served as GBJ's attorneys of record after we vacated those portions of the district court's judgment relating to the calculation of GBJ's damages (tax recapture issue) and the fiduciary obligations of GBJ's president to Sequa (fiduciary duty issue). See Sequa Corp. v. GBJ Corp., 156 F.3d 136, 150 (2d Cir. 1998). The litigation of the remanded issues continues to date.

Butler contends that a series of incidents indicated its charging lien was in jeopardy. It says that in late 1998, following our August 20, 1998 remand, the newly retained counsel for GBJ contacted the Butler law firm for assistance on the fiduciary duty issue. The law firm asserts that it acquiesced to this request out of a desire to protect its $2.9 million charging lien, realizing that it could only recover upon it if GBJ succeeded in the underlying litigation. Thus, it provided assistance on the fiduciary duty issue, and on March 26, 1999 attempted to submit an amicus curiae brief separate from the one submitted on GBJ's behalf. When the district court rejected the amicus brief in August 1999, a single memorandum, apparently a collaboration between attorney Jones and the Butler law firm, was offered in support of GBJ's position and filed in mid-September.

As litigation of the fiduciary duty issue proceeded, Butler alleges that GBJ's new counsel solicited the firm's aid in litigating the remaining dispute, the apparently more complex tax recapture issue. In a March 31, 1999 order the district court had referred the tax recapture issue to a Special Master, and Butler claims that its subsequent assistance to GBJ on this issue was exhaustive, including: prepping GBJ's counsel on discovery methods and trial techniques in advance of a July 1999 hearing before the Special Master; identifying and arranging for a tax expert to refute Sequa's expert report; purchasing two hearing transcripts for GBJ in the course of the sessions before the Special Master; and drafting GBJ's August 14, 1999 post-hearing memorandum, which was submitted to the Special Master. Butler provided this aid purportedly because it had been forced to make a "Hobson's choice": either expend its own time and money to ensure that GBJ would succeed in its claims against Sequa, so that Butler could later recover its charging lien, or do nothing and likely lose the lien.

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Bluebook (online)
250 F.3d 171, 50 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 371, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 10645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-sequa-corp-and-sequa-capital-ca2-2001.