City of El Paso v. Salas-Porras Soule

6 F. Supp. 2d 616, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7627, 1998 WL 262384
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedMay 12, 1998
Docket2:97-cr-00458
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 F. Supp. 2d 616 (City of El Paso v. Salas-Porras Soule) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of El Paso v. Salas-Porras Soule, 6 F. Supp. 2d 616, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7627, 1998 WL 262384 (W.D. Tex. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

BRIONES, District Judge.

On this day, the Court considered Defendants’ Motion to Disqualify filed on March 19, 1998, in the above-captioned cause. Counsel for the City of El Paso (“City”), the firm of Krafsur, Gordon, Mott, Davis & Woody, P.C. (“KGM”), filed its Response on March 26, 1998. The Court held an eviden-tiary hearing on the matter on April 3 and 7, 1998. Thereafter, the Court allowed the Parties to file post-hearing briefs. Defendants filed their post-hearing brief on April 13,1998. KGM and the City filed their Post-hearing Response Briefs on April 20, 1998. 1 Defendants then filed their Reply Brief on April 27, 1998. After due consideration, the Court is of the opinion that the Motion should be granted.

Background

Briefly, in the underlying cause the City is seeking to collect on a final judgment rendered in its favor against Parallax Corporation N.V., a/k/a Parallax N.V. (“Parallax”), in a Texas state court condemnation proceeding regarding a piece of real estate (“condemned land”) in the City. Through its Complaint, the City is attempting to recover certain funds that were held in the registry of the County Court at Law, El Paso County, Texas (“state court”), in connection with the condemnation proceedings (“condemnation proceedings”), and other funds of Parallax. These funds allegedly were transferred to Defendants during the pendency of state court litigation. The City relies on several legal theories for the basis of its claims, including fraudulent transfer, civil conspiracy, fraud, conversion, and alter ego. 2

Defendants filed the instant Motion because of an alleged conflict of interest between KGM and at least three Defendants in this cause. Specifically, Defendants Carlos Salas-Porras S. (“Salas-Porras Jr.”), Carlos Salas-Porras R. (“Salas-Porras Sr.”), and *619 Parallax, Defendants assert, have been represented by KGM and/or attorneys currently employed by KGM. The City and KGM insists there is no conflict. KGM argues that there was no attorney-client relationship between it and the subject Defendants, that the alleged prior representation did not involve substantially related matters, that no confidential information was revealed, and that the instant Motion is untimely. The Court finds the parties established the following facts during the evidentiary hearing and through duly admitted and verified exhibits.

Facts

In the 1970’s, the El Paso firm of Mayfield & Perrenot (“Mayfield & Perrenot”) began its representation of Salas-Porras Jr., Salas-Porras Sr., and several corporate entities owned by the Salas-Porras family. This representation included the formation of many of the Salas-Porras family corporate entities.

In 1986, Andrew Krafsur (“Krafsur”) joined Mayfield & Perrenot as an attorney. He worked at Mayfield & Perrenot until 1994. During Krafsur’s tenure at Mayfield & Perrenot, the firm represented several of the Salas-Porras family corporate entities. Burges Perrenot, one of Mayfield & Perre-not’s founding partners, was a close advisor to Carlos Salas-Porras Jr., Carlos Salas-Porras Sr., and at least some of the Salas-Porras family corporate entities during Kraf-sur’s employment at Mayfield & Perrenot.

Krafsur left Mayfield & Perrenot in 1994 and formed KGM. Pat Gordon (“Gordon”), another KGM attorney, provided tax advice to Parallax by way of another law firm, Delgado & Acosta (“D & A”). D & A also formerly represented Parallax. D & A consulted with Gordon regarding tax issues which would arise in the course of its representation of Parallax. Exactly under what circumstances and when Gordon first began to do work for Parallax through D & A is not apparent from the record. D & A billing statements, which were admitted into evidence during the evidentiary hearing, contain several entries referring to work done by Gordon, either indirectly or directly, for Parallax. 3 Several KGM billing statements addressed to D & A also contain entries mentioning work done by KGM attorneys for Parallax and other corporate entities owned by the Salas-Porras family. 4

*620 In February 1996, the City contacted Harrell Davis (“Davis”), a KGM partner, and asked him if KGM would be willing to undertake post-judgment work related to the condemnation proceedings. The work was to involve post-judgment discovery for the purpose of collecting the deficiency judgment rendered against Parallax in City of El Paso v. Parallax Corporation, N.V., County Court at Law Number Four, Case No. 91-5809. As part of KGM’s routine conflicts check, Davis sent a memorandum (“conflicts memo”) to the other KGM attorneys informing them of KGM’s potential representation of the City, and asking that he be informed of any conflict of interest which might arise out of the representation. Krafsur responded to the conflicts memo by telling Davis that he knew Salas-Porras Jr. Gordon did not respond to the memo.

KGM attorneys Krafsur and Davis met with Carlos Salas-Porras Jr. in February 1996 at KGM offices. The meeting concerned the firm’s possible representation of the City in the post-judgment proceedings and any potential conflict in interest. Kraf-sur and Davis asked Salas-Porras Jr. to sign a letter waiving conflicts of interest arising out of KGM’s representation of the City in Case No. 91-5809. 5 After consulting with independent counsel, Salas-Porras Jr. agreed to sign the letter (“waiver letter”). The waiver letter, dated March 7, 1996, and addressed to Salas-Porras Jr., provides in relevant part as follows:

While [KGM] has not represented either. Parallax or New World, and has not obtained any information regarding their dispute with the City of El Paso, due to our personal relationship and the fact we have represented and continue to represent you and other entities you own or control, we do not believe it appropriate to undertake the City’s representation without a waiver of any potential conflict of interest.
After discussions with us and consultation with your counsel ... you have agreed that any conflict of interest involving you, Parallax or New World will be affirmatively waived, and this firm may undertake the representation of the City of El Paso. This waiver will in no event constitute a waiver of the attorney-client privilege on any matters in which we have undertaken your representation.

Salas-Porras Jr. endorsed the terms of the waiver on behalf of Parallax, New World, and himself individually.

Sometime in October or November 1997, a letter was sent on behalf of Salas-Porras Jr. to KGM advising the firm to withdraw because of a conflict. Despite the exchange of several letters, KGM was never informed of any factual basis for the conflict.

DISCUSSION

Motions to disqualify an attorney are substantive motions resolved under federal law standards, In re Dresser Indus., Inc.,

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Bluebook (online)
6 F. Supp. 2d 616, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7627, 1998 WL 262384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-el-paso-v-salas-porras-soule-txwd-1998.