Covey v. Colonial Pipeline Company

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedFebruary 24, 2021
Docket2:18-cv-01121
StatusUnknown

This text of Covey v. Colonial Pipeline Company (Covey v. Colonial Pipeline Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Covey v. Colonial Pipeline Company, (N.D. Ala. 2021).

Opinion

U.S. DISTRICT N.D. OF AL

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION JOHN CHRISTOPHER COVEY, } } Plaintiff, } } v. } Case No.: 2:18-CV-01121-RDP } COLONIAL PIPELINE COMPANY, et } al., } } Defendants. }

HUGH GERALD DELAUGHDER, JR., et } al., } } Plaintiffs, } } Vv. } Case No.: 2:19-CV-923-RDP } COLONIAL PIPELINE COMPANY,et =} al., } } Defendants. }

BEVERLY KAY WILLINGHAM, } Individually and as Administratrix of the } Estate of ANTHONY LEE } WILLINGHAM, deceased, } } Plaintiffs, } } v. } Case No.: 2:19-CV-01507-RDP } COLONIAL PIPELINE COMPANY, et } al., } } Defendants. }

MEMORANDUM OPINION This case is before the court on Defendant L.E. Bell Construction Company, Inc. (“L.E. Bell”)’s Amended Motion to Disqualify Counsel and for Related Sanctions. (Doc. # 116-1). In that Motion, L.E. Bell seeks various forms of relief as a remedy for alleged ethical violations arising out of Glenda Cochran Associates, LLC (“Cochran”)’s interactions with Steve Barker, a former employee of L.E. Bell. Specifically, L.E. Bell requests the court (1) disqualify Cochran from these proceedings; (2) bar all parties and counsel in these proceedings (other than L.E. Bell and its counsel) from contacting Barker; (3) require Cochran to provide the court with all documentation received from, concerning, or related to Barker; (4) grant L.E. Bell an award of fees and expenses incurred in prosecuting this Motion; and (5) award any other relief the court considers fair, just, practicable, and warranted. (Doc. # 116-1 at 50). That Motion (Doc. # 116-1) is due to be granted in part, denied in part. However, before discussing the merits of L.E. Bell’s claims, it is first necessary to provide a brief overview of the relevant facts. I. Background This consolidated case stems from the October 31, 2016, explosion at a Colonial Pipeline (“Colonial”) work site in Helena, Alabama. (Doc. # 1). Three cases (that each involve the same set of operative facts) were filed in the Northern District of Alabama (Cases # 2:18-cv-01121- RDP; 2:19-CV-923-RDP; 2:19-CV-01507-RDP) and another three cases were filed in Alabama state court. (See Doc. # 64). Cochran served as plaintiff's counsel in only one of the suits, which was filed against Colonial and Superior Land Designs LLC. Delaughder v. Colonial Pipeline Co., 19-cv-923 (N.D. Ala.). Cochran’s only claims against L.E. Bell are worker’s compensation claims, filed in a separate action than those referenced above. (Doc. # 119-2 at § 8). Those claims were filed in state court and, as they were filed under state worker’s compensation law, they do not depend on any finding of fault. (Doc. # 119-2 at { 8).

On October 11, 2019, the federal cases were consolidated before the undersigned.' (Doc. # 64). After consolidation, counsel for plaintiffs in the various suits began coordinating the case, including the conduct of discovery. (Doc. # 68 at 2). Soon thereafter, counsel for L.E. Bell discovered that Cochran had “hired” Barker, L.E. Bell’s former Safety Director and a former consultant for L.E. Bell with respect to this litigation, and provided him with a $5,000 retainer. (Doc. # 68 at 2). By the time L.E. Bell learned of the working relationship between Cochran and Barker, the two had met on three occasions and had spoken by phone for some 14 hours. (Doc. # 116-1 at 16). L.E. Bell then filed a Motion to Disqualify Glenda Cochran and Associates to prevent Cochran from playing any role in the consolidated federal action, as well as the corresponding state court cases, because of Barker’s work with L.E. Bell’s legal team in developing causation theories as to why the pipeline explosion occurred. (Doc. # 68). Although Cochran was not adverse to L.E. Bell in any suit other than the worker’s compensation actions, and Barker’s work on the causation theories implicated Colonial (not L.E. Bell), L.E. Bell was nevertheless concerned about Cochran learning of causation theories because those theories could be used to produce larger verdicts or settlements against L.E. Bell. (Doc. # 116-1 at 13). And, L.E. Bell was particularly concerned because it had an indemnity agreement with Colonial, under which L.E. Bell could be deemed liable for those larger verdicts and settlements in the absence of “gross negligence” by Colonial. [rephrased last sentence] (Doc. # 116-1 at 12-13). With these concerns in mind, L.E. Bell’s counsel asserted that Cochran violated the Alabama Rules of Professional Conduct (‘‘Rules” or “Alabama Rules”) by improperly paying a fact witness, by improperly contacting a person who worked with defense counsel and was

' The consolidation order (Doc. # 64) stated that this court and Judge Alvis, of the Shelby County Circuit Court, will work together to informally coordinate the parties’ discovery efforts. (Doc. # 64). However, the cases in Shelby County Circuit Court have since been reassigned to Judge Corey Moore. Judge Moore has graciously agreed to continue to coordinate the parties’ discovery efforts in the two courts.

associated with a represented party, and by continuing to represent a plaintiff despite an imputed conflict of interest. (Doc. # 68 at 2-3). In light of that Motion (Doc. # 68), the undersigned stayed the consolidated federal suits and ordered the parties to not contact Barker. (Doc. # 71). After the parties conducted limited discovery, the parties deposed Barker while under the supervision of the court. (Docs. # 73, 109). L.E. Bell’s counsel then filed the Amended Motion to Disqualify Counsel and for Related Sanctions currently before the court. (Doc. # 116-1). This litigation generally, and the motion to disqualify specifically, has been delayed because of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Before discussing the legal merits of L.E. Bell’s Amended Motion to Disqualify Counsel and for Related Sanctions (Doc. # 116-1), the court finds it necessary to address Barker’s role as a consultant for L.E. Bell with respect to this litigation. L.E. Bell asserts that “Barker was a key member of L.E. Bell’s Litigation team [where] he worked extensively ... to develop several proximate causation theories.” (Doc. # 116-1 at 12). Cochran claims that statement is “hyperbole” and that, at most, Barker worked in a limited consulting capacity for L.E. Bell to prepare factual information for the Occupational Health and Safety Administration (“OSHA”) and the National Transportation Safety Board (“NTSB”). (Doc. # 119 at 7, 26). As is often the case, it appears to the court that the truth lies somewhere in between these two extreme positions. During his deposition, Barker explicitly denied being a “core member” of L.E. Bell’s legal team. (Doc. # 116- 15 at 185:24-186:3). But, Barker’s consulting role with L.E. Bell was not as perfunctory as Cochran suggests. Not only did Barker work with L.E. Bell in gathering and analyzing facts later provided to OSHA and the NTSB, he also worked with L.E. Bell’s legal counsel, employees of L.E. Bell, and outside consultants to develop theories of what caused the explosion and who might be legally responsible. (Doc. # 116-15 at 31-39). And, it is Cochran’s exposure to these legal

theories that is the most ethically concerning. Il. Legal Standard “Because a party is presumptively entitled to the counsel of his choice, that right may be overridden only if “compelling reasons’ exist.” In re BellSouth Corp., 334 F.3d 941, 961 (1th Cir. 2003). One compelling reason to deny a client counsel of its choice is counsel’s violation of an applicable rule of professional conduct. See Banque de Rive, S.A. v. Highland Beach Dev. Corp., 758 F.2d 559, 561 (11th Cir.

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Covey v. Colonial Pipeline Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/covey-v-colonial-pipeline-company-alnd-2021.