Delta Air Lines, Inc., Relator v. Hon. Charles C. Cooke III, Judge, 18th District Court, Johnson County, Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1995
Docket10-95-00256-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Delta Air Lines, Inc., Relator v. Hon. Charles C. Cooke III, Judge, 18th District Court, Johnson County, Texas (Delta Air Lines, Inc., Relator v. Hon. Charles C. Cooke III, Judge, 18th District Court, Johnson County, Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Delta Air Lines, Inc., Relator v. Hon. Charles C. Cooke III, Judge, 18th District Court, Johnson County, Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Delta Air Line v. Cooke


IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-95-256-CV


     DELTA AIR LINES, INC.,

                                                                                              Relator

     v.


     HONORABLE CHARLES C. COOKE III, JUDGE,

     18TH DISTRICT COURT, JOHNSON COUNTY, TEXAS,

                                                                                              Respondent


Original Proceeding


DISSENTING OPINION


      To the extent that a corporate entity can be upset, Delta Airlines is upset. This is because its lawyers are now suing it in another county for another client in an unrelated matter. McKool Smith, P.C. of Dallas has represented Delta for over five years in litigation that grew out of the proposed multi-billion dollar expansion of the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport. McKool Smith has charged Delta over $220,000 for representing it, and has had access to its inner-most corporate structure, procedures, and thinking. McKool Smith is now alleging that Delta is guilty of, among other things, defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and business disparagement. Delta, it seems to me, is justified in being upset, but being upset is not the legal issue involved.

      Robert A. Norris and Norris Industries, Inc., represented by McKool Smith, sued Delta Airlines and several Delta employees over termination of a mail-handling contract that Norris had with Delta for handling mail at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport. Norris seeks actual and exemplary damages based upon Delta's statements to the media concerning the reasons for the termination. As attorney for Norris, McKool Smith is directly accusing Delta of intentional and malicious conduct and is seeking to recover actual and exemplary damages.

      After being sued by its own lawyers, Delta filed a motion to disqualify McKool Smith on the grounds that the law firm cannot, without Delta's consent, concurrently represent another client adverse to Delta, absent "exceptional circumstances." When the motion was heard, McKool Smith did not present any "exceptional circumstances" that would justify the representation. It simply elected to stand on its assertion that Texas law allows the adverse representation.     McKool Smith's position can be characterized as: "If you can't discipline me for it, you can't disqualify me for it."

      However, the framers of the ethical rules for lawyers in Texas have always asserted that those rules are minimum standards of professional conduct, the violation of which will subject a lawyer to discipline, and are not rules governing procedural disqualification of lawyers in judicial proceedings. See Tex. Disciplinary R. Prof. Conduct preamble (1989), reprinted in Tex. Gov't Code Ann., tit. 2, subtit. G app. A (Vernon Supp. 1995) (State Bar Rules art. X, § 9); Robert P. Schuwerk & John F. Sutton, Jr., A Guide to the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct, 27A Hous. L. Rev. 1, 100-01 (1990). The preamble of the Disciplinary Rules clearly states, "these rules are not designed to be standards for procedural decisions." Tex. Disciplinary R. Prof. Conduct preamble ¶ 15 (1989). The rules attempt to induce ethical behavior by "stating minimum standards of conduct below which no lawyer can fall without being subject to disciplinary action." Id. ¶ 7.

      Indeed, courts have accorded the rules that status. Woods v. Covington County Bank, 537 F.2d 804, 812 (5th Cir. 1976) (contending that standards such as ABA canons are useful guides but are not controlling in adjudicating disqualification motions); Spears v. Fourth Court of Appeals, 797 S.W.2d 654, 656 (Tex. 1990) (noting that disciplinary rules do not control motions to disqualify, but may be used as guidelines to show merits of those motions). The Supreme Court's directive in Spears that "the burden is on the movant to establish with specificity a violation of one or more of the disciplinary rules," relied on by Respondent, must be read in context. Spears, 797 S.W.2d at 656. That statement follows a paragraph in which the court explains why it will use the disciplinary rules as "guidelines" to decide the case. Id.

      Delta asserts—and McKool Smith does not dispute—that, if Texas allows "non-consensual concurrent adverse representation," we will stand alone. According to Delta, forty-five states have adopted the Model Rules of Professional Conduct promulgated by the American Bar Association and four states still follow the Model Code of Professional Responsibility that was the ABA's predecessor to the Model Rules—both of which prohibit concurrent adverse representation without consent. Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.7(a)(2) (1994); ABA Comm. on Ethics and Professional Responsibility, Informal Op. 1495 (1982) (concluding that, under the ABA Model Code, a lawyer may not accept representation adverse to an existing client even in an unrelated matter and stating the answer would be the same under the proposed Model Rules); In re Dresser Indus., Inc., 972 F.2d 540, 544 (5th Cir. 1992). Federal jurisdictions, including the Fifth Circuit, follow the ABA rule that would prohibit the concurrent representation without Delta's consent. Dresser Indus., 972 F.2d at 544-45.

      According to the comments accompanying ABA Model Rule 1.7, "a lawyer ordinarily may not act as advocate against a person the lawyer represents in some other matter, even if it is wholly unrelated." Model Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.7 cmt. ¶ 3 (1994). Additionally, the American Law Institute's Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers, in its most recent draft, forbids a lawyer from suing a client in another case without all parties' consent, citing a lawyer's duty of loyalty to his clients. Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers § 209 (Tent. Draft No. 4, 1991) (discussing lawyers' representation of clients opposing former clients in unrelated matters).

      In In re Dresser Indus., Inc., the Fifth Circuit issued a writ of mandamus directing the district court to disqualify attorneys opposing Dresser, who concurrently represented it in two other pending lawsuits. 972 F.2d at 546. In so doing, the court noted that neither the Model Code, the Model Rules, nor the ALI draft Restatement

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Related

In Re Dresser Industries, Inc.
972 F.2d 540 (Fifth Circuit, 1992)
Conoco Inc. v. Baskin
803 S.W.2d 416 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1991)
Spears v. Fourth Court of Appeals
797 S.W.2d 654 (Texas Supreme Court, 1990)

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Delta Air Lines, Inc., Relator v. Hon. Charles C. Cooke III, Judge, 18th District Court, Johnson County, Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delta-air-lines-inc-relator-v-hon-charles-c-cooke--texapp-1995.