Dickson, Carlson & Campillo v. Pole

99 Cal. Rptr. 2d 678, 83 Cal. App. 4th 436, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 9645, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7305, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 686
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 29, 2000
DocketB123240
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 99 Cal. Rptr. 2d 678 (Dickson, Carlson & Campillo v. Pole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Dickson, Carlson & Campillo v. Pole, 99 Cal. Rptr. 2d 678, 83 Cal. App. 4th 436, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 9645, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7305, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 686 (Cal. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*440 Opinion

CROSKEY, Acting P. J.

Two partners withdrew from a law partnership and took the firm’s largest client with them. The remaining partners decided to immediately dissolve the firm and the former partners sued the two departing partners and their new firm for declaratory relief, accounting, breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and other causes of action in two separate actions seeking, among other things, their share of the profits earned from the completion of the partnership’s unfinished business representing a defendant in numerous product liability cases. The trial court in the first action (1) found that the plaintiffs had a fiduciary duty to complete some of the unfinished business but had failed to do so and therefore had failed to “do equity,” (2) barred the plaintiffs from recovering in the accounting any of the profits earned by the defendants, and (3) referred the accounting cause of action to the court hearing the second action, which primarily had asserted tort claims against the departing partners. The trial court in the second action then consolidated the two actions and determined that the prior ruling in the first action completely precluded the recovery of tort and contract damages based on profits earned by the defendants after the date of dissolution, granted a motion in limine excluding all evidence of those profits, and then granted a motion for judgment on the pleadings in favor of the defendants.

The plaintiffs challenge both rulings on appeal. We conclude that the equitáble maxim to “do equity” is not a complete defense in an accounting action and also does not preclude the recovery of damages on the plaintiffs’ tort and contract causes of action.

Factual and Procedural Background

1. The Law Firm Dissolution

Plaintiff Dickson, Carlson & Campillo (DCC) was a law partnership. Plaintiffs Ralph A. Campillo, Robert L. Dickson, Jeffrey J. Carlson, Hall R. Marston, Roxanne M. Wilson, David J. Fleming, George E. Berry, and Mark S. Geraghty and defendants Debra Pole and William Fitzgerald were its general partners. The firm represented Baxter Healthcare Corporation (Baxter), the successor in interest to a manufacturer of breast implants, as a defendant in many actions, and coordinated its defense in breast implant litigation nationwide. Pole served as Baxter’s national coordinating counsel for the litigation and Fitzgerald assisted her. Several of the other partners also represented Baxter and assisted in its nationwide coordinated defense.

Pole and Fitzgerald sought to leave the firm together with several other attorneys and employees to join Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison (Brobeck) and *441 sought to take the Baxter litigation with them. They provided Brobeck with detailed information concerning the profitability to DCC of the Baxter litigation, including DCC’s historical billings per attorney, and met with Baxter to obtain its consent. After Brobeck agreed to admit Pole and Fitzgerald as partners, and Baxter agreed to retain Brobeck as counsel, they informed their partners on August 28, 1995, that they were leaving DCC. They requested a waiver of the provision of the partnership agreement requiring 90 days’ notice of intent to withdraw, but the firm refused.

DCC’s other partners concluded that they could best protect their interests in profits from the pending Baxter litigation by dissolving the firm. On September 20, 1995, they met without notifying Pole and Fitzgerald and voted to dissolve the partnership effective immediately. The firm then reconstituted itself as a new partnership (DCC-2) with the same name and essentially the same partners except Pole and Fitzgerald. The partners withheld from Pole and Fitzgerald their profit distributions from some predissolution work and their share, of the liquidation proceeds and deposited those amounts in interest-bearing accounts pending resolution of the present dispute.

DCC’s remaining partners continued to work on some of the Baxter litigation that was pending on the date of dissolution, although most of the pending litigation followed Pole and Fitzgerald to Brobeck. The remaining partners declined to continue to represent Baxter in certain cases that were pending upon dissolution and began to represent a competing breast implant manufacturer.

2. The Two Actions

DCC 1 sued Pole, Fitzgerald, and Brobeck in October 1995 (Super. Ct. L.A. County, No. SC039135; hereafter, the accounting action) alleging two counts for declaratory relief and a third for accounting seeking to recover, among other things, part of the profits earned from the defendants’ representation of Baxter in litigation in which DCC had represented Baxter as of the date of dissolution. 2 DCC and each of the remaining partners individually initiated another action against Pole, Fitzgerald, and Brobeck in *442 November 1995 (Super. Ct. L.A. County, No. SC039264; hereafter, the second action) alleging in their amended complaint breach of fiduciary duty, inducing breach of fiduciary duty, intentional interference with prospective economic advantage, intentional interference with contractual relations, breach of contract, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, unfair competition, and unjust enrichment.

Pole and Fitzgerald cross-complained against DCC, DCC-2, and the individual partners in the second action alleging breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, unjust enrichment, accounting, breach of contract, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and failure to disclose the partnership books and information upon request (former Corp. Code, §§ 15019, 15020).

The court consolidated the two actions for pretrial purposes in January 1997. DCC-2 dissolved in December 1997. Both cases were scheduled to begin trial in January 1998, but Pole, Fitzgerald, and Brobeck successfully moved to continue the trial in the second action to allow further discovery concerning the plaintiffs’ claimed damages.

3. Trial and Motion for Judgment in the Accounting Action

The court conducted a nonjury trial in the accounting action in January 1998. Pole, Fitzgerald, and Brobeck moved for judgment (Code Civ. Proc., § 631.8) after the close of DCC’s case on the ground that DCC and its remaining partners were not entitled to share in the profits earned from Brobeck’s representation of Baxter. They argued that although ordinarily all partners are entitled to share the postdissolution profits earned by individual partners from partnership business that was unfinished at the time of dissolution, the remaining partners here had failed to “do equity” because they had breached their common obligation to complete the firm’s unfinished business by refusing to continue to represent Baxter in certain pending litigation. They also argued, among other things, that the remaining partners had unclean hands because they failed to complete the unfinished business, excluded Pole and Fitzgerald from partnership meetings, and withheld partnership funds that were due to Pole and Fitzgerald.

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99 Cal. Rptr. 2d 678, 83 Cal. App. 4th 436, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 9645, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 7305, 2000 Cal. App. LEXIS 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickson-carlson-campillo-v-pole-calctapp-2000.