EOR Domestic, LLC v. Shroff

2013 OK CIV APP 37, 300 P.3d 759, 2013 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 25, 2013 WL 1901014
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 22, 2013
DocketNo. 110,100
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 OK CIV APP 37 (EOR Domestic, LLC v. Shroff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EOR Domestic, LLC v. Shroff, 2013 OK CIV APP 37, 300 P.3d 759, 2013 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 25, 2013 WL 1901014 (Okla. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

KENNETH L. BUETTNER, Presiding Judge.

11 Defendants/Appellants David Shroff, d/b/a Excalibur, Inc. (Shroff),1 Avondale Operating Co. (Avondale), and Excalibur XYZ, Inc. (XYZ) (collectively, Appellants) appeal the trial court's order granting a motion to disqualify Appellants' counsel, Joseph L. Hull, III, filed by Plaintiff/Appellee EOR Domestic, LLC (EOR). On de novo review, we find the trial court erred as a matter of law in disqualifying Appellants' counsel. We reverse.

{2 EOR filed its Petition against Avondale March 31, 20112 Hull filed an Entry of Special Appearance in Intervention for Purposes of Response to Temporary Restraining [761]*761Order April 4, 2011.3 Over the next several weeks, the parties filed increasingly acrimonious pleadings,4 culminating in EOR's Motion to Disqualify Hull as counsel for Avon-dale, Shroff, and XYZ, or in the alternative, for sanctions, filed May 25, 2011.

13 In its Motion to Disqualify, EOR argued that Excalibur and XYZ both claimed to be the owners of the majority working interest in the Unit. EOR asserted Hull had violated Rule 1.7(a) of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct in three ways: first, by stating that both Excalibur and XYZ own the majority working interest in the Unit; see-ond, by letting the interests of Shroff predominate over the interests of XYZ and Avondale (by making arguments on behalf of XYZ and Avondale designed to protect Shroff from liability for executing agreements on behalf of the non-existent Execali-bur; and third, by refusing to say whether he represented Excalibur to avoid personal exposure to a misdemeanor charge of violating 68 0.8.2011 § 1212. EOR additionally claimed that Hull sought to represent Excalibur by filing a notice of default under the PSA on behalf of XYZ, which was not a party to the PSA. EOR contended such conduct is subterfuge requiring disqualification. EOR finally complained that Hull had violated its duty of candor by stating that Excalibur would pay franchise taxes to be reinstated,5 [762]*762that Excalibur owned the majority working interest in the Unit, and that EOR had breached a contract with Excalibur.6

1 4 In response, Appellants contended that only after an investigation, following the April 5, 2011 hearing, did Shroff learn that his previous counsel had never filed doeu-ments to form Excalibur. Appellants averred that after that discovery, Shroff sought to have rights purportedly owned by Excalibur assigned to XYZ, which Shroff knew was a corporation in good standing. Appellants argued that the fact Shroff was mistaken about the existence of Excalibur showed Shroff and Hull never made intentional misrepresentations. Appellants denied there was a conflict and attached waivers of any conflict signed by Shroff and Abererom-bie.

T5 Following a hearing held September 7, 2011, the trial court issued its Order on Motion to Disqualify October 25, 2011. In its order, the trial court included 31 findings of fact. The court found EOR is a Delaware LLC; Avondale is Operator of the Unit; Excalibur was a corporation formed in 1973 which had no connection to Shroff and is not in good standing under the laws of Oklahoma; Shroff is President of XYZ, an Oklahoma corporation formed in 2008 and currently in good standing with the Oklahoma Secretary of State; EOR filed this action to oust Avondale as Operator; Hull filed a special appearance on behalf of Excalibur in which he sought to intervene to enforce the PSA; EOR filed an Amended Petition May 13, 2011, in which it added Shroff (d/b/a/ Excalibur) and XYZ as parties; and Hull represents Avondale, Shroff, and XYZ. The court further found that Shroff executed the PSA, as president of Excalibur, December 21, 2010, in which he sold an interest in the Unit; the PSA included a representation that the seller was a valid corporation in good standing and had marketable title to the property; Hull learned at an April 2011 hearing that Excalibur was not in good standing with the Oklahoma Secretary of State; Shroff sought to correct the misuse of the Excalibur corporate name by a corrective assignment from EIG; XYZ now claims the right to receive proceeds from the sale of oil from the Unit; Hull caused documents (including a "correctional assignment" from EIG to XYZ dated April 15, 2011) purporting to vest title to a working interest in the Unit in XYZ to be filed in Creek County May 10, 2011; the interest XYZ claims in the Unit is the same as the interest claimed by Excalibur and subject to the PSA with EOR; Hull attempted to exercise XYZ's purported rights in the PSA May 16, 2011, when he sent a notice to EOR asserting default under the PSA, which he signed as counsel for XYZ; XYZ also contended EOR was eloud-ing its title by claiming an interest under the PSA; Hull urged contradictory positions on behalf of two different clients by claiming EOR was in default under the PSA, which was executed by a defunct corporation, Excalibur, and by claiming that XYZ owned the property interest because of the corrective assignment; there was a direct conflict between Shroff (d/b/a/ Excalibur) and XYZ because both are asserting, through Hull, that they hold rights under the PSA (Shroff and XYZ both claim an interest in EOR's alleged default); whether Shroff (d/b/a/ Excalibur) or XYZ exercises rights under the PSA are substantive issues in direct conflict with each other; whether the PSA may be enforced by Shroff (d/b/a/ Excalibur) or XYZ is an issue to be resolved by litigation, but one attorney is arguing both positions on behalf of two clients; and Hull argued the positions of both Shroff (d/b/a/ Excalibur) and XYZ in a June 9, 2011 letter. The court noted that Hull had averred that if there was a conflict, Shroff and XYZ had waived it. The court found that Hull spoke to Shroff for twenty minutes about potential conflicts, but that only two minutes were devoted to a possible conflict between Shroff and XYZ, and that Shroff gave informed consent on behalf of XYZ in [763]*763the same document in which he gave his personal consent to Hull's representation. The court noted Abercrombie had signed an affidavit stating his consent to Hull's possible conflict, but the court found no testimony or evidence about the information Hull gave Abercrombie to obtain his consent. The trial court next found that Hull failed to explain 68 0.98.2011 $ 1212 to Shroff before the hearing on the motion to disqualify and Shroff was unaware of the possible consequences of operating a business that has been suspended by the Oklahoma Secretary of State, and Hull did not advise Shroff on the potential impact § 1212 could have on enforcement of the PSA. The court next noted that Hull argued it did not matter whether the interest in the Unit was held by Shroff (d/b/a Execali-bur) or XYZ because they were one party, which the court held completely ignored the corporate structure of XYZ and Oklahoma corporations law; the court concluded Hull played fast and loose with corporate formalities by arguing that Shroff (d/b/a/ Excalibur) and XYZ were all the same client; and the court's last finding of fact was that Hull blurred the lines of corporate formality and thereby potentially exposed Shroff (d/b/a/ Excalibur) and XYZ to liability.

T6 In making conclusions of law, the trial court first noted that a lawyer shall not represent a client if the representation involves a concurrent conflict of interest, citing Rule 1.7(a) of the Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2013 OK CIV APP 37, 300 P.3d 759, 2013 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 25, 2013 WL 1901014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eor-domestic-llc-v-shroff-oklacivapp-2013.