Feld & Sons, Inc. v. Pechner, Dorfman, Wolfee, Rounick, & Cabot

458 A.2d 545, 312 Pa. Super. 125
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1983
Docket2076
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 458 A.2d 545 (Feld & Sons, Inc. v. Pechner, Dorfman, Wolfee, Rounick, & Cabot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feld & Sons, Inc. v. Pechner, Dorfman, Wolfee, Rounick, & Cabot, 458 A.2d 545, 312 Pa. Super. 125 (Pa. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

SPAETH, Judge:

This is an appeal from an order sustaining appellees’ preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer and dismissing appellants’ complaint in trespass and assumpsit. Appellees were appellants’ lawyers in a labor dispute. In proceedings before the National Labor Relations Board, the individual appellants committed perjury, falsified exhibits, and offered a potential witness against them a bribe not to testify. As a result they were convicted of a federal crime, and were fined and placed on probation. Appellants allege that they engaged in this criminal conduct on the advice and with the assistance of appellees, and they seek compensatory and punitive damages for professional malpractice (Count I), the infliction of emotional distress (Count II), and deceit (Count III), and compensatory damages for breach of contract (Count IV). The lower court held that appellants are entitled to no relief because they and appellees are in pari delicto. We agree with the lower court that appellants are entitled to no relief, except we think that if they can prove their allegations, they are entitled to recover the legal fees they paid appellees. We shall therefore modify the order of the lower court to provide that appellants’ *128 complaint is dismissed, except as to so much of Count IV as seeks to recover legal fees paid appellees. As so modified, the order will be affirmed.

Since the case arises on appellees’ demurrer to appellants’ complaint, we shall assume that the facts pleaded in the complaint are true. Sinn v. Burd, 486 Pa. 146, 404 A.2d 672 (1979); Gekas v. Shapp, 469 Pa. 1, 364 A.2d 691 (1976); DeSantis v. Swigart, 296 Pa.Super. 283, 442 A.2d 770 (1982). 1 The complaint is detailed and diffuse, comprising one hundred and forty six paragraphs. R.R. 6a-55a. Its dispositive allegations may be summarized as follows.

Appellants are engaged in the retail men’s clothing business. One of appellants is a corporation, trading as “Today’s Man;” the other appellants are individuals who are officers or employees of the corporation. Appellees are a law firm, Pechner, Dorfman, Wolffe, Rounick & Cabot, and partners and associates of the firm. In June 1977 the corporation retained the Pechner firm as special labor counsel. The corporation wanted to prevent the Philadelphia Joint Board, Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers’ Union, AFL-CIO, from organizing its warehouse employees. As the corporation’s labor counsel, members of the labor section of the Pechner firm devised a plan to prevent unionization of the warehouse employees. Generally stat *129 ed, the plan was to ensure that a majority of the warehouse employees would vote against being represented by the union. To accomplish this, several warehouse employees suspected of being sympathetic to the union were fired, and certain management personnel, specifically, Larry Feld and appellants Klein and Jacobson, each a vice-president of the corporation, were falsely designated as warehouse employees.

In the ensuing dispute, the union filed a representation petition with the National Labor Relations Board, seeking an order fixing the membership of the warehouse employee bargaining unit. At the hearings on the petition, appellants lied under oath and submitted falsified time cards and payroll records in an effort to convince the hearing officer that the designated warehouse employees were in fact warehouse employees who should be permitted to participate in the union representation election. Appellants engaged in this criminal conduct on the advice and with the assistance of the Pechner firm labor lawyers.

The union also filed an unfair labor practice complaint with the National Labor Relations Board. A warehouse employee, one Tyrone Evans, was subpoenaed to testify at the hearing on the complaint. Evans knew that appellants had lied under oath and had submitted false documents at the hearing on the representation petition. In an attempt to keep him from testifying, several of the Pechner firm labor lawyers and Feld offered Evans a bribe to ignore the subpoena for his appearance.

As a result of their conduct at the representation hearing, the individual appellants were indicted for perjury and interference with an agent of the National Labor Relations Board. Each was convicted of a federal crime, and was fined and placed on probation.

Appellants allege that as a result of the Pechner firm’s representation of them, they suffered various damages, including loss of business, emotional distress, and unnecessary legal expenses. Count I of the complaint seeks compensatory damages “in an amount exceeding $250,000” and *130 punitive damages for professional malpractice; Count II seeks the same damages for the infliction of emotional distress, and Count III, for deceit. Count IV seeks compensatory damages for breach of contract, “in an amount equal to the monies already paid” the Pechner firm, and “in an amount equal to the monies necessarily expended by [appellants] to correct the effects” of the Pechner firm’s breach of contract to provide appellants “competent, professional advice of the quality reasonably to be expected from labor counsel.” Complaint, paras. 145(b), 141.

The common law doctrine of in pari delicto (“in equal fault”) is an application of the principle that “ ‘no court will lend its aid to a man who grounds his action upon an immoral or illegal act.’ ” Fowler v. Scully, 72 Pa. 456, 467 (1872) (collecting authorities, and quoting YEATES, J., in Mitchell v. Smith, 1 Binn. 110, 121 (1804), who was in turn quoting Lord Mansfield in Holman v. Johnson, 98 Eng. Rep. 1120 (1775)). 2 When the doctrine is applied, the result is to render the transaction between the parties “absolutely without any force or effect whatever ____ The law will leave the parties just in the condition in which it finds them.” Pittsburg v. Goshorn, 230 Pa. 212, 227 (1911). And see Kuhn v. Buhl, 251 Pa. 348, 371, 96 A. 977 (1916); Burkholder v. Beetem’s Adm’rs, 65 Pa. 496, 505-506 (1870).

*131 The doctrine is subject to qualifications, however, which have been variously stated. In Story Equity Jurisprudence § 423 (14th ed. 1918) it is said:

And indeed in cases where both parties are in delicto, concurring in an illegal act, it does not always follow that they stand in pari delicto; for there may be, and often are, very different degrees in their guilt. One party may act under circumstances of oppression, imposition, hardship, undue influence, or great inequality of condition or age; so that his guilt may be far less in degree than that of his associate in the offense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
458 A.2d 545, 312 Pa. Super. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feld-sons-inc-v-pechner-dorfman-wolfee-rounick-cabot-pasuperct-1983.