in Re Dana Meador

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1998
Docket97-0582
StatusPublished

This text of in Re Dana Meador (in Re Dana Meador) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
in Re Dana Meador, (Tex. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

No. 97-0582

lNRE DANAMEA DOR,RELATOR

ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS

Argued December 4, 1997

CHIEF JUSTICE PHILLIPS delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

The issue in this original mandamus proceeding is whether the trial court abused its discretion

by refusing to disqualify plaintiff's counsel. Defendants contend that the lawyer improperly used

privileged documents which the lawyer's client (in another lawsuit) secretly removed from defendants'

offices. We hold that, under the facts and circumstances of this case, the trial court did not abuse its

discretion by refusing to disqualify the lawyer. The court of appeals therefore abused its discretion

in granting mandamus relief compelling disqualification. See 948 S.W.2d 345. Accordingly, we

conditionally grant mandamus relief against the court of appeals.

I

Patricia Peterson worked at Conley, Lott, Nichols Machinery Company (CLN) from May

1994 until January 1996 as executive assistant for Robert Nichols, CLN's president. She had access

to Nichols's office, and among her responsibilities were opening his mail and retrieving his phone messages.

During Peterson's tenure, Dana Meador, a former financial consultant for CLN, sued the

company and Nichols for fraud, breach of contract, intentional infliction of emotional distress, assault,

and discrimination. Meador alleged, among other things, that Tom Dowdle, CLN's former general

manager, had sexually harassed her. When Meador filed her suit, CLN was prosecuting its own suit

against Dowdle for fraud, which CLN subsequently settled in June 1995. Peterson, in the course of

her duties at CLN, came across and read a letter from CLN's attorneys to Nichols describing the

settlement terms. The letter reflected that, in addition to a cash payment, Dowdle had agreed to give

CLN a sworn statement concerning the Meador lawsuit. The letter, however, did not specifY, or set

requirements for, the content of Dowdle's statement.

Dowdle subsequently gave his sworn statement, which Peterson also found and read at CLN.

Peterson, who claims that she was also sexually assaulted by Dowdle, testified that the statement

(which is not in the record) contained "blatant lies." Without Nichols's permission, Peterson copied

the settlement letter, as well as a follow-up letter transmitting the settlement funds, a chronology of

events in the Meador dispute prepared by CLN's counsel, and Nichols's handwritten notes about the

Meador lawsuit. Peterson did not, however, copy Dowdle's statement. She testified that she

expected CLN to pressure her for false testimony in the Meador lawsuit, and that she wanted the

documents to help her substantiate the truth. Peterson admitted during testimony that Nichols would

not have allowed her to copy the documents had he known of it. Peterson, believing she was about

to be fired, quit her job at CLN in January 1996, taking the covertly copied documents with her.

Five months later, in considering whether to bring her own claim against CLN, Peterson called

2 Meador. Meador referred Peterson to her own attorney, W. D. Masterson. At their first meeting in

June 1996, Masterson agreed to represent Peterson. During this meeting, Peterson gave Masterson

the Dowdle settlement letter she had copied in CLN's offices. Either Masterson or Peterson also gave

a copy of the settlement letter to Meador.

A few days later, CLN deposed Meador in the underlying action. Although Meador's full

deposition is not in the record before us, Meador testified at the disqualification hearing that, during

her deposition, she gave the Dowdle settlement letter to CLN's attorneys and told them that Peterson

h ad copied other documents as well. It is not clear whether Meador voluntarily produced the

settlement letter or did so in response to a subpoena duces tecum.

Four months later, CLN noticed Peterson's deposition, including a subpoena duces tecum for

all documents which Peterson may have taken from CLN. In response to the subpoena, Peterson

g ave the other documents to Masterson, who copied them. She then produced the documents at her

deposition a week later. Upon seeing the documents, CLN demanded that Masterson return all

copies of them, claiming that they were privileged. When Masterson refused to do so, CLN moved

to disqualify him from representing Meador. After an evidentiary hearing in December 1996, the trial

court ordered Masterson to return all of the CLN documents removed by Peterson, and to not use

them in the Meador litigation. The court, however, refused to disqualify Masterson.

CLN then petitioned for writ of mandamus to the trial court. The court of appeals granted

the relief, adopting the standard of conduct from ABAFormal Opinion 94-382, promulgated by the

3 American Bar Association's Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility. 1 That opinion

provides:

A lawyer who receives on an unauthorized basis materials of an adverse party that she knows to be privileged or confidential should, upon recognizing the privileged or confidential nature of the materials, either refrain from reviewing such materials or review them only to the extent required to determine how appropriately to proceed; she should notifY her adversary's lawyer that she has such materials and should either follow instructions of the adversary's lawyer with respect to the disposition of the materials, or refrain from using the materials until a definitive resolution of the proper disposition of the materials is obtained from a court.

ABAFoRMAL OP. 94-382. The court of appeals focused on the Dowdle settlement letter, concluding

that, even though this letter is privileged on its face, Masterson made no effort to notifY CLN that he

had the document. Because "Masterson's conduct fell short of the standard that an attorney who

receives unsolicited confidential information must follow," the court of appeals ordered his

disqualification. 948 S.W.2d at 349.

Masterson then sought mandamus relief in this Court against the court of appeals. We stayed

the trial court proceedings and granted leave to file.

1 This ten-person standing committee of the American Bar Association is charged with "interpreting the professional standards of the Association and recommending appropriate amendments and clarifications. . . . " ANNOTATED MODEL RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT viii (ABA Center for Professional Responsibility, 3d ed. 1996). It issues advisory opinions on ethics questions of general interest submitted by attorneys. See id.; see also Klein, Legal Malpractice, Professional Discipline, and Representation of the Indigent Defendant, 61 TEMP L. REv. .

1171, 1179 n.54 (1988). While the Committee's opinions are often cited as persuasive authority by state disciplinary bodies, the opinions do not bind those bodies. See, e.g., ABA INFOR.!\IIAL OP. 1420 (1978) ("Enforcement of legal ethics and disciplinary procedures are local matters securely within the jurisdictional prerogative of each state and the District of Columbia."); Hellman, When "Ethics Rules" Don't Mean What They Say: The Implications of Strained ABA Ethics Opinions, 10 GEO. J. LEGAL ETHICS 317, 326 (1997) ("ABA opinions are binding upon no one.

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