Jane Doe v. John Roe, and Roe and Roe, Limited

958 F.2d 763
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1992
Docket91-1289
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 958 F.2d 763 (Jane Doe v. John Roe, and Roe and Roe, Limited) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jane Doe v. John Roe, and Roe and Roe, Limited, 958 F.2d 763 (7th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

Time and again, federal courts have emphasized that RICO (the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 *765 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq.) was designed as a flexible tool for fighting organized crime in the United States. Equally well known are the novel — and often imaginative — ways in which civil plaintiffs have attempted to use this flexibility in order to exploit RICO’s provisions for treble damages and attorney’s fees. In this appeal, we are asked to determine whether a plaintiff may bring a civil action under RICO where she alleges that her divorce attorney defrauded her into having sexual relations with him in lieu of payment for his legal services. We hold that RICO cannot encompass such a claim.

I.

The complaint alleges the following facts, which we make explicitly clear we are required to take as true for purposes of this appeal. Wooten v. Loshbough, 951 F.2d 768, 769 (7th Cir.1991).

In April 1983, Jane Doe first met attorney John Roe at a social gathering. After inquiring about Doe’s ongoing divorce proceedings, Roe indicated that he could represent her more effectively than her current attorney, and suggested that she drop by his office to discuss the matter further. In June 1983, Doe followed up on their conversation and visited Roe at his office, whereupon he repeated his assertions that he was an extremely influential divorce attorney who could provide her with better legal services. Relying on these assurances, Doe asked Roe to take over her case and paid him his requested retainer fee of $7,500. No written agreement concerning Roe’s fees was executed, but Roe expressly stated that any additional fees owing him would be paid by Doe’s husband — a representation Doe deemed critical since she lacked the financial means to make further payments.

As Doe’s divorce proceedings became more emotionally trying, she began to seek Roe’s counselling on her personal affairs in addition to her legal problems, and soon she developed a psychological dependency on his advice. Playing on Doe’s vulnerability, Roe made sexual overtures towards Doe during their second appointment at his office. At first Doe attempted to spurn Roe’s advances by pushing him away from her. When Roe persisted, however, she submitted to his sexual demands because of her anxiety that he would otherwise discontinue his work on her case, leaving her unrepresented and unable to afford a retainer for a third attorney. Above all else, Doe did not want to risk losing the custody of her child and the opportunity to obtain some financial security for their future.

From 1983 to 1989, Roe continued to represent Doe in her divorce and on post-decree matters. Throughout that same period, Doe yielded to Roe’s sexual advances on repeated occasions at Roe’s office, Doe’s home and at other locations. However, his demands were not limited to sexual favors. Frequently, he asked her to prepare meals for him at her home. He also required her to accompany him at various outings and social events. Given her scant economic resources, Doe saw no alternative but to comply with all of his wishes.

In May 1984, following a court appearance in the divorce case, Roe drove Doe to her home where they engaged in sexual relations. While in flagrante delicto, they were interrupted by Doe’s husband who unexpectedly had appeared in the bedroom. Outraged with Roe’s sexual activity with his wife, Doe’s husband refused to pay any of Roe’s attorney’s fees. Roe, thereafter, refrained from asking the court to order Doe’s husband to pay such fees because Roe feared that he might reveal his knowledge of his sexual relationship with Doe, thereby subjecting himself to personal embarrassment and possible professional discipline.

But Roe demanded full value for his legal services. In June 1984, while Doe was waiting in court just before a hearing on her divorce, Roe presented her with a written settlement agreement which was to be submitted for the court’s approval. The agreement provided, inter alia, that Roe would be authorized to obtain a judgment lien against Doe for any additional attorney’s fees owing him. Roe recommended that she sign the agreement, but he did not *766 explain to her any of its terms or give her an opportunity to read it. Mistakenly believing that her retainer fee remained sufficient to cover her debts to Roe, Doe followed his advice and signed the document without hesitation. Only a month later, Roe used this agreement as a basis for entering a lien judgment against her home for $2,500; at that time, however, Doe had never been told that she owed Roe additional legal payments, nor was she informed that a lien had been placed against her home to secure those obligations.

In late May 1986, Doe received a bill for Roe’s legal services in the amount of $6,500, comprising $4,000 owing towards her original retainer, and the $2,500 she incurred in additional fees. Enclosed with the bill was a letter informing Doe that if she did not pay this balance, she might suffer “some slight injury.” The letter also noted that if Doe did not wish to pay her bill in full, Roe would be willing to work out “other ways” to have her pay off her balance, and that he would be “in touch” with her in the near future. Out of fear for her own personal safety, and because she was unable to make payment in full, Doe agreed to continue her sexual relations with Roe. In turn, Roe filed a satisfaction and release of judgment as to the lien on her residence and other amounts allegedly due — in spite of her failure to pay him anything toward the $2,500 judgment.

Following entry of the divorce decree, Doe asked Roe to represent her in regard to difficulties which she was experiencing with respect to the decree’s enforcement. He agreed to do so on the condition that his terms for “compensation” remain the same. Understandably, Doe took this statement to mean that the price of his continued representation would be further submission to Roe’s sexual demands. However, because she still felt dependent on Roe for legal representation and emotional support, and because she was also frightened by what Roe might do if she should break off their relationship, she continued to engage in sexual activity with Roe until October 1988.

In February 1989, Doe learned that another of Roe’s female divorce clients had brought a lawsuit against Roe for breach of fiduciary duty arising from his sexual activity with her while representing her in a divorce action. Thinking that she might have a similar claim for redress, Doe terminated her employment of Roe, hired a third attorney, and then informed Roe that any further contact with her should be directed to her new counsel. Angered by this unanticipated turn of events, Roe made a series of phone calls to Doe in which he threatened her with dire consequences if she pursued the matter. Specifically, Roe threatened to “rip [Doe] to shreds,” to “get everyone he knew to make her look terrible — like a slut,” and to “get her for this.” Roe also told Doe that she should be worried about her family, her reputation and the success of her business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
958 F.2d 763, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jane-doe-v-john-roe-and-roe-and-roe-limited-ca7-1992.