Lucas v. Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Inc.

217 F. Supp. 3d 1200, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 158044, 2016 WL 6698935
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedNovember 15, 2016
DocketCASE NO. 14cv1631-LAB (JLB)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 217 F. Supp. 3d 1200 (Lucas v. Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucas v. Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Inc., 217 F. Supp. 3d 1200, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 158044, 2016 WL 6698935 (S.D. Cal. 2016).

Opinion

ORDER RE: SANCTIONS

Honorable Larry Alan Burns, United States District Judge

David Lucas sued Joseph A. Bank for allegedly inflating suit prices before offering supposed “buy one, get one free” sales. Hassan Zavareei of Tycko & Zavareei and Stuart Scott of Spangenberg Shibley & Liber represented David M. Lucas in this putative class action. Without rehearsing the entire procedural history of the case, suffice it to say that the allegations against Joseph A. Bank fell apart when it became clear to all that Lucas, who had been designated lead plaintiff, had lied about ever buying suits from Joseph A. Bank. Plaintiffs eventually moved to dismiss the case with prejudice, and Joseph A. Bank filed a motion to sanction Lucas and his attorneys for not dismissing the case sooner.

[1202]*1202The Court agrees that Lucas’s attorneys should have been more diligent and skeptical of Lucas’s story much earlier in the litigation. But they didn’t act recklessly. And the Court won’t stain their reputations for dishonest acts committed by their client. With that said, the Court recognizes that significant time, effort, and money was spent by everyone involved because Lucas attempted to perpetrate a fraud on Joseph A. Bank, this Court, and the public. The Court has determined that Lucas’s conduct is sanctionable.

I. Background

A. Lucas becomes the class representative.

Lucas learned of the proposed lawsuit against Joseph A. Bank through an online advertisement. He responded to the ad and eventually spoke with an employee at the Spangenberg law firm. The conversation was memorialized in a May 2014 memo. Lucas told a firm representative with whom he first spoke that he remembered buying three suits for about $1,000. He went on to relate that the suits “incurred wear” “within a year.” When the Spangenberg associate asked Lucas if he’d be interested in serving as a class representative in a contemplated class action suit against Joseph A. Bank, he enthusiastically responded “YES!” (Ex. A, Tab 1.)

About a month later, Lucas sent Span-genberg an email containing a different account. He now claimed that he had purchased a total of 12 suits from Joseph A. Bank—three suits on four separate occasions. Spangenberg asked for proof, and Lucas emailed them back a document that he described as “the bank statements for the four purchases made with my debit card.” What Lucas provided looked like an online banking print-out that had been redacted with black marker, The document showed four debit transactions at Joseph A. Bank occurring in December 2012, June 2013, December 2013, and a fourth transaction with the date redacted. (Ex. A, Tab 2.)

A Spangenberg paralegal followed up with Lucas asking him for the date of the redacted purchase. Lucas told her it was July 1, 2012. The paralegal annotated the alleged bank statement with that date and attempted to otherwise “clean[] up the document” by removing the black marker redactions. Attorney Scott later produced this cleaned-up document to Joseph A. Bank in July 2015, but didn’t provide the original that Lucas had sent until August 2016. (Ex. A, Tab 34.)

Scott testified that in his opinion, Lucas seemed like a good fit to be a class representative. Lucas held a Master’s degree in accounting, worked for Qualcomm, and was married to a service member in the U.S. Navy. Scott had no reason to suspect that Lucas was lying about buying suits. Scott and Zavareei decided to move forward with Lucas as their class representative. They filed the lawsuit in July 2014.

B. Problems with Lucas’s story emerge.

The parties litigated the action over the next year. In January 2016, Joseph A. Bank deposed Lucas. Lucas testified that he purchased the first three suits in July 2012 from a Joseph A. Bank store in San Diego. He said the suits frayed after he wore them once or twice. Rather than return them to Joseph A. Bank, he donated them to Goodwill. Yet, he testified that a few months later he bought three more suits from Joseph A. Bank. When these suits also frayed after a single wearing, he donated them too. He testified that the next summer (2013), he bought three more suits from Joseph A. Bank. And a few months later, he bought the final three suits. According to Lucas, all of the suits frayed after he wore them.once or twice. He testified that he didn’t complain or return the suits because returning things [1203]*1203made him anxious. He maintained that he purchased all of the suits with his Navy Federal Credit Union debit card. (Dkt. 151-1, Ex. B.)

On May 24, 2016, pursuant to a subpoena, Navy Federal Credit Union produced Lucas’s original bank statements. The records established that Lucas had made no purchases from any Joseph A. Bank store. Faced with the glaring inconsistency between Lucas’s testimony and what the records revealed, plaintiffs’ counsel told Joseph A. Bank’s lawyers that they were “conferring with Mr. Lucas to figure this out,” and surmised that Lucas may have “misremembered the debit card he used.” (Ex. A, Tab 16.)

A week later, Daniel Freeh, a Spangen-berg attorney who had most of the communication with Lucas, alerted Scott and Zavareei to another issue: If the prices Lucas supplied on his alleged bank statement were correct, then he was taxed at 8.75%, which “should mean that he bought [the suits] in the Bay area.” (Ex. A, Tab 21.) Freeh emailed Lucas: “The tax rate looks like it was 8.75%, which suggest[s] that it was in San Francisco or Santa Clara county. Maybe Marin. Not a lot of places around San Diego have a sales tax rate that high.” (Ex. A, Tab 20.)

C. The parties file summary judgment motions.

On June 22, 2016, Lucas and Joseph A. Bank filed motions for summary judgment. (Dkt. 103 and 106.) Joseph A. Bank argued that Lucas wasn’t entitled to restitution, and also maintained that his story was so implausible that no reasonable juror could believe it. Joseph A. Bank identified five problems with Lucas’s story: (i) His claim to have purchased twelve-suits didn’t make sense; (ii) his Navy Federal records showed no suit purchases; (Hi) the Navy Federal records showed that Lucas made purchases in Virginia at the same times in 2012 that he claimed he bought suits in San Diego; (iv) Lucas said he had alterations performed at the stores, but the prices on the statement Lucas produced didn’t reflect those additional costs; and (v) the suit prices on the statement Lucas produced reflected an 8.75% sales tax, yet no Joseph A. Bank store in San Diego had a tax rate that high in 2012 or 2013. (Dkt. 106-1.)

Zavareei testified that when he read Joseph A. Bank’s summary judgment motion “alarm bells went off.” A few days later, Tycko attorneys spoke with Lucas by telephone and although they “still kind of believe[d]” Lucas, stated they .didn’t .feel comfortable going forward with him as class representative. (Ex. A, Tab 28.) Plaintiffs’ counsel withdrew their motion for summary judgment, asked for a continuance on Joseph A. Bank’s pending summary judgment motion, and moved to substitute a new class representative “to protect the putative class” and because of the “vagaries around the specifics of [Lucas’s] purchases.” (Dkt. 108-1.) Discovery was closed by then, and the Court denied the request. (Dkt. 113.)

Three days later, plaintiffs’ counsel moved to voluntarily dismiss their claims with prejudice and to withdraw, from representing Lucas owing to ethical concerns. (Dkt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 F. Supp. 3d 1200, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 158044, 2016 WL 6698935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucas-v-jos-a-bank-clothiers-inc-casd-2016.