Moriarty v. Sullivan

25 Mass. L. Rptr. 510
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJune 9, 2009
DocketNo. 041004
StatusPublished

This text of 25 Mass. L. Rptr. 510 (Moriarty v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moriarty v. Sullivan, 25 Mass. L. Rptr. 510 (Mass. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Sweeney, Constance M., J.

The defendant Michael Sullivan, Nicole Proulx and the City of Holyoke move to disqualify plaintiffs counsel on the grounds that he has allegedly violated several disciplinary rules and has conflicts of interest due to his past representation of some parties and potential witnesses.1 For the reasons stated herein, the moving parties’ motion is DENIED and the moving parties and their attorney, Lisa Brodeur-McGan, are ordered to pay costs, including attorney fees, incurred by the plaintiff in defending against the knowingly wrongful allegations made by the defendants and their attorney in this motion.

This action for wrongful termination of employment and defamation arises from events which occurred during the time the plaintiff was the City’s license clerk. The plaintiff says he was discharged from his employment because the defendants wrongfully accused him of misappropriating funds and essentially accepting bribes from license applicants and licensees.

The litigation in this case is marked by contentiousness between the parties and their attorneys. It has reached a new and dangerous level with this motion to disqualify plaintiffs counsel. Attorney Brodeur-McGan and her clients are attempting through this motion to thwart their discovery obligations and, even more seriously, to interfere with the right of the plaintiff to be represented by an attorney of his choosing. The moving parties and their attorney do not hesitate to attempt to destroy the reputation of plaintiff s counsel through direct accusations and innuendos of wrongdoing that are unfounded. Some context is helpful here.

Throughout the course of this litigation the parties’ attorneys have had difficulty distinguishing their professional responsibilities from their personal animosity toward some or all of opposing counsel. This is best evidenced by a series of motions filed during the last several months. Most of the aggravating factors giving rise to the court’s rulings on these motions have been due to Attorney Brodeur-McGan’s conduct. For example, Attorney Brodeur-McGan scheduled two depositions to take place at the same time in different counties. When plaintiffs counsel sought relief from this obvious and deliberate scheduling conflict, Ms. Brodeur-McGan countered that the plaintiffs counsel was raising a frivolous objection because he should have known that the deponents would elect to mail in their documents rather than appear in accordance with the summonses. As an example of Ms. Brodeur-McGan’s hubris, she is seeking sanctions against plaintiffs counsel for successfully obtaining a protective from the Court to prevent her from requiring plaintiffs counsel to be in two places, fifty miles apart, at the same time. Yet at other times, Attorney McGan contacted the Clerk’s office to announce that she was on her way to Court to obtain unspecified relief from supposed wrongdoing by plaintiffs counsel during some depositions. Nothing materialized from these seemingly frantic calls, probably because I instructed the Clerk’s office not to respond to these general alarms from Attorney Brodeur-McGan unless she presented some written request for court intervention.

I entered a scheduling order agreed to by the parties that set April 30, 2009 as the discovery completion date. The plaintiff scheduled the defendant Sullivan’s deposition for March 26, 2009. This was the fourth time the deposition was scheduled. The earlier depositions were cancelled at the defendants’ request. Sullivan is the Mayor of Holyoke. Attorney Brodeur-McGan notified plaintiffs counsel less than 48 hours before the scheduled deposition that she would not produce her client for his deposition and that she would not attend any further depositions because she had just realized that plaintiffs counsel was ethically conflicted. In particular, she claimed that plaintiffs counsel represented the City of Holyoke and Sullivan from 2001-2002 with respect to licensing issues. Moreover, she suddenly realized “after putting the puzzle together” that after a brief tenure with the City, plaintiffs counsel represented the license holders of the Latin Spot, a Holyoke bar. The Latin Spot owners, according to Brodeur-McGan, are essential witnesses in the case and their testimony is likely to involve matters that occurred when plaintiffs counsel represented them. Indeed she claims that she suddenly realized that she might have to call plaintiffs counsel as a witness.

[511]*511Attorney Brodeur-McGan did not raise any of these claimed conflicts until just before discoveiy closed and literally on the eve of her client’s deposition. She cannot cogently explain how, if these conflicts actually existed, she remained silent about them for more than four years after this case was entered in Court. It is almost embarrassing to hear her explanation. She weaves a diz2ying tale consisting of unrelated facts, distortions, innuendo and unsupported suppositions to arrive at the penultimate moment when she, in her own oft repeated words, solved the puzzle. It is interesting to note that while she claims the plaintiffs counsel cannot take any affirmative action on behalf of his client due to the alleged conflicts of interest, she has no problem expecting him to respond to her as she attempts to continue discoveiy for her clients; this, despite the passage of the discovery deadline. It is clear that Attorney Brodeur-McGan and Mayor Sullivan were attempting to avoid Sullivan’s scheduled deposition and hid behind claims of conflicts of interest and threats of filing complaints with the Board of Bar Overseers in order to avoid providing proper discoveiy in this case.

In their motion, the movants assert that plaintiffs counsel violated the Massachusetts Rules of Professional Conduct in several ways. Specifically, the defendants say that plaintiffs counsel violated the following rules for the following reasons:

1. Rule 1.6(a)(b) by disclosing to the plaintiff secrets and confidences obtained during counsel’s representation of Sullivan and the City and his later representation of the Latin Spot.
2. Rule 1.7 by simultaneously representing the plaintiff and the Latin Spot during this litigation.
3. Rule 1.9 by representing the plaintiff in this matter having represented the Latin Spot in a substantially related matter.
4. Rule 3.4 by obstructing or destroying evidence.
5. Rule 3.7 by representing a party while likely being a necessary witness at trial.

The claimed rules violations fall into three categories: 1. destruction of evidence, 2. prior legal representation of the defendants Sullivan and Holyoke, 3. prior legal representation of the Latin Spot. Standing alone, any one of these claims if true is of great seriousness. The most serious of which is the allegation that plaintiffs counsel destroyed or obstructed evidence in this case. There is absolutely no evidence whatsoever that plaintiffs counsel obstructed or destroyed anything to do with this case, let alone evidence. It cannot be emphasized enough that Attorney Brodeur-McGan has not presented an iota of evidence in support of her claim. While Attorney Brodeur-McGan made sweeping allegations of evidence destruction in her filings, she abandoned any attempt to justify that claim by the time of hearing. She abandoned it because her claim is groundless. However, she didn’t even have the good grace at hearing to withdraw that particular claim but instead left it to plaintiffs counsel to refute that which she had not supported in any way.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Mass. L. Rptr. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moriarty-v-sullivan-masssuperct-2009.