Morris v. Margulis

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 1999
Docket5-98-0325
StatusPublished

This text of Morris v. Margulis (Morris v. Margulis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. Margulis, (Ill. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

30 September 1999

NO. 5-98-0325

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIFTH DISTRICT

________________________________________________________________________

EDWARD MORRIS, )  Appeal from the

)  Circuit Court of

    Plaintiff-Appellant, )  St. Clair County.

)

)  No.  97-L-294

ARTHUR MARGULIS and MARGULIS & )

GRANT, P.C., )

    Defendants, )

and )

BRYAN CAVE, LLP, JOHN GOEBEL, )

DANIEL O'NEILL, J. THOMAS ARCHER, )

and ALAN J. DIXON, )  Honorable

)  John Goodwin,

    Defendants-Appellees. )  Judge, presiding.

________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE MAAG delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff Edward Morris appeals an order of the circuit court of St. Clair County granting summary judgment against him and in favor of defendants Bryan Cave, LLP (Bryan Cave), John Goebel, Daniel O'Neill, J. Thomas Archer, and Alan J. Dixon.  The individual defendants are all partners in the Bryan Cave firm.  For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand.

This action grows out of the failure of the former Germania Bank (Germania), a St. Louis, Missouri-based savings and loan.  Various civil and criminal actions flowed from Germania's failure, including actions against some officers and directors of Germania.  The plaintiff in this action, Morris, was sued civilly and prosecuted criminally.  Morris was convicted of various criminal charges.  His conviction was affirmed on appeal.  In this action, Morris alleges an attorney-client relationship existed between himself and the defendants.  Morris claims that the defendants breached the fiduciary duties owing from them to him and that he was damaged as a result.  With this general background, we will now address the issues raised in this case.

I. Facts

A detailed description of the complex facts underlying this case is necessary to an understanding of the plaintiff's claims against Bryan Cave and its partners.  Plaintiff Edward Morris is a former officer and director of Germania Bank.  In this decision we will refer to certain persons as either an "outside" or "inside" director of Germania because that is how the parties referred to them in the trial court.  An outside director is a director who served on the board of Germania but was not a full-time employee of the bank.  An inside director was both a member of the board of directors and a full-time employee.  Morris was an inside director.

Bryan Cave is a St. Louis-based law firm.  Attorneys from Bryan Cave represented Morris personally in several matters and served as corporate counsel for Germania.  John Goebel, Daniel O'Neill, J. Thomas Archer, and Alan J. Dixon are attorneys and partners at Bryan Cave.  John Goebel was an outside director of Germania Bank and advised Germania and its officers as corporate counsel.  Bryan Cave represented John Goebel and other outside directors in the civil suits resulting from the Germania collapse.  Daniel O'Neill represented John Goebel during the criminal investigation of the Germania collapse.  Edward Morris, the plaintiff, is married to Peggy Morris, an attorney who was employed at Bryan Cave during the events at issue in this case.  

A. Bryan Cave's Acknowledged Attorney-Client Relationship With Edward Morris

Bryan Cave began representing Morris prior to Morris joining Germania.  In 1983, Kathleen Sherby, a partner at Bryan Cave, wrote a will for Morris.  The will prepared by Sherby for Edward Morris names Sherby as successor executor of his estate.  David Slavkin, a partner at Bryan Cave, represented Morris in domestic relations matters in late 1989 and early 1990.  Morris left Germania in 1988 and was then employed by Steifel Nicholas as an investment banker.  In 1990, Edward Morris left Steifel Nicholas.  E. Perry Johnson, a partner at Bryan Cave, reviewed a severance agreement for Morris related to his departure from Steifel Nicholas.  

According to Peggy Morris, she also represented her husband during the time she was an attorney employed at Bryan Cave.  In 1993, staff at Bryan Cave prepared living wills and durable powers of attorney for the parents of Edward Morris at the request of Peggy Morris.  In the early 1990s, Peggy Morris supervised a Bryan Cave legal assistant in completing paperwork for the incorporation of the Fortune Group Financial Corporation.  Edward Morris was a 50% shareholder in the corporation.  John Goebel was the billing partner involved with that incorporation, according to Peggy Morris.  In his deposition, Goebel testified that he was aware that Bryan Cave had an attorney-client relationship with Morris through the representation of Edward Morris by Peggy Morris, David Slavkin, E. Perry Johnson, and Kathleen Sherby.  Peggy Morris further contends that Edward Morris frequently discussed a variety of legal matters with her and that she advised him as attorney.

B. The Disputed Attorney-Client Relationship

Morris became president and CEO of Germania in February 1986 and chairman in June 1986.  While Edward Morris was employed at Germania, problems developed in the bank's loan portfolio, which led to the seizure of Germania by the Office of Thrift Supervision.  Germania's seizure was followed by the filing of civil suits and criminal charges against various officers and directors of Germania.  Morris and Goebel, along with other Germania directors, were sued civilly.  Morris was indicted on federal mail and wire fraud charges on November 19, 1992.  Goebel was notified by the United States Attorney's office that he was a "subject" of the criminal investigation.  

The crux of the criminal charges is set out in United States v. Morris , 80 F.3d 1151 (7th Cir. 1996).  We will first briefly describe the facts related to the charges.  After the deregulation of the savings and loan industry in the early 1980s, Germania expanded its loan portfolio to include larger multifamily residential and commercial loans, in addition to the residential real estate loans it had previously made.  In September 1987, an in-depth quarterly analysis (the September Analysis) of the bank's loan portfolio recommended that Germania approve an additional $9.3 million in loan loss reserves.  The executive committee, including Edward Morris, did not approve additional loan loss reserves.  They authorized only those reserves necessary to cover identified losses in the portfolio.  Germania then proceeded to embark on a $10 million offering of subordinated capitol notes ("Schnotes"), using an offering circular describing the current loan loss reserves as "adequate."  The failure to disclose the September Analysis in the offering circular led to the conviction of Morris for mail and wire fraud.

The facts concerning how and why Germania decided not to approve additional loan loss reserves or report the contents of the September Analysis are in controversy.  Edward Morris contends that he discussed the September Analysis and loan loss reserves with John Goebel.

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