National Equestrian League, LLC v. White

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedOctober 7, 2021
Docket1:20-cv-21746
StatusUnknown

This text of National Equestrian League, LLC v. White (National Equestrian League, LLC v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Equestrian League, LLC v. White, (S.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA MIAMI DIVISION CASE NO. 20-21746-CIV-MORENO/GOODMAN

NATIONAL EQUESTRIAN LEAGUE, LLC, et al.,

Plaintiffs,

v.

KEEAN WHITE, et al.,

Defendants. ____________________________________________/

ORDER1 ON PLAINTIFFS’ PURPORTED ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE WITH ATTORNEY JAMES D. WHISENAND AND HIS LAW FIRM

Plaintiffs have refused to produce 361 documents totaling 1,882 pages listed on their privilege log, claiming that the materials are protected by the attorney-client privilege with James D. Whisenand and his law firm.

1 This Order is based in part on factual information in a memorandum which Defendants say they were required to file under seal because of Plaintiffs’ designation of large portions of James Whisenand’s deposition and exhibits as privileged or confidential. But, after reviewing the deposition, the Undersigned determined [ECF No. 120] that the material does not constitute confidential material.

Moreover, the proposed legal fee arrangement and emails discussing the alternatives between Whisenand and Plaintiffs are not privileged. See Soricelli v. GEICO Indem. Co., No. 8:16-CV-1535-T-30TBM, 2017 WL 275967, at *4 (M.D. Fla. Jan. 20, 2017) (“Courts in this Circuit have concluded ‘fee agreements or retainer agreements generally are not privileged.’”); Armor Screen Corp. v. Storm Catcher, Inc., No. 07-81091-Civ, 2009 WL 2767664, at *1 (S.D. Fla. Aug. 31, 2009) (“[T]he communication of factual information, such as . . . fee agreements, and retainer agreements are generally not protected by the attorney-client privilege.”). Plaintiffs maintain this position even though (1) Whisenand unequivocally represents (in a formal written submission filed in the case [ECF No. 122]) that neither he

nor his law firm had an attorney-client relationship with Plaintiffs and/or their principals; (2) they twice rejected Whisenand’s proposals to retain him as an attorney providing legal advice and opted to instead use him as a business consultant; (3) Whisenand’s submission

explains that Plaintiffs retained and compensated nine other active attorneys; (4) Whisenand represents that “no privileged legal advice was provided to Plaintiffs”; (5) Plaintiffs listed only five documents (out of the 361 on their privilege log) in their

memorandum [ECF No. 118] which they say illustrate Whisenand’s provision of legal advice; and (6) at best, only two of the five documents mention, albeit succinctly and in a conclusory way, legal concepts which could arguably be deemed legal advice -- but the context establishes that these isolated comments were primarily made in Whisenand’s

role as a business advisor who happens to also be an attorney. As suggested by the factors outlined above, Plaintiffs have not met their burden of establishing the attorney-client privilege for any of the 361 documents on their privilege

log. As a result, Plaintiffs shall produce them to Defendants within three business days of this Order. I. Procedural and Factual Background In their Second Amended Complaint [ECF No. 61], Plaintiffs National Equestrian

League, LLC (“National”) and JumpingClash, S.L. (“JC”) assert claims for damages and injunctive relief against Defendants Matthew Morrissey, Keean White, Angelstone Farms, Inc., Morrisey Management Group, LLC, and Major League Show Jumping LLC.

The case concerns the parties’ efforts to develop and launch a professional horse jumping league. According to Plaintiffs, they were supposed to be working with Defendants to

develop the league, but Defendants had been secretly working to form their own league and had misappropriated Plaintiffs’ trade secrets and prospects. Plaintiffs contend that Defendants worked to steal a plan to develop the league; worked to use Plaintiffs’

confidential information, regulatory knowhow, and business plans; schemed to infringe copyrights belonging to one Plaintiff; and ultimately engaged in this misconduct in order to set up their own league. Plaintiffs assert claims for copyright infringement, breach of contract (three counts

against different defendants), fraud, negligent misrepresentation, tortious interference, conspiracy, breach of fiduciary duty, theft of trade secrets (two counts), unjust enrichment, copyright infringement, and unfair business practices.

Defendants answered [ECF No. 70] the Second Amended Complaint, asserted affirmative defenses and raised Counterclaims. Defendant Angelstone contends that Plaintiff National never paid the full amount due under a consultant agreement. Defendant Angelstone asserts claims for declaratory relief, breach of contract (two

counts), and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and tortious interference (against Plaintiff JC). In response, Plaintiffs/Counter-Defendants filed [ECF No. 73] a motion to dismiss counterclaims and to strike affirmative defenses.

The parties have had several discovery disputes in this case, including the instant one involving Plaintiffs’ invocation of the attorney-client privilege over communications with Whisenand and his law firm. Plaintiffs have filed [ECF No. 95] the purportedly

privileged documents under seal. The parties filed memoranda on the attorney-client privilege issue [ECF Nos. 116; 117; 118] after the Undersigned received information at a hearing and then pinpointed [ECF No. 98] specific issues to be addressed.

Defendants filed both a sealed unredacted version of their memorandum [ECF No. 116] and a publicly-filed redacted version of the same memorandum [ECF No. 117]. Defendants attached as an exhibit Plaintiffs’ Amended Privilege Log [ECF Nos. 116-1; 117-1]. Plaintiffs filed on CM/ECF a memorandum [ECF No. 118] and filed under seal

[ECF No. 119-1] a copy of an April 24, 2019 “Term Sheet & National Equestrian League Arrangement” between JC and Equus & Co. (“Equus”), an entity formed approximately 15-20 years ago to engage in equestrian business activities (in which Whisenand is the

manager). In addition, Whisenand, a non-party who received a subpoena in the case several months ago, filed what he deemed “additional source information” to “assist the Court” with the issues flagged in the Order establishing a briefing schedule. [ECF Nos. 121; 122].

Whisenand filed both an unredacted [ECF No. 122] and a redacted [ECF No. 121] version of the additional source information. He also explained that he provided Plaintiffs’ counsel with both a redacted and an unredacted copy of the additional source

information but provided Defendants’ counsel with only a redacted copy. Whisenand explained that this was “done out of an abundance of caution pending the Court’s determination [of the attorney-client privilege issue].” [ECF No. 121, p. 1].

Daniel Entrecanales, Luis Estrada, and Pablo Marquez are the non-attorney principals of Plaintiff JumpingClash and, along with Whisenand, are board members in Plaintiff National Equestrian League, LLC. The communications at issue are either

between Whisenand and the other three or are communications among Plaintiffs’ principals. Whisenand, an attorney at Whisenand & Turner, P.A., has been involved in equestrian sports since he was eight. Whisenand is also involved in several businesses,

including Equus. a. Initial Solicitation In 2017, Estrada contacted Whisenand about Equus partnering with JC to develop

the National Equestrian League (“NEL”). Estrada ran polo operations for the Santa Maria Polo Club in Sotogrande, Spain; he and Whisenand “had done quite a bit of business together” and were friends. [ECF No. 93-1, 16:18-20; 29:23-24]. Whisenand stated: He [Estrada] asked me if I would be interested in – in working with JumpingClash through Equus & Co. Matter of fact, specifically, he said he wanted Equus & Co.

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