Paul R. Rosen, Esq. v. National Labor Relations Board

735 F.2d 564, 236 U.S. App. D.C. 298
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 6, 1984
Docket83-1226
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 735 F.2d 564 (Paul R. Rosen, Esq. v. National Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul R. Rosen, Esq. v. National Labor Relations Board, 735 F.2d 564, 236 U.S. App. D.C. 298 (D.C. Cir. 1984).

Opinion

STARR, Circuit Judge:

Paul R. Rosen, a member of the Pennsylvania Bar, and the Philadelphia law firm of which he is a partner, Spector, Cohen, Ga-don, and Rosen (“Spector, Cohen”), brought a civil action against the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB” or “Board”) and its executive secretary, John Truesdale, seeking relief from a finding by an Administrative Law Judge that Mr. Ro-sen had suborned perjury. In their complaint, plaintiffs alleged that this finding violated their due process rights inasmuch as they had no opportunity to present evidence at the hearing — or thereafter — on Mr. Rosen’s behalf. Their prayer for relief sought, among other things, that the administrative finding be declared' void and that the NLRB be required to hold a hearing to allow Mr. Rosen to clear his name. The District Court dismissed the suit on several grounds, namely that the plaintiffs had failed to invoke available administrative procedures adequate to protect their rights; that the action was an improper collateral attack on an NLRB proceeding; and that the action was barred by the doctrine of judicial immunity. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. 1

I

This case had its genesis in a 1978 attempt by a labor union to organize the warehouse employees of Feld and Sons (“the Company”), a Pennsylvania textile concern also known as “Today’s Man,” the name which adorns the NLRB administrative proceedings that figure prominently in the backdrop of this case. Following a representation election, the union sought certification as the warehouse employees’ collective bargaining representative. At the same time, the union filed unfair labor practice charges alleging, inter alia, that the Company had dismissed certain employees for pro-union activities. Today’s Man, 263 NLRB 332, 334 (1982).

At an administrative hearing on the two issues of certification and unfair labor practice charges, the Company was represented by the Philadelphia law firm of Pechner, Dorfman, Wolffe, Rounick & Cabot (“Pechner, Dorfman”). Mr. Rosen and his firm had not yet joined the cast in this unfolding drama, although Spector, Cohen was at all relevant times serving as the Company’s corporate counsel.

During the course of the administrative hearing on the issue of union certification, NLRB representatives became convinced that various representatives of the Company, including its president, Mr. Feld, and two Pechner, Dorfman attorneys had committed perjury or subornation of perjury. In accordance with Board procedures in such instances, the NLRB Regional Office in Philadelphia prepared a memorandum for the Board’s General Counsel in Washington outlining the facts and recommending that the matter be referred for possible prosecution to the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. 263 NLRB at 334.

In October 1978, Pechner, Dorfman tried to settle the unfair labor practice charges. Although the possibility of resolving the perjury charges was raised during the course of settlement negotiations, NLRB *567 representatives indicated to the Pechner, Dorfman attorneys that any settlement of the unfair labor practice charges would not include any agreement not to bring perjury charges. 263 NLRB at 335-336. The Pechner, Dorfman attorneys thereafter reached a formal settlement agreement with the NLRB on the unfair labor practices, which Mr. Feld, as president, signed on behalf of the Company. After approving the settlement in January 1979, the NLRB petitioned the Third Circuit Court of Appeals for enforcement of the agreed-to order as part of the settlement.

Between the time of settlement and the time the Board sought enforcement, a major substitution occurred in the dramatis personae. The Company engaged Mr. Ro-sen’s firm, already ensconced, as we have seen, as corporate counsel, to represent it in the NLRB matter. With Spector, Cohen now substituted in as counsel, the Company objected to the NLRB’s enforcement petition on the ground that the settlement agreement should be set aside. The Company alleged that an oral side agreement existed by which the NLRB had agreed not to press the perjury charges against Mr. Feld and the Pechner, Dorfman attorneys. Furthermore, the Company alleged that this agreement created a conflict of interest between Pechner, Dorfman and the Company by implanting an interest on the part of the Pechner, Dorfman attorneys in persuading the Company to acquiesce in the settlement agreement. The Company and the NLRB thereupon agreed to a limited remand before Administrative Law Judge Donnelly for the purpose of adducing evidence concerning the negotiations and execution of the settlement agreement to determine whether the settlement in fact included the alleged side agreement to drop the perjury charges. The die was thus cast for the unhappy events which brought about the action now before us.

Mr. Rosen represented the Company in this second, limited hearing before the ALJ. The principal witnesses were the Pechner, Dorfman attorneys and the Board representatives involved in negotiating the original settlement. In response to questions from Board counsel, a Pechner, Dorf-man attorney, Barry Bevacqua, testified about a meeting with Mr. Rosen at Philadelphia’s Locust Club in March 1979. AU Trial Transcript at 818. Mr. Rosen promptly objected to this line of questioning on relevancy grounds, contending that inasmuch as the Locust Club meeting had occurred after the settlement, the meeting simply could not bear on the scope of the settlement. Id. at 822. Judge Donnelly overruled the objection.

With the evidentiary door now open, not only Mr. Bevacqua but two other Pechner, Dorfman attorneys, namely Martin Sobol and Julius Steiner, testified about their conversations with Mr. Rosen concerning' the scope of the original settlement. The Pech-ner, Dorfman lawyers testified, in essence, that at the Locust Club conclave Mr. Rosen had advanced a theory of the case which would have barred perjury charges being brought against Mr. Feld and certain Pech-ner, Dorfman attorneys. Under Mr. Ro-sen’s theory, the NLRB representative who negotiated the settlement had expressly agreed to resolve the perjury charges as part of the original settlement and thus wash out any lingering perjury or subornation issues.

Mr. Bevacqua testified that in response to Mr. Rosen’s articulation of this theory, the Pechner, Dorfman attorneys demurred on the grounds that Mr. Rosen’s theory did not square with the facts. Mr. Rosen, according to Mr. Bevacqua’s testimony, thereupon reminded them that he had statements from witnesses and “control over them” and that his theory “was a viable way to get the whole thing put to bed.” Id. at 827 (testimony of Mr. Bevac-qua). Mr. Sobol, another Pechner, Dorf-man attorney, similarly testified that Mr. Rosen had opined that unless Mr. Sobol testified to facts supporting the foregoing theory, some Pechner, Dorfman attorneys would be disbarred and two of those attorneys would find themselves behind bars. Id. at 1991-94 (testimony of Mr. Sobol). According to Mr. Sobol, Mr. Rosen reiterat *568 ed that he controlled the relevant witnesses. Id. 2

Upon concluding the hearing, Judge Don-nelly found in a written opinion that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
735 F.2d 564, 236 U.S. App. D.C. 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-r-rosen-esq-v-national-labor-relations-board-cadc-1984.