RLS ASSOCIATES, LLC v. United Bank of Kuwait PLC

417 F. Supp. 2d 417, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7830, 2006 WL 490068
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 27, 2006
Docket01 Civ. 1290(CSH)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 417 F. Supp. 2d 417 (RLS ASSOCIATES, LLC v. United Bank of Kuwait PLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RLS ASSOCIATES, LLC v. United Bank of Kuwait PLC, 417 F. Supp. 2d 417, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7830, 2006 WL 490068 (S.D.N.Y. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

HAIGHT, Senior District Judge.

This case currently presents two questions: (1) whether the complaint should be dismissed with prejudice, plaintiff having failed to post a bond for costs as ordered by the Court; and (2) the related but separate question of the identity of counsel, if any, who are obligated to represent plaintiff in the resolution of the first question.

I. BACKGROUND

The Court’s most recent opinion and order in this case, reported at RLS Associates, LLC v. United Bank of Kuwait PLC, 2005 WL 3312004 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 7, 2005) (“the December 7 Opinion”), familiarity with which is assumed, directed plaintiff RLS Associates, LLC (“RLS”) to post a bond for costs in the amount of $465,900 within 30 days from the date of entry of the Opinion, “failing which the Court will on defendant’s application dismiss the action.” Id. at *3. The December 7 Opinion then concluded with this statement: “Because such a dismissal would not address the merits of plaintiffs clams, it would be without prejudice.” Id.

I freely concede that this reference to a dismissal without prejudice, as opposed to a dismissal with prejudice, was made without counsel for either party having addressed that issue in their briefs or having been given an opportunity to do so before the December 7 Opinion was filed. The question now arises whether that statement was improvidently made, a question defendant The United Bank of Kuwait, PLC (“the Bank”) poses in a pending mo *418 tion dated January 23, 2006 for an order dismissing the action with prejudice.'

Plaintiff has not yet responded to that motion because of an uncertainty about its present representation by counsel. 1 That uncertainty is reflected by a recent exchange of letters and a telephone conference conducted by the Court on February 22, 2006. The participants in the conference were myself; my law clerk; Mr. Richard L. Swomley, the lay president of plaintiff RLS; Richard B. Feldman, an attorney; and Michael H. Smith, also an attorney. For reasons that are readily apparent, counsel for the Bank did not participate.

II. LEGAL REPRESENTATION OF PLAINTIFF

The pertinent correspondence and the substance of the telephone conference reveal the following facts.

In late 2000 or early 2001, Mr. Swomley decided that plaintiff RLS should commence an action against the Bank. RLS retained the firm of Spitzer & Feldman, P.C. (“the Spitzer firm”) to represent it. Mr. Swomley came to the Spitzer firm because he knew a partner, James Spitzer, Jr. However, the litigation was handled principally by Ronald J. Offenkrantz, 2 another partner in the Spitzer firm, and by Mr. Smith, then an associate at the firm. Mr. Swomley says that RLS and the Spit-zer firm executed an engagement agreement at that time, although he does not presently have a copy. ■

The litigation went forward. I need not recite its history in detail. In late 2003 the Spitzer firm dissolved. Mr. Spitzer is now a partner at the New York office of the Tampa-headquartered firm of Holland & Knight. Mr. Smith moved as an associate to another firm and then relocated to his present New York firm, Rosenberg Feldman Smith, LLP (“the Rosenberg firm”). 3

Mr. Smith stated during the conference that after the Spitzer firm dissolved, he was engaged and paid by former partners of that firm (Messrs. Spitzer, Offen-krantz, and Thomas R. Westle) “to undertake specific, discrete tasks” in connection with RLS’s action against the Bank. Mr. Smith then moved to the Rosenberg firm. Mr. Feldman of that firm says in a letter to the Court dated February 2, 2006 (with copies to, inter alia, Messrs. Spitzer, Of-fenkrantz and Westle) that “[o]ur firm was retained by Spitzer and Feldman solely to assist Spitzer and Feldman, the attorneys of record for the plaintiff, in opposing the defendant’s renewed motion for a bond decided by Your Honor in December, 2005.” 4 Mr. Feldman’s letter says further, without contradiction by Mr. Swom-ley during the telephone conference, that the Rosenberg firm “[was] not retained for any other purpose nor have we ever entered into any engagement agreement with the plaintiff in this matter.”

In these circumstances, the question arises as to plaintiffs present legal representation, in the particular context of opposing or responding to defendant’s motion for an order of dismissal with prejudice. For the reasons that follow, I conclude that the professional and ethical *419 responsibility for that representation must fall upon the former equity-holding partners of the Spitzer firm.

The core question presented is the obligation vel non of the partners of a dissolved law firm to protect the interests of clients in litigation commenced prior to the dissolution. Surprisingly, neither the Code of Professional Responsibility adopted by the Appellate Divisions of the New York Supreme Court nor the New York Partnership Law squarely address this question. However, considering that the mission of lawyers is to serve those persons or entities they accept as clients, one feels intuitively that the obligation of a partner of a law firm to an existing client should not lapse with the subsequent dissolution of the firm; and in fact a former partner’s ethical obligation to a pre-disso-lution client finds expression in commentaries and case law. In NYC Eth. Op.1988-4, 1988 WL 490014 (N.Y.C. Ass’n B. Comm. Prof. Jud. Eth. June 3, 1988), the Committee on Professional and Judicial Ethics of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, construing certain provisions of the Code of Professional Responsibility, said:

Lawyers, therefore, have an ethical obligation to perform professional services they contract to provide until their completion, absent good cause for withdrawal. Even in the event of dissolution, every member of a law firm retained by a client is obligated to fulfill the retainer agreement.

1988 WL 490014, at *2. One of the cases the Committee cited for those propositions is Vollgraff v. Block, 117 Misc.2d 489, 458 N.Y.S.2d 437 (1982), an action for legal malpractice. In 1976 the plaintiffs were involved in a car accident. That year they retained a law firm to prosecute their case against two entities. Later in 1976 the partnership was dissolved, no successor firm was formed, and “each of the partners went in different directions.” Id. at 438. The attorneys failed to file a timely suit on plaintiffs’ behalf and plaintiffs sued the former partners of the firm for malpractice. The court, rejecting a motion to dismiss the complaint, held that plaintiffs’ claim was viable because it rested upon the former partners’ continuing professional obligations:

Partnership dissolution doers not discharge a partner from obligations existing prior to dissolution, but only as to obligations arising after dissolution.

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Related

Storey v. O’Brien
482 F. App'x 647 (Second Circuit, 2012)
RLS ASSOCIATES, LLC v. United Bank of Kuwait PLC
464 F. Supp. 2d 206 (S.D. New York, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
417 F. Supp. 2d 417, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7830, 2006 WL 490068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rls-associates-llc-v-united-bank-of-kuwait-plc-nysd-2006.