Selendy v. Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP

CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 2019
Docket2019 NYSlipOp 29119
StatusPublished

This text of Selendy v. Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP (Selendy v. Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Selendy v. Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

<partyblock>

<br><table width="75%" border="1" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="4" align="center"><tr><td>

<br><div align="center"><b><font size="+1">Philippe Selendy, FAITH GAY, DAVID ELSBERG, JENNIFER SELENDY, ANDREW DUNLAP, MARIA GINZBURG, SEAN BALDWIN, CHRISTINE CHUNG, JORDAN GOLDSTEIN, YELENA KONANOVA, Petitioners,

<br><br>against<br><br>Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &amp; Sullivan, LLP, Respondent.</font></b></div>

<br><br>

</td></tr></table><br><br>652323/2018

<br><br>Attorneys for Petitioner: Debra L. Raskin and Anne L. Clark of Vladeck, Raskin &amp; Clark, P.C.

<br><br>Attorneys for Respondents: Andrew J. Rossman and Richard Werder of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &amp; Sullivan, LLP.

<br>Saliann Scarpulla, J.

<p>The following e-filed documents, listed by NYSCEF document number (Motion 001) 2, 23 were read on this motion to/for INJUNCTION/RESTRAINING ORDER</p>

<br><br>The following e-filed documents, listed by NYSCEF document number (Motion 002) 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32 were read on this motion to/for DISMISS

<p>In this attorney partnership dispute, respondent Quinn Emanuel Urquhart &amp; Sullivan, LLP ("Quinn Emanuel") moves, pursuant to CPLR 404(a) and 3211(a), to dismiss the petition of petitioners Philippe Selendy, Faith Gay, David Elsberg, Jennifer Selendy, Andrew Dunlap, Maria Ginzburg, Sean Baldwin, Christine Chung, Jordan Goldstein, and Yelena Konanova <font color="FF0000">[*2]</font>(collectively, "Petitioners") to stay arbitration. Petitioners oppose dismissal.</p>

<p><b><i>Background</i></b></p>

<p>Petitioners are New York attorneys and former partners of Quinn Emanuel, a California limited liability partnership with international law offices. Petitioners were admitted into the partnership pursuant to the Second Amended and Restated Partnership Agreement dated October 15, 2014 ("Partnership Agreement"). </p>

<p>In January and February 2018, Petitioners withdrew from Quinn Emanuel's New York office and formed a new law firm, Selendy &amp; Gay PLLC. Section 5.1(a)(iii) of the Partnership Agreement provides that</p>

<blockquote>[i]f a partner voluntarily withdraws from [Quinn Emanuel], and if, at any time within eighteen (18) months after the effective date of such withdrawal, he, or any enterprise which he joins, performs any legal services in any case or other matter venued within 100 miles of any office of [Quinn Emanuel] for any client who was a client of [Quinn Emanuel] prior to the effective date of such withdrawal, and for which he or his new enterprise performed no legal services prior to the date of the withdrawing partner first became an employee or partner of [Quinn Emanuel], then the partner so withdrawing shall pay to [Quinn Emanuel], as a reasonable estimate of the harm caused to [Quinn Emanuel] and the other partners by his withdrawal as a result of the loss of fees which would otherwise have been received from [Quinn Emanuel's] clients taken by him, a sum equal to 10% of the total fees billed by him and/or his new enterprise from that client for services rendered by them, or any of them, during the eighteen (18) month period following the effective date of his withdrawal from the partnership.</blockquote><p>In late February 2018, Richard Werder, the managing partner of Quinn Emanuel's New York office, demanded that Petitioners comply with section 5.1(a)(iii)'s payment obligations. Petitioners refused, on the basis that the provision is against New York public policy as an impermissible restraint on the practice of law. </p>

<p>The petition alleges that prior to demanding payment, Quinn Emanuel engaged in serious anticompetitive conduct. Petitioners submit emails from John Quinn, the firm's founding member, in which he sought to impose an antipoaching condition because the "issues to be faced will be resolved a lot easier if [Petitioners] don't hire any [Quinn Emanuel associates]." Petition, Ex. D (emphasis in original). Petitioners refused and allege that Quinn Emanuel continued attempting to extract a "no poaching" agreement by threatening to enforce section 5.1(a)(iii) as a penalty, despite having never enforced the provision against a departing partner.<sup><a href="#1FN" name="1CASE"><b>[FN1]</b></a></sup>

</p>

<p>Unable to amicably resolve their dispute, Quinn Emanuel filed a demand for arbitration to enforce the provision on April 24, 2018. Section 7.6 of the Partnership Agreement ("Arbitration Provision") provides that</p>

<blockquote>[i]n the event of any dispute between or among any partners or between any one or more partners, on the one hand, and the Partnership on the other, with respect to this Partnership Agreement, the conduct of the affairs of the Partnership or any other matter related thereto, whether in contract, tort, equity or otherwise, and whether arising from facts or circumstances first existing before or after the adoption of this arbitration provision by the partners, such dispute shall be resolved exclusively through an arbitration proceeding conducted pursuant to the Commercial Rules of the American Arbitration Association and the supplementary Procedures for Large Complex Cases . . . . The arbitration shall be conducted on a confidential basis in a private office or other private facility in Los Angeles, California and shall be agreed to by the parties (or selected by the arbitrator if the parties cannot agree) . . . . The arbitrator shall have jurisdiction to determine the arbitrability of any dispute . . . . The final award in the arbitration shall be binding on the parties and may be specifically enforced by legal proceedings, including but not limited to entry of a judgment on the award by any court of appropriate jurisdiction . . . . The obligation to arbitrate any such dispute will survive any partner's disassociation from the Partnership.</blockquote><p>In addition to the Arbitration Provision, section 7.5 of the Partnership Agreement provides that</p>

<blockquote>[The Partnership] Agreement is to be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of California applicable to contracts made and to be performed wholly within such State, and without regard to the conflicts of the laws principles thereof. Subject to the [Arbitration Provision], any suit brought hereon, whether in contract, tort, equity or otherwise, shall be brought in the state or federal courts sitting in Los Angeles, California, the parties hereto hereby waiving any claim or defense that such forum is not convenient or proper.</blockquote><p>On May 11, 2018, Petitioners filed in this court: (1) a petition to permanently stay and enjoin the arbitration proceeding; and (2) an order to show cause for a temporary stay pending determination of that petition. Petitioners submit, as an exhibit to the petition, a declaration of Hal R. Lieberman ("Lieberman"), a well-respected legal ethics expert in New York, who opined that the payment obligations at issue are unethical under New York law, in addition to the no-poaching agreement Quinn Emanuel attempted to extract from Petitioners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Selendy v. Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/selendy-v-quinn-emanuel-urquhart-sullivan-llp-nysupct-2019.