Sillam v. Labaton Sucharow LLP

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 22, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-06675
StatusUnknown

This text of Sillam v. Labaton Sucharow LLP (Sillam v. Labaton Sucharow LLP) 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
Sillam v. Labaton Sucharow LLP, (S.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK -------------------------------------------------------------x GERARD SILLAM and ALDRIC SAULNIER, : : Plaintiffs, : No. 21-CV-6675 (CM) (OTW) : -against- : OPINION AND ORDER : LABATON SUCHAROW LLP, et al., : Defendants. : : -------------------------------------------------------------x ONA T. WANG, United States Magistrate Judge: I. BACKGROUND This case was referred to me for general pretrial management on September 13, 2022 (ECF 43), after Judge McMahon determined that the only remaining claim in this case would be one for fraudulent inducement arising from Plaintiffs’ execution of two release agreements, in 2009 and 2014, with Defendants. This Opinion and Order arises from Plaintiff Sillam’s alleged breach of promises he made in order to resolve the parties’ dispute over the location of Plaintiffs’ depositions. Specifically, Defendants allege that Plaintiff Sillam brought two criminal actions or complaints (“the 2023 Complaints”) in March and April of 2023. II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY In January 2023, the parties appeared before me for a status conference with what appeared, at first blush, to be a straightforward discovery dispute: Where should Plaintiffs be deposed? (ECF 79). Plaintiffs claimed to be elderly French citizens who raised numerous challenges, including pandemic-related health reasons, to leaving France to be deposed. Defendants also raised two concerns unique to this lawsuit and these Plaintiffs, both relating to Plaintiffs’ propensity for bringing meritless criminal charges against Defendants and their counsel:1 first, that the questions that defense counsel planned to ask Plaintiffs as they were deposed in France might result in disputes or give rise to criminal charges in France (ECF 81 at 15, Transcript of January 25, 2023 Conference); and second, a more general concern that Defendants and their

lawyers might be subjected to other, frivolous criminal proceedings, as they have in the past. See, e.g., id. at 28.2 Plaintiffs’ U.S. counsel, Douglas Reda (“Mr. Reda”), made several representations that his clients would be “willing to sign whatever they [defendants and counsel] need, they feel to be protected.” Id. at 24. Later, Mr. Reda represented: [W]e put in our papers that they would sign whatever affidavits that the, we told them this, that they would feel comfortable to protect them that he would not be bringing, neither of them would be bringing any criminal proceedings or any proceedings, whatsoever, in France, in regards to the deposition. They could even have sanctions built into the affidavit if they violate that, I just don’t, I think the chances of it happening are so slim because the ultimate sanction here would be you dismiss their case . . .

Id. at 46. Upon those representations, I determined that Plaintiffs would not be required to leave France for their depositions, but ruled as follows: [D]efendants may elect whether to conduct a deposition of Mr. Sillam remotely or in person with Mr. Sillam in France. That is [D]efendants’ election. The parties are to work together in good faith to agree to the particulars and logistics of the deposition, including but not limited to providing affidavits or other statements or agreements from Mr. Sillam to address the concerns raised by defense counsel about frivolous proceedings brought in France, or potential frivolous proceedings brought in France.

Id. at 49. I further cautioned:

1 See ECF 130 for Defendants’ summary of proceedings instituted in France by the Plaintiffs. 2 THE COURT: What I’ve heard articulated, a concern that there will be criminal proceedings . . . unfairly brought . . . that will cause problems . . . Significant problems . . . MR. ZAUDERER: Yes, he just has to file them, that’s all he has to do. I am concerned . . . by what you have told me, Mr. Zauderer, about what Mr. Sillam has done in the past about criminal proceedings . . . . Maybe I am like Charlie Brown with [the] football, but I have faith and hope that Mr. Reda and the representations that he’s made and the work that he has done with his client[s] will make that a nonissue, . . . . If it becomes an issue, I do want to hear about it, okay? Id. at 50. Shortly after the January conference, Defendants prepared declarations for both Plaintiffs to sign, in which they promised, inter alia, that they would not: file or pursue any type of legal proceeding in France, including but not limited to any type of criminal proceeding or criminal complaint, against Defendants, Defendants’ counsel, or any persons affiliated with them, relating directly or indirectly to the conduct of the Deposition or this action.

(ECF 104-4 at ¶ 4, Exhibit D - Declarations of Plaintiffs Sillam and Saulnier (February 16, 2023)). Plaintiffs signed these declarations on February 16, 2023, and Sillam, sitting in France, was deposed by remote means on May 5 and May 12, 2023. (See ECF 104-5, Exhibit E - Excerpts from Plaintiff Sillam's Deposition Transcript (May 12, 2023); ECF 111 at 2). By August 2023, however, Defendants notified the Court that Sillam3 had filed a criminal complaint in March 2023 that they believed breached the promises in his declaration. (See ECF 104). We later learned that Sillam had filed two criminal complaints, the 2023 Complaints, in March and April4 of 2023.5 More letters followed in the ensuing days, see ECF Nos. 105 and 107,

3 Although prior criminal proceedings appear to have been brought by both Plaintiffs, the 2023 Complaints appear to have been brought only by Plaintiff Sillam. 4 During the course of the briefing on the order to show cause, Sillam apparently admitted that he had filed a second complaint on April 27, 2023, “for the violation of privilege, possession of stolen goods applied to it and also for defamation,” apparently based on the same facts that gave rise to Sillam’s March 2023 complaint. (See ECF 124-4 at 11, Declaration of Sillam’s French counsel). 5 As Sillam’s French counsel describes, there is a file or database called “traitement des antécedents judiciaries” (the “TAJ”) maintained by the French police that “includes all people who have been subject to a police hearing,” including victims of crimes and regardless of outcome of the hearing. (ECF 126-4 at 8). The presence of a person’s name in the TAJ does not mean one has been found guilty of any crime. Id.; see also ECF 130 at 6. The public prosecutor provided to Defendants’ French counsel a copy of the TAJ (referencing Sillam, apparently) at some time before December 16, 2022, and the TAJ was referenced by Defendants and incorporated in a written response filed December 16, 2022 after which I issued an order to show cause specifically related to the promises Sillam made in his declaration. (See ECF 108). As directed, the parties made several written submissions on August 14, 2023, and appeared for a show cause hearing on August 15, 2023. (ECF 117). I made a preliminary finding at the hearing that Sillam had failed to show cause that he had not breached

the promises made in his February 2023 declaration, and directed supplemental briefing on whether Sillam breached those promises and whether French law “placed him in such a quandary that he had no choice but to institute a new criminal complaint.” Id. at 1; ECF 118-1 at 39, Transcript of August 15, 2023 Show Cause Hearing. III. SILLAM’S AND HIS COUNSEL’S EXPLANATIONS Sillam and his counsel’s explanations in response to the Order to Show Cause follow the

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Bluebook (online)
Sillam v. Labaton Sucharow LLP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sillam-v-labaton-sucharow-llp-nysd-2024.