Sobel v. Sells (In re Gordon Properties, LLC)

505 B.R. 703
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedFebruary 25, 2013
DocketBankruptcy No. 09-18086-RGM; Adversary No. 12-1562-RGM
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 505 B.R. 703 (Sobel v. Sells (In re Gordon Properties, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sobel v. Sells (In re Gordon Properties, LLC), 505 B.R. 703 (Va. 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT G. MAYER, Bankruptcy Judge.

First Owners Association of Forty Six Hundred Condominium, Inc., (“FOA”), one of the defendants in this adversary proceeding, asks that Reed Smith LLP, counsel for the plaintiffs, be disqualified because Reed Smith previously represented it in substantially related matters. Va. Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.9(a).1

FOA has been in litigation with Gordon Properties, LLC and its related entities and individuals for more than four years. There have been at least seven law suits, two bankruptcies, an arbitration and numerous appeals, all of which, according to statements of counsel in various hearings, have cost FOA more than a million dollars in attorneys fees. FOA and Gordon Properties recently reached a global settlement which is scheduled for a hear[706]*706ing before this court for approval. FOA was represented in all of the litigation by Reed Smith until relatively recently when a newly elected Board of Directors discharged Reed Smith and, through its Special Litigation Committee, retained new counsel.2

Before the ink was dry on the global settlement — before it was even finalized and reduced to writing — eleven unit owners (several of whom previously sat on the Board of Directors and two of whom previously sat on the Special Litigation Committee) filed this suit against FOA and three of its directors (all three of whom are affiliated with Gordon Properties) in the Circuit Court for the City of Alexandria. The suit sought to have the Circuit Court declare that the three Gordon Properties-affiliated directors were invalidly elected; that a change in the membership of the Special Litigation Committee was invalid; that the prior Special Litigation Committee be reinstated; that the Board of Director’s action in temporarily hiring Condominium Services, Inc. (“CSI”), a subsidiary of Gordon Properties, was invalid; and that the three Gordon Properties-affiliated directors may not participate in any Board action involving Gordon Properties. It further sought to have the three Gordon Properties-affiliated directors “temporarily and/or permanently enjoined from voting or taking any action on any matters that involve any settlement of the claims arising out of or relating to Gordon Properties, CSI or Gordon Residential.” Complaint for Declaratory Judgment and Injunctive Relief at 20. Lindsay Wilson, one of the individual defendants, removed the case to this court under 28 U.S.C. § 1452. The plaintiffs are represented by Reed Smith. FOA, a defendant, seeks to disqualify Reed Smith from participating in this case.

Rules of Professional Conduct

There are two competing principles. On the one hand, a party should have the right to retain counsel of his choice. On the other hand, a party has the right to have his confidences preserved by his counsel both during and after the representation. Chantilly Const. Corp. v. John Driggs Co., 39 B.R. 466, 468 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1984) (Bostetter, C.J.). A client is entitled to his lawyer’s considered advice. In order to give full and fair advice, a lawyer needs his client to fully and freely discuss the matter with him and to give him all the information that the client possesses, even unfavorable or unflattering information.3 Without complete information, a lawyer cannot fully and properly evaluate a client’s situation and offer competent advice. A client will be reluctant to fully discuss his case with his lawyer if he thinks that the information may be divulged to others or used against him later. Rules 1.6(a) and 1.9(c) of the Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct govern a lawyer’s use of clients’ confidential information.4

There are three types of confidential information: privileged communi[707]*707cations; secret information; and information relating to or gained by the lawyer in the course of his representation of his client. Privileged communications are those communications that are subject to the well-known attorney-client privilege. A client secret is “information gained in the professional relationship that the client has requested be held inviolate or the disclosure of which would be embarrassing or would be likely to be detrimental to the client, whatever its source.” Rule 1.6, Comment 3.5 All other information obtained by a lawyer in the course of representing a client is case-related information. A lawyer may not disclose privileged or secret information and may not use case-related information to the disadvantage of his client unless it has become “generally known.”6 Rule 1.9(c)(1).

The confidentiality rules are common-sense rules. They assure that a client — whether an individual, a corporation or a condominium unit owner’s association — can confide in his lawyer without fear that his lawyer will divulge that information to others or use it to the client’s disadvantage.

The confidentiality rules lead directly to limitations on a lawyer’s ability to represent a new client in matters involving a former client. When confidentiality conflicts with the right to choose counsel, confidentiality prevails. Tessier v. Plastic Surgery Specialists, Inc., 731 F.Supp. 724, 729 (E.D.Va.1990) (“the right ... to retain counsel of his choosing is ‘secondary in importance to the Court’s duty to maintain the highest ethical standards of professional conduct to insure and preserve trust in the integrity of the bar.’ ”). The confidentiality rules protect both the former client from the obvious threats of divulging confidential information or using it to the for[708]*708mer client’s disadvantage, and the new client from the lawyer’s inability or hesitancy to develop favorable information because of the lawyer’s duty to protect the former client’s confidential information. Id. at 728.

“[0]nce an attorney-client relationship has been established, an irrebutta-ble presumption arises that confidential information was conveyed to the attorney in the prior matter.” Tessier, 731 F.Supp. at 734, citing Chantilly. This does not mean that a lawyer is forever barred from representing a new client against a former client. Rule 1.9(a) addresses this. A lawyer may represent a new client against a former client, but not “in the same or a substantially related matter” in which the lawyer represented a prior client. Rule 1.9. The determination of whether a new matter is substantially related to the prior matter is not always easily resolved as is illustrated by Tessier.7 In resolving the representational issues, Tessier examined the prior and the present representations of the law firm. The court paid particular attention to the issues involved, the relation of the issues in the two cases, the facts in both cases, the time frames covered in each case, the causes of action, the legal theories and the parties involved. Id. at 730-731. It was not necessary for each factor to be identical in both cases for the two cases to be substantially related. Id. at 730. For example, with regard to legal theories, it stated:

While the legal theories employed in both cases are substantially different, the cases do arise from substantially similar facts.

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Bluebook (online)
505 B.R. 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sobel-v-sells-in-re-gordon-properties-llc-vaeb-2013.