The law firm representing a defendant in a suit involving sexual harassment asked the district court to permit it to withdraw. Because explanation required disclosure of communications from its client, the presiding judge referred the request to another member of the court, who referred it to a magistrate in turn. Proceedings in the district court and this court have been conducted under seal to prevent the disclosure of confidences.
The law firm believes that its client will commit perjury. This fear is well-founded.
Magistrate Weisberg recommended that the court deny the motion, because the firm could not know that the client would testify falsely in all respects, and it could refrain from opening up the subjects that it was confident would produce falsehoods. The magistrate thought that the age of the case (more than two years) counseled against letting the firm withdraw; if it did, the magistrate concluded, the client would be forced to proceed without counsel. Judge Bua entered an order providing that the magistrate’s report is “adopted in its entirety” by the court.
On a motion to reconsider, the district judge allowed oral argument. This time he repudiated the magistrate’s report. Although the magistrate found that the request to withdraw is unrelated to the fact that the firm has not been paid since mid-1988 (and claims it is owed more than $100,000), the judge said that the magistrate undoubtedly recommended denial of the motion only because of the dispute about unpaid fees. He continued:
... There is no question in my mind — I can tell you, I would allow you to withdraw when you came before me and set it down for a hearing, okay. And I can’t believe the magistrate wouldn’t allow you to withdraw if there were no fee question.
Do you really believe that if you appeared before Magistrate Weisberg, saying, Judge, we just — we have a dilemma, an ethical dilemma. We have $100,000 coming. And we are going to waive that hundred thousand dollar fee. Let us out of this case — that he, in a minute, he would say, motion granted, or make that recommendation of you. I can tell you that I was prepared to do it. And I am prepared to do it now. You tell me, we will waive our fee. You are out of the case.
Unwilling to pay this price to escape an ethical dilemma, the law firm filed a notice of appeal and a petition for a writ of mandamus.
Whether an attorney held in a case against his will may appeal is a tough question.
Conticommodity Services, Inc. v. Ragan,
We need not decide whether an appeal lies. Bypassing all questions concerning appellate jurisdiction,
Ragan
issued a writ of mandamus, concluding that ordering a lawyer to represent a nominal party to civil litigation exceeded the court’s power. Lately the Supreme Court approved the use of mandamus to contest an involuntary civil appointment.
Mallard v. United States District Court,
— U.S. -, 109 S.Ct.
We take at face value the representation of the district judge that he was "prepared to do it"-that is, to allow the law firm to withdraw, if the firm would but waive any claim for payment. That must mean that, in the district judge's view, the interests of justice do not require the further participation of this law firm. If that be so, then the dispute about fees does not require the firm to continue as counsel. An unresolved dispute about compensation does not make the firm indispensable to the litigation and surely will not make the lawyer a more diligent advocate. Once the judge concluded that the firm's presence was not essential to the administration of justice, he should have released it.
Fees are matters of contract, and unless the fee is so exorbitant that its collection offends Disciplinary Rule 2-106(A) of the Code of Professional Responsibility, disputes about them are resolved under that body of law.
United States v. Vague,
Magistrate Weisberg’s careful opinion gives a better reason to hold counsel in the case, but as Judge Bua has repudiated the magistrate’s views we cannot say that they supply the basis of decision and then apply the abuse-of-discretion standard that usually governs.
Ohntrup v. Firearms Center, Inc.,
Nix v. Whiteside,
Counsel’s motion for leave to withdraw should have been granted. An appropriate writ of mandamus will issue.
