On January 31, 1972, the law firm of Charles H. Goldstein, Joseph F. Gentile, and Norman H. Kirshman filed its amended complaint claiming money due for the reasonable value of legal services rendered by Norman H. Kirshman. Defendants Alan B. Lees and Florenza Lees contended at trial that the monies prayed for in the complaint exceeded the amount specified in an oral agreement between Alan Lees and Norman Kirshman. Plaintiffs contended that there was no such agreement, and the trial judge agreed. The defendants have appealed.
The basic question presented in this case is whether or not a former counsel to a corporation can properly render legal services on behalf of a minority shareholder and director in a proxy fight designed to gain control of the same corporation under circumstances where the former counsel holds corporate confidences and secrets which are relevant to the proxy fight. We hold that such representation is improper and that a contract to provide such services is void for reasons of public policy.
Facts
Norman Kirshman served as executive vice president, secretary, and general counsel to Diodes, Inc. from April 1967 to October 1969. Before assuming the position of general counsel, he had been retained by Diodes as outside counsel, beginning February 1965. In his position as an officer and as general counsel to Diodes, Kirshman became privy to its innermost secrets. In fact, Kirshman testified that he “knew the operations of the corporation intimately .... [A]ll of the subsidiaries had been acquired either as a result of my negotiations 1 or as a result of my participation that I had as a member of the board of directors.... I think I knew the company more intimately than anybody other than Mr. Lloyd ... the chief executive officer.”
Early in 1971, Kirshman and Alan Lees (a director of Diodes, who owned more than 107,000 shares of its stock) discussed the possibility of a proxy solicitation to gain control of the corporation. After a series of preliminary discussions, the decision to initiate the proxy battle was made, and Lees agreed to assume the cost of soliciting proxies. Initially, Lees, at Kirshman’s suggestion, retained the legal services of Goldstein
Thus there is no question that Kirshman’s “insight to the facts” of Diodes was a critical component in the retention of his services as counsel. Indeed, as Kirshman explained, the decision to initiate the proxy struggle was preceded by “many questions by Dr. Lees to me about the intricacies and inside information that I had because I had been very close to Mr. Lloyd as his No. 2 man. . ..”
Discussion
It is settled in California that an attorney may not recover for services, rendered if those services are rendered in contradiction to the requirements of professional responsibility. As the California Supreme Court explained in
Clark
v.
Millsap,
At the time of the performance of the services for which compensation is demanded here, rule 5 of the Rules of Professional Conduct provided that: “A member of the State Bar shall not accept
In one sense, plaintiffs are correct. There is no basis in the record which would permit an appellate court to conclude that the proxy fight itself was adverse to the interests of the corporation. This conclusion follows even though Kirshman and Lees failed in their attempt to gain control of the corporation. We cannot say that this exercise in corporate democracy was inimical to the interests of the corporation. Certainly if the proxy fight itself were in fact adverse to the interests of the corporation, a violation of rule 5 would be apparent. Although the conclusion that the proxy fight may have been consistent with the interests of the corporation is necessary to preserve the plaintiffs’ judgment, it is not sufficient. The question is whether or not the employment of Kirshman was adverse to the interests of the former client. Clearly, it was.
Business and Professions Code section 6068, subdivision (e), states: “It is the duty of an attorney: . . . [t]o maintain inviolate the confidence, and at every peril to himself to preserve the secrets, of his client.” In this instance, Kirshman accepted employment which surely at best must have tempted him to reveal or to improperly monopolize the confidences and secrets of his former client. As the Supreme Court recognized in
It could be argued that as a shareholder and as a director, Lees was entitled to be apprised of corporate confidences and secrets. Since Lees’
Clearly, the duty stated in section 6068, subdivision (e) applies in the corporate context. As the California Supreme Court stated in discussing the narrower
5
but related question of the attorney-client privilege,. “Certainly the public policy behind the attorney-client privilege requires that an artificial person be given equal opportunity with a natural person to communicate with its attorney, within the professional relationship, without fear that its communication will be made public. As one writer has said, ‘The more deeply one is convinced of the social necessity of permitting corporations to consult frankly and privately with their legal advisers, the more willing one should be to accord them a flexible and generous protection.’ ”
(D. I. Chadbourne, Inc.
v.
Superior Court,
Moreover, it is apparent that although shareholders have some rights to corporate information not available to the general public, shareholder status does not in and of itself entitle an individual to unfettered access to corporate confidences and secrets. For example, Corporations Code section 3003
6
confines the shareholder’s right to inspect corporate records to three categories of documents: (1) the share register or duplicate share register; (2) the books of account; and (3) the minutes of proceedings of the shareholders and the board of directors, and of executive committees of the directors. Thus, by statute, shareholders have less right to acquire corporate information than do directors.
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On the other hand, Lees’ position as a director of the corporation would ordinarily entitle him to the receipt of confidential information. Thus it can be argued that Kirshman’s employment did not threaten the revelation of corporate confidences to anyone who would not otherwise be entitled to receive them. This superficially acceptable argument cannot withstand analysis.
Clearly, if Kirshman were counsel to the corporation, he could not, consistently with his position as general counsel, act as proxy for one contending group of shareholders. As the Committee on Professional Ethics and Grievances of the American Bar Association stated in Opinion 86: “In acting as the corporation’s legal adviser he must refrain from taking part in any controversies or factional differences which may exist among shareholders as to its control. When his. opinion is sought by those entitled to it, or when it becomes his duty to voice it, he must be in a position to give it without bias or prejudice and to have it recognized as being so given. Unless he is in that position his usefulness to his client is impaired.” This duty to act without bias or prejudice does not dissolve merely because the attorney has been discharged. Any contrary ruling would conflict with California’s commitment to the principle that “the client’s power to discharge an attorney, with or without cause, is
The board of directors, not corporate counsel, has the right to control the affairs of the corporation. (Corp. Code, § 800.) The board of directors thus has the power to retain and discharge corporate counsel. It would serve no useful purpose to burden the exercise of that power with the fear that discharged 8 counsel could make his services available to the highest bidding minority shareholder. 9 Thus, even though a director has a right to receive confidential information, he has no exclusive right to receive such information from former counsel. To the extent that Lees had a claim on Kirshman’s knowledge by virtue of his status as director, so did all of the other directors of the corporation.
Thus the argument that Lees had a right to the confidences of the corporation proves too much. It proves that Kirshman had a duty to serve both Lees and the adversaries in the proxy contest. Conflicts of interest such as these cannot be tolerated.
Finally, we note that there is no force to the objection that the result announced here will work a windfall for defendants. This decision is not rendered for the sake of defendants.
10
Indeed, it is
The judgment is reversed.
Ashby, J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied June 4, 1975. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
The negotiations were conducted by Kirshman in his capacity as general counsel and in his capacity as executive vice president.
Alternatively, it could be said that plaintiffs come to the court with unclean hands. The unclean hands doctrine is not confined to equitable actions, but is also available in legal actions.
(Fibreboard Paper Products Corp.
v.
East Bay Union of Machinists,
The Rules of Professional Conduct have been amended, effective January 1, 1975. Rule 4-101 provides: “A member of the State Bar shall not accept employment adverse to a client or former client, without the informed and written consent of the client or former client, relating to a matter- in reference to which he has obtained confidential information by reason of or in the course of his employment by such client or former client.”
Jacuzzi
v.
Jacuzzi Bros., Inc., supra,
“The attorney-client privilege is more limited than the ethical obligation of a lawyer to guard the confidences and secrets of his client.” (American Bar Assn., Code of Professional Responsibility EC4-4.)
Mooney
v.
Bartenders Union Local No.
284,
Corporations Code, section 3004: “Director’s right to inspect books, documents and properties of corporation. Every director shall have the absolute right at any reasonable time to inspect all books, records, documents of every kind, and the physical properties of the corporation, domestic or foreign, of which he is a director, and also of its subsidiary corporations, domestic or foreign. Such inspection by a director may be made
We do not intend to suggest that the operation of this rule would vary if the attorney resigns before discharge or resigns because of a disagreement over company policy.
This factor distinguishes
Croce
v.
Superior Court,
Plaintiffs contend that defendants have no standing to raise the issue. They suggest that because Diodes failed to bring an action to remove Kirshman as Lees’ attorney, the issue has been waived. There is no suggestion that Diodes, by failing to bring a lawsuit, impliedly consented to Kirshman’s behavior; nor would such a suggestion have any merit. Diodes may have failed to bring a lawsuit out of lethargy, lack of finances, political and tactical considerations, etc. In the absence of consent by Diodes, the contract between Kirshman and Lees was illegal. If a contract is voidable for public policy reasons, the court can and should raise the question on its own motion. As Witkin explains (at 3 Cal. Procedure (2d ed.) Pleading, § 918, at pp. 2503-2504, “Generally
The cases cited by plaintiff are either entirely.not in point, or involve a situation where the clients consented to the attorney’s activity. In such a situation, the contract is not illegal in the first place. (See, e.g.,
Grauberger
v. Light,
Technically, of course, this action is not brought upon the contract, but is brought for services rendered pursuant to the contract. Needless to say, this distinction does not call for a different result.
