HAVASU LAKESHORE INVESTMENTS, LLC, Cross-complainant and Appellant, v. TERRY L. FLEMING, SR., Individually and as Trustee, etc., et al., Cross-defendants and Respondents.
JEAN VICTOR PELOQUIN et al., Cross-complainants and Appellants, v. TERRY L. FLEMING, SR., Individually and as Trustee, etc., et al., Cross-defendants and Respondents.
No. G047244
No. G047329
Fourth Dist., Div. Three
May 28, 2013
217 Cal.App.4th 770
Stradling Yocca Carlson & Rauth, Donald J. Hamman and Eve A. Brackmann for Cross-complainant and Appellant Havasu Lakeshore Investments, LLC.
Watt Tieder Hoffar & Fitzgerald and Jeffrey T. Robbins for Cross-complainants and Appellants Jean Victor Peloquin, J. Victor Construction, Inc., and Capital Source Partners.
No appearance for Cross-defendant and Respondent Terry L. Fleming, Sr.
OPINION
IKOLA, J.—The trial court disqualified a law firm from simultaneously representing a limited liability company, its managing member (a partnership), and the person who managed that partnership (who was not himself a member of the company) in a lawsuit against two of the company‘s minority members. The court found that the interests of the company and the nonmember individual potentially conflicted, and concluded the law firm could not jointly represent the company and the nonmember individual against the company‘s minority members. The court based its ruling on
FACTS3
The limited liability company—Havasu Lakeshore Investments, LLC (the LLC)—was formed in 2004 to acquire land and develop a recreationаl mobilehome park in the City of Lake Havasu, California. The LLC‘s managing member—Capital Source Partners (Peloquin‘s partnership)—is a partnership in which Jean Victor Peloquin is a general partner. Peloquin is also the principal of J. Victor Construction, Inc. (Peloquin‘s corporation), another member of the LLC. Peloquin, as an individual, is not himself a member of the LLC.
In June 2011, Fleming Jr. sued Peloquin individually for breach of contract, fraud, and negligent misrepresentation. Fleming Jr. alleged he exercised his buyout option under an option agreement with Peloquin to have Peloquin buy Fleming Jr.‘s membership interest in the LLC for an agreed upon fixed price (with interest thereon), but Peloquin did not comply.
In August 2011, the LLC, Peloquin‘s partnership, Peloquin‘s corporation, and Peloquin filed a cross-complaint against Fleming Sr. and Fleming Jr. for, inter alia, breach of contract and bad faith, as well as to set aside a trustee‘s sale and cancel the option agreement. The law firm of Hart, King & Coldren (HKC) represented all cross-complainants.
In February 2012, Fleming Sr. moved to disqualify HKC from representing the LLC. Fleming Sr. based his motion on an attorney‘s duty of confidentiality under
In the disqualification motion, Fleming Sr. alleged that in August 2004, he and Fleming Jr. loaned $1.25 million to Peloquin‘s corporation. Fleming Sr. alleged that in November 2004, the Flemings converted the loan into a membership interest in the LLC. In December 2004, Peloquin entered into an option agreement with the Flemings, giving them an option to sell to Peloquin their membership interests in the LLC. In February 2009, the LLC defaulted on a bank construction loan (personally guaranteed by Peloquin and Peloquin‘s corporation) and the mobilehome park went into foreclosure. “At the instruction of, and with the full knowledge and agreement of” cross-complainants, Fleming Sr. negotiated with the lender bank to buy the construction note. In May 2010, a notice of trustee‘s sale was recorded. In June 2010, Fleming Sr. bought the mobilehome park at the trustee‘s sale.
Peloquin and the LLC opposed Fleming Sr.‘s disqualification motion. They argued that HKC did not represent the LLC “during the Flemings’ actions that gave rise to the liability asserted in the Cross-Complaint” and that “HKC never represented Fleming Sr. and never received confidential information from Fleming Sr.” Peloquin and the LLC asserted that, prior to the cross-complaint, HKC “represented Peloquin in relation to [the LLC] regarding only mobilehome park operational matters, none of which involved either Fleming Sr. or Jr.” Thesе matters pertained to lease agreements and community guidelines for the mobilehome park, its possible conversion to resident ownership, and rent defaults and security interests in the mobilehomes—matters which “required no information, and none was provided, concerning the members or internal operations of [the LLC], and in particular required no information and none was provided concerning Fleming Sr. or Jr.” HKC represented Peloquin after Fleming Sr. bought the construction loan from the lender bank. “At that time Fleming Sr. was reрresented by separate counsel, Paul Bojic, who is [Fleming Sr.‘s] counsel in this case.”
Peloquin supported these allegations with his declaration and that of a partner of HKC. Peloquin declared that Snipper, Wainer & Markoff, not HKC, was legal counsel for the LLC in forming the LLC and preparing its operating agreement. He declared that HKC did not represent the LLC until Peloquin, as a partner in Peloquin‘s partnership (the managing member of the LLC), engaged HKC to file the cross-complaint.
A partner with HKC declared he had nevеr represented or had conversations with Fleming Sr., and had never reviewed confidential information belonging to or handled matters pertaining to Fleming Sr. (other than through Fleming Sr.‘s counsel). He declared that on April 23, 2010, Peloquin asked him “to address a situation where [Fleming Sr.] had apparently entered into a purchase agreement for the construction note on [the LLC‘s] property at an extreme discount without [Peloquin‘s] permission.” The attorney further declared that, prior to that date, HKC had no involvement in matters relаting to the option agreement and the LLC‘s operating agreement.
In April 2012, the court requested the parties to brief the potential relevance of Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at pages 214-216 to Fleming Sr.‘s motion for disqualification of HKC as counsel for the LLC.
In June 2012, the court granted Fleming Sr.‘s motion to disqualify HKC as counsel for the LLC, thus allowing HKC to continue representing Peloquin, Peloquin‘s partnership, and Peloquin‘s corporation.6 The court stated HKC should not be representing the LLC and “non-member Peloquin” in a cross-complaint against the Flemings, who are members of the LLC. The court relied on
DISCUSSION
Cross-complainants contend that neither the record nor the respondent‘s brief filed by Fleming Jr. reveal that аn actual conflict exists to support the disqualification of HKC from jointly representing the LLC and Peloquin. They argue that Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th 209 stated that disqualification is unwarranted when the conflict is merely hypothetical.
“‘Generally, a trial court‘s decision on a disqualification motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion.‘” (City and County of San Francisco v. Cobra Solutions, Inc. (2006) 38 Cal.4th 839, 848 [43 Cal.Rptr.3d 771, 135 P.3d 20]
A court may disqualify an attorney upon “a showing that disqualification is required under professional standards governing avoidance of conflicts of interest or potential adverse use of confidential information.” (Oaks Management Corporation v. Superior Court (2006) 145 Cal.App.4th 453, 462 [51 Cal.Rptr.3d 561].) An attorney bears two distinct ethical duties to a client: (1) a duty of loyalty, whereby an attorney devotes his or her “‘entire energies to his client‘s interests‘” (Flatt v. Superior Court (1994) 9 Cal.4th 275, 289 [36 Cal.Rptr.2d 537, 885 P.2d 950], italics omittеd), and (2) a duty of confidentiality, “which fosters full and open communication between client and counsel” (San Francisco, supra, 38 Cal.4th at p. 846).
Fleming Sr. based his disqualification motion on HKC‘s duty of confidentiality, claiming HKC “received confidential information” about him that could be used against him in the cross-complainants’ action. Fleming Sr. relied on
But the court granted Fleming Sr.‘s motion on the basis of HKC‘s duty of loyalty, citing
Finally,
The issue here is whether the LLC and Peloquin have adverse interests, either actually or potentially. Fleming Jr. asserts that an actual conflict exists between the interests of the LLC and Peloquin, and describes the conflict as follows: “Peloquin‘s counsel must defend him against the claims of breach, misrepresentation, and fraud. [Citations.] Counsel for [the LLC] should be focused on the propriety of the claims regarding the purchase and foreclosure of [the LLC‘s] property.” In other words, the alleged conflict is that HKC must defend Pеloquin in Fleming Jr.‘s action against him, while simultaneously prosecuting the cross-complaint on behalf of Peloquin, the LLC, and the other cross-complainants. Essentially, the risk is that HKC may spread
We therefore examine the reсord for any substantial evidence to support the court‘s finding that the LLC and Peloquin had, at a minimum, a potential conflict of interest. In doing so, we recognize that a mere hypothetical conflict is insufficient. (Fox Searchlight Pictures, Inc. v. Paladino (2001) 89 Cal.App.4th 294, 302 [106 Cal.Rptr.2d 906].) Rather, there must be some identifiable potential conflict. In Carroll v. Superior Court (2002) 101 Cal.App.4th 1423, 1430 [124 Cal.Rptr.2d 891], the appellate court “interpret[ed] the Rule 3-310 concept of potential conflict to mean, at least in the [juvenile] dependency context, a reasonable likelihood an actual conflict will arise.” (Italics added.) Subsequently, our Supreme Court approved Carroll‘s interpretation in a juvenile dependency case. (In re Celine R. (2003) 31 Cal.4th 45, 58 [1 Cal.Rptr.3d 432, 71 P.3d 787].) Similarly, a major treatise defines a potential conflict under
We apply the foregoing definitions of a potential conflict to the three sets of circumstances presented by the record and Fleming Jr.‘s contentions: (1) the action on the cross-complaint, (2) Fleming Jr.‘s lawsuit, and (3) the Flemings’ status as members of the LLC.
With respect to the cross-complaint, there is no conflict; the LLC‘s interests and Peloquin‘s are clearly allied. The LLC and the оther cross-complainants seek to recover the LLC‘s property and to restore value to the LLC. Fleming Jr., in his respondent‘s brief, agrees these are the LLC‘s
With respect to Fleming Jr.‘s action against Peloquin based on the option agreement, the LLC is not a party to the lawsuit or the option agreement. The option аgreement obligates Peloquin (should a Fleming exercise the contractual “put“) to buy out Fleming‘s membership interest in the LLC at a contractually specified fixed price. The LLC has no beneficial right or obligation under, or duty arising from, the option agreement. It is a stranger to that transaction. Since the LLC has no right or duty at all under the option agreement, a fortiori it has no right or duty, the benefit or performance of which could conflict with a right, duty or obligation owed by Peloquin.
The only remaining question is whether the LLC‘s interests conflict with Peloquin‘s solely because two of the LLC‘s minority members are аdversaries of Peloquin (and coincidentally of the LLC). The trial court, in granting Fleming Sr.‘s disqualification motion, relied on Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th 209, as does Fleming Jr. in his respondent‘s brief. Fleming Jr. contends he “has a vested interest in the independent representation of [the LLC] based on the fact that he maintains a percentage membership interest in [the LLC],” despite his exercise of the option to sell his interest under the option agreement.
In Gong, the issue was whether the interests of a corporation conflicted with those of its majority shareholder (who owned 51 percent of the corporation‘s stock and was also its managing director) for purposes of
The Court of Appeal observed that “case law forbids dual representation in a derivative suit alleging fraud by thе principals, because the principals and the organization have adverse, conflicting interests.” (Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 215.) The Court of Appeal also noted that although the minority shareholder had “not yet filed a derivative claim seeking damages on behalf of the corporation (which . . . would require [joint counsel‘s] disqualification), [the minority shareholder‘s] complaint alleges damage to [the corporation] through [the majority shareholder‘s] personal use of corporate funds, and the dissolution claim threatеns [the corporation‘s] corporate existence.” (Id. at p. 216.) In addition, the corporation had filed (through the majority shareholder and joint counsel for the corporation and the majority shareholder) a cross-complaint against the minority shareholder, which raised a concern the majority shareholder was using the corporation “as a pawn in his dispute with [his brother], possibly to [the corporation‘s] detriment.” (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal concluded that the minority shareholder‘s “allegations аnd the dissolution cause of action show that the interests of [the majority shareholder] and [the corporation] diverge” (ibid.), thereby requiring the disqualification of joint counsel for the corporation and the majority shareholder (id. at p. 212).8
The distinctions between Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th 209 and the case at hand are significant. The instant case does not involve a derivative suit (or its substantive equivalent) or an attempt by the Flemings to force dissolution of the LLC. The Flemings do not allege Peloquin mismanaged the LLC or misused the LLC‘s property or funds. (Indeed, it is Fleming Sr. who has apparently foreclosed on and taken from the LLC its primary asset.) There is no pending buyout at a price based on the LLC‘s fair market value (which, if mismanagement had been alleged, may have affected the value).9
Fleming Jr. cites no authority for the proposition that an attorney may never jointly represent an entity and its management against a nonmanaging
We find this reasoning to be persuasive and equally applicable to the facts at hand. Absent an actual conflict of interest (or the reasonable likelihood of one arising) between Peloquin and the LLC, HKC was ethically permitted to jointly represent all cross-complainants against the Flemings. Furthermore, Peloquin was authorized to provide, on the LLC‘s behalf, its consent to multiplе representation.10
Fleming Jr. points out that HKC has withdrawn from its representation of any party in this case and concludes cross-complainants’ appeal is “illogical.” Whether, as Fleming Jr. postulates, cross-complainants wish to reinstate HKC as their counsel or desire to retain different counsel to jointly represent them,
DISPOSITION
The court‘s order is reversed. Cross-complainants are entitled to recover their costs on appeal.
Bedsworth, Acting P. J., and Fybel, J., concurred.
