The defendants in a commercial lawsuit petition us for a writ of mandamus directing Judge Mills to vacate his order disqualifying the law firm of Mayer, Brown & Platt from representing them. The petition requires us to determine the scоpe of our mandamus jurisdiction over orders of disqualification.
An order disqualifying a lawyer or law firm is not considered a collateral order and therefore cannot be appealed as a matter of right as soon as it is entered.
Richardson-Merrell Inc. v. Roller,
Mandamus was not, of coursе, invented to deal with disqualification orders. It has a long history and a well established — or at least consistently articulated — standard: the petitioner must show
irreparable
harm (or, what amounts to the same thing, the lack of an adequate remedy by way of direct appeal or otherwise) and a
clear
right to the relief sought.
Bankers Life & Casualty Co. v. Holland,
While it is true that requiring a new trial because of an error not shown to be harmful is a formula for wastеful duplication,
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that has never been a ground for interlocutory appeals. Otherwise many orders granting discovery would be immediately appealable under the collateral-order doctrine, and they are not.
Riese v. Board of Regents,
Two differences between collateral-order appeals and mandamus, however, may justify a differenсe in the requirement of showing harm. First, a collateral order is appealable as a final decision under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and appeals under that statute are a matter of right. So we cannot refuse to hеar and decide an appeal properly filed under that statute even if it is “really” an interlocutory order, which is in fact the character of collateral orders. If disqualification orders wеre deemed to be collateral orders, the potential for interrupting litigation with interlocutory appeals and burdening the courts of appeals with such appeals would be considerable. Second, the standard of review is the same whether a case is brought to the court of appeals by an appeal from a genuinely final judgment or by an appeal from a collateral order. There is thus no disincentive to appeal the latter sort of order because the standard of review is narrower. Mandamus, in contrast, is a discretionary writ; and the standard of review is narrower than in an ordinary appeal. There is little danger to the courts of appeals of being flooded by petitions for mandamus, and in fact such petitions are relatively infrequent. Professor Moore is therefore on firm ground in stating that “with respect to the demands of justice made by individual cases, it seems clear that discretionary review by mandamus is to be preferred to enlarging by judicial interpretation the categories of interlocutory orders that are ap-pealable as of right.” 9 James William Moore & Bernard J. Ward, Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 110.26, at p. 319 (2d ed. 1992) (footnote omitted).
The reality of course is that an order of disqualification can impose substantial hardship on a litigant. If the order is plainly wrong — if this is apparent without elaborate consideration of contested facts and legal principles — considerations of administrative efficiency arguе for resort to mandamus as a swift and economical remedy against injustice. Nothing in the text of the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, or in the history and usages of mandamus, which has been deployed flexibly in cases where irreparablе harm could easily have been found wanting — notably cases in which the writ is used to enforce the right to a jury trial,
Dairy Queen, Inc. v. Wood,
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This conclusion, however, makes the second half of the test for mandamus all the more critical in the setting of disqualification. If
clear
right to relief (“clear and indisputable,” as the cases sometimes say,
Allied Chemical Corp. v. Daiflon, Inc., supra,
Well, was it? The plaintiff in the underlying litigation, Glenayre Electronics, is under contract to be bought by N-W Group; the judge treated the acquisition аs a
fait accompli.
Mayer Brown has done extensive legal work for N-W. Indeed NW was a client of Mayer Brown at the time Mayer Brown began to represent the defendants in this case. Section 1.7 of the Illinois Rules of Professiоnal Responsibility forbids a law firm to represent clients having adverse interests without their consent. N-W did not consent, so Mayer Brown sought to eliminate the conflict by terminating its relationship with N-W. It did so, with the latter’s consеnt. The judge held that this did not cure the conflict, because he “cannot allow a lawyer to disregard one client in order to represent another. To hold otherwise would allow a firm to abandon its аbsolute duty of loyalty to one of its clients so that it can benefit from a conflict of interest which it created.” This reasoning is clearly inadequate to support the judge’s order. The abandoned cliеnt, of course, was N-W. It has not objected to being abandoned. Glenayre has no standing to assert N-W’s rights to Mayer Brown’s “absolute loyalty.” Ill. R.Prof.Resp. 1.9;
Lavaja v. Carter,
We emphasize that this is not a case in which a law firm represents adversaries. N-W was not an adversary of the defendants, who are Mayer Brown’s clients, at the time that Mayer Brown represented NW. Nor did Mayer Brown, unceremoniously or otherwise, “dump” N-W so that it could represent the defendants without having a conflict of interest. N-W permitted Mayer Brown to withdraw and is not complaining that its permission was coerced or otherwise ineffective. It is true that in defense of the judge’s order, Gle-nayre argues that Mayer Brown has learned things in its representation of N-W which will give it an unfair advantage in defending against Glenayre’s suit once the acquisition of Glenayre by N-W is completed. If this is so — as it might have been had Mayer Brown represented N-W in the acquisition of Glenayre, but it did not — this would be a ground for disqualification. There is no evidence of such an abuse, however, nor is the suggestion of one рlausible in the circumstances. Glenayre was not a part of N-W when the latter was represented by Mayer Brown. It still is not a part of it. All the acquisition will do, once it takes place, will be to make N-W the owner of Glenayre, an event that need have no effect whatever on Glenayre’s conduct of its suit, let alone arm Mayer Brown with crucial insights into that conduct.
And even if the likelihood that Mayer Brown wоuld carry into the defense of this suit knowledge gleaned from its representation of N-W is larger than we think, this *1122 was not the ground of the judge’s decision, or even alluded to by him. On its own terms — and thus without regard to the only argument that, if substantiated, would indicate the presence of any of the abuses associated with dual representation — the decision of the district court is patently erroneous and must be vacated. The writ of mandamus is therefore
Granted.
