Lead Opinion
One of Minnesota’s largest law firms is before us, requesting that we overturn judgments that it committed legal malpractice and breached fiduciary duties owed to a client. On its side it has a recent decision of the Minnesota Supreme Court and our duty to conscientiously ascertain and apply state law. We predict that the Minnesota Supreme Court would reverse the judgments against Dorsey & Whitney LLP with instructions to dismiss. We must therefore do the same.
I.
This case is in federal court because the Plaintiffs’ claims are related to the Chapter 7 bankruptcy case filed by SRC Holding Corporation, also known as Miller & Schroeder, Inc. (M & S). See 28 U.S.C. § 1334(b). Trustee Brian F. Leonard, on behalf of M & S’s bankruptcy estate, brought an adversary complaint against the law firm Dorsey & Whitney LLP (Dorsey), alleging that the firm breached fiduciary duties that it owed to its client M & S. Bankruptcy estate claimant Bremer Business Finance Corporation (Bremer) brought a separate adversary complaint against Dorsey, alleging three claims premised on the theory that Bremer was Dorsey’s client. The Trustee joined Bremer’s complaint,
Dorsey consented to the entry of a judgment by the bankruptcy judge on the Trustee’s complaint under 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(2). Dorsey did not consent to the
While the Trustee’s and Bremer’s claims went forward in the federal courts, parallel litigation involving the same claims and transactions proceeded in the Minnesota state courts. The state-court plaintiffs were 28 banks that had been dismissed from the Trustee’s action for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction, and three banks from whose claims the bankruptcy court abstained “in the interest of justice, or in the interest of comity with State courts or respect for State law” under 28 U.S.C. § 1334(c)(1). The claims of the 31 banks were the same as those alleged in Bremer’s complaint. As a result of limited federal court jurisdiction, the two actions would decide the same questions of law on a nearly identical set of facts.
Minnesota law supplies the rules of decision for this case. Just as in an action brought under diversity jurisdiction, the doctrine of Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
As the parallel actions rounded their turns through the courts, Bremer’s federal action ran a few lengths behind the 31 banks’ state court litigation. The state trial court granted summary judgment in Dorsey’s favor, whereas the bankruptcy court denied summary judgment and held a seven-day trial. The bankruptcy court was aware of the state court’s decision but unwilling to give it preclusive or persuasive effect. By the time the district court considered Bremer’s objections to the bankruptcy court’s proposed decision, the Minnesota Court of Appeals had partially reversed the trial court’s decision, but the Minnesota Supreme Court had granted further review. McIntosh County Bank v. Dorsey & Whitney, LLP (McIntosh I),
II.
In a bankruptcy adversary proceeding tried on the merits without a jury, “the court must find the facts specially and state its conclusions of law separately.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a)(1); Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7052. The rule only requires that the trial court set forth its reasoning with enough clarity that the appellate court may understand the basis of the decision. Century Marine Inc. v. United States,
Rule 52(a) does not, however, “inhibit an appellate court’s power to correct errors of law, including those that may infect a so-called mixed finding of law and fact, or a finding of fact that is predicated on a misunderstanding of the governing rule of law.” Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc.,
With this standard in mind, we must restate the trial courts’ factual findings
III.
M & S was a Minneapolis-based investment banking firm. One of its key lines of business was to arrange loans for Indian tribes. M & S would serve as the lead lender; after closing the loan it would sell participation interests in the loan to other lenders, mostly small local banks. Because it normally sold 100% of the loans to participants, M & S’s revenue came from the placement fee paid by the Tribe and servicing fees the participants paid M & S to administer the loans.
In February of 1999, M & S closed the “St. Regis II” loan to President R.C.-St. Regis Management Company (President) in the amount of $3,492,000.
M & S retained Dorsey to assist in documenting the loan. Dorsey had assisted M & S in dozens of transactions and was familiar with M & S’s business methods; there was no written agreement as to Dorsey’s representation. Before closing the loan, Dorsey internally questioned whether some of the documents required approval by the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) to be enforceable. Dorsey did not disclose the internal debate to M & S. The bankruptcy court found that Dorsey lawyers believed that, due to the risk of the documents being voided, the loan should not be closed until the NIGC approved of the loans or determined that approval was not required.
On February 16, 1999, the NIGC informed President and the Tribe that it would probably not approve the documents before the planned closing date. Dorsey advised M & S that approval of the loans was not needed. Although one lawyer testified that she orally advised M & S of the risks involved in closing without NIGC approval, the bankruptcy court found her not credible. The court credited the testimony of M & S personnel who stated that if M & S had known of the risk, it would not have closed the loans. M & S closed the loans on February 24,1999.
Prior to closing, M & S had received commitments from participating banks to fund 100% of the two loans, including a $2,000,000 (approximately 57%) participation from Bremer. M & S sent a memorandum to the participants recommending that the loans be closed without NIGC approval, while also expressing its opinion that NIGC approval was imminent. The district court found no evidence that Bremer received the memorandum.
Bremer executed a Participation Agreement with M & S in May of 1999, although the text of the Agreement says it was effective on March 1, 1999. The Agreement defines the parties’ relationship as “that of a seller and purchaser of a property interest,” and authorized M & S “to be named as the nominal payee of the Note and ... to generally act as agent for all
Participant has received and made a complete examination of copies of all Loan Documents it requires to be examined and approves of the form and content of the same. Participant acknowledges that Participant has been provided with or granted access to all of the financial and other information that Participant has requested or believes to be necessary to enable Participant to make an independent and informed judgment with respect to the Collateral, Borrower and any Obligor and their credit and the desirability of purchasing an undivided interest in the Loan. Participant has, without reliance on Lender and based upon such documents and information as the Participant has deemed appropriate, made its own credit analysis and decision to purchase its participation interest in the Loan.
The same paragraph went on to specify that Bremer was not relying on any statements made by M & S during the course of the marketing, offering, or negotiation of the Participation Agreement:
Participant is participating with Lender based upon Participant’s own independent examination and evaluation of the Loan transaction and the information furnished with respect to Borrower and without any representations or warranties from Lender as to the Borrower’s financial suitability, the appropriateness of the investment and the value and security of the Collateral.... PARTICIPANT ACKNOWLEDGES THAT LENDER MAKES NO WARRANTY OR REPRESENTATION AND SHALL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY STATEMENT, WARRANTY OR REPRESENTATION MADE IN CONNECTION WITH THE COLLATERAL OR ANY DOCUMENT IN CONNECTION WITH THE LOAN. WITHOUT LIMITING THE GENERALITY OF THE FOREGOING, PARTICIPANT ACKNOWLEDGES THAT LENDER HAS MADE NO GUARANTY OF REPAYMENT, IT BEING UNDERSTOOD PARTICIPANT SHALL LOOK ONLY TO BORROWER, ANY OBLIGOR AND TO THE COLLATERAL FOR REPAYMENT OF THE LOAN.
M & S’s duty under the Agreement was to administer the loan for Bremer’s benefit “in accordance with the customary policies and procedures under which it administers loans for its own account.” The Agreement obligated M & S to “enforce any remedies under the Loan Documents ... and in furtherance thereof may select counsel and other professionals of its choice.... ” Bremer was required to pay its portion of any litigation expenses, including attorneys’ fees. The Agreement provided that M & S “shall not be responsible for any negligence or misconduct on the part of any accountant, attorney, ... or other expert or be bound to supervise the proceedings of any such appointee provided that Lender shall use reasonable care in the selection of such person or firm.” The Participation Agreement was a standard form agreement originally drafted by M & S’s in-house counsel. Bremer advanced its $2,000,000 participation on April 6,1999.
The casino opened in April of 1999, but had difficulty making money. By February of 2000, President defaulted on its payment obligations. Two months later, the Tribe revoked President’s management rights. On October 3, 2000, a Dorsey lawyer and representatives from M & S and Bremer met with the Tribal Council to discuss a possible resolution of the un
The same day as the meeting, Dorsey filed a lawsuit on M & S’s behalf in the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota against President for the collection of unpaid loan amounts and against the Tribe for an accounting of casino revenue. The Tribe was later dismissed from the lawsuit. In April of 2002, the court in that action entered a judgment against President in the amount of $4,505,043.75 on the St. Regis II loan. Three years later, Bremer and the other participants entered into a settlement with the Tribe in which the Tribe paid Bremer $650,000 for an assignment of its interest in the President judgment.
Soon after the President lawsuit was filed, Dorsey began to prepare for possible claims of the participants against M & S. On December 7, 2000, Bremer showed Dorsey a draft complaint against M & S, alleging that M & S defrauded it by fraudulently misrepresenting that the loan had received NIGC approval when it had not. Some of the allegations suggested that Dorsey’s advice as to the need for NIGC approval had been erroneous. Around the same time, M & S voluntarily dismissed the claim against the Tribe in the President litigation. The bankruptcy court concluded that the decision to drop the claims against the Tribe was made by Dorsey to conceal its “potential malpractice” as “a pattern of avoiding a situation where it would have to actually prove up the validity” of the St. Regis II loan documents.
Dorsey’s lead counsel in the President litigation sent a memorandum to Dorsey’s internal ethics counselor and loss management partner requesting an opinion on whether Dorsey was disqualified from representing M & S against Bremer because one of its lawyers might be a fact witness as to the closing of the St. Regis II loan. In the memorandum, the lead counsel mentioned that another firm was lobbying M & S to represent them on the issue, “but I would obviously prefer to keep all of this within the firm to the extent we can.” The ethics and loss management lawyers advised that the firm could continue to represent M & S.
Through its counsel at Dorsey, M & S responded to Bremer’s draft complaint. The lawyer wrote that M & S “concluded with the concurrence of my firm that NIGC approval was not required with respect to the loan documents.... ” The letter also referred to the memorandum M & S had sent to the participants recommending that the loans be closed without NIGC approval. After modifying its draft complaint to remove references to the Dorsey firm, Bremer filed a lawsuit against M & S in a Minnesota state court on December 21, 2000. Bremer alleged claims for fraud in the inducement, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of contract; it asked for rescission of the Participation Agreement and damages. Bremer’s state court lawsuit was stayed when M & S filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection.
IV.
Brian Leonard was appointed Trustee to administer M & S’s bankruptcy estate. Bremer filed a timely proof of claim against the estate. It later filed an adversary complaint against Dorsey, alleging legal malpractice, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of contract. At the heart of Bremer’s complaint was the theory that
Along with M & S’s successor in interest, Marshall Investments Corporation (Marshall), the Trustee had previously brought his own complaint against Dorsey on behalf of the estate. Marshall and the Trustee claimed that Dorsey breached its fiduciary duty to M & S by fading to disclose: (1) it had a conflict of interest in representing M & S in a lawsuit against a participant; and (2) M & S had a third-party claim against Dorsey that it could assert in the suit brought by a participant. At least some of the Trustee’s allegations were based on the assumption that the loan participants were Dorsey’s clients or third-party beneficiaries of Dorsey’s services.
The bankruptcy court held a seven-day trial on both complaints. Six months later, it issued a 146-page decision, which contained findings of fact and conclusions of law. According to the bankruptcy court, Bremer and Dorsey had a direct attorney-client relationship at the time of the St. Regis loan closings. Alternatively, the court found that Bremer had standing to sue Dorsey for legal malpractice as a third-party beneficiary of the attorney-client contract between M & S and Dorsey. It then concluded that Dorsey committed malpractice by closing the St. Regis II loan without first obtaining NIGC approval. The bankruptcy court recommended that the district court enter a judgment of $1,759,000 on Bremer’s malpractice and breach of contract claims, and dismiss the negligent misrepresentation claim. It reached that figure by adding the original $2,000,000 participation and the $409,000 in fees and expenses for pursuing the state-court action against M & S, then subtracting the $650,000 settlement with the Tribe. The court recommended that the Trustee’s claim for indemnity and contribution be dismissed as moot.
On the Trustee’s action, the bankruptcy court found that Dorsey breached its fiduciary duties of loyalty and full disclosure to M & S. Based on its conclusion that Dorsey represented Bremer in both the drafting of the St. Regis II documents and the President litigation, the court found that Dorsey’s representation of M & S in Bremer’s state-court lawsuit was directly adverse to a current client without that client’s consent. It also found that Dorsey failed to disclose that it may have committed malpractice by closing the St. Regis II loan without NIGC approval. According to the bankruptcy court, Dorsey’s ongoing representation of M & S was materially conflicted by Dorsey’s interest in avoiding malpractice liability. It further found that the breach was “a blatant conflict of interest constituting a lack of good faith,” and that Dorsey’s attorneys acted with “fraudulent or ill-intent.” The bankruptcy court ordered disgorgement of all attorneys’ fees and expenses paid in the Bremer and President litigations, entering a total judgment of $836,344.32 for the Trustee and $51,099.88 for Marshall.
Dorsey objected to the bankruptcy court’s proposed findings and conclusions of law in Bremer’s action and appealed its judgment in the Trustee’s action. On de novo review of Bremer’s action, the district court determined that Bremer did not become Dorsey’s client until Dorsey began work on the President litigation in June of 2000. It found that Dorsey committed malpractice representing Bremer in the President litigation without disclosing that it had been negligent in the closing of the St. Regis loans. According to the court, “but for Dorsey’s negligence, Bremer
Reviewing the judgment in the Trustee’s action under a clear-error standard, the district court affirmed the decision of the bankruptcy court. The district court diverged slightly from the bankruptcy court’s view of the standard of care, holding that Dorsey was required to delay the closing until the NIGC finished its review of the documents related to the St. Regis II loans. In other words, it believed that a reasonable lawyer would have known that the validity of the documents without NIGC advice was uncertain and advised the client to await the NIGC’s determination. The district court agreed that failure to disclose the malpractice claim was a breach of fiduciary duty and affirmed the bankruptcy court’s remedy of full fee disgorgement.
Dorsey appeals the district court’s judgment for Bremer and the bankruptcy court’s judgment in favor of the Trustee and Marshall. Bremer cross-appeals, requesting that we adopt the bankruptcy court’s view and increase the judgment against Dorsey to $1,759,000.
V.
Considering sua sponte our jurisdiction over this appeal, the dissent con-eludes that this ease must be dismissed. We disagree. According to the dissent, we lack jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, the jurisdictional basis asserted by Dorsey, because the district court did not resolve the Trustee’s claim for indemnity and contribution against Dorsey.
“Under § 1291, the courts of appeal have jurisdiction over ‘all final decisions of the district courts of the United States.’ ” Alpine Glass, Inc. v. Ill. Farmers Ins. Co.,
In its report and recommendations, the bankruptcy court concluded that an attorney-client relationship existed between Bremer and Dorsey at the time of the “St. Regis II” loan closing and that Dorsey committed malpractice, entitling Bremer to an award of damages directly from Dorsey and “probably resulting in the elimination of Bremer’s claim against the estate.” In re SRC Holding Corp.,
Only Dorsey filed objections to the bankruptcy court’s report and recommen
“The language of Bankruptcy Rule 9033(b) is nearly identical to that of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(b) [which implements section 636(b)(1) ]. Indeed, the drafters of Rule 9033(b) indicated that the rule ‘is derived from [Rule 72(b) ], which governs objections to a recommended disposition by a magistrate.’ ” In re Nantahala Village, Inc.,
It follows that the Supreme Court’s observation that section 636(b)(1) “provide[s] for de novo review only when a party
Plaintiff also objects to the award of statutory costs to defendant DiMeo. Unfortunately, his objection comes too late. After the magistrate-judge issued his report, plaintiff had ten days to file written objections to the Report and Recommendation. We find no evidence in the record that plaintiff objected to the magistrate-judge’s findings and recommended disposition. Failure to raise objections to the Report and Recommendation waives the party’s right to review in the district court....
Davet v. Maccarone,
Bremer then filed a motion to alter or amend the district court’s judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e), requesting that the district court address the Trustee’s indemnity and contribution claim. However, as the district court recognized, Bremer was too late. See United States v. Metro. St. Louis Sewer Dist.,
In denying Bremer’s Rule 59(e) motion, the district court noted that, as a result of its conclusions in the April 6th order, the Trustee’s indemnity and contribution claim was not moot and that it had “not ‘adopt[ed]’ the bankruptcy court’s recommendation to dismiss the claim as moot.” In re SRC Holding Corp., No. 06-3962,
First, pursuant to Rule 9033(d), Bremer and the Trustee waived their right to contest the bankruptcy court’s dismissal recommendation by failing to object.
The district court also explained why, though a shift in the legal basis for the dismissal of the Trustee’s indemnity and contribution claim had occurred, the dis
Second, the Trustee’s indemnity and contribution claim has not accrued and thus was premature because “[t]he Trustee has no basis to recover contribution or indemnity from Dorsey until [M & S’s liability to Bremer] has been proven.” In re SRC Holding Corp.,
Therefore, contrary to the dissent’s suggestion that, if this appeal were dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, the district court would take some further action with respect to the Trustee’s indemnity and contribution claim, the district court has ended its handling of the claim:
The Court notes that Bremer’s initial action against [M & S’s] filed in bankruptcy court is currently stayed. It is the belief of this Court that the bankruptcy court may choose to lift the stay and litigate [M & S’s] liability to Bremer in that case, litigate the issue based on any objection filed contesting Bremer’s proofs of claims, or consolidate the two matters and litigate the issue. Either way, [M & S’s] liability is not properly before this Court at this time, and therefore, the Court refrains from making any findings as to such liability.
Id. at *3 n. 4.
In sum, the district court accepted the bankruptcy court’s recommendation that the indemnity and contribution claim be dismissed, without discussion, because none of the parties objected to the recom
VI.
Between the time of the district court’s decision and oral argument in this case, the Minnesota Supreme Court decided McIntosh II.
The trial court granted Dorsey’s motion for summary judgment as to the remaining three claims. Id. On appeal, the Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed the decision on the negligent misrepresentation claim and part of the legal malpractice claim. McIntosh I,
The Minnesota Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals in part, holding that the trial court appropriately granted summary judgment in Dorsey’s favor on the third-party beneficiary and implied contract theories. Id. at 545-49. The Court began by reiterating the general rule that, absent fraud or another improper motive, “an attorney is liable for professional negligence only to a person with whom he has an attorney-client relationship. If an attorney were to owe a duty to a nonclient, it could result in potential ethical conflicts for the attorney. ...” Id. at 545 (citation omitted). In Minnesota, a lawyer can only be found to have a duty to a third party who is a direct and intended beneficiary of the lawyer’s services. Id. at 547.
Elaborating on the meaning of “direct and intended beneficiary,” the Court held that the transaction must have “as a central purpose an effect on the third party and the effect [must be] intended as a purpose of the transaction.” Id. at 547. Further, the lawyer must be aware of the client’s intent to benefit the third party. McIntosh II,
Finding the situation of the bank participants “far from the will-drafting context in which the third-party beneficiary theory was first developed,” the Court concluded that the banks “were not direct and intended beneficiaries of the attorney-client relationship between M & S and Dorsey.” Id. In the Court’s opinion, the purpose of Dorsey’s legal work was not to benefit the banks, but to close the St. Regis loans. Id. Even if Dorsey was aware of M & S’s participation model and M & S expected Dorsey’s work to benefit the banks, the Court held, to incur liability Dorsey would need to be aware that the banks were the intended beneficiaries of its services. Id.
The Court concluded that the record before it did not indicate that Dorsey was aware of that intent. McIntosh II,
[T]here is no indication that this advice was more than an incidental part of Dorsey’s representation. The names of the Bank Participants were not included in any of the instruments Dorsey drafted. No Bank Participant met with Dorsey attorneys prior to or at closing. There was no communication between the Bank Participants and Dorsey before or at closing.
Id. Having quoted significant portions of the Participation Agreement, the Court noted that the banks had acknowledged that they bought the participations based on their own independent evaluations of the loans. Id. at 542, 548.
Rather than considering them third-party beneficiaries of Dorsey’s legal work in the St. Regis transactions, the Court suggested that the banks’ “only relationship to the proposed transaction was that of parties with whom [Dorsey’s] clients might negotiate a bargain at arm’s length.” Id. at 548 (quoting Goodman v. Kennedy,
Both Dorsey and Bremer have advised us of the McIntosh II decision. See Fed. R.App. P. 28(j). Dorsey argues that it supports reversal of Bremer’s judgment against it; Bremer contends that the record before us is different from the one before the Minnesota Supreme Court in McIntosh II.
VII.
Both the Minnesota Supreme Court’s core holding and its suggestion that the relationship between M & S and the participating banks was an “arm’s length” dealing contrast mightily with the analyses of the bankruptcy and district courts. In a footnote, the district court asserted that “Miller & Schroeder had loyalties to both President and to the bank lender/participants, whose interests were not necessarily aligned. And through Miller & Schroeder’s acquiescence with President’s push for closing, Miller & Schroeder evidenced that its loyalties to President prevailed.” This statement by the district court implies that M & S owed a duty of care and loyalty to the bank participants even before they advanced funds to participate in the loans.
In McIntosh II, the Minnesota Supreme Court quoted key parts of the Participation Agreement and emphasized the participants’ independent evaluation of the loans without reliance on M & S. Id. at 542, 548. But when the district court
While the disclaimers in the Participation Agreement play no part in the Court’s determination as to Bremer’s standing, the Court notes that it would have no difficulty finding that these disclaimers do not protect Miller & Schroeder from the bank lender/participants’ claims, as the Court seriously questions whether Miller & Schroeder, acting as a dual agent with conflicting loyalties, acted in good faith or exercised reasonable judgment.
The Minnesota Supreme Court took the disclaimers as evidence that the banks were not intended beneficiaries of Dorsey’s work.
Whereas the Minnesota Supreme Court was unwilling to hold Dorsey liable to the loan participants, the bankruptcy court concluded as a matter of public policy that Dorsey should be held liable:
[I]f Dorsey can escape liability for activities that constitute malpractice in this situation on a standing defense, the integrity of these types of commercial transactions are at risk.... It cannot be sued for malpractice by the loan participants because they do not have standing; it cannot be sued by Miller & Schroeder because Miller & Schroeder has no damages.
There was obviously a broad discrepancy between how the courts below characterized the loan participation relationship between M & S and Bremer and how the Minnesota Supreme Court viewed the matter. As we seek to decide this case in the same manner as would the latter Court, we must investigate this relationship further.
Loan participations are “ostensibly simple devices that in fact are highly complex.” Patrick J. Ledwidge, Loan Participation Among Commercial Banks, 51 Tenn. L.Rev. 519, 519 (1984). Commentators have cited several problems with participation agreements, in that they create an unbalanced power relationship in which the loan participant is at the mercy of the lead lender. See W.H. Knight, Jr., Loan Participation Agreements: Catching Up With Contract Law, 1987 Colum. Bus. L.Rev. 587, 629-30; Ledwidge, supra, at 526-27 (noting that there is no fiduciary relationship between lead lender and participant). “[T]he hidden dangers in participation agreements ... usually come to light after lead lender failure.” Lori Laughlin Dalton, Comment, Lead Lender Failure and the Pitfalls for the Unwitting Participant, 42 Sw. L.J. 1071, 1071-72 (1989). Based on a belief that financial institutions have the resources to adequately protect their own interests, courts have typically dismissed bank requests for judicial protection in participated loan transactions. Knight, supra, at 587-88.
We have taken part in the trend against granting protection to participating banks. In Union National Bank of Little Rock v. Farmers Bank, we held that a loan participation is not a security under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
A leading case on the nature of loan participation agreements is First Bank of WaKeeney v. Peoples State Bank,
Although the Minnesota Supreme Court has not directly addressed the nature of a participating bank’s rights under a participation agreement, in McIntosh II it described the participation as an “arm’s length” dealing and emphasized the participants’ duty to rely on their own independent evaluation of the loans. Id. at 548. The Court’s emphasis on the terms of the Participation Agreement convinces us that its view of these transactions is consistent with the commonly accepted understanding. As such, we predict that Minnesota law would hold Bremer to the marketplace standards of vigilance and independent inspection, and not grant it any protection beyond the express terms of the Participation Agreement.
VIII.
Turning to the district court’s decision in the Bremer action, we review its factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo. Universal Title Ins. Co. v. United States,
McIntosh II controls the question of Bremer’s standing to sue for malpractice committed during the closing of the loan. When Bremer bought a participation interest in the St. Regis II loan, it did so “in reliance not on M & S but on [its] own independent evaluation of the loan[ ].” McIntosh II,
We now turn to whether Bremer had standing to sue Dorsey for legal malpractice or breach of contract as of June 2000 when Dorsey began work on the President litigation. The district court found that Dorsey represented the participants’ inter
Based on our understanding of the relationships created by the Participation Agreement, we do not believe that Bremer’s relationship with M & S at any time granted it standing to sue Dorsey for legal malpractice or breach of contract. A participating bank’s only relationship is with the lead bank; the participant cannot look to the borrower for satisfaction of the debt. In re AutoStyle Plastics, Inc.,
As defined by the Participation Agreement, the relationship between M & S and Bremer was that of “a seller and purchaser of a property interest.” This relationship was not so close that Dorsey’s representation of M & S could be imputed to Bremer. The Agreement obligated Bremer to pay M & S’s attorneys’ fees in proportion to its participation in the loan. M & S could only be liable to Bremer for breach of the Participation Agreement if it failed to use good faith or reasonable care in selection of litigation counsel or breached its overall duty to protect Bremer’s interests “in accordance with the customary policies and procedures under which it administers loans for its own account.” This standard of care is lower than what is ordinarily imposed on fiduciaries and may only expose the lead lender to liability for bad faith or possibly gross neglect. See First Citizens Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. Worthen Bank & Trust Co.,
Dorsey’s client in the President litigation was M & S. It owed M & S, not the loan participants, the duties of confidentiality, loyalty, and care that attend the attorney-client relationship. Keeping in mind “the potential ethical conflicts” that might result “[i]f an attorney were to owe a duty to a nonclient,” McIntosh II,
Furthermore, the district court’s theory as to causation strikes us as illogical. The court’s finding was that Bremer wasted its money funding the President litigation rather than pursuing a malpractice claim against Dorsey. The district court found, however, Bremer had no standing to pursue a malpractice action for the alleged negligence in the closing of the St. Regis II loans. To prove damages in a legal malpractice case, a client must prove that but for the lawyer’s conduct, the client would have obtained a more favorable re-
IX.
Our decision in the Bremer action foreshadows our decision in the Trustee action. In bankruptcy matters we are a second court of review; we apply the same standards as the district court, reviewing the bankruptcy court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo. In re M & S Grading, Inc.,
The bankruptcy court found that Dorsey breached its fiduciary duty of loyalty by representing M & S in Bremer’s state-court lawsuit when Bremer was a current client. It also found that Dorsey breached its fiduciary duties of loyalty and full disclosure by failing to disclose that it may have committed malpractice by closing the St. Regis II loan without NIGC approval. In the bankruptcy court’s opinion, Dorsey’s representation of M & S in the President litigation and in Bremer’s state-court lawsuit was materially limited by Dorsey’s own interest in avoiding liability for malpractice in closing the St. Regis loans. It further found that the conflicts of interest were blatant, in bad faith, and with fraudulent or ill intent.
We have already determined that Bremer was at no time Dorsey’s client or a third-party beneficiary of Dorsey’s services. Hence there were no conflicting loyalties. The bankruptcy court erred as a matter of law in finding that Dorsey breached its fiduciary duty to M & S by representing it in Bremer’s state-court lawsuit. We therefore reverse that aspect of its decision and turn to whether Dorsey breached its fiduciary duty by failing to inform M & S that it may have committed malpractice in the St. Regis closings.
Relying in part on the testimony of the Trustee’s expert, Professor Neil Hamilton, the bankruptcy court found that Dorsey’s duty to disclose a potential malpractice claim arose from its ethical and professional obligations. First, it discussed the duty to avoid conflicts of interest. See Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 1.7(b). Second, it discussed the duty to keep the client sufficiently informed to permit the client to make informed decisions. See Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 1.4. The court then observed that the Rules of Professional Conduct “do not require a client to prove that a conflict actually affects the eventual representation; but in this case, it surely did.”
We believe the bankruptcy court erred by relying too heavily on the Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct. Demonstrating that an ethics rule has been violated, by itself, does not give rise to a cause of action against the lawyer and does not give rise to a presumption that a legal duty has been breached. Minn. R. Prof. Conduct, Scope; Carlson v. Fredrikson & Byron, P.A.,
Unlike in the ethics context, there is “relatively little case law directly on point — and none in Minnesota” that addresses the lawyer’s common-law duty to confess a potential malpractice claim to his client. See Charles E. Lundberg,
A classic example of a duty to advise a client of potential malpractice is a lawyer who fails to file a lawsuit for a client within the limitations period. See Restatement (Third) of The Law Governing Lawyers § 20, cmt. c (2000). The Restatement classifies this duty as part of the duty to keep the client reasonably informed, but mentions “the resulting conflict of interest that may require the lawyer to withdraw.” Id. (emphasis added). Withdrawal is only called for if there is a conflict of interest such that “there is a substantial risk that the lawyer’s representation of the client would be materially and adversely affected by the lawyer’s” own interests. Id. §§ 121, 125. “Disclosure should be made if the failure to do so could reasonably be expected to prejudice the client’s continued representation.” 3 Mallen & Smith, supra, § 24:5 at 545.
We predict that the Minnesota Supreme Court would not hold a lawyer liable for failure to disclose a possible malpractice claim unless the potential claim creates a conflict of interest that would disqualify the lawyer from representing the client. See Carlson,
Negligent legal advice does not give rise to a claim for legal malpractice until the client suffers damages as a result. See Wartnick v. Moss & Barnett,
We do not believe that Dorsey’s representation of M & S in the President litigation was a breach of fiduciary duty. According to the bankruptcy court, Dorsey breached the standard of care by closing the St. Regis loans without first obtaining NIGC approval. The court found that if M & S had known of the risks that the loans could be voided, it would not have closed the loans. But M & S could only be damaged if President defaulted on the loans and the documents proved to be unenforceable. Dorsey’s work on the President litigation was part of its legitimate efforts to prevent its possible error in judgment from harming M & S; there was not a substantial risk that Dorsey’s interests were adverse to those of M & S.
Neither do we believe that Dorsey’s representation of M & S in Bremer’s state-court action was a breach of fiduciary duty. In that action, Bremer accused M & S of fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of contract based on allegations that M & S misrepresented the enforceability of the Pledge Agreement. Reasonable or justifiable reliance is an element of both fraud and negligent misrepresentation. See Martens v. Minn. Mining & Mfg. Co.,
Because the participation agreement specifically required [the participants] to affirm that they had made “an independent and informed judgment with respect to the Collateral, Borrower and Obligor and their credit and the desirability of purchasing an undivided interest in the Loan” and to acknowledge that [M & S] made no warranty or representation regarding the enforceability of any loan documents, [the participants’] reliance on Dorsey’s advice, as communicated through [M & S], was not justifiable.
There were advantages and disadvantages to Dorsey representing M & S through both the closing of the St. Regis transactions and the litigation that arose from those transactions. On one hand, Dorsey was intimately aware of all the facts related to the litigation, and the law that controlled the enforceability of the loan documents. On the other hand, there was the potential that Dorsey’s lawyers could be called as fact witnesses, and the hazard that “[i]t is far too easy to make the legal advisor a scapegoat for a variety of business misjudgments.... ” See Viner v. Sweet,
X.
In summary, we reverse the decisions of the bankruptcy court in the Trustee’s case and the district court in Bremer’s case. The decision of the Minnesota Supreme Court persuades us that it would hold loan participants such as Bremer to the marketplace standards of vigilance and independent inspection, such that its relationship with the lead lender is limited to the express terms of the participation agreement. Due to the arm’s-length nature of that relationship, Bremer’s relationship with the lead lender M & S did not grant it standing to sue M & S’s lawyer Dorsey for legal malpractice or breach of contract. Furthermore, even if Bremer had standing to sue Dorsey, it could not collect damages for negligence that allegedly occurred before it obtained standing.
Because Bremer was not Dorsey’s client, Dorsey did not breach its fiduciary duty to M & S by representing it in Bremer’s state-court lawsuit. We also predict that the Minnesota Supreme Court would not hold a lawyer liable for failure to disclose a possible malpractice claim unless the potential claim creates a conflict of interest that would disqualify the lawyer from representing the client. The lawyer may act in the client’s interests to prevent an error in judgment from harming the client without breaching a fiduciary duty. We conclude, based on the language of the participation agreement, that there was not a substantial risk that Dorsey’s representation of M & S in Bremer’s state-court action was materially and adversely limited by Dorsey’s own interests. Hence there was no breach of fiduciary duty.
Our decisions are a result of controlling law from the opinions by the Minnesota Supreme Court and Court of Appeals, the inferences we have drawn from the Minnesota opinions, and our duty to correctly ascertain and apply Minnesota law.
XI.
The judgments against Dorsey & Whitney LLP are reversed. The cross-appeal of Bremer Business Finance Corporation is dismissed as moot. We instruct the district court to enter a judgment in Dorsey’s favor in the actions of both Bremer and the Trustee.
Notes
. Although the Trustee is a party to both of the adversary proceedings discussed in this case, for convenience we will refer to the first action as the "Trustee's,” and to the second action as "Bremer’s.”
. We review the bankruptcy court's findings as to the Trustee action and the district court’s findings as to the Bremer action.
. The St. Regis I loan was for $8,624,000 and for our purposes structured identically to the St. Regis II loan. The claims in this case deal principally with the St. Regis II loan.
. The Trustee’s claim against Dorsey for indemnity and contribution is not what we have referred to as the "Trustee’s action.” Rather, it is a claim asserted by the Trustee in what we have termed "Bremer’s action.” None of the parties have appealed the district court's dismissal of the Trustee’s claim for indemnity and contribution.
. 28 U.S.C. §§ 631-639.
. Section 631(b)(1), in pertinent part, provides that:
Within ten days of being served with a copy, any party may serve and file written objections to such proposed findings and recommendations as provided by rules of court. A judge of the court shall make a de novo determination of those portions of the report or specified proposed findings or recommendations to which objection is made. A judge of the court may accept, reject, or modify, in whole or in part, the findings or recommendations made by the magistrate.
28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1).
. The district court also noted that, "[e]ven after briefing was complete,” it had provided the Trustee and Bremer with another opportunity to raise the indemnity and contribution claim, but both parties failed to do so. In re SRC Holding Corp., No. 06-3962,
. Mr. Lundberg was Dorsey’s expert witness in this case. The bankruptcy court agreed that there were no Minnesota decisions directly on point.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The appellant, Dorsey & Whitney, LLP, invokes our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, which authorizes review of “final decisions” of the district courts, including those arising in bankruptcy. See Conn. Nat. Bank v. Germain,
This case began with the filing of two adversary complaints in the bankruptcy court. One complaint was filed by the Trustee, Brian F. Leonard, on behalf of Miller & Schroeder’s bankruptcy estate, against Dorsey. It has been labeled the Trustee complaint. The second complaint was filed by Bremer Business Finance Corporation, joined by the Trustee, also against Dorsey. It has been called the Bremer complaint. As the majority explains, the Bremer complaint included a claim by the Trustee “for indemnity and contribution against Dorsey to offset any monies that Bremer might recover in its claims against the estate.” Ante, at 611; Dorsey App. A-99. This claim has not been adjudicated by the district court.
The bankruptcy court first addressed the Trustee’s claim for indemnity and contribution in its decision of August 28, 2006. In re SRC Holding Corp.,
When Dorsey objected to the bankruptcy court’s report and recommendation, however, the district court concluded that Bremer did not establish a direct attorney-client relationship with Dorsey until after the closing of the loan, and that Bremer could not recover directly from Dorsey based on pre-closing negligence. The district court’s order of April 6, 2007, which resolved the objections to the report and recommendation, did not analyze the Trustee’s claim for indemnity and contribution. See In re SRC Holding Corp.,
Although there is no analysis as to the bankruptcy court’s recommendation regarding the Trustee’s indemnification and/or contribution claim in the Court’s opinion, the Court did not “adopt” thebankruptcy court’s recommendation to dismiss the claim as moot. The bankruptcy court’s conclusions were adopted only “to the extent they [were] not inconsistent” with the Court’s Opinion. Here, the bankruptcy[] court’s conclusion to dismiss the claim as moot was inconsistent with the Court’s Opinion. The Court found that Bremer was not entitled to recover its investment loss directly from Dorsey, which is contrary to the very basis for the bankruptcy court’s recommendation to dismiss the Trustee’s indemnity/contribution claim as moot. Therefore, because the Court found the way that it did, it is implied in the April 6, 2007 Order that the indemnity/contribution claim is no longer moot.
Id. at *4 (emphases added).
The district court’s order also made clear that the Trustee’s claim for indemnity and contribution was not resolved. The court observed that “the record before the Court is not complete as to the Trustee’s claims for indemnification and/or contribution,” and that “[n]o court has tried the issues of Miller & Schroeder’s liability to Bremer and Dorsey’s liability for contribution or indemnity to the Trustee.” Id. at *1. The court acknowledged that “dicta” in its April 6 order noted “some evidence that would have supported finding Dorsey’s liability to Miller & Schroeder (or the'Trustee),” but explained that “such liability was not before this Court and this Court did not conclusively decide it.” Id. The court said that it “simply did not address the claim [for indemnity and contribution] because the claim was not properly presented to the Court and the Court could not address the claim because the record is not complete to determine the claim.” Id. at *4 (emphases added). The court thus “decline[d] to address the merits of the Trustee’s contribution/indemnification claims.” Id. at *5.
In summary, the bankruptcy court recommended that the claim for indemnification and contribution be dismissed as moot. The district court’s order of April 6, 2007, did not adopt the recommendation to dismiss the claim as moot, but did not otherwise address the claim on the merits. The district court’s order of May 15, 2007, denied a motion to alter or amend judgment, and thus left the April 6 order intact. As a result, the Trustee’s claim for indemnification and contribution was not dismissed; it is still unresolved and pending in the district court.
The majority acknowledges that the district court did not adopt the bankruptcy court’s recommendation to dismiss the claim as moot. Given that Federal Bankruptcy Rule 9033(d) mirrors 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1), ante, at 619-20, it is clear that the district court had authority to reject the bankruptcy court’s recommendation, whether or not Bremer or the Trustee filed a contingent objection. See Thomas v. Arn,
Although the district court rejected the only basis on which the bankruptcy court recommended dismissal of the indemnity/contribution claim, the majority asserts that the district court nonetheless dismissed the claim “without discussion.” Ante, at 623. The majority theorizes that the district court “accepted the bankruptcy court’s recommendation that the indemnity and contribution claim be dismissed, without discussion, because none of the parties objected to the recommendation.” Id. The flaw in this analysis is that the bankruptcy court’s recommendation to dismiss the claim cannot be separated from the court’s rationale for recommending dismissal. The bankruptcy court recommended that the claim be dismissed as moot; the district court declined to adopt that recommendation, because it was inconsistent with the district court’s opinion. The bankruptcy court did not recommend alternatively that the indemnity/contribution claim be dismissed “without discussion,” on the merits, or for any other reason. Once the district court rejected the bankruptcy court’s recommendation to dismiss the claim as moot, there was no remaining recommendation of dismissal to be adopted. The district court’s adoption of those portions of the bankruptcy court’s recommendation that were not inconsistent with the district court’s opinion did not silently dismiss the indemnity/contribution claim on grounds never recommended by the bankruptcy court or stated by the district court. Cf. Lorin Corp. v. Goto & Co.,
In its order of May 15, the district court cited the absence of a “contingent objection” by Bremer or the Trustee, and the doctrine of “waiver,” to explain why it refused to address the merits of the unresolved claim for indemnity and contribution for the first time on a motion to alter or amend judgment. But this discussion does not establish that the district court dismissed the indemnity/contribution claim on April 6, and the May 15 order never states that the claim was dismissed. The court denied Bremer’s motion to alter or amend judgment “to the extent Bremer [was] asking [the] Court to make findings as to that claim,”
The majority also contends that the district court “explained that, even if Bremer and the Trustee had not waived their right to review of the indemnity and contribution claim, the claim was properly dismissed because it was premature.” Ante, at 623. The district court, however, never stated that the indemnity/contribution claim was “dismissed” because it was premature. The court merely referenced the fact that the record was not complete with respect to the indemnity/contribution claim as part of its explanation for declining to
When a district court adjudicates fewer than all claims in an action, there is no final decision that may be appealed, subject to the exceptions set forth in 28 U.S.C. § 1292, Rule 54(b), and the collateral order doctrine. Hope v. Klabal,
Our jurisdiction over Dorsey’s appeal with respect to the Trustee complaint depends on whether the two consolidated cases filed in the bankruptcy court became one action for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and appellate jurisdiction. On May 11, 2005, the bankruptcy court ordered that the two adversary proceedings involving the Bremer complaint and the Trustee complaint were “consolidated for pretrial and trial purposes only.” The circuits vary in their treatment of consolidated cases and appellate jurisdiction. As the D.C. Circuit has summarized: (1) “Some circuits hold that consolidated cases remain separate actions and no Rule 54(b) certification is needed to appeal the dismissal of any one of them;” (2) “Others treat consolidated cases as a single action, or presume that they are, allowing the presumption to be overcome in highly unusual circumstances;” and (3) “Still other
Our circuit falls in the third category of circuits that have no “hard and fast rule” about the treatment of consolidated cases. Id. We have said that where cases are consolidated “for the purposes of convenience only,” such as where a district court said that consolidation was to “accommodate the convenience of the parties,” continued to refer to future filings “in these two suits,” and stated that after one complaint was dismissed that there was “still other related litigation pending with this same case number,” then the presence of an open question in one of the formerly separate suits did not preclude appeal of a final decision in the other suit. Tri-State Hotels, Inc. v. FDIC,
Under the case-by-case approach used by this and several other circuits, I would consider the two underlying adversary actions as one consolidated action for purposes of determining appellate jurisdiction. Although the bankruptcy court implied that the consolidation was somehow limited when it consolidated the cases for “pretrial and trial purposes only,” the court offered no explanation of what other purpose might exist. Other circuits following the case-by-case approach have held that when two cases are consolidated for discovery and trial, then all claims in both cases must be resolved before the district court’s decision is final and appealable. See Alinsky v. United States,
Upholding the finality requirement in this case furthers the congressional policy against premature appeals and piecemeal reviews in at least one specific respect. Dorsey’s lead argument in its appeal of the district court’s decision on the Trustee complaint is that Dorsey did not commit legal malpractice. (Appellant’s Br. 31-44). Because the firm did not commit malpractice, Dorsey contends, the firm had no duty to disclose a potential malpractice claim to Miller & Schroeder, so the district court’s finding of liability for failure to make such a disclosure must be reversed. As the district court explained in its discussion of the claim for indemnity and contribution, however, that court has not resolved whether Dorsey committed malpractice. The court emphasized that the record was not complete on this question, that Dorsey’s liability for negligence was not before the court, and that the court “did not conclusively decide it.”
. Although we have said that a more flexible standard of finality applies to bankruptcy appeals under 28 U.S.C. § 158(d), e.g., In re Woods Farmers Coop. Elevator Co.,
. Even if there were a final decision, I would respectfully disagree with the majority's conclusion — based on excerpts from two footnotes in the district court’s 94-page opinion (one of which expressly states that disclaimers in the Participation Agreement "play no part” in the court’s decision about Bremer’s standing) — that the holding and analysis in McIntosh County Bank v. Dorsey & Whitney, LLP (McIntosh II),
The district court's finding that there was a direct attorney-client relationship between Bremer and Dorsey after June 2000 was based on specific underlying facts, such as a cover letter from Dorsey stating that the firm had been "retained to represent the Loan Participants,” a memorandum from a Dorsey attorney addressed to the "loan participants” and stamped “subject to attorney-client privilege,” and section 4.8 of the Participation Agreement (not discussed in McIntosh II), which authorized Miller & Schroeder to retain counsel to represent Bremer and other loan participants.
. I am not persuaded that the Trustee appeal could be resolved on the alternative ground that Dorsey had no duty to disclose a potential malpractice claim, even where such nondisclosure violates the Minnesota ethics rules, as long as the potential claim does not "create[ ] a conflict of interest that would disqualify the lawyer from representing the client.” Ante, at 629. This argument was not raised by Dorsey in the district court or in this court. See JCB, Inc. v. Union Planters Bank, NA,
