STATE of Vermont
v.
Donald BAKER.
Supreme Court of Vermont.
Present: REIBER, C.J., and DOOLEY, JOHNSON, SKOGLUND and BURGESS, JJ.
ENTRY ORDER
¶ 1. The State appeals the decision of the trial court to disqualify the prosecuting attorney and the entire Orleans County State's Attorney's Office (OCSA) based on the appearance of a conflict of interest. While in private practice, before becoming Deputy State's Attorney for Orleans County, Joseph Malgeri represented a co-defendant and State's witness in defendant's *821 case. The issue in this appeal is whether the deputy state's attorney was properly disqualified, under conflict-of-interest rules, because of the earlier representation. We find he was not and reverse.
¶ 2. On December 2, 2004, the Ammex duty-free store in Derby Line, Vermont was robbed. On December 9, 2004, following an investigation of the crime, the State charged defendant with kidnapping and grand larceny in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 2405(a)(1)(E) and 13 V.S.A. § 2501 respectively. More than a year later, the State charged a co-defendant with aiding in the commission of a felony and perjury in relation to that same robbery. The perjury charge resulted from false statements the co-defendant allegedly made during a deposition taken in the defendant's case. The State dismissed the perjury charge as part of a plea agreement resolving all pending charges against the co-defendant. The co-defendant became a chief witness in the prosecution of defendant.
¶ 3. Defense counsel learned on July 20, 2006 that Joseph Malgeri, the deputy state's attorney acting as lead prosecutor in this case, had previously represented the co-defendant on DUI and false-information-to-a-police-officer (FIPO) charges in 1995. Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri had no recollection of this prior representation and therefore did not disclose it.
¶ 4. Defendant subsequently filed a motion to disqualify Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri and the entire OCSA as prosecutors in his case, and the State opposed that motion. The co-defendant entered a waiver of any conflict of interest related to his prior representation by attorney Malgeri on August 8, 2006. The Orleans District Court ruled that the appearance of a conflict of interest was sufficient to warrant disqualification of Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri and, by extension, the whole OCSA office.
¶ 5. There is scarce Vermont case law dealing with a conflict of interest resulting from a prior representation of a co-defendant by the prosecuting attorney against a current defendant. Thus, the trial court examined case law from other jurisdictions in reaching its decision. The court acknowledged that most states find disqualification is not "automatic" in similar circumstances. It reasoned, though, that "`[g]iven the need to protect against the appearance of impropriety and the risk of prejudice attendant on abuse of confidence, however slight,'" Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri should be disqualified. (quoting People v. Tessitore,
¶ 6. "A motion to disqualify counsel is a matter that rests within the sound discretion of the trial court, and its ruling will not be disturbed absent an abuse of discretion." Stowell v. Bennett,
*822 ¶ 7. "The precept that an attorney scrupulously avoid representing conflicting interests and hold inviolate the confidence and secrets entrusted to him by his client" applies equally to a prosecuting attorney as to an attorney in the private sector. State v. Miner,
¶ 8. Although there are no Vermont cases which directly address the particular conflict-of-interest issue presented here, two cases are useful in establishing the current state of Vermont law. We applied the framework of Rule 1.9 in State v. Crepeault, in which the defendant in a sexual abuse case had previously been represented by the prosecuting attorney in a CHINS (child in need of care or supervision) proceeding.
¶ 9. Here, the trial court relied on two cases from other jurisdictions in which the attorney previously represented a co-defendant and then switched hats and joined the same prosecution against a defendant. In Tessitore, the court held that disqualification was proper where the attorney had preliminarily represented the co-defendant and then appeared for the prosecution at the defendant's sentencing hearing in the same case.
¶ 10. In a leading Connecticut case, the trial court disqualified plaintiff's counsel for a conflict of interest based solely on an "appearance of impropriety" and the perception of impropriety by the defendant. Bergeron,
¶ 11. We next consider whether the two matters in which Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri participated were, in fact, substantially related. "Substantiality is present if the factual contexts of the two representations are similar or related." Crepeault,
¶ 12. The Bergeron court advised that "[t]he standards for attorney disqualification are directed at protecting client confidences."
(1) the presence or absence of a prior direct attorney-client relationship between the defendant seeking disqualification and the prosecuting attorney and (2) the presence or absence of evidence that the prosecuting attorney actually received confidential information from or about the complaining defendant.
McFarlan v. Dist. Court,
¶ 13. In Crepeault, we found that the two representations were "substantially related" because the prior case concerned the defendant's parenting abilities and relationship with her children, and the later case involved sexual molestation of one of the children by that same defendant.
¶ 14. These decisions lead us to conclude that the trial court's disqualification of Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri was not justified by the circumstances. We find no relationship between the co-defendant's 1995 case and defendant's 2004 case. The defense argues that the co-defendant's lack of truthfulness connects these cases because Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri was exposed to the co-defendant's 1995 FIPO charge and his alleged perjury during his deposition in preparation for defendant's 2004 case. Yet this argument is without merit; Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri gains no advantage in prosecuting the case against defendant by knowing that his chief witness has a conviction for dishonesty. This information would be available to any prosecutor involved in the case, and the co-defendant's apparent propensity for dishonesty only arms the defense with stronger ammunition to impeach his testimony at defendant's eventual trial. This argument fails to meet any of the tests established by the various jurisdictions discussed above. The facts supporting the prosecution of a DUI and FIPO charge against the co-defendant in 1995 have no relation to the facts supporting the kidnapping and grand larceny charges against defendant in 2004. The two cases are not substantially related and it was, therefore, error to look for an appearance of impropriety.
¶ 15. Vermont Rule of Professional Conduct 1.10(a) states "[w]hile lawyers are associated in a firm, none of them shall knowingly represent a client when any one of them practicing alone would be prohibited from doing so by Rules 1.7, 1.8(c), 1.9 or 2.2." Because no conflict of interest exists for Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri, the OCSA cannot be disqualified through imputation. Therefore, the trial court's ruling to disqualify both Deputy State's Attorney Malgeri and the OCSA is reversed.
Reversed.
