GAC Commercial Corp. v. Mahoney Typographers, Inc.

66 Mich. App. 186 (1975) 238 N.W.2d 575

GAC COMMERCIAL CORPORATION
v.
MAHONEY TYPOGRAPHERS, INC.

Docket No. 22828.

Michigan Court of Appeals.

Decided December 8, 1975.

*187 Stanley, Davidoff, Long & Gray, for plaintiffs Business Assets and Joe Goldberg.

Wise, Sayen & Basch, for defendants.

Before: T.M. BURNS, P.J., and V.J. BRENNAN and M.F. CAVANAGH, JJ.

T.M. BURNS, P.J.

This appeal concerns the disqualification of the members of a law firm from further representing one of the parties to this suit. We address this opinion only to that question and not to the merits of the civil litigation.

Plaintiffs Business Assets Corporation and Joe Goldberg have been represented by Llewellyn Gray of the law firm Stanley, Davidoff, Long and Gray since the commencement of the suit. Defendants Mahoney Typographers, Inc. and Claire J. Mahoney were initially represented by Benjamin W. Wise of the law firm of Wise, Sayen and O'Connor.

From June, 1972, until May, 1974, Michael O'Connor, as a partner of Wise, Sayen and O'Connor, took full responsibility for conducting defendants' defense. In June, 1974, Mr. O'Connor terminated *188 his partnership and became associated with the law firm which represents the plaintiffs (Stanley, Davidoff, Long and Gray).

There is no contention that Mr. O'Connor has been connected with this litigation since his disassociation with the law firm which represents the defendants, nor is there any indication that Mr. O'Connor has discussed the case with Mr. Gray after becoming associated with him. Mr. Gray has continued to represent the plaintiffs, and the defendants seek the disqualification of Mr. Gray and his law firm. The trial court refused to disqualify Mr. Gray. Defendants appeal.

Should a law firm be disqualified from continuing to represent a client where, during the pendency of the litigation, it hired an attorney who represented the opponent in the same case?

Defendants contend that Mr. Gray's continued representation of the plaintiffs would be unprofessional and would create the appearance of impropriety. Plaintiffs argue that no confidences have been or will be divulged and that Mr. O'Connor will not be involved in the litigation in any way.

We initially note that the issue raised herein is a difficult one and that our decision could be construed in an overbroad manner. Our holding is limited strictly to the facts of the instant case. Applying the appropriate provisions of the Code of Professional Responsibility and prior case law relevant to this appeal, we reverse the trial court and remand for an order disqualifying Mr. Gray and the members and employees of his firm from further representing the plaintiffs in this litigation.

Defendants point to Canons 4, 5 and 9 of the Code of Professional Responsibility and Canons (385 Mich lvi) as requiring disqualification in this case. Canon 4 states that a lawyer should preserve *189 the confidences and secrets of a client. Canon 5 states that a lawyer should exercise independent professional judgment on behalf of a client. Canon 9 requires that a lawyer avoid even the appearance of professional impropriety. There is no indication that any of these canons have been directly violated, but this fact is not of great significance. The potentiality of unethical conduct and the mere appearance of impropriety are serious questions which the code is designed to answer.

We can find no case law which directly answers the question before us, but in Auseon v Reading Brass Co, 22 Mich App 505; 177 NW2d 662 (1970), we had before us a closely analogous situation. There, several former employees of the defendant corporation were suing for bonuses allegedly due for services previously rendered. Defendant challenged the representation of the former employees by attorney Kenneth G. Prettie, claiming that there was a conflict of interest. Prettie had been a trustee of defendant's employee retirement fund and was co-trustee of the trust whose corpus consisted of almost half of the corporation's outstanding shares of stock. Prettie had also represented the corporation in negotiation of a contract between it and one of the plaintiffs, who was in turn represented at the time by a member of Prettie's law firm. On the basis of then Canon 6, relating to representing a client with undivided fidelity and maintaining the secrecy of confidences, and former Canon 37, relating to the duty of a lawyer to preserve confidences beyond current employment, we held that the attorneys should be disqualified to maintain the appearance of propriety. Prettie had drafted the contract for the corporation and later represented parties adverse to his former client. Disqualification of Prettie was required, and *190 the association between Prettie and Hayes in the same law firm required that Hayes be disqualified.

DR 5-105 of Canon 5 requires refusal to continue employment if the interests of another client may impair the independent professional judgment of the lawyer. DR 5-105(D) states that "[i]f a lawyer is required to decline employment or to withdraw from employment under DR 5-105, no partner or associate of his or his firm may accept or continue such employment". Our reasoning in Auseon and the clear language of DR 5-105(D) indicate that disqualification may arise merely through partnership or association with an attorney who is ethically prevented from continued participation in litigation.

W E Bassett Co v H C Cook Co, 302 F2d 268 (CA 2, 1962), involved a similar conflict. The issue there concerned the appropriateness of the representation of the plaintiff by a partner in a law firm which included an attorney who had represented the defendant in previous litigation concerning issues on which he had previously advised the defendant. Basing its decision in part on American Bar Association Canons 6 and 37, the Court found disqualification was required because of the partnership association and the prior representation and advisement.

In the case at bar, there is no indication that confidences have actually been disclosed in violation of Canon 4 nor that any specific disciplinary rule has been violated. But in light of the apparent potentiality of even an inadvertent violation of Canon 4 and the mandate of Canon 9, the disqualification of Mr. Gray and the other members of his firm is necessary. In Auseon, supra, we said that attorneys must not only adhere to the canons, but that they must also scrupulously avoid those situations *191 in which it can be said that there is even an appearance of impropriety. This is the requirement of Canon 9. Even in a case such as this where there is no claim of specific unethical conduct, where it might appear that impropriety exists, remedial action is required. The fact that Mr. O'Connor previously represented the defendant and is now associated with an attorney representing the plaintiffs in the same litigation raises surface appearances of impropriety. A partnership of attorneys is typically an association where close communication, cooperation and exchange of knowledge and ideas is common and necessary practice. Where such activity may potentially result in the revelation of the confidences of opposing litigants, there exists an appearance of impropriety which must be eliminated.

Disqualification may seem unwarranted in a case such as this where the question of professional ethics does not involve affirmative wrongdoing or a clear conflict of interest. But involved here is a matter of maintaining the highest standards of professional conduct required to avoid the appearance of impropriety. As members of a profession in which public reliance and trust is so essential and whose members' integrity must be assured to maintain vital public respect, we as attorneys must recognize the importance of a high standard by which our conduct is measured. Even where there is no thought of or intent to do wrong, if our conduct appears to be unethical, we weaken that respect and trust just as surely as if we had purposefully violated a specific rule.

Countless situations arise in the day-to-day practice of law which raise questions of what course the attorney should take to resolve a problem whose solution is unclear. A difficult weighing and *192 balancing of the interests of the client, the attorney, and the legal profession as a whole is required where that problem concerns a matter of professional conduct. But the bottom line should always be this: where it is a question of ethics, the answer is "no". There is no room for "close" questions of professional propriety, particularly at a time when public trust in and respect for the legal profession is not at its highest level.

Reversed.