United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 06-1790
INTERNATIONAL STRATEGIES GROUP, LTD.,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
GREENBERG TRAURIG, LLP, A. JOHN PAPPALARDO, AND
ECKERT, SEAMANS, CHERIN & MELLOTT, LLC,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Selya, Circuit Judge,
Stahl, Senior Circuit Judge,
and Howard, Circuit Judge.
Jessica Block with whom Block & Roos, LLP, was on brief for
appellant.
Paul B. Galvani with whom Matthew P. Garvey and Ropes &
Gray, LLP, were on brief for appellees Greenberg Traurig, LLP,
and Pappalardo.
Martha Born with whom William B. Mallin, Timothy S. Coon,
Holland & Knight, LLP, and Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott, LLC,
were on brief for Eckert, Seamans, Cherin & Mellott, LLC.
March 30, 2007
STAHL, Senior Circuit Judge. Plaintiff International
Strategies Group, Ltd. ("ISG") brought suit against attorney A.
John Pappalardo and two law firms, Greenburg Traurig, LLP ("GT"),
Pappalardo's current firm, and Eckert, Seamans, Cherin & Mellott,
LLC ("ESCM"), Pappalardo's former firm. ISG's claims against
defendants arose from the loss of roughly $4 million, which it
invested with Corporation of the BankHouse ("COB"), a Boston-based
investment firm. Attorney Pappalardo represented COB as it sought
to recover about $19 million, including ISG's funds, that COB had
lost through a series of fraudulent transfers.
The district court granted summary judgment as to all of
ISG's claims against the three defendants, finding a failure to
demonstrate causation and to file within the statute of
limitations. We affirm, concluding that summary judgment was
appropriate as to ISG's negligence, misrepresentation, breach of
fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and 93A unfair trade practices
claims because no attorney-client relationship was formed between
ISG and any of the defendants. Further, we hold that ISG's
remaining two claims, for conversion, and aiding and abetting fraud
and breach of fiduciary duty, fail because they were not filed
within the statutory period. We also affirm the district court's
denial of ISG's motion for reconsideration or relief from judgment.
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I. Background
This case involves a complex set of financial
transactions involving numerous individuals and entities. We do
not delve into every nuance in our recitation of the facts below,
but only those necessary to explain our decision. Because we are
reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we draw all reasonable
inferences in favor of the non-moving party, ISG. Maldonado-Denis
v. Castillo-Rodriguez, 23 F.3d 576, 581 (1st Cir. 1994).
A. The Scheme
ISG, a Hong Kong-based company, invested $4 million with
COB in April 1998, through COB's so-called "Federal Reserve
Guarantee Program." COB told potential investors that this program
generated profits by controlling the circulation of U.S. dollars.
COB promised investors substantial profits, along with a guarantee
of non-depletion of their original investment. Having been
essentially promised profit at zero risk, ISG transferred its $4
million investment to a COB account at ABN Amro Bank in Belgium on
May 15, 1998. Two weeks later, on May 29, 1998, COB made
unauthorized transfers of $821,500 of ISG's investment into an ESCM
bank account in Pennsylvania, and $328,500 into a COB bank account
in Boston. Both transactions violated the non-depletion agreement,
and were made without ISG's permission or knowledge.
COB then engaged in a Ponzi scheme, according to ISG's
allegations, using funds from new investors to cover the depletion
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of funds provided by previous investors, amounting to millions of
dollars in ill-gotten gains by COB and a variety of individuals and
entities not involved in this suit. ISG estimates that COB amassed
about $19 million dollars through this scheme, and then transferred
these funds in November 1998, without the permission of any
investor, to an entity called Swan Trust. Henry Pearlberg, the
trustee of Swan Trust, then depleted the Swan Trust account through
a series of transactions in late 1998 and early 1999, depositing
most of the money ($16.7 million) in an account held by First
Merchant Bank ("FMB"), which ISG characterizes as a "rogue Northern
Cyprus bank." Pearlberg also appropriated about $2.3 million for
his own use. ISG alleges that FMB dissipated the $16.7 million
account through yet another series of fraudulent transactions from
February to May 1999.
In April 1999, COB and its CEO, James Pomeroy, persuaded
Pearlberg to execute a Deed of Assignment, which assigned to
Pomeroy, as agent for COB, all rights to the misappropriated funds
held by FMB, Swan Trust, and Pearlberg. In July 1999, Pomeroy
received a disbursement of $1.2 million from FMB based on this
assignment. These recovered funds were not passed on to the
investors, but were retained by COB or Pomeroy and are now
dissipated.
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B. Attempts to Recover Dissipated Funds
In June 1998, ISG had become concerned that COB was not
honoring the non-depletion agreement and unsuccessfully sought
assurance from COB that its funds were intact. By mid-1999 ISG's
director, Phillip Clark, a Hong Kong attorney, was actively
investigating COB's handling of ISG's investment. By then, ISG
knew that COB had transferred funds to Swan Trust, and that
Pearlberg had subsequently transferred the majority of those funds
to the FMB account. By this time, ISG also had learned of
Pearlberg's assignment to Pomeroy and Pomeroy's recovery of $1.2
million based on the assignment. By April 2000, ISG had learned of
COB's initial depletion of its investment -- the May 1998 transfers
to the ESCM and COB accounts in the United States.1
In July 1999, Pappalardo, then an attorney with ESCM,
began representing COB. On August 11, 1999, COB's Pomeroy sent ISG
an email detailing COB's "options for retrieval" of the lost funds.
Pomeroy also informed ISG that, "I have chosen to move to prepare
litigation against the parties utilizing the law firm of Greenberg
& Traurig. I have utilized the law firm of Seamin Cherin & Melott
[sic] for the criminal assistance against the parties."
1
ISG learned much of this information from its cooperation
with a Belgian judge's investigation into the COB fraud. ISG
communicated with Belgian authorities on its own, without
assistance from Pappalardo. Indeed, during this period, ISG admits
that it filed a criminal complaint with the Belgian authorities
against a COB employee, Albert Pans. ISG filed this complaint
without the assistance of Pappalardo.
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During this same period, ISG's Clark flew to Boston to
confront COB over the missing funds. When the parties met in
Boston, Pappalardo told Clark that he had been retained by COB;
that COB was also a victim of the fraudulent scheme; that all
necessary steps, including litigation, would be taken to recover
the funds; and that any independent action by ISG against COB,
Pomeroy, or other parties would jeopardize Pappalardo's
negotiations to recover the missing funds. ISG alleges that these
representations, and other events that we detail below, led it to
believe that Pappalardo was ISG's legal representative and that an
attorney-client relationship had been formed.2
Pappalardo informed ISG on several occasions that a
negotiated recovery of the funds was imminent, as was COB's filing
of a civil complaint against the perpetrators of the fraud. When
Pappalardo had neither recovered the funds nor filed a complaint in
over two years, ISG finally retained outside counsel on November 7,
2001. Through counsel, ISG filed suit against COB and Pomeroy in
March 2002. ISG obtained a $10 million judgment in that suit, but
the award has proven uncollectible. ISG also filed suit against
ABN Amro Bank, FMB, and two individuals associated with COB's
scheme. Those suits are currently pending.
2
ISG alleges that it established three attorney-client
relationships, one with each defendant. However, for simplicity,
this opinion analyzes only the alleged ISG-Pappalardo relationship,
because it is the only hook for ISG's allegations regarding the
firms. Pappalardo left ESCM for GT on March 13, 2001.
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C. Proceedings Below
ISG brought three claims against all three defendants:
negligence, in the form of legal malpractice; misrepresentation;
and violation of Chapter 93A, the Massachusetts consumer protection
law, see Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 1 et seq. ISG brought two
additional claims against Pappalardo alone, for breach of fiduciary
duty and breach of express and implied contract. Finally, ISG
brought two claims against ESCM alone, for conversion, and aiding
and abetting fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, based on the May
1998 transfer of funds to ESCM's escrow account.
Defendants moved for summary judgment on all counts. The
district court declined the defendants' request to grant summary
judgment on the ground that no attorney-client relationship was
formed. However, holding that ISG had failed to establish a viable
theory of causation, the court granted summary judgment as to most
of ISG's claims, including negligence, misrepresentation, violation
of Chapter 93A, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of contract.
The court also granted summary judgment as to the remaining two
claims -- conversion, and aiding and abetting fraud and breach of
fiduciary duty -- concluding that the statute of limitations had
expired.
ISG filed a motion for reconsideration or relief from
judgment, which the district court denied. ISG timely appealed the
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district court's grant of summary judgment and denial of its motion
for reconsideration.
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
On appeal, we review a district court's grant of summary
judgment de novo, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to
the nonmoving party. See Fontánez-Núñez v. Janssen Ortho LLC, 447
F.3d 50, 54 (1st Cir. 2006). Summary judgment is appropriate where
there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(c). An appellate court is not "tied to the district court's
rationale," but may affirm a grant of summary judgment "on any
ground revealed by the record." Iverson v. City of Boston, 452
F.3d 94, 98 (1st Cir. 2006).
We review a district court's denial of a motion for
reconsideration or relief from judgment for abuse of discretion.
See Ruíz-Rivera v. Riley, 209 F.3d 24, 27 (1st Cir. 2000). "To
obtain relief, the movant must demonstrate either that newly
discovered evidence (not previously available) has come to light or
that the rendering court committed a manifest error of law."
Palmer v. Champion Mortgage, 465 F.3d 24, 30 (1st Cir. 2006).
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B. Duty of Care
Most of ISG's claims3 against defendants are predicated
on establishing the existence of an attorney-client relationship or
other duty of care between ISG and the defendants, including the
claims of negligence,4 misrepresentation,5 and violation of Chapter
93A.6 In addition, ISG's claims against Pappalardo, for breach of
fiduciary duty and breach of contract, are also predicated on the
existence of an attorney-client relationship or other duty of care
between Pappalardo and ISG.7
3
All parties agree that Massachusetts law governs ISG's
claims. See Moores v. Greenberg, 834 F.2d 1105, 1107 n.2 (1st Cir.
1987) (a federal court "ordinarily should" honor an agreement
between the parties as to what substantive law controls).
4
See Miller v. Mooney, 431 Mass. 57, 725 N.E.2d 545, 549
(2000) (under Massachusetts law "[e]xistence of an attorney-client
relationship is an element of a malpractice plaintiff's proof.").
5
A misrepresentation claim can rest upon an attorney-client
relationship, or a duty to a nonclient where "the attorney knows
[the nonclient] will rely on the services rendered." Miller, 725
N.E.2d at 550 (quoting Robertson v. Gaston Snow & Ely Bartlett, 404
Mass. 515, 536 N.E.2d 344, 350, cert. denied, 493 U.S. 894 (1989)).
6
In Robertson, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court held
that, where a plaintiff's 93A claim alleges unfair or deceptive
acts during the course of the defendant's "legal representation of
the plaintiff," proof of "an attorney-client relationship between
the plaintiff and [defendant] is critical to the plaintiff's 93A
claim." 536 N.E.2d at 351. Here, ISG predicated its 93A claim on
the existence of an attorney-client relationship with defendants.
Specifically, ISG's 93A count alleges that the defendants wrongly
"under[took] joint representation" and committed unfair and
deceptive acts while "representing ISG."
7
ISG's complaint alleges the existence of a fiduciary duty
based on Pappalardo's "undertaking to represent ISG." Similarly,
ISG's claim of breach of express or implied contract is based on
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ISG puts forth two theories for the existence of a duty
of care by defendants. First, ISG argues that an attorney-client
relationship was in fact formed. Second, ISG avers that "the
forbearance of ISG induced by Pappalardo while at GT and ESCM,
created a duty of care." This second argument is an invocation of
the foreseeable reliance exception that, under Massachusetts law,
creates a duty of care toward nonclients. See Sheinkopf v. Stone,
927 F.2d 1259, 1268 (1st Cir. 1991). Thus, we first examine
whether an attorney-client relationship was created in fact; if
not, we then consider whether the foreseeable reliance exception
for nonclients applies in this case.
1. Attorney-Client Relationship
Under Massachusetts law, an attorney-client relationship
may be shown by an express contract, see Miller, 725 N.E.2d at 549,
or may be implied "when (1) a person seeks advice or assistance
from an attorney, (2) the advice or assistance sought pertains to
matters within the attorney's professional competence, and (3) the
attorney expressly or impliedly agrees to give or actually gives
the advice or assistance," DeVaux v. Am. Home Assurance Co., 387
Mass. 814, 444 N.E.2d 355, 357 (1983) (quoting Kurtenback v.
TeKippe, 260 N.W.2d 53, 56 (Iowa 1977)). The third prong of the
DeVaux test may be established "by proof of detrimental reliance,
the existence of an obligation by Pappalardo "to use utmost good
faith and due care in protecting ISG's interests."
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when the person seeking legal services reasonably relies on the
attorney to provide them, and the attorney, aware of such reliance,
does nothing to negate it." Id.
It is not entirely clear whether ISG alleges that an
express attorney-client relationship was formed. Nonetheless, we
can easily conclude that this is not the case. There is no
evidence here of a retainer agreement or other contract for legal
services between ISG and any of the defendants; nor is there
evidence of billing or remittances for such services.
ISG points to the power of attorney that it executed in
favor of Pappalardo in July 2000, authorizing him to transfer to an
interest bearing escrow account any funds belonging to ISG that he
succeeded in recovering from Swan Trust. However, by executing the
power of attorney, ISG granted only a circumscribed agency power to
Pappalardo in order to facilitate the physical return of the
missing funds. While the power of attorney may have some impact on
our analysis of whether an implied attorney-client relationship was
formed, it is certain that such a limited power of attorney did not
create an express attorney-client relationship. See Williams v.
Dugan, 217 Mass. 526, 528, 105 N.E. 615 (1914) (noting that a power
of attorney creates limited agency relationship as to expressly
enumerated powers and no additional powers may be inferred); see
also Bachner v. Air Line Pilots Ass'n, 113 F.R.D. 644, 649 (D.
Alaska 1987) ("A power of attorney establishes the relationship of
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attorney-in-fact, which is an agency relationship different from
the relationship of an attorney-at-law.").
We turn next to ISG's contention that an attorney-client
relationship was created by implication, under the DeVaux three-
part test. On appeal, ISG contends that, based on Pappalardo's
assurance that he represented the interests of the investors and
his warnings that filing independent charges would jeopardize his
attempts to negotiate a recovery of the funds, ISG reasonably
believed that Pappalardo was its attorney and forebore from
pursuing independent legal action on that basis. In contrast, the
defendants maintain that Pappalardo made clear that he only
represented COB, and ISG demonstrated an understanding of this
fact; that ISG never relied on Pappalardo for legal services; and
that ISG, as a sophisticated, represented entity, understood that
its position was potentially adverse to Pappalardo's client, and
indeed threatened suit against COB on this basis several times.
Our analysis of whether an implied relationship was
created must start with the conjunctive, three-part DeVaux test.
Under part one of the test, we ask whether ISG sought legal advice
or assistance from Pappalardo. See DeVaux, 444 N.E.2d at 357.
Courts interpreting DeVaux have understood this first prong to
require concrete communication by the plaintiff requesting that the
attorney represent him, or explicitly seeking individualized legal
advisement. For example, in Robertson v. Gaston Snow & Ely
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Bartlett, 404 Mass. 515, 536 N.E.2d 344, 351 (1989), the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ("SJC") found no implied
attorney-client relationship between a corporate officer and a law
firm representing the corporation, where the officer never
explicitly requested that the firm represent him regarding his
employment status at the corporation after a reorganization. The
SJC reached this conclusion even though the officer had previously
been a client of the firm in regard to other matters, had numerous
discussions with the firm about the corporate reorganization and
his future employment with the corporation, and had requested and
received a sample employment agreement from the firm. Id. The SJC
concluded that an implied relationship cannot be formed without
active communication from the plaintiff to the lawyer requesting
legal representation or legal advice:
In spite of several written and many oral
communications between the plaintiff and the
other participants, the plaintiff introduced
no evidence of a specific reference to [the
firm] as his personal counsel. His claim is
essentially, therefore, that he thought that
[the firm] represented him but that he
failed to communicate his thought to anyone.
Id. at 349.
Similarly, in Sheinkopf v. Stone, 927 F.2d 1259, 1266-67
(1st Cir. 1991), this court held that no implied attorney-client
relationship arose under Massachusetts law between an attorney and
an investor, where the investor bought into a joint investment
venture managed by the attorney. We reached this result even
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though the attorney prepared various legal documents for the
investor's signature and requested that he sign them; promised to
"protect" the investor; told the investor that "other clients of
[the firm]" were also investing in the venture; listed the firm's
address on the joint venture's legal documents; and transacted
joint venture business out of his law firm office and with the
assistance of his law firm secretary. Id. at 1265-66. This court
found particularly persuasive that the investor "never explicitly
requested [the attorney] or [the law firm] to represent him, never
sought any legal advice from them, and was never billed for
services." Id. at 1268.
Here, ISG's claim is in some ways weaker than those of
plaintiffs in Robertson and Sheinkopf. Not only is there no
evidence or allegation that ISG explicitly requested legal
representation from Pappalardo, but on at least two occasions ISG
acknowledged that it was not Pappalardo's client. First, in a
March 30, 2000, letter, Clark wrote to Pappalardo:
While I appreciate that you act for
Corporation of the Bankhouse (COB), I find
that your failure to respond to any of our
correspondence insulting and unprofessional.
It is not beyond the parameters of your
ethical requirements for you to correspond
with International Strategies Group (ISG) on
COB's instruction.
(emphasis added). Second, on August 15, 2001, having grown more
frustrated at Pappalardo's lack of communication and failure to
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recover the funds through negotiation, C.M. Barber, another ISG
director, wrote to Pappalardo:
John, you seem to be testing our resolve to
take [independent] action. How do we respond?
. . . We can prepare a comprehensive complaint
to the Massachusetts State Bar with respect to
your treatment of us as third parties,
particularly in the circumstances of the Power
of Attorney.
(emphasis added). These acknowledgments that Pappalardo did not
represent ISG were consistent with Pappalardo's advisement to ISG
on at least two occasions that he represented COB alone. Following
Pappalardo's first meeting with ISG, he wrote to Clark on August
20, 1999:
As you know, I am counsel along with others,
for Societè Bank House ("C.O.B.") and
represent that entity and its employees in
connection with certain matters arising from
their relationship with Swan Trust and its
successors.
Three months later, Pappalardo began a letter to ISG's Barber with
a similar notification: "I am writing to you at the request of my
client, Corporation of the BankHouse, Incorporated ('COB') in
connection with the recovery of funds from the transactions
involving the Swan Trust."
In addition, there is no evidence that ISG requested
legal advice from Pappalardo respecting ISG's potential individual
claims.8 Such a request would have raised a serious ethical
8
There is evidence that ISG asked Pappalardo on several
occasions about the status of COB's potential civil claims to
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dilemma for Pappalardo, as one of ISG's foremost claims would have
been against COB, Pappalardo's client. Indeed, in a March 23,
2000, letter to COB, ISG's Clark acknowledged that ISG did not have
an attorney-client relationship with COB's attorneys, and therefore
prodded COB to consult with its own attorneys regarding the
prospects for a COB civil suit:
[W]e are of the view that the urgent
instigation of civil proceedings against
Swan Trust, May Davis and others is now a
priority. May we seek your consultation
with your civil attorneys as to the process
and timing of implementing same. It is our
view that there will be economies in process
and costs through the various investors
and/or their fiduciary proceeding in concert
and together with Corporation of the
BankHouse ("CoB") in its separate function
as fiduciary to such parties. There would
be a requirement for all such parties to be
privy to the benefits of a client
relationship with your appointed attorneys.
(emphasis added). Though ISG here proposed a joint representation
of all the investors by COB's attorneys, there is no evidence or
recover the funds, including an August 16, 2001, letter from ISG to
Pappalardo. However, ISG asking COB's attorney about potential COB
claims is quite different from ISG seeking legal advice from
Pappalardo regarding its own potential claims, and is not
sufficient to satisfy prong one of DeVaux. Further, even if such
a request for information might in some circumstances satisfy prong
one, the record shows, and ISG concedes, that Pappalardo never
provided ISG with the information it sought regarding COB's
potential civil claims. Therefore, the third prong of DeVaux --
the provision of the requested legal services -- would not be
satisfied, and no implied relationship could be said to have
arisen.
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even allegation that COB responded to this proposal or took any
action to implement it.
In sum, the record indicates that ISG did not explicitly
request legal representation from Pappalardo, nor did it seek
advice regarding its own legal position vis-à-vis the entities
implicated in the fraud. Therefore, we conclude that ISG has set
forth insufficient facts to support its claim of an implied
relationship under part one of the DeVaux test.
We turn next to the third prong of the DeVaux test,9 and
ask whether Pappalardo expressly or impliedly agreed to give or
actually gave the requested advice or assistance. See DeVaux, 444
N.E.2d at 357. This prong may be satisfied if ISG reasonably
relied on Pappalardo to provide legal services, and Pappalardo,
aware of such reliance, did nothing to negate it. Id.
The reasonable reliance test captures the essence of
ISG's allegation that an implied relationship was created. ISG
argues that Pappalardo urged it not to proceed on its own, but
rather to wait for Pappalardo to orchestrate a negotiated return of
the missing funds on behalf of the "team" of investors; therefore,
the argument goes, ISG reasonably relied on Pappalardo to provide
legal services, and Pappalardo, aware of this reliance, did nothing
9
We temporarily skip prong two of DeVaux as our analysis of
prong three will shed considerable light on the outcome under prong
two. We revisit prong two at the end of this section.
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to negate the impression that he was acting as ISG's attorney.
However, the facts before us do not support this account.
The problem with ISG's allegation here is that no
evidence suggests that ISG was relying on Pappalardo to provide ISG
with legal services. Instead, all the evidence suggests that ISG
was relying on Pappalardo to recover the funds for COB, with the
expectation that ISG would be an eventual financial beneficiary of
such a recovery. Pappalardo told ISG that, in his opinion, his
negotiations were more likely to lead to a recovery of the missing
funds if ISG refrained from filing its own charges. This was a
strategic opinion from the attorney of a potential adversary, which
ISG was free to accept at face value, ignore, or seek legal advice
regarding. ISG chose to forego its own action, expecting to
benefit financially from a successful COB recovery. However, ISG's
anticipated financial benefit does not transform Pappalardo's legal
work on behalf of COB into a duty to ISG. Nor does ISG's
expectation of an eventual financial recovery support the notion
that it was reasonable for ISG to rely on Pappalardo for legal
services.
This situation is analogous to one the SJC confronted in
Spinner v. Nutt, 417 Mass. 549, 631 N.E.2d 542 (1994). There,
trust beneficiaries brought suit against the attorneys for the
estate's trustees. The SJC found no duty of care as between the
estate's attorneys and the estate's beneficiaries: "The fact that
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third parties are thus benefitted, or damaged, by the attorney's
performance does not give rise to a duty by the attorney to such
third parties, and hence cannot be the basis for a cause of action
by the third parties for the attorney's negligence." Id. at 546
(quoting Goldberg v. Frye, 266 Cal. Rptr. 483, 489 (Cal. Ct. App.
1990)). The SJC concluded that, "In these cases the third parties
are incidental beneficiaries, and '[a]n incidental benefit does not
suffice to impose a duty upon the attorney.'" Id. (quoting Ronald
E. Mallen and Jeffrey M. Smith, 1 Legal Malpractice § 7.11 (3d ed.
1989)).
Similarly here, where ISG relied on Pappalardo to recover
the missing money on behalf of COB, rather than to provide ISG
directly with legal counsel, ISG put itself in the position of an
incidental third-party financial beneficiary, and therefore no
implied attorney-client relationship was established. ISG relied
on Pappalardo only to recover the missing funds for COB, not to
provide ISG with legal services.
Furthermore, assuming arguendo that ISG did rely on
Pappalardo to provide direct legal services, no reasonable
factfinder could conclude that ISG's reliance in this regard was
reasonable. ISG attempts to rebut this conclusion by pointing to
several pieces of evidence, including three statements made by
Pappalardo. ISG notes that: (1) Pappalardo sent ISG an "action
plan" for recovery of the funds which noted that he "represent[ed]
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the team," comprised of the investors and COB; (2) Pappalardo told
ISG that COB and ISG's interests were "one and the same"; and (3)
Pappalardo told ISG that he was preparing a civil suit against the
fraudulent parties "to protect [ISG's] interest."
However, these comments must be analyzed in the broader
context of the parties' course of dealing. As discussed above,
Pappalardo had told ISG on several occasions that he represented
COB alone, and ISG made several statements which indicated its
understanding of this arrangement. Also, ISG had chosen to
forebear in bringing its own legal action, hoping instead that
Pappalardo's negotiations on behalf of COB would succeed, resulting
in an eventual financial benefit to ISG. Finally, ISG was aware of
its ability to bring suit against COB and Pomeroy, and reminded
Pappalardo and COB of this fact on several occasions.
Evaluating the three statements cited by ISG in this
larger context, we conclude that ISG's alleged reliance was not
reasonable. First, Pappalardo's statement in the "action plan"
that he represented the investors as a team simply reflected the
reality that ISG had chosen to coordinate its strategy with COB by
deferring individual action in favor of Pappalardo's efforts to
recover the funds for COB. Pappalardo's statement that he
represented the team is even less problematic than that made by the
attorney in Sheinkopf, who told an investor that "other clients of
[the firm]" were also investing in the attorney's venture. 927
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F.2d at 1265. We were unpersuaded in Sheinkopf that that statement
was a reasonable basis for an implied relationship. In this case,
Pappalardo's statement accurately reflected a choice made by ISG to
forebear in favor of Pappalardo's efforts on COB's behalf.
Second, Pappalardo's statement that the interests of his
client and ISG were one and the same also did not form a reasonable
basis for ISG's reliance on Pappalardo for legal services. As
discussed above, ISG had threatened to sue COB and Pomeroy on
several occasions, indicating that it was well aware that their
interests were not fully aligned.
Third, when read in the context of the entire letter,
Pappalardo's statement that he was preparing a civil suit on behalf
of COB in order to "protect [ISG's] interest" also does not provide
a reasonable basis for ISG's reliance. ISG highlights just one
sentence in the October 22, 1999, letter from Pappalardo to ISG:
"To also protect your interest and as part of pursuing our position
for collection, COB has been preparing its own civil fraud case
against the US based parties." It is a sign of the tenuousness of
ISG's claim that the sentence it chose to highlight contains a
clear statement by Pappalardo that the civil suit would be brought
solely on behalf of his client, COB. Further, because ISG knew
that the suit would be brought on behalf of COB alone, it is clear
that the "interest" that Pappalardo referred to was simply ISG's
recovery of its investment funds as an incidental beneficiary of
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the lawsuit. This is particularly so given that the same letter
began, "I am writing to you at the request of my client,
Corporation of the BankHouse Incorporated ("COB") . . ." and the
second paragraph stated:
As our client is bound by confidentiality
agreements, I am reluctant to share specifics
of the details or process, for fear of
jeopardizing the sensitive arrangements
involved or breaching specific confidentiality
agreements that are integral to the matters
involved. However, I want to provide you with
an understanding of the actions that are being
taken on behalf of COB.
(emphasis added).
ISG also points to the power of attorney and accompanying
"side letter" as grounds for its alleged reasonable reliance on
Pappalardo for legal services. As discussed above, the power of
attorney granted to Pappalardo the limited agency right to transfer
any recovered ISG funds to an interest-bearing escrow account. The
"side letter" was drafted by ISG and given to Pappalardo along with
the signed power of attorney. It read:
The Directors of ISG seek to . . . clarify . .
. that the captioned Power of Attorney is
given to [ESCM and Pappalardo] upon the
understanding that it will be actioned by the
attorney with the utmost good faith and due
care having regard to the interests of ISG.
The "side letter" simply reiterated the duty of care that
accompanies any agency relationship and did not expand the very
limited grant of authority contained in the power of attorney. No
reasonable factfinder could conclude that ISG, a sophisticated
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entity, was reasonable to rely on Pappalardo to provide broad legal
services simply because it appointed him attorney-in-fact for the
limited purpose of transferring funds. Indeed, in an August 2001
letter to Pappalardo, ISG acknowledged that it remained a nonclient
third party even after the power of attorney was signed.10
Therefore, we hold that ISG's claim fails the third prong
of DeVaux because ISG did not rely on Pappalardo for legal
services, but merely for incidental financial benefit. Further, we
conclude that even if ISG did rely on Pappalardo for legal
services, such reliance was not reasonable given the parties'
course of dealings.
We also briefly note that these conclusions are fatal to
ISG's claim under prong two of DeVaux, which requires the plaintiff
to have sought advice or assistance on a matter within the
attorney's professional legal competence. See DeVaux, 444 N.E.2d
at 357. As we noted in Sheinkopf, attorneys "routinely wear a
multitude of hats," 927 F.2d at 1265, and mere interaction with an
attorney for assistance of any kind is not enough under DeVaux.
The assistance sought must be legal in nature. The facts here show
that ISG relied on Pappalardo only for a financial benefit. ISG
10
In the August 15, 2001, letter, ISG threatened to file ethics
charges against Pappalardo for his "treatment of [ISG] as third
parties, particularly in the circumstances of the Power of
Attorney."
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having failed all three prongs of the DeVaux test, we conclude that
no implied attorney-client relationship was created.
2. Foreseeable Reliance Exception for Nonclients
Generally, under Massachusetts law, an attorney only owes
a duty of care to clients. See One Nat'l Bank v. Antonellis, 80
F.3d 606, 609 (1st Cir. 1996) ("'[A]n attorney's liability for
negligence arises out of a duty owed to a client.'") (quoting
Norman v. Brown, Todd & Heyburn, 693 F.Supp. 1259, 1265 (D. Mass.
1988)). However, Massachusetts courts have carved out a limited
"foreseeable reliance" exception to this rule, which creates a duty
to nonclients where the attorney knew, or should have reasonably
foreseen, that the nonclient would rely on his services. See
Antonellis, 80 F.3d at 609; Sheinkopf, 927 F.2d at 1268.
Nonetheless, this duty will not be imposed if "such an independent
duty would potentially conflict with the duty the attorney owes to
his or her client." Antonellis, 80 F.3d at 609 (quoting Lamare v.
Basbanes, 418 Mass. 274, 636 N.E.2d 218, 219 (1994)).
ISG invokes this nonclient exception to no avail, for the
simple reason that ISG and COB were potentially adverse parties.
Imposing on Pappalardo a duty to ISG would create a potential
conflict with Pappalardo's preexisting duty to COB, his client.
See id. ("Massachusetts and federal case law has consistently found
that a potential conflict between an attorney's duty to his or her
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client and the alleged duty to the nonclient is sufficient to
defeat the nonclient's malpractice claim.").
ISG and COB were potentially adverse parties since ISG
invested in COB's scheme. ISG became aware of an actual conflict
with COB when it began investigating the fraudulent transfers in
early 1999. In a letter to COB sent in early 1999, before
Pappalardo was hired, ISG bitterly complained that COB was not
keeping ISG apprised of its account positions, and threatened to
pursue legal actions if COB "had been in any way misleading or
inaccurate" regarding the funds:
You seem to be under the mistaken impression
that I am posturing with respect to the need
for ISG to consider it's [sic] legal options.
I should clarify perhaps that [ISG directors]
could well be taken to task with regard to our
failure to take local state legal advice.
Given this very real conflict between ISG and COB, we decline to
impose on Pappalardo a duty to ISG as a nonclient.
Therefore, because we have determined that no reasonable
factfinder could conclude that an attorney-client relationship was
created, either expressly or by implication, and that no duty of
care was owed to ISG as a nonclient, we conclude that summary
judgment was appropriate as to the five counts11 predicated upon the
existence of such a duty.
11
See supra, Part II.B.
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C. The Remaining Claims
Two claims remain -- conversion, and aiding and abetting
fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, both brought against ESCM
alone. ISG bases these claims on COB's unauthorized transfer of
$821,500 of ISG's investment to an ESCM account on May 29, 1998.
Both claims against ESCM sound in tort, see Gallagher v. R.E.
Cunniff, Inc., 314 Mass. 7, 49 N.E.2d 448, 449 (1943) (conversion);
Arcidi v. Nat'l Ass'n of Gov't Employees, Inc., 447 Mass. 616, 856
N.E.2d 167, 173 (2006) (aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary
duty), meaning the claims are subject to a three-year statute of
limitations, see Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, § 2A ("Except as
otherwise provided, actions of tort, actions of contract to recover
for personal injuries, and actions of replevin, shall be commenced
only within three years next after the cause of action accrues.").
Massachusetts courts have said that a tort claim accrues
when the plaintiff knew or should have known of the alleged injury.
See Joseph A. Fortin Constr., Inc. v. Mass. Hous. Fin. Agency, 392
Mass. 440, 466 N.E.2d 514, 516 (1984) ("[I]t is a well-settled rule
that causes of action in tort generally accrue under G.L. c. 260,
§ 2A, at the time the plaintiff is injured."); Hendrickson v.
Sears, 365 Mass. 83, 310 N.E.2d 131, 135 (1974) ("[A] cause of
action accrues on the happening of an event likely to put the
plaintiff on notice.").
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The defendants assert that the limitations period began
to run in April 2000, when ISG learned of the transfer of funds to
ESCM's account.12 Citing the doctrine of continuous representation,
ISG argues that the limitations period should be equitably tolled
during the period that ISG was allegedly represented by Pappalardo.
See Murphy v. Smith, 411 Mass. 133, 579 N.E.2d 165, 167 (1991) (the
continuing representation doctrine "tolls the statute of
limitations in legal malpractice actions where the attorney in
question continues to represent the plaintiff's interests in the
matter in question"). Thus, ISG suggests that the statutory period
did not begin to run until October 2001, when ISG "disengaged
entirely from its relationship with Pappalardo and his firms."
Because we have determined that no attorney-client
relationship existed between ISG and Pappalardo, the continuous
representation doctrine clearly is not applicable here. Therefore,
ISG's claims accrued in April 2000, when it first learned of its
injury. Because more than three years elapsed between April 2000
and the filing of this action on June 30, 2004, ISG's claims were
12
It is clear from the record that ISG had actual notice of
this transfer by April 17, 2000. On that date, ISG faxed to
Pappalardo a summary of the information it had learned from a
Belgian judge who was investigating the fraudulent transfers. The
document presents a timeline of eight separate unauthorized
transfers of ISG funds by COB, including the first on the list:
"29th of May 1998: USD 821.500 to MELLON BANK, Pittsburgh, USA . .
. holder ECKERT DEMANS [sic] CHERIN & MELLOT."
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not timely filed, and the district court correctly granted summary
judgment on this basis.
D. Motion for Reconsideration or Relief from Judgment
We also affirm the district court's rejection of ISG's
motion for reconsideration or relief from judgment. ISG's motion
for reconsideration, which we review for abuse of discretion, see
Barrett v. Lombardi, 239 F.3d 23, 28 (1st Cir. 2001), consisted
only of "theories previously advanced and rejected," Palmer v.
Champion Mortgage, 465 F.3d 24, 30 (1st Cir. 2006), and arguments
unrelated to the grounds upon which we found summary judgment to be
appropriate.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons we affirm the district court's
grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants as to all of ISG's
claims. Costs to appellees.
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