UFT Commercial Finance, LLC v. Richard Fisher ( 2021 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 20‐2012
    UFT COMMERCIAL FINANCE, LLC, and JOANNE M. NOREN,
    also known as Joanne Marlowe, individually,
    Plaintiffs‐Appellants,
    v.
    RICHARD A. FISHER,
    Defendant‐Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 1:19‐CV‐07669 — Charles P. Kocoras, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED JANUARY 15, 2021 — DECIDED MARCH 23, 2021
    ____________________
    Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and WOOD and HAMILTON, Cir‐
    cuit Judges.
    HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. This is a legal malpractice case.
    Plaintiffs are a start‐up company and its founder. They have
    sued the company’s former chief legal officer, Richard Fisher,
    to recover losses from an arbitration award that held them li‐
    able for years of unpaid wages owed to Fisher himself. The
    plaintiffs’ core allegation is that they would not have been
    2                                                  No. 20‐2012
    found liable to Fisher if he had not advised them to enter into
    what they now say was an illegal agreement to defer Fisher’s
    own compensation until the company was able to secure more
    funding. The district court granted Fisher’s motion to dismiss
    for a variety of reasons that together foreclosed the plaintiffs’
    malpractice claims. On appeal, the plaintiffs challenge only
    two of the district court’s reasons. We affirm. Even if the plain‐
    tiffs were correct on both issues, their claims still could not
    survive the motion to dismiss.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    Since this appeal is from a grant of a motion to dismiss for
    failure to state a claim, we present the following facts as they
    are pled in the complaint. Plaintiff UFT is a commercial fi‐
    nance company founded by plaintiff Joanne Marlowe in 2008.
    Defendant Richard Fisher worked as a consultant with UFT
    from February 2013 to September 2013 and then became em‐
    ployed by UFT as its chief legal officer in October 2013.
    Throughout his employment, Fisher was the sole source of
    legal counsel to UFT and Marlowe regarding the company’s
    operations. Among other duties, Fisher drafted the employ‐
    ment agreements between UFT and its employees, including
    both Marlowe’s and his own. These employment agreements
    included mandatory arbitration clauses.
    During Fisher’s time at UFT, the company’s revenues were
    inconsistent, coming in “fits and starts,” so that the company
    failed to pay Marlowe, Fisher, and all other employees their
    agreed salaries when they were due. Fisher and other employ‐
    ees continued to work at the company because they believed
    in its potential. Still, at various times, Fisher recommended
    and drafted “supplemental agreements” allowing for the
    No. 20‐2012                                                   3
    accrual of wages owed to various employees who could not
    be paid on schedule due to UFT’s revenue patterns. Following
    Fisher’s advice, even Marlowe herself entered into one of
    these supplemental agreements with UFT in 2014. And Fisher
    signed one in January 2016. Fisher’s supplemental agreement
    said he was owed $330,000, which was to “be paid in full from
    any subsequent first closing of any permanent equity/debt
    placement by [UFT] in an amount greater than US $1,000,000,
    if not paid earlier from any other source.” Fisher did not ad‐
    vise UFT to consult independent counsel when negotiating
    his own supplemental and employment agreements. Plain‐
    tiffs also allege that when UFT was considering buying Direc‐
    tors and Officers (D&O) liability insurance in 2014, Fisher ad‐
    vised Marlowe against it and did not fully inform Marlowe or
    UFT of the liability protections afforded by D&O insurance.
    In August 2016, Fisher left UFT on bad terms after negoti‐
    ations with Marlowe over his contract renewal broke down.
    In January 2018, to recover his unpaid wages from his years
    at UFT, Fisher demanded arbitration before the American Ar‐
    bitration Association. On January 2, 2019, an arbitrator found
    that Fisher’s wages had been illegally withheld throughout
    his employment because the Illinois Wage Payment and Col‐
    lection Act, 820 ILCS 115/1 et seq., “imposes strict time limits
    on when wages … must be paid.” Dkt. 7‐1, 8. The arbitrator
    held UFT and Marlowe jointly and severally liable to Fisher
    for unpaid wages and statutory penalties totaling $864,976.
    The arbitrator also held UFT liable for an additional $366,460
    because Fisher did not receive written notice of his contract
    nonrenewal, which entitled Fisher to be paid for another
    three‐year contract term, whether earned or not.
    4                                                             No. 20‐2012
    Plaintiffs have not paid the arbitration award. Instead, in
    an attempt to avoid these losses, the plaintiffs now point the
    finger back at Fisher in this highly unusual lawsuit. Plaintiffs
    sued Fisher in an Illinois state court alleging that Fisher’s own
    legal malpractice caused them to take the actions that trig‐
    gered their liability to him under the arbitration award. More
    specifically, the plaintiffs allege that Fisher negligently failed
    to advise them on (1) the legality and consequences of their
    employment and supplemental agreements, and the manda‐
    tory arbitration clauses therein; (2) Fisher’s conflict of interest
    in executing his own supplemental agreement; (3) the benefits
    of independent counsel when negotiating Fisher’s own agree‐
    ments; and (4) the benefits of purchasing D&O insurance.1
    1 It is rare but not completely unprecedented for an employer to sue
    its own employee for negligent acts taken within the scope of his employ‐
    ment. See Withhart v. Otto Candies, LLC, 
    431 F.3d 840
    , 845 (5th Cir.
    2005) (maritime shipping employer allowed to sue employee for negli‐
    gently causing property damage); Nordgren v. Burlington N. R.R., 
    101 F.3d 1246
    , 1253 (8th Cir. 1996) (Federal Employers Liability Act did not
    preempt railroad’s state‐law counterclaims against employees for prop‐
    erty damage); Stack v. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pac. R.R., 
    615 P.2d 457
    ,
    459 (Wash. 1980) (railroad had common‐law right to sue employees for
    property damage); see generally Restatement of Employment Law § 8.01
    (Am. L. Inst. 2015). The economics of such claims are rarely promising
    (apart from counterclaims), and state laws often require employers to in‐
    demnify employees for damages caused on the job even when the em‐
    ployee acted negligently. See, e.g., 
    Cal. Labor Code § 2802
    (a) (“An em‐
    ployer shall indemnify his or her employee for all necessary expenditures
    or losses incurred by the employee in direct consequence of the discharge
    of his or her duties, or of his or her obedience to the directions of the em‐
    ployer, even though unlawful, unless the employee, at the time of obeying
    the directions, believed them to be unlawful.”).
    Illinois’ employee indemnification law, however, first took effect in
    2019 and does not cover negligent activity—meaning that the plaintiffs in
    No. 20‐2012                                                                   5
    Fisher removed the case to federal court under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1441
    (b) based on diversity of citizenship. (Fisher is a Geor‐
    gia citizen; plaintiffs are Illinois citizens.) The district court
    granted Fisher’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, finding that:
    (1) any malpractice related to Fisher’s original employment
    agreement was barred by Illinois’ statute of repose; (2) Fisher
    owed no duty to plaintiff Marlowe because he formed no at‐
    torney‐client relationship with her individually; (3) plaintiffs
    did not sufficiently plead that Fisher’s legal advice proxi‐
    mately caused them to use the supplemental agreements, re‐
    fuse independent counsel, or forgo D&O insurance; and (4)
    plaintiffs have not alleged any damages stemming from con‐
    tracts with any employees other than Fisher. See UFT Com‐
    mercial Finance, LLC v. Fisher, 
    2020 WL 2513097
     (N.D. Ill. May
    15, 2020). Together, these findings foreclosed all of plaintiffs’
    malpractice claims.
    this case still have an incentive to sue Fisher for malpractice. See 820 ILCS
    115/9.5(a) (2019) (“An employer shall reimburse an employee for all nec‐
    essary expenditures or losses incurred by the employee within the em‐
    ployee’s scope of employment …. An employer is not responsible for losses
    due to an employeeʹs own negligence….”) (emphasis added). Thus, depend‐
    ing on state law and private agreements, it is at least possible for in‐house
    counsel to face malpractice claims brought by their employers. See, e.g.,
    Kaye v. Rosefielde, 
    432 N.J. Super. 421
    , 478–83 (App. Div. 2013) (allowing
    malpractice claim by employer against its general counsel), revʹd on other
    grounds, 
    223 N.J. 218
     (2015). In fact, insurance companies offer “Employed
    Lawyers” liability policies that cover such situations. See, e.g., Chubb In‐
    surance        Co.,      Employed       Lawyers      Professional     Liability,
    https://www.chubb.com/us‐en/business‐insurance/employed‐lawyers‐
    professional‐liability.html (covering in‐house counsel’s “Defense of
    claims brought by the organization”).
    6                                                     No. 20‐2012
    II. Discussion
    Plaintiffs’ appeal targets only two of the district court’s
    findings. First, plaintiffs argue that Fisher owed a duty to
    Marlowe, both as an individual client and as an intended ben‐
    eficiary of his services to UFT. Second, plaintiffs argue that
    they did not need to plead proximate cause as to the supple‐
    mental agreements because Fisher’s advice to use such agree‐
    ments was “in itself improper.” See Metrick v. Chatz, 
    266 Ill. App. 3d 649
    , 654–55, 639 N.E2d 198, 202 (1994). Even if the
    plaintiffs were correct on both issues, their claims still fail.
    A. Duty to Marlowe
    We review de novo, meaning without deference, the dis‐
    trict court’s dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), accepting the plain‐
    tiffs’ factual allegations as true and asking only whether they
    present “a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Bell At‐
    lantic Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 570 (2007). In this diver‐
    sity case, Illinois’ substantive law governing legal malpractice
    applies. Great West Cas. Co. v. Robbins, 
    833 F.3d 711
    , 715 (7th
    Cir. 2016), citing Erie R.R. v. Tompkins, 
    304 U.S. 64
    , 78 (1938).
    The elements of legal malpractice in Illinois are “(1) the
    existence of an attorney‐client relationship that establishes a
    duty on the part of the attorney; (2) a negligent act or omission
    constituting a breach of that duty; (3) proximate cause; and (4)
    damages.” TIG Ins. Co. v. Giffin Winning Cohen & Bodewes, P.C.,
    
    444 F.3d 587
    , 590–91 (7th Cir. 2006), citing Lopez v. Clifford Law
    Offices, 
    362 Ill. App. 3d 969
    , 974–75, 
    841 N.E.2d 465
    , 470–71
    (2005) (collecting Illinois cases). The client’s reasonable belief
    rather than the attorney’s words or actions ultimately controls
    whether an attorney‐client relationship has been formed. See
    Morris v. Margulis, 
    307 Ill. App. 3d 1024
    , 1037, 
    718 N.E.2d 709
    ,
    No. 20‐2012                                                         7
    719 (1999), rev’d on other grounds, 
    197 Ill. 2d 28
    , 
    754 N.E.2d 314
    (2001); Restatement (Third) of the Law Governing Lawyers
    § 14 (Am. L. Inst. 2000). An attorney’s duty normally extends
    only to the client, but “if a nonclient is an intended third‐party
    beneficiary of the relationship between the client and the at‐
    torney, the attorney’s duty to the client may extend to the non‐
    client as well.” In re Estate of Powell, 
    12 N.E.3d 14
    , 20 (Ill. 2014).
    The third party “must prove that the primary purpose and
    intent of the attorney‐client relationship itself was to benefit
    or influence the third party.” 
    Id.,
     quoting Pelham v. Gries‐
    heimer, 
    92 Ill. 2d 13
    , 21, 
    440 N.E.2d 96
    , 100 (1982).
    Plaintiffs argue that Marlowe was in fact Fisher’s client on
    certain matters where he advised her personally and that he
    otherwise owed her a duty as an intended beneficiary of his
    attorney‐client relationship with the company, UFT. Plaintiffs
    argue that Marlowe reasonably believed that Fisher was her
    lawyer when he personally drafted and advised her on her
    own supplemental agreement with UFT and when he advised
    her to forgo D&O insurance. Plaintiffs further claim that
    Fisher owed Marlowe a duty when drafting his own supple‐
    mental agreement with UFT because Marlowe was the in‐
    tended third‐party beneficiary of Fisher’s agreement.
    Even if we assume for purposes of argument that Marlowe
    was Fisher’s client regarding her own supplemental agree‐
    ment and the D&O insurance decision, plaintiffs have failed
    to plead any plausible malpractice claims arising from those
    matters. On appeal, the plaintiffs have not challenged the dis‐
    trict court’s separate finding that the complaint failed to plead
    that forgoing D&O insurance proximately caused any loss
    from the arbitration award. See UFT Commercial Finance, 
    2020 WL 2513097
    , at *7 (“Plaintiffs have failed to plead proximate
    8                                                     No. 20‐2012
    cause with regards to … D&O Insurance….”). Plaintiffs also
    do not challenge the finding that, since the arbitration con‐
    cerned only Fisher’s unpaid wages, the complaint does not
    plead any damages from UFT’s agreements with other em‐
    ployees, including Marlowe. Thus, even if we assumed that
    Marlowe was a client with respect to her own agreements
    with UFT and the D&O insurance decision, the district court’s
    other unchallenged findings on proximate cause and dam‐
    ages foreclose any viable malpractice claims arising from
    those matters. As to plaintiffs’ argument that Marlowe was an
    intended beneficiary of Fisher’s supplemental agreement, we
    explain next why, even if that were true, plaintiffs’ claims re‐
    garding Fisher’s agreement still fail.
    B. Proximate Causation Regarding Supplemental Agreements
    The plaintiffs’ second challenge on appeal is that the dis‐
    trict court erred in finding that the complaint failed to plead
    proximate causation as to Fisher’s supplemental agreement.
    The district court found that proximate causation had not
    been pled because “Plaintiffs do not allege that they would
    have opted against using the supplemental agreements …
    had Fisher fully advised them.” UFT Commercial Finance, 
    2020 WL 2513097
    , at *7. Plaintiffs say they did not need to plead
    causation as to the supplemental agreements because, under
    Illinois law, causation is assumed if the attorney’s recom‐
    mended conduct is itself illegal. See Metrick, 266 Ill. App. 3d
    at 655, 639 N.E.2d at 202 (“[T]o establish the element of prox‐
    imate cause, it is necessary for the client to both plead and
    prove that had the undisclosed risk been known, he or she
    would not have accepted the risk …. Such is not the case, how‐
    ever, when the course of action the attorney recommends is in itself
    improper under the circumstances presented.”) (emphasis added).
    No. 20‐2012                                                      9
    But even if the plaintiffs are right about this legal rule, it could
    help them only if Fisher in fact recommended illegal conduct.
    He did not, and the arbitrator’s ruling puts that point beyond
    reasonable factual dispute. We may consider the arbitrator’s
    ruling on a motion to dismiss because it is so central to the
    complaint. E.g., Williamson v. Curran, 
    714 F.3d 432
    , 435–36 (7th
    Cir. 2013) (collecting cases and affirming dismissal based on
    such documents); Bogie v. Rosenberg, 
    705 F.3d 603
    , 608–09 (7th
    Cir. 2013) (same).
    The plaintiffs contend that causation should be assumed
    with respect to Fisher’s supplemental agreement because the
    arbitrator found it was an illegal “deferred compensation
    agreement” (DCA) under the Illinois Wage Payment and Col‐
    lection Act. According to the plaintiffs, the agreement was il‐
    legal because Fisher disclaimed his right to payment until the
    company received more funding, which violated the Act’s
    prohibition against “any release or restrictive endorsement
    required by an employer as a condition to payment,” 820 ILCS
    115/9. Plaintiffs also say that’s how the arbitrator read the
    agreement.
    Plaintiffs misread both the agreement and the arbitrator’s
    award. The arbitrator most definitely did not find that Fisher’s
    supplemental agreement was an illegal deferred compensa‐
    tion agreement. On the contrary, he explicitly rejected that ar‐
    gument. He found that the intent and effect of the agreement
    were merely to confirm UFT’s accrued payment obligation to
    Fisher:
    Both Respondents admit that Fisher is due un‐
    paid wages for the time he performed services
    for UFT. However, they vigorously contend that
    by executing the DCA [Deferred Compensation
    10                                                 No. 20‐2012
    Agreement], Fisher agreed that the sole source of
    payment for his 2014 and 2015 wages was to be
    an infusion of outside capital.… There are sev‐
    eral problems with this argument.
    The document, itself, supported by Fisher’s tes‐
    timony, shows from its title and subtitle that
    Fisher’s purpose in creating it was to confirm
    the amount of wages he was owed for 2014 and
    2015. The DCA records the parties’ agreement
    that UFT owed him $330,000 for those years.
    The DCA further says that it was “… an ac‐
    knowledgment of a payment obligation … and
    constitutes an agreement as to the total amount
    due to the Employee as of December 31, 2015”
    and further, that it does not affect Fisher’s other
    rights under the EA. Nothing in the document
    suggests that it was intended by the parties to
    be an amendment to the [original Employment
    Agreement]. Also, by its clear language, the
    DCA contemplated that Fisher’s compensation
    could be “... earlier paid from any other source.”
    Dkt. 7‐1, 10–11 (emphasis in original).
    Fisher argues that this finding by the arbitrator deserves
    issue‐preclusive effect. That is unlikely because arbitration
    awards are not required by statute to have issue‐preclusive
    effect in federal courts, Kremer v. Chem. Const. Corp., 
    456 U.S. 461
    , 477 (1982), and the Supreme Court has often denied the
    need to judicially fashion rules to that effect. See McDonald v.
    City of West Branch, 
    466 U.S. 284
    , 288–89 (1984) (in § 1983 ac‐
    tion, federal courts should not afford claim‐ or issue‐preclu‐
    sive effect to arbitration award), citing Alexander v. Gardner–
    No. 20‐2012                                                    11
    Denver Co., 
    415 U.S. 36
    , 55–56 (1974) (same for Title VII action),
    and Barrentine v. Arkansas–Best Freight System, Inc., 
    450 U.S. 728
    , 745–46 (1981) (same for Fair Labor Standards Act claims).
    With or without issue preclusion, the arbitrator was
    clearly correct on the merits. UFT violated the Act by failing
    to pay Fisher as agreed. The supplemental agreement did not
    aggravate or add to those violations. It merely memorialized
    the parties’ agreement as to how much the company owed
    him and the company’s commitment to pay him from any
    new capital it could raise in an amount over $1 million. When
    the parties entered into the supplemental agreement, Fisher
    presumably had a slam‐dunk case under the Act but no po‐
    tential defendant that he was willing to sue and that would
    have been in a position to pay a judgment. The agreement
    makes sense as an interim measure to forestall litigation by
    acknowledging the obligation and committing the company
    to one way to satisfy it, if it could raise new capital.
    The agreement did not disclaim any right to payment. It
    said instead that Fisher still could and should be “earlier paid
    from any other source.” And the title of the agreement—
    “Compensation Owed Richard Fisher (‘Employee’) for 2014‐
    2015 under Employment Agreement dated October 1, 2013”—
    helps to confirm that its purpose was to confirm the accrued
    amount owed to Fisher.
    As a result, we reject the plaintiffs’ assertion that proxi‐
    mate cause can be assumed with respect to this agreement.
    Rather, the plaintiffs needed to plead facts plausibly showing
    that, if Fisher had not recommended the supplemental agree‐
    ments, the plaintiffs would have taken a different course of
    action that would have avoided their liability to Fisher. The
    district court correctly found that the plaintiffs did not plead
    12                                                 No. 20‐2012
    such facts. For instance, the plaintiffs have not pled that with‐
    out the supplemental agreements they would have timely
    paid Fisher’s wages during his employment or that they
    would have fired him to prevent the accumulation of his
    wages. The plaintiffs have thus failed to plead causation as to
    the supplemental agreements. Plaintiffs also have not chal‐
    lenged the court’s similar findings as to the D&O and inde‐
    pendent counsel decisions. So the district court’s proximate
    causation analysis remains unscathed: “Plaintiffs have failed
    to plead proximate cause with regards to the supplemental
    agreements, D&O Insurance, and independent counsel.” UFT
    Commercial Finance, 
    2020 WL 2513097
    , at *7.
    That failing, coupled with the unchallenged findings on
    damages, forecloses all of plaintiffs’ malpractice claims re‐
    garding the supplemental agreements, the original employ‐
    ment agreements, and the D&O insurance decision. The judg‐
    ment of the district court is AFFIRMED.