Havasu Lakeshore v. Fleming ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 5/28/13; pub. order 6/18/13 (reposted 7/1/13 to clerically correct panel designation on 6/18 pub. order)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    HAVASU LAKESHORE
    INVESTMENTS, LLC, et al.,
    G047244
    Cross-Complainants and Appellants,                             (consol. with G047329)
    v.                                                        (Super. Ct. No. 30-2011-00487736)
    TERRY L. FLEMING, SR., Individually                                OPINION
    and as Trustee, etc., et al.,
    Cross-defendants and Respondents.
    Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Thierry
    Patrick Colaw, Judge. Reversed.
    Stradling Yocca Carlson & Rauth, Donald J. Hamman and Eve A.
    Brackmann for Cross-complainant and Appellant Havasu Lakeshore Investments, LLC.
    Watt Tider Haffar & Fitzegerald and Jeffrey T. Robbins for Cross-
    complainants and Appellants Jean Victor Peloquin, J. Victor Construction, Inc., and
    Capital Source Partners.
    Hartnett Law Group, Patrick M. Hartnett, and Jessica L. Jasper for Cross-
    defendant and Respondent Terry L. Fleming, Jr.
    No appearance for Cross-defendant and Respondent Terry L. Fleming, Sr.,
    Individually and as Trustee.
    The trial court disqualified a law firm from simultaneously representing a
    limited liability company, its managing member (a partnership), and the person who
    managed that partnership (who was not himself a member of the company) in a lawsuit
    against two of the company‟s minority members. The court found that the interests of the
    company and the nonmember individual potentially conflicted, and concluded the law
    firm could not jointly represent the company and the nonmember individual against the
    company‟s minority members. The court based its ruling on rule 3-310(C) of the State
    Bar Rules of Professional Conduct and Gong v. RFG Oil, Inc. (2008) 
    166 Cal.App.4th 209
    , 214-216 (Gong), both of which concern an attorney‟s duty of loyalty to
    1
    simultaneously represented clients. Because no actual conflict of interest existed
    between the company and the individual who managed the company‟s managing
    member, and there was no reasonable likelihood such a conflict would arise, we reverse
    2
    the court‟s ruling.
    3
    FACTS
    1
    All references to rules are to the State Bar Rules of Professional Conduct.
    2
    “[A]n order granting or denying a motion to disqualify an attorney is
    appealable . . . .” (Truck Ins. Exchange v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. (1992) 
    6 Cal.App.4th 1050
    , 1052, fn. 1.)
    3
    We take the facts from the pleadings in the underlying litigation (Gong,
    supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 215), declarations of the parties and their counsel, and the
    contracts between the parties.
    2
    The limited liability company — Havasu Lakeshore Investments, LLC (the
    LLC) — was formed in 2004 to acquire land and develop a recreational mobilehome park
    in the City of Lake Havasu, California. The LLC‟s managing member — Capital Source
    Partners (Peloquin‟s partnership) — is a partnership in which Jean Victor Peloquin is a
    general partner. Peloquin is also the principal of J. Victor Construction, Inc. (Peloquin‟s
    corporation), another member of the LLC. Peloquin, as an individual, is not himself a
    member of the LLC.
    The LLC, Peloquin‟s partnership, Peloquin‟s corporation, and Peloquin are
    the appellants in this appeal and the cross-complainants in the underlying litigation. The
    respondents and cross-defendants — Terry L. Fleming, Sr. (Fleming Sr.) and his son,
    Terry L. Fleming, Jr. (Fleming Jr.) — are members of the LLC, each owning a 9.26
    4
    percent interest in the LLC.
    In June 2011, Fleming Jr. sued Peloquin individually for breach of contract,
    fraud, and negligent misrepresentation. Fleming Jr. alleged he exercised his buy-out
    option under an option agreement with Peloquin to have Peloquin buy Fleming Jr.‟s
    membership interest in the LLC for an agreed upon fixed price (with interest thereon),
    but Peloquin did not comply.
    In August 2011, the LLC, Peloquin‟s partnership, Peloquin‟s corporation,
    and Peloquin filed a cross-complaint against Fleming Sr. and Fleming Jr. for, inter alia,
    breach of contract and bad faith, as well as to set aside a trustee‟s sale and cancel the
    option agreement. The law firm of Hart, King & Coldren (HKC) represented all cross-
    complainants.
    4
    Some references to “Fleming Sr.” in this opinion refer collectively to
    Fleming Sr. (individually and as a trustee) and to an entity allegedly controlled and
    managed by the Flemings and to which Fleming Sr. transferred the LLC‟s property after
    he bought it at a trustee‟s sale.
    3
    In February 2012, Fleming Sr. moved to disqualify HKC from representing
    the LLC. Fleming Sr. based his motion on an attorney‟s duty of confidentiality under
    rule 3-310(E), arguing that he, as a member of the LLC, had previously communicated
    5
    confidential information to HKC.
    In the disqualification motion, Fleming Sr. alleged that in August 2004, he
    and Fleming Jr. loaned $1.25 million to Peloquin‟s corporation. Fleming Sr. alleged that
    in November 2004, the Flemings converted the loan into a membership interest in the
    LLC. In December 2004, Peloquin entered into an option agreement with the Flemings,
    giving them an option to sell to Peloquin their membership interests in the LLC. In
    February 2009, the LLC defaulted on a bank construction loan (personally guaranteed by
    Peloquin and Peloquin‟s corporation) and the mobilehome park went into foreclosure.
    “At the instruction . . . of, and with the full knowledge and agreement of” cross-
    complainants, Fleming Sr. negotiated with the lender bank to buy the construction note.
    In May 2010, a notice of trustee‟s sale was recorded. In June 2010, Fleming Sr. bought
    the mobile home park at the trustee‟s sale.
    Fleming Sr. supported these allegations with his declaration and that of his
    counsel. In addition, Fleming Sr. declared HKC represented the LLC in all or most of its
    dealings. He further declared, “On numerous occasions prior to the Trustee‟s Sale . . . , I
    discussed numerous legal matters with [HKC] with regard to [the LLC] and my
    membership interest in the same. [¶] At no time did I ever waive any attorney-client
    privilege as an owner of [the LLC] nor at anytime did [HKC] ask my permission to
    represent [the LLC] against myself . . . .”
    5
    On appeal, only Fleming Jr. has filed a respondent‟s brief, even though he
    admittedly did not join in Fleming Sr.‟s disqualification motion below. Appellants
    question Fleming Jr.‟s standing to file a respondent‟s brief, but raise this issue in their
    reply brief; therefore, we do not address it. (Kahn v. Wilson (1898) 
    120 Cal. 643
    , 644.)
    4
    Peloquin and the LLC opposed Fleming Sr.‟s disqualification motion.
    They argued that HKC did not represent the LLC “during the Flemings‟ actions that gave
    rise to the liability asserted in the Cross-Complaint” and that “HKC never represented
    Fleming Sr. and never received confidential information from Fleming Sr.” Peloquin and
    the LLC asserted that, prior to the cross-complaint, HKC “represented Peloquin in
    relation to [the LLC] regarding only mobilehome park operational matters, none of which
    involved either Fleming Sr. or Jr.” These matters pertained to lease agreements and
    community guidelines for the mobilehome park, its possible conversion to resident
    ownership, and rent defaults and security interests in the mobilehomes — matters which
    “required no information, and none was provided, concerning the members or internal
    operations of [the LLC], and in particular required no information and none was provided
    concerning Fleming Sr. or Jr.” HKC represented Peloquin after Fleming Sr. bought the
    construction loan from the lender bank. “At that time Fleming Sr. was represented by
    separate counsel, Paul Bojic, who is [Fleming Sr.‟s] counsel in this case.”
    Peloquin supported these allegations with his declaration and that of a
    partner of HKC. Peloquin declared that Snipper, Wainer and Markoff, not HKC, was
    legal counsel for the LLC in forming the LLC and preparing its operating agreement. He
    declared that HKC did not represent the LLC until Peloquin, as a partner in Peloquins‟
    partnership (the managing member of the LLC), engaged HKC to file the cross-
    complaint.
    A partner with HKC declared he had never represented or had
    conversations with Fleming Sr., and had never reviewed confidential information
    belonging to or handled matters pertaining to Fleming Sr. (other than through Fleming
    Sr.‟s counsel). He declared that on April 23, 2010, Peloquin asked him “to address a
    situation where [Fleming Sr.] had apparently entered into a purchase agreement for the
    construction note on [the LLC‟s] property at an extreme discount without [Peloquin‟s]
    permission.” The attorney further declared that, prior to that date, HKC had no
    5
    involvement in matters relating to the option agreement and the LLC‟s operating
    agreement.
    Our review of the contracts between the parties reveals that the LLC‟s
    operating agreement states that Snipper, Wainer & Markoff drafted the operating
    agreement and represented Peloquin‟s partnership and was permitted in the future to act
    as attorney for the LLC and Peloquin‟s partnership, but not for any other member of the
    LLC “as it relates to their interest in the [LLC].” The option agreement (upon which
    Fleming Jr.‟s lawsuit is based) lists Hartnett & Hayes, LLP as counsel for the Flemings.
    In April 2012, the court requested the parties to brief the potential relevance
    of Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at pages 214-216 to Fleming Sr.‟s motion for
    disqualification of HKC as counsel for the LLC.
    In June 2012, the court granted Fleming Sr.‟s motion to disqualify HKC as
    counsel for the LLC, thus allowing HKC to continue representing Peloquin, Peloquin‟s
    6
    partnership, and Peloquin‟s corporation. The court stated HKC should not be
    representing the LLC and “non-member Peloquin” in a cross-complaint against the
    Flemings, who are members of the LLC. The court relied on rule 3.310(C) and Gong,
    supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at pp. 214-216. The court quoted Gong‟s statement, “„To resolve
    this issue, we review the pleadings to determine whether the interests of [a majority
    shareholder and a corporation] potentially or actually conflict. (Rule 3-310(C).)‟” The
    court concluded that “disqualification can be based on potentially conflicting interests.”
    The court stated “the pleadings in this case demonstrate that, at a minimum, the interests
    of [the LLC] and Peloquin as a non-member of [the LLC] are at least potentially
    conflicting.”
    6
    The court, by ruling HKC could continue to represent Peloquin, Peloquin‟s
    partnership, and Peloquin‟s corporation impliedly found HKC had not obtained
    confidential information about Fleming Sr. so as to require disqualification of HKC from
    representing cross-complainants (adversaries of Fleming Jr.) under Rule 3-310(E).
    6
    DISCUSSION
    Cross-complainants contend that neither the record nor the respondent‟s
    brief filed by Fleming Jr. reveal that an actual conflict exists to support the
    disqualification of HKC from jointly representing the LLC and Peloquin. They argue
    that Gong, supra, 
    166 Cal.App.4th 209
     stated that disqualification is unwarranted when
    the conflict is merely hypothetical.
    “„Generally, a trial court‟s decision on a disqualification motion is
    reviewed for abuse of discretion.‟” (City and County of San Francisco v. Cobra
    Solutions, Inc. (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 839
    , 848 (San Francisco).) “„When substantial
    evidence supports the trial court‟s factual findings, the appellate court reviews the
    conclusions based on those findings for abuse of discretion.‟” (Ibid.) But “„where there
    are no material disputed factual issues, the appellate court reviews the trial court‟s
    determination as a question of law.‟” (Ibid.)
    A court may disqualify an attorney upon “„a showing that disqualification
    is required under professional standards governing avoidance of conflicts of interest or
    potential adverse use of confidential information.‟” (Oaks Management Corporation v.
    Superior Court (2006) 
    145 Cal.App.4th 453
    , 462.) An attorney bears two distinct ethical
    duties to a client: (1) a duty of loyalty, whereby an attorney devotes his or her “„entire
    energies to his client‟s interests‟” (Flatt v. Superior Court (1994) 
    9 Cal.4th 275
    , 289,
    italics omitted), and (2) a duty of confidentiality, “which fosters full and open
    communication between client and counsel” (San Francisco, 
    supra,
     38 Cal.4th at p. 846).
    Fleming Sr. based his disqualification motion on HKC‟s duty of
    confidentiality, claiming HKC “received confidential information” about him that could
    be used against him in the cross-complainants‟ action. Fleming Sr. relied on rule 3-
    310(E), which prohibits an attorney from accepting, without a current or former client‟s
    7
    consent, “employment adverse to the client or former client where, by reason of the
    representation of the client or former client, the member has obtained confidential
    information material to the employment.”
    But the court granted Fleming Sr.‟s motion on the basis of HKC‟s duty of
    loyalty, citing rule 3-310(C) and Gong, supra, 
    166 Cal.App.4th 209
    . Rule 3-310(C)
    provides: “A member shall not, without the informed written consent of each client: [¶]
    (1) Accept representation of more than one client in a matter in which the interests of the
    clients potentially conflict; or [¶] (2) Accept or continue representation of more than one
    client in a matter in which the interests of the clients actually conflict; or [¶] (3)
    Represent a client in a matter and at the same time in a separate matter accept as a client a
    person or entity whose interest in the first matter is adverse to the client in the first
    matter.” In other words, with few exceptions, an attorney may not simultaneously
    represent clients (even as to unrelated matters) whose interests are adverse to one another.
    (Flatt v. Superior Court, 
    supra,
     9 Cal.4th at p. 285, fn. 4.) This is because an attorney
    has a “„duty to protect his client in every possible way, and it is a violation of that duty
    for him to assume a position adverse or antagonistic to his client without the latter‟s free
    and intelligent consent given after full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances.‟”
    (Id. at p. 289.) “A conflict of interest exists when a lawyer‟s duty on behalf of one client
    obligates the lawyer to take action prejudicial to the interests of another client; i.e.,
    „when, in behalf of one client, it is his duty to contend for that which duty to another
    client requires him to oppose.‟” (Vapnek et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Professional
    Responsibility (The Rutter Group 2012) ¶ 4:1, p. 4-1.)
    Finally, rule 3-600(E) is relevant to this case, as it permits counsel
    “representing an organization [to] also represent any of its directors, officers, employees,
    members, shareholders, or other constituents, subject to the provisions of rule 3-310.”
    Case law has established certain principles governing an attorney‟s ability ethically to
    simultaneously represent an organization and one or more of its constituents. For
    8
    example, counsel may not represent a corporation and its management when they have
    adverse, conflicting interests. (Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at p. 214.) “[O]nce a
    conflict has arisen between a corporation and one or more of its officers, directors or
    shareholders, corporate counsel may not simultaneously represent the corporation and the
    adverse officer, director or shareholder.” (La Jolla Cove Motel & Hotel Apartments, Inc.
    v. Superior Court (2004) 
    121 Cal.App.4th 773
    , 785.) “Thus, where a shareholder has
    filed an action questioning [the corporation‟s] management or the actions of individual
    officers or directors, such as in a shareholder derivative or . . . dissolution action,
    corporate counsel cannot represent both the corporation and the officers, directors or
    shareholders with which the corporation has a conflict of interest.” (Id. at pp. 785-786.)
    In addition, counsel for a corporation should “refrain from taking part in any
    controversies or factional differences among shareholders as to control of the
    corporation . . . .” (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. v. Tracinda Corp. (1995) 
    36 Cal.App.4th 1832
    , 1842, italics added.) On the other hand, a “potential conflict . . . does
    not warrant automatic disqualification of joint counsel.” (Gong, at p. 215.)
    The issue here is whether the LLC and Peloquin have adverse interests,
    either actually or potentially. Fleming Jr. asserts that an actual conflict exists between the
    interests of the LLC and Peloquin, and describes the conflict as follows: “Peloquin‟s
    counsel must defend him against the claims of breach, misrepresentation, and fraud.
    [Citations.] Counsel for [the LLC] should be focused on the propriety of the claims
    regarding the purchase and foreclosure of [the LLC‟s] property.” In other words, the
    alleged conflict is that HKC must defend Peloquin in Fleming Jr.‟s action against him,
    while simultaneously prosecuting the cross-complaint on behalf of Peloquin, the LLC,
    and the other cross-complainants. Essentially, the risk is that HKC may spread itself too
    thin, become distracted, or prioritize one matter over the other. This is not the type of
    conflict addressed by rule 3-310(C). Even if it were, Fleming Jr. lacks standing to raise
    this concern as he “cannot show any legally cognizable interest that [was] harmed by
    9
    [HKC‟s] joint representation of [the Flemings‟] adversaries.” (Great Lakes Construction,
    Inc. v. Burman (2010) 
    186 Cal.App.4th 1347
    , 1358.)
    We therefore examine the record for any substantial evidence to support the
    court‟s finding that the LLC and Peloquin had, at a minimum, a potential conflict of
    interest. In doing so, we recognize that a mere hypothetical conflict is insufficient. (Fox
    Searchlight Pictures, Inc. v. Paladino (2001) 
    89 Cal.App.4th 294
    , 302) Rather, there
    must be some identifiable potential conflict. In Carroll v. Superior Court (2002) 
    101 Cal.App.4th 1423
    , 1430, the appellate court “interpret[ed] the Rule 3-310 concept of
    potential conflict to mean, at least in the [juvenile] dependency context, a reasonable
    likelihood an actual conflict will arise.” (Italics added.) Subsequently, our Supreme
    Court approved Carroll’s interpretation in a juvenile dependency case. (In re Celine R.
    (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 45
    , 58.) Similarly, a major treatise defines a potential conflict under
    rule 3-310 to mean “a reasonably foreseeable set of circumstances which could impair
    the attorney‟s ability to fulfill his or her professional obligations to each client in the
    proposed representation.” (Vapnek et al., Cal. Practice Guide: Professional
    7
    Responsibility, supra, ¶ 4:64, p. 4-24.14, italics added.)
    We apply the foregoing definitions of a potential conflict to the three sets of
    circumstances presented by the record and Fleming Jr.‟s contentions: (1) the action on
    the cross-complaint, (2) Fleming Jr.‟s lawsuit, and (3) the Flemings‟ status as members of
    the LLC.
    7
    Absent a somewhat restrictive interpretation of the term “potential
    conflict,” potential conflicts of interest would be inherent in every case of multiple
    representation. Counsel and their clients should not be subjected to such risk and
    uncertainty. Disqualification of counsel can harm the disqualified attorney‟s client, who
    must bear the monetary and other costs of finding a replacement. (Gregori v. Bank of
    America (1989) 
    207 Cal.App.3d 291
    , 300.) Indeed, disqualification motions can be (and
    often are) misused as weapons to harass opposing counsel, delay litigation, or force
    disadvantageous settlement. (Id. at p. 301.)
    10
    With respect to the cross-complaint, there is no conflict; the LLC‟s interests
    and Peloquin‟s are clearly allied. The LLC and the other cross-complainants seek to
    recover the LLC‟s property and to restore value to the LLC. Fleming Jr., in his
    respondent‟s brief, agrees these are the LLC‟s litigation goals. These goals are beneficial
    to every member of the LLC, including the Flemings in their status as members of the
    LLC, and to Peloquin, in his status as a partner and principal in the LLC‟s other
    members.
    With respect to Fleming Jr.‟s action against Peloquin based on the option
    agreement, the LLC is not a party to the lawsuit or the option agreement. The option
    agreement obligates Peloquin (should a Fleming exercise the contractual “put”) to buy
    out Fleming‟s membership interest in the LLC at a contractually specified fixed price.
    The LLC has no beneficial right or obligation under, or duty arising from, the option
    agreement. It is a stranger to that transaction. Since the LLC has no right or duty at all
    under the option agreement, a fortiori it has no right or duty, the benefit or performance
    of which could conflict with a right, duty or obligation owed by Peloquin.
    The only remaining question is whether the LLC‟s interests conflict with
    Peloquin‟s solely because two of the LLC‟s minority members are adversaries of
    Peloquin (and coincidentally of the LLC). The trial court, in granting Fleming Sr.‟s
    disqualification motion, relied on Gong, supra, 
    166 Cal.App.4th 209
    , as does Fleming Jr.
    in his respondent‟s brief. Fleming Jr. contends he “has a vested interest in the
    independent representation of [the LLC] based on the fact that he maintains a percentage
    membership interest in [the LLC],” despite his exercise of the option to sell his interest
    under the option agreement.
    In Gong, the issue was whether the interests of a corporation conflicted
    with those of its majority shareholder (who owned 51 percent of the corporation‟s stock
    and was also its managing director) for purposes of rule 3-310(C). (Gong, supra, 166
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 212, 215.) The minority shareholder (the majority shareholder‟s
    11
    brother and a director of the corporation) owned 49 percent of the stock and sued the
    majority shareholder and the corporation (id at p. 212), seeking, inter alia, involuntary
    dissolution of the corporation and declaratory relief and specific performance of a buy-
    sell agreement (id at p. 215). The trial court severed the minority shareholder‟s claim for
    declaratory relief and ruled that the buy-sell agreement required the majority shareholder
    to buy the minority shareholder‟s shares at “„fair market value.‟” (Id. at p. 213.) The
    minority shareholder then challenged the continuing ability of a law firm to represent
    both the majority shareholder and the corporation, claiming the corporation “now had a
    significant role in the dispute between the two brothers because the buy-sell agreement
    required [the corporation] to pay for an appraiser, selected by” the majority shareholder.
    (Ibid.) The minority shareholder also asserted the majority shareholder had “dissuaded a
    potential third party from purchasing” the corporation. (Ibid.) The minority shareholder
    further alleged the majority shareholder had abused his authority and wasted corporate
    property (e.g., damaging the corporation through his personal use of corporate funds).
    (Id. at p. 216.)
    The Court of Appeal observed that “case law forbids dual representation in
    a derivative suit alleging fraud by the principals, because the principals and the
    organization have adverse, conflicting interests.” (Gong, supra, 166 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 215.) The Court of Appeal also noted that although the minority shareholder had “not
    yet filed a derivative claim seeking damages on behalf of the corporation
    (which . . . would require [joint counsel‟s] disqualification), [the minority shareholder‟s]
    complaint alleges damage to [the corporation] through [the majority shareholder‟s]
    personal use of corporate funds, and the dissolution claim threatens [the corporation‟s]
    corporate existence.” (Id. at p. 216.) In addition, the corporation had filed (through the
    majority shareholder and joint counsel for the corporation and the majority shareholder) a
    cross-complaint against the minority shareholder, which raised a concern the majority
    shareholder was using the corporation “as a pawn in his dispute with [his brother],
    12
    possibly to [the corporation‟s] detriment.” (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal concluded that
    the minority shareholder‟s “allegations and the dissolution cause of action show that the
    interests of [the majority shareholder] and [the corporation] diverge” (ibid.), thereby
    requiring the disqualification of joint counsel for the corporation and the majority
    8
    shareholder (id. at p. 212).
    The distinctions between Gong, supra, 
    166 Cal.App.4th 209
     and the case at
    hand are significant. The instant case does not involve a derivative suit (or its substantive
    equivalent) or an attempt by the Flemings to force dissolution of the LLC. The Flemings
    do not allege Peloquin mismanaged the LLC or misused the LLC‟s property or funds.
    (Indeed, it is Fleming Sr. who has apparently foreclosed on and taken from the LLC its
    primary asset.) There is no pending buy-out at a price based on the LLC‟s fair market
    9
    value (which, if mismanagement had been alleged, may have affected the value).
    Fleming Jr. cites no authority for the proposition that an attorney may never
    jointly represent an entity and its management against a non-managing minority member.
    That notion is contrary to rule 3-600(E), which expressly permits counsel to represent an
    organization and its constituents, subject to rule 3-310. In Formal Opinion No. 1999-153
    of the State Bar of California Standing Committee on Professional Responsibility and
    Conduct, the committee interpreted rules 3-310 and 3-600 to decide the following issue:
    “May a lawyer, who is not currently and has not previously represented a close
    8
    Cross-complainants suggest Gong was wrongly decided because the
    appellate court merely required the majority shareholder to hire and manage a second set
    of attorneys, while allowing him to continue to manage the corporation despite his
    alleged conflict of interest with it. Cross-complainants suggest the proper remedy for the
    majority shareholder‟s misuse of the corporation for his own personal interests was an
    appointment of a receiver for the corporation.
    9
    Fleming Jr. obliquely asserts that evidence exists of fraud and
    misappropriation by Peloquin, but provides no record references and fails to specify
    whether the alleged fraud was perpetrated against the Flemings or upon the LLC.
    13
    corporation as to the subject of a dispute, be retained to represent the corporation and
    Shareholder A, who is authorized to retain and oversee counsel for the corporation, in a
    lawsuit brought by Shareholder B, the only other shareholder of the corporation, against
    both the corporation and Shareholder A?” (Ibid.) The committee concluded: “Under the
    particular facts presented, and subject to any limitations created by any fiduciary duties of
    Shareholder A, a lawyer may ethically represent both the corporation and Shareholder A
    in the lawsuit. . . . Under the facts presented, the corporation‟s consent to the joint
    representation may be obtained from Shareholder A. Consistent with rule 3-310(C)(1),
    this joint representation is permissible only for so long as the corporation and A do not
    have opposing interests in the lawsuit which the attorney would have a duty to advance
    simultaneously for each. Additionally, the lawyer must fulfill those duties to the
    corporation described in rule 3-600.” (Ibid.) “In such circumstances, there may be
    economic and practical reasons for the Corporation and A to be represented jointly in B‟s
    lawsuit. Given the nature of the lawyer‟s duties to the corporation in this case, the
    Committee concludes there is no reason why a corporation‟s options under the facts
    presented should be any more limited than any other defendant in a similar situation.”
    (Ibid.)
    We find this reasoning to be persuasive and equally applicable to the facts
    at hand. Absent an actual conflict of interest (or the reasonable likelihood of one arising)
    between Peloquin and the LLC, HKC was ethically permitted to jointly represent all
    cross-complainants against the Flemings. Furthermore, Peloquin was authorized to
    10
    provide, on the LLC‟s behalf, its consent to multiple representation.
    Fleming Jr. points out that HKC has withdrawn from its representation of
    any party in this case and concludes cross-complainants‟ appeal is “illogical.” Whether,
    10
    Cross-complainants contend their unanimous opposition to Fleming Sr.‟s
    disqualification reveals they consented (and presumably would have done so in writing)
    to joint representation by HKC.
    14
    as Fleming Jr. postulates, cross-complainants wish to reinstate HKC as their counsel or
    desire to retain different counsel to jointly represent them, rule 3-310(C) does not bar an
    attorney from such joint representation under the current facts.
    DISPOSITION
    The court‟s order is reversed. Cross-complainants are entitled to recover
    their costs on appeal.
    IKOLA, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
    FYBEL, J.
    15
    Filed 6/18/13
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    HAVASU LAKESHORE
    INVESTMENTS, LLC, et al.,
    G047244
    Cross-Complainants and Appellants,                (consol. with G047329)
    v.                                             (Super. Ct. No. 30-2011-00487736)
    TERRY L. FLEMING, SR., Individually                   ORDER
    and as Trustee, etc., et al.,
    Cross-defendants and Respondents.
    Cross-complainant and appellant Havasu Lakeshore Investments LLC, and
    the law firms of Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton, O‟Melveny & Meyers, Wilson,
    Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati, Morrison & Forester and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher have
    requested that our opinion, filed on May 28, 2013, be certified for publication. It appears
    that our opinion meets the standards set forth in California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(c).
    The request is GRANTED.
    The opinion is ordered published in the Official Reports.
    IKOLA, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
    FYBEL, J.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G047244A

Filed Date: 7/1/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014