Commonwealth v. Delnegro ( 2017 )


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    16-P-339                                                 Appeals Court
    16-P-340
    COMMONWEALTH    vs.   DAVID DELNEGRO.
    Nos. 16-P-339 & 16-P-340.
    Hampden.      January 6, 2017. - April 12, 2017.
    Present:    Kafker, C.J., Hanlon, & Agnes, JJ.
    Practice, Criminal, Interlocutory appeal, Assistance of counsel.
    Supreme Judicial Court, Superintendence of inferior courts.
    Attorney at Law, Disqualification, Attorney as witness,
    Conflict of interest. Conflict of Interest. Witness,
    Attorney as witness. Constitutional Law, Assistance of
    counsel. Due Process of Law, Assistance of counsel.
    Complaints received and sworn to in the Springfield
    Division of the District Court Department on February 4, 2014,
    and June 8, 2015.
    Motions for disqualification of counsel, filed on April 10,
    2015, and October 15, 2015, were heard by Patricia T. Poehler,
    J., and Philip A. Contant, J., respectively.
    Kaily Hepburn for the defendant.
    Bethany C. Lynch, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    KAFKER, C.J.       The defendant, David Delnegro, seeks
    interlocutory review of orders disqualifying his attorney, Kaily
    2
    Hepburn, from representing him in two criminal cases.   Hepburn
    was the sole passenger in the defendant's vehicle when he was
    charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of
    alcohol and negligent operation.   Hepburn was also present at a
    subsequent hearing on that matter in which the defendant got
    into an altercation with court officers and was charged with
    assault and battery on a public employee, disruption of court
    proceedings, and disorderly conduct.   The defendant claims that
    Hepburn is not a necessary witness in the first case, and even
    though she is a necessary witness in the second case, that she
    can represent him in pretrial proceedings.   He also argues that
    he has consented to any conflict of interest arising from the
    representations.
    We dismiss the interlocutory appeals because the defendant
    did not petition a single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court
    for interlocutory review pursuant to G. L. c. 211, § 3, and the
    doctrine of present execution does not provide for interlocutory
    review of disqualification of counsel orders in criminal cases.
    We nonetheless consider the propriety of Hepburn's
    representation of the defendant, due to the important ethical
    considerations at stake, and conclude that she cannot represent
    him in either case at trial or any pretrial proceedings.
    Background.    The Commonwealth alleges the following facts.
    On February 4, 2014, at approximately 2:00 A.M., the defendant
    3
    was driving in an erratic manner through the streets of
    Springfield.    Hepburn was the only passenger in the vehicle.      A
    police officer stopped the vehicle and approached it.     Based on
    the defendant's "glassy and bloodshot" eyes, flushed face,
    slurred speech, and the odor of alcohol on his breath, the
    officer asked him to get out of the car.     He had difficulty
    doing so and, in the officer's opinion, performed poorly on
    field sobriety tests.     The officer then placed him under arrest.
    At this point, according to the officer, Hepburn "ran out" of
    the vehicle and "demanded" that the officer release the
    defendant, because she was an attorney.     Again, according to the
    officer, Hepburn was "extremely belligerent" and began
    "screaming obscenities" at him.
    After the defendant's arraignment on the resulting criminal
    case, Hepburn sought to represent him.     The Commonwealth moved
    to disqualify her, arguing that she had a conflict of interest
    because of her status as a percipient witness to the events
    underlying the charges.     The motion judge agreed, noting that,
    because Hepburn was the only passenger in the vehicle, she was
    the "percipient witness," and the only person "who could
    possibly rebut the testimony of the police."     The judge further
    explained:     "[The officer's] report does not cast her in a
    particularly flattering light.     Given this police report, I do
    not see how Attorney Hepburn can be loyal to the defendant and
    4
    to herself.   Any analysis by her regarding whether she is a
    necessary witness for the defendant would naturally be impacted
    by her self interest in not embarrassing herself by taking the
    witness stand and subjecting herself to cross examination.     The
    conflict lies in her divided loyalties."1
    Thereafter, at a hearing on June 8, 2015, the Commonwealth
    alleges that the defendant, representing himself, became
    aggravated with the judge.    Hepburn sat in the gallery of the
    courtroom behind the defendant.    After the judge continued the
    defendant's case, according to court officers, the defendant
    refused to leave the courtroom and began shouting about
    unrelated matters.    There was also apparently a struggle over a
    court document in the defendant's hands that Hepburn may have
    given him.    Several court officers attempted to escort him from
    the courtroom, and a physical struggle ensued.    Hepburn followed
    the officers as they removed the defendant from the courtroom,
    lobby, and courthouse, insisting that they release him and
    1
    The Commonwealth first raised the issue of the propriety
    of Hepburn's representation at a pretrial hearing on the first
    case. The judge heard arguments at sidebar and determined that
    Hepburn could represent the defendant. At a subsequent hearing,
    a different judge conducted a colloquy with the defendant to
    ensure that he understood the consequences of Hepburn's
    representation. Several weeks later, the Commonwealth filed a
    motion to disqualify Hepburn based on her conflict of interest
    and status as a necessary witness, which the defendant opposed.
    The second judge agreed with the Commonwealth and disqualified
    Hepburn from representing the defendant in the first case for
    the reasons discussed above.
    5
    attempting to record the incident.2     The defendant was eventually
    placed under arrest.
    Initially, Hepburn sought to represent the defendant in the
    case arising from the second incident.      The Commonwealth again
    moved to disqualify her, based on her presence at the hearing.
    The motion judge agreed and disqualified her from representing
    the defendant in the second case, finding that she "was not only
    a percipient witness but actively involved in the underlying
    events."
    Discussion.     1.   Notices of appeal and the doctrine of
    present execution.     The defendant's notices of appeal for both
    disqualification orders cited Mass.R.Crim.P. 15, an inapplicable
    rule related to motions to suppress.      See Mass.R.Crim.P.
    15(a)(2), as appearing in 
    422 Mass. 1501
    (1996) (defendant may
    apply to single justice of Supreme Judicial Court for leave to
    appeal order determining motion to suppress evidence).         The
    defendant also did not petition a single justice of the Supreme
    Judicial Court for interlocutory review pursuant to G. L.
    c. 211, § 3, which would have been the appropriate means to
    immediately seek review of the disqualification orders.3        Rather,
    2
    Hepburn attested that another court officer took away her
    cellular telephone, which she was using to record the incident.
    No videotape appears in the record of the incident.
    3
    G. L. c. 211, § 3, as appearing in St. 2011, c. 93, § 46,
    grants the Supreme Judicial Court the general superintendence
    6
    at a subsequent hearing and in later filings, the defendant
    relied on the doctrine of present execution to justify the
    interlocutory appeals.   We conclude that interlocutory review of
    such orders may only be permitted pursuant to G. L. c. 211, § 3,
    because the doctrine of present execution does not apply to
    disqualification orders in criminal matters, for the reasons
    explained by the United States Supreme Court in Flanagan v.
    United States, 
    465 U.S. 259
    , 264 (1984).   We therefore dismiss
    the appeals.
    Generally, "a judgment must be final to be appealable."
    Commonwealth v. Bruneau, 
    472 Mass. 510
    , 515 (2015).   This rule
    is "crucial to the efficient administration of justice," and
    serves the important interests of not burdening the parties and
    clogging the courts with costly, time-consuming piecemeal
    appeals.   
    Flanagan, supra
    . In criminal cases, the reasons for
    the final judgment rule are "especially compelling" for both the
    defense and the Commonwealth.   Ibid., quoting from Cobbledick v.
    United States, 
    309 U.S. 323
    , 324 (1940).   The Sixth Amendment to
    the United States Constitution and art. 11 of the Massachusetts
    Declaration of Rights provide criminal defendants with the right
    to a speedy trial.   See Mass.R.Crim.P. 36(b), 
    378 Mass. 909
    power to correct and prevent errors and abuses by courts of
    inferior jurisdiction "if no other remedy is expressly
    provided."
    7
    (1979).   As for the Commonwealth, "[a]s time passes, the
    prosecution's ability to meet its burden of proof may greatly
    diminish:   evidence and witnesses may disappear, and testimony
    becomes more easily impeachable as the events recounted become
    more remote."   
    Flanagan, supra
    .
    Therefore, in criminal cases, the "[Supreme] Court has
    allowed a departure [from the final judgment rule] only for the
    limited category of cases falling within the 'collateral order'
    exception."   
    Id. at 265,
    citing Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial
    Loan Corp., 
    337 U.S. 541
    , 545-547 (1949).    To fall within this
    "narrow exception," Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord, 
    449 U.S. 368
    , 374 (1981), a trial court order must, at a minimum,
    meet three conditions.    First, it must "conclusively determine
    the disputed question"; second, it must "resolve an important
    issue completely separate from the merits of the action"; and
    third, it must be "effectively unreviewable on appeal from a
    final judgment."   
    Id. at 375,
    quoting from Coopers & Lybrand v.
    Livesay, 
    437 U.S. 463
    , 468 (1978).
    The Supreme Court has concluded that a motion to disqualify
    counsel in a criminal case does not satisfy the third prong of
    this rule because it is not "effectively unreviewable on appeal
    from a final judgment."   
    Flanagan, supra
    at 266.   The reason is
    that a defendant who demonstrates on appeal that his or her
    chosen counsel was improperly disqualified has an effective
    8
    remedy:   the defendant is entitled to a new trial without a
    showing of prejudice.    See 
    id. at 268.
    "No showing of prejudice
    need be made to obtain reversal [of an erroneous
    disqualification order] because prejudice to the defense is
    presumed."   
    Ibid. This presumption "reflects
    [the]
    constitutional protection of the defendant's free choice,"
    independent of the "objective fairness" of the proceedings.
    
    Ibid. See United States
    v. Gonzalez-Lopez, 
    548 U.S. 140
    ,
    150 (2006), quoting from Sullivan v. Louisiana, 
    508 U.S. 275
    ,
    282 (1993) ("erroneous deprivation of right to counsel of choice
    'unquestionably qualifies as structural error'").
    In the present case, to support his contention that the
    motion to disqualify counsel is immediately appealable, the
    defendant relies on a line of Massachusetts civil cases applying
    the doctrine of present execution to disqualification motions.
    See, e.g., Maddocks v. Ricker, 
    403 Mass. 592
    , 598 (1988).
    Pursuant to the present execution doctrine, an order is
    "immediately appealable if it concerns an issue that is
    collateral to the basic controversy . . . and the ruling will
    interfere with rights in a way that cannot be remedied on appeal
    from the final judgment."    Rodriguez v. Somerville, 
    472 Mass. 1008
    , 1009 (2015), quoting from Shapiro v. Worcester, 
    464 Mass. 261
    , 264 (2013).
    9
    The defendant is correct that disqualification orders in
    civil cases are immediately appealable under the doctrine of
    present execution.4   See 
    Maddocks, supra
    .   See also Smaland Beach
    Assn., Inc. v. Genova, 
    461 Mass. 214
    , 219 n.10 (2012) (pretrial
    disqualification order immediately appealable in property case).
    Such orders "realistically" cannot be "cured on appeal" from the
    final judgment because, in civil cases, prejudice must be shown
    in addition to an abuse of discretion in disqualifying the
    attorney.    
    Maddocks, supra
    .   See Bryan Corp. v. Abrano, 
    474 Mass. 504
    , 509, 516 (2016).     Although, in theory, there could be
    a new trial in which the client is represented by chosen
    counsel, in practice, "it is unlikely that an appellate court
    would reverse a judgment and require a new trial in the absence
    of a demonstration, often impossible to make, that [the]
    erroneous disqualification order significantly prejudiced the
    rights of the client."    
    Maddocks, supra
    .
    Criminal cases are, however, as explained above, quite
    different.   Whereas, in civil cases, prejudice is difficult, if
    not impossible to prove, even when counsel was improperly
    disqualified, making appeal of the disqualification order
    4
    The United States Supreme Court has adopted a different
    approach, holding that "orders disqualifying counsel in civil
    cases, as a class, are not sufficiently separable from the
    merits to qualify for interlocutory appeal." Richardson-
    Merrell, Inc. v. Koller, 
    472 U.S. 424
    , 440 (1985).
    10
    essentially unreviewable, in criminal cases, such prejudice is
    presumed, and the defendant will automatically receive a new
    trial upon a showing that the disqualification was improper.
    See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Rondeau, 
    378 Mass. 408
    , 415 (1979).
    Moreover, as explained by the United States Supreme Court, there
    are compelling reasons, constitutional and otherwise, to more
    strictly enforce the final judgment rule in criminal, rather
    than in civil, cases.   See 
    Flanagan, 465 U.S. at 264
    .    We
    therefore conclude that the doctrine of present execution does
    not apply to render disqualification orders immediately
    appealable in criminal cases.
    This does not leave the defendant in a criminal case
    without a remedy.   The defendant, discerning a clear abuse of
    discretion in the trial court's disqualification of his or her
    chosen counsel, can file a G. L. c. 211, §   3, petition to a
    single justice of the Supreme Judicial Court.   The single
    justice can quickly and efficiently address abuses or errors in
    the disqualification decision likely to result in a new trial,
    and the delays associated therewith, if not otherwise corrected.
    This alternative avenue of review properly balances the need to
    avoid inefficient and time-consuming piecemeal appeals, while
    providing for the rapid correction of obvious errors regarding
    the disqualification of counsel in earlier proceedings.
    11
    2.    Disqualification of counsel.   Despite our conclusion
    that the interlocutory appeals are not properly before us, we
    nevertheless address the propriety of Hepburn's representation
    of the defendant, "because the claim[s] [have] been briefed
    fully by the parties, [they] raise[] . . . significant issue[s]
    concerning the [ethical conduct of lawyers], and addressing
    [them] would be in the public interest."       Marcus v. Newton, 
    462 Mass. 148
    , 153 (2012) (addressing merits even though party was
    "not entitled to an interlocutory appeal...under the doctrine of
    present execution").5      The trial judges in both cases found that
    Hepburn should be disqualified as counsel.       We review those
    decisions for an abuse of discretion.       See Smaland, supra at
    220.       Based on the record before us, we discern none.
    a.    Necessary witness.   Although subject to certain
    exceptions, a lawyer that is "likely to be a necessary witness"
    cannot represent the defendant at trial.6      Mass.R.Prof.C. 3.7(a),
    
    426 Mass. 1396
    (1998).       In determining the necessity of a
    5
    "The public ha[s] a deep and vital interest in [the]
    integrity" of attorneys, who are "sworn to aid in the
    administration of justice and to act with all good fidelity both
    to [their] clients and to the court." Berman v. Coakley, 
    243 Mass. 348
    , 354 (1923).
    6
    The defendant argues that one of the exceptions applies --
    that disqualification of Hepburn would "work substantial
    hardship" on him. Mass.R.Prof.C. 3.7(a)(3), 
    426 Mass. 1396
    (1998). We disagree. Neither case is particularly complex or
    difficult, and should not take a significant amount of time for
    another attorney to prepare for trial.
    12
    lawyer's testimony, courts consider "the nature of the case, the
    importance and probable tenor of the lawyer’s testimony, and the
    probability that the lawyer’s testimony will conflict with that
    of other witnesses."   Comment [4] to rule 3.7.
    A witness is deemed necessary where "the proposed testimony
    . . . is material and relevant, . . . is also not cumulative and
    . . . unobtainable elsewhere."    Carta v. Lumbermens Mut. Cas.
    Co., 
    419 F. Supp. 2d 23
    , 31 (D. Mass. 2006) (applying
    Mass.R.Prof.C. 3.7[a]).     We then require disqualification
    because "[c]ombining the roles of advocate and witness can
    prejudice the tribunal and the opposing party."     Comment [1] to
    rule 3.7.   "The trier of fact may be confused or misled by a
    lawyer serving as both advocate and witness. . . .     A witness is
    required to testify on the basis of personal knowledge, while an
    advocate is expected to explain and comment on evidence given by
    others."    
    Id. comment [2].
      See Serody v. Serody, 19 Mass. App.
    Ct. 411, 414 (1985) ("Commentators and the cases have remarked
    on the adverse effect upon the judicial process in the public
    mind of having lawyers leave the counsel table for the witness
    chair").
    Based on the record before us, Hepburn is "likely to be a
    necessary witness" in both cases.    Rule 3.7(a).   The defendant
    recognizes this to be true in the second case, so we only
    address this issue in regards to the first case.     Hepburn was
    13
    the sole passenger in the defendant's vehicle prior to and
    during his first arrest and the only person who could contradict
    the officer's versions of the events.   See Commonwealth v.
    Patterson, 
    432 Mass. 767
    , 778 (2000) (defense counsel was
    necessary witness because she was only person who could refute
    Commonwealth's version of defendant's statement to police),
    overruled in part on other grounds, Commonwealth v. Britt, 
    465 Mass. 87
    , 99 (2013).   See 
    Rondeau, 378 Mass. at 415-417
    (defense
    counsel was necessary witness because he was only alibi witness
    that could not be impeached with criminal conviction).7
    The fact that neither the Commonwealth nor the defendant
    presently intend to call Hepburn as a witness does not render
    her testimony unnecessary.   "[T]he rule depends not on whether
    the attorney will be called, but whether he [or she] ought to be
    called."   Borman v. Borman, 
    378 Mass. 775
    , 790 (1979).    To mount
    an adequate defense in either case, the defendant is very likely
    to need to call Hepburn as a witness.   Even if he does not plan
    to call her now, subsequent events at trial may require a change
    of plan and a change of mind.   At that point, Hepburn's
    testimony, as his attorney, would be "less effective" and "more
    7
    Contrast Commonwealth v. Zabek, 
    86 Mass. App. Ct. 520
    , 526
    (2014) (defense counsel was not necessary witness where victim
    expressed reservations about testifying to counsel, but "there
    was no reason to believe that the victim would testify in a
    manner inconsistent with what she told [counsel]").
    14
    easily impeachable."    Borman, supra    at 786.   The jury might
    believe that she is "distorting the truth for [her] client."
    
    Ibid. If Hepburn does
    not testify, the Commonwealth could
    request a missing witness instruction, which would permit the
    jury to draw a negative inference against the defendant on the
    assumption that her testimony would not be favorable to him.8
    See Commonwealth v. Beltrandi, 
    89 Mass. App. Ct. 196
    , 203
    (2016).    Because the defendant's "present intention to forego
    the testimony of counsel appears obviously contrary to [his]
    interests," the motion judges "properly reject[ed] counsel's
    best judgment in the matter[s] and order[ed] disqualification."
    Borman, supra at 791.
    We therefore conclude that Hepburn may not represent the
    defendant at trial in either case.      Because the necessary
    witness rule contains the limiting phrase "at trial" and focuses
    on the problems associated with an advocate-witness,9 we are
    8
    The Commonwealth also indicated that if the defendant
    decides to take the stand at trial, the Commonwealth may call
    Hepburn as a rebuttal witness.
    9
    "Unlike the rules governing disqualification due to
    conflicts of interest . . . rule [3.7(a)] contains the limiting
    phrase at trial. . . . [B]ecause the rule strives to mitigate
    potential jury confusion, to avoid the difficulties of cross-
    examining an adversary and to diminish the appearance of
    impropriety where an attorney leave[s] counsel table for the
    witness chair, . . . judges need only divorce the two functions
    -- that of advocate and witness -- at the trial itself"
    (citations and quotations omitted). 
    Smaland, 461 Mass. at 225
    -
    226.
    15
    "limited to barring [Hepburn's] participation at trial" under
    this rule.     
    Smaland, 461 Mass. at 226
    (emphasis supplied).     "Any
    disqualification that might extend to pretrial activities must
    derive from a different source."       
    Id. at 226-227.
    b.   Conflict of interest.     We further conclude that Hepburn
    may not represent the defendant before trial.       See
    Mass.R.Prof.C. 1.7(a)(2), as amended, 
    430 Mass. 1301
    (1999).        We
    do so because Hepburn has a significant conflict of interest
    that the defendant cannot properly waive, see 
    id., comment [2],
    and the conflict rules, unlike the necessary witness rule, do
    not limit an attorney's disqualification to trial.        See Smaland,
    supra at 225.
    Generally, "a lawyer shall not represent a client if the
    representation involves a concurrent conflict of interest."
    Rule 1.7(a).    A concurrent conflict of interest exists if "there
    is a significant risk that the representation of one or more
    clients will be materially limited . . . by a personal interest
    of the lawyer."      Rule 1.7(a)(2).   See Commonwealth v. Perkins,
    
    450 Mass. 834
    , 852 (2008) (quotations omitted) (conflict of
    interest exists "where the independent professional judgment of
    trial counsel is impaired . . . by his [or her] own interests").
    The burden "rests on the party seeking disqualification to
    establish the need to interfere with the relationship."
    Steinert v. Steinert, 
    73 Mass. App. Ct. 287
    , 288 (2008).
    16
    In the present case, the Commonwealth has met its burden to
    establish that Hepburn has a concurrent conflict of interest in
    both cases.   There is a "significant risk" that Hepburn's
    representation will be "materially limited" by her personal
    interests.    Rule 1.7(a)(2).    The police officer's testimony
    regarding what he described as her "aggressive tirade" during
    the defendant's first arrest portrays her in a less than
    flattering light, as the motion judge determined.      By
    testifying, Hepburn would air this conduct publicly and subject
    herself to cross-examination.      "The conflict lies in the fact
    that the client's interests would be better served by having the
    attorney testify while the attorney's interests would be better
    served by not testifying."      
    Patterson, 432 Mass. at 780
    .     See
    comment [1] to the Mass.R.Prof.C. 3.7 (lawyer's status as
    necessary witness "can also involve a conflict of interest").
    Hepburn was also "intimately involved" in the events, which
    is when "[t]he need for disqualification is greatest."       
    Serody, 19 Mass. App. Ct. at 415
    .       Hepburn was with the defendant and
    was able to observe his driving before he was pulled over.         She
    not only observed the subsequent events, but allegedly became an
    active participant in them.      Apparently, the officer would
    testify that she argued "belligerent[ly]" with police during the
    first arrest.
    17
    Before his second arrest, Hepburn apparently provided to
    the defendant a copy of the court's docket, which, when he would
    not answer the court officers' questions about it, escalated the
    situation.    Hepburn followed the officers as they escorted the
    defendant from the premises, insisting that they release him and
    attempting to record the incident with her cellular telephone.
    Her affidavit describes in detail her personal observations and
    actions, indicating she is a necessary witness for the motion to
    dismiss.     Thus, Hepburn's testimony is central to her
    representation of the defendant before trial as well as at
    trial.
    "Notwithstanding the existence of a concurrent conflict of
    interest," a lawyer may nonetheless represent a client under
    certain circumstances.     Rule 1.7(b).   As an initial matter, for
    the conflict to be "consentable," 
    id. comment [2],
    the lawyer
    must "reasonably believe" that he or she "will be able to
    provide competent and diligent representation" despite the
    conflict.    
    Id. 1.7(b)(1). The
    client must also give "informed
    consent, confirmed in writing," 
    id. 1.7(b)(4), and
    such consent
    must be "voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently" given.
    
    Perkins, 450 Mass. at 853
    , quoting from Commonwealth v.
    Martinez, 
    425 Mass. 382
    , 392 (1997).      Finally the court must
    balance the right to chosen counsel on one hand, with the
    "obligation of 'maintaining the highest standards of
    18
    professional conduct and the scrupulous administration of
    justice,' on the other."   Slade v. Ormsby, 
    69 Mass. App. Ct. 542
    , 545 (2007), quoting from Mailer v. Mailer, 
    390 Mass. 371
    ,
    373 (1983).   In so doing, the court must determine whether the
    conflict "taints the legal system," requiring counsel to be
    disqualified regardless of consent.    
    Id. at 546.
    Based on the significant conflict of interest here,
    Hepburn's belief that she can provide competent and diligent
    representation to the defendant, either before trial or at
    trial, is not reasonable, and the defendant therefore cannot
    consent to the representation.   The defendant's interests would
    not be "adequately protected," rule 1.7 comment [15], as
    Hepburn's current strategy, in representing him rather than
    serving as a potential witness on his behalf, is "obviously
    contrary to [his] interests."    
    Smaland, 461 Mass. at 222
    .     See
    
    Patterson, 432 Mass. at 779
    ("[t]hat defense counsel 'ought' to
    testify concerning what transpired at her client's interview
    with the police soon became 'obvious'"); rule 1.7 comment [10]
    ("if the probity of a lawyer’s own conduct in a transaction is
    in serious question, it may be difficult or impossible for the
    lawyer to give a client detached advice").    "Avoiding the
    consequences of an actual conflict of interest is a shared
    responsibility of counsel and the court."    Commonwealth v.
    Zabek, 
    86 Mass. App. Ct. 520
    , 524 (2014).    Hepburn was thus
    19
    "ethically obligated to withdraw" as counsel and never should
    have taken on the representations, given her significant
    involvement as a participant and witness in both incidents
    leading to the defendant's arrests.    
    Rondeau, 378 Mass. at 414
    .
    In reaching this conclusion, we recognize that courts
    "should not lightly interrupt the relationship between a lawyer
    and a client," Slade, supra at 545, quoting from G.D. Matthews &
    Sons Corp. v. MSN Corp., 
    54 Mass. App. Ct. 18
    , 20 (2002), and
    "due regard" should be given to the effect of disqualification
    on the defendant.    Rule 3.7 comment [4].     "Nonetheless, the
    right to representation by an attorney of one's choosing" is not
    absolute, and must, in some circumstances, yield to other
    considerations."    
    Bryan, 474 Mass. at 509
    .    Disqualification is
    proper, even if the client consents to the representation, if
    after a "searching review," the court determines that the
    representation would "taint[] the legal system or the trial of
    the cause before it."    Slade supra at 546.
    Our review of the record confirms that disqualification was
    necessary to prevent such a taint.    Hepburn's representation
    would taint the pretrial as well as trial proceedings.       Also,
    neither of the cases are particularly difficult or complex, and
    should not take an excessive amount of time for another lawyer
    to get up to speed to litigate.   See Rule 3.7 comment [4].        The
    longer Hepburn continues to represent the defendant, the greater
    20
    the learning curve for her successor and the greater the
    possibility of ineffective assistance of counsel in the pretrial
    proceedings she does undertake.   We therefore conclude that, in
    the present case, the court's interests in maintaining the high
    ethical standards of the legal profession and "the public's
    interest in the fair, efficient, and orderly administration of
    justice," Commonwealth v. Burbank, 
    27 Mass. App. Ct. 97
    , 106
    (1989), outweigh the defendant's right to chosen counsel at and
    before trial in both cases.
    Conclusion.   For the reasons stated, the defendant's
    interlocutory appeals from the disqualification orders are
    dismissed.
    So ordered.