Liberty National Enterprises L. P. v. Chicago Title Ins. Co (2011), Cal.App.4th
[No.
B222455. Second Dist., Div. Eight. Apr. 6, 2011.]
LIBERTY
NATIONAL ENTERPRISES, L.P., Plaintiff and Respondent, v. CHICAGO TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant and
Appellant.
(Superior
Court of Los Angeles County, No. BC380261, Helen I. Bendix, Judge.)
(Opinion
by Flier, J., with Rubin, Acting P. J., and Grimes, J., concurring.)
COUNSEL
Hennelly
& Grossfeld and Susan J. Williams for Defendant and Appellant.
Shernoff
Bidart Echeverria, Michael J. Bidart, Ricardo Echeverria; McDougal & Associates, Donald C. McDougal, Jr.,
Norman Paul Breen; The Ehrlich Law Firm and Jeffrey Isaac Ehrlich for Plaintiff and Respondent. {Slip Opn. Page
2}
OPINION
FLIER,
J.-
Respondent
Liberty National Enterprises, L.P. (Liberty) owns the Broadway Trade Center (BTC) in Downtown Los Angeles. In
May 2002, Liberty was served with an action that challenged its exclusive ownership of BTC. Liberty tendered the
defense of this action to appellant Chicago Title Insurance Company (sometimes referred to as Chicago), which it
refused. Liberty, represented by Attorney Donald C. McDougal, brought an action against Chicago in which it
alleged that Chicago's denial was in bad faith.
The
trial was divided into three phases. Coverage was the first phase. When this concluded favorably to Liberty,
Chicago changed counsel; new counsel moved to disqualify McDougal. Chicago contended that McDougal had learned
confidential information about its claims policies when McDougal represented Chicago from time to time prior to
1995 and that McDougal should also be disqualified because he was a witness in the case. The trial court denied
the motion and Chicago has appealed from this order. We affirm.
ATTORNEY
McDOUGAL AND CHICAGO TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY
Prior
to 1995, McDougal was hired by Chicago approximately 12 times to represent individuals or entities who had
purchased title policies from Chicago and who had made claims under those policies. These cases involved failure
of title, easement disputes and issues of ingress and egress; the last of these cases came to McDougal in 1995.
According to McDougal, during the time he represented Chicago's insureds, "I never performed any work for
CHICAGO regarding any claims of 'bad faith' by the company. Moreover, I was never hired by CHICAGO to review or
analyze its claims processing procedures. By the time I was hired to represent an insured, the person's claim
had already been reviewed and accepted by CHICAGO. I thus had no reason or occasion to examine the manner in
which claims were handled by CHICAGO."
At
his deposition, McDougal testified that he was also retained by Chicago to review coverage issues and on
occasion he was consulted by Chicago on whether to {Slip Opn. Page 3} issue a particular policy or whether to
require special endorsements on a policy. He did not prepare written coverage opinions, however, and was used
more as a sounding board on given problems.
McDougal
has represented Liberty since it was formed in 1993. He assisted Liberty in the purchase of BTC and it was
McDougal who advised Liberty to purchase a title policy from Chicago. "[I]t was my belief that CHICAGO had the
best claims department and a reputation for standing behind its policies when insureds had claims. . . . [¶] . .
. I tendered [the] defense . . . to CHICAGO on behalf of my client, LIBERTY. I was absolutely shocked when the
claim was denied in July 2002."
McDougal
contacted people he knew in the title insurance industry and learned that a major change had been made in the
claims handling process when Chicago was acquired by Fidelity National in 2000.
PROCEDURAL
HISTORY
Liberty's
original complaint was filed on November 5, 2007. Chicago first appeared in the case in December 2007,
represented by Steve Garcia of Knapp, Petersen & Clark. "I [McDougal] told Attorney Garcia during one of our
first conversations in late 2007 that I used to be hired by CHICAGO to represent its insureds during the period
from about 1987 to 1995. . . . At no time prior to CHICAGO switching attorneys in late August 2009 did Attorney
Garcia or anyone else associated with CHICAGO claim that I should be disqualified from representing LIBERTY
based on my having worked for CHICAGO's insureds many years ago."
The
case was vigorously litigated beginning in late 2007. There was at least one demurrer; the usual case management
and status conferences; discovery requests addressed to Chicago beginning in November 2007; depositions of one
principal each for the two parties; a neutral evaluation conference; and the trial of the first phase {Slip Opn.
Page 4} (coverage) on March 25 and 26, 2009.
fn. 1 McDougal
participated in the proceedings dealing with the statement of decision after the trial court announced its intended
decision following the conclusion of the first phase.
While
the statement of decision was being finalized, Chicago discharged Knapp, Petersen & Clark and substituted in
its stead Hennelly & Grossfeld. On November 10, 2009, the latter wrote McDougal a lengthy letter in which it
stated, among other things, that Chicago objected to McDougal's use of the knowledge of Chicago's claims
practices "gained while he represented the company" that he was now suing. The letter stated that during a
telephone conversation on the occasions of a "meet and confer" McDougal had said that he knew about Chicago's
claims practices, that it had the best claims policies and personnel and that it was the best in the industry in
claims handling. The letter stated that Chicago would move to disqualify McDougal.
Chicago
filed the motion to disqualify counsel on December 18, 2009.
THE
TRIAL COURT'S RULING
The
court's minute order states that Chicago "provides no explanation for why it waited for two years, after the
conclusion of a lengthy trial in this case on liability, to move to disqualify plaintiff's counsel, a counsel
that has represented plaintiff from the inception of this case." The court found that claims handling had been
an issue in this case from day one. "New defense counsel's attempt to argue that defendant did not know the
basis for its motion until a recent meet and confer is also not convincing" in light of the fact that claims
handling was an issue from the inception of the case. Finally, the trial court concluded that Liberty "would be
extremely prejudiced" if McDougal were disqualified. McDougal had won the liability phase and had been {Slip
Opn. Page 5} Liberty's "long-time counsel throughout the events that [led] up to the filing of the instant
case."
As
to McDougal's role as a witness in the case, the trial court found that Liberty consented to this and therefore
rejected the claim that McDougal should be disqualified because he was also a witness.
DISCUSSION
1.
Disqualification of Counsel May Be Waived
We
recognize that there are some courts that have held that disqualification of counsel cannot be waived even when
the motion is brought after an extremely long passage of time. (Flamm, Lawyer Disqualification (Banks &
Jordan 2003) § 21.1, pp. 394-395, citing inter alia State ex rel. Oklahoma Bar Assn. v.
Berry (Okla. 1998) 969 P.2d 975, 978.) The rationale of these cases is that ethical rules serve a
public interest, which precludes representation by a lawyer who should be disqualified. California, however, is
not one of the jurisdictions adhering to this view. (E.g., In re Complex Asbestos
Litigation(1991) 232
Cal.App.3d 572,
599.) In fact, the majority view appears to be that attorney disqualification can be impliedly waived by failing
to bring the motion in a timely manner. (Flamm, Lawyer Disqualification, supra, § 21.1, pp.
396-397.)
It
appears that, at least in California, the delay has to be extreme or unreasonable before it operates as a
waiver. (Western Continental Operating Co. v. Natural Gas Corp. (1989) 212
Cal.App.3d 752,
764 [the delay "was not extreme or unreasonable"]; Forrest v.
Baeza (1997) 58
Cal.App.4th 65,
78 [the delay was "insufficiently extreme"].) It has been held that when the party opposing the motion has made
a prima facie showing of unreasonable delay causing prejudice, disqualification should not be ordered, and the
burden shifts to the moving party to justify the delay. (In re Complex Asbestos Litigation, supra, 232
Cal.App.3d at p. 599.) It has also been held that the prejudice to the opponent must be extreme. (Ibid.)
{Slip Opn. Page 6}
2.
The Delay in Bringing the Disqualification Motion Was Unreasonable
The
question before us is whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying the motion to disqualify
McDougal.
fn. 2 In large
part, the court's decision was based on the delay in filing this motion. We therefore address the question whether
the delay was unreasonable.
Chicago
claims that there was no delay because it acted promptly upon learning from McDougal during a "meet and confer"
in October or November 2009 that McDougal knew Chicago's claims procedures and "was actively using that
information against Chicago on Liberty's behalf."
There
is no citation to the record where it might be shown that McDougal was "actively using that information against
Chicago." In fact, Chicago's summary of McDougal's knowledge of its claims procedures makes no mention of
McDougal using that information against Chicago. There is also no citation to the record after this sentence:
"Mr. McDougal conceded, for the first time and just before Chicago demanded that he disqualify himself, that he
was using information about Chicago's claims handling practices and internal structure obtained from his prior
representation to frame Liberty's discovery requests and its 'bad faith' theory."
We
look askance at this practice of stating what purport to be facts -- and not unimportant facts -- without
support in the record. This is a violation of the rules, {Slip Opn. Page 7} specifically rule 8.204(a)(1)(C) of
the California Rules of Court, with the consequence that such assertions will, at a minimum, be disregarded.
(Regents of University of California v. Sheily (2004) 122
Cal.App.4th 824,
827, fn. 1.)
As
we have noted, the record does contain the letter dated November 10, 2009, in which Chicago, through its new
counsel, objected to McDougal's use of his knowledge of Chicago's claims practices. Allegedly, Chicago learned
of this only during the "meet and confer" held a few days before the letter was written. But this is
contradicted by McDougal's deposition, taken on September 3, 2008, when he stated: "I had taken and put all of
my clients with Chicago Title Insurance Company because of my vast experience with their claims department."
Thus, Chicago was on notice as of September 2008 of McDougal's "vast experience" with its claims department,
which not unreasonably could mean that he was familiar with its claims policies and personnel. In any event, it
was enough to put Chicago on inquiry notice but there was no inquiry.
But
even if it is true that Chicago only learned of McDougal's knowledge of its claim policies in the fall of 2009,
there is absolutely nothing to suggest that this knowledge was in any way relevant. In the first place,
McDougal's knowledge of the claims policies came to light only when he discovered, to his chagrin, that those
policies had apparently changed after Chicago was acquired by Fidelity National in 2000. What
McDougal knew was therefore literally history. Finally, as Chicago's letter of November 10, 2009, reflects, the
discovery about Chicago's claims policies, directives, guidelines, personnel, etc., was, as might be expected,
massive. Thus, it is very questionable that McDougal had anything to add when it came to Chicago's policies and
practices.
In
short, Chicago's attempt to start the clock ticking only in October/November 2009 is simply a failure. This
brings us to the question whether a delay of two years is unreasonable. There are a number of factors to be
taken into account in answering this question. {Slip Opn. Page 8}
The
stage of litigation at which the disqualification motion is made is one such consideration. (See generally
Flamm, Lawyer Disqualification, supra, § 21.5, pp. 406-409.) Where in a marital dissolution action
the case was remanded for further proceedings and one of the parties filed a motion seeking to disqualify the
opponent's counsel, the court noted that to "deprive respondent of the counsel of his choice at this
late stage in the proceedings, where no unfair disadvantage to appellant is indicated, would, we believe,
cause undue hardship to respondent without serving the purpose of the disqualification remedy." (In re
Marriage of Zimmerman (1993) 16
Cal.App.4th 556,
565.) It stands to reason that the later the motion is made, the more difficult it is to replace counsel. In
this case, the motion was made roughly midway through the case, which is a very bad time to have to change
lawyers, especially in a case that involves the interplay of many documents and several
witnesses.
That
this is not a simple case is yet another consideration. Title insurance litigation in a bad faith context is
neither easy nor simple. It requires knowledge of both the law and practice of title insurance and not
inconsiderable professional skills. Replacing counsel midway through such a case is a very dicey proposition,
especially after the coverage phase of the trial.
Delay
is significant not only from the perspective of prejudice to the nonmoving party, it is also an indication that
the alleged breach of confidentiality was not seen as serious or substantial by the moving party.
(E.g., Glover v. Libman (N.D. Ga. 1983) 578 F. Supp. 748, 767 [delay can be seen as an
admission that confidentiality and conflict are not significantly at stake].) As we have seen, in his September
2008 deposition, McDougal spoke of his "vast experience" with Chicago's claims department; evidently, neither
Chicago nor its counsel became alarmed over this. This strongly suggests that no one felt that McDougal's
alleged familiarity with Chicago's claim procedures posed a problem. This is surely a strong indication that
this disqualification motion should be denied. {Slip Opn. Page 9}
It
has also been held that one can properly consider the possibility that the "party brought the motion as a
tactical device to delay litigation." (Western Continental Operating Co. v. Natural Gas Co.,
supra,212
Cal.App.3d 752,
763.) This is a reasonable inference in this case. Chicago and its counsel were well aware of McDougal's
exposure to Chicago's claims department from the very beginning; in fact, McDougal discussed it with Attorney
Garcia at the outset of the case. This is why the claim rings hollow that McDougal's alleged knowledge of
confidential information was allegedly discovered only in October/November 2009.
Finally,
the showing that the delay was unreasonable was of such a character and weight that the burden shifted to
Chicago to justify the delay. (In re Complex Asbestos Litigation, supra, 232
Cal.App.3d 572,
599.) Other than contending, unsuccessfully, that there was no delay at all, Chicago offered nothing to justify
the delay.
Even
though the test on appeal is abuse of discretion, we must carefully review the trial court's exercise of
discretion. (People ex rel. Dept. of Corporations v. SpeeDee Oil Change Systems, Inc.,
supra, 20
Cal.4th 1135,
1144.) As the foregoing discussion shows, there is sound reasoning behind the trial court's decision. The timing
of the motion is among the most significant circumstances that was taken into consideration by the trial court.
The timing spells prejudice to Liberty, as we discuss below, and it also reflects a lack of concern on Chicago's
part over the alleged breach of confidentiality. On balance, we conclude that the trial court did not err in
concluding that the delay in this case was unreasonable.
3.
The Prejudice to Liberty Was Extreme
We
agree with the trial court that the prejudice to Liberty would have been extreme if McDougal would have been
disqualified.
McDougal
not only knew Liberty as a result of having represented it since 1993, he gained mastery of this case as it was
being developed for the two years that preceded the trial of the first phase. All will agree that mastery over a
complex case is {Slip Opn. Page 10} best acquired as the case progresses through discovery. While it is of
course possible to learn a case by reviewing the file, it is not quite the same as having done it as McDougal
did it in this case. But this is not all there was. McDougal was not only Liberty's longtime lawyer and the man
who filed and developed this case, he was successful with the case. That marked him as a lawyer
of great value to Liberty (and quite possibly provided the motivation for the motion to disqualify
him).
Among
all the factors to be taken into account in a motion for disqualification, the interest and right of the
nonmoving client to the lawyer of its choice is certainly one. This interest must of course yield to the moving
party's interest when there is an actual conflict or breach of confidentiality. But when, as here, the delay was
so unreasonable as to amount to an implied waiver, the interests of the nonmoving client should certainly be
taken into account. And, in this case, that interest is very clearly a continuation of McDougal as counsel for
Liberty.
Chicago's
contention that there is no substantial evidence to support the finding of extreme prejudice is without merit.
McDougal's long association with Liberty, his knowledge of this case and his success with the case, when viewed
by an informed eye, is substantial evidence of his great value to Liberty. It follows that losing him would be a
disastrous development for Liberty. After all, clients pursue cases in order to win them and that is what
McDougal did for Liberty.
4.
McDougal Should Not Have Been Disqualified Because He Was Also a Witness
Chicago
contends that the trial court used the wrong standard in determining that McDougal's role as a witness did not
disqualify him as Liberty's counsel. In addition to consent by the client, Chicago contends, the court should
also have considered "detriment to the opponent or injury to the integrity of the judicial process." (Lyle v.
Superior Court (1981) 122
Cal.App.3d 470,
482.) The court's minute order makes no mention of detriment to Chicago or the integrity of the judicial
process. {Slip Opn. Page 11}
We
cannot imagine that the seasoned trial judge in this case did not take into account the interests of justice in
deciding whether McDougal's additional role as a witness disqualified him as Liberty's counsel. This
consideration is an organic part of the decision to be made when a party's lawyer is proposed as a witness.
Chicago provides no support at all for the claim that the trial judge did not take the interests of justice or,
for that matter, Chicago's interests into account. Not every component of a trial court's decisionmaking process
is to be found in the minute order containing the decision.
DISPOSITION
The
order is affirmed. Liberty is to recover its costs in this appeal.
Rubin,
Acting P. J., and Grimes, J., concurred.
FN 1. The
projected second phase addressed damages and the third phase was for determination of bad faith and punitive
damages.
FN 2. "Generally,
a trial court's decision on a disqualification motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion. [Citations.] If the
trial court resolved disputed factual issues, the reviewing court should not substitute its judgment for the trial
court's express or implied findings supported by substantial evidence. [Citations.] When substantial evidence
supports the trial court's factual findings, the appellate court reviews the conclusions based on those findings
for abuse of discretion. [Citation.] However, the trial court's discretion is limited by the applicable legal
principles. [Citation.] Thus, where there are no material disputed factual issues, the appellate court reviews the
trial court's determination as a question of law. [Citation.] In any event, a disqualification motion involves
concerns that justify careful review of the trial court's exercise of discretion." (People ex rel. Dept. of
Corporations v. SpeeDee Oil Change Systems, Inc. (1999) 20
Cal.4th 1135,
1143-1144.)
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