PlanNet Consulting v. McNary CA4/3 ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Filed 12/7/21 PlanNet Consulting v. McNary CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    PLANNET CONSULTING, LLC,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                        G059474
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 30-2018-01033841)
    DANIEL MCNARY et al.,                                                 OPINION
    Defendants and Appellants.
    Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Glenn R.
    Salter, Judge. Affirmed.
    Law Offices of Scott L. Dahle and Scott L. Dahle for Defendants and
    Appellants.
    K & L Law Group and Marc Y. Lazo, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    *               *               *
    Defendants and cross-complainants Daniel McNary and MC Constructors,
    Inc. (collectively defendants), appeal from the trial court’s order disqualifying their
    counsel from the litigation underlying this appeal. Substantial evidence supports the
    court’s factual finding that counsel, through a prior transactional representation of the
    limited liability company plaintiff in this litigation, developed an intimate knowledge of
    the plaintiff’s operations, and a substantial relationship exists between counsel’s prior
    representation of the plaintiff and current representation of the defendants. Accordingly,
    we affirm the court’s disqualification order.
    I
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Representations by Counsel
    According to its verified complaint in this case, plaintiff PlanNet
    Consulting, LLC (the LLC), and its affiliates provide professional services for
    “information [and] operational technology planning, design, implementation, operations
    and optimization, and [] critical facility planning, design[] and construction.” In 2012,
    through its managing principal Steve Miano, the LLC entered a joint venture with
    defendant Daniel McNary called PlanNet Design & Construction, Inc. (the corporation),
    to operate a data center construction business and “act as the construction contractor for
    [the LLC’s] jobs.” During this period, Miano and McNary collectively owned the
    majority of the LLC’s membership interests and also were co-equal owners of all of the
    corporation’s shares.
    In the summer of 2016, McNary introduced Miano to the attorney who was
    disqualified in this case: Scott Dahle. One month later, Miano and Dahle signed an
    agreement for Dahle to provide services as a “team leader with respect to all aspects of
    the potential” acquisition of a third party technology company not involved in this
    litigation. Although Miano’s signature section ambiguously indicated he was executing
    the agreement on behalf of “PlanNet”—i.e., without specifying whether the name meant
    2
    the LLC or the corporation—the agreement broadly stated in its first sentence that Dahle
    would provide “consulting and advisory services to PlanNet, and its subsidiaries, and/or
    affiliates.”
    The “[s]cope” section of the retainer agreement listed 24 categories of
    service Dahle would provide. They included “[l]egal, . . . [p]roviding general legal,
    financial, and investment banking consultation services, [and] . . . [a]ssisting in
    preparation of any private placement memoranda, prospectuses, investor presentations, or
    other offering documents deemed necessary.” It is undisputed that after signing the
    agreement, Dahle performed due diligence for the corporation’s possible acquisition of
    the technology company, revised the LLC’s articles of organization, and, for entities
    under the “umbrella” of the corporation, “suggested and provided a set of bylaws to be
    used by all corporate entities for purposes of consistency.” Dahle ultimately
    recommended against acquiring the company and, according to the defendants, ceased his
    “formal association with” the corporation around February 2017.
    At the time the 2016 retainer agreement was signed, Miano had taken a
    leave of absence from the corporation and, in his place, McNary was serving as an
    interim chief executive officer. When Miano returned in late 2017, he accused McNary
    of mismanaging the corporation. In March 2018, McNary retained Dahle to represent
    him in his business dispute with Miano. Two months later, McNary and Dahle came to a
    board of director’s meeting for the corporation where McNary’s employment termination
    was to be discussed. Miano was also there with his counsel, who objected to Dahle’s
    representation of McNary based on Dahle’s earlier representation of the LLC.
    Nothwithstanding that objection, the parties continued their discussions with Dahle’s
    participation; the following month, the LLC, the corporation, Miano, and McNary
    formalized a termination of their business relationships through two documents signed on
    the same day: a settlement agreement and an intellectual property licensing agreement.
    3
    The settlement agreement provided that Miano would receive all of
    McNary’s interests in the LLC and McNary would own all interests in the corporation.
    The related licensing agreement stated it was being entered into to “permit [a] transition
    and rebranding” of the corporation, and established the LLC’s intellectual property would
    be licensed to the corporation for six months, by which time the corporation was to be
    renamed to “something unrelated to ‘PlanNet’ [ i.e., the LLC].”
    Five months after signing the licensing agreement, in November 2018,
    McNary publicly announced “Constructiv” as a new “brand name” for the corporation.
    The announcement rhetorically asked “Why did we make the switch from PlanNet
    Design & Construction to Constructiv?” and repeated: “PlanNet is now Constructiv!”
    B. The Current Litigation
    The following month, the LLC filed a lawsuit against McNary and the
    corporation,1 alleging the following 11 causes of action: (1) breach of contract (on the
    settlement agreement); (2) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing
    (on the settlement agreement); (3) breach of contract (on the license agreement);
    (4) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing (on the license
    agreement); (5) intentional interference with prospective economic advantage;
    (6) negligence; (7) trade name infringement; (8) dilution of mark; (9) false advertising;
    (10) unfair competition; and (11) conversion. 2 All causes of action either rest on or
    include a theory that McNary and the corporation either intentionally or negligently
    advertised “Construtiv” to induce and encourage the LLC’s clients and related parties to
    1
    Other named codefendants are not parties to this appeal.
    2
    Although the complaint lists a 12th cause of action entitled “preliminary and permanent
    injunctions,” its allegations only amount to a request for a remedy and not a cause of
    action. (Marlin v. Aimco Venezia, LLC (2007) 
    154 Cal.App.4th 154
    , 162.)
    4
    seek services from Constructiv instead of the LLC. In its request for relief, the LLC
    seeks, among other things, injunctive relief and money damages.
    Dahle filed answers for McNary and the corporation, which now identifies
    itself through a new name: MC Constructors, Inc.3 Dahle also filed on behalf of the
    defendants a cross-complaint against the LLC and Miano; that cross-complaint is not at
    issue in this appeal.
    C. The Motion to Disqualify Counsel
    The LLC filed a motion to disqualify Dahle from representing defendants
    in this litigation, asserting Dahle had acted as the LLC’s counsel under the 2016 retainer
    agreement and learned its confidential information. Specifically, the LLC asserted Dahle
    obtained the LLC’s “confidential and proprietary information . . . including but not
    limited to [its] risk tolerance, business culture, . . . financial condition, . . . litigation
    strategies . . . , plans for expansion, . . . marketing strategies, [and ]insurance holdings.”
    The defendants initially filed an opposition arguing Dahle had “performed
    no legal services on behalf” of the LLC. The parties submitted further briefing and
    documents, including a declaration by the LLC’s president, Andrew Harrod,
    summarizing the LLC’s e-mail communications in which Dahle had been involved, and
    attaching copies of 45 e-mails as examples of various legal matters about which Dahle
    had communicated. Harrod asserted his review of the LLC’s internal system showed
    Dahle had been privy to over 18,000 LLC e-mails, through Dahle’s LLC e-mail address.
    In their supplemental brief, the defendants conceded that Dahle had
    provided legal services to the LLC by drafting “amended articles of organization” for the
    LLC, which had been discussed in some of Harrod’s attached e-mail exhibits. Through a
    declaration, Dahle also explained that some of the e-mails dealt with bylaws he had
    3
    All further references to the corporation include the business MC Constructors, Inc.,
    formerly known as PlanNet Design & Construction, Inc., based on the defendants’
    briefing.
    5
    “suggested and provided,” to “bring consistency to the many disparate companies created
    under the umbrella of” the corporation. The defendants maintained Dahle should not be
    disqualified, however, because there was no substantial relationship between his services
    and the present litigation underlying this appeal.
    The trial court granted the LLC’s motion to disqualify Dahle. The court
    found Dahle’s 2016 retainer agreement “contemplated he would, among other things,
    perform legal services for the [LLC],” and that he “provided some non-litigation legal
    services that” were “interwined” with “the provision of business services to the [LLC].”
    The court also found “Dahle was a major player in the business side of [the LLC], both in
    the development of the business as well as its operations,” and had “an intimate
    knowledge of how [the LLC] operates.” The court reasoned the knowledge was “of
    unusual value in this case” and would “inform the settlement agreement’s interpretation,
    application, and understanding.” The trial court did not err in reaching this result.
    (Whyte v. Schlage Lock Co. (2002) 
    101 Cal.App.4th 1443
    , 1451 [reviewing court
    generally affirms or reverses based on the correctness of the results and not their
    reasons]).
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A. Standard of Review
    We review a trial court’s ruling to disqualify counsel for abuse of
    discretion. “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.” (People ex rel. Dept. of Corporations v. SpeeDee Oil
    Change Systems, Inc. (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 1135
    , 1143-1144.)
    6
    B. Attorney Disqualification Principles and the Substantial Relationship Test
    The authority of a trial court “‘to disqualify an attorney derives from the
    power inherent in every court “[t]o control in furtherance of justice, the conduct of its
    ministerial officers.”’” (City and County of San Francisco v. Cobra Solutions, Inc.
    (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 839
    , 846 (Cobra Solutions), quoting Code Civ. Proc., § 128,
    subd. (a)(5).) “[W]here a former client seeks to have a previous attorney disqualified
    from serving as counsel to a successive client in litigation adverse to the interests of the
    first client, the governing test requires that the client demonstrate a ‘substantial
    relationship’ between the subjects of the antecedent and current representations. [¶] The
    ‘substantial relationship’ test mediates between two interests that are in tension in such a
    context—the freedom of the subsequent client to counsel of choice, on the one hand, and
    the interest of the former client in ensuring the permanent confidentiality of matters
    disclosed to the attorney in the course of the prior representation, on the other.” (Flatt v.
    Superior Court (1994) 
    9 Cal.4th 275
    , 283; accord Rules Prof. Conduct, rule 1.9(a)
    [former client’s “informed written consent” required for attorney’s subsequent
    representation of other client with adverse interest “in the same or a substantially related
    matter”]; accord also Cobra Solutions, supra, 38 Cal.4th at p. 847 [discussing Rules Prof.
    Conduct, rule 3-310(E), predecessor to Rules Prof. Conduct, rule 1.9].)
    “To determine whether there is a substantial relationship between
    successive representations, a court must first determine whether the attorney had a direct
    professional relationship with the former client in which the attorney personally provided
    legal advice and services on a legal issue that is closely related to the legal issue in the
    present representation. [Citation.] If the former representation involved such a direct
    relationship with the client, the former client need not prove the attorney actually
    possesses confidential information.” (Cobra Solutions, 
    supra, 38
     Cal.4th at p. 847, citing
    Jessen v. Hartford Casualty Ins. Co. (2003) 
    111 Cal.App.4th 698
    , 709, 710-711
    7
    (Jessen).) Instead, “it must be presumed that confidential information has passed to the
    attorney and there cannot be any delving into the specifics of the communications
    between the attorney and the former client in an effort to show that the attorney did or did
    not receive confidential information during the course of that relationship.” (Jessen,
    supra, at p. 709.) There are at least three sound reasons for this “conclusive presumption
    of knowledge of confidential information”: it avoids requiring the former client to prove
    what is in the attorney’s mind, it “also avoids the ironic result of disclosing the former
    client’s confidences and secrets through an inquiry into the actual state of the lawyer’s
    knowledge[,] and it makes clear the legal profession’s intent to preserve the public’s trust
    over its own self-interest.” (H. F. Ahmanson & Co. v. Salomon Brothers., Inc. (1991)
    
    229 Cal.App.3d 1445
    , 1453.)
    “‘[A] “substantial relationship” exists whenever the “subjects” of the prior
    and the current representations are linked in some rational manner.’” (Knight v.
    Ferguson (2007) 
    149 Cal.App.4th 1207
    , 1213.) The ground for discerning a sufficient
    link between “subject[s]” is broader than the ground arising from common facts and
    issues. (See Jessen, supra, 111 Cal.App.4th at p. 711-712.) This increased breadth
    protects the former client because, “[d]epending upon the nature of the attorney’s
    relationship with the former client, in the office or in the courtroom, the attorney may
    acquire confidential information about the client or the client’s affairs which may not be
    directly related to the transaction or lawsuit at hand but which the attorney comes to
    know in providing the representation to the former client with respect to the previous
    lawsuit or transaction.” (Jessen, supra, 111 Cal.App.4th at p. 712.) “Thus, successive
    representations will be ‘substantially related’ when the evidence before the trial court
    supports a rational conclusion that information material to the evaluation, prosecution,
    settlement or accomplishment of the former representation given its factual and legal
    issues is also material to the evaluation, prosecution, settlement or accomplishment of the
    current representation given its factual and legal issues.” (Id. at p. 713.)
    8
    C. Analysis
    1. Substantial Evidence Supports the Trial Court’s Factual Findings
    “‘When a trial court’s factual determination is attacked on the ground that
    there is no substantial evidence to sustain it, the power of an appellate court begins and
    ends with the determination as to whether, on the entire record, there is substantial
    evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, which will support the determination, and when
    two or more inferences can reasonably be deduced from the facts, a reviewing court is
    without power to substitute its deductions for those of the trial court. If such substantial
    evidence be found, it is of no consequence that the trial court believing other evidence, or
    drawing other reasonable inferences, might have reached a contrary conclusion.’”
    (Jameson v. Five Feet Restaurant, Inc. (2003) 
    107 Cal.App.4th 138
    , 143 (Jameson),
    quoting Bowers v. Bernards (1984) 
    150 Cal.App.3d 870
    , 873-874.)
    The record supports the court’s express and implied findings that Dahle
    directly represented the LLC under his 2016 retainer agreement and developed an
    intimate knowledge of the LLC’s operations based on the LLC’s confidential
    information. The LLC’s submitted declarations, by Miano and Harrod, combined with
    Dahle’s retainer agreement, and the defendants’ belated acknowledgement that Dahle had
    performed at least some legal work for the LLC, provide substantial evidence to support
    the trial court’s necessary factual conclusions.
    The evidence supports the conclusion either that Dahle provided many
    services directly to the LLC or that the LLC’s operations were closely related to the
    corporation’s operations. There was extensive overlap that included the same primary
    decision makers, Miano and McNary. Harrod submitted e-mails showing Dahle was also
    involved in operations that included management-level employees of “PlanNet” beyond
    Miano and McNary. Under either view, the evidence was sufficient to support a
    conclusion that Dahle developed an intimate knowledge of the LLC’s operations based
    9
    on confidential information gained from Dahle’s direct and personal legal representation
    of the LLC.
    While defendants urge a different interpretation of the evidence, including
    their contention that Dahle subjectively believed he was representing only the
    corporation, substantial evidence supports the court’s contrary conclusion that Dahle
    represented the LLC. (Founding Members of the Newport Beach Country Club v.
    Newport Beach Country Club, Inc. (2003) 
    109 Cal.App.4th 944
    , 956 [“When the
    competent extrinsic evidence is in conflict, and thus requires resolution of credibility
    issues, any reasonable construction will be upheld if it is supported by substantial
    evidence”]; Jameson, supra, 107 Cal.App.4th at p. 143.)
    In sum, the defendants have failed to demonstrate that the evidence was
    insufficient to support the trial court’s factual conclusions that Dahle developed intimate
    knowledge about the LLC’s operations based on the LLC’s confidential information
    gained from Dahle’s direct and personal legal representation of the LLC.
    2. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Concluding a Substantial
    Relationship Exists Between the Representations
    In light of the factual findings, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    concluding that Dahle’s successive representation of McNary and the corporation in the
    underlying litigation is substantially related to Dahle’s earlier legal services provided to
    the LLC. Information material to the evaluation, prosecution, or accomplishment of
    Dahle’s transactional services for the LLC is also material to the evaluation, prosecution,
    settlement or accomplishment of Dahle’s representation of the defendants against the
    LLC in the litigation underlying this appeal. (Jessen, supra, 111 Cal.App.4th at pp. 712-
    713.)
    As noted, all of the LLC’s causes of action in this case assert theories that
    the defendants tried to inappropriately draw away the LLC’s business toward the
    corporation after signing the settlement agreement and licensing agreement, seeking
    10
    money damages. Many, if not all, of the LLC’s theories of damages require analyzing
    what consequences, if any, resulted from defendants’ alleged actions. Understanding
    such consequences and validating or disputing monetary calculations logically rests on
    issues involving the LLC’s operations and what damages, if any, were proximately
    caused by the defendants. (See, e.g., Skydive Arizona, Inc. v. Quattrocchi (9th Cir. 2012)
    
    673 F.3d 1105
    , 1109-1110, 1112 [discussing jury’s consideration of customer evidence,
    plaintiff’s business reputation evidence, and plaintiff’s money “spent in developing and
    advertising its business,” in awarding $2.5 million in actual damages for willful
    trademark infringement].) An intimate knowledge of how the LLC operates—
    information clearly material to Dahle previously representing the LLC in its transactional
    matters—would be material to assessing the LLC’s alleged damages, thus demonstrating
    a sufficient substantial relationship link between Dahle’s former and present
    representations. (See Jessen, supra, 111 Cal.App.4th at p. 711-712.)
    All of the defendants’ contentions against a substantial relationship existing
    rest on a restrictive view of the possible link between Dahle’s representations. For
    example, the defendants argue no substantial relationship exists because “[e]ach cause of
    action alleged only relates to conduct [that occurred] post-settlement[, i.e., after the
    settlement agreement and licensing agreement were signed].” But a premise that
    liability-establishing facts had not occurred at the time of prior representation does not,
    by itself, negate a conclusion that a substantial relationship between the representations
    exists. (Jessen, supra, 111 Cal.App.4th at p. 711-712.) It is instead reasonable to
    conclude that Dahle’s knowledge of the LLC’s operations from his former representation
    of it relates to his representation of the defendants against the LLC here, at least as it
    pertains to the subject of what relief, if any, the LLC is entitled.
    The defendants contend the trial court erred because the LLC only showed
    Dahle became aware of “classic playbook information” about the LLC, insufficient to
    show the necessary link of materiality between Dahle’s prior and current representations.
    11
    The defendants rely on Wu v. O’Gara Coach Co., LLC (2019) 
    38 Cal.App.5th 1069
     (Wu)
    and assert that “nothing that happened during [Dahle’s] prior representation is directly at
    issue in, or has some critical importance to, the second representation.”
    Wu was based on an employment discrimination lawsuit brought by a
    former sales adviser of the defendant corporation. (Wu, supra, 38 Cal.App.5th at
    pp. 1072-1073.) On appeal, the court reversed the disqualification of the plaintiff’s law
    firm, concluding the corporation had not shown a substantial relationship between
    representations because the defendant had only shown the principal of the plaintiff’s law
    firm, who had earlier been the president and chief operating officer of the corporation,
    possessed only “classic playbook information” as it related to the plaintiff’s case. (Id.,
    at pp. 1083-1084)
    In Wu, although the principal had already graduated from law school when
    employed by the corporation, it was only after ending his position there that he was
    admitted to the bar. (Wu, supra, 38 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1075, fn. 2.) The appellate court
    separated “what [the principal] may know simply because he participated as a nonlawyer
    executive in events at the company from confidential information he possesses based at
    least in part on attorney-client privileged communications,” and focused its analysis “on
    the latter category.” (Id. at p. 1083.) The Wu court concluded the information presented
    there was insufficient to demonstrate a substantial relationship between representations,
    reasoning that “[t]o be protected through a disqualification order, ‘“the information
    acquired during the first representation [must] be ‘material’ to the second; that is, it must
    be found to be directly at issue in, or have some critical importance to, the second
    representation.”’” (Ibid, quoting Fremont Indemnity Co. v. Fremont General Corp.
    (2006) 
    143 Cal.App.4th 50
    , 69.)
    Wu does not support the defendants’ position in this case. While, as a
    general proposition, operational knowledge of an organization-client may only amount to
    insufficient playbook information (Wu, supra, 38 Cal.App.5th at p. 1083), in this case,
    12
    the subjects implicated by the facts and legal issues surrounding the LLC’s claimed harm
    because of the defendants’ conduct support a rational conclusion that intimate knowledge
    about the LLC’s operations would be of sufficiently “‘“critical importance”’” (ibid), and
    therefore would be more than mere playbook information.
    Finally, the defendants also contend we must separate information he knew
    as a consultant from what he knew as a lawyer in determining whether a substantial
    relationship exists in this case. However, the defendants do not dispute that “Dahle
    performed some non-litigation legal work and such work was intertwined with the
    business activities Dahle performed.” Neither Wu nor the related case, O’Gara Coach
    Co., LLC v. Ra (2019) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1115
     (Ra), support defendants’ argument.
    Ra involved the same principal involved in Wu, supra, 
    38 Cal.App.5th 1069
    : the same former president and chief operating officer of the corporation who
    subsequently became a lawyer. In contrast to the intertwined legal services and nonlegal
    services in this case, in both Ra and Wu there was no overlap between the principal’s
    employment as an executive and services he later provided as a lawyer. Nonetheless,
    because he obtained significant and relevant privileged information as an executive in
    acting as the point person on litigation, which was not the case in Wu, disqualification
    was required in Ra.
    Although defendants seek to separate, for purposes of analysis, Dahle’s
    services as a lawyer and nonlawyer, the evidence about legal services Dahle provided to
    the LLC supports the trial court’s findings that Dahle developed intimate relevant
    knowledge about the LLC’s operations based on the LLC’s confidential information
    gained from his direct and personal legal representation of the LLC. The trial court did
    not abuse its discretion in concluding that a substantial relationship exists between
    Dahle’s prior representation of the LLC and his current representation of the defendants
    against the LLC.
    13
    III
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s order granting the LLC’s motion to disqualify is affirmed.
    The LLC shall recover its costs on appeal.
    ZELON, J.*
    WE CONCUR:
    BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
    GOETHALS, J.
    *Retired Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, assigned by the Chief
    Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    14