Wong v. Luu , 472 Mass. 208 ( 2015 )


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    SJC-11789
    GARY WONG vs. GEORGE V.H. LUU & others1
    (and seven consolidated cases2).3
    Suffolk.     March 3, 2015. - July 15, 2015.
    Present:    Gants, C.J., Spina, Cordy, Botsford, & Duffly, JJ.
    Practice, Civil, Attorney's fees. Attorney at Law, Conduct
    prejudicial to administration of justice.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    August 17, 2009.
    1
    Super 88 Allston, LLC; Hong Kong Supermarket, Inc.; Hong
    Kong Supermarket Holding Corp.; Hong Kong Supermarkets of Mass.,
    LLC; Hong Kong Supermarkets of Allston, LLC; Jeffrey Wu, also
    known as Myint J. Kyaw; and Lucky Star Elmhurst, LLC.
    2
    Wincent International, Inc. vs. George V.H. Luu & others;
    Tin World, Inc. vs. Super 88, LLC, & others; Hop Lee Trading
    Co., Inc., & others vs. Wincent International, Inc., & others;
    Cheng Liu & others vs. Winvest LLC & others; Cheng Lee Co., Inc.
    vs. Super 88 Allston LLC & others; Gary Wong vs. Haymarket
    Capital, LLC, & others; Chang & Son Enterprises, Inc., & others
    vs. Super 88 Super Market II, Inc., & others.
    3
    The appellant, Attorney Richard Goren, was allowed to
    intervene in these cases solely for the purpose of appealing the
    award of sanctions against him that is at issue in this appeal.
    2
    A motion for sanctions, filed on March 29, 2011, was heard
    by D. Lloyd Macdonald, J.
    The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for
    direct appellate review.
    Michael P. Angelini for Richard Goren.
    Cynthia Mark (Anne R. Sills with her) for Yu Cheng Liu &
    another.
    Gregory P. Turner, for Hop Lee Trading Co., Inc., & others,
    was present but did not argue.
    Vy Truong, for Tin World, Inc., was present but did not
    argue.
    Debra Squires-Lee & Jessica Gray Kelly, for Boston Bar
    Association, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
    GANTS, C.J.      The issue presented in this case is the scope
    of a judge's authority under the inherent powers of the court to
    order an attorney for a party to pay the other parties'
    attorney's fees as a sanction for the attorney's misconduct
    where that sanction is not authorized by any statute or court
    rule, and where the attorney has not violated a court order or
    rule of procedure.    We conclude that a judge may exercise the
    court's inherent power to sanction an attorney with an
    assessment of attorney's fees only if the attorney has engaged
    in misconduct that threatens the fair administration of justice
    and the sanction is necessary to preserve the judge's authority
    to administer justice.     Because we conclude that the judge
    abused his discretion in exercising the court's inherent powers
    to sanction the attorney under the circumstances in this case,
    and that the attorney's alleged misconduct was more
    3
    appropriately addressed by a referral to the Board of Bar
    Overseers (board), we reverse the judge's order imposing
    sanctions.4
    Background.    Attorney Richard Goren was the attorney for
    Cheng Lee Co., Inc. (Cheng Lee), one of the plaintiffs in a
    complex litigation in the Superior Court arising out of the
    attempted sale of three supermarkets in the Boston area (the
    Super 88 stores).   Eight cases, later consolidated, were brought
    by three groups of plaintiffs:   the "trade creditors" (vendors
    of the Super 88 stores, including Cheng Lee, the "Hop Lee"
    plaintiffs, and the "Tin World" plaintiffs); the "workers"
    (former employees of the Super 88 stores asserting class action
    wage claims); and the "asset purchasers" (aggrieved attempted
    purchasers of the Super 88 stores).    The cases were brought
    against three groups of defendants:    the "Super 88 defendants"
    (corporate entities and principals of the Super 88 stores); the
    "Hong Kong Supermarket defendants" (the prospective purchasers
    of the Super 88 stores); and the "lenders" (financial
    institutions that lent money to the Super 88 defendants).
    On December 10, 2010, counsel for all parties in the
    litigation appeared in court for a conference pursuant to Mass.
    R. Civ. P. 16, as amended, 
    466 Mass. 1401
     (2013), and for an
    4
    We acknowledge the amicus brief submitted by the Boston
    Bar Association.
    4
    omnibus motions hearing.    With the judge's permission, counsel
    used the occasion instead to engage in substantive settlement
    discussions.   They reported to the court that a potential
    settlement framework had been reached, and they requested that
    the conference be continued so that they could further develop
    the framework.    The judge allowed the continuance and encouraged
    counsel's efforts.    The conference was continued a second time
    on the representation by counsel that substantial progress was
    being made towards settlement.    The judge scheduled March 18,
    2011, as the date on which counsel would report the terms of a
    final settlement to the court or proceed with the conference and
    hearing.
    Prior to March 18, the parties had reached a final
    settlement agreement, which they had intended to sign and file
    with the court.    Under the terms of the settlement agreement,
    the lenders agreed to release their claims to a security
    interest in the Super 88 store located in the Dorchester section
    of Boston in exchange for a release of the claims of all
    plaintiffs in the consolidated cases.    From the proceeds of the
    sale of the Dorchester store to one of the asset purchasers in
    settlement of its claims, Cheng Lee was to receive $650,000; the
    Hop Lee plaintiffs were to receive $264,000; the Tin World
    plaintiffs were to receive $313,395; and the workers were to
    receive $950,000, but $500,000 would not be paid for six months.
    5
    This would leave a balance of approximately $7 million for the
    lenders from the sale of the other two Super 88 stores.
    On March 18, however, counsel appeared in court and
    announced that there had been a "breakdown in the settlement
    discussions" because, days earlier, they had learned of a
    solicitation letter that Goren had sent out the week before to
    106 unsecured creditors of the Super 88 defendants that had been
    identified on a 2009 bankruptcy schedule.5   Most of the
    recipients were nonparty creditors, but four of the Hop Lee
    plaintiffs also received the letter, as did one nonparty
    creditor who was represented by the attorney for Tin World.6   In
    the letter, which was printed on the stationery of Goren's law
    firm at the time, Bodoff & Associates, P.C. (Bodoff), Goren
    explained that he "represent[ed] an unsecured trade creditor of
    Super 88 and [was] about to conclude an agreement whereby [his]
    client will recover 100 cents on the dollar in a settlement with
    various parties."   The letter went on to request that the
    recipient complete an enclosed form if the recipient were
    "interested in seeking to recover [its] unpaid Super 88 invoices
    on a contingent fee basis."   The letter further explained, "If
    5
    The Super 88 defendants had filed for bankruptcy in 2009,
    but the bankruptcy petitions were dismissed.
    6
    Goren later stated that the letter was sent to the Hop Lee
    plaintiffs through "error and inadvertence."
    6
    there is sufficient interest generated by unpaid creditors, we
    will bring a lawsuit against certain parties on the creditors'
    collective behalf . . . ."7   The letter both began and concluded
    with a request that the recipient treat the inquiry as
    confidential.8
    The Tin World and Hop Lee plaintiffs and the Super 88
    defendants moved for sanctions against Goren on the grounds that
    he had violated the rules of professional conduct9 and had
    interfered with the "effective administration of justice."10   At
    7
    The letter further stated that "[t]he contingency would be
    for 50% plus a proportionate share of costs and no settlement
    for less than 90% of aggregate face value could be made without
    the approval of a majority in interest of the claimants and the
    party financing the litigation."
    8
    In a subsequently filed affidavit, Goren stated that "[a]
    number of creditors responded" to this inquiry, and that he
    informed them that he was "not advising, nor agreeing then to
    represent" them, but "was gathering information for [a] third
    party who was considering financing the prosecution of their
    claims and that upon resolution of [his] current representation
    [of Cheng Lee], [he] would be in touch with them."
    9
    The "Tin World" plaintiffs and "Hop Lee" plaintiffs
    specifically claimed that Goren had contacted parties
    represented by counsel (including the four Hop Lee plaintiffs
    who received the solicitation letter) in violation of Mass. R.
    Prof. C. 4.2, as amended, 
    437 Mass. 1303
     (2002), and that he had
    solicited clients with interests adverse to his client, Cheng
    Lee Company Co., Inc. (Cheng Lee), in violation of Mass. R.
    Prof. C. 1.7, as amended, 
    430 Mass. 1301
     (1999). The Super 88
    defendants also claimed that Goren had "engag[ed] in bad faith
    negotiations over the course of three months with all counsel in
    these consolidated actions" in violation of the preamble to the
    rules of professional conduct.
    10
    The moving parties requested that sanctions also be
    imposed on Bodoff & Associates, P.C. (Bodoff), and the Super 88
    7
    the sanctions hearing on April 8, the various counsel explained
    why Goren's solicitation letter had derailed the settlement
    process.   They noted that the total amount of the claims
    exceeded the aggregate sale prices of the three supermarkets,
    and that everyone understood that it was in the interest of
    their clients that "outsiders to the consolidated actions not be
    invited in on what was a finite pot of money."   As a number of
    the parties had agreed to compromise their claims in various
    ways for the sake of reaching a settlement, the prospect of
    additional claims caused them to renege, because they had only
    agreed to compromise their claims on the assumption that they
    "were wrapping up all of the litigation," and because "a
    potential involuntary bankruptcy" could have been triggered if
    other "potential creditors [were] alerted to the false
    assumption that there's a pot of money out there that's just
    waiting to be tapped."11   The parties had never entered into a
    confidentiality agreement, and there was no confidentiality
    provision in the proposed settlement agreement, but counsel
    explained that "there was no real need for a [c]onfidentiality
    defendants requested that sanctions also be imposed on Goren's
    client, Cheng Lee.
    11
    Counsel also contended that Goren's statement that his
    client had received "100 cents on the dollar" contributed to the
    derailment of the settlement because it caused the Tin World
    plaintiffs -- who had only received "69 cents on a dollar" -- to
    insist on receiving more money.
    8
    [a]greement because it was in all of [their] own clients'
    interest to keep this as quiet as possible."12
    Goren replied that sanctions were unwarranted because he
    had not violated any ethical rule or court order or committed a
    breach of any agreement with the other parties, and because
    jurisdiction for sanctioning attorneys for ethical violations
    lies with the board.   He also denied that he had had any
    intention to "torpedo" the settlement.
    The judge ordered Goren to "reimburse all parties in the
    consolidated cases their necessary and reasonable attorney[']s
    fees and expenses incurred from December 10, 2010 through April
    8, 2011 in connection with the effort to settle the litigation
    and respond to the solicitation by Attorney Goren."13   The judge
    quoted the following passage from Beit v. Probate & Family Court
    Dep't, 
    385 Mass. 854
    , 859-860 (1982):
    12
    Counsel also noted that although "confidentiality was
    discussed," the negotiations involved a class action suit and
    "confidentiality would actually be difficult in this
    circumstance."
    13
    Originally, the judge also ordered that Cheng Lee be
    jointly and severally liable for the parties' attorney's
    fees.However, the judge later vacated that part of the order
    after he was persuaded, based in part on an affidavit from
    Goren, "that Cheng Lee intended that the settlement go through
    as negotiated by the parties and that Cheng Lee did nothing to
    encourage Goren's solicitation." The judge stated that "[o]n
    the expanded record, it would be unjust for Cheng Lee to be
    sanctioned for conduct that directly harmed Cheng Lee's own
    interests." The judge did not order sanctions against Bodoff.
    9
    "Judges have the inherent power to do whatever may be done
    under the general principles of jurisprudence to insure
    [the integrity of the judicial process]. . . . Simply
    stated, implicit in the constitutional grant of judicial
    power is authority necessary to the exercise of . . .
    [that] power. . . . [E]very judge must exercise his
    inherent powers as necessary to secure the full and
    effective administration of justice. . . . Exercising this
    power, a judge may impose reasonable court costs on an
    attorney who . . . delays the adjudication of legitimate
    claims and defenses, unnecessarily increases clients'
    litigation expenses, and squanders limited judicial
    resources. A judge cannot condone behavior that causes
    precious time to be wasted away while the court, parties,
    court personnel, and witnesses [otherwise diligently
    conduct themselves]" (quotations, citations, and footnotes
    omitted).
    The judge noted that, "[i]n a technical sense," he did not have
    jurisdiction to rule on compliance with the rules of
    professional conduct, but he concluded that the content of the
    rules "may inform the [c]ourt's assessment of whether Goren
    acted unreasonably such as to have impeded 'the full and
    effective administration of justice' and 'delay[ed] the
    adjudication of legitimate claims and defenses . . . and
    squander[ed] limited judicial resources.'"   The judge found that
    "[u]nquestionably, Goren did so."
    The judge stated that he had "placed on hold [his] earlier
    effort to move the consolidated cases to prompt trial on
    counsel's representation in December, joined by Goren, that they
    had agreed on a settlement framework but that time was needed to
    finalize it."   He did so in reliance "on the good faith of all
    counsel, as officers of the [c]ourt, in representing to the
    10
    [c]ourt that they were engaged diligently in the global
    settlement effort."   He found that "but for one participant,"
    impliedly Goren, "they were in fact so engaged."
    He found that the settlement negotiations had been
    "conducted in confidence because of the parties' awareness that
    if additional claimants appeared, the finite settlement fund
    would be further diluted and (if a critical mass of new claims
    were filed) a bankruptcy petition could be triggered that would
    have left all the plaintiffs without a practical remedy."     He
    also found that, in these circumstances, "the very act of
    solicitation and its communication of the prospect of a recovery
    by third parties breached the assumption of confidentiality,
    which was central to the prospect of achieving settlement."
    The judge found that Goren "appeared to have . . .
    violat[ed]" Mass. R. Prof. C. 4.2, as amended, 
    437 Mass. 1303
    (2002), by soliciting five creditors that Goren knew or should
    have known were already represented by counsel for the trade
    creditors.14   He further found that Goren "was subject to"
    paragraph 2 of the preamble to the rules of professional conduct
    14
    Rule 4.2 of the Massachusetts Rules of Professional
    Conduct, as amended, 
    437 Mass. 1303
     (2002), provides: "In
    representing a client, a lawyer shall not communicate about the
    subject of the representation with a person the lawyer knows to
    be represented by another lawyer in the matter, unless the
    lawyer has the consent of the other lawyer or is authorized by
    law to do so."
    11
    and that his "conduct was fundamentally dishonest toward his co-
    counsel and a breach of the core professional duty of good faith
    and fair dealing with other counsel."15   The judge also found
    that Goren's conduct "was a fundamental breach of his duty of
    candor to the [c]ourt," in violation of Mass. R. Prof. C. 3.3,
    
    426 Mass. 1383
     (1998), but he did not specify how Goren had
    committed a breach of this duty, or which subsection of rule
    3.3 (a) Goren had violated.16,17
    The judge further concluded that "[t]he [c]ourt has been
    materially prejudiced" by Goren's conduct, writing:
    "The impact of Goren's conduct on the administration of
    justice, the [c]ourt's most immediate concern, has been
    stark. The progression of the consolidated cases to a fair
    and prompt disposition has been obstructed. Three months
    15
    Paragraph 2 of the Preamble to the Massachusetts Rules of
    Professional Conduct, 
    426 Mass. 1303
     (1998), provides, in
    relevant part: "As a representative of clients, a lawyer
    performs various functions. . . . As negotiator, a lawyer seeks
    a result advantageous to the client but consistent with
    requirements of honest dealing with others."
    16
    Rule 3.3 (a) of the Massachusetts Rules of Professional
    Conduct, 
    426 Mass. 1383
     (1998), which was the rule in effect on
    the date of the judge's order, provided that a "lawyer shall not
    knowingly . . . (1) make a false statement of material fact or
    law to a tribunal; (2) fail to disclose a material fact to a
    tribunal when disclosure is necessary to avoid assisting a
    criminal or fraudulent act by the client . . . ; (3) fail to
    disclose to the tribunal legal authority in the controlling
    jurisdiction known to the lawyer to be directly adverse to the
    position of the client and not disclosed by opposing counsel; or
    (4) offer evidence that the lawyer knows to be false . . . ."
    17
    The judge made no findings regarding the allegation by
    the moving parties that Goren had violated Mass. R. Prof. C.
    1.7.
    12
    of diligent and expensive lawyers' time has been wasted.
    And the assumption on which the [c]ourt relied in staying
    the cases has been shown to have been based on a false
    premise."
    In addition to allowing in part the motions for sanctions and
    ordering sanctions against Goren, the judge referred a copy of
    his order to the board for its review.
    Pursuant to the judge's order, counsel involved in the
    settlement negotiations filed affidavits detailing their
    attorney's fees.   After a nonevidentiary hearing addressing
    those filings, the judge ordered Goren to pay sanctions totaling
    $239,928.40 to counsel for the parties engaged in settlement
    negotiations (other than Cheng Lee).     The judge observed:
    "The magnitude of the total award gives the [c]ourt
    temporary pause. However, on reflection, it is a fair,
    reasonable and just sanction under the unusual, if not
    unique, circumstances of this case. Attorney Goren's
    callous indifference to the consequences of his unethical
    solicitation directly caused the predictable financial
    injury which the sanctions are designed to compensate.
    Further, not reflected in the sanctions is the impact on
    the [c]ourt (the resources of which are currently strained
    to the limit). If such impact were in fact monetized, the
    total sanctions would be substantially enlarged."
    Goren appealed, and we granted direct appellate review.18
    18
    The sanctions award against Goren is the only issue on
    appeal. The parties ultimately entered into a court-indorsed
    settlement agreement on June 11, 2014, which resolved all claims
    in these consolidated cases apart from the sanctions at issue in
    this appeal and a separate award of attorney's fees not
    involving Goren.
    13
    Discussion.   Massachusetts generally follows the "American
    rule" and denies recovery of attorney's fees unless such fee-
    shifting is authorized by contract, statute, or court rule.     See
    Police Comm'r of Boston v. Gows, 
    429 Mass. 14
    , 17 (1999) (Gows);
    Preferred Mut. Ins. Co. v. Gamache, 
    426 Mass. 93
    , 95 (1997).     In
    some circumstances, a judge in a civil case is expressly
    authorized by statute or rule to sanction an attorney for
    misconduct by requiring the attorney to pay opposing counsel's
    fees.   A judge may award an adverse party reasonable attorney's
    fees and other costs upon a finding that "all or substantially
    all of the claims, defenses, setoffs or counterclaims . . . made
    by any party who was represented by counsel . . . were wholly
    insubstantial, frivolous and not advanced in good faith."   G. L.
    c. 231, § 6F.   See Mass. R. Civ. P. 11 (a), as amended, 
    456 Mass. 1401
     (2010) (attorney may be subjected to "appropriate
    disciplinary action" for wilful violation of rule requiring that
    attorney not sign pleading unless "to the best of his knowledge,
    information, and belief there is a good ground to support it;
    and that it is not interposed for delay").   A judge is also
    granted abundant authority pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 37 to
    impose sanctions, including attorney's fees, where an attorney
    violates a rule of discovery or an order regarding discovery.
    See Mass. R. Civ. P. 37 (b), as amended, 
    423 Mass. 1406
     (1996).
    Furthermore, even though not expressly authorized by the rules
    14
    governing contempt, we have recognized -- notwithstanding the
    American rule -- that "[w]here a party's conduct in a litigation
    constitutes contempt of court, . . . a court has discretion to
    award attorney's fees against the contumacious party."     Gows,
    supra.19
    In this case, the judge assessed attorney's fees against
    Goren without the authority of any statute or rule, without
    finding Goren in contempt of court, and in the absence of any
    contractual arrangement among the parties authorizing the
    assessment of attorney's fees.   The judge in his decision
    imposing sanctions on Goren quoted the legal standard we
    declared in Beit, noting that a judge, through the exercise of
    the court's inherent powers, may sanction an attorney by the
    award of attorney's fees "as necessary to secure the full and
    effective administration of justice."   Beit, 
    385 Mass. at 859
    ,
    quoting O'Coins, Inc. v. Treasurer of the County of Worcester,
    
    362 Mass. 507
    , 514 (1972).   But the legal issue in Beit was
    simply whether a judge, through the exercise of inherent powers,
    19
    See Mass. R. Civ. P. 65.3, as appearing in 
    386 Mass. 1244
    (1982) (authorizing civil contempt proceedings for violations of
    "orders or judgments entered pursuant to these rules, for the
    violation of which civil contempt is an appropriate remedy").
    See also Demoulas v. Demoulas Super Mkts., Inc., 
    424 Mass. 501
    ,
    571 (1997), S.C., 
    428 Mass. 543
     (1998), and S.C., 
    432 Mass. 43
    (2000) ("As matter of law, the awarding of attorney's fees and
    costs is an appropriate element of a successful civil contempt
    proceeding"); Matter of Vincent, 
    408 Mass. 527
    , 530 (1990) ("It
    is well settled that a court has the inherent power to impose
    sanctions for contempt of its orders").
    15
    could sanction an attorney for failing to appear at trial.     That
    was effectively a violation of a court order, because when a
    judge sets a date for trial, and no continuance is sought or
    allowed, the judge is implicitly ordering counsel in the case to
    appear on that date for trial, and the counsel's failure to
    appear, without excuse, is plainly grounds for sanction.     See
    Beit, 
    supra at 859-860
     ("authority to make the court's lawful
    orders effective" includes authority to sanction attorney for
    failure to appear).   Goren did not violate any court order; nor
    did he engage in any misconduct in the court room.   Therefore,
    this case tests the limits of a judge's inherent powers to
    sanction in a way that Beit did not, and requires us to revisit
    the scope of the court's inherent powers.
    We have held that a judge has the inherent power to assess
    attorney's fees against a party or attorney for out-of-court
    misconduct that was not in violation of any court order, but
    only in "rare and egregious cases."   Gows, 429 Mass. at 17, 19
    (judge awarded attorney's fees against party who delayed
    compliance with lawful court order and forced prevailing party
    to resort to litigation to obtain compliance).   The crux of the
    issue here is whether this is such a "rare and egregious" case.
    Under Federal law, a judge may exercise the inherent powers
    of the court to assess attorney's fees against an attorney as a
    sanction for misconduct where the attorney has "willful[ly]
    16
    disobe[yed]" a court order or where the attorney has "acted in
    bad faith, vexatiously, wantonly, or for oppressive reasons."
    Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 45-46 (1991), quoting
    Alyeska Pipeline Serv. Co. v. Wilderness Soc'y, 
    421 U.S. 240
    ,
    258-259 (1975).    See Gows, 429 Mass. at 18, quoting Newman v.
    Piggie Park Enters., Inc., 
    390 U.S. 400
    , 402 n.4 (1968) (noting
    that under Federal law, "[c]onduct has been held to justify an
    award of attorney's fees where a party has acted 'in bad
    faith'").    In Chambers, the bad faith conduct that warranted the
    assessment of attorney's fees -- which included but went beyond
    violations of court orders and other misconduct that could be
    sanctioned under Federal statutes and rules -- was egregious.
    See Chambers, 
    supra at 35-42, 58
     (affirming award of almost $1
    million in attorney's fees against litigant who tried "first, to
    deprive [the Federal District Court] of jurisdiction [by acts of
    fraud on the court] and, second, to devise a plan of
    obstruction, delay, harassment, and expense sufficient to reduce
    [opposing party] to a condition of exhausted compliance").
    However, there appears to be no Federal rule defining what
    constitutes "bad faith" for the purpose of justifying a court's
    award of attorney's fees based on the court's inherent
    powers.     See 
    id. at 63
     (Kennedy, J., dissenting) (only
    limitation on court's exercise of inherent power to impose
    sanctions "appears to be a finding at some point of 'bad faith,'
    17
    a standard the Court fails to define").   We recognize that "bad
    faith" alone is too vague a standard to establish the scope of a
    judge's inherent power to assess attorney's fees against an
    attorney who is not in violation of a court order, statute, or
    rule of procedure.
    A judge's inherent powers -- including the inherent power
    to assess attorney's fees for misconduct -- must be broad enough
    to enable a judge to ensure the fair administration of justice.
    See Avery v. Steele, 
    414 Mass. 450
    , 457 (1993), quoting New
    England Novelty Co. v. Sandberg, 
    315 Mass. 739
    , 746 (1944)
    ("'[C]ourt[s] of superior jurisdiction [have] the inherent power
    . . . to punish those who obstruct or degrade the administration
    of justice' . . . [and] have wide discretion to determine when a
    party or attorney before them has acted in a manner warranting
    the imposition of sanctions"); Beit, 
    385 Mass. at 859
    .    But the
    exercise of these powers to assess attorney's fees must be
    limited to those cases where the imposition of such sanctions is
    necessary to preserve the court's authority to accomplish
    justice.   See Chambers, 
    501 U.S. at 64
     (Kennedy, J., dissenting)
    ("Like all applications of inherent power, the authority to
    sanction bad-faith litigation practices can be exercised only
    when necessary to preserve the authority of the court");
    O'Coins, Inc., 
    362 Mass. at 510
    , quoting Opinion of the
    Justices, 
    279 Mass. 607
    , 609 (1932) ("[I]mplicit in the
    18
    constitutional grant of judicial power is 'authority necessary
    to the exercise of . . . [that] power [emphasis supplied]'").
    The inherent powers of the court are limited by this rule of
    necessity, consistent with the principle that "[b]ecause
    inherent powers are shielded from direct democratic controls,
    they must be exercised with restraint and discretion."     Roadway
    Express, Inc. v. Piper, 
    447 U.S. 752
    , 764 (1980).   See Chambers,
    
    supra at 44
     ("Because of their very potency, inherent powers
    must be exercised with restraint and discretion").20   In accord
    with this principle, a court should exercise restraint and
    discretion both in determining whether the rule of necessity
    permits the imposition of sanctions under a court's inherent
    powers and, where it does, in determining whether to impose a
    sanction in a particular case and the severity of the sanction.
    The inherent powers necessary to preserve the court's
    authority to accomplish justice include the power to sanction an
    attorney for failing to comply with an order of the court and
    for undue delay in compliance.   See Sommer v. Maharaj, 
    451 Mass. 20
    Where a court's power to impose the sanction of
    attorney's fees is concerned, there is an additional
    consideration warranting restraint, namely, the risk that the
    court's inherent powers might be interpreted so liberally as to
    create an exception to the American Rule so broad that it might
    in practice devour the rule. See Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 32
    , 45 (1991), quoting Roadway Express, Inc. v. Piper, 
    447 U.S. 752
    , 765 (1980) (court has inherent power to depart from
    American rule only in "narrowly defined circumstances").
    19
    615, 620-622 (2008), cert. denied, 
    556 U.S. 1235
     (2009)
    ("extreme delay in payment of the judgment" warranted forfeiture
    of party's right to be heard); Gows, 429 Mass. at 17-19; Beit,
    
    385 Mass. at 859-860
    ; Commonwealth v. Rogers, 
    46 Mass. App. Ct. 109
    , 112 (1999) (upholding nominal assessment of fees against
    attorney for violation of court order where violation was not
    disruptive enough to warrant summary contempt punishment).      See
    also Chambers, 
    501 U.S. at 45-46
    , quoting Alyeska Pipeline Serv.
    Co., 
    421 U.S. at 258
    , and Hutto v. Finney, 
    437 U.S. 678
    , 689
    n.14 (1978) (fee shifting allowed for "willful disobedience of a
    court order" and where party "shows bad faith by . . . hampering
    enforcement of a court order").   The court's inherent powers
    also include the power to sanction an attorney for making
    knowingly false misrepresentations to the court, intentionally
    misleading the court, or knowingly concealing information that
    an attorney has a duty to provide to the court.   See Chambers,
    
    supra at 46
    , quoting Universal Oil Prods. Co. v. Root Refining
    Co., 
    328 U.S. 575
    , 580 (1946) ("[I]f a court finds 'that fraud
    has been practiced upon it . . . ,' it may assess attorney's
    fees against the responsible party"); Munshani v. Signal Lake
    Venture Fund II, LP, 
    60 Mass. App. Ct. 714
    , 714-715, 718-722
    (2004) (dismissal of party's case pursuant to court's inherent
    powers was warranted after party committed fraud on court by
    "manufacturing evidence, swearing to its authenticity, and
    20
    continuing to insist on its authenticity for more than seven
    months while an expert investigated the matter").   They also
    include the power to sanction an attorney for engaging in
    conduct in the court room that interferes with a judge's ability
    to manage the court room fairly, efficiently, and respectfully.
    See Chambers, 
    supra,
     quoting Hutto, supra (fee shifting allowed
    where party "shows bad faith by delaying or disrupting the
    litigation"); Clark v. Clark, 
    47 Mass. App. Ct. 737
    , 743-744
    (1999) (award of attorney sanctions was not improper where
    attorney engaged in "bombastic" behavior during trial, and
    walked out of court room during cross-examination of her client
    without permission after having been warned by court that such
    conduct could result in criminal contempt proceedings being
    instituted against her).   They also include the power to
    sanction an attorney for other types of misconduct, but only
    where the exercise of that inherent power is necessary to
    punish, deter, or remedy misconduct that threatens a judge's
    ability to ensure the fair administration of justice.   See
    Avelino-Wright v. Wright, 
    51 Mass. App. Ct. 1
    , 3, 5-6 (2001)
    (upholding attorney's fee sanction for attorney who "abused the
    court process" by, inter alia, "challenging the integrity of the
    judges and appointed experts"; "becoming so enmeshed with her
    client that she [had] lost her professionalism in advocating for
    a client"; "not attempting to exercise proper control and
    21
    guidance of her client"; and "violating the court imposed
    restraining order against her").
    The judge in this case essentially found that Goren, by
    sending the solicitation letter, committed a breach of the
    "assumption of confidentiality" that was "central to the
    prospect of achieving settlement," and thereby thwarted a
    settlement that was on the verge of being executed, which wasted
    three months of attorneys' time that had been invested in
    negotiating the settlement, and "materially prejudiced" the
    court by delaying the judge's effort to move the consolidated
    cases towards trial.   Further, although the judge recognized
    that he had no jurisdiction "[i]n a technical sense" to decide
    whether Goren had violated the rules of professional conduct, he
    nonetheless essentially found that Goren had violated these
    rules, and the judge relied on these violations to demonstrate
    that Goren had acted unreasonably to impede "the full and
    effective administration of justice."   We review the judge's
    imposition of sanctions under the court's inherent powers for
    abuse of discretion.   See Chambers, 
    501 U.S. at 55
    .   "[A]
    judge's discretionary decision constitutes an abuse of
    discretion where we conclude the judge made 'a clear error of
    judgment in weighing' the factors relevant to the decision,
    . . . such that the decision falls outside the range of
    22
    reasonable alternatives" (citation omitted).    L.L. v.
    Commonwealth, 
    470 Mass. 169
    , 185 n.27 (2014).
    We know of no other case, nor has one been cited by the
    parties or amicus, where a judge sanctioned an attorney pursuant
    to the inherent powers of the court for conduct that resulted in
    a breakdown of settlement negotiations where there was no breach
    of a settlement agreement or confidentiality agreement, and no
    violation of an order of the court or rule of procedure.21   The
    fair administration of justice does not require the settlement
    of a case; although the parties are free to settle their case,
    their entitlement under law is to a trial, not to a settlement
    in lieu of a trial.   See Bower v. Bournay-Bower, 
    469 Mass. 690
    ,
    701 (2014) ("art. 11 [of the Massachusetts Declaration of
    Rights] safeguards an individual's right to seek recourse under
    the law"); Graizzaro v. Graizzaro, 
    36 Mass. App. Ct. 911
    , 912
    (1994) ("A court may appropriately urge settlement on the
    21
    In Strand v. Hubbard, 
    31 Mass. App. Ct. 914
    , 914-915
    (1991), where the Appeals Court approved an award of attorney's
    fees against a party who "provoked a needless round of
    litigation by torpedoing the settlement to which she had
    previously agreed," the Appeals Court was acting pursuant to its
    statutory authority under G. L. c. 215, § 45, which applies only
    in probate proceedings and which permits a court to award costs
    and expenses "as justice and equity may require." The holding
    in that case applies only to probate proceedings. See Matter of
    the Estate of King, 
    455 Mass. 796
    , 802-805 & n.13 (2010) ("§ 45
    is a special departure from the American rule . . . but one
    [that is] limited to matters relating to wills, estates, and
    trusts").
    23
    parties but may not refuse them access to a judicial forum to
    resolve their justiciable disputes").    See also Goss Graphics
    Sys., Inc. v. DEV Indus., Inc., 
    267 F.3d 624
    , 627-628 (7th Cir.
    2001) ("If parties want to duke it out, that's their
    privilege").   It might be regrettable that money and time were
    wasted in negotiations that ultimately failed to bear fruit, but
    that risk is inherent in every negotiation.    Because of the risk
    that judges may misuse the inherent powers to pressure a party
    to settle a case by threatening the party with sanctions, and
    also because of the risk that judges will be drawn into
    collateral disputes regarding what occurred during settlement
    negotiations by parties seeking sanctions, we must scrutinize
    with special care any exercise of the inherent powers in the
    context of settlement negotiations.     Cf. Graizzaro, supra ("[A]
    judge must show restraint in urging settlement on the parties,"
    and "[w]hile a judge in a civil case doubtless may play a role
    in settlement discussions . . . , he must be conscious to avoid
    use of his power to coerce settlements from recalcitrant
    parties" [citation omitted]).
    A settlement agreement, especially in a case as complex as
    this, no doubt would spare the court the time and resources that
    would otherwise be devoted to trying the case.    But an
    attorney's conduct during settlement negotiations that results
    in the failure of those negotiations is not subject to sanctions
    24
    under the judge's inherent powers where the judge is not
    participating in those negotiations, because the failure of
    settlement negotiations does not threaten a judge's ability to
    ensure the fair administration of justice.22   Where a settlement
    agreement is entered into as a result of fraud or duress, the
    aggrieved party may challenge the lawfulness of the agreement
    and may potentially be awarded attorney's fees as an equitable
    remedy, along with the voiding of the agreement.   Cf. Warner
    Ins. Co. v. Commissioner of Ins., 
    406 Mass. 354
    , 360 n.7 (1990)
    ("settlement agreement is a private contract . . . governed by
    general contract law").   But where, as here, no agreement is
    reached, a judge's inherent powers do not authorize the judge to
    determine who was responsible for the breakdown of negotiations,
    and order the attorney responsible to pay the attorney's fees
    incurred by the other parties in the thwarted negotiations.
    22
    We do not mean to suggest that a court does not have a
    legitimate interest in the progress of settlement negotiations.
    Cf. Mass. R. Civ. P. 16, as amended, 
    466 Mass. 1401
     (2013)
    (identifying "possibility of settlement" as subject that "a
    court may in its discretion direct the attorneys for the parties
    . . . to appear before it" to consider at pretrial conference).
    Other jurisdictions have accordingly held that a court has the
    inherent power to order parties to attend settlement
    negotiations, and to sanction parties for failing to comply with
    such orders. See In re Novak, 
    932 F.2d 1397
    , 1406-1407 (11th
    Cir. 1991); G. Heileman Brewing Co. v. Joseph Oat Corp., 
    871 F.2d 648
    , 656-657 (7th Cir. 1989). But we note that no such
    order was issued in this case.
    25
    The judge here determined that Goren committed a breach of
    the "assumption of confidentiality" that was necessary to the
    entry of a settlement agreement, but where no confidentiality
    agreement was entered into and where confidentiality was not
    required by an order of the court, the inherent powers of the
    court are not properly exercised to sanction the breach of such
    an assumption.23   The judge suggested that the breach of the
    "assumption of confidentiality" violated the obligation of an
    attorney to deal honestly with others, but the inherent powers
    of the court do not extend to claims that an attorney during
    settlement negotiations did not act honestly.24
    The judge also found that Goren violated Mass. R. Prof. C.
    4.2 by sending his solicitation letter to a few prospective
    23
    Contrast Baella-Silva v. Hulsey, 
    454 F.3d 5
    , 7, 11-13
    (1st Cir. 2006) (affirming sanction imposed by Federal District
    Court against party who committed breach of confidentiality
    clause of settlement agreement incorporated into court's
    judgment); Toon v. Wackenhut Corrections Corp., 
    250 F.3d 950
    ,
    952, 954 (5th Cir. 2001) (affirming sanction against party who
    committed breach of confidentiality provision of settlement
    agreement by filing unsealed motion to enforce settlement
    agreement).
    24
    The judge focused on the provision in Mass. R. Prof. C.
    Preamble, par. 2, which provides, "As negotiator, a lawyer seeks
    a result advantageous to the client but consistent with
    requirements of honest dealing with others," and implicitly
    found that Goren violated that part of the preamble that calls
    for "honest dealing with others." But the preamble to the rules
    of professional conduct provides only "general orientation"; it
    is not itself a rule. Mass. R. Prof. C. Scope [9], 
    426 Mass. 1308
     (1998).
    26
    clients who were already represented by counsel in settlement
    negotiations.   The judge recognized that "[i]n a technical
    sense" the adjudication of an alleged violation of an ethical
    rule rests solely with the board and this court, and that a
    judge does not have jurisdiction to rule on issues of
    compliance.25   But he nonetheless determined that a finding of an
    ethical violation may bear on the issue whether Goren impaired
    the administration of justice.   In the circumstances of this
    case, we disagree.   Sending a solicitation letter to a
    represented client in these circumstances -- even assuming it
    was in violation of rule 4.2 -- is not conduct that may be
    sanctioned through the inherent powers of the court; such
    sanctions were not necessary to ensure the fair administration
    of justice where the judge also referred the matter to the board
    for its consideration, and where disciplinary proceedings
    instituted by the board and reviewed by this court would be able
    to protect the interests embodied in rule 4.2.
    The judge's finding that Goren committed "a fundamental
    breach of his duty of candor to the [c]ourt," in violation of
    rule 3.3, calls for separate analysis, because this rule
    prohibits an attorney from making a knowing false statement to a
    25
    See S.J.C. Rule 4:01, § 1, as amended, 
    430 Mass. 1319
    (2000) ("exclusive disciplinary jurisdiction" over lawyers
    practicing in the Commonwealth lies with Supreme Judicial Court
    and Board of Bar Overseers).
    27
    court, and it is plain that the inherent powers of the court
    include the authority to sanction an attorney for such
    misconduct, regardless of the adjudication of any complaint
    before the board for violation of this rule.   See Rockdale Mgt.
    Co. v. Shawmut Bank, N.A., 
    418 Mass. 596
    , 598 (1994) ("When a
    fraud on the court is shown through clear and convincing
    evidence to have been committed in an ongoing case, the trial
    judge has the inherent power to take action in response to the
    fraudulent conduct," and "has broad discretion to fashion a
    judicial response warranted by the fraudulent conduct");
    Munshani, 60 Mass. App. Ct. at 718-722.   See also Chambers, 510
    U.S. at 46, quoting Universal Oil Prods. Co., 328 U.S. at 580
    ("if a court finds 'that fraud has been practiced upon it, or
    that the very temple of justice has been defiled,' it may assess
    attorney's fees against the responsible party").   The judge did
    not specify what he found to constitute this breach of Goren's
    duty of candor but we need not remand for such a finding,
    because the only finding that might support the exercise of the
    judge's inherent powers to sanction -- a finding that, when the
    attorneys represented to the judge that they were exploring
    settlement of the case, Goren knowingly misled the judge because
    Goren knew at the time that he intended to sabotage any possible
    settlement by sending out the solicitation letter -- is not
    supported by the information presented to the court.     Although
    28
    there was ample information to support a finding that Goren
    should have recognized that his sending of the solicitation
    letter put at risk the settlement agreement that he claimed in
    the letter he was "about to conclude" for his client, there is
    no information to suggest that Goren sought settlement
    discussions to procure delay in the litigation, knowing that he
    would sabotage any possible settlement.
    We understand the judge's frustration that a settlement of
    a complex case was thwarted by Goren's desire to solicit other
    clients at a time when he should have known that doing so risked
    the settlement that had so nearly been achieved.    We understand
    as well the parties' frustration that so much of their
    attorneys' time (and therefore their money) was squandered by
    the ultimate failure of negotiations triggered by Goren's
    solicitation.    But the inherent powers of a judge to sanction an
    attorney are not so broad as to right all wrongs.    They are
    limited to what is necessary to "vindicat[e] judicial
    authority."    Chambers, 
    501 U.S. at 46
    , quoting Hutto, 437 U.S.
    at 689 n.14.    See Byrne v. Nezhat, 
    261 F.3d 1075
    , 1133 n.116
    (11th Cir. 2001) ("Unlike the tort law, [sanctions imposed under
    court's inherent powers] are aimed directly at redressing the
    harm suffered by the judicial system"); Mark Indus., Ltd. v. Sea
    Captain's Choice, Inc., 
    50 F.3d 730
    , 733 (9th Cir. 1995)
    ("Return of all fees and costs [was] too severe a sanction"
    29
    because "[t]he proper use of sanctions that are within the
    court's inherent power is to protect the court so it may
    adequately dispense justice," whereas "[h]ere . . . the court
    chose to impose what amounted to a summary malpractice
    penalty").26   Because the alleged wrongs committed by Goren did
    not threaten the judge's ability to ensure the fair
    administration of justice, we conclude that the judge exceeded
    the inherent powers of a court by his assessment of attorney's
    fees and therefore abused his discretion in doing so.27
    26
    Sanctions imposed under the court's inherent powers may
    also serve the purpose of "mak[ing] [a] party whole for expenses
    caused by his opponent's obstinacy." Chambers, 
    501 U.S. at 46
    ,
    quoting Hutto v. Finney, 
    437 U.S. 678
    , 689 n.14 (1978). See
    Avelino-Wright v. Wright, 
    51 Mass. App. Ct. 1
    , 5 (2001) ("Unlike
    the use of the criminal contempt power, the purpose of sanctions
    is designed not only to punish but also to compensate the
    aggrieved litigant for the actual loss incurred by the
    misconduct of the offending party"). But it does not follow
    that sanctions can always be justified whenever a party is
    injured by an opposing party's or an attorney's misconduct. The
    limiting principle of necessity means that the inherent powers
    of a judge may only be exercised where necessary to preserve the
    court's authority to administer justice.
    27
    Because we conclude that the sanctions order must be
    reversed where the fair administration of justice was not
    threatened by Goren's conduct, we do not reach the issue whether
    Goren's conduct was in bad faith, or whether a finding of bad
    faith is required to assess attorney's fees under the judge's
    inherent powers where no court order or rule of procedure has
    been disobeyed. Nor do we consider Goren's argument that he was
    entitled to an evidentiary hearing before sanctions could be
    imposed.
    30
    Conclusion.   For the reasons stated, we reverse the judge's
    order and subsequent amended order as they pertain to the
    imposition of sanctions on Goren.28
    So ordered.
    28
    Our reversal of the judge's order does not affect the
    judge's referral of the matter to the Board of Bar Overseers for
    its consideration.