in Re Rsr Corporation and Quemetco Metals Limited, Inc. ( 2015 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
    444444444444
    NO . 13-0499
    444444444444
    IN RE RSR CORPORATION AND QUEMETCO METALS LIMITED, INC., RELATORS
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    ON PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS
    4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444
    Argued September 2, 2015
    JUSTICE DEVINE delivered the opinion of the Court.
    This original proceeding concerns whether the trial court abused its discretion by
    disqualifying plaintiffs’ counsel because they “worked so closely” with a defendant’s former finance
    manager. Treating the finance manager like a side-switching paralegal, the trial court applied In re
    American Home Products Corp., 
    985 S.W.2d 68
    (Tex. 1998) (orig. proceeding), and found
    plaintiffs’ counsel should have screened him from participating in the case. We hold the American
    Home Products screening requirement does not govern a fact witness with information about his
    former employer if his position with that employer existed independently of litigation and he did not
    primarily report to lawyers. To the extent the fact witness discloses his past employer’s privileged
    and confidential information, the factors outlined by In re Meador, 
    968 S.W.2d 346
    (Tex. 1998)
    (orig. proceeding), should guide the trial court’s discretion regarding disqualification. Because the
    trial court improperly disqualified plaintiffs’ counsel under American Home Products, we
    conditionally grant mandamus relief.
    I. Background and Procedural History
    In the underlying case, Bickel & Brewer represent RSR Corporation and Quemetco Metals
    Limited, Inc. (collectively, “RSR”) in their suit against Inppamet S.A.,1 a Chilean manufacturer of
    anodes used in the mining industry. RSR had licensed its anode-production information to Inppamet
    in 2003. In return, Inppamet promised to pay RSR a fee for every anode sold. In 2008, RSR sued
    Inppamet in Texas for (among other things) breaching their contract and misappropriating trade
    secrets. That same year, Inppamet sued RSR in Chile. The law firm of Bofill Mir & Alvarez Jana
    (BMAJ) represents RSR in the Chilean litigation.
    Hernan Sobarzo was Inppamet’s finance manager from April 2007 to April 2010. Sobarzo’s
    self-described duties included ensuring cash flow and financing, as well as calculating Inppamet’s
    payments to RSR under the 2003 agreement. He had access to data regarding Inppamet’s financial
    statements, foreign trading, and government reports. When RSR requested an audit in 2009
    concerning Inppamet’s payments to RSR, Sobarzo gathered information and discussed the audit with
    Inppamet’s lawyers and company officers. He also discussed litigation strategy with company
    officers, communicated with Inppamet’s lawyers, and reviewed invoices describing the attorneys’
    work. Notably, Sobarzo’s contract with Inppamet stated that all information Sobarzo obtained
    during his employment was confidential and could not be disclosed to third parties, even after his
    employment ended.
    1
    RSR also sued Plastic and Metal Parts, Inc., and Andreas Siegmund. For convenience, we refer only to
    Inppamet. Although Siegmund is a defendant in the underlying suit and a real party in interest in this original proceeding,
    he has not made an appearance here.
    2
    In April 2010, Sobarzo resigned from Inppamet. He took with him around 2.3 gigabytes of
    data, consisting primarily of emails—around 15,000 to 17,000 of them. The emails included some
    of Sobarzo’s personal communications, as well as emails between Inppamet’s lawyers, managers,
    and directors.
    Months later, an attorney with BMAJ, RSR’s Chilean counsel, emailed Sobarzo and asked
    Sobarzo to contact him. The two eventually met to discuss Inppamet and the feud with RSR. More
    meetings followed, often involving Bickel & Brewer. Twice Sobarzo traveled to New York City to
    meet with Bickel & Brewer. At other times, attorneys from Bickel & Brewer traveled to Chile. The
    trial court found Sobarzo met with Bickel & Brewer’s attorneys and consultants at least 19 times for
    a total of more than 150 hours.
    The parties dispute what happened during these meetings. But this much is clear: Sobarzo
    supplied significant information regarding Inppamet, accusing Inppamet of underpaying RSR under
    the 2003 agreement. He discussed Inppamet’s audit of the payments and even provided Bickel &
    Brewer a spreadsheet concerning the payment calculations. Bickel & Brewer attorneys looked on
    as Sobarzo displayed Inppamet documents on his computer, and BMAJ possesses a pen drive with
    many Inppamet documents. The parties, of course, dispute the nature and number of documents
    Bickel & Brewer reviewed. RSR asserts Bickel & Brewer always told Sobarzo not to reveal
    Inppamet’s privileged or confidential information during their interviews. Inppamet, however,
    contends Bickel & Brewer freely viewed the documents Sobarzo took from Inppamet, many of which
    were privileged and confidential. Regarding the pen drive, the parties dispute the extent that Bickel
    3
    & Brewer reviewed the documents on the pen drive and whether BMAJ took adequate precautions
    against viewing privileged information.
    Sobarzo insisted on compensation for his time with BMAJ and Bickel & Brewer. The trial
    court found Sobarzo charged $1,600 per day, which was four times his current salary. RSR asserts
    Sobarzo misrepresented his salary and led RSR’s attorneys to believe they were fairly compensating
    him for travel expenses and lost time. In May 2011, BMAJ and Sobarzo formalized the terms of
    Sobarzo’s compensation in a written consulting agreement. As the trial court noted, though the
    agreement was between BMAJ and Sobarzo, RSR and Bickel & Brewer also participated in the
    decision to retain him. Inppamet argues the contract required BMAJ to pay Sobarzo for 30 hours
    of work per week, guaranteeing Sobarzo nearly $1 million by the time the contract’s three-year term
    passed, in addition to other benefits. In response, RSR points to a section of the agreement stating
    BMAJ had no obligation to use Sobarzo’s services and would pay Sobarzo only for work actually
    performed.
    Two months after signing the agreement, however, Sobarzo quit consulting with BMAJ and
    Bickel & Brewer. He then signed an affidavit recanting his accusations against Inppamet and
    asserting Inppamet never underpaid RSR.
    Concerned by Bickel & Brewer’s exposure to Sobarzo and his documents, Inppamet moved
    to disqualify Bickel & Brewer from representing RSR. Former Texas Supreme Court Justice
    Deborah Hankinson, who had been appointed by the trial court as a special master, denied the motion
    to disqualify. She did, however, order Bickel & Brewer to destroy one document—a spreadsheet
    with Inppamet’s payment calculations. Inppamet appealed the disqualification ruling to the trial
    4
    court. The trial court, relying primarily on American Home Products, found that BMAJ was
    “irreparably tainted” by hiring Sobarzo and reviewing his documents. It also found a genuine threat
    that BMAJ or Sobarzo had disclosed confidential information to Bickel & Brewer and accordingly
    ordered Bickel & Brewer’s disqualification. Beyond the spreadsheets for calculating Inppamet’s
    payments to RSR and information regarding the audit, the trial court’s order did not identify specific
    documents Bickel & Brewer reviewed. The court of appeals subsequently denied RSR’s petition for
    mandamus relief. 
    405 S.W.3d 265
    , 268 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013).
    II. The Proper Disqualification Standard
    “Disqualification is a severe remedy.” Spears v. Fourth Court of Appeals, 
    797 S.W.2d 654
    ,
    656 (Tex. 1990) (orig. proceeding). A party whose counsel is improperly disqualified has no
    adequate remedy by appeal. In re Guar. Ins. Servs., Inc., 
    343 S.W.3d 130
    , 132 (Tex. 2011) (orig.
    proceeding) (per curiam). Thus, if the trial court abused its discretion by disqualifying Bickel &
    Brewer, we may grant mandamus relief. In re Nitla S.A. de C.V., 
    92 S.W.3d 419
    , 422 (Tex. 2002)
    (orig. proceeding) (per curiam). A trial court abuses its discretion if it incorrectly analyzes or applies
    the law. In re Sanders, 
    153 S.W.3d 54
    , 56 (Tex. 2004) (orig. proceeding) (per curiam). Of course,
    we may not make factual determinations in mandamus proceedings. In re Dep’t of Family &
    Protective Servs., 
    273 S.W.3d 637
    , 648 (Tex. 2009) (orig. proceeding).
    RSR asserts the trial court abused its discretion by disqualifying Bickel & Brewer under
    American Home Products, a case discussing disqualification of counsel for hiring the other side’s
    former paralegal or legal assistant. 
    See 985 S.W.2d at 71
    . According to RSR, Sobarzo is a fact
    witness and a different standard applies. We agree and hold the factors test from In re Meador
    5
    properly balances Inppamet’s need to protect privileged information against RSR’s interest in
    retaining counsel.
    Meador applies when attorneys “receive[] an opponent’s privileged materials outside the
    normal course of 
    discovery.” 968 S.W.2d at 352
    . In Meador, a company president’s executive
    assistant copied a letter from the company’s attorneys regarding a pending lawsuit. 
    Id. at 348.
    The
    executive assistant later quit her job, taking the copy with her. 
    Id. She decided
    to sue the company
    and contacted an attorney already representing a client in a suit against the company. 
    Id. at 349.
    The
    attorney agreed to represent her as well. 
    Id. During their
    meeting she gave him a copy of the
    company’s letter from its attorneys, followed by copies of several other company documents. 
    Id. Although the
    attorney “should have known after the most cursory review that the materials . . . were
    privileged,” he still appeared to have “thoroughly reviewed” them. 
    Id. at 352.
    The trial court
    ordered the attorney to return the company’s documents, but it refused to disqualify the attorney from
    representing his original client. 
    Id. at 349.
    On mandamus review, we held that “the trial court, giving due consideration to the
    importance of our discovery privileges, must consider all the facts and circumstances to determine
    whether the interests of justice require disqualification.” 
    Id. at 351.
    At times, “a lawyer who has
    been privy to privileged information improperly obtained from the other side must be disqualified,
    even though the lawyer was not involved in obtaining the information.” 
    Id. But not
    always.
    Relevant factors for the trial court’s consideration include:
    1)      whether the attorney knew or should have known that the material was
    privileged;
    6
    2)       the promptness with which the attorney notifies the opposing side that he or
    she has received its privileged information;
    3)       the extent to which the attorney reviews and digests the privileged
    information;
    4)       the significance of the privileged information; i.e., the extent to which its
    disclosure may prejudice the movant’s claim or defense, and the extent to
    which return of the documents will mitigate that prejudice;
    5)       the extent to which movant may be at fault for the unauthorized disclosure;
    6)       the extent to which the nonmovant will suffer prejudice from the
    disqualification of his or her attorney.
    
    Id. at 351–52.
    The factors explained by Meador are appropriate for evaluating whether Bickel & Brewer
    should be disqualified in this case. Like the executive assistant in Meador, Sobarzo secreted
    documents from his employer when he quit and provided them to the opposing side’s counsel. Like
    the attorney in Meador, Bickel & Brewer received the opposing side’s documents not through
    discovery requests but rather “outside the normal course of discovery.” 
    Id. at 352.
    To the extent
    Bickel & Brewer should have known any documents were privileged, they still were not “directly
    involved in wrongfully procuring” them. 
    Id. Meador provides
    a flexible, fact-oriented standard so that trial courts may reach a just result.
    But here, the trial court’s order reflects that it neither considered the Meador factors nor resolved the
    factual disputes necessary to do so. The trial court applied the wrong standard.
    Inppamet, however, argues that Sobarzo’s status as a paid consultant and his extensive
    contact with Bickel & Brewer calls for a different rule. Citing American Home Products, Inppamet
    7
    claims we must presume Sobarzo shared Inppamet’s confidences with Bickel & Brewer and argues
    RSR cannot overcome this presumption. Inppamet also asserts that Bickel & Brewer’s close contact
    with BMAJ, as well as with Sobarzo, created a genuine threat of disclosure of Inppamet’s
    confidences.
    American Home Products concerned a law firm that hired its opposing counsel’s former legal
    
    assistant. 985 S.W.2d at 71
    . In such cases, two presumptions ensure that any law firm hiring a side-
    switching paralegal is disqualified unless it has screening measures in place. First, it is conclusively
    presumed that “a paralegal or legal assistant who has worked on a case” received confidences and
    secrets. 
    Id. at 74.
    Second, it is presumed that the paralegal shared the confidential information with
    the new employer. 
    Id. at 75.
    This latter presumption is not conclusive, but may only be overcome
    by (1) “instruct[ing] the legal assistant ‘not to work on any matter on which the paralegal worked
    during the prior employment, or regarding which the paralegal has information relating to the former
    employer’s representation,” and (2) “tak[ing] other reasonable steps to ensure that the paralegal does
    not work in connection with matters on which the paralegal worked during the prior employment.”
    
    Id. (quoting Phoenix
    Founders, Inc. v. Marshall, 
    887 S.W.2d 831
    , 835 (Tex. 1994) (orig.
    proceeding)). Such “other reasonable steps” must include “formal, institutionalized screening
    measures that render the possibility of the nonlawyer having contact with the file less likely.” In re
    Columbia Valley Healthcare Sys., L.P., 
    320 S.W.3d 819
    , 826 (Tex. 2010) (orig. proceeding).
    In other words, under American Home Products and its progeny, if the side-switching
    employee is not screened but “works on the case at her [new] employer’s directive, . . . and the [new]
    employer reasonably should know about the conflict of interest, then the presumption of shared
    8
    confidences must become conclusive.” 
    Id. at 827.
    Simply put, if Sobarzo is the type of side-
    switching employee that American Home Products contemplated, then neither BMAJ nor Bickel &
    Brewer could retain him as a consultant in the underlying case. Even if Sobarzo was only retained
    by BMAJ, Bickel & Brewer would still be subject to disqualification because its attorneys had
    substantive communications about the case with Sobarzo. American Home 
    Products, 985 S.W.2d at 78
    .
    We conclude, however, that American Home Products does not apply to a fact witness such
    as Sobarzo. His position with his former employer existed independently of litigation, and his
    function was not primarily to report to lawyers. Sobarzo was Inppamet’s finance manager with
    firsthand knowledge of facts, and thus his contact with Inppamet lawyers, without more, does not
    shield him from RSR’s contact. Indeed, we have only applied the American Home Products
    presumptions to paralegals, legal assistants, or other nonlawyers who are directly supervised by
    attorneys and are retained to assist with litigation.2 We applied the same presumptions in several
    cases predating American Home Products, but again, only to legal staff.3 To be sure, we take a
    functional approach, looking not only to labels and job titles but also to the side-switching
    employee’s duties at the original employer. Nonetheless, we examine whether the tasks “performed
    2
    See Guar. Ins. Servs., 343 S.W .3d at 132–34 (considering side-switching paralegal who, at original firm,
    reviewed the case file, identified persons with knowledge of relevant facts, and drafted a response to a request for
    disclosures); Columbia Valley Healthcare Sys., 320 S.W .3d at 822 (considering side-switching legal assistant who, at
    original firm, “was a custodian of records and was responsible for filing many privileged documents concerning the
    suit”).
    3
    See Grant v. Thirteenth Court of Appeals, 888 S.W .2d 466, 467–68 (Tex. 1994) (orig. proceeding) (per
    curiam) (considering side-switching legal secretary who, at original firm, handled case files, interviewed clients, and
    prepared investigative reports); Phoenix Founders, 887 S.W .2d at 833 (evaluating side-switching paralegal who located
    a pleading and discussed the case with one firm’s lead counsel before being hired by the opposing firm).
    9
    were the same as those that might be executed by a legal assistant as a full-time employee of a law
    firm or by a legal assistant in the legal department of a party.” American Home 
    Products, 985 S.W.2d at 74
    . If so, then the “professional obligations that inhere when performing services for a
    client must obtain.” 
    Id. at 77.
    But if not, the employee may be a fact witness and screening is not
    required.
    Even the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct allow an attorney to contact the
    former employees of the opposing party. Under Rule 4.02(a), a lawyer, in representing a client, may
    not communicate with a person or organization “the lawyer knows to be represented by another
    lawyer regarding that subject.” TEX . DISCIPLINARY RULES PROF’L CONDUCT R. 4.02(a), reprinted
    in TEX . GOV ’T CODE , tit. 2, subtit. G, app. A. This prohibition extends to certain “persons presently
    having a managerial responsibility” in the organization or “presently employed by” the organization.
    TEX . DISCIPLINARY RULES PROF’L CONDUCT R. 4.02(a) (emphasis added). But “this Rule does not
    prohibit a lawyer from contacting a former employee of a represented organization.” TEX .
    DISCIPLINARY RULES PROF’L CONDUCT R. 4.02 cmt. 4.
    Applying the bright-line rule from American Home Products to fact witnesses instead of legal
    staff would limit informal discovery and fact-gathering. “Denial of access to such a person would
    impede an adversary’s search for relevant facts . . . .” RESTATEMENT (THIRD )             OF THE   LAW
    GOVERNING LAWYERS § 100 cmt. g (AM . LAW INST . 2000). If attorneys abuse their freedom by
    eliciting privileged or confidential information from fact witnesses, then their conduct is subject to
    Meador. But American Home Products does not create a blanket rule against any contact with such
    10
    fact witnesses, even if they were once employed by the opposing side and had contact with that
    side’s attorneys.
    Inppamet emphasizes Bickel & Brewer’s extensive contact with Sobarzo, the compensation
    Sobarzo received, and Sobarzo’s confidentiality agreement with Inppamet. These facts, of course,
    are relevant to Meador, but they do not call for an entirely different analytical framework. Frequent
    contact with Sobarzo and knowledge of his confidentiality agreement may inform at least two of the
    Meador factors: “whether the attorney knew or should have known that the material was privileged,”
    and “the extent to which the attorney reviews and digests the privileged information.” 
    Meador, 968 S.W.2d at 351
    –52. Such facts inform the Meador analysis; they do not call for its abandonment.
    Neither does Sobarzo’s compensation require the presumptions of American Home Products to be
    applied here. Although attorneys may not compensate a witness “contingent upon the content of the
    testimony of the witness or the outcome of the case,” they may still provide reasonable compensation
    for travel expenses and the witness’s loss of time. TEX . DISCIPLINARY RULES PROF’L CONDUCT
    R. 3.04(b). If an attorney violates this rule, the opposing side should so argue and seek an
    appropriate remedy. But compensation on its own does not turn a fact witness into a paralegal or
    legal assistant subject to the American Home Products presumptions.
    Inppamet points to a court of appeals decision disqualifying a firm for hiring an engineer as
    a consultant in a lawsuit against her prior employer, Bell Helicopter Textron. In re Bell Helicopter
    Textron, Inc., 
    87 S.W.3d 139
    , 144 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2002, orig. proceeding [mand. denied]).
    The employee had worked as an engineer, accident investigator, and chief of flight safety for Bell
    Helicopter. 
    Id. at 144.
    At times, she worked with Bell Helicopter’s counsel to develop legal
    11
    strategies in cases involving helicopter crashes. 
    Id. Eventually, she
    left Bell Helicopter and was
    later hired by a firm suing Bell Helicopter. 
    Id. The court
    of appeals applied the American Home
    Products presumptions because the engineer-turned-consultant was part of the legal team that
    developed defenses at Bell Helicopter. 
    Id. at 145–47.
    Although the plaintiffs presented affidavits
    averring the consultant never divulged Bell Helicopter’s privileged information, trade secrets, or trial
    strategies, the court of appeals held the plaintiffs’ counsel must be disqualified. 
    Id. at 147,
    151. It
    held her status as a fact witness did not prevent disqualification. 
    Id. at 150–51.
    For the reasons already discussed, the American Home Products presumptions do not apply
    to fact witnesses who, at their original place of employment, were not hired for litigation purposes
    and were not directly supervised by lawyers. We disapprove of Bell Helicopter for disqualifying a
    firm that hired the opposing side’s former engineer without first considering the Meador factors.
    Finally, Inppamet points to a recent opinion by the Texas Committee on Professional Ethics
    concerning when a law firm hires an opposing law firm’s former employee “who is not a lawyer,
    paralegal or secretary.” Tex. Comm. on Prof’l Ethics, Op. 650, 78 TEX . B.J. 579, 581 (2015)
    (emphasis added). The Commission determined that the hiring law firm must withdraw from the
    representation if
    the employee in question had in the prior employment worked on the lawsuit or
    otherwise had access to information concerning the prior employer’s representation
    of the opposing party in the lawsuit and the hiring law firm fails to take effective
    steps, which normally would include screening the newly hired employee, to prevent
    the employee from disclosing or using in the hiring law firm confidential information
    related to the lawsuit. In all other circumstances, the hiring law firm will not be
    required to withdraw from the representation unless, regardless of the hiring law
    firm’s attempts to prevent improper disclosure or use of any confidential information
    12
    relating to the lawsuit acquired by the employee in the prior law firm, the employee
    actually discloses or uses such confidential information in the hiring law firm.
    
    Id. This ethics
    opinion, however, does not discuss fact witnesses. The opinion refers to
    nonlawyers and nonparalegals, but it only applies to the opposing law firm’s employees. Here,
    Sobarzo was originally employed by a party to the case. As a finance manager, he has firsthand
    knowledge of relevant facts, and RSR was free to pursue these facts. To the extent RSR’s counsel
    abused this freedom, its conduct is governed by Meador rather than American Home Products.
    ***
    We hold the trial court abused its discretion by disqualifying Bickel & Brewer under
    American Home Products. We do not decide whether disqualification would have been proper under
    Meador because the trial court did not reach the issue and did not resolve all fact issues relevant to
    a Meador analysis. We conditionally grant mandamus relief. The writ will issue only if the trial
    court does not vacate its order granting Inppamet’s motion to disqualify.
    __________________________
    John P. Devine
    Justice
    Opinion delivered: December 4, 2015
    13