Harriet Miers' Enron problem
http://bluemassgroup.typepad.com/blue_mass_group/law_and_lawyers/index.html
It appears that the right-leaning but Bush-disliking
Professor Bainbridge was the first to notice this
extraordinary tidbit from Harriet Miers' past (a hat tip
also to David Sirota at HuffPost). This morning,
President Bush touted Miers' leadership abilities,
including her position as managing partner of Locke
Liddell, a major Texas law firm. Turns out, however,
that Locke Liddell had a teensy little legal problem
while Miers was running it: the firm represented a
client who was defrauding investors via a Ponzi scheme;
the firm knew that the fraud was going on; and the firm
said nothing to anyone, thereby costing fraud victims
millions. As a result, the firm was sued, and ended up
paying a $22 million settlement. The firm, of course,
denied any wrongdoing, as is standard procedure in such
settlements.
Nor, according to Sirota, was that the only time in
which Locke Liddell had to shell out millions to settle
a lawsuit under Miers' leadership - apparently there was
another, similar incident that cost the firm another $8
million.
The full story on the $22 million settlement is below
the flip. In the meantime, we look forward to learning
more details about this most interesting story.
LOCKE LIDDELL: $ 22 Mil Settlement Serves as Warning to
Other Law Firms
Locke Liddell & Sapp's agreement to pay $ 22 million to
settle a suit alleging it aided a client in defrauding
investors is expected to serve as a warning to other
firms that they must take action when they learn a
client's alleged wrongdoing may be harming third
parties. The Dallas-based firm agreed April 14 to settle
a suit stemming from its representation of Russell
Erxleben, a former University of Texas star football
kicker whose foreign currency trading company was
allegedly a Ponzi scheme. Erxleben pleaded guilty last
November to federal conspiracy and securities-fraud
charges and is to be sentenced in May.
Locke Liddell's settlement comes on the heels of an $
8.5 million settlement by Houston's Sheinfeld, Maley &
Kay and attorney Lee Polson. The two settlements, minus
attorneys' fees and expenses, are expected to bring
investors a recovery of more than 60 cents on the
dollar. And if those large settlements don't get
lawyers' attention, the American Law Institute is
considering making a lawyer's duty to a third party
clear in its Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers.
The Texas disciplinary rules state that a lawyer may
disclose confidential client information in order to
prevent the client from committing a criminal or
fraudulent act. Jim George, an Austin lawyer who is a
member of the ALI, said he favors making it clear that a
lawyer must tell people if a client is hurting them.
"It's a very simple legal proposition a lawyer can't
help people steal money," said George, of George &
Donaldson.
George represents investors who lost $ 34 million they
placed in Erxleben's Austin Forex International. Daniel
N. Matheson III, a former Locke Liddell partner who
represented Erxleben, said in his deposition that he
knew in March 1998 that $ 8 million in AFI's losses
hadn't been reported to investors. AFI, which was
founded in September 1996, shut its doors in September
1998. A few days later, Texas securities regulators
seized its accounts and put the company into
receivership. Harriet Miers, co-managing partner of
Locke Liddell, said the firm denies liability in
connection with its representation of Erxleben.
"Obviously, we evaluated that this was the right time to
settle and to resolve this matter and that it was in the
best interest of the firm to do so," Miers said.
The Locke Liddell settlement covers partner Curtis
Ashmos of Austin and former partners Daniel Matheson and
Jane Matheson. Other defendants, including an accounting
firm and an Austin businessman, remain in the case. The
settlement agreement bars lawyers for the plaintiffs
from talking to the media about the settlement. Judge
Paul Davis of Travis County, Texas's 200th District
Court agreed April 17 to certify a class for settlement
purposes.
If investors whose losses total more than $ 300,000 opt
out of the settlement, Locke Liddell can walk away from
it, according to the agreement. Janet Mortenson, the
court-appointed receiver for Austin Forex, testified
that settlement was reached after two long days of
mediation. She said that investors would benefit from
getting quick payment. Had the case been certified as a
class action, Locke Liddell would have filed an
interlocutory appeal, which could have delayed the case
from going to trial for at least a year, Mortenson said.
Mortenson also defended the 24.5 percent contingent fee
being paid to Bickerstaff, Heath, Smiley, Pollan, Kever
& McDaniel in Austin, Texas, for representing her. She
said she had no money to pursue the claims against the
law firms and was turned down by several firms because
of the complexity of the case. "This is a perfect
example of the appropriateness of contingency fees,"
Mortenson said.
Bickerstaff partner Michael Shaunessy was the lead
lawyer for Mortenson. By filing the malpractice case on
behalf of both Mortenson and the investors, the
plaintiffs' lawyers avoided a legal fight over who was
the proper party to file suit. The case came together
after Davis ruled that Mortenson owned the legal
privilege and work product of Erxleben's lawyers.
Documents, including lawyers' notes contained in the
boxes that were turned over to Mortenson, formed the
basis of the suit, which was filed last October.
Test Case
The case was viewed as a test of the Texas Supreme
Court's April 1999 ruling that a lawyer can be sued by a
nonclient for negligent misrepresentation. In McCamish
Martin Brown & Loeffler v. Appling Interests, however,
the court made it clear that a lawyer could be liable
only when the lawyer invites the nonclient to rely upon
the lawyer's opinions and misrepresentations.
Kathy Patrick, who represented Locke Liddell, questioned
Mortenson at the fairness hearing about the state of the
law on lawyers' duty to third parties. Mortenson agreed
that the case was on the "frontier of Texas law."
Patrick, of Houston's Gibbs & Bruns, also pointed out
that Locke Liddell had credible defenses, including
evidence that Erxleben may have concealed his conduct
from his attorneys. Before the settlements, Mortenson
had recovered only about $ 300,000 in cash, four cars
and a $ 75,000 skybox for UT football games. As alleged
in the petition, Erxleben traded on his football
reputation to solicit investors. He allegedly
represented that each investor's account was maintained
separately and that trading profits were allocated
appropriately. But the plaintiffs claim the funds were
placed into a single account and traded together as one
large pool of money. The suit alleges that Erxleben
sometimes misappropriated funds for his personal use and
would allocate profits to individual investor accounts
at his own discretion, often favoring some investors
over others. The petition alleges the lawyers allowed
AFI to sell unregistered securities, signed off on
brochures and promotional materials that contained
misrepresentations, and knew about the company's growing
losses for months before state securities regulators
began investigating. This story originally appeared in
the Texas Lawyer. (The Legal Intelligencer, April 26,
2000)
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