Guest guest Posted May 19, 2001 Report Share Posted May 19, 2001 From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> Sent: Friday, May 18, 2001 4:47 PM Subject: Unethical Lawyers ~ Wall Street Journal> > The following are excerpts from The Wall Street Journal on 5/16/01 > > SOME COMPANIES PAY LAWYERS NOT TO SUE AGAIN > Ethics Codes Say Agreements Must Be Disclosed to Clients, But Not All > Lawyers Do So > > By Milo Gevelin > > Here's a way for businesses to rein in costly lawsuits: pay plaintiffs' > lawyers not to sue. > > That may seem far-fetched. But courts and bar disciplinary groups have been > cracking down on deals in which companies privately pay lawyers large sums > to settle their clients' cases - if the lawyers promise not to sue again. > > Sound unethical? Usually it is. Any agreement by lawyers to limit future > representation of possible clients effectively constrains the public's > access to the courts. That's why state legal-ethics codes prohibit offering > or accepting " practice restriction agreements " as part of any settlement. > > But these agreements have become increasingly common, say lawyers and ethics > experts, particularly in cases in which lawyers amass a large number of > claims involving big potential damage awards against a single company. A > frequent condition of settling, says New York plaintiffs lawyer > Rheingold, is that the plaintiffs lawyers agree not to bring similar claims > on the behalf of other plaintiffs in the future. > > For defendant companies, the alternative is to face future lawsuits on > behalf of new plaintiffs financed by lawyers' fees from prior settlements, > says Geoffrey Hazard, a legal-ethics professor at the University of > Pennsylvania. " There is a strong incentive to get that lawyer out of the > picture. " he says. > > One way defendants can ethically do that, says Mr. Hazard, is by signing > plaintiffs' lawyers up as " consultants, " thereby creating a conflict of > interest that prohibits them from suing the company again. > > " It's a contrivance, " says Mr. Hazard, " but it's significantly within the > rules. " The only qualification is that the plaintiff's lawyer must disclose > the consulting arrangement to the current client beforehand. " There are > some lawyers who don't do that, " Mr. Hazard adds. > > In the biggest case to come to light, DuPont Co. paid a now-defunct Miami > plaintiffs' firm a $6.4 million side payment five years ago to settle a > batch of crop-damage suits brought by 48 commercial growers who used its > Benlate fungicide. Lawyers for both sides reached the side deal during > settlement negotiations after a state judge in Miami barred DuPont's defense > arguments as punishment for withholding evidence, leaving the company facing > a potentially huge damage award. > > As part of the deal with DuPont, the two lead plaintiffs lawyers returned > all confidential company documents, agreed to seal the court file - > including the judge's order sanctioning DuPont for misconduct - and, as > newly hired DuPont consultants, effectively barred themselves from any > involvement in future Benlate cases. They got the $6.4 million fee, on top > of their contingency fee of roughly 30% of the $59 million settlement they > negotiated for their clients. > > For DuPont, the deal eliminated the threat of future litigation brought by a > plaintiffs firm specializing in Benlate. The agreement surfaced in state > court in Gainsville last July, after the firm's clients became suspicious > and sued both DuPont and the lawyers for fraud. The growers contend they > were kept in the dark about their lawyers' stake in the settlement and > forced to either accept the settlement or find other counsel. The Florida > Bar Association is investigating. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.