Commercial Litigation and Arbitration

Class Actions — Attorney-Client Relationship Between Class Counsel and Absent Class Members

The New York Appellate Division, First Department, ruled on Thursday, December 27, 2007, that the attorney-client relationship between class counsel and absent class members is limited in scope and, specifically, does not require class counsel to turn over work product to every absent class member. The decision, Wyly v. Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman, LLP, 2007 NY Slip Op 10506 (1st Dept. Dec. 27, 2007) (which can be found at http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/3dseries/2007/2007_10506.htm) arose out of the Computer Associates Class Actions in the Eastern District of New York that were settled for approximately $150 million in December 2003. A handful of absent class members who had not objected to the settlement commenced a CPLR Article 4 special proceeding seeking a judgment directing class counsel to "turn over their files" relating to the Class Actions. The First Department acknowledged that, at the end of a typical attorney-client relationship, “a client, presumptively, has full right of access, with narrow exceptions, to all of the documents in the attorneys' file, including work-product material, where no claim for unpaid legal fees is outstanding,” under the New York Court of Appeals’ decision in Matter of Sage Realty Corp. v Proskauer Rose Goetz & Mendelsohn, 91 NY2d 30 (1997). The First Department found Sage Realty fundamentally distinguishable, however:

[I]t has been observed, by courts and commentators alike, that the relationship between appointed counsel and an absent member in a class action differs fundamentally from that found in the traditional relationship (see e.g. Selection of Class Counsel, Third Circuit Task Force Report, 208 FRD 340, 347-348 [2002] ["absent class [*5]members are not individual clients. Thus, the ordinary attorney-client relationship does not exist between each class member and class counsel."] [other citations omitted]).

The Court concluded:

Given the above-delineated disparity in the roles, responsibilities, and potential liabilities assumed by a client in the traditional attorney-client context, as opposed to an absent class member's relationship to class counsel, and his/her status as a litigant, coupled with the potential for class counsel to be unduly burdened, even after the end of litigation, by a multitude of requests from absent class members for counsel's entire file, we reject a blanket extension of Sage Realty's presumptive-entitlement right to absent class members, and find that the better practice is to require absent class members to establish their entitlement to class counsel's file on a case-by-case basis. Petitioner, in this matter, has failed to shoulder that burden

In light of the fact that the Computer Associates’ Class Actions involved more than 600,000 class members — none of whom objected to the settlement — the First Department’s reference to potentially “a multitude of requests” is a masterful understatement, and its conclusion eminently practical.

Share this article:

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Recent Posts

(1) Appellate Review of Inherent Power Sanctions (7th Circuit): Factual Findings Reviewed for Clear Error, Choice of Sanction for Abuse of Discretion — 4-Element Test for Reversal; (2) Sanctions and Class Actions: Monetary Sanctions Properly Imposed on Defendants for Improper Communications with Class Members (Represented Parties) — “[I]f The Class And The Class Opponent Are Involved In An Ongoing Business Relationship, Communications From The Class Opponent To The Class May Be Coercive” (Good Quote); (3) Monetary Sanctions under Goodyear v. Haeger: If Same Fact-Gathering Would Have Been Conducted Absent The Misconduct, No But-For Causation — But Only “Rough Justice” Required, “Not Accountant-Like Precision” (Good Quote) — Once Misconduct Is Clear, Time Spent Ferreting It Out Compensable under Goodyear; (4) Goodyear Did Not Overrule Long-Standing Rule That Courts May Impose Modest Civil Monetary Sanctions to Curb Litigation Abuse; (5) Appellate Jurisdiction Lacking Where Sanctioned Attorney Fails to File Notice of Appeal and Lawyer’s Intent to Appeal Not Apparent from Client’s Notice; (5) Rule 11 Improper Purpose — Party May Have Many Purposes for Pursuing Claim — As Long As Claim Is Supported by Good Faith Belief in the Merits, “A Parallel Reason Does Not Violate Rule 11” — To Deny A Motion for Sanctions, The District Court Need Not Address Every Argument: “Arguments Clearly Without Merit Can, And For The Sake Of Judicial Economy Should, Be Passed Over In Silence” (Good Quote); Non-Monetary Sanction on Counsel: Complete Twice The Required Amount Of Professional Responsibility Hours For Her Next Continuing Legal Education Cycle Imposed By The State Bar

Archives