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ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR OF THE CITY
OF NEW YORK COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
Year 1994 Ethics Opinions
THE ASSOCIATION OF THE BAR
OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK
FORMAL OPINION 1994-10
COMMITTEE ON PROFESSIONAL AND JUDICIAL ETHICS
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October 21, 1994
ACTION: FORMAL OPINION
OPINION:
TOPIC: Confidences and secrets;
disclosure of organizational wrongdoing; limited partnership.
DIGEST: A lawyer for a limited
partnership must tell the limited partners any information
concerning improprieties by the general partner, but may not
reveal the information to non-clients unless necessary to prevent
the commission of a crime.
CODE: DRs 4-101(A), 4-101(B)(1),
4-101(C)(3), 5-105(B), 5-108(A)(2), 5-109, 7-102(B)(1),
7-102(B)(2); ECs 4-4, 4-6, 5-1, 5-14, 5-18, 7-6; Definitions 6,
9.
QUESTIONS
1. Must an attorney who represents
a limited partnership and discovers that the general partner,
whom the attorney also represents in an individual capacity, has
engaged in improper conduct with respect to the partnership
business in ways that adversely affect the interests of the
limited partners, reveal that information to the limited
partners?
2. May the attorney also reveal
the information to non-clients affected by the wrongdoing?
OPINION
An attorney has served for several
years as legal counsel to a limited partnership (the
"Partnership") from which she receives a weekly legal
fee. She has also represented the sole general partner
("GP") of the Partnership in connection with the
Partnership business and on other unrelated matters. The
accountant for the Partnership recently informed the attorney of
the existence of a bank account which GP, without the
Partnership's knowledge or approval, has been using to run a
related business. GP has deposited all profits from his business
into this bank account. The accountant also informed the attorney
that GP has refused to allow the accountant or the general
manager of the Partnership business to see any books or records
concerning the side business, has failed to pay certain taxes on
the proceeds, and has not reported income from the side business
to the limited partners or on the Partnership's tax returns,
limited partner K-1 forms, or otherwise. Based upon the
attorney's own inquiry, she believes this information to be true.
The attorney has also been
informed by the general manager of erratic behavior by GP in his
dealings with the staff and others, and that GP has asked for
advances of net profits because he "needs the money."
The attorney suspects that the money that has been earned from
the side business has been advanced to GP personally and
therefore is not in the Partnership account for distribution to
limited partners and others. The attorney has twice written to
the GP and asked GP to make appropriate distributions and to
report the concession income on amended tax returns. GP has not
responded to the attorney's letters, has not taken the steps the
attorney advised him to take, and has not communicated with the
attorney directly for several months.
The ethical principles involved in
this inquiry are: (1) the duties of an attorney retained by a
partnership, see EC 5-18; DR 5-109; (2) an attorney's duty of
primary loyalty to the client, including the obligation to
provide a client with material information helpful to the
client's interests, see EC 5-1; Spector v. Mermelstein, 361 F.
Supp. 30 (S.D.N.Y. 1972), aff'd in relevant part, 485 F.2d 474
(2d Cir. 1973); (3) an attorney's duty to preserve the
confidences and secrets of a client, see DR 4-101; (4) an
attorney's duty to reveal fraud perpetrated by a client or
another person, see DR 7-102(B); and (5) an attorney's duty to
discontinue representation where differing interests may affect
the attorney's independent professional judgment, see EC 5-14, DR
5-105(B).
The committee concludes that while
the attorney must make disclosure of GP's actions to the
Partnership's limited partners, she is not under a duty to
disclose such information to others. Furthermore, the differing
interests of GP and the limited partners likely will require that
she discontinue her representation of the Partnership, the GP or
any limited partner relating to Partnership matters, if she
determines that her individual professional judgment will be or
is likely to be affected thereby.
The Partnership entity is the
attorney's client. DR 5-109 provides:
When a lawyer employed or retained
by an organization is dealing with the organization's directors,
officers, employees, members, shareholders or other constituents,
and it appears that the organization's interests may differ from
those of the constituents with whom the lawyer is dealing, the
lawyer shall explain that the lawyer is the lawyer for the
organization and not for any of the constituents.
EC 5-18, in turn, provides in
pertinent part that:
A lawyer employed or retained by a
corporation or similar entity owes allegiance to the entity and
not to a stockholder, director, officer, employee,
representative, or other person connected with the entity. In
advising the entity, a lawyer should keep paramount its interests
and the lawyer's professional judgment should not be influenced
by the personal desires of any person or organization.
Occasionally, the lawyer may learn that an officer, employee or
other person associated with the entity is engaged in action,
refuses to act, or intends to act or to refrain from acting in a
matter related to the representation that is a violation of a
legal obligation to the entity, or a violation of law which
reasonably might be imputed to the entity, and is likely to
result in substantial injury to the entity. In such event, the
lawyer should proceed as is reasonably necessary in the best
interest of the entity.
The attorney, therefore, owes her
primary allegiance to the Partnership, and not to GP or any other
individuals connected with it. N.Y. City 1986-2; ABA Inf. 1233
(1972).
When the attorney for an entity
such as the Partnership discovers acts of impropriety by a
partner or employee of that entity that may adversely affect the
interests of others therein, that attorney may disclose such
information to the "governing body" of the entity to
enable it to take action necessary to protect its interests. EC
5-18; N.Y. City 1986-2; ABA 202 (1940); ABA Inf. 1318 (1975).
Where, however, the "governing body" of the entity is
implicated in the improper act, disclosure to limited partners
outside of the "governing body" is warranted in order
to allow them to protect their interests if the governing body
could not reasonably be expected to do so. N.Y. City 1986-2
(1986); Texas 387 (1977); Florida 65-59 (1965). In the situation
presented, GP is the sole general partner of the Partnership and
reasonably cannot be expected to protect the limited partners'
interests. Accordingly, the attorney should disclose her
knowledge of the GP's improprieties to the Partnership's limited
partners.
Such disclosure of GP's
improprieties is not prohibited by the principle that an attorney
has a duty to preserve the confidences and secrets of a client.
While the attorney discovered the GP's improprieties in the
course of her representation of the Partnership, her duty of
loyalty to the Partnership would be paramount to any duty to
respect the secrets of any individual partner, such as GP,
disclosed during the course of Partnership representation, even
if GP is also a client. N.Y. City 1986-2.
The attorney does not, however,
have a corresponding duty to reveal information of GP's
improprieties to interested third parties, who are not her
clients. DR 7-102(B)(1) provides that:
A lawyer who receives information
clearly establishing that . . . [t]he client has, in the course
of the representation, perpetrated a fraud upon a person or
tribunal shall promptly call upon the client to rectify the same,
and if the client refuses or is unable to do so, the lawyer shall
reveal the fraud to the affected person or tribunal, except when
the information is protected as a confidence or secret.
Even if the attorney determines
that she has information which "clearly establishes" a
fraud perpetrated by GP, * she may not reveal such information if
it is a protected "confidence" or "secret."
Except in specifically circumscribed instances, a lawyer may not
reveal a confidence or secret of a client. DR 4-101(B)(1).
According to EC 4-4, a lawyer's obligation to preserve a client's
secrets is much broader than the attorney-client privilege and
"exists without regard to the nature or source of
information or the fact that others share the knowledge."
This obligation applies to substantially all information gained
in the professional relationship. N.Y. State 528 (1981), citing
Hazard, Ethics in the Practice of Law 21 (1978) ("The basic
rule of confidentiality is that the lawyer should keep everything
secret that he learns from or about a 'client,' except when its
disclosure helps his client.") This obligation to preserve
client confidences and secrets continues beyond the termination
of a lawyer's employment. DR 5-108(A)(2); EC 4-6; N.Y. City
1986-8.
* This is a factual determination
that cannot be made by this Committee. In determining whether GP
has committed a fraud, the attorney should be mindful that the
term "fraud," as used in the Code, "does not
include conduct, although characterized as fraudulent by statute
or administrative rule, which lacks an element of scienter,
deceit, intent to mislead, or knowing failure to correct
misrepresentations which can be reasonably expected to induce
detrimental reliance by another." Definition 9. In making
such a determination, the attorney should also be mindful of EC
7-6, which states, in pertinent part:
In many cases a lawyer may not be
certain as to the state of mind of the client, and in those
situations the lawyer should resolve reasonable doubts in favor
of the client.
It would be for the attorney to
make the ultimate determination whether all the information
available to her "clearly establishes" a fraud by GP.
"Confidence" refers to
information protected by the attorney-client privilege as a
matter of law. "Secret" is defined much more broadly,
however, and refers to any information, whether or not
privileged, that was gained in the professional relationship and
that the client has requested be held inviolate or the disclosure
of which would be embarrassing or would likely be detrimental to
the client. DR 4-101(A); N.Y. City 1986-8. The information she
received concerning GP is a "secret" under DR 4-101(A)
because it was "gained in the professional
relationship" and its disclosure obviously would be
"detrimental" to GP.
One exception to the rule
mandating preservation of client confidences and secrets is DR
4-101(C)(3), which permits, but does not require, an attorney to
disclose a client's intention to commit a crime. The exception is
strictly construed, however, and is applied only when a client is
planning to commit a crime in the future or is continuing an
ongoing criminal scheme. See EC 4-7. That question is one of law
which must be answered by the attorney; it is not for this
Committee's determination. If the attorney concludes that GP is
intending to commit a future crime, then, and only then, may the
attorney reveal such intent. She is not, however, in any event
ethically required to reveal that information.
We have assumed that the
attorney's retention by the Partnership, her continuing retention
by GP on other matters and her work for GP in connection with
Partnership affairs render GP a "client" for purposes
of DR 7-102(B). Even if GP were not considered a
"client," the result under DR 7-102 would be unchanged.
DR 7-102(B)(2) provides that "[a] lawyer who receives
information clearly establishing that . . . [a] person other than
the client has perpetrated a fraud upon a tribunal shall promptly
reveal the fraud to the tribunal." As none of the interested
third parties fits within the Code's definition of
"tribunal," Definition 6, no duty to disclose arises
under DR 7-102(B)(2).
The differing interests of the GP
and the Partnership's limited partners created by GP's improper
actions, however, may also require that the attorney discontinue
her representation of the Partnership, as well as either GP or
any limited partner, relating to Partnership matters (and
particularly relating to any actions taken by the Partnership
against GP relating to the conduct that is the subject of this
inquiry), if she determines that her independent professional
judgment will be or is likely to be affected by such differing
interests. DR 5-105(B); N.Y. City 1986-2; N.Y. State 555 (1984);
ABA Inf. 1441 (1979).
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the
first question is answered in the affirmative; the second
question is answered in the negative.
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