CHARLES R. BREYER, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE.
A law firm — and its attorneys — do not own the matters on which they perform their legal services. Their clients do. A client, for whatever reason, may summarily discharge counsel and hire someone else. At that point, the client owes fees only for services performed to the date of discharge, and his former lawyer must, even if fees are in dispute, cease working on the matter and immediately cooperate in the transfer of files to new counsel.
It is in this context that the Court is asked to address a question of first impression: namely, whether a law firm — which has been dissolved by virtue of creditors terminating their financial support, thus rendering it impossible to continue to provide legal services in ongoing matters — is entitled to assert a property interest in hourly fee matters pending at the time of its dissolution.
This issue was presented to the Bankruptcy Court, which this Court reviews de novo. See Executive Benefits Insurance Agency v. Arkison, ___ U.S. ___, 134 S.Ct. 2165, 189 L.Ed.2d 83 (2014) citing Stern v. Marshall, ___ U.S. ___, 131 S.Ct. 2594, 180 L.Ed.2d 475 (2011). In doing so, the Court concludes that under the facts presented here, neither law, equity, nor policy recognizes a law firm's property interest
Now before the Court are cross motions for summary judgment in a long-running bankruptcy dispute. These four actions arise from the bankruptcy of a large law firm: Heller Ehrman LLP. Heller's bankruptcy estate claims the profits earned by the law firms that Heller's former clients retained to work on hourly fee matters. Heller, because of its bankruptcy and dissolution, could no longer do that work. The question these cases present is whether hourly fee matters pending when a law firm dissolves are the property of that firm. More specifically, these cases require the Court to consider whether Heller's bankruptcy Trustee has a claim against third-party law firms that hired former Heller lawyers, representing former Heller clients in hourly fee matters. The answer to both questions is no.
Heller's bankruptcy Trustee ("Trustee") filed multiple adversary proceedings against various law firms, including Davis, Wright, Tremaine LLP; Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP; Foley & Lardner LLP; and Jones Day ("Defendants") which Heller's former Shareholders joined. Many of the initial lawsuits settled, but four defendant law firms challenged the Trustee's claims to their profits earned from former Heller clients. For the reasons set forth below, the Court finds that the Trustee does not have a property interest in profits Defendants earned working on hourly fee matters which Heller had once handled, and therefore enters JUDGMENT in favor of Defendants and against the Trustee.
As to the questions of (1) whether hourly fee matters pending when a law firm dissolves are the property of that firm and (2) whether Heller's bankruptcy Trustee has a claim against third-party law firms representing Heller's former clients in hourly fee matters, the relevant facts are undisputed.
The Trustee's adversary proceedings against Defendants and other law firms allege that Heller's estate is entitled to recover profits associated with pending hourly matters because the "Jewel Waiver" was a constructively fraudulent transfer or an actual fraudulent transfer of Heller's property under the Bankruptcy Code or under the California Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act. 11 U.S.C. § 548; Cal. Civ.Code § 3439 et seq. The Trustee has not sued the individual Shareholders. In re Heller Ehrman LLP, 2013 WL 951706 at *1-2 (Bankr.N.D.Cal. Mar. 11, 2013).
At the hearings in Bankruptcy Court, the Trustee made several significant concessions which the Bankruptcy Court described in detail:
Id. at *3-4 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
The only Defendants in these cases are the third-party law firms that provided services to Heller's former clients under new fee agreements once Heller dissolved. The Trustee seeks to recover a portion of the fees paid to these third parties.
The Court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). An issue is "genuine" only if there is a sufficient evidentiary basis on which a reasonable fact finder could find for the nonmoving party, and a dispute is "material" only if it could affect the outcome of the suit under governing law. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248-49, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). The burden is on the moving party to demonstrate that there is no genuine dispute with respect to any material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986). A court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and draw all justifiable inferences in its favor. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 255, 106 S.Ct. 2505. "Where the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the non-moving party, there is no `genuine issue for trial.'" Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio, 475 U.S. 574, 587, 106 S.Ct. 1348, 89 L.Ed.2d 538 (1986). It is agreed that this Court must apply California law in its analysis of whether the bankruptcy estate held a property interest in the pending hourly matters at the time of the dissolution. See generally Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 78, 58 S.Ct. 817, 82 L.Ed. 1188 (1938). If Heller had no property interest in Defendants' fees, then summary judgment must be granted in favor of the Defendants.
The Trustee asserts that under California law as set forth in Jewel v. Boxer, the estate has a property interest in pending hourly matters. In Jewel, the California Court of Appeal considered the voluntary dissolution of a four-person firm after its partners split into groups of two and formed new firms. 156 Cal.App.3d at 174-75, 203 Cal.Rptr. 13. "[E]ach former partner sent a letter to each client whose case he had handled for the old firm, announcing the dissolution." Id. at 175, 203 Cal.Rptr. 13.
Jewel is different from the cases here for five key, related reasons. First, the dissolution of the firm at issue in Jewel was voluntary, while Heller's dissolution was forced when Bank of America withdrew the firm's line of credit. This is significant because the partners in Jewel could have, but chose not to, finish representing their clients as or on behalf of the old firm. Here, Heller lacked the financial ability to continue providing legal services to its clients, leaving clients with ongoing matters no choice but to seek new counsel and Heller Shareholders no choice but to seek new employment. Second, in Jewel, "[t]he new firms represented the clients under fee agreements entered into between the client and the old firm." Id. at 175, 203 Cal.Rptr. 13. Here, the clients signed new retainer agreements with the new firms. Third, in Jewel, the new firms consisted entirely of partners from the old firms: one firm with four partners had become two firms with two partners each. Here, Defendants are pre-existing third-party firms that provided substantively new representation, requiring significant resources, personnel, capital, and services well beyond the capacity of either Heller or its individual Shareholders. Where in Jewel, the departed partners continued to have fiduciary duties to each other and the old firm, here, the third-party firms never owed any duty, fiduciary or otherwise, to the dissolved firm. Fourth, Jewel treated hourly fee matters and contingency fee matters as indistinguishable. Here, there are no contingency fee cases at issue. Finally, Jewel was decided in 1984 and thus applied the Uniform Partnership Act (the "UPA") which the materially different Revised Uniform Partnership Act (the "RUPA") has since superseded. The RUPA, which applies after 1999 to all California partnerships, allows partners to obtain "reasonable compensation" for helping to wind up partnership business, Cal. Corp.Code § 16401(h), and thus undermines the legal foundation on which Jewel rests.
The RUPA's impact on Jewel is significant. Section 404(b)(3) of the RUPA provides that a partner must "refrain from competing with the partnership in the conduct of the partnership business before the dissolution of the partnership." Cal. Corp. Code § 16404(b)(3). As the drafters of the RUPA explained, this language means that "[t]he duty not to compete ... does not extend to winding up the business, as do the other loyalty rules. Thus, a partner is free to compete immediately upon an event of dissolution...." RUPA § 404 cmt. 2. Therefore, unlike in Jewel, if a former Heller Shareholder signed a new retainer agreement with a former Heller client, this would not violate the "fiduciary duty not to take any action with respect to unfinished partnership business for personal gain." Jewel, 156 Cal.App.3d at 178-79, 203 Cal.Rptr. 13. Consequently there is no provision of the RUPA that gives the dissolved firm the right to demand an accounting for
Although Jewel has been cited in dozens of cases from California and beyond, "courts have cited Jewel reflexively and uncritically," that is, without much analysis or consideration of the changes in law firm practice or law. Geron, 476 B.R. at 739 n. 2. The California Supreme Court has not ruled on the issue now before the Court, nor do any published California cases decided under the RUPA cite Jewel for its unfinished business rule. Thus, California law is unsettled on the question of whether a law firm may assert a property interest in hourly fee matters pending at the time of its dissolution. Absent clear authority from California courts, the Court next turns to the equities.
A bedrock of the commercial legal profession is that lawyers expect to be paid for services they provide to their clients, and clients expect to pay the firm that employs the lawyers who provide their services. Balancing the equities, it is simple enough to conclude that the firms that did the work should keep the fees.
The Trustee argues instead that the former Heller Shareholders had a fiduciary duty to account to Heller's estate for profits their new firms earned from work on former Heller matters. However, the fiduciary duty to account is limited to partnership property. Cal. Corp. Code § 16404(b)(1). If the profits Defendants earned are not derived from Heller partnership property, then there is no duty to account. A few basic principals demonstrate why the equities do not favor finding a property interest here.
A law firm never owns its client matters. The client always owns the matter, and the most the law firm can be said to have is an expectation of future business. At the motion hearing the Trustee was unable to articulate a basis for calculating the value of this expected future business. The Trustee suggested that the value at issue here is "good will," which does not ordinarily appear on law firm balance sheets which are on a modified cash basis. In California, and beyond, professional law partnerships do not have a "good will" asset. See Lyon v. Lyon, 246 Cal.App.2d 519, 526, 54 Cal.Rptr. 829
Obviously, the expectation of future business — if it is "good will" — would disappear as soon as either (1) the client removes business, which it can do at will, or (2) the law firm ceases to be able to perform the work to generate those expected future profits. "It has long been recognized in [California] that the client's power to discharge an attorney, with or without cause, is absolute." Fracasse v. Brent, 6 Cal.3d 784, 790, 100 Cal.Rptr. 385, 494 P.2d 9 (1972). When a client exercises "the unilateral right to discharge his or her attorney," the party discharged "only has a right to quantum meruit recovery" for the value of work already done on the matter. Jalali v. Root, 109 Cal.App.4th 1768, 1777, 1 Cal.Rptr.3d 689 (2003). Here, the client matters at issue ceased to be Heller's partnership business and became the Defendants' partnership business when the clients terminated Heller and retained new, third-party counsel.
The Trustee conceded as much before the Bankruptcy Court. As the Bankruptcy Court explained, the Trustee "did not deny that a Shareholder who left Heller prior to the dissolution, in the absence of a breach of duty, would not have to account for unfinished business taken to another firm." In re Heller Ehrman LLP, 2013 WL 951706, at *4. The Trustee further "acknowledged and did not dispute Defendants' allegation that prior to its dissolution, Heller had never sued a former Shareholder under a Jewel theory to recover the profits earned on such unfinished business." Id. Thus, according to the Trustee, "only as a result of Heller's dissolution were departing Shareholders burdened with a duty to account for unfinished business taken from the firm." Id.
It is unclear why the duties, rights, and property interests at stake here should be different simply because Heller dissolved. To the extent dissolution does change the lay of the land, it should do so in favor of Defendants as a matter of equity. Heller ceased to be able to represent its clients, leaving them with no choice but to seek representation elsewhere. Defendants came to the rescue of these clients and provided them with legal services on ongoing matters. The former Heller clients negotiated and signed entirely new retainer agreements with third-party firms. And those firms provided substantively new representation, requiring significant resources, personnel, capital, and services well beyond the capacity of either Heller or its individual Shareholders.
Public policy considerations also support the Court's ruling. The Trustee argued at the motion hearing that the two policy reasons articulated by Jewel apply here. First, Jewel explained that preventing extra compensation to law partnerships "prevents partners from competing for the most remunerative cases during the life of the partnership in anticipation that they might retain those cases should the partnership dissolve." Jewel, 156 Cal.App.3d at 179, 203 Cal.Rptr. 13. Second, the Jewel holding "discourages former partners from scrambling to take physical possession of files and seeking personal gain by soliciting a firm's existing clients upon dissolution." Id. Based on the detailed discussion of these policy issues during the motion hearing, the Court concludes that they are not at play here.
The profits to which the Trustee asserts a claim are not those of the former Heller Shareholders themselves, but rather those of the new, third-party firms. Thus, any benefit or incentive for the former Heller Shareholders is not directly at issue. Further, the former Heller clients chose to sign new retainer agreements with third-party firms. The decision to retain new counsel was not instigated by "physical possession of files" but rather by Heller's inability to provide further representation. Nor could the Trustee provide the Court with a workable definition of "winding up" or "unfinished business." The Court agrees that Heller should bill and be paid for the time its lawyers spent filing motions for continuances, noticing parties and courts that it was withdrawing as counsel, packing up and shipping client files back to the clients or to new counsel, and getting new counsel up to speed on pending matters. That is what winding up unfinished business entails when a firm dissolves in the context of a bankruptcy.
Nor could the Trustee direct the Court to any concrete evidence that either of the two policy factors articulated in Jewel came into play during Heller's dissolution. That Defendants, in hiring former Heller Shareholders, considered those Shareholders' book of business is to be expected and hardly speaks to unruly competition within Heller. In fact, the Trustee's position would create a perverse incentive in the context of a firm struggling to avoid dissolution. The Trustee's rule would incentivize partners of a struggling firm to jump ship at the first sign of trouble to avoid the kind of suit Defendants now find themselves in, even if that would destabilize an otherwise viable firm.
Finding no justification, legal or otherwise, for creating a property interest in pending hourly matters, the Court GRANTS summary judgment in favor of Defendants and against Plaintiff.