Recent Posts in Attorney Abuses Category
| April 18, 2012 |
| Divorce and Family Law HORROR STORIES - How the System Is Broken! SHARE Yours With Us? |
| Posted By Thurman W. Arnold CFLS |
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Share Your Family Law Horror Story?
I want to thank all of you who write me about the difficult circumstances and horror stories surrounding your divorce and other family law matters, both in and out of divorce court. I receive dozens of emails each month from non-client readers, many who need help and so have questions, many who are merely venting, and many who have deep problems with how the government sponsored system for resolving family law disputes has unfolded and been applied for them, or misused.
I am not able to respond to every email, and for those who really want was is in effect a consultation with me (by seeking detailed answers to complex questions, for instance) I suggest you consider a phone or Skype conference with me or Mike Peterson at my office. I bill $350/hour for those consults and Mike bills at $250/hour.
However, for those who simply wish to have their often tragic stories heard I've decided to open up a portion of my website for posting them. Your experiences may be useful to others, and I imagine others similarly situated will read them with great interest. I think there should be a forum for people to communicate the good and bad of what they've been through.
Therefore, you must understand that I have a busy law practice along with a website that requires my constant attention and so am practically limited in my time and ability to respond or educate people about the law, your options, tactics you might try to change the course of your case or situation, and so on. I may not be able to enter into an ongoing dialogue with many of you, and don't want you to be offended if my responses are truncated, but if you wish to share your situations and experiences and if they are appropriately written, I will post them in a new section of my website that I am creating.
Your stories - if you'd like me to share them with the world for you - shouldn't simply be rants, but they certainly can express the poignancy of your situation. They need to be coherently (but not perfectly) written, not be abusive, respect other's rights to privacy, and provide enough information that a reader can follow them. I will create editorial guidelines as this concept develops. If you wish to have your story posted you will have to give me the rights to use it as I see fit.
Again, I will refine how this will work. For now I will watch to see whether creating such a forum is something the public really desires - both in terms of people sharing their experience as well as others caring to read about them. Hence, this concept is a work in progress.
If this makes sense to you and is something you wish to undertake, send me your stories at twarnold@verizon.net - don't use my on-line intake forms or blog comments because the length is limited in what I receive.
Thurman W. Arnold, III, C.F.L.S. |
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| August 03, 2011 |
| Divorce and Family Lawyers Who LIE - EQUANIMITY and DIVORCE PRACTICE |
| Posted By Thurman Arnold |
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Lawyers Who Lie
Some lawyers, like some people, lie to the Court - particularly in the more contentious of family law cases where emotions run highest. Our culture (and our lower natures) places so much value upon our sense of being entitled to getting what we want, regardless whether it is earned or deserved or the suffering it inflicts upon others when it is not, that otherwise decent, moral people disconnect from their sworn oaths, and more. I often remind my clients that while the judicial system aspires to do justice, the adversarial system only has enough time and resources to devote in any given case to approximate the appearance of justice. For those people who face dishonest lawyers, I apologize and sympathize deeply with your predicament. These men and women seem to forget that real people are involved and that outcomes ruin not on the lives of the parties themselves, but also their children. This of course models behaviors that will repeat - often for generations. I will speculate that lawyers who lie learned the related behaviors from trauma within their own families of origin.
Fortunately it is a rare event in my experience. Most attorneys are honest and ethical, at least in my small community. In 30 years of practice I can count the times that opposing counsel themselves submitted perjured testimony to a Judge. These attorneys became so personally aligned with their clients, or so egotistically challenged, that boundaries evaporated and they became willing to say anything.
There are also a middle category of divorce attorneys whose advocacy style relies upon disinformation but not necessarily outright misrepresentation. It is not uncommon to hear some story or event postured in ways that the lawyer knows are untrue and go beyond a lawyer's ethical obligation to paint his client in a favorable light. Whole stories can even be spun out and laid out before a judicial officer under the guise of "argument" even though no evidence supports the argument, and it is inflammatory, painful to listen to, and without foundation. I believe that why the public, and other lawyers and bench officers, most hold family law attorneys in lowered esteem is because such behaviors are so common among the legal brothers and sisters that it is considered as natural and even humorous. This style of practice exists in a zone of greyishness, one that is reinforced by the conditioning that lawyers receive early on and may be compounded by their own personal histories.
While the latter situations are unfortunate, they occur frequently enough that I've grown desensitized to them. Unfortunately, judges - who can't necessarily discern truth any faster than the rest of us, especially with their limited time and resources - often decline to control these situations. The California Family Code does not provide clear direction or remedies that are efficient and not cumbersome.
This is why I advocate an amendment to Family Code section 271 or a parallel statute authorizing sanctions awards directly against attorneys, and not just their clients, under circumstances and for lawyer conduct that we really could categorize easily since the legal bunch can list it easily. Caselaw is divided whether the existing section covers attorneys themselves for their own misconduct. If attorneys are not personally responsible for their actions under the umbrella of "zealous representation" then training the public to curb their attack dogs will take forever and not be successful.
Lawyers accusing lawyers of unethical behavior is painful and unseemly and this discussion is uncomfortable for lawyers. The dangers in making attorney misconduct directly sanctionable in family law cases include adding another layer where potential manipulative name-calling abuses can occur and even more court time can be consumed. But if we agree attorney misconduct should be deterred, and that the costs to clients and court that they case are equally or more substantial, how else might we achieve this? If lawyers cannot be held accountable, even as their clients may find up footing the consequences as illustrated in the Davenport decision, then we must expect more of the same.
Equanimity is difficult in such circumstances. Adversarial litigation brings the worst out of some people. Many lawyers fit that profile - and certainly many clients lost in the land of relationship end are in a deep destructive trance where the perceived benefits of the ends justify the means. Hell, we all fit that profile from time to time. Unfortunately, those ends never are grounded in anything but illusion.
"All creatures desire peace and happiness" - as your relationship ends, protect yourself but be strong and be whole.

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| May 06, 2011 |
| Marriage of Davenport: Trial Court SANCTIONS Wife Under FC Section 271 for Her ATTORNEYS' "UNBRIDLED AGGRESSION" In Family Court Proceedings! |
| Posted By Thurman W. Arnold, III, C.F.L.S. |
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A Shifting Judicial Response to Overzealous Advocacy:
Excessively Exuberant and Inflammatory Litigation Tactics
Will Not Be Tolerated in California
Justice Richman of the First Appellate District for Sonoma County, California, issued this week a momentous opinion that signals that courts will no longer passively allow attorneys who embark on rampaging attacks in high conflict divorce, or elsewhere, to do so without meaningful reprisals. Clients who encourage or permit their lawyers to manage their cases in this style may find their purses and wallets pried open.
While my review of the case may seem harsh, I believe that it reflects the frustration of the appellate court. I have endeavored to quote the decision itself as much as possible for readability. The trend in recent reported appellate decisions suggests that the pendulum is swinging against litigants who get sucked into divorce trance and its insane warfare. Marriage of Davenport excoriates not only one lawyer and his client but also the Santa Rosa law firm for which the attorney worked.
Mediators, collaborative attorneys, ethical divorce practitioners, and holistic lawyers will appreciate that a major California appellate decision has outed the adversarial elephant in the courtroom for the destructive creature that it is, affirming consequences for litigious behavior that are necessary and overdue. Courts are not merely imposing monetary punishments, they are publicly shaming those professionals (attorneys, mental health professionals, and even trial court judges) who fail to act within the bounds of due process, fiduciary duty obligations, and the rules of civility. Indeed, last month the Second Appellate District in Ventura County upheld a sanctions award against a self-represented attorney in a family law proceeding, and reported him to the California State Bar as well.
Still, Davenport raises some important questions. These include:
- What level of vitriol and sarcastic behavior is permissible in the trenches of high-conflict divorce proceedings? When does zealous advocacy so exceed the bounds of civility that the behavior of litigants or their attorneys receives as much attention as the underlying property division and support issues in the case?
- Is it possible to remain a civil advocate without sacrificing the zeal that is required and expected of lawyer warriors?
- If attorneys, or the clients in their stead, are to be held accountable for conduct that increases the adversarial tone of the proceedings might this have a chilling effect upon strong and courageous advocacy, making less empowered parties more vulnerable to exploitative litigation tactics employed by the other side?
- Should the California legislature amend Family Code section 271 to authorize trial courts to sanction family law attorneys directly for abuses they themselves commit? Good arguments exist for and against (another day, another blog).
Marriage of Davenport (2011) 194 Cal.App.4th 1507
Marriage of Davenport was published May 4, 2011. It may be the most important annunciation in years by California jurists that some litigants and lawyers are stubbornly out of control, recognizing that the survival of our current family court legal scheme requires that the judiciary manage the worst behavior of such participants.
Davenport will be cited as a textbook illustration of what to overcome and avoid.
Click here for the full opinion.
Jill and Ken Davenport married in 1948 and separated in 1990, amassing an estate worth near 57 million dollars. Ken was a talented car salesman and real estate investor. It wasn't until March 1, 2006 that Jill filed a petition for dissolution of marriage. During that 16 years "there was agreement and cooperation, including their participation in joint estate planning favorable to Jill, and agreement to sell off many of the [community properties]." Jill was then 75 years of age, and Ken was 78.
This cooperation ended on February, 3 2006 when something set Jill onto the road to calamity. She fired a first salvo in the form of a letter to Ken which accused him of having "stepped over the line," having "lied to me," warning he being taken advantage of by others (sweet irony?), and demanding money and property. Although the parties had co-existed peaceably for almost 16 years, the status quo exploded with this letter.
What had changed for Jill? That month or before she'd retained the law firm of O'Brien Watters and Davis to protect and advance her interests. When her Petition was filed, senior attorney Michael Watters was named as her attorney of record. However, in November 2005 Andrew Watters (Michael's nephew), passed the California Bar and joined the law firm effective February, 2006. He was introduced to Jill three days later and became her gladiator, so beginning an odyssey that would continue unabated for more than five years. According to Andrew, thereafter he "personally handled or [was] personally involved in each and every transaction between the parties ..., as well as each and every discovery request, discovery event, court proceeding, and other substantive matter." As the First Appellate District court dryly notes, "[i]n short, Andrew Watters became the lead lawyer for Jill in what would necessarily be a complex family law litigation." "Early on, a young and inexperienced attorney at that firm [Andrew] became Jill's primary attorney, and interacted with Ken's attorneys for the next two years, interactions that would generate a 35-page register of actions and 19 volumes of court files."
Out of the gate Andrew Watters pursued a campaign of attack against Ken and his attorneys that seemed ill-fated. Five months into the proceedings, he filed a motion to compel further answers to Form Interrogatories after making negligible efforts to resolve the discovery dispute informally. California has long required that before litigants file motions to compel discovery, the record must show that they made reasonable and sincere efforts to resolve the argument informally. Proof of this is contained in what are called "meet and confer" letters. Unfortunately, these letters are often authored with a threatening tone, reflect posturing and grandstanding, and sometimes hope to set up the other side for sanctions when a motion to compel is heard. In this case, Andrew wrote a single letter, failed to respond to Ken's attorney's reply, and he didn't attempt to discuss the issues with Ken's attorneys directly before filing his motion. The trial court declared these efforts to be "unreasonable" and "admonished [counsel for both parties] to change their meet and confer practices so that meeting and conferring is meaningful and not just a token gesture."
Over the next two years Wife's side would file eight discovery motions. The court file came to consist of 19 volumes, something that the experienced trial judge, Judge Cerena Wong, would later describe as "outrageous" for a family law case. Wife filed three OSC re Contempts against the Husband, including one in which the Court in August, 2006, ordered the parties to meet and confer in a 4-way, as to which Ken "refused to meet and confer if attorney Andrew G. Watters was present in the room." Oh boy. Unfortunately, this reaction is not uncommon but risks forming a vacuum where the business of cooperatively resolving the case stalls.
The FC §271 Sanctions' Requests
On May 23, 2008, attorney Watters filed two motions that ultimately blew up in Jill's face, led to this appeal, but now provides a roadmap for how not to behave when representing parties to matrimonial proceedings. One motion requested Family Code section 271 sanctions and attorney fees.
Wife's initial motion paperwork was "blank", evidently designed to reserve hearing dates on the court's calendar. The appellate court notes that "Andrew Waters did not consult with [Ken's attorney] on the date, nor even advise him of the filings, causing him to complain about the timing of the motions, including that they were filed late in the afternoon of May 23, 2008, the Friday before the Memorial Day weekend, and at the last possible moment."
Family Code section 271(a) reads in pertinent part:
"the court may base an award of attorney's fees and costs on the extent to which the conduct of each party or attorney furthers or frustrates the policy of the law to promote settlement of litigation and, where possible, to reduce the cost of litigation by encouraging cooperation between the parties and attorneys. An award of attorney's fees and costs pursuant to this section is in the nature of a sanction.... In order to obtain an award under this section, the party requesting an award of attorney's fees and costs is not required to demonstrate any financial need for the award...."
Jill sought legal fees of $600,861 and costs of $332,933. Her attorney filed a 52-page declaration which attached 1250 pages of exhibits. Much of Watters' declaration was "inappropriate, asserting hearsay, argument, opinion, and conclusion, and was improper on several bases. An early passage ... illustrates some of this, where Andrew Watters purports to describe Jill's description of Ken's 'negotiating tactics, habits, and personality traits,' which he labeled 'Deal in the pocket,' 'Poor mouth,' and 'Artificial crisis,'...." This sort of sarcasm doesn't warm the hearts of judges.
Although the record is not clear, it appears that Watters requested that Ken's attorneys also be sanctioned. If so, personalizing sanctions between attorneys is always a dangerous mistake.
Watters' tone was reportedly sarcastic, deprecatory, improperly personal, and lacked objectivity (see several paragraphs below for the juicier stuff). Effectively he was "testifying" on behalf of his client. His declaration included assertions that:
- "I've seen first hand that Ken can be a very persuasive person, and that Ken seems to use all of his abilities and skill to get the best deals for himself. Unfortunately we've learned that Ken has also used this great skill and ability to take care of his wife."
- "I was skeptical ... that someone could really use these tactics effectively outside of a car dealership.... However, throughout our dealings with Ken in this matter, I have personally observed Ken use each of the aforementioned tactics."
- "During the pendency of this proceedings,...., the 'inconvenient truth' here is that Ken has used his unusually strong business skill and acumen against his spouse despite his fiduciary duties..."
Wife's attorney asserted several breaches of fiduciary duty including that Ken (1) omitted two assets worth $3.1 million on his schedule of assets and debts; (2) produced a written statement of the parties' net worth to be $30.5 million, when several months earlier he gave a financial statement to a loan officer showing the net worth to be twice that; (3) that his schedule of assets and debts failed to state values for many of the listed items; and (4) engaged in various discovery abuses, including stalling the taking of his deposition for ten months.
Watters' motion included Points and Authorities citing but one case: In re Marriage of Feldman (2007) 153 Cal.App.4th 1470.
Feldman is the most important fiduciary duty case of the last decade. It upheld $250,000 in sanctions against a Husband who clearly was frustrating the resolution of that case, and who was secreting assets from the Wife. "Feldman" has become the rallying cry behind many well-intentioned efforts by California Family Law attorneys to force the other side to comply with their fiduciary duties.
Many divorce attorneys have "Feldman letters" loaded and cocked on their computers, to fire off where the other side is 'hiding the ball.' Several years ago these were widely circulated within the family law community with a certain amount of glee. Some attorneys use these letters as an intimidation tactic.
Feldman sanctions' threats are indeed sometimes required to remind the other side they are straying from their obligations to be transparent - but misconduct must be egregious in order to succeed on a
Feldman claim.
Feldman is important authority for curbing and remedying abusive and dishonest conduct in divorce proceedings, but like all things it can be over-used, blunting its utility.
Watters urged: "'Here, the Davenport matter might as well be called
In re Marriage of Feldman - The Sequel. If ever a dissolution of marriage action in Sonoma County warranted the imposition of sanctions on a party, this is the case.... indeed, 'this case is
worse than what happened in
Feldman.'" The decision asserts
"F
eldman would become Jill's short-hand description of all that was claimed to be wrong with Ken's conduct,..."
"Feldman, Feldman, Feldman, Jill repeated below,..." The appellate justices noted that "Jill remains relentless ...."
For those who have been on the receiving end of nasty Feldman letters, this is the first reported decision that provides an antidote. However, at the same time,
Feldman is important authority to assist under-empowered spouses in family law litigation.
Ken naturally opposed Jill's Feldman motion, and gave notice that he would seek too would seek Section 271 sanctions. Jill's Reply argued Ken's motion was technically defective and filed on the wrong forms, and that Ken's requested fees "have little or no connection with the alleged 'sanctionable' conduct of Jill"
as opposed to that of Jill's attorney. It is not clear that they challenged the
amount of these fees.
The trial of these dueling Feldman claims took place over five days in October and November, 2008. Wife's attorney filed detailed evidentiary objections to the declarations and exhibits that Ken submitted, including motions to strike portions of his pleadings, and Judge Wong essentially ignored these objections making "it abundantly clear that she could separate the wheat from the chaff."
Davenport deals a blow to the common practice of using evidentiary objection briefs to attack declarations from the opposing side that contain improper matter (the function of these is to emphasize to the Court the lack of
admissible evidentiary support for statements contains in these declarations, and to strike some of the contents of these pleadings from the record). Judge Wong stated "as far as I'm concerned, fighting over comments or statements made as to whether or not they're relevant or whether or not they're objectionable, you know, this is not a jury trial for heaven's sake. I'm a judge. You know, I can sift through this stuff. I might have some comment about what I think to be more lawyerly conduct and lawyerly language . . . . You should be able to rely on the court being able to read what it reads and eliminate what's not relevant."
Well, maybe.... Judges are as human as the rest of us. Exactly what argument or "evidence" a court is relying upon in reaching its conclusions is of rightful concern to litigants and their attorneys. Short-circuiting a proper record that makes effective appellate review possible carries a danger of giving trial courts too much power and discretion.
Judge Wong issued a statement of decision that found that:
- Jill's counsel's failure to meet and confer before filing her motion, and during the proceedings, is sanctionable conduct.
- The facts Jill alleged "do not rise to the level [of Feldman]."
- No valid evidence or support was presented that justified an expedited hearing (normally Feldman motions are heard at the conclusion of a dissolution action, when the Court has the larger picture before it, but Attorney Watters had urged that an immediate hearing was required here to deter what he claimed was continuing sanctionable conduct by Ken and his attorneys.
- Jill's counsel's hostile and disrespectful correspondence is sanctionable.
- Jill's attorney repeatedly made references to what was said and presented in a mediation that the parties had undertaken, in violation of Evidence Code section 1119.
- Watters' surreptitious conduct with computer consultants in relation to extracting computer data on a computer in his possession that was believed to include privileged material was inappropriate and sanctionable (in connection with retrieving data stored on a computer that Wife controlled, Watters switched the computer experts, replacing the agreed upon forensic with an IT person whom he'd met at a karaoke Bar where he claimed such "nerds" are known to hang out).
- All fees relating to Wife's motions could have been avoided by Wife's counsel. Had he done any of the following, it was likely the costly motions and hearings relating thereto could have been avoided: (1) Met and conferred with counsel; (2) been more respectful and cooperative; (3) used the assigned case manager; (4) accepted Husband's counsel's offers to agree to a neutral forensic accountant.
- Watters' insistence on a expedited Feldman trial in the middle of the case rather than at its conclusion was unnecessary and unreasonably expensive to the parties, and wasted the Court's limited resources.
Judge Wong denied Jill's motions. "There has been a failure of proof sufficient to penalize husband and his attorneys Merrill, Arnone, Benoit or Johnson." She granted Ken's request that the Court find that the Petitioner, through her attorneys, engaged in a course of conduct that was sanctionable. Judge Wong observed:
"'The Court questions the wisdom of such a large firm as O'Brien, Watters to choose to 'educate' a newly admitted lawyer with a case that involved millions of dollars of varied assets in California and other states, with a long term marriage and complicated trust holdings. With no background in either civil or family law litigation, Mr. Andrew Watters admitted to the Court that he was taught to litigate this case with unbridled aggression. These uncooperative and uncivil courses of action have caused
Mrs. Davenport unnecessary delays and unnecessary attorney fees and costs.'" [Italics and emphasis added].
I don't know if this last reference is a typographical mistake , but if not Judge Wong's message that Jill's gladiators poorly served her is remarkable. It also spells "malpractice."
The court also criticized Ken, who had early on stated he would not engage in a court-ordered 4-way if Attorney Watters "was in the room." Judge Wong saw this position as "inexcusably rude and uncalled for. Respondent's arrogance must have hit a sensitive nerve in counsel because Petitioner's case became a case that rapidly deteriorated into unprofessionally rude conduct and speech after that."
What Divorce Lawyers Might Avoid
The appellate court found that "Andrew Watters' demeaning comments to opposing counsel were contrary to the California Attorney Guidelines of Civility and Professionalism promulgated by the State Bar in 2007 (Guidelines). These guidelines reflect that "attorneys have an obligation to be professional with . . . other parties and counsel, [and] the courts," which obligation "includes civility, professional integrity, . . . candor . . . and cooperation, all of which are essential to the fair administration of justice and conflict resolution." (Guidelines, supra, Introduction, p. 3.) Section 4 of the Guidelines further counsels that "An attorney should avoid, hostile, demeaning or humiliating words," further providing in relevant part that: "An attorneys communications about the legal system should at all times reflect civility, professional integrity, personal dignity, and respect for the legal system. An attorney should not engage in conduct that is unbecoming a member of the Bar and an officer of the court. For example, in communications . . . with adversaries: [¶] . . . [¶] c. An attorney should not disparage the intelligence, integrity, ethics, morals or behavior of the court or other counsel, parties or participants when those characteristics are not at issue. [¶] . . . [¶] f. An attorney should avoid hostile, demeaning or humiliating words." (Guidelines, supra, § 4, pp. 4-5.)"
Justice Richman continued "there is abundant evidence of Andrew Watters treatment - more accurately, mistreatment - of his opposing counsel in his correspondence with them. Bad enough that such correspondence occurs in any litigation. It is utterly inconsistent with a fundamental aspect of proper family law practice. "Family law cases are not supposed to be conducted as adversarial proceedings. Quite the contrary, the goal is to reduce acrimony and adversarial approaches common to general civil litigation and, instead, to foster cooperation between the parties and their counsel with a view toward settlement short of full-blown litigation. [See Fam. C. §§ 2100 (b), § 271(a) (sanctions for uncooperative conduct in family law cases); see also Cal. Atty. Guidelines of Civility & Professionalism § 19-in family law proceedings an attorney should seek to reduce emotional tension and trauma and encourage the parties and attorneys to interact in a cooperative atmosphere, and keep the best interest of the children in mind']."
"The record is replete with correspondence from Andrew Watters to Ken's attorneys that contained abusive, rude, hostile, and/or disrespectful language, correspondence that Andrew Watters himself acknowledged was substantial evidence, when in the course of his closing argument he stated that '[p]erhaps some unpleasant letters that could offend someone did substantially increase the cost of litigation.' Perhaps it did indeed. A few illustrations should suffice:
- his November 22, 2006 letter to Mr. Merrill referring to Ken's nonappearance for deposition, which letter provided in pertinent part as follows: 'Regarding your client's failure to appear once again for his continued deposition, we too regret that your client chose not to appear. As you know, we duly noticed his continued deposition for 11/20/06-11/22/06. Once again, you offer the same tired, old, and shopworn excuse. Your continued blustering about mutually agreeable dates, efficiency and promptness, and convenience is pathetic when your client's actions negate any semblance of cooperation. Talk is cheap. Actions speak louder than words. Your credibility is at stake here.'
- his March 13, 2007 letter to Mr. Benoit included remarks that were rude, including 'Enough already with the delays.' Worse, his letter indicated that he did not believe Mr. Benoit-the person he described as "the dean of the Family Law Bar"-telling him: 'We don't accept your implication that you didn't already have [the Request to Inspect] . . . . Perhaps you didn't look hard enough, because we filed a Motion to Compel . . . in which I attached RTI Set one to my Declaration. Or you weren't counting that copy.' And the letter ends with utter disrespect, with observations such as: 'this seems like a case of the pot calling the kettle black'; 'In your last paragraph, your first suggestion is illusory. . . ."; and, "Your last paragraph rings hollow.'
- his September 11, 2008 letter to Mr. Johnson which, bad enough, insinuated untruthfulness: 'We've noticed that, in the past, you have had some trouble keeping things straight. We also noticed that you tend to stretch things somewhat too far in the name of appearances.' Worse, it accused Mr. Johnson of unethical conduct: 'It's no surprise, then, that your letter of 8/7/08 appears to be an attempt to create a false and misleading exhibit for use at a later law and motion hearing so that your client can sit in court with a halo over his head, and so you can say look how many times Ken offered to settle! That wouldn't surprise us at all, given your practice of attaching a large pile of exhibits to your declarations without any testimony from you concerning their truth.'
Later confronted with such correspondence, Andrew's response was not apologetic. He indicated at one point it might have been "unfortunate," but that was it. In his words, 'So I should note if I caused undue emotional pain on the other side in terms of writing unpleasant letters, if I offended anyone, then that's unfortunate and certainly a learning process for me, but the fact is I am not on trial here. And, in any event, the attorneys on the other side-I'm sure they can handle it. Mr. Mike Merrill, I think, is a 35 year attorney, former Marine officer in Vietnam, has seen it all. Mr. Benoit is a 35- or 40 year family law lawyer. He's seen it all. Mr. Johnson was in the Navy, I believe. These are not attorneys not able to do lawyering because of unpleasant letters from a
baby lawyer on the other side.' [Italics added].
The appellate justices observed that Jill's position on appeal was equally unrepentant where, referring to "the tone of some of [Andrew Watters'] written communications," she describes it as "the expressions (sometimes intemperate) of a young lawyer frustrated that Ken was systematically obstructing the search for the truth by his actions in resisting routine discovery, which is supposed to be self-executing. Ken and his attorneys then created a smokescreen that prevented the trial court from seeing the substance of the communications in context."
Strong, strong language. An important caveat for the lawyers who will inevitably attempt to use Davenport to support sanctions' motions for uncivil conduct by opposing counsel is that just accusing the other side of behaving like Mr. Watters may itself seem abusive to a trial court. While the justices' opinion does not appear "overstated" given a record so rich in illustrations of what not to do, I think we need to be careful not to ourselves overstate it, or to try to fit conduct we don't like into a
Davenport box where that conduct fails to speak for itself. That is a species of risk that has blunted the edge of
Feldman claims since that decision was rendered, making it a less viable tool for under-empowered litigants. The corollary is that "trance begets trance." We don't want to make the same mistakes and so seem as aggressive as our opponents.
The Adversarial Tone Continued On Appeal
Accordingly, Jill was ordered to pay $100,000 in sanctions plus $304,387 in attorney fees to Ken. Unfortunately for her, Wife's attorneys' strategies on appeal remained obdurate. By this point Andrew Watters had gone "walkabout" and left the firm (following the trial court decision). O'Brien, Watters continued with the same verve as it had at the trial court level. For example, their briefs targeted Judge Cerena Wong with a number of arguments that one (including the appellate justices) might find to be offensive. The appellate court stated "[i]n sum, Jill manifests a treatment of the record that disregards the most fundamental rules of appellate review."
For instance, in addition to being highly histrionic, Jill's appellate arguments scolded the judge, accusing her of relying on inadmissible evidence while ignoring admissible evidence. Jill's brief posed the question: "Imagine if a high school civics class had been on a field trip to the court that day. How would the teacher be able to explain to his/her students that the judge said she would not follow the rules?" It is mind-boggling that seasoned attorneys would argue that high school students would see that the judge was not following the rules when the judge herself could not. Of course, the appellate justices concluded that just the reverse was true, and that all of Judge Wong's conclusions were well supported by the record and the law but that Jill and her "team" lacked a comprehension of the rules of evidence and basic propriety.
Frankly, Wife's team had reasons to be concerned about Judge Wong's treatment of the evidentiary objections, but is it possible that in assailing the trial court with the tone that they apparently used that this triggered a defensive reaction in the appellate justices which ultimately took center stage over the legal issues?
Jill argued that whatever the appropriateness of the statements made by attorney Andrew Watters, such communications were covered all by the "litigation privilege" set forth in California Civil Code section 47 and hence could not properly generate a sanctions' award. Similarly, Jill on appeal argued that Andrew Watters' communications were protected by the bounds of free speech and zealous advocacy. Not so ruled the Court. Family law is not the Wild West, nor is it a frontier where "anything goes".
What Went Wrong
(Or, 'Should People Living in Glass Houses Throw Stones')?
We family court lawyers are not entirely to blame for getting lost in the dark woods of adversarial divorce to such an extent that some misplace their ethics or, as here, lose control of our emotions - our clients' experiences of divorce are devastating, and lawyers respond to the felt needs of the consuming public like any other industry. Some clients entice us with a willingness to pay "whatever it takes" to personify their angst in formulating our strategies for them - and it is extremely difficult not to become enmeshed in their emotional struggles to an extent that blur the boundaries between their experiences and perspectives and our own.
Particularly as a younger lawyer I confess at times I was deluded into buying my clients' attitudes and personalizing the pain within the stories, and sometimes adopted an arrogance and one-sidedness in accepting their views as the entire picture. This remains a struggle for me at times today. Caring, which I suspect all the members of the O'Brien law firm share, is what is honorable about "zealous advocacy." Unfortunately, relationship wars tend to challenge us all beyond our capacity to stay mindful - within depth of caring lies a trap. We can care too much, and strong emotions in any direction are a potent drug. I for one need to constantly reground myself, and to release the ferocity that accumulates from the frustrations of interacting with high conflict litigants and attorneys. And since this is so for me, it must be so for the others - a realization that can offer some balance and even crack a door to forgiveness.
The Mission Statement of O'Brien, Watters & Davis LLP as published on their website identifies their aspirations as follows: "To render quality legal services and maintain the highest ethical standards; to provide excellent service to clients; to use our best efforts to have our clients succeed and achieve results; to make a reasonable and fair profit; to maintain an excellent reputation in the community and within the legal profession; to be actively involved in and give service to the community; and to have mutual respect and support for one another." I trust that they mean this. Something strikes me as odd, however, about it. I sense a wisp of a sentiment that implies that rendering quality legal services might be inconsistent with maintaining the highest ethical standards; that excellent service is only measured by achieving results, which in traditional lawyer-speak means winning (and not necessarily settling) cases; and that achieving reasonable and fair profits is dependent on strategies for winning adversarially. I guess it is hard to not interpret their advertisement outside the light of what went on in Davenport.
O'Brien Waters, me the writer of this Blog, and you the reader are given the invitation and opportunity to reflect upon, re-evaluate, and close the gaps between our intention and actions, every day. Which is always a good reason to be grateful, since we can dust ourselves off and start out anew.
Marriage of Davenport is a wake up call. Andrew Watters is no demon, but this case contains a concentrated dose of the pitfalls of the adversarial paradigm. Is anybody listening?
Save yourself unnecessary grief and expense, and live a longer life. Seek out family law specialists who have the genuine desire and interest to help you set (and reset as required) a tone that might free you from this mess, rather than binding you more tightly within it!
I believe that the law firm that assisted Ken in this case deserve recognition and naming for their role in this landmark case: Perry, Johnson, Anderson, Miller & Moskowitz by John E. Johnson and Deborah S. Bull. Congratulations!
Thurman W. Arnold, III, C.F.L.S.
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| January 17, 2010 |
| I have an attorney but what if I want a SECOND OPINION? |
| Posted By Thurman Arnold. Certified Family Law Specialist |
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Q. I am represented by an attorney. However, I don't have a lot of faith in him anymore and now trial is scheduled in four months. Am I being paranoid in wanting a second opinion about my divorce case?
A. Dissolution proceedings generate great anxiety. The circumstances surrounding the breakup of relationships, division of property and debts, sharing of custody, fears about future economics, and being a stranger to a process that one can only marginally direct or control cause difficulties in evaluating the quality and value of advice that clients receive.
Please don't hesitate to seek a second or even a third opinion about your family law matter.
We all ought to have a healthy skepticism about what professionals tell us, particularly when the subject affects us in an intimate, immediate or lifetime basis. It is not uncommon to become suspicious of one's attorney, or to lose confidence. Indeed, a major tactic which parties use to manipulate each other in high conflict divorces involves promoting distrust of the other's lawyer; a second opinion may become useful in grounding you. Your fears may be well founded, or they may be caused by a lack of understanding (most often a result of poor communication skills on the part of an attorney, or a lack of apparent empathy for your plight). In either case with these warning signs evident and some time left to change horses if that is indeed what you conclude is necessary, failing to investigate this further right now is a recipe for disaster.
Lawyers are not all created equally; some are unquestionably smarter and more poised and articulate than others, and there is a huge variation in the level of skill and commitment that individuals possess or bring to any particular case or specialty topic.
Certified Family Law Specialists are highly likely to understand the legal complexities of modern divorce, and to be familiar and comfortable with current best practices in the mental health sciences as they relate to individual and family dynamics. Most attorneys lack sufficient interest to bother to undertake the fairly grueling training, education, and testing required for certification as a legal specialist. Although certification as a divorce expert does not guarantee the outcome you desire to achieve, it does stack the odds in your favor - hiring a specialist is more likely to pair you with an experienced legal professional who is at the top of the divorce lawyer bio-sphere. If your attorney is not certified, or even if he is and you sense that his advice is not efficient or it is not making sense to you (or others), it is no sin to discreetly step away, take some breaths, and get reliable and independent feedback.
If you are feeling uneasy about the quality of the legal representation you are receiving, don't ignore the signals. Given what is at stake, why not seek a second legal opinion from a qualified attorney? At worse you may find that your anxiety has been dispelled and that the real problem with you and your lawyer involves a lack of communication or a lack of understanding by one or both of you that can be remedied; at best you may avert a developing train crash before your life and finances are thoroughly wrecked.
We don't have crystal balls, but we all possess intuition and common sense. Use yours!
We offer Second Opinions and frank and discreet, expert advice, by telephone and video-conferencing and webcam!
Thurman W. Arnold III, C.F.L.S. |
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