Nited Tates Istrict Ourt Entral Istrict of Alifornia: Ivil Inutes Eneral
Nited Tates Istrict Ourt Entral Istrict of Alifornia: Ivil Inutes Eneral
Nited Tates Istrict Ourt Entral Istrict of Alifornia: Ivil Inutes Eneral
Present: The Honorable VIRGINIA A. PHILLIPS, CHIEF UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
On January 10, 2019, Debtor Egan Avenatti, LLP (“Debtor”) filed its Motion to
Disqualify Counsel. (Doc. No. 36.) On January 17, 2019, Creditor Jason Frank Law,
PLC (“Creditor”) filed its Opposition, (Doc. No. 39), and on January 22, 2019, Debtor
filed its Reply, (Doc. No. 41). After considering the arguments in support of and in
opposition to the Motion, and those advanced at the January 24, 2019 hearing, the
Court rules as follows.
Debtor contends that attorneys Scott Sims, Andrew Stolper, Jason Frank, and
Franks, Sim & Stolper, LLP must be disqualified as Creditor’s counsel, as “in the course
of representing EA and Avenatti in litigation, Sims, Jason Frank, and Andrew Stolper
have learned confidential information about the finances of EA and Avenatti as well as
their litigation strategies related to financial discovery,” and because Mr. Sims “is
currently counsel of record for EA and Avenatti in ongoing litigation.” (Doc. No. 36 at 6.)
production or review of EA’s or Avenatti’s financial records,” (Doc. No. 39-2 at 3), Mr.
Frank’s indication that his only work in the case at issue was limited to a single
deposition, (Doc. No. 39-1 at 3), and Mr. Stolper’s declaration that he never represented
Debtor in any matter, (Doc. No. 39-3 at 2). Debtor does not substantiate his arguments
with evidence of any specific information that Sims, Frank, or Stolper learned in the
course of their work at Egan Avenatti. Furthermore, courts in this Circuit have found
that attorneys may, when they themselves have an interest adverse to a debtor, serve
as their own counsel, as the California Rules of Professional Conduct would otherwise
prevent an attorney from pursuing “collection of an attorney fee without the client's
written consent. That is not the law.” In re Rindlisbacher, 225 B.R. 180, 183 n.4 (B.A.P.
9th Cir. 1998)
Debtor also argues that disqualification is warranted because Mr. Sims currently
represents it in Egan Avenatti, LLP v. Stoll, a fee collection lawsuit currently pending in
Orange County Superior Court. Neither the facts nor the law support Debtor’s
contention. At the January 24, 2019 hearing, Debtor’s counsel stated that Egan
Avenatti fired Frank and Sims in 2016, and that they were “summarily walked out of the
premises,” for “plotting to take cases.” It is simply implausible that Sims continued to
represent Debtor after that, and Sims’ declaration confirms that he did not. Debtor cites
to California Code of Civil Procedure Sections 284 and 285 for the proposition that the
lack of any notice of withdrawal by Sims in the Stoll action means that Sims still acts as
Egan Avenatti’s counsel of record. Neither of those sections directly addresses whether
an attorney who, like Sims, represented a party while employed at a law firm, must file a
notice of withdrawal when he or she leaves the firm and the firm continues to represent
that party. Scant case law exists on this point, but the California Rules of Civil
Procedure contemplate that attorneys may leave a case without having filed a notice of
withdrawal. See Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 285 2. (“Where at different stages of the suit
different attorneys have acted for one of the parties, and no notice of substitution
appears, service of notice upon the attorney last acting and recognized by the Court, is
sufficient to bind client); see also Wells Fargo & Co. v. City & County of San Francisco,
25 Cal. 2d 37, 43 (1944) (“The requirements of a substitution as prescribed in sections
284 and 285 of the Code of Civil Procedure are not applicable unless the associated
attorney attempts to act as the sole attorney rather than as an associated attorney and
to convert his association into a substitution for the attorney of record.”).
that a conflict of interest exists, the first two factors clearly weigh against
disqualification; the Court will discuss the next two in greater detail.
The Court also finds that Debtor’s Motion to Disqualify, originally made orally at
the January 4, 2019 debtor’s exam, (Doc. No. 25), is tactically abusive. Counsel that
Debtor seeks to disqualify first appeared in this action on October 2, 2018, (Doc. No. 15,
16), some four months ago. Mr. Frank was also present for—and, in fact, made a
pro se appearance at—the July 25, 2018 debtor’s exam, six months earlier.
(Doc. No. 43-2 at 64.) Counsel have undertaken numerous substantive actions in this
case, including representing Creditor at multiple oral arguments, (Doc. No. 18, 25), and
conferring with Debtor about the date of the January 4, 2019 exam at which the Motion
was finally brought, (Doc. No. 32, 33). Given the numerous points over a period of
months at which Debtor could have raised this potential issue, the timing of the Motion
smacks of tactical abuse.2
The thus Court finds that the “balancing of interests” test weighs against
disqualification of counsel.
1
Debtor was repeatedly evasive at this examination. Debtor did not bring sub-
poenaed documents, (Doc. No. 43-2 at 7), claimed not to know if Egan Avenatti
had filed tax returns, (id. at 13), was unable to recall his income from the firm (or
even provide an estimate), (id. at 24-25), claimed not to recall how Egan Avenatti
fell $2 million behind in payroll taxes, (id. at 31), and indicated that he did not
remember when Mr. Egan left Egan Avenatti, (id. at 63). Debtor also noted that
he may only pay a portion of the $10-million judgment to Mr. Frank because it
was “bogus.” (Id. at 11-12.)
2
Other courts in this district to consider similar months-long delays in bringing a
motion to disqualify have found they suggest “both waiver of the right to disqualify
and that the motion is a ‘tactical abuse’ of the procedure.” Sirisup v. It's Thai,
L.L.C., No. CV 13-07246 DDP (PJWx), 2015 WL 404096, at *3 (C.D. Cal. Jan.
29, 2015).
IT IS SO ORDERED.