Every Massachusetts attorney, like attorneys
across the country, have ethical duties when representing clients.
Some of these duties protect the client and others protect our legal
system. Lawyers, as officers of the courts, have duties to the legal
system itself. One of these duties is that a lawyer shall not bring
or prosecute a claim or defense that is frivolous. This duty is
established in the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure and in the
Massachusetts Rules of Professional Conduct. A recent case shows the
dangers of lawyers bringing frivolous claims.
In the case of Callahan v. Bedard, the
parties were unmarried parents of a young daughter. Their
relationship resulted in litigation in Probate and Family Court
relating to support of the child. The parties reached an agreement
in which a condominium was transferred to a trust with half of the
value to benefit the daughter and half to benefit the mother. In
consideration of this transaction, the father paid lower child
support. The agreement was approved by a Probate Court Judge and
incorporated into a judgment. About six months later, the father
sought to vacate the settlement by claiming that Probate Court lacked
jurisdiction to approve the agreement. His lawyer prosecuted the
action to vacate in Probate Court and then in the Appeals Court.
The Appeals Court had no trouble
rejecting the father's argument. In doing so, the Appeals Court
found the father's appeal to be frivolous. As a result, they looked
at the actions of the father's attorney. The Court found that the
attorney should have appreciated the meritless quality of the
father's arguments. The attorney and the father wasted the resources
of both the mother and the Court. The Appeals Court imposed a remedy
for such wasteful action on both the father and the attorney. The
Court ordered that both the father and the lawyer (in fact his law
firm) “shall be jointly and severally liable for the payment of the
appellate attorney's fees of the mother and for the sum of double her
appellate costs.”
Jointly and severally liable means that
the mother can collect the money owed for attorney fees from either
the father or his attorney. In fact, she can collect the entire
amount from the attorney if she chooses and the law firm has
sufficient resources. Furthermore, she may go back to Probate Court
and ask the Judge to award her additional attorney fees for the
frivolous action in Probate Court. After the opinion from the
Appeals Court, it will be difficult for a Probate Court Judge to deny
this motion.
This should be a warning to attorneys.
Don't bring frivolous actions for clients. Don't waste the time and
resources of the courts or your opponents. Attorneys should always act in good faith.
No comments:
Post a Comment