Wallis v. Levine et al
Filing
221
WRITTEN Opinion entered by the Honorable Joan B. Gottschall on 10/25/2012: Plaintiff's Motion to Disqualify the law firms of Miller, Shakman and Beem and Fox Rothschild, LLP 122 is denied. Mailed notice(vcf, )
Order Form (01/2005)
United States District Court, Northern District of Illinois
Name of Assigned Judge
or Magistrate Judge
Joan B. Gottschall
CASE NUMBER
12 C 5285
CASE
TITLE
Sitting Judge if Other
than Assigned Judge
DATE
10/25/2012
Wallis vs. Levine
DOCKET ENTRY TEXT
Plaintiff’s Motion to Disqualify the law firms of Miller, Shakman and Beem and Fox Rothschild, LLP [122]
is denied.
O[ For further details see text below.]
Docketing to mail notices.
STATEMENT
Plaintiff Scott Wallis filed a motion [122] to disqualify the law firms of Miller, Shakman and Beem (“MSB”)
and Fox Rothschild, LLP (“Fox”) from representing Defendant Cardservice International, LLC (“CSI”) in this
litigation. The court has received the law firms’ response to the motion as well as Wallis’s reply. For the reasons
stated below, the motion is denied.
Wallis claims that the firms should be disqualified because, after filing a lawsuit in 2008, he contacted MSB
seeking legal representation. Wallis claims that he spoke with MSB attorney Eddie Feldman about his case, and
that Feldman then spoke about Wallis’s case with Fox. Wallis argues that, in representing CSI in this litigation,
MSB is violating Illinois’ Rules of Professional Conduct, while Fox (a Pennsylvania firm) is violating
Pennsylvania’s Rules of Professional Conduct. Wallis argues that he was a prospective client when he spoke to
Feldman, and that the information he revealed to Feldman could be harmful to him in this case. He therefore
argues that Rule 1.18 of the Illinois and Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct (identical to the American
Bar Association’s Model Rule 1.18) mandates disqualification of both firms.
Rule 1.18 (Duties to Prospective Client) provides that an attorney who receives information from a “prospective
client” may “not represent a client with interests materially adverse to those of a prospective client in the same
or a substantially related matter if the lawyer received information from the prospective client that could be
significantly harmful to that person in the matter.” Courts have applied the rule to disqualify firms where lawyers
learned confidential information about the factual basis of a claim or a party’s litigation strategy--information
that would “unfairly advantage . . . current clients.” De David v. Alaron Trading Corp., No. 10 C 3502, 2012
WL 1429564, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Apr. 23, 2012).
MSB and Fox respond that Wallis has offered no evidence that any communication from Wallis to Feldman has
been or has the potential to be used against Wallis in litigation, nor has Wallis supplied any evidence as to what
information was disclosed by Feldman to Fox. CSI was not a defendant in Wallis’s 2008 case, Wallis v. Levine,
No. 08 C 6579 (N.D. Ill.). The law firms also point out that, in the 2008 litigation, Wallis filed a motion seeking
12C5285 Wallis vs. Levine
Page 1 of 2
STATEMENT
to disqualify the judge that stated that, during his conversation with Feldman, he learned that Shakman did not
represent plaintiffs against law firms or attorneys. (See Motion for Equitable Relief, Case No. 08-cv-6579, ECF
No. 119.) MSB and Fox have also provided an affidavit from Feldman which states that he does not recollect
his conversation with Wallis or recognize Wallis’s name, and that he has no notes or records pertaining to the
conversation.
Motions for disqualification “should be viewed with extreme caution for they can be misused as techniques of
harassment.” Freeman v. Chi. Musical Instrument Co., 689 F.2d 715, 722 (7th Cir. 1982). “Accordingly, the
burden is on the moving party to show the facts warranting disqualification.” Van Jackson v. Check ’N Go of
Ill., Inc., 114 F. Supp. 2d 731, 732 (N.D. Ill. 2000). There must be solid evidence of conflict; the court will not
grant a motion for disqualification “where the mere appearance of impropriety is far from clear.” Freeman, 689
F.2d at 723.
Assuming that a “prospective client” relationship was formed during Wallis’s conversation with Feldman, Wallis
has presented the court with no facts that would warrant disqualification. The conversation between Wallis and
Feldman about Wallis’s 2008 case lasted only 15-20 minutes, during which time Feldman apparently informed
Wallis that MSB did not take on cases against law firms and attorneys. Wallis gives no hint as to what
confidential information might have been revealed during the conversation that was relevant to this case or could
be “significantly harmful” to him. As the appearance of impropriety is far from clear, Wallis has failed to meet
his burden to show that disqualification is warranted. The court therefore denies his motion.
12C5285 Wallis vs. Levine
Page 2 of 2
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?