Although DRI members more often than not have an adversarial relationship with class action counsel, on occasion they become our clients, for example, when they are sued for malpractice by individual members of the class that they represented. Two recent cases (one on each coast) discuss the scope of the duty owed by class counsel to absent class members, i.e., those class members who are not named class representatives.
In Wyly v. Milberg Weiss Vershad & Shulman, 12 N.Y.3d 400 (2009) New York’s highest court concluded that unlike when a traditional attorney client relationship terminates, an absent class member does not enjoy a “presumption of access” to the class counsel’s file, including work product. In so concluding, the Court of Appeals discussed the fact that absent class members enjoy some of the indices of an attorney client relationship with class counsel, such as the right of privileged communication with class counsel and the prohibition against direct communication by adverse counsel. However other indices, such as the right to direct the course of litigation, testify at trial, participate in discovery or discharge counsel, are missing. Accordingly, an absent class member needed to demonstrate both a substantial stake in the underlying litigation and a demonstrated legitimate need for the documents to permit him access to class counsel’s files for purpose of pressing either a malpractice claim against class counsel or an action to set aside the settlement of the class action. In that case, access to the file was denied.
In Martorana v. Marlin & Saltzman et. al, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 1076 (Ct. of Appeals, Second Appellate District, July 1, 2009) the California Court of Appeals also examined the peculiar species of attorney client relationship between class counsel and an absent class member who was asserting a malpractice claim against class counsel for its failure to individually notify him of the need to timely file a settlement claim or opt out. Interestingly, the Court stated that there was no dispute that class counsel “owed a duty of care to all class members to represent them with such skill prudence and diligence as attorneys of ordinary skill and capacity commonly possess and exercise in the performance of their tasks.” The Court nevertheless concluded that the mass notification procedure provided for and approved by the court supervising the class action barred the malpractice claim, based on collateral estoppel and pubic policy, unless the absent class member could show that class counsel had breach some individual duty to the absent class member over and above what was owed to all members of the class.
Query – Are there other types of multiple or joint representations that impact on the scope of the duty owed to the individual represented by counsel?