Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

Selling Out?

Wolk set­tled the under­ly­ing case, Tay­lor v. Tele­dyne, No. CIV.A.1:00-CV-1741-J (N.D. Ga.), on the con­di­tion that the order crit­i­ciz­ing him be vacated.

This accu­sa­tion is damn­ing. It also may be untrue.

In his nutty and angry 100 page pro se defama­tion com­plaint against Over­lawyered and oth­ers, Arthur Wolk writes:

Wolk did not even per­son­ally han­dle the dis­cov­ery in the Tay­lor case, and thus the order crit­i­cal of Wolk’s con­duct dur­ing dis­cov­ery in the Tay­lor case was issued in error, but more impor­tantly Wolk ensured that his clients were pro­tected by stay­ing out of the set­tle­ment nego­ti­a­tions, which were medi­ated by others.

More­over, the Tay­lor case was set­tled with no involve­ment from Wolk, and the plain­tiffs in the Tay­lor case had addi­tional coun­sel other than Wolk, who inde­pen­dently reviewed all aspects of the set­tle­ment mak­ing sure the plain­tiffs in Tay­lor were well served, received full value in the set­tle­ment and were com­pletely sat­is­fied with the result. Indeed, the plain­tiffs in Tay­lor received a set­tle­ment that far exceeded the value pre­vi­ously placed on the case by an inde­pen­dent mediator.

Most impor­tantly, the Tay­lor case was set­tled before Wolk even requested the Court vacate the mis­taken dis­cov­ery order, which the Court in Tay­lor even­tu­ally did.

So Wolk isn’t say­ing that there wasn’t an order crit­i­cal of him, and he’s not say­ing that the set­tle­ment wasn’t con­tin­gent on the vaca­tion of the order. He say­ing that he didn’t make the set­tle­ment con­tin­gent on the vaca­tion of the order.

“Wolk made the set­tle­ment con­tin­gent on the vaca­tion of the order crit­i­ciz­ing him” is a very dif­fer­ent state­ment than “other lawyers made the set­tle­ment con­tin­gent on the vaca­tion of the order that crit­i­cized Wolk.” In the for­mer, Wolk is sell­ing his clients out; in the lat­ter, some­one else is. There’s still impro­pri­ety, but it’s not Wolk’s impro­pri­ety. If Wolk was not involved in the set­tle­ment nego­ti­a­tions on the Tay­lor case, I wouldn’t hes­i­tate to call Overlawyered’s state­ment defamatory.

(Wolk quotes other lawyers involved with the set­tle­ment as say­ing that the set­tle­ment was not con­tin­gent on the vaca­tion of the order. But that seems at odds with the pub­lished opin­ion in the case: “on April 16, 2003, Wolk’s co-counsel, Richard Gen­ter, sent a let­ter to the Court’s clerk indi­cat­ing that all coun­sel believed that set­tle­ment might be pos­si­ble, but ‘an imped­i­ment to set­tle­ment [was] the Court’s Order of Sep­tem­ber 30, 2002….’”)

If the pub­lished opin­ion (which makes Wolk seem even nut­tier than his com­plaint does*) said that Wolk had set­tled the case on con­di­tion that the order crit­i­ciz­ing him be vacated, Over­lawyered would be in the clear.

And it does:

[The insurer’s rep­re­sen­ta­tive] also knew that [Wolk] would not set­tle the case as long as the Omnibus Dis­cov­ery Order remained and she knew that the exis­tence of that Order was an imped­i­ment to her gain­ing a set­tle­ment for the dol­lar fig­ure to which Respon­dent would appar­ently oth­er­wise agree.

The tes­ti­mony of Richard Gen­ter, Wolk’s for­mer col­league, is largely con­sis­tent with [the insurer’s representative’s] tes­ti­mony. Gen­ter would have told Hola­han that Wolk would not set­tle the case as long as the Omnibus Dis­cov­ery Order was in place.

Wolk says in his com­plaint that he pro­vided Over­lawyered and the other defen­dants with doc­u­men­ta­tion that the alle­ga­tion that he sold his clients out was untrue. Wolk pro­vided Pope­hat, which had writ­ten about the same story, the same doc­u­men­ta­tion, and Pope­hat took the extra­or­di­nary step of tak­ing the story down.

Did Wolk com­pro­mise his clients’ inter­ests? We don’t know, but the North­ern Dis­trict of Georgia’s opin­ion makes it appear that he did.

Over­lawyered has a judg­ment say­ing that lim­i­ta­tions barred Wolk’s suit; they crowed about it. Now Wolk is argu­ing that they “had repub­lished the arti­cle with enhanced tags, links and SEOs well within the one year Penn­syl­va­nia statute of lim­i­ta­tions” on his first suit, and within the lim­i­ta­tions period for his sec­ond suit.

Which raises what I sus­pect is an inter­est­ing internet-defamation ques­tion: is chang­ing the tags on a blog post “repub­li­ca­tion” of the blog post, so that the statute of lim­i­ta­tions starts to run afresh?***

[Note: in the orig­i­nal of this post, I cast asper­sions on Over­lawyered with­out read­ing the court’s order closely enough. I apol­o­gize.]
 


* Suc­cess­ful long­time lit­i­ga­tors are not infre­quently nutjobs. Just because you’re para­noid doesn’t mean the aviation-defense bar isn’t out to get you.

** Wolk thinks the Over­lawyered post was a delib­er­ate right-wing corporate-sponsored hatchet job.

*** If Wolk were rep­re­sented by coun­sel, we might even­tu­ally get an answer to that question.

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About The Author

Mark Bennett got his letter of marque from the Supreme Court of Texas in May 1995. He is famous for having no sense of humor when it comes to totalitarianism.

Comments

2 Responses to “Selling Out?”

  1. Mr. B.,
    Re: Motions & Court Orders — if you were rep­re­sent­ing a defen­dant and the judge ignored your Motions includ­ing the Omnibus Dis­cov­ery by nei­ther Agree­ing or Deny­ing (leav­ing the ORDERs blank), would you be OK with it and go for­ward or re-file before trial? Thanks.

  2. […] Rea­son set­tles sev­eral mer­it­less libel law­suits brought against it for $0 after much pro­ce­dural wran­gling, but is still on the hook for the cost of defend­ing itself, demon­strat­ing the need for national anti-SLAPP law. [Sul­lum; Techdirt; Pub­lic Cit­i­zen; Pub­lic Cit­i­zen; Volokh; Bennett] […]

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