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New York State Bar Association
Committee on Professional Ethics
Opinion #818 – 11/28/2007
Topic: Conflicts of
interest; persons paying for representation of another; designated
underwriters’ counsel.
Digest: Designated
underwriters’ counsel may represent the underwriters in a
securities offering even though the issuer appointed and pays counsel,
provided that underwriters consent after disclosure of material
facts. In certain cases, with informed consent of the affected
clients, designated underwriters’ counsel may also represent the
issuer.
Code: DR 5-101(A), 5-105(A),
(B), (C), 5-107(A), (B).
QUESTION
1. When a law firm is selected by an issuer of
securities to serve as the designated counsel for the underwriters of
securities to be issued by that company or other entity, may the
attorney also perform legal services for the company or
entity?
OPINION
2. A common practice among issuers that frequently issue
investment grade securities is to designate one law firm to represent
the investment banks selected to underwrite the issuer’s
securities offerings (a “Designated Underwriters’
Counsel”). This practice is common for both corporate and
municipal issuers. Frequently, the issuer will make this
designation even before it has determined to undertake an offering,
decided on the type of offering, or selected who the underwriters will
be.[1] And, often, the selected law firm will continue in that
role for a considerable period, spanning multiple offerings.
3. The appointment of a Designated Underwriters’ Counsel is
thought to benefit the frequent issuer, underwriters and
investors. Because such counsel works consistently on offerings of
the issuer’s securities, it becomes particularly familiar with the
issuer, and thereby better able to make judgments about the information
that should be disclosed in offering documents. This familiarity
may therefore improve the quality of disclosure in offering documents,
lower transaction costs and promote the efficiency of the capital
markets by allowing seasoned issuers to reach the capital markets
quickly, as market and other opportunities arise. The ability to
reach the capital markets quickly and opportunistically is particularly
important in the context of so-called “shelf”
offerings.[2] In addition, having a single law firm as
underwriters’ counsel for frequent issuers rather than different
firms chosen by the lead underwriter for different offerings gives the
issuer the benefit of underwriter’s counsel more familiar with the
issuer’s business and able to update its knowledge more quickly
and cost effectively.
4. Although – by definition – the Designated
Underwriters’ Counsel represents the underwriters, the
counsel’s fees are paid by the issuer. Further, as noted,
the Designated Underwriters’ Counsel is also selected for this
work by the issuer. Occasionally, an issuer who becomes familiar
with a law firm as underwriter’s counsel may wish to hire the firm
on an unrelated matter. An issuer may also wish to select, as
Designated Underwriters’ Counsel, a lawyer or law firm that
regularly represents the issuer or that otherwise has a personal
relationship with an officer of the issuer (e.g., a family
member).
5. A law firm’s work for the underwriters in an offering may
conflict with the interests of the issuer. For example, there may
be competing interests when negotiating the underwriting agreement
– the contract pursuant to which the underwriting banks agree with
the issuer to underwrite the securities to be sold. Similarly, in
the course of preparing for a securities offering, there may be
disagreement about what is “material” for purposes of
disclosure in offering documents. As the Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board has explained, “The potential for conflict of
interest is inherent in the issuer’s selection of the counsel
whose particular responsibilities may include advocating decisions that
the issuer may oppose or may perceive as not to be in its best
interest.”[3] But while the underwriter and the issuer may be
adverse to one another at certain points during the preparation of a
securities offering, both have the shared goal of completing the
offering in a timely manner and complying with all applicable
laws.
ANALYSIS
6. Against this background, we examine the relevant ethical issues
that Designated Underwriters’ Counsel must keep in mind when
representing the underwriters, both where such counsel performs no legal
work for the issuer and where he or she does.
7. Where the law firm performs no work for the
issuer. Lawyers are frequently engaged
to represent a client where a third party will be responsible for
payment of the lawyer’s fees. One very common example is
where an insurance policy protects the client in connection with a
litigated matter. As we said in N.Y. State 721, at 3 (1999),
“Despite the fact that an insurance company has retained the
lawyer pursuant to its contractual duty to defend the policyholder, the
client is the policyholder, not the insurance company.” The
obligation to exercise independent professional judgment on behalf of
the client continues even when the lawyer’s fee is being paid by a
third person.[4] The mere fact that a third party is paying the
lawyer’s fees thus does not present a disabling conflict.[5] Nor does the prospect of repeated work, for the same or
different clients – be they policyholders or underwriters.
Indeed, DR 5-107(A) and (B) specifically contemplates that third parties
may be obligated to pay attorneys fees.
8. The Code explicitly requires that a lawyer whose fees will be
paid by a third party obtain consent of the client, after full
disclosure of all relevant facts and circumstances, before accepting
such compensation. Investment banks in the business of
underwriting are usually well aware of the role played by Designated
Underwriters’ Counsel and that their selection was made, and
compensation will be provided, by the issuer. Accordingly, the
underwriters’ consent to the issuer’s selection and payment
of Designated Underwriters’ Counsel is usually implicit in the
underwriters’ agreeing to serve as an underwriter in the
contemplated transaction. But Designated Underwriters’
Counsel specifically needs to consider, and fully disclose to the
underwriters, any material facts or circumstances – beyond the
selection as Designated Underwriters’ Counsel by the issuer and
what that ordinarily entails – that might bear on the
lawyer’s ability to exercise independent professional judgment on
behalf of the client (the underwriter) or otherwise interfere with the
lawyer’s ability to adequately represent the client.[6] As an extreme example, such circumstances might include
that a substantial percentage of the law firm’s work consists of
acting as Designated Underwriters’ Counsel for the particular
issuer whose securities the investment bank will be underwriting, or
that the responsible partner is the brother of the issuer’s chief
financial officer or of the elected official responsible for the
designation (in the case of municipal securities).
9. The Code also specifically cautions against the third party
unduly interfering with the lawyer’s representation of its
client. Thus, the third party may not “impose conditions
that would lead to inadequate representation or constrain the
lawyer’s independent professional judgment on behalf of the
client.”[7]
10. Where the law firm performs work for the issuer.
Outside counsel to an organization or municipality obviously owes duties
to the client, including the duties of zealous representation and
loyalty. Where a law firm that represents an issuer is
selected to serve as Designated Underwriters’ Counsel, there is a
potential for conflict.
11. The Code defines “differing interest” to mean
“every interest of a client that will adversely affect either the
judgment or the loyalty of a lawyer to a client, whether it be a
conflicting, inconsistent, diverse, or other interest.” Because
the interests of an issuer and its underwriters may differ during the
course of an offering (e.g., on what disclosures are necessary), it is
possible that a law firm that currently represents both the underwriters
and the issuer will be subject to “differing interests” that
would preclude accepting the assignment as Designated
Underwriters’ Counsel or require withdrawing from it.[8]
12. In certain circumstances, however, conflicts can be waived by
the clients: a lawyer can represent multiple clients with
differing interests if a disinterested lawyer would believe that the
lawyer can competently represent the interest of each client, and if
each consents to the representation after full disclosure of the
implications of the simultaneous representation and the advantages and
risks involved.[9] That analysis is fact intensive.[10] For example, if all
or substantially all of the lawyer’s income was derived from
representing the issuer, a disinterested lawyer would likely conclude
that the lawyer could not competently represent the interests of the
underwriters in connection with an offering.[11] Another example
would be if a law firm were asked to represent both the issuer and the
underwriters in connection with the offering itself. This is
ethically permissible in certain situations, but before undertaking the
representation the firm would need to obtain informed consent from each
client, and to take precautions in the event that disputes among the
clients arose (such as having other counsel, for example, in-house
counsel, handle those aspects of the matters).[12]
13. Where consent is available, the lawyer or law
firm should, in framing the appropriate disclosure, consider the amount
of work done for the issuer, the importance of that work to the law firm
(financially or otherwise), and any other connections between the law
firm and the issuer. For example, litigators at the law firm
acting as the Designated Underwriters’ Counsel may be representing
the issuer in a lawsuit that will be the subject of due diligence (and,
possibly, the subject of disclosure in the offering documents). In
considering whether to seek consent of the issuer and underwriter in
this situation, consideration should be given to whether the litigators
may be called upon to reveal information to the corporate lawyers
performing due diligence, and if so on what terms. The lawyer may
wish to consider whether it is appropriate to advise the issuer to waive
confidentiality vis-à-vis the underwriters and the effect on the
privilege of doing so, or instead, for example, to set up firewalls to
“screen” off the two sets of lawyers. All of this will
require the informed consent of the clients, which consent will be
effective only if the disinterested-lawyer test of DR 5-105 is
met.
CONCLUSION
14. A law firm selected to serve as Designated Underwriters’
Counsel by a company must carefully consider its relationship with the
company selecting it, and assess whether a disinterested lawyer would
conclude that the law firm can competently represent the interests of
the underwriters in light of its relationship with the company, and if
so, ensure that the underwriters appropriately consent to its
representation of them.
[1] Letter from Bus. Law Section of the N.Y. State Bar Ass’n
to the Sec. and Exch. Comm’n (Dec. 18, 2002), available at
http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/s74502/gesbackman1.htm
[2] Id.
Under SEC Rule 415, an issuer may file a registration statement in
anticipation of selling securities at a later date. With its
registration statement “on the shelf,” the company is able
to go to market quickly when conditions are favorable.
[4] See, e.g., DR
5-107(B) (“Unless authorized by law, a lawyer shall not permit a
person who recommends, employs, or pays the lawyer to render legal
service for another to direct or regulate his or her professional
judgment in rendering such legal services, or to cause the lawyer to
compromise the lawyer’s duty to maintain the confidences and
secrets of the client under
DR 4?101(B).”).
[5] See Nassau County 2003-2
(attorney may accept legal fees from a private school to represent
students with disabilities and their parents in disputes with local
school districts over the placement of students in appropriate schools
even though in any given case the appropriate school may turn out to be
a school other than the private school paying the attorney’s
fees).
[6] See, e.g., DR
5-101(A) (absent informed consent, lawyer may not accept employment
“if the exercise of professional judgment on behalf of the client
will be or reasonably may be affected by the lawyer’s own
financial, business, property, or personal interests”);
DR 5?105(A) (same if independent professional judgment will
be or is likely to be adversely affected by other client
relationships).
[7] N.Y. State 721, at 4 (1999) (attorney may ethically adhere to
an insurance company’s numerous guidelines regarding legal
research, provided that the attorney remains able to provide competent
representation to his or her client).
[9] DR 5-101(A); DR 5-105(C).
[10] See Iowa Opinion 2006-03 (law firm may, with
consent, represent issuer in a bond offering where it has represented,
or does represent, the underwriter in unrelated matters); N.Y. City
2001-2 (under certain circumstances, law firm may represent multiple
clients on different sides of the same
transaction).
[11] This example is meant
only for illustrative purposes and not to define an outer
boundary. Specific facts and circumstances will dictate when the
relationship between the lawyer, or law firm, and the issuer is such
that the disinterested lawyer test would not be met.
[12] See N.Y. City
2001-2; N.Y. State 807 ¶ 11 (2007) (“a single lawyer may, in
unusual and very limited circumstances, undertake dual representation of
both parties to a real estate transaction”). On the other
hand, where accommodations can not be made, joint representation may not
be possible. See N.Y. State
753 (2002) (lawyer may not generally represent both the buyer and the
lender in a real estate transaction).
Related Files
Conflicts of interest; persons paying for representation of another; designated underwriters' counsel. (Adobe PDF File)
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