Eaton v. Frisby: Does Eaton have any Good Arguments?

Jimmy Gates at the Clarion-Ledger reports on a hearing yesterday in Eaton v. Frisby on the issue of whether the Peters-DeLaughter aspect of the case will be kept under seal. The more that this story develops the weaker Eaton’s arguments sound. The article summarized the party’s positions as follows:

Frisby:

But Alan Perry and Robert McDuff, attorneys for Frisby, now known as Triumph Group Inc., argued sealing should be done on a document-by-document basis.

“Closing everything engenders suspicion and mistrust,” McDuff said.

Eaton:

Eaton has argued to keep many court papers sealed, including Yerger’s order for Peters to give a deposition. Peters’ transcript, however, would be sealed until the court makes a final determination, Yerger ruled.

Yerger asked [Mike] Wallace how Eaton would be prejudiced if the documents in the Eaton vs. Frisby case weren’t sealed.

“By suspicion,” Wallace responded.

Frisby has the better argument by far. We’re ALREADY suspicious.Eaton wanting to maintain secrecy into the investigation of Eaton makes me more suspicious. If you did nothing wrong, why do you care if everything is public?

Eaton hired Ed Peters in the biggest civil case in Mississippi– a theft of trade secrets case involving hundreds of millions of dollars. Peters’ background was as a prosecutor, not as a civil trial lawyer who had obtained a lot of big verdicts. Then Peters did not file an entry of appearance in the case and Frisby did not even know he was on the case. Eaton says that it hired Peters because he had tried a lot of cases. But Eaton’s story has some obvious holes.

First, when you hire a hot-shot trial lawyer you want that lawyer to appear in the case to try to scare the other side. Having Peters lay in the weeds does not really serve a purpose. Second, it begs the question of how Peters was being paid? Lawyers getting paid by the hour have an economic incentive to formally appear in the case so that the opposing party has to mail them all their pleadings. In a case this big, a lawyer billing by the hour stands to make a lot of money just reading all the pleadings that the parties file. That was apparently not a big concern for Peters.

Third, Eaton’s claim is just intellectually dishonest. Although I believe that there should be, there is no prohibition in Mississippi of hiring a lawyer because of the lawyer’s perceived relationship with the judge. The lawyer can’t discuss the case with the judge, but he can work on the case. And if the judge respects the lawyer because he knows him, that’s just part of it. Our system trusts the judge to not let the relationship influence him and the lawyer to not contact the judge about the case. Here, Eaton could literally just have said that it hired Peters because it thought that Peters could help it with the judge. But Eaton can’t say that here, since DeLaughter had no way to know that Peters was on the case, since Peters never filed an entry of appearance.

Eaton appears to be conceding that Peters had improper contact with DeLaughter. Larry Latham’s testimony in a 2008 hearing before Judge Yerger pretty much proves that fact with circumstantial evidence. Eaton’s defense appears to be that it did not know what Peters was doing. But that begs the question of why Peters would do it on his own? Tim Balducci did it with Judge Lackey because he was sucking up to Scruggs. Peters did it with DeLaughter in the Langston case for a million dollars. But in the Eaton case why would Peters, with Scruggs’ million already in his pocket, risk his and DeLaughter’s freedom on a case where he wasn’t even the lead local attorney for Eaton? When he didn’t even appear on the pleadings? When if he was getting paid by the hour he would get paid the same win or lose? It just doesn’t make sense unless:

  1. Peters and DeLaughter were so corrupt that they did not even think about crossing ethical lines; or
  2. Eaton and/ or one or more of Eaton’s other lawyers knew what Peters was doing.

If there’s another plausible explanation I’d like to hear it.

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