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Commision Advisory 84-03
Municipal Lawyers Representing Both a Municipal Employee a Municipality in the Same Suit
The purpose of this Advisory(1) is to explain how the provisions of G.L. c.
268A apply to attorneys who are called upon to represent both the municipality
and the municipal employee in civil rights and other lawsuits based upon the
employee's official acts.
The starting point is G.L. c. 268A, §17(c)
which prohibits a municipal attorney such as a city solicitor or town counsel
from representing anyone other than the municipality in connection with a
lawsuit in which the municipality is a party or has a direct and substantial
interest. Exempted from this prohibition is representation "in the proper
discharge of the [municipal attorney's] official duties."
I. BACKGROUND
In 1982, the Commission ruled that a municipal attorney would violate
§17(c) by representing both a municipality and private party in the same
lawsuit, irrespective of the similarity of the interests. See, EC-COI-82-46. The
Commission noted that the proper discharge of the attorney's municipal duties
did not include also representing private parties. The Supreme Judicial Court
affirmed the Commission's ruling in 1984. See, Town of Edgartown v. State Ethics
Commission, 391 Mass. 82 (1984). In light of the Edgartown decision, the
Commission has received a number of inquiries from municipal attorneys raising
two distinct questions:
Does G.L. c. 268A, §17 permit a municipal
attorney to represent both the municipality and municipal employee in defense of
a civil rights action where the complaint alleges liability solely in the
employee's official capacity?
Does G.L. c. 268A, §17 permit a municipal
attorney to represent the municipality and municipal employee in defense of a
civil rights action where the complaint alleges liability in the employee's
individual capacity as well as official capacity? In both cases, G.L. c. 268A,
§17 will generally not preclude such multiple representation, although
restrictions under the Rules of Professional Conduct may apply.
II.
LAWSUITS BASED ON EMPLOYEES' OFFICIAL ACTS
For the purposes of G.L. c. 268A,
§17, it is appropriate for a municipal attorney to defend a municipal employee
in a lawsuit based upon the employee's official acts. The authority for such
representation derives from the municipal charter, ordinance, or by-law which
establishes the powers and responsibilities of the municipal attorney.(2)
The municipal attorney's obligation to defend the municipality in legal
actions necessarily carries with it the authority to represent the employees
whose official acts are the basis of the legal action. Dunton v. County of
Suffolk, 729 F.2d 903, 907 (2nd Cir., 1984) ["municipalities commonly provide
counsel for their employees and themselves when both municipality and employee
are sued."] The representation of municipal employees is therefore within the
"proper discharge of the [attorney's] official duties" as long as the municipal
attorney's appointing official is aware of and has authorized the attorney's
representation. See, EC-COI-83-20.
This is not to say that the authority
can be appropriately exercised in every case. For example, where the interests
of the municipality and municipal employee are adverse, the representation, even
if authorized, is prohibited under Rule 1.7 Conflict of Interest: General Rule
of the Massachusetts Rules of Professional Conduct, S.J.C. Rule 3:07. Dunton v.
County of Suffolk, supra suggesting that the competing interests may frequently
require disqualification; Martyn v. Donlin, 148 Conn. 27 (1961); Massachusetts
Bar Association Ethics Committee Informal Opinion, 80-2. Further, even assuming
that disqualification is not mandated, the municipal attorney may decline
representation of the municipal employee where there is a perceived conflict of
interest. Filippone v. Mayor of Newton, 392 Mass. 622 (1984).
Section
17, however, does not require disqualification. What §17 says is that, given
sufficient authorization, the proper discharge of a municipal attorney's duties
can extend to representing a municipal employee in a lawsuit based upon the
employee's official acts.
III. LAWSUITS BASED ON EMPLOYEES' OFFICIAL AND
INDIVIDUAL ACTS
The application of §17 does not differ when a municipal
attorney represents a municipal employee who has been sued in both the
employee's official and individual capacity. At the outset, G.L. c. 268A, §17
does not deal satisfactorily with the question of representation in an
employee's official and individual capacity. G.L. c. 268A, §17 was drafted prior
to the passage of recent civil rights statutes, the passage of indemnification
statutes covering municipal employees (G.L. c. 258) and the Supreme Court
decision in Monnell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978) which
found that municipalities could be held liable under 41 U.S.C. 1983 for
employee's actions taken pursuant to municipal policy.
Although the
representation of an employee solely in the employee's private capacity is
proscribed by §17,(3) see Town of Edgartown, supra, the propriety of
representation in both the employee's official and individual capacity has not
been previously addressed by the Commission. As a matter of sound policy, the
Commission concludes that the proper discharge of a municipal attorney's duties
can also reasonably extend to representing a municipal employee in the
employee's official and individual capacity, provided that appropriate
authorization has been given by the attorney's appointing official. (4)
CONCLUSION
The primary concern of §17 is that the interests of
the municipality may potentially be diminished by competing private loyalties.
Town of Edgartown, supra. However, the primary concern raised by the
representation of municipal employees at issue is not that the interests of the
municipality may be diminished, but rather that the employee may not receive
adequate representation in view of the attorney's presumed loyalty to the
municipality. The adequacy of an employee's representation is a matter more
appropriately addressed by the Rules of Professional Conduct and by the trial
judge on a case-by-case basis. Dunton v. County of Suffolk, supra; Kevlik v.
Goldstein, 724 F.2d 844 (1st Cir. 1984); Shadid v. Jackson, 521 F. Supp. 87
(E.D. Tex. 1981); EC-COI-84-39.
The Commission's conclusion is also based on
practical considerations that are consistent with the Commission's obligation to
give G.L. c. 268A a workable meaning, Graham v. McGrail, 370 Mass. 133, 140
(1976). To mandate the municipality to provide separate representation in all
cases where municipal employees have been sued in both their official and
individual capacity would create a financial hardship on the municipality, and
would result in an inefficient use of municipal attorneys. Further, the
application of §17 should not depend on the strategic decision of whether the
plaintiff has named a municipal employee in his or her individual as well as
official capacity for liability purposes.
For the purposes of §17, the
propriety of the attorney's representation should rest initially with the
attorney's appointing official, who is in a position to determine whether the
interests of the municipality will be preserved by authorizing the additional
representation. Such representation is, of course, subject to the restrictions
of the Rules of Professional Conduct which may require separate representation
on a case-by-case basis.
DATE AUTHORIZED: September 25, 1984
REVISED: January, 2004
FOOTNOTES
1. The Commission
issues Advisories periodically to interpret various provision of the conflict of
interest law. Advisories respond to issues that may arise in the context of a
particular advisory opinion or enforcement action but which have the potential
for broad application. It is important to keep in mind that this advisory is
general in nature and is not an exhaustive review of the conflict law. For
specific questions, public officials and employees should contact their agency
counsel or the Legal Division of the State Ethics Commission at (617) 727-0060.
Copies of all Advisories are available from the Commission office or online at
www.mass.gov/ethics.
2. The position of municipal attorney is not
defined within the General Laws but rather has developed according to the legal
service needs of each municipality. Randall and Franklin, Municipal Law and
Practice, c. 10, §227. On the state level, the authority of the Attorney General
to represent state employees in defense of their official acts is
well-established. See, G.L. c. 12, §3.
3. For example, the Commission
has ruled that a municipal attorney may not privately represent a municipal
employee in defense of an enforcement action by the Commission, since the town
will inevitably have a direct and substantial interest in the outcome of the
Commission proceedings.
4. In EC-COI-92-10, the Commission also ruled
that a municipality may, through the adoption of a by-law, permit a special town
counsel simultaneously to represent private parties who are not municipal
employees in connection with matters in which the municipality is also a party
or has a direct and substantial interest, notwithstanding the restrictions of
G.L. c. 268A, §17, and Town of Edgartown v. State Ethics Commission, 391 Mass.
83 (1984). The by-law would make the arrangement "as provided by law for the
proper discharge of official duties" within the meaning of §17.
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