This slip opinion is subject to revision and may not reflect the final opinion adopted by the Court. Opinion Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District Case Style: State of Missouri, ex rel. Wendy Wexler Horn, Prosecuting Attorney, St. Francois County, Missouri, Relator v. Honorable Thomas L. Ray, Circuit Court, St. Francois County, Twenty-Fourth Judicial Circuit Associate Division III, Respondent. Case Number: ED81020 Handdown Date: 07/16/2002 Appeal From: Writ of Prohibition Counsel for Appellant: Wendy Wexler Horn Counsel for Respondent: Jo Ann Rotermund and Wayne R. Williams, Jr. Opinion Summary: The St. Francois County prosecuting attorney filed a petition for a writ of prohibition seeking to prevent the circuit court from enforcing an order disqualifying her entire office in three cases due to a conflict of interest after the office hired a former public defender, William Bryant, as an assistant prosecuting attorney. PRELIMINARY ORDER MADE PERMANENT. Writ Division Three holds: The trial court abused its discretion in disqualifying the entire office from prosecuting the defendant Ralph Napoli, Jr., in Cause Nos. 01CR612936, 02CR610634 and 02CR610775, which were pending during attorney Bryant's employment with the public defender's officer. Bryant never represented Napoli, and appropriate screening procedures were set up. As such, Rule 4-1.11 of the Rules of Professional Conduct does not require the disqualification of the entire office and there is no "appearance of impropriety." Citation: Opinion Author: Paul J. Simon, Presiding Judge. Opinion Vote: PRELIMINARY ORDER MADE PERMANENT. Mooney, C.J. and Hoff, J., concur. Opinion:
Relator, the prosecuting attorney for St. Francois County, filed a petition for a writ of prohibition seeking to prevent the Honorable Thomas L. Ray from enforcing an order disqualifying her entire office in three cases due to a conflict of interest. We issued a preliminary order in prohibition. We now make the preliminary order permanent. The relevant facts are not in dispute. William Bryant was employed as an assistant public defender in the Farmington office of the Missouri State Public Defender from July 31, 2000, to March 1, 2002. Bryant was initially assigned to St. Francois County, but was later transferred to Washington County where he represented clients on a regular basis. Bryant also assisted in supervising the docket in St. Francois County for the last year of his employment. As a supervisor, he assisted two newer attorneys with plea negotiations, bond reduction hearings, sentencing hearings, and in reviewing case files. Bryant left the public defender's office on March 1, 2002 and began new employment with the St. Francois County Prosecuting Attorney on March 4, 2002. Since that date, Bryant has personally disqualified himself from any and all personal involvement in cases in which defendants were represented by the public defender's office during his tenure with the public defender. In addition, the prosecuting attorney's office implemented a screening mechanism to ensure that Bryant would not personally handle any of those cases. All files opened after March 4, 2002 were coded a different color from existing files. Bryant cannot have access to files that were opened prior to March 4, 2002. The prosecuting attorney also instructed Bryant not to disclose any confidential information regarding any public defender clients to anyone in the prosecutor's office. The prosecuting attorney has instructed her staff not to discuss any public defender cases pending prior to March 4, 2002, with Bryant. Further, the prosecuting attorney voluntarily disqualified her entire office from all public defender cases where Bryant was the attorney of record. In the underlying case, the State filed three separate complaints against the defendant Ralph Napoli, Jr., Cause Nos. 01CR612936, 02CR610634, and 02CR610775. Each case was filed prior to March 4, 2002, while Bryant was working in the public defender's office. Napoli was represented by the public defender's office, but Bryant did not "personally and substantially represent" Napoli in any of the three cases at any stage of the proceedings. Bryant filed a sworn affidavit that he did not work on Napoli's cases nor did he, to the best of his knowledge, receive any confidential information about his cases. Bryant also stated he had not discussed the cases with anyone in the prosecuting attorney's office and did not have access to the file. After Bryant became employed by the prosecutor's office, Napoli filed a motion to disqualify the entire office of the St. Francois County Prosecuting Attorney and sought the appointment of a special prosecuting attorney. After a hearing on the motion, the circuit court entered an order disqualifying the entire office from prosecuting Napoli's cases. Relator
filed a petition for a writ of prohibition and this Court entered a preliminary order in prohibition. A writ of prohibition does not issue as a matter of right, and whether a writ should be issued in a particular case is a question left to the sound discretion of the court to which application has been made. State ex rel. Nat. Super Markets, Inc. v. Dowd, 1 S.W.3d 595, 597 (Mo. App. E.D. 1999). Prohibition will issue where there is an important question of law decided erroneously that would otherwise escape review on appeal and the aggrieved party may suffer considerable hardship and expense as a consequence of the erroneous decision. State ex rel. Riverside Joint Venture v. Missouri Gaming Com'n, 969 S.W.2d 218, 221 (Mo. banc 1998). The situation presented here falls within this category as the prosecuting attorney's office is not a party to the underlying case and would have no way to obtain review of this issue in an appeal. Relator argues she is entitled to a writ of prohibition because the circuit court erred in finding the entire office was disqualified from Napoli's cases. The parties agree that attorney Bryant is personally disqualified and have not asked the circuit court or this Court to make a determination about Bryant. The issue is whether Bryant's disqualification can be imputed to the entire prosecuting attorney's office despite the screening mechanisms implemented by the office. The circuit court, relying upon Rule 4-1.10, found such imputed disqualification. Relator contends the applicable Rule of Professional Conduct that should be applied is Rule 4-1.11 instead of Rule 4-1.10. In 1986, the Missouri Supreme Court adopted the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct as its own rules to govern the ethics and professional responsibility of Missouri attorneys. Rules 4-1.10 and 4-1.11 distinguish between lawyers moving between private firms and those moving between private practice and government agencies. See, State v. Ross, 829 S.W.2d 948, 950 (Mo. banc 1992). As stated in the Comment to Rule 4-1.10: [W]here a lawyer represents the government after having served private clients, the situation is governed by Rule 1.11(c)(1). . . . if the more extensive disqualification in Rule 1.10 were applied to former government lawyers, the potential effect on the government would be unduly burdensome. The government deals with all private citizens and organizations, and thus has a much wider circle of adverse legal interests than does any private law firm. In these circumstances, the government's recruitment of lawyers would be seriously impaired if Rule 1.10 were applied to the government. On balance, therefore, the government is better served in the long run by the protections stated in Rule 1.11. Accordingly, the applicable rule is Rule 4-1.11. Under Rule 4-1.11, there is no imputed disqualification to the government agency even if a lawyer is personally disqualified from handling a matter. Rule 4-1.11(c) provides for the disqualification of the lawyer in a matter if he or she "participated personally and substantially while in private practice or nongovernmental employment . . . ." The Comment to Rule 4-1.11 states specifically that paragraph (c) "does not disqualify other lawyers in the agency with which the lawyer in question has become associated." (emphasis added.) In the new 2002 Model Rules of Professional Responsibility recently adopted by the ABA, the comment to Rule 1.10
specifically states that "where a lawyer represents the government after having served clients in private practice, nongovernmental employment or in another government agency, former-client conflicts are not imputed to government lawyers associated with the individually disqualified lawyer." In addition, the comment to Rule 1.11 states, "Because of the special problems raised by imputation within a government agency, paragraph (d) does not impute the conflicts of a lawyer currently serving as an officer or employee of the government to other associated government officers or employees, although ordinarily it will be prudent to screen such lawyers." However, Missouri case law appears to continue to require an imputed disqualification if there is an "appearance of impropriety." This appears to be an application of a prior disciplinary rule, DR 9-101, which was repealed when Missouri adopted the Model Rules of Professional Conduct in 1986. See, American Bar Association, Annotated Model Rules of Professional Conduct 177 (4th ed. 1999). However, despite its repeal, Missouri courts have continued to apply this test, including the Missouri Supreme Court. See, Ross, 829 S.W.2d at 951. Although, Justice Holstein opined in his