Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Firing My Attorney & California Bar Dealings

Firing My Attorney

Shortly after Bifoss assured me that his utterly disastrous negotiation was just fine, I ended my agreement with Jaffe.  He then reminded Layton that he continued to have a claim on any recovery I might obtain from HomeFirst.  That lien would make it impractical to get another attorney to represent me on a contingency basis.  I saw no reason to trust another attorney either.  Nothing would come from legal action. 

As I headed into my whistleblowing adventures, I thought I had power and was rightly exercising it.  Even after CEO Jenny and the Board members decided to terminate me, I thought that I would be vindicated.  I fantasized how Board members would share a wink and nod with me to say it would all work out fine in the end.  That was how it went six years earlier when a different floundering CEO wanted to fire me, but not this time.  When I assumed that I would be fairly compensated for what happened, I could treat as silent partners those who had witnessed the same events without speaking up.  Now that I would get nothing and HomeFirst would suffer not at all, those who failed to help became guilty by their association with Jenny and the acts of retaliation.

When I have described to friends my experience with Jaffe, they have been sympathetic.  One suggested early on that I complain to the California State Bar, but I supposed him biased because he had recently been disbarred as a result of his involvement in an unfortunate incident.  Six months after I parted from Jaffe, another friend, who was a practicing bankruptcy attorney, also said I should consider complaining to the Bar. 

The California State Bar advises that complaints must be limited to violations of its Rules of Professional Conduct.  The Bar is not interested in hearing the gripes of a dissatisfied client who feels that his attorney should have negotiated a richer settlement with fewer restrictions on his freedom of speech.  I found a few Bar rules that I could contend Jaffe violated, and I sent off my complaint a year after I was fired.  They replied that Jaffe might have been negligent, but the Bar does not discipline attorneys for errors in judgment or mistakes.  They suggested that I might try mandatory fee arbitration.  Another mediator with more fees; I passed.  Case closed.


The next step was a complaint to the State of California concerning HomeFirst’s violation of the California Whistleblower Protection Act.

Monday, February 22, 2016

Settlement Agreement Failure


Jaffe anticipated that the session with the mediator would be a waste of expensive time because little new would be presented.  Emotions would rise; as the only one with skin in the game, I was a risk, especially because I thought that the unclean hands critique of the emails was nonsense.  From Jaffe’s standpoint, it would be safer to negotiate separately with Layton.

On Wednesday morning after the briefs were submitted, Jaffe offered $75,000, and Layton countered with $24,000, which was $1,000 less than the low end of the bracket Jaffe had proposed.  I gave him permission to counter with $55,000.  While he was working with Layton, I researched the “unclean hands” defense.  I wrote Bifoss that she had misread the law and my situation; she replied, “It is illegal for you to access someone else’s computer files without their knowledge,” referring to the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and the California Computer Crimes Act.  That afternoon, Jaffe informed me that he had settled for $45,000, and two hours later he received a draft settlement agreement from Layton.  Although he had agreed for less than I authorized, I thought maybe it could still work out if the other terms of the settlement agreement were reasonable.  If they simply read, “here is the money, now go away,” maybe I could live with that. 

On Thursday with more internet research under my belt, I told Jaffe and Bifoss that their understanding of the “unclean hands” was incorrect because my roles of CFO and Compliance Officer legally justified my viewing company emails based on my suspicion of wrongdoing.  Given the clear proof of retaliation that the emails provided, we should demand $65,000.  Jaffe said that he stood by Bifoss’ understanding of the law and, anyway, the $45,000 constituted an “enforceable bilateral agreement,” meaning I had to shut up and accept the deal whether I liked it or not.  That evening, Jaffe sent me a copy of the agreement he had negotiated with Layton. 

The document provided that HomeFirst would pay me $45,000 in settlement of all claims I might have against them, and I would not disclose at any time after my employment anything of a secret, confidential, or private nature connected with the business of HomeFirst, make any disparaging comments about HomeFirst, its officers, directors or employees[1], encourage anyone else to make disparaging comments, or disclose the nature or existence of the settlement agreement.

Since I would receive $27,000 after Jaffe’s fees and I had to pay $3,000 to the mediator even though no meeting had occurred, the agreement meant that I would net about two months’ compensation.  That was far from the $100,000 that I had fantasized in March, and the gag order was a nightmare.

I had begrudgingly accepted that a settlement would require that I not disclose the terms of the agreement, but I had not considered that I would never to be able to talk about any of my experience at HomeFirst ever, to anyone.  For two years I had been told to shut up.  I successfully resisted that pressure.  I could not stomach agreeing now to be silent forever. 

The non-disclosure provisions that are increasingly common in employment and separation agreements, aim to squelch whistleblowing with language like, “Employee shall not disclose, and represents that Employee has not disclosed, any confidential company information to any third party”[2].  Some agreements require employees to report violations internally first as the Chair had ordered me, to forego monetary rewards like those from qui tam suits, and to maintain silence on the terms of severance agreements. 

My employment by HomeFirst had not bound me in a confidentiality agreement, but now they wanted even broader protection that extended to any information of a private nature, whatever that was, and to comments that they might consider disparaging.  They treated it as a simple business transaction, and they offered an insultingly small payment, but I wanted them to feel a penalty for having done wrong. 

Although I was principled, I still had doubts.  Since Jaffe’s $5,000 and the mediator’s $3,000 were sunk costs, I was thinking about walking away from $32,000, and for what?  Was I so naïve as to expect not to be restricted in what I could say?  Really, who was I going to talk to about HomeFirst anyway?  And if I did tell anyone, how would they find out?  Would they require annual depositions to see if I had talked?  Take the money and do what you want, some suggested or, at least, wondered. 

On Friday, I told Jaffe and Layton that I would not sign the agreement as written.  They may have been negotiating but not on terms acceptable to me.  Copying Layton earned me a wrist slap from Bifoss and a warning that I had risked a waiver of attorney-client privilege by doing so.  I was so done.

On Sunday evening, I sent Jaffe an amended settlement agreement without the onerous restrictions on my future communications.  Jaffe replied, HomeFirst would not agree to changes in the nondisclosure language.  Batting emails back and forth, I said that I had told him months earlier about having the CEO’s emails without getting a rise from him and I had set $90,000 as a minimum goal in negotiations.  I posed a hypothetical case to clarify the email question: a CFO gathers email proof that his CEO is stealing and provides it to the police; he is fired; are you telling me that his retention of the emails was illegal?  Jaffe never replied.  He was so done, too.

I called Bifoss on Monday.  When I complained about the “unclean hands” issue, she assured me that they were my attorneys and understood such things; not very good attorneys, I said, if they make a mistake like that.  She assured me that the $45,000 was a good result and I would not do better in court.  The restrictions on communications were entirely normal, she said, and not the result of Jaffe’s letting Layton write the settlement agreement.  The same terms were included in every settlement agreement Jaffe negotiated, she promised.  I lamented that I had not learned much earlier, say on June 4, that they would consider two months compensation plus a gag order to be a good result.

My ace negotiator had let me down.




[1] To avoid the legal challenge of determining damages from disparagement, the agreement called for the return of the settlement amount in the event of disparagement.  To ensure the enforceability of the clause, which it described as “material,” it called for me to acknowledge that it was “reasonable”.
[2] Moberly, Richard, Jordan A. Thomas and Jason Zuckerman.  “De Facto Gag Clauses: The Legality of Employment Agreements That Undermine Dodd-Frank’s Whistleblower Provisions.”  ABA Journal of Labor & Employment Law 30 (2014) 87-120

Sunday, February 21, 2016

Legal Mediation - The Briefs

Legal Mediation – The Briefs

The goal of mediation was to find some middle ground on which I, HomeFirst, and the insurance company that would pay all of its costs could meet in agreement.  Successful mediation could avoid trial expenses that I would have to pay for.  In the mediation, each side’s brief would place a stake in the ground describing its case, and then we would arrive at the settlement agreement.

The mediation session allows little opportunity for the presentation of evidence or witnesses that challenge statements in the opposing brief.  If the stakes are set too far apart, no meeting may be possible.  If one stake is placed near the center and the other, far afield – even if its logic might be found faulty in a longer evaluation – then the indicated median will favor the most outrageous party.  In such a situation, I still had my negotiator to rely upon.

My Brief

Jaffe’s assistant Bifoss sent me the draft brief at 10 pm on the night before it was due to the mediator.  Although she and Jaffe had had months to prepare the document, it was imperfect at best.  Bifoss based my lost wages on the wrong compensation and a period of loss that was too short.  I corrected the amount, corrected a misspelling of my name, and added reference to California’s protection of whistleblowers who report “reasonably suspected,” rather than actual, violations. 

The brief described in a bloodless, professional tone HomeFirst’s failure to act to correct the violations I had identified, and it listed some of the government agencies to whom I had reported them.  These constituted protected conduct under California’s whistleblower protection act, California Labor Code 1102.5.  Except in what it failed to do, nothing was surprising here.

Because my communications with Bifoss and Jaffe had been so spotty and Bifoss had sent the draft to me so late, I did not make a big deal of the three HomeFirst violations she left out.  I went easy on the brief’s impotent description of how CEO Jenny Niklaus had pushed for my retirement and had trimmed my responsibilities.  I did not point out how the brief understated the concern I expressed to Board members that the scope and intentionality of the violations were unprecedented at the company.  It stated that I had contacted the California Department of Industrial Relations for more information but ignored the complaint I filed.  It said that I had complained to the U.S. Department of Labor instead of the California Economic Employment Development Department.  There were simply too many problems to make sure that all of the possible corrections would be implemented properly.

The brief was slapdash, but it was done.  Jaffe had discounted the importance of everything save his ability to negotiate successfully with the other side, so it might still go all right. 

HomeFirst Brief

In the narrative proposed by HomeFirst’s attorney Layton, the problem was the way I interacted with the company’s internal and external stakeholders.  I had been inappropriate when I challenged the Chair’s August 2013 order not to report violations externally; my warning the Board in January 2014 that a forecast would likely prove a waste of time was unprofessional.  I raised compliance problems, one after another, she said, without providing solutions as I was expected to do.

In Layton’s telling, when I admitted in March 2014 that I had reported two violations externally, I raised for the first time a disturbingly long list of compliance violations.  One of the complaints was unfounded, she said, and what I called bid collusion was just healthy nonprofit collaboration.  My insinuations were offensive, and my attitude was loathsome: I insisted that I alone was right. 
I intended, Layton said, only to find obstacles and cast aspersions on Jenny.  I had unfairly and disingenuously filed one complaint on the same day that she asked reasonable questions about the matter.  My email to the Audit Chair about Jenny’s violation of HomeFirst’s whistleblowing policy was just self-serving.  My May 28, 2014 meeting with Jenny was the last straw.  I twice called her a liar and said she was a piece of work.  Jenny would no longer meet alone with me.  I had to be fired.

Evidence was clear and convincing that my termination would have happened regardless of any whistleblowing.  And, anyway, she said, I could not prove that my termination was connected to my whistleblowing.  I was fired, she said, because I misbehaved, and then I cried whistleblower.  My executive position made my whistleblower claim less authentic than another employee’s because I was expected to work with Jenny and the Board to resolve the violations.

The brief was impassioned and infuriating.  The facts she claimed were incomplete or flat out wrong; and important facts were not included.  I had begun reporting violations to management in October 2013, not March 2014, and I always recommended corrections.  Layton claimed that I was personally responsible for fixing the problems even though Jenny had isolated me from correcting operations.  She held me up as obviously reprehensible for saying what was true: I had challenged Suzanne because her order was illegal; Jenny had lied; the forecast was a waste of time; HomeFirst had violated agreements and laws.

Layton’s brief assembled a long litany of my offenses with dates and references to different people who, it implied, could be called to testify if necessary.  To undermine the case she built would require discovery and depositions that Jaffe wanted to avoid through mediation; to refute her lies seemed impossible in a one-day mediation setting.  We would be stuck in endless he-said-she-said bickering.  Resolution during mediation would depend on the persons involved: a nonprofit nobly serving the homeless versus this irresponsible and impolite jerk.

Personal attacks against the whistleblower are common[i], and HomeFirst’s brief continued them.  Layton’s brief went after my character, and it relied on the assumption of shared beliefs: of course, one should not challenge one’s superior; of course, one should not undermine one’s employer’s position. 

Challenging the truthfulness of legal opponents is helpful, but it can be easier just to destroy them personally through shaming[ii].  The witnesses may then destroy themselves.  The unrelenting brief made me doubt myself.  Maybe I was wrong in my analyses of the situations, in my disclosures, in my refusal to accept what Jenny and the Board said they would do, and in my general jerkiness.  Maybe they were right to fire me for my attitude. 

Still, the briefs were just posturing and positioning.  Jaffe decided not to use the emails that connected my termination to my whistleblowing, so neither side wrote anything that the other did not already know.  Neither attorney could expect to deliver a knockout punch in its brief even though Layton seemed to land a stronger barrage of blows. 

Everything would come down to negotiation, which Jaffe had done for more than 40 years.



[i] Devine, Tom and Tarek F. Maassarani. The Corporate Whistleblower’s Survival Guide. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc. 2011
[ii] Ronson, Jon.  So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed.  New York: Riverhead Books.  2015

Friday, February 19, 2016

Pig in a Poke – My Whistleblower Attorney, Part 2

Pig in a Poke – My Whistleblower Attorney

Few wrongful termination cases like mine are decided incourt, but one San Francisco plaintiff attorney warned that 75% of wrongful termination cases that do not settle outside of court are decided in favor of the company.  Success was far from certain even though I was confident of proving my complaint.  I figured that HomeFirst’s nonprofit status might argue for a low settlement amount.  A New Jersey plaintiff attorney listed 60 settlements he had achieved with an average settlement amount of $300,000.  Another site contended that the average settlement is $150,000 rather than the sometimes reported $1 million figure and encouraged plaintiffs to be reasonable and not to expect a windfall.

In reply to Jaffe’s email I suggested $200,000 for a demand figure.  The figure less Jaffe’s fees would roughly equal the amount that HomeFirst directors had kicked around in March and also roughly equal to one year’s compensation.  The amount equaled about five months’ compensation from June through November plus 2.8 times compensation for my guess of “non-economic losses.”  It made good sense to me based on solid internet research.

I set a target, and now Jaffe’s task was to get there through negotiation.  I heard nothing until a week later when I sent a follow-up email asking what the next step was.  “Send a demand letter,” Bailey Bifoss, Jaffe’s associate and a graduate of Golden Gate University where Layton taught, replied.  I asked, when might that be; probably today, she replied.  Her short email to Layton suggested $200,000 and asked for Layton’s response as soon as possible.  After I followed-up with Jaffe a week later, Layton apologized and promised to reply by the end of the week.

Bifoss warned me that litigation is expensive and involves discoveries, depositions, interrogatories, and responses, all of which are time-consuming and stressful.  In addition, cutbacks in State funding meant that a court date might be 15 months or more after the preliminaries are completed, pushing resolution out beyond two years.  Jaffe preferred pre-litigation mediation, she said, because it costs only about $6,000 for the day and can be scheduled within a couple of months.  The mediation, which is chaired by a professional mediator in private practice or with an organization like JAMS, a dispute resolution organization, requires each side to put all of their cards on the table with the intent to come to an agreement.  To ensure that the day is not wasted, the parties might first bracket their agreeable settlement ranges, she said.  How well mediation works depends on the willingness of the sides to negotiate, and so far Layton had not presented a very conciliatory face.

After another week of silence, I followed up with Bifoss.  Layton responded to Bifoss’ call by proposing an “early mediation.”  Bifoss recommended that we propose a settlement range of $25,000 to $195,000 to make sure that Layton was serious about the mediation.   I said that $25,000 was too low and that $50,000 would be better and would be in line with a goal minimum of $90,000.  Jaffe weighed in, stressing the importance of using $25,000 in order to get the negotiations moving, based on his extensive experience.  He would insist that all decision makers be present: CEO Jenny Niklaus, the insurance company representative, and Layton.  Layton came back saying that she was not a bracket person and the insurance company representative could not be physically present.  My team had frittered away its negotiating position, but that was no matter because we had a case.

Jaffe scheduled a mediator from the list that Layton provided: a retired judge Santa Clara County judge who seemed to be qualified enough.  The mediation meeting would be just before Thanksgiving, two months away.  My additional investment in the project would be half of the $6,000 mediator’s fee.

Two weeks prior to the scheduled meeting, after hearing nothing from Jaffe in the interim, I emailed Bifoss asking whether we needed to discuss preparation for the mediation meeting.  She said that she would send me a draft brief on the following Monday, November 17, the day before it was due to the mediator.  Then I answered, no, I had not had a conversation with Jaffe about “dollar amount expectations.”  Bifoss also wanted to chat about information I had obtained from Jenny’s emails.  I explained again that I had access to the emails because of my rights as CFO and duties as Compliance Officer to investigate potential wrongdoing. 

On Monday, Jaffe and Bifoss called to discuss the emails.  Jaffe said that they should not be mentioned during the mediation because they could create a big problem for us due to the “unclean hands” and “after-acquired evidence” defenses.  If HomeFirst could show that I committed some termination-worthy misconduct in obtaining the emails, they could have complete or partial defense against my claim.  I had my doubts.  I figured: regardless of the legal merits of my claim that I had obtained the emails legitimately, contest by Layton would mean additional costs and risks for Jaffe that he had to weigh against his 40% of any possible additional settlement result.  In conclusion, Jaffe said that he hoped to be able to get between $50,000 and $65,000 without spending the day in mediation.  That would save us all a lot of inconvenience.

I had my pig, and I was riding into battle.


Friday, February 12, 2016

Pig in a Poke -- My Whistleblower Attorney, Part 1

Pig in a Poke – My Whistleblower Attorney


Jenny’s emails beginning in March 2014 made clear that I would be fired, and I began considering the need for an attorney.  Although I had worked with company attorneys for many years, I had never hired one for myself.  I googled whistleblower attorneys and found some candidates on superlawyer.com and other sites. 

One firm boasted of winning $500,000 for a client, which seemed a small amount to brag about.  I settled on one, Stephen Jaffe, who asked potential clients to complete an “intake form” laying out facts.  That struck me as an appealingly efficient way to proceed, and his downtown San Francisco office was outside the circle that I expected might be influenced by HomeFirst’s reputation for doing good work.   Jaffe’s office shared the floor with two other attorney’s offices and the floor required security approval to reach.  That struck me as positive: to avoid hit men sent by defeated defense attorneys (rather than disappointed plaintiffs). 

When I met with him on June 4, the day after I was fired, Jaffe was accompanied by two interns from Golden Gate University, which I took as evidence of his reputation in the community.  He had apparently read at least some of the intake form and asked reasonable questions about my situation.  All in all he seemed as plausible as any I might meet via the internet.  I signed what he described as his standard contingency fee agreement with its 40% contingency. 

I handed Jaffe a flash drive with 575 files, including about 350 emails, which, I explained, I had collected while fulfilling my responsibilities as CFO and Compliance Officer.  I felt good, and Jaffe said I had “a case.”  Of course.  My limited research on attorneys was balanced by my optimism: the emails provided clear evidence of the connection between my whistleblowing and my termination.  I needed a water carrier more than a genius litigator.

Two weeks after our meeting, I had heard nothing more from Jaffe.  In response to my email he said he would re-contact their attorney, whose name I had provided.  The absence of movement and his use of the peculiar term “re-contact” made me uncomfortable.  Four more weeks passed with no progress.  I suggested that HomeFirst would kick the case to their insurance carrier, which would use an attorney, Rona Layton, with whom I had worked on the case of another difficult HomeFirst employee.  My doubts rose, but I was locked into a $5,000 retainer.

In mid-July Jaffe sent a letter to the insurance company attorney offering to negotiate in good faith as long as they contacted him by July 24 and threatening to file a lawsuit otherwise.  After I followed up two weeks later, Jaffe emailed Layton, “unless we are engaged in good faith negotiations towards a settlement, I plan to file a civil complaint the week of August 11th.”

On August 8, Layton replied that I was fired because of my “inability or refusal to act in a professional, courteous manner” and that I “decided that a whistleblower claim would be more lucrative than just retiring.”  She wrote that my “plan to make the Board and the CEO look bad, and to cast [my]self as the one person who was doing the right thing, is transparent and disingenuous.”  She closed saying, “Nevertheless, protracted litigation is generally not in anyone’s best interest, and so if Mr. Veuve would like to make a reasonable settlement proposal, I would encourage my client to consider it.”

Jaffe sent Layton’s letter to me without comment.  When I asked what the next steps were, Jaffe replied, “We have to formulate a demand figure.  Please think about a number for which you would settle.  Remember, a settlement is – by definition – a compromise; not a 100% recovery of all your losses.  When you tell me that number, I will recommend where we should start with a demand.”

I worried that Jaffe was pointing toward a relatively low, easy to negotiate figure even though our contingency fee agreement seemed to recommend a large settlement in which he would share.  The email suggested that his calculus was more complicated than I had imagined and that more was involved than the quality of my case and the money HomeFirst would be willing to pay.