Zacks, Detwiler, Dunn, Steiger affidavits continue to deny involvement in a takeover attempt, despite evidence to the contrary (evidence will be presented here later this week)
Would you tolerate your attorney doing this?
(Neither do we.)
Last updated 12/15/2009 5:42 PM
Columbus, Ohio (December 13, 2009) — The former attorneys for Leader Technologies submitted individual sworn affidavits in their 1,236-page defamation lawsuit Motion for Summary Judgment (MSJ) on December 2, 2009, which Leader has now had an opportunity to review. All commentary is Leader's opinion.
Legal experts consulted are mystified by the MSJ´s sheer volume and timing. MSJ´s at this stage are normally filed by the defendants – the ones being sued – not by the plaintiffs. Leader believes the volume represents an attempt to overcome lack of evidence with volume. In any event, Zacks et al demanded a jury trial. Filing a summary judgment before discovery in their lawsuit raises serious Rules questions. Defamation cases swing on the facts (or lack thereof) surrounding the alleged defamation. The fact-finding, including depositions and subpoenaed testimony, has yet to occur. Here´s just one example of the lack of facts in the plaintiffs´ Affidavits (Aff.):
"McKibben regularly posts false statements about the Plaintiffs that defame them, and specifically me and/or place them or me, in a false light, knowing the statements to be untrue or with reckless disregard to their truth or falsity." (Zacks Aff. § 8, Dunn Aff. § 4, Steiger § 7, Detwiler § 4).
These are identical statements in the Zacks Dunn, Detwiler, and Steiger Affidavits and beg the question: Why are they making exactly the same word-for-word complaints? Since they are making identical complaints, is it not appropriate to extrapolate that they acted in concert, as McKibben and Leader allege? Otherwise, identical allegations are nonsensical. Their affidavits include numerous identical statements.
Plaintiffs say repeatedly that Leader and McKibben made false statements and knew they were false. However, these assertions are conclusory and unsupported. MSJ´s must prove "beyond reasonable doubt" that no disputes of fact exist before they can be granted.[1] The discovery to determine the facts has just begun in this case.[2] A repeatedly copied accusation of wrongdoing and self-serving personal affidavits are conclusory assertions and not permitted in a motion for summary judgment (see Footnote 1). Such legal writing as this is indicative of the plaintiffs' level of legal care and illustrates why Leader sought new counsel.
Plaintiffs paint a picture of benevolence, veracity and righteous indignation. They represent themselves as holding only the shareholder's highest interests and say repeatedly that they did not conspire to take over the company. Detwiler Aff. § 2 ("My reputation for professionalism, integrity, and honesty is impeccable" ), 3, 19, 20, 41; Zacks Aff. § 2, 3, 4, 6 ("I attempted to assist..." and "I was drawn back in" and "suggested all debts be paid" and "commiserate with other shareholders" ), 15 ("forced to submit malpractice coverage claims" ), 16 ("[Leader and McKibben] injure[d] me" and "alienated from the community" ), 17 ("wholeheartedly encouraged McKibben to make the company successful" ); Steiger Aff. § 3 ("Mr. Zacks… act[ed] solely as a scribe" and "[I] contribute[d]… to move the company forward" ), 4 ("I tried to get McKibben to honor his commitments" and "I was forced to hire collections counsel" ), 9, 13 ("I have been damaged" ), 14 ("ridiculed in my occupation" ), 15; Dunn Aff. § 3, 4, 8, ("All these statements are false" ), 11 ("shamed and ridiculed in my profession" ), 12; Wittenberg Aff. § 2 ("protecting my reputation from slanderous attacks" ), 8 ("nothing I have done… is even remotely unethical" ), 12 ("lies spread by McKibben" ), 13).
Plaintiffs´ characterizations of due care and innocence stand in stark contrast to other elements of their testimony, which we believe anyone of ordinary skill in business knows are highly disruptive activities. For example:
Neither Leader or McKibben have ever agreed to absolve Zacks et al of their fiduciary or professional duties. Such an assertion runs counter to everything Leader and McKibben believe and stand for regarding professional ethics, fiduciary duty and accountability. In fact, the Business Judgment Rule duties of diligence, loyalty, obedience (to laws and organizing documents), accountability, disinterestedness, due care, good faith and non-abuse of discretion were specifically signed on to by Zacks, Steiger and Detwiler. Click here to read Detwiler's Business Judgment Rule commitments May 23, 2000. (Such highly relevant ethics agreements were noticeably absent from Plaintiffs´ 1,236-page MSJ while some 130-pages of Clerk of Court Civil Case Detail were included.);
2005-01-17 — 2006-01-13 — 2006-05-11 — 2006-09-22 — 2006-10-02 — 2006-11-08 — 2006-11-15 — 2006-12-04 — 2007-01-03 — 2007-02-12 — 2007-05-25 — 2007-08-01 — 2007-11-28 — 2007-12-19 — 2008-01-30 — 2008-02-20 — 2008-06-04 — Leader and ODOD eventually settled after The American Thinker and other national watchdog organizations picked up the story;
Leader asserts that Zacks et al´s disruptive actions highlighted above were self-fulfilling prophecies. Namely, create a problem, complain about it, attack McKibben for not fixing it, offer to be the white knight to fix it, stir up trouble to ensure that the "problem" will not go away, file dubious lawsuits in support of your concocted causes, then use your knowlege of the weaknesses of the court system to string out expensive lawsuits until Leader´s lawyers slip up or get litigation fatigue (Zacks Aff. § 6,10; Detwiler Aff. § 14, 15, 19, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 36; Steiger Aff. § 4,5; Dunn Aff. § 5; Wittenberg Aff. § 5, 6, 7).
Plaintiff´s MSJ venom is focused on Leader´s Founder and Chairman Michael T. McKibben, and yet they have also sued a dozen others, most of whom do not even know them. Attorneys are not permitted to sue people merely to harass them (Oh. R. Prof. Conduct. Responsibilities [5).
Steiger´s Affidavit itself clearly identifies Leader´s sole purpose in resisting the Plaintiffs actions: "Stop interfering in Leader´s business". (Steiger Aff. § 8) This unambiguous statement by Leader stands in stark contrast to Plaintiffs´ accusations, largely centered on McKibben, that he has engaged in a campaign to discredit the Plaintiffs. The fact is that McKibben and Leader have no interest in the Plaintiffs and simply wish them to stop their dubious lawsuits and legal activity and leave the company alone to pursue business instead of consuming pointless hours resisiting plaintiffs´ actions. (Detwiler stated to Jeremy Float earlier in 2009 that his intention was to "punish Leader for what they have done", link affidavit here, contrary to Plaintiff's numerous assertions of constructive intent in the MSJ - linked here).
Plaintiffs sworn statements in their Motion for Summary Judgment regarding Leader´s allegations of having been involved in attempts to take over the company as its former legal counsels and fiduciaries include the following.
Stay tuned.
The MSJ is 1,236 pages long. The citations initially gleaned from it and shown above may contain inadvertent citation errors and will be corrected as they are identified, if any.
Footnotes:
[1] "A trial court may not enter a summary judgment if it appears a material fact is genuinely disputed. The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of informing the trial court of the basis for its motion and identifying those portions of the record that demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. The moving party may not make a conclusory assertion that the non-moving party has no evidence to prove its case. The moving party must specifically point to some evidence which demonstrates the non-moving party cannot support its claim." Mason v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2009-Ohio-6204.
[2] "On summary judgment the moving party has the burden to establish the absence of a genuine, that is, disputed, issue as to any material fact. On summary judgment the court does not decide the issue of fact; it decides whether there is a genuine issue of fact. A summary judgment should not be granted unless the moving party demonstrates a right to a judgment with such clarity as to leave no room for controversy." Muggli, Christine Bremer. Motion For Summary Judgment — A Change is in the Air. Wisconsin Bar Association. Last accessed December 13, 2009.
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