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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 15th JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
IN AND FOR PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA
CASE NO. 502009CA040800XXXXMBAG
JEFFREY EPSTEIN,
Plaintiff,
SCOTT ROTHSTEIN, individually, and
BRADLEY J. EDWARDS, individually,
Defendants.
TRANSCRIPT OF HEARING
PROCEEDINGS
DATE TAKEN: Monday, January 27, 2014
TIME:
3:00 p.m. - 4:23 p.m.
PLACE:
Palm Beach County Courthouse
205 N. Dixie Highway
Courtroom 9C
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
BEFORE:
Donald Hafele, Circuit Judge
This cause came on to be heard at the time and place
aforesaid, when and where the following proceedings were
stenographically reported by:
Robyn Maxwell, RPR, FPR, CLR
Realtime Systems Administrator
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APPEARANCES:
On behalf of the Plaintiff:
W. CHESTER BREWER, JR., P.A.
4
250 South Australian Avenue
5
Suite 1400
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
6
561.655.4777
BY: W. CHESTER BREWER, JR., ESQUIRE
wcblaw@aol.com
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8
ATTERBURY, GOLDBERGER & WEISS, PA
9
250 South Australian Avenue
Suite 1400
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West Palm Beach, FL 33401
561.659.8300
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BY: JACK A. GOLDBERGER, ESQUIRE
jgoldberger@agwpa.com
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TONJA HADDAD, PA
315 SE 7th Street
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Suite 301
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
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954.467.1223
BY: TONJA HADDAD COLEMAN, ESQUIRE
tonja@tonjahaddad.com
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On behalf of Bradley J. Edwards:
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SEARCY, DENNEY, SCAROLA, BARNHART & SHIPLEY, P.A.
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2139 Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard
West Palm Beach, FL 33409
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561.686.6300
BY: JACK SCAROLA, ESQUIRE
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JSX@searcylaw.com
BY: WILLIAM B. KING, ESQUIRE
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Wbk@searcylaw.com
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Thereupon,
2
the following proceedings began at 3:00 p.m.:
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THE COURT: Good afternoon, everybody.
4
Thank you so much. Have a seat. Welcome.
5
MR. BREWER: Good afternoon, Your Honor.
6
THE COURT: I had the opportunity to read
7
the binder and the materials sent to me by
8
respective counsel. I don't think the case should
9
take two hours.
10
MR. BREWER: No.
11
THE COURT: So what I'm going to ask you to
12
do is kindly tailor your arguments to one-half
13
hour apiece. And the movant may split up the time
14
to save some moments for rebuttal. And I think
15
that should more than adequately deal with the
16
matter.
17
I think the United States Supreme Court
18
heard the Brown vs. Board Of Education and gave
19
20 minutes a side. So if that can be done in that
20
amount of time, I think we can take care of this.
21
And, of course, you all realize -- and I
22
don't think this has anything whatsoever to do
23
with the matter, but I should let you know that I
24
handled the state claims that involved Mr. Epstein
25
when I was in Division B. So I have a significant
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amount of familiarity with the claims that were
2
made. However, until I met with Judge Crow
3
involving this case, I had no knowledge whatsoever
4
that a separate and independent action had been
5
brought by Mr. Epstein against the Rothstein
6
entities and Mr. Edwards. So to that extent, I
7
just to want let you know, as you probably already
8
did already know, that I handled those cases I
9
believe to their conclusion, at or near the time
10
that I left that division two years ago or so.
11
Okay. So are you Ms. Haddad?
12
MS. HADDAD: I am.
13
THE COURT: Will you be arguing on behalf
14
Mr. Epstein?
15
MS. HADDAD: No, Judge. I don't have --
16
Mr. Brewer will be arguing on our behalf because,
17
as you can hear, I have a cold.
18
THE COURT: All right.
19
Mr. Scarola, did you want to say something?
20
NR. SCAROLA: I did, Your Honor. I just
21
wanted to clarify one matter which I believe to be
22
of some significance.
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THE COURT: Sure. Of course.
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MR. SCAROLA: And that is Your Honor
25
referenced a claim against the Rothstein entities
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and that is not the case.
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THE COURT: It was just Rothstein
3
individually?
4
MR. SCAROLA: It was just against
5
Mr. Rothstein individually. That claim has never
6
really been defended and -- against Mr. Edwards.
7
And the focus of these motions is only on
8
Mr. Edwards' claims for abuse of process and
9
malicious prosecution.
10
THE COURT: The later I knew. My apologies
11
for misstating the number of defendants involved.
12
MR. SCAROLA: No apology necessary, sir.
13
THE COURT: The only defendants involved --
14
and they may have been voluntarily dismissed
15
without prejudice; is that accurate?
16
MR. SCAROLA: There was a voluntary
17
dismissal of the initial claims brought against
18
Mr. Edwards, that's correct, sir, on the eve of
19
summary judgment hearing.
20
THE COURT: I remember that being written
21
in your papers.
22
MR. SCAROLA: Yes, sir.
23
THE COURT: So is Epstein's claim against
24
Rothstein still viable at this juncture?
25
MS. HADDAD: Yes, Your Honor, it is.
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THE COURT: So the dismissed case without
2
prejudice was to -- was as to Mr. Edwards only.
3
MR. SCAROLA: The claims against LM, one of
4
victims of Mr. Epstein's conduct, those claims are
5
also dismissed.
6
THE COURT: Okay. Thank you for that
7
clarification. I much appreciate it.
8
Mr. Brewer.
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MR. BREWER: Yes, sir. Well, first of all,
10
Your Honor, I'm Chester Brewer appearing on behalf
11
of Jeffrey Epstein.
12
We have before you today a motion for
13
summary judgment filed on behalf Mr. Epstein with
14
regard to a counterclaim that was filed by
15
Mr. Edwards. The case is currently set before
16
Your Honor, specially set I might say, for a
17
three-week or proposed three-week trial, and it is
18
currently set for May the 6th of this year.
19
One thing that I did want to talk to the
20
Court about before going into the procedural
21
history is in the package that was provided to you
22
by counsel for Mr. Edwards there is a statement or
23
interview that is with a young lady by the name of
24
. Now, I don't know whether you
25
have had an opportunity to read it or not.
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THE COURT: I didn't. I saw the reference
2
to Ms.
. Who is she?
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MR. BREWER: Ms.
was an alleged
4
victim of Mr. Epstein. There was an interview
5
taken of her by Mr. Scarola and I believe
6
Mr. Edwards. There's a transcript of that
7
interview which is neither sworn to nor even
8
signed. It's something that could not be used for
9
any purpose in the trial of this matter, even for
10
impeachment. So if Your Honor has not read it,
11
won't go into it.
12
THE COURT: No, I have not read it. I just
13
saw the name
bandied about on
14
several different occasions, so that's all I know.
15
And as you can tell, I didn't know her
16
relationship to the case.
17
MR. BREWER: Okay. Your Honor, the
18
procedural history here is there were a number of
19
claims brought by alleged victims of Mr. Epstein.
20
There were a number of different attorneys that
21
were involved. And a number of different cases
22
were filed both in federal court and in state
23
court on behalf of these alleged victims. The
24
cases proceeded, as you've said, some of them were
25
before you. They have all now -- per my
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information, they have now all concluded although
there may still be some investigations.
THE COURT: Mr. Edwards at his latest
deposition indicated that there's still the
victim's case that's going on in the federal
court.
MR. BREWER: Nothing has happened on that
8
for a quite some period of time now.
9
The --
10
MR. KING: Judge, if I may, in response to
11
your question. I'm not sure what victim's case
12
that's referencing. All -- all of the cases --
13
THE COURT: This was a federal statutory --
14
MR. KING: I --
15
THE COURT: -- that Mr. Edwards indicates
16
he's doing pro bono on behalf of two of the
17
alleged victims.
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MR. KING: You're correct.
19
THE COURT: In the Epstein matters.
20
MR. KING: That's correct. Sorry for the
21
interruption.
22
THE COURT: That's okay.
23
MR. BREWER: During the course of those
24
cases, there was some rather unusual discovery
25
that was taking place. And it was learned, and I
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I'll get into this towards the end of my
2
presentation, but there were a number of things
3
that were learned by Mr. Epstein in and around
4
November of 2009 -- November/December 2009. He
5
filed a lawsuit against Mr. Rothstein,
6
Mr. Edwards, and LM who is one of the alleged
7
victims. One of the counts in that was for
g
malicious -- I believe it's -- he only had abuse
9
of process along with some other counts.
10
In response to that complaint, Mr. Scarola
11
on behalf of Mr. Edwards filed a counterclaim.
12
That counterclaim went through several amendments,
13
but the fourth amended counterclaim speaks to two
14
causes of action; that is abuse of process and
15
malicious prosecution. So those are what we're
16
here to talk about today, is abuse of process and
17
malicious prosecution as it relates to
18
Mr. Epstein's original claim against Mr. Edwards.
19
In response to Mr. Edwards' counterclaim,
20
there were a number of affirmative defenses
21
raised, but one of them that was raised was the
22
litigation privilege. And we are here today to
23
talk with you about the litigation privilege and
24
its current state as espoused by the Florida
25
Supreme Court and the Third District Court Of
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Appeals and, in fact, the Fourth District Court Of
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Appeals.
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THE COURT: One thing I wanted to interrupt
4
you on is this Wolfe case and its current status
5
and the -- I'll call the -- I'll call it the
6
Edwards side to make things be easier. But the
7
Edwards side has raised the issue that apparently
8
this Wolfe case is still in rehearing and
9
therefore of no precedential value to the court
10
Mr. King, did you want to speak briefly to
11
that?
12
MR. KING: Yeah. We submitted a notice of
13
correction to Judge Sasser the other day who stood
14
in for you on the page extension.
15
THE COURT: Right.
16
MR. KING: We gave her that and asked her
17
to turn that over to you.
18
THE COURT: I didn't get it.
19
MR. KING: Okay. What's actually happened
20
is
and it's confusing because Westlaw's whole
21
history on this, and Mr. Brewer also understands
22
this because he ran into the same problem.
23
My reading of the history that Westlaw
24
contains indicates that the mandate has issued but
25
they still use the caveat "this is a Westlaw
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citation only, it's not in the final published
format, and therefore it can be changed at any
time." But with the issuance of the mandate, that
signifies that it is -- the rehearing is denied
and it is now final.
6
THE COURT: Okay. Thank you for that. I
7
did not know that until right now.
8
NR. UREMIA: So let's get into the Wolfe
9
case. That's where we're headed next. And really
10
there's a trilogy of cases. There's the Levin
11
case, the Echevarria case, if I'm somewhere close
12
to pronouncing that correctly, and the Wolfe case.
13
All of them deal with litigation privilege which
14
dates back to 1917. And I think that we are all
15
most familiar with the standard that defamation
16
cases, if the, quote, alleged defamation occurred
17
during the course of a judicial proceeding would
18
be protected by the litigation privilege and no
19
action could be taken on them.
20
Over the years different courts looked at
21
it. There was an attempt -- there were attempts
22
made to determine how far and to which causes of
23
action the litigation privilege would apply.
24
The seminal case now for us, I guess, now
25
is Levin. This was Levin, Mabie suing. It was
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actually a tortious interference case. But the
2
case went up to the Florida Supreme Court. And
3
the issue before them was how far is this
4
privilege or to what causes of action should this
5
privilege apply?
6
And the Levin court came out and said that
7
it would apply to all torts, including the one
8
that was before them which was tortious
9
interference. And that the standard for
10
determining whether the action complained of would
11
be whether that action had some relation to the
12
proceeding, the judicial preceding.
13
Later on the question came up, Well, should
14
that -- it's the -- we've already determined that
15
it applies to all torts. And so, does it also
16
apply to statutory violations or cases involving
17
statutory violations? And that's the Echevarria
18
case, also in front of the Florida Supreme Court,
19
some 13 or 14 years after Levin, and they found,
20
yes, that it does apply to, essentially, all civil
21
judicial proceedings.
22
Now, the issues before us are the
23
litigation privilege as it applies to abuse of
24
process and malicious prosecution. That was all
25
brought to a head in the Wolfe case. In the Wolfe
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case, the Third District Court Of Appeal was faced
2
with the issue of do the -- does the litigation
3
privilege apply in those two causes of action.
4
The answer was yes. The Wolfe case or the
5
Wolfe court went back and essentially referred
6
back to and analyzed the Levin and Echevarria
7
cases. And that's why I say it's kind of a
8
trilogy.
9
And in the Wolfe case it was determined
10
that this was not -- not only was it privileged
11
for any actions that were related to the judicial
12
process, it was an absolute privilege.
13
Now, in our case, we have exactly the same
14
issue. We've got a complaint that was filed that
15
is alleged in the counterclaim to be malicious
16
prosecution. We also have the pleadings,
17
everything that was filed after the initiation of
18
the judicial pleading -- judicial process. It's
19
claimed to be an abuse of process.
20
In fact, in answers to interrogatories and
21
all of the discovery that has been had from the
22
Edwards side, they have said that the filing of
23
the complaint was in itself it was untrue, the
24
information that was there was untrue; Epstein
25
should have known it was untrue, and that he had a
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bad purpose in filing which was to intimidate or
2
extort Mr. Edwards and his client.
3
That's been put to bed in the Wolfe case
4
because the litigation privilege absolutely
5
applies and is absolute. The Wolfe case states
6
that they could think -- or the Wolfe court stated
7
they could think of no action that would be more
g
related to the judicial process than the filing of
9
a complaint. So a complaint, the filing of the
10
complaint is privileged.
11
Then going back, and then as they related
12
to the Levin case and the Echevarria case, they
13
said anything that was related to the judicial
14
process -- discovery, depositions,
15
interrogatories -- as long as they were related,
16
they were protected by -- the participants were
17
protected by the litigation privilege.
18
They -- in the trilogy, and I forget which
19
one of the cases it was, but they go even further
20
and clarify that the claim "a bad motive" is
21
really irrelevant to these causes of action when
22
you were talking about the litigation privilege.
23
The -- let me see, where am I here?
24
In the Wolfe case it was a motion for
25
judgment on the pleadings. In some of these other
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cases it was motion for summary judgment. And in
2
all of these cases they found that the litigation
3
privilege barred the causes of action that were
4
being claimed.
5
The argument has been made by the other
6
sides that because Mr. Edwards -- or, excuse me,
7
because Mr. Epstein had no reason to file the
8
original complaint that he filed, that somehow or
9
another the litigation privilege should not apply.
10
And that because he shouldn't have filed the
11
original complaint, everything that he did
12
thereafter was an abuse of process.
13
We would put it to Your Honor that's not
14
the standard as espoused by the Third District
15
Court Of Appeal, the Fourth District Court Of
16
Appeal, or the Florida Supreme Court. The
17
standard is: Did the action have some relation to
18
the judicial proceeding?
19
THE COURT: I think at least in trying to
20
distinguish Wolfe, but at the same time taking a
21
more global approach, the Edwards' side is
22
suggesting that timing and the length of time
23
subsequent to the settlement of the pending claims
24
and his continuing to prosecute the suit more so
25
on the malicious prosecution side would distance
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itself from Wolfe, because in Wolfe I believe the
court made clear that it was a brief prosecution
of the action and was not protracted. How do you
respond to that concern?
5
MR. BREWER: I respond by quoting the
6
Florida Supreme Court, which is: If the action
7
and whether they're talking one action, 20 actions
8
or 40 actions, if the action is related to the
9
judicial preceding, then you have a litigation
10
privilege.
11
THE COURT: And that can go on essentially
12
forever in your mind?
13
MR. BREWER: I don't know that it can go on
14
forever because also they were talking,
15
particularly in the Levin case, about protections
16
that would be afforded to litigants. But those
17
protections would not be through a cause of action
18
for malicious prosecution or abuse of process;
19
rather, it would be through the court with
20
contempt proceedings, perhaps. It would be
21
through the Florida Bar for, you know,
22
inappropriate actions taken by an attorney. It
23
could be perjury for a litigant which would be
24
handled by the state.
25
THE COURT: I don't think perjury. Not if
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it's guised in the litigation privilege, but
perhaps you're right that it could be met with
57.105 standards.
MR. BREWER: 57.105 was the one I was just
5
getting ready to get to, Your Honor. So there are
6
protections against what you're talking about, but
7
again, I have to go back to what did the Supreme
8
Court tell us.
9
I did want to touch also on another point
10
that was raised in our motion, which is that the
11
Complaint, at least insofar as malicious
12
prosecution, has to fail because there is probable
13
cause demonstrated for Mr. Epstein to have filed
14
or at least have reason to believe that he could
15
file -- properly file the claim that he
that he
16
did file.
17
THE COURT: Is probable cause always a
18
legal -- purely legal determination?
19
MR. BREWER: No. No. If there are
20
questions of fact that are involved with the
21
probable cause, the questions of fact are for the
22
determination of the jury. The jury -- the judge
23
then takes those determinations of the jury to
24
make a finding of probable cause. But it is in
25
the -- at the end of the day the court -- the
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issue of probable cause is a matter of law for
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determination by the court.
3
But the threshold for establishing probable
4
cause in a civil action is really rather low.
5
Because it is whether the defendant could have
6
reasonable -- what the -- what the defendant could
7
have reasonably believed at the time of asserting
8
the claim.
9
So I want to go briefly through what
10
Mr. Epstein knew or was available to him at the
11
time November/December of 2009.
12
First, undisputed, Mr. Edwards was a
13
partner at the Rothstein firm. It's also
14
undisputed and it had been admitted by
15
Mr. Rothstein that this firm was the front for one
16
of the largest Ponzi schemes in Florida history.
17
At the time, Mr. Edwards was the lead attorney for
18
three cases that were being brought by the
19
Rothstein firm against Mr. Epstein.
20
During the litigation there were numerous
21
discovery attempts which appeared to be unrelated
22
to those; and that was trying to get flight
23
manifests, take depositions of people who may have
24
been on flights on Mr. Epstein's planes, some
25
very, very prominent names. And these things were
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escalating during that time period. And it was
2
very, very strange.
3
In late November of 2009 there was an
4
explanation as to why those things were going on.
5
And the Rothstein firm imploded. And there was a
6
complaint that was brought by Bill Scherer I
7
believe down -- I don't know if it was Broward
8
County or Dade County.
9
THE COURT: Yeah, I'm familiar with all
10
that.
11
I remember that day. Do you remember that
12
day, Mr. Edwards?
13
MR. EDWARDS: I remember it like yesterday.
14
MR. BREWER: In any event, he filed a
15
complaint on behalf of a group of investors that
16
we refer to as Razorback. And if I can find it.
17
Here we go. One of allegations in the complaint
18
in Razorback was, additionally, "Rothstein used
19
RRA's representation in the Epstein case to pursue
20
issues and evidence unrelated to the underlying
21
litigation but which was potentially beneficial to
22
lure investors into the Ponzi scheme."
23
THE COURT: You -- five out of the six of
24
you know me very well, and I always am very
25
receptive to argument. You guys know that. The
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only one is Ms. Haddad. I think -- I'm not sure
2
if we met before. But I just feel like the
3
probable cause aspect just carries with it too
4
many factual issues for me to rule as a matter of
5
law, so I don't think that I can grant relief on
6
the probable cause issue vel non. So if you will,
7
please move on to --
8
MR. BREWER: On that note, because I was
9
I will close.
10
THE COURT: Okay. Thank you very much,
11
Mr. Brewer.
12
MR. BREWER: No, I will close by --
13
THE COURT: On that issue?
14
MR. BREWER: I will close on that issue.
15
THE COURT: Very well.
16
MR. BREWER: But I would like to close by
17
quoting a very prominent attorney.
18
THE COURT: Sounds like a plan.
19
MR. BREWER: This is something that was
20
before Judge Crow.
21
And it begins out of the attorney saying,
22
"Tab 4, Levin vs. Middle -- Levin vs. Middlebrook
23
is the Tab No. 18?"
24
Judge Crow says, "I read it a thousand
25
times."
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The attorneys says, "Yes, sir, I'm sure you
have."
"THE COURT: You have to give it to me
again, though."
ATTORNEY: "I will be happy to do that."
6
"THE COURT: This deals with the litigation
7
privilege?"
8
The attorney then goes on to say, "Yes,
9
sir, it does deal with litigation privilege.
10
Echevarria also deals with the litigation
11
privilege. Delmonico stands for the proposition
12
that the issues with regard to privilege are some
13
issues of law for the court to determine. And I
14
provided Your Honor with highlighted copies. I'm
15
providing opposing counsel with highlighted copies
16
as well.
17
"THE COURT: Okay."
18
THE ATTORNEY: "Basic point here, Your
19
Honor, is that the litigation privilege is an
20
absolute privilege. Once it is established that
21
the actions occur within the course and scope of
22
the litigation, the privilege applies absolutely
23
as a matter of public policy.
24
"The basis of those decisions, that if
25
there's misconduct in the course of litigation --
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if you're talking about improper discovery, if
2
you're filing improper motions -- there are
3
remedies that are available to the court through
4
the court's inherent power to control its own
5
litigation; through the contempt powers of the
6
court through Florida Statute 57.105, and through
7
the filing of bar grievances. And it will cripple
the system if litigants are obligated to respond
9
to separate litigation just because somebody has
10
alleged you noticed the deposition that shouldn't
11
have been noticed. You filed a motion that
12
shouldn't have been filed."
13
That prominent attorney is Mr. Scarola.
14
THE COURT: In an unrelated case?
15
MR. BREWER: In this case. In this case
16
when they were arguing that Mr. Edwards was
17
entitled to the litigation privilege with regard
18
to Mr. Epstein's complaint.
19
THE COURT: Okay. Who --
20
Off the record for a minute.
21
(Discussion off the record.)
22
THE COURT: Okay. Mr. King, please.
23
MR. KING: Thank, Your Honor. William King
24
and Jack Scarola, Your Honor, for Mr. Edwards who
25
is seated with us at the table.
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1
May it please the Court.
2
THE COURT: Please.
3
MR. KING: In light of the Court's ruling
4
on the probable cause issue, I am not going to get
5
into all of the facts with which we did not have
6
an opportunity to identify in detail. I'll simply
7
say to the Court that there still exists the issue
g
of the bona fide determination they have not
9
raised here today. And so, the submission of the
10
facts that we have submitted, that we've prepared
11
for you, would bear on that unless they have --
12
likewise, because of factual disputes, they're
13
basically taking the position that is no longer --
14
that's no longer an issue either for purposes of
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
and now this Wolfe case is not being disposed of
23
24
25
Wolfe, Levin, and Echevarria cases.
this summary judgment.
Pursuant --
THE COURT: Let me stop you, Mr. King, so
that you're not confused by my preliminary
statements to Mr. Brewer. And that is, that the
global issue that's covered by, as Mr. Brewer puts
it, the trilogy of cases, the Levin, Echevarria,
or is not being ceded by Mr. Brewer here. They're
still claiming that both counts are covered by the
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1
My statement is only if, in fact, those
2
cases are, and now the Wolfe case which is now, in
3
my view, on point relative to both abuse of
4
process and malicious prosecution claims globally,
5
if that case for some reason doesn't cover that,
6
then the elements of the malicious prosecution
7
claim are off the table. In other words, I would
g
not grant the motion because of at least those two
9
reasons; that is that I believe that there are
10
questions of fact related to the probable cause
11
issue, as well as the bona fide determination
12
issue additionally.
13
NR. KING: And I understand the Court's
14
ruling in that regard.
15
THE COURT: Okay.
16
MR. KING: My only point was they raised in
17
their initial brief an issue of whether there was
18
a bona fide termination. That, likewise, is very
19
fact specific.
20
THE COURT: I agree and that's why I want
21
to make clear that that standing alone, the
22
elements of the malicious prosecution claim as
23
opposed to the abuse of process claim, which I
24
will handle separately, will not muster in summary
25
judgment in my view.
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MR. KING: Thank you.
2
Then let me focus, then, on the litigation
3
privilege, Judge, since that's the key issue that
4
the Court is dealing with today.
5
THE COURT: Thank you.
6
MR. KING: It is our position that a
7
conflict currently exists with regards to the
g
issue whether the litigation privilege bars a
9
malicious prosecution claim. And I have cited to
10
the case Olson vs. Johnson, 961 Sold. 356, the
11
Second DCA's opinion in 2007, after both Levin and
12
Echevarria. And it holds that malicious
13
prosecution claims are not barred by the
14
litigation privilege.
15
Then you have Wolfe that stands in
16
contradistinction to that which holds that it
17
does. Although, as I'll point out in a few
18
moments, one of -- Judge Shepherd in his
19
concurring opinion doesn't -- he doesn't rely on
20
that, on that theory.
21
Our position is that Olson vs. Johnson sets
22
forth the accurate and more persuasive
23
proposition; that is that it does not bar a
24
malicious prosecution claim. Even though Olson
25
vs. Johnson dealt with complaints by a complaining
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1
witness in a case that only resulted in a
2
malicious prosecution claim leading to a wrongful
3
arrest, doesn't -- the facts of the case itself do
4
not go so far as to address issues of what happens
5
once a civil complaint is filed. But the
6
proposition that that Olson states is unequivocal;
7
that is the litigation privilege does not apply to
8
malicious prosecution.
9
Now, when we get to Judge Sasser's opinion,
10
which I submit in all of the cases that have been
11
cited by everyone, Judge Sasser's opinion is the
12
most cogent, most well-reasoned, and rejects those
13
very propositions that two judges in the Wolfe
14
case adopt.
15
So let me -- let me just suggest to the
16
Court --
17
THE COURT: Which Judge Sasser? I'm trying
18
to figure out which one you are talking about.
19
NR. KING: That is the decision in -- bear
20
with me, Judge.
21
THE COURT: No problem.
22
MR. KING: That is the decision in Johnson
23
vs. Libow, a 2012 -- Westlaw 4068409 in 2012.
24
THE COURT: Okay.
25
MR. KING: It is concise. It's to the
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point. And I'll address that in just a few
2
moments.
3
THE COURT: All right. Thanks.
4
MR. KING: Now, what's interesting about
5
Wolfe, and what's almost inexplicable about Wolfe,
6
is that it ignores its own prior precedent by
7
Judge Cope in his concurring decision in Boca
8
Investors Group vs. Potash, 835 So2d. 273.
9
THE COURT: That was a concurring opinion?
10
MR. KING: Yes, that was his concurring
11
opinion.
12
THE COURT: Okay.
13
MR. KING: Of course, as you know,
14
Judge Cope is very well-respected and his opinions
15
are very articulate, but it also ignores a
16
Third DCA's full panel's decision in SCI Funeral
17
Servcies Inc. vs. Henry, 839 So2d. 702 at Note 4,
18
Third DCA opinion in 2000, both of which both
19
Judge Cope and the panel in the SCI case note that
20
the Supreme Court's citation in Levin to Wright
21
vs. Yurko, which I cited in the memorandum, which
22
was a Fifth DCA decision back in 1984, implicitly
23
recognizes -- that is the Supreme Court itself
24
implicitly recognizes that malicious prosecution
25
claims are not subject to the litigation
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2
3
4
5
6
privilege.
And if you read Wright vs. Yurko, you read
Judge Cope's concurring opinion, and you read the
panel's footnote in SCI, one should not come up
with any other conclusion other than that's what
the Supreme Court did. So you have Wolfe standing
7
in contradistinction to its own -- to its own
g
precedent, which they don't address at all in
9
Wolfe, and it stands importantly in
10
contradistinction to the Supreme Court's own
11
position on that -- on that doctrine.
12
I -- I would dare say that the Third
13
District will always stand alone on that
14
proposition. Any other district court which is
15
going to undertake this issue will not follow that
16
ruling. And the Supreme Court itself, if it ever
17
gets on the cert's jurisdiction, will not either.
18
Other courts have likewise commented that
19
the litigation privilege would not bar a malicious
20
prosecution claim. I have cited you to the
21
decision of Judge Corrigan in North Star Capital
22
Acquisition, LLC vs. Krig, 611 F.Supp.2d 1324
23
(M.D. Fla. 2009), another decision that was
24
decided after Levin and Echevarria. And the court
25
in that case discussed -- let me just for a moment
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here --
2
Well, the bottom line is Judge Corrigan
3
commented about the litigation privilege and
4
stated that neither malicious prosecution nor
5
abuse of process would be barred by the litigation
6
privilege.
7
I have also cited the Cruz vs. Angelides,
8
the Middle District of -- I'm sorry,
9
574 So2d. 278, Second DCA 1991, which also
10
suggests that malicious prosecution would not be
11
barred by the litigation privilege.
12
But as I've indicated, the most cogent and
13
well articulated opinion on this subject is
14
Judge Sasser's opinion in Johnson vs. Libow. She
15
expressly revoked the arguments that are raised by
16
Wolfe, which arguments, of course, are opposed by
17
the assertion in Olson. The court noted the
18
following -- and these are the very compelling
19
reasons why Wolfe would not apply to a malicious
20
prosecution claim.
21
As she said, "Levin involved actions taken
22
during the course of proceedings" and as you
23
remember what Levin was; that was a situation
24
where there was a motion to disqualify counsel.
25
Then ultimately, when they didn't call counsel,
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they filed a separate interference claim and the
2
court barred that on the litigation privilege.
3
But the court stated that when you're dealing with
4
the malicious prosecution lawsuit, it's
5
fundamentally different. It involves the filing
6
of a baseless action against a defendant. And the
7
purpose of a malicious prosecution action is to
g
prevent vexatious prosecution or litigation.
9
"The purpose of the litigation privilege,"
10
she stated expressly, "is not to preclude the tort
11
of malicious prosecution. And if the litigation
12
privilege was applicable to the filing of a suit,
13
the tort of malicious prosecution would not
14
survive."
15
And as the Court is well aware, the
16
malicious prosecution has been recognized as
17
it's an ancient tort in Florida. It's always been
18
around. The Supreme Court has addressed it in the
19
past specifically. And one cannot lightly accept
20
the proposition that the Supreme Court, which
21
itself has indicated -- implicitly indicated at
22
least that the litigation privilege would not bar
23
a malicious prosecution claim. That the Supreme
24
Court itself would not adhere to the those rulings
25
and overturn a century of law recognizing the tort
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1
of malicious prosecution.
2
We also submit that Wolfe is
3
distinguishable because the litigation privilege
4
was applied to the attorneys in that case. The
5
attorneys were involved, and I need not go over
6
all of the facts of the case, but it was a very,
7
very brief involvement by the lawyers. As I
8
suggested in the brief, lawyers may end up being
9
given a broader immunity under the litigation
10
privilege because of their obligations to their
11
clients to carry out their legal and ethical
12
responsibilities.
13
And the facts of that case are somewhat
14
compelling in that the attorneys who make a brief
15
appearance shouldn't be exposed to all of this.
16
Maybe their -- maybe the thought process was
17
something along the lines, well, we don't want to
18
put the attorneys through this. This should be
19
cut out right at the beginning.
20
THE COURT: Off the record for one second.
21
MR. KING: Yes.
22
(Discussion off the record.)
23
MR. RING: And I cited the Taylor case,
24
which was a Supreme Court of Idaho decision, which
25
discusses that issue and which shows that for
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those very reasons that I identified, lawyers
2
should have a greater opportunity to --
3
opportunity to seize upon immunity which would cut
4
off their liability early on. So whether it's a
5
qualified immunity or absolute immunity discussed
6
in that decision, whatever, perhaps that was
7
the -- a factor or although they don't cite to
8
Taylor, but maybe that's a factor in Wolfe.
9
THE COURT: I guess I understand your
10
position that you're taking in terms of in the
11
Wolfe context, because as I indicated to
12
Mr. Brewer during his argument, the court made it
13
a point to indicate the very brief involvement of
14
the Kenny Knachwalter firm. But since I did ask
15
my question off the record, I'll indicate what I
16
did ask was whether or not Mr. Epstein was
17
represented at all times material to the
18
allegations now made by Mr. Edwards. And Mr. King
19
has answered in the affirmative.
20
I'm having difficulty then with trying to
21
reconcile why the claim was only brought against
22
Mr. Epstein as opposed to his attorneys,
23
especially where the emphasis has been made quite
24
strongly that despite the settlements that went on
25
Epstein, essentially himself as related to the
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1
2
3
4
5
6
court, was the guiding influence here in
proceeding against Mr. Edwards in a -- for a --
for a time period that you believe is actionable.
NR. KING: Well, one response, without
going into the entire tortured history of
Mr. Epstein's actions and the various machinations
7
that he undertook, the initial complaint which
8
charged Mr. Edwards with all sorts of horrific
9
crimes -- fraud, perjury, conspiracy to commit
10
perjury, securities fraud, general fraud,
11
extorsion, all -- all specific crimes that were
12
alleged against him, the lawyers who were involved
13
in that case withdrew. They abandoned those
14
claims.
15
Well, we can't ask them why, but I submit
16
that what happens is the evolution of that case
17
then becomes a case involving merely -- I
18
shouldn't say merely abuse of process, abuse of
19
process. So one response is that's a situation
20
that -- that you -- that is sort of suggested by,
21
perhaps, the court in Wolfe and in desiring to
22
protecting lawyers who recognize what happened and
23
then get out of the case.
24
They realize that whatever they were told
25
by their client, and we submit that, for example,
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1
the attorneys would not necessarily know what
2
Mr. Epstein had in his mind. We know what Epstein
3
had in his mind because I have outlined somewhat
4
in the papers here the huge amount of evidence
5
accumulated by not only Mr. Edwards but the
6
federal government, by the state government which
7
showed that not only was -- did he abuse
8
Mr. Edwards' clients repeatedly from the time they
9
were 14 and 15 years old, he was abusing girls as
10
young as 12 years old. He was having -- he was
11
having orgies on his airplane, one of those
12
indications that they may have had reference to in
13
their papers and earlier made reference here about
14
why was discovery pursued by Mr. Edwards.
15
But they -- the lawyers are just not -- A,
16
they're not sued. That's not a situation that
17
we're facing here.
18
THE COURT: I know that.
19
MR. KING: And for the very reasons that
20
Taylor talks about, it's just unwise, it seems to
21
me, to pursue lawyers in a case where you may know
22
inside what's going on with Epstein and why he's
23
doing what he's doing.
24
And that's a fine line that the lawyers
25
have to face in every case; when do I step out?
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1
The original lawyers in this case did step out.
2
And those claims were all abandoned. And I think
3
that speaks volumes. All of that, of course, goes
4
in part to the issues of malicious prosecution,
5
which we would ultimately argue if I had to get
6
into those facts.
7
I hope that answers your question. I mean,
8
Epstein stands in our -- from our standpoint, in a
9
completely different position than the lawyers at
10
this stage of the proceedings despite the fact
11
that after he settles the claims he then continues
12
to pursue the allegations.
13
And to us, your review of the size of those
14
settlements would have an impact on all of the
15
issues, not on this particular issue that we're
16
talking about now. But if we had to get into
17
those facts and the court took a look at what
18
those settlements were in camera, then we would
19
believe that that would be -- that's a strong
20
indication that all of this stuff that he seized
21
upon, that Edwards seized upon
22
MR. BREWER: Excuse me, Your Honor. Motion
23
For Summary Judgment is supposed to be something
24
that is in evidence and in record and it's not.
25
THE COURT: Yeah, I have no plans on
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1
reviewing the size of the settlement amounts.
2
They don't phase me at all. And I -- I don't --
3
it seems since they agreed to be confidential, I
4
think we should respect that.
5
MR. RING: And I understand, and since
6
we're not even discussing these, and I may be
7
going further than what your concerns were about
8
the lawyer's involvement in the case and why they
9
wouldn't be sued in a case like this.
10
THE COURT: What I'm saying is I can
11
understand both sides' argument. But on the one
12
hand, it's interesting that the line of cases here
13
on this immunity issue often bears on the facts of
14
the cases. Meaning, the most repugnant they
15
take -- there's a more liberal approach. The
16
Wolfe case where the Kenny Knachwalter firm
17
abandoned the claims immediately, there's a more
18
conservative approach. And I tend to -- tended
19
tended to notice that while I was reviewing the
20
cases, which is understandable, certainly.
21
But the -- the -- what I said about both
22
sides is, yes, I can see in a situation where the
23
attorneys quickly abandoned the case there's the
24
indication that a claim would not lie. However,
25
where I -- where I have the representation made
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without controvert that Epstein was represented
2
throughout the process, so to speak, even after
3
the settlements were effectuated, but represented
4
nonetheless by counsel, I can also see the other
5
side where it could -- it could weaken the
6
argument that Epstein would be at the control so
7
to speak.
8
NR. KING: Well, it -- it's our position
9
that the mass of evidence which we have, some of
10
which I just outlined, reflects that Mr. Epstein
11
seized upon a convenient situation, the RRA
12
implosion, to use that as a sword against
13
Mr. Edwards. And it became -- it was personal
14
with him, and he knew that the allegations against
15
him by not only his own clients were true. And as
16
you know, ultimately, what happens is the
17
attorneys dismiss the case on the eve of the
18
Motion For Summary Judgment. And
19
Mr. Scarola corrects me. I wasn't in in
20
those the earlier stage, but he indicates that two
21
sets of lawyers got out.
22
THE COURT: That's okay. That's fine.
23
MR. KING: But in any event, then on the
24
eve of the summary judgment motion we submit that
25
the last set of lawyers gets out because -- they
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1
withdraw those claims or dismiss those claims
2
because they are faced with the knowledge that
3
they couldn't uncover one iota of evidence that
4
Mr. Edwards was guilty of anything. His name
5
never appeared in the public, in any public
6
documents were filed. They took his deposition
7
for days. They have never been able to uncover
8
one piece of evidence that would remotely suggest
9
that he was involved. So the bottom line is --
10
really probably have gone further than the
11
Court --
12
THE COURT: No, not at all.
13
MR. KING: -- and I apologize for that.
14
THE COURT: I just want to give you a
15
ten-minute warning now, but --
16
MR. KING: All right.
17
THE COURT: Don't these cases, though,
18
teach us that essentially no matter how repugnant
19
the judicial conduct process -- the conduct during
20
the judicial proceedings, I should say, no matter
21
how far repugnant the conduct during the judicial
22
proceedings may be, as long as they are within the
23
judicial proceeding there is this immunity that
24
exists, particularly for an abuse of process
25
claim?
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1
2
3
4
5
6
The malicious prosecution claim I am more
on the fence. But on, as far as the abuse of
process claim is concerned, and there's that
balancing that is taken into account that I
believe it's talked about primarily in the Levin
case about the full disclosure within the lawsuit
7
venue versus someone facing liability because of
g
what may be alleged in a complaint or during a
9
deposition or something along those lines. As
10
long as it's within the judicial proceeding, and,
11
again, no matter how repugnant it may be, is there
12
not this immunity afforded by the appellate courts
13
that would extend at least to the abuse of process
14
claim? And tell me, if not, why not, please.
15
NR. KING: We acknowledged in the memo that
16
both in the Third and the Fourth -- in the Fourth
17
in the American National Title Case, both applied
18
the doctrine to the abuse of process claim.
19
The full import of how far that will go
20
because each of those cases again involved
21
lawyers. But the question is: Will that in the
22
future -- because, again, that tort, abuse of
23
process, has been around a long time. But the
24
American National case was 1999. And also the
25
LatAm case, which was a precursor to Wolfe on that
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issue, the litigation privilege and the abuse as
it applied to the abuse of process, that case was
cited by Wolfe.
So you had -- you had some rational prongs
that Wolfe could latch onto in terms of the issue
of the application of litigation privilege to
7
abuse of process. And we would distinguish it
8
on
we would distinguish those cases based on
9
the fact that lawyers only were involved.
10
We would also maintain that that --
11
THE COURT: I guess, Mr. King, what it
12
comes down to is, shouldn't lawyers know better
13
than the litigants themselves? And, again, if --
14
I would be a bit more receptive to your argument
15
if I was told Epstein filed these documents
16
pro se. Because he is at least, you know, to a
17
degree an educated individual. He has a
18
background, I believe, in finance. So, you know,
19
there could be those facts that could be developed
20
within his educational purview, within his
21
experience purview, within his own personal
22
vendettas that he may have with Mr. Edwards.
23
But, again, shouldn't lawyers know better?
24
The lawyers are continuing this plight on behalf
25
their client. Why is Epstein the one who is the
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1
2
3
4
5
6
focal point of this abuse of process claim?
NR. KING: And, again, I would go back to
the role that lawyers have in walking that ethical
line, walking that legal line, walking the
line where they have to advance their client's
cause as best they can. And when it comes to that
7
point where they recognize that, no, these claims
8
are false, there's no basis for us to proceed,
9
then they get out.
10
And now, as I'm advised, two firms did that
11
before. The last firm came in and dropped
12
their -- dropped those claims on the eve of
13
summary judgment.
14
So one, to me, as -- I shouldn't say that.
15
To -- to Mr. Edwards in this particular case we
16
see a clear distinction. And that distinction is
17
you don't go after the lawyers for these claims if
18
you recognize that there is a -- that they have
19
acted within the bounds of arguably of their
20
ethical responsibilities and legal
21
responsibilities to their client. They have to
22
zealously advocate for him. But that doesn't
23
excuse him. That doesn't excuse an individual who
24
over all those years were committing those heinous
25
acts against not only Mr. Edwards' clients, but
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many, many others.
2
THE COURT: But those heinous acts as have
3
you communicated, and I won't take a position one
4
way or the other on the acts, but I'm just picking
5
up on what you just said, but they have nothing to
6
do with this case itself on the claims of abuse of
7
process and malicious prosecution. They just
8
simply don't. I mean, you may suggest to me that
9
they have something to do with them from the
10
standpoint of Epstein's dissatisfaction with the
11
settlement or whatever may have been attributed to
12
that, but they really have nothing to do with
13
these claims.
14
NR. KING: Well, with the litigation
15
privilege I will acknowledge other than what I
16
have already argued the situation was different
17
wherein, in, for example, Wolfe he had the brief
18
appearance by the lawyer and Judge, it was
19
Judge Shepherd, in his concurring opinion, didn't
20
embrace that. What he said was, Look, there's two
21
elements, and malicious prosecution doesn't even
22
exist here. Let's get rid of it.
23
THE COURT: Right.
24
MR. KING: I would just suggest that the
25
facts that I have outlined, and which we have in
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all of the materials that we submitted to you, all
2
of those facts are -- they -- they do go to the
3
other issues that you aren't addressing here; the
4
factual issues on good faith and the factual
5
issues on bona fide termination.
6
And so with that reservation, I would
7
suggest that the only other reason why these facts
8
are so significant is because anybody sitting -- a
9
court sitting back and looking at the landscape
10
here would have to ask themselves, look, in light
11
of -- for example, Judge Sasser's opinion, and the
12
reasons why we have malicious prosecution claims
13
and why they would survive is because of something
14
just like this. And I'm getting back to the
15
litigation privilege and malicious prosecution.
16
I really have ended my comments on that but
17
I just wanted to address your concerns about why
18
all of these facts might impact.
19
THE COURT: No. Go right ahead.
20
MR. KING: And those facts impact because
21
what it does is it cries out and it shows you that
22
this is why a malicious prosecution claim should
23
survive the litigation privilege. When you have a
24
torrent of evidence that he's comitted these acts
25
and that he knows that the attorney for those
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clients has acted appropriately and at every stage
2
he was involved before he ever got associated --
3
before Mr. Edwards ever got associated with RRA
4
and he continued them on after he did it.
5
He does pro bono work for clients, as you
6
know, in the federal case. He knows that.
7
Epstein knows that. And that's why the facts are
g
important to malicious prosecution claims because,
9
as Judge Sasser says, the idea here, the concept
10
here on a malicious prosecution claim is, this
11
is -- this is the kind -- this is why the
12
privilege shouldn't apply, because the vexatious
13
prosecution of a claim is something that the law
14
will recognize.
15
And everything that we have put into the
16
record about Epstein's involvement shows that this
17
use of that lawsuit was a pretext. And that he
18
had every evil motive in the world to pursue these
19
claims and continue those claims after Mr. Edwards
20
settled those claims -- Mr. Epstein settled those
21
claims.
22
So my only other comments is to try to
23
address your concerns vis-a-vis the issue of abuse
24
of process. That's more difficult. It's more
25
difficult because we have the Fourth's opinion and
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the Third's precursor opinion, so it
it
it
2
clearly is problematic.
3
We our -- our position on it is essentially
4
this: Judge Corrigan in his opinion in the case
5
that I cited says the privilege shouldn't apply
6
either. Then you have what we submit are
7
egregious facts which should -- including a
8
settlement and he continued prosecution
9
afterwards, which we submit it is going to be
10
the light's going to go off and say, Whoa, wait a
11
minute, we can't -- we can't count this the
12
application of privilege in the context of these
13
facts. Your concerns are legitimate and well
14
expressed. No matter how egregious the facts,
15
perhaps that won't make a difference to the
16
application of the privilege to -- to an abuse of
17
process claim, perhaps.
18
But we submit for the reasons that we have
19
identified that the litigation privilege should
20
equally not apply to the abuse of process claim
21
for those reasons.
22
THE COURT: Malicious prosecution.
23
MR. KING: Okay. Well, certainly to
24
malicious prosecution. But also your last
25
concern --
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2
3
4
5
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THE COURT: Your position is I think it
does apply to abuse of process.
MR. BREWER: Right.
MR. KING: But certainly not malicious
prosecution for the reasons that are
well-articulated by Judge Sasser and others. And
7
with regard to the reasons I've just expressed to
8
the abuse of process claim.
9
And make sure I didn't miss anything --
10
THE COURT: Three minutes to wrap up.
11
MR. SCAROLA: And I'm going to use two of
12
them, if I may, Your Honor.
13
THE COURT: Any objection?
14
MR. BREWER: Yes, Your Honor. They're not
15
allowed to split. This is not, you know, a
16
rebuttal on their part.
17
THE COURT: I agree.
18
MR. BREWER: So they're not allowed to
19
split it.
20
MR. SCAROLA: May I have just a moment?
21
THE COURT: Absolutely. Take your time.
22
But I do believe that protocol would dictate only
23
one attorney speak to the issues.
24
MR. KING: Right.
25
THE COURT: Thank you.
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I have Judge Sasser's opinion. I have it
2
right here or, I should say, her order as opposed
3
to the opinion.
4
NR. KING: All right. You have that. And
5
just to wrap up then, Judge, with regard to the
6
comments in Levin about the other -- the
7
availability of other remedies that are -- that
8
would exist against attorneys if the -- you know,
9
if the privilege were not applied to the attorneys
10
as in Levin, there are a myriad that the court
11
has. Much more difficult when it comes to an
12
individual. And I -- I think there was one other
13
comment made. Let me just double-check my notes.
14
Counsel had referenced the abuse of process
15
claim and whether the facts support the abuse of
16
process claim. We submit from that standpoint
17
they do. We've satisfied all of the elements.
18
They -- they -- and the last comment I'll
19
make here is their focus was you can't have an
20
abuse of process claim based upon the pursuit of
21
all of these actions that were taken during the
22
course of the proceedings. And we submit that
23
under the circumstances of this case, where this
24
claim was commenced against Mr. Edwards during the
25
course of his prosecution of the underlying claims
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1
and while multiple other claims were being pursued
2
against him, that under those circumstances the
3
abuse of process claim does survive a challenge to
4
whether or not we have satisfied the elements.
5
The process that's involved in the abuse of
6
process claim is the lawsuit. The subsequent
7
actions that all of the cases talk about are, in
8
our case, the pursuit of all of those efforts
9
during the course of the -- of that case. And
10
they were all done for an ulterior motive. We've
11
satisfied those elements.
12
I don't have the time to get into all of
13
the facts. I tried to give you the essence of
14
what we had by citing to the statement of
15
undisputed facts, Mr. Edwards' affidavit, the
16
materials relating to the filing of our motion for
17
punitive damages which was granted. We gave you
18
the depositions because, unfortunately, to really
19
grasp the entire background on this, you almost
20
have to read the entire depos. I tried
21
highlighting and pulling them out for you, but I
22
couldn't really do that. So I apologize.
23
THE COURT: No, that's okay.
24
MR. KING: But that would end my argument.
25
I appreciate your courtesy.
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THE COURT: Thank you and Mr. Brewer for
2
your --
3
MR. BREWER: A few moments, Your Honor?
4
THE COURT: Sure.
5
MR. BREWER: I forgot to ask you if I could
6
address you from the chair here rather than the
7
podium.
8
THE COURT: That's fine.
9
No, I wanted to thank Mr. King and
10
Mr. Brewer for their initial arguments, and I
11
appreciate very much the professional.
12
eft. BREWER: Your Honor, you seemed to be a
13
little bit more troubled with regard to the
14
malicious prosecution aspects here. I'd like to
15
point out to you that in the case, the Wolfe case,
16
specifically they stated "because the law is clear
17
that the litigation privilege applies to abuse of
18
process, we affirm the trial court's order
19
granting judgment on the pleadings in favor of the
20
defendants below as to that cause of action.
21
Although the law is not as clear whether the
22
litigation privilege also applies for the cause of
23
action for malicious prosecution, we conclude that
24
it does and affirm the trial court's order finding
25
that the litigation privilege also applies to a
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1
cause of action for malicious prosecution."
2
That was actually the issue before them
3
because it had already been determined that the
4
litigation privilege applied to the abuse of
5
process in both the Third and the Fourth District
6
Courts of Appeal. That's admitted by
7
the counterclaim in their motion in opposition.
g
I wanted to speak about this idea that the
9
worst -- the actions were of Mr. Epstein and/or
10
his attorneys that somehow or another there's a
11
sliding scale. And if you worked longer on the
12
case, or if you put in more pleadings or whatever,
13
that somehow or another that would have an effect.
14
That's not something that I have seen
15
anyway in the trilogy of cases. In fact, what is
16
said in the trilogy of cases is if the litigation
17
privilege applies, it's an absolute privilege.
18
Absolute.
19
The Olson vs. Johnson was mentioned to you
20
to say that to indicate that the -- that malicious
21
prosecution can still survive and exist. And, in
22
fact, the Olson case, which was a case in which
23
three ladies accused this guy of stalking, filed a
24
false police report. The guy got arrested.
25
Actually, I think -- I'm not sure if he went to
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1
2
trial, but he was able to establish that he was
six miles away at the time of the alleged
3
stalking. And the ladies just lied to get him in
4
trouble.
5
The Olson case was addressed in the Wolfe
6
case, and it said, Wait a minute, that is -- a
7
cause of action for malicious prosecution will
8
stand there because that was an action that was
9
taken outside of the judicial process.
10
THE COURT: And that -- and that's, you
11
know, where, you know, I'll ask Mr. King to
12
briefly address this as well. But, you know, the
13
dilemma the court has here is the language that is
14
reaffirmed in Wolfe and extracted from the
15
Echevarria matter from the Florida Supreme Court.
16
And they quoted and say that Echevarria reaffirmed
17
the proposition -- and I'm using my own words by
18
saying "the proposition" -- that, quote, absolute
19
immunity must be afforded to any act occurring
20
during the course of a judicial proceeding so long
21
as the act has some relation to the proceeding.
22
And they clarify that although not all statements
23
made outside of the formal judicial process are
24
protected by the litigation privilege, an absolute
25
immunity applies to conduct occurring during the
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course of the proceedings.
2
So that seems to tell me that if Epstein is
3
filing a complaint, if Epstein is seeking
4
discovery, if Epstein is making obnoxious
5
allegations against Edwards -- and I'm, again, not
6
taking a position one side or the other, that's
7
why I'm using the word "if" to preface all of my
8
commentary, as long as it has some relation to the
9
proceeding -- it is afforded absolute immunity.
10
If you're sitting in my shoes, Mr. Brewer,
11
or better yet sitting in Mr. Edwards' shoes, what
12
would be his best argument to defeat your motion
13
on malicious prosecution?
14
MR. BREWER: I don't know that they have
15
one, Your Honor, in light of Wolfe. Not at this
16
level.
17
THE COURT: Is there anything that you can
18
fathom as an officer of the Court that they are
19
claiming Epstein did in either the abuse of
20
process or the malicious prosecution claim -- and
21
as I said, I'm more concerned with the malicious
22
prosecution claim -- that Epstein did outside of
23
the judicial proceedings? Is there anything
24
alleged here that he did outside of the judicial
25
proceeding, such as -- I saw in the damages
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portion of the argument made by the Edwards side,
2
and I think it may have had some relation to
3
Judge Crow's questions about damages relating to
4
Mr. Edwards -- but I saw that there were
5
some --that -- that Mr. Edwards felt there was
6
some threat to his or -- to him and his family.
7
Has there been any such threats made to your
8
knowledge by Mr. Epstein that would have gone to
9
him or his family?
10
MR. BREWER: Your Honor, I'm late to the
11
game. I was not a participant or counsel here
12
until, oh, probably three or four months ago. I
13
have done my best to familiarize myself in what
14
has gone on prior, but it's voluminous. And so I
15
can't swear to you that I've read everything or
16
seen everything. I, however, have no knowledge of
17
Mr. Epstein making any threats to -- towards
18
Mr. Edwards.
19
THE COURT: I'm just using that as an
20
example.
21
MR. BREWER: Well, I don't have any
22
knowledge of him making threats to Mr. Edwards or
23
to his family.
24
THE COURT: Anything outside of the
25
judicial proceeding as potentially or allegedly
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obnoxious? And as Mr. King brought out earlier
2
the allegations being horrifying, egregious, no
3
matter how you might identify those allegations
4
that were quickly withdrawn, anything that you're
5
aware of that went on outside of the judicial
6
process that is being alleged here?
7
MR. BREWER: Not that is being alleged
8
here, Your Honor, no.
9
THE COURT: Mr. King, anything that's being
10
alleged here that goes outside of the broad
11
spectrum that I have read into the record that has
12
its genesis in Echevarria and was quoted by the
13
Wolfe Third District Court of Appeal opinion?
14
MR. KING: There's nothing alleged.
15
Mr. Edwards' testimony, though, was that he was
16
being stalked by an investigator which gave him
17
the additional concern. But that's not
18
specifically alleged as a matter that, you know,
19
that forms the basis for the malicious prosecution
20
or the abuse of process claim. It's not
21
specifically set forth in the pleadings.
22
THE COURT: How do I get around this
23
Echevarria language? Again, I recognize what's
24
gone on here, but personal empathy doesn't have
25
any part in a courtroom. It just doesn't and
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1
shouldn't. I ruled in your favor and I've ruled
2
against you. I've ruled in Mr. Goldberger's
3
favor; I've ruled against him. I've ruled in
4
favor of Mr. Edwards' claims and contentions; I've
5
ruled against him.
6
But I'm just having difficulty coming away
7
from the reaffirmation of the Florida Supreme
8
Court's blanket statement here that absent extra
9
judicial activity, everything that is occurring
10
during the course of a judicial proceeding, so
11
long as the act has some relation to the
12
proceeding, is subject to absolute immunity.
13
NR. KING: If I may?
14
THE COURT: Absolutely.
15
MR. KING: Levin -- neither Levin nor
16
Echevarria dealt with the malicious prosecution
17
claim, which is really what I'm going to focus on
18
now.
19
THE COURT: But now I'm dealing with --
20
and, again, forgive me for interrupting, but just
21
to make clear the precedential value that I have
22
to ascribe to Wolfe, and as you indicated, the
23
Fourth in its case seems to, at least from the
24
abuse of process part of the matter, align itself
25
with that same side. The Third District Court of
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1
2
3
4
5
6
Appeal is an appellate court that I must follow
unless there's a specific ruling to the contrary
by the Fourth District Court of Appeal. And the
Third is crystal clear in its analysis.
Whether you or I agree with it is not for
me to say. But its analysis is abundantly clear
7
and it, again, reaffirms the Supreme Court
g
language that talks about where we're within the
9
judicial proceeding, as repugnant as it may be, as
10
long as it bears relation, some relation, just let
11
this be the rather broad language utilized by the
12
Supreme Court of Florida, absent extrajudicial
13
process -- extrajudicial actions, better stated,
14
I'm left with this legal analysis while cogent,
15
it's clear, while short it's clear.
16
MR. KING: But that is why all of the
17
positions that I have articulated that would
18
suggest that Levin nor Echevarria would apply to a
19
malicious prosecution claim because it is
20
distinctly different from the nature of -- just as
21
Judge Sasser says, "It's not something that is
22
going on during the course of proceedings. It's
23
the proceeding itself."
24
Now that's what Wolfe -- Wolfe takes the
25
position otherwise. It says, Well, that -- that
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clearly falls within the privilege.
THE COURT: And Wolfe is the binding
precedent. With all due respect to my suite mate,
she's not. And, you know, as a fellow circuit
court judge, again, her opinion is meticulous and
well-written, but it flies in the face of
7
precedential value here, and that is the Wolfe
8
case that ties the bow, so to speak, around the
9
malicious prosecution case.
10
Where there may have been before something
11
to hang one's hat on, the probable cause issue, as
12
I described before, clearly a factual issue.
13
Whether the case ended in a bona fide termination
14
in favor of Mr. Edwards, subject certainly to
15
factual review. But that -- but the elements are
16
taken away from us, in my view, from a trial
17
court's decision-making and we're left with the
18
global analysis that was rendered by the Third
19
District Court Of Appeal.
20
And the bow is tied to include malicious
21
prosecution cases as long as those actions, as
22
alleged and conceded by you, and I appreciate
23
incredibly the concession, but as conceded that
24
all of the allegations contained in the operative
25
Fourth Amended Complaint relate to the judicial
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proceeding in some form.
2
NR. KING: If I may, Judge, just a final
3
conclusionary remark?
4
THE COURT: Absolutely. Please.
5
MR. KING: I would harken back to the
6
impact of Olson, which even though it does not
7
deal with a post-civil complaint issue such as you
g
have here, the language of the opinion is the
9
litigation privilege does not apply to malicious
10
prosecution. There is
we submit that that set,
11
forth at least a conflict on that issue that
12
allows you to then peruse all of the issues that I
13
discussed.
14
THE COURT: Let me look at that Olson case
15
specifically, please.
16
MR. BRENER: I have a copy here if you
17
would like, Your Honor.
18
THE COURT: No. You have both done an
19
excellent job in tabbing all of these materials,
20
and I want to again compliment both sides on their
21
presentations and their performance as well as
22
well presentations. It's extremely gratifying,
23
especially when I've had I think 14 hearings in
24
addition to the 8:45s today to see the kind of
25
advocacy that I'm seeing here at this hearing.
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But I will take a quick look at that Tab 16 that I
have. Thank you.
The Olson case that is cited in, and I've
read somewhat quickly, but I believe I've picked
up the genesis. And the import of the opinion
6
deals with prelitigation statements made by an
7
individual who is accusing Olson of stalking. And
8
the court distinguished that claim privilege from
9
a defamation case that was addressed in a case
10
called Fridovich vs. Fridovich, 598 Sold. 65,
11
Florida Supreme Court case 1992, in which the
12
Supreme Court was presented with a certified
13
question of whether a person who makes statements
14
to law enforcement about another individual prior
15
to the instigation of judicial proceedings.
16
And that is important here I think in our
17
review of the case since those statements that
18
were made allegedly by the accuser in Olson were
19
made prior to the instigation of judicial
20
proceedings and whether those statements were
21
protected by an absolute privilege for liability
22
against defamation, and the court held that
23
defamatory statements voluntarily made by private
24
individuals to the police or to the State's
25
Attorney's Office before institution of criminal
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charges are presumptively qualifiedly privileged.
2
And such voluntary statements are treated
3
differently than statements made under the State
4
Attorney's investigatory subpoena, which are
5
encompassed within a judicial proceeding and thus
6
are absolutely privileged.
7
So there is that distinguishing
8
characteristic here as well. And, again, the
9
issue was met head on by Wolfe. It was not
10
discussed in the Olson case, respectfully, that
11
can gather here. So based on the Third District
12
Court's decisions in Wolfe quoting in large part
13
from the Florida Supreme Court's decision in
14
Echevarria, whereas here all of the allegations
15
made in both the abuse of process claim and the
16
malicious prosecution claim, as conceded by the
17
Edwards side, are acts occurring during the course
18
of a judicial proceeding and bear some relation to
19
the proceeding, the Court has no other alternative
20
than to grant the motion on both counts.
21
MR. BREWER: Your Honor, I have prepared an
22
order which I think fairly closely -- it does not
23
have in it about the conceding the points, but it
24
does grant the motion based upon the cases that
25
you have just indicated.
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THE COURT: I would ask you to kindly go
2
ahead and order the transcript and track the
3
language that I have tried to utilize here
4
distinguishing Olson, as well in following the
5
Supreme Court's directive in Echevarria and the
6
Third District Court of Appeal dictates in the
7
Wolfe case.
8
MR. BREWER: Yes, Your Honor.
9
THE COURT: That's the cornerstone of the
10
Court's decision.
11
Again, thank you all very, very much for
12
your input and your professionalism and your
13
arguments. No one could have done a better job on
14
both sides. So thank you very much.
15
MR. BREWER: Thank you, Your Honor.
16
THE COURT: Thank you, Madam Court
17
Reporter.
18
THE COURT REPORTER: Thank you, Your Honor.
19
(Thereupon, the proceedings were concluded
20
at 4:23 p.m.)
21
22
23
24
25
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COURT CERTIFICATE
2
3
4
STATE OF FLORIDA
5
COUNTY OF PALM BEACH )
6
7
62
8
I, Robyn Maxwell, Registered Professional
9
Court Reporter, State of Florida at Large, certify that I
10
was authorized to and did stenographically report the
11
foregoing proceedings and that the transcript is a true
12
and complete record of my stenographic notes.
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
Dated this 29th day of January, 2014.
RO=Y'' MA WE L, RPR, FPR, CLR
REALTIME SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATORS'
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| Filename | EFTA00607688.pdf |
| File Size | 4261.5 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 118,102 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T23:02:09.571417 |