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A sign at Dewey and LeBoeuf headquarters, file. REUTERS Shannon Stapleton

Former partner says Citibank hid Dewey's financial state

2/27/2013 COMMENTS (0)

By Casey Sullivan 

Feb 26 (Reuters) - A former partner at the defunct law firm Dewey & LeBoeuf has accused Citibank of encouraging him to sign up for a loan to fund his stake in Dewey while hiding the law firm's precarious financial state.

The former partner, Steven Otillar, filed his claim in federal court in New York on Tuesday in response to a lawsuit in May in which Citibank accused him and his wife of defaulting on the $209,000 loan.

In the 29-page counterclaim, Otillar's lawyer, Helen Davis Chaitman, said internal Citibank documents revealed the bank knew Dewey had misreported its 2010 financial information to the legal magazine American Lawyer.

A Citibank spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday. Neither did a lawyer for Citibank.

According to the lawsuit, Citibank's internal records indicated that Dewey's revenue in 2010 was $759 million, some $150 million less than the $910 million Dewey reported to the American Lawyer.

Citibank's records also revealed that Dewey's revenue per partner was $707,000, when the firm reported a figure of $870,000 to American Lawyer, the lawsuit said.

Had Citibank disclosed the facts it knew about Dewey's financial condition, Otillar would not have executed the loan when he joined Dewey from Baker & Mackenzie, it said.

The lawsuit also argued that Citibank had a fiduciary duty to disclose the information it had about Dewey's financial condition when it gave him the loan in September 2011.

In court papers last September, Citibank said it owed no such duty to Otillar and that he "offers only his speculation that because Citibank was Dewey's longtime lender, it must have had information that was unknown and unavailable to Otillar."

Chaitman said Otillar does not owe Citibank payment on the $209,000 loan and demanded punitive damages to be determined at a potential jury trial.

The case is before Judge Louis Stanton in federal court in New York.

Dewey once employed more than 1,000 lawyers in 26 offices worldwide. It filed for bankruptcy in May 2012 in a collapse that has largely been attributed to compensation guarantees the firm gave to some of its partners.

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