The no-holds-barred litigation between the Republic of Argentina
and several distressed debt hedge funds that refused to
participate in the country's sovereign debt restructurings has
thrown a secondary spotlight on Argentina's lawyers from Cleary
Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton. As my Reuters colleague Andrew
Longstreth reported last month, Cleary has a solid hold on the
niche practice of representing countries that can't (or won't) pay their debts, which often puts the firm at odds with
resourceful hedge fund adversaries that have obtained judgments
against Cleary's sovereign clients. How resourceful? Extremely.
You've probably heard about Elliott Capital's seizure of an
Argentine naval vessel in Ghana, and, on a less piratical note,
of Elliott and Aurelius Capital's shrewd -- and successful --
argument that the pari passu clause in old Argentine debt
contracts bars the country from paying bondholders who
participated in restructurings before it pays holdouts like
them.
Late last month, with the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals
poised to hear arguments on an injunction that would enforce the
court's previous ruling on the pari passu clause, the hedge
funds took a direct shot at Cleary. Lawyers for Aurelius and the
Elliott subsidiary NML Capital filed a motion to compel the law
firm to comply with subpoenas demanding information on a
supposed plan by Argentina to evade the court order entered by
U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa in November, which effectively
enjoined Argentina from making $3 billion in scheduled payments
to exchange bondholders without paying hedge fund holdouts. The
2nd Circuit subsequently stayed the injunction, and Argentina
made the scheduled payments to exchange bondholders in December,
without paying holdouts. But the hedge funds meanwhile claimed
that the sovereign is plotting a scheme to continue paying
exchange bondholders even if the appeals court eventually
upholds the injunction. Lawyers at Dechert (for NML) and
Friedman Kaplan Seiler & Adelman (for Aurelius) argued that the
funds are entitled to any Cleary materials related to
Argentina's "actions or plans, whether or not consummated, to
evade or diminish the effect" of Griesa's orders.
Cleary's actions, the hedge funds asserted, implied that the
law firm possesses such documents, or, at least, undocumented
information about Argentina's plans. According to the brief,
when hedge fund lawyers met last month with Argentina counsel
Carmine Boccuzzi of Cleary, he said he would send a letter
confirming that the firm did not have material covered by the
subpoena. But the letter Boccuzzi ended up sending, according to
the brief, didn't expressly avow that Cleary has no documents,
instead raising attorney-client privilege and other objections
to the subpoena. "An inference must be drawn that Argentina is,
at a minimum, drawing up plans to violate (Griesa's) orders if
they are affirmed, and that Cleary has participated in such
efforts," the brief said. Even if the relevant documents were
privileged, the hedge funds said, Cleary would have to turn them
over under the crime fraud exception, which applies to
violations of court orders.
Cleary filed its response Thursday -- and in it the firm
said flatly that it does not have any relevant documents. "There
is no scheme to 'evade' (Griesa's) order, and accordingly,
Cleary Gottlieb is not in possession, custody or control of
documents or information concerning any such purported evasion,"
the brief said. "That fact, which was explained to plaintiffs'
counsel during the parties' meet and confer, should have been
sufficient to end the matter, but has not."
Moreover, according to Cleary, Griesa doesn't even have
jurisdiction over the discovery dispute. Since the 2nd Circuit
has agreed to hear Argentina's appeal of Griesa's pari passu
injunction, Cleary said, the entire matter is before the appeals
court, not the trial judge. And by making their "improper"
demand for information from the law firm, Cleary argued the
hedge funds had ventured "into an area frowned upon by courts
because it raises particular concern for the adversary system
and the attorney-client relationship." As Cleary's brief notes,
courts rarely grant discovery against one side's lawyers. The
hedge funds' "baseless speculation" in this case certainly does
not justify their extraordinary demand, the firm said.
Judge Griesa, however, has at least temporary control over
enforcement of the hedge fund subpoenas (which were issued to
bond trustee Bank of New York Mellon and a gaggle of exchange
bondholders, as well as Cleary). That's troubling for Argentina
and its lawyers, considering the judge's on-the-record suspicion
that the sovereign intends to defy court orders. (I emailed
Cleary partner Boccuzzi for comment but didn't hear back.)
The hedge funds are expected to file their response to
Argentina early next week, and briefing on Cleary's subpoena
should be completed by mid-January.
(Reporting by Alison Frankel)
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