Following a tragic collision between a delivery truck owned by Valley Coca-Cola Bottling Company and a school bus that resulted in numerous fatalities, the truck's driver, Ruben Perez, became the focus of both civil exposure and a potential criminal investigation. Shortly after the accident, the law firm Kirk & Carrigan, retained to represent the company, contacted Perez. According to Perez's summary-judgment evidence, the attorneys met with him (including at the hospital), gave him their business cards, instructed him not to speak with others about the accident, and assured him that they were acting as his attorneys as well or, at minimum, that any statements he provided would be kept confidential and used for legal purposes. Relying on these assurances, Perez provided the lawyers a detailed, recorded statement about the accident. Later, without Perez's consent and despite their assurances, the lawyers furnished the statement to the district attorney, which contributed to Perez's criminal indictment. Perez then sued Kirk & Carrigan for, among other things, breach of fiduciary duty, negligence/malpractice, fraud, and violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices–Consumer Protection Act (DTPA), alleging that the attorneys had formed an attorney–client relationship with him (or at least owed him duties of confidentiality) and wrongfully disclosed his privileged communications. The trial court granted summary judgment for the law firm, and Perez appealed.
Can an attorney–client relationship—and the attendant duties of loyalty and confidentiality—arise by implication between corporate counsel and a company employee based on the attorneys' assurances and conduct, and if so, does voluntarily disclosing the employee's confidential statement to a prosecutor bar summary judgment for the attorneys on claims such as breach of fiduciary duty and negligence?
In Texas, an attorney–client relationship may be established by an express or implied contract; no formal retainer or fee agreement is necessary. The relationship turns on the parties' conduct and the putative client's reasonable belief that the attorney is acting as his lawyer, coupled with the attorney's manifestations and assurances. Once formed, the relationship imposes fiduciary duties on the attorney, including the duty of loyalty and the duty to preserve client confidences. Communications made for the purpose of obtaining or facilitating legal advice are protected by the attorney–client privilege and may not be disclosed without the client's informed consent, absent a recognized exception. While Texas recognizes certain privileges and immunities for attorneys in the context of judicial proceedings, those protections do not confer categorical immunity for extra-judicial, voluntary disclosures to third parties that breach fiduciary duties or the attorney–client privilege. Summary judgment is improper where evidence raises a genuine issue of material fact on the existence of an attorney–client relationship, breach, causation, or damages.
The court of appeals reversed the trial court's summary judgment for Kirk & Carrigan and remanded. Evidence created a fact issue as to whether an implied attorney–client relationship existed between the attorneys and Perez, whether the lawyers breached duties of loyalty and confidentiality by disclosing his statement to the district attorney, and whether any privileges or immunities shielded that conduct as a matter of law.
The court emphasized that the existence of an attorney–client relationship is determined by the parties' conduct and the client's reasonable belief, not merely by the lawyer's internal identification of the client. Perez produced summary-judgment evidence that the lawyers told him they were his attorneys (or acted as if they were), cautioned him against speaking with others, and assured him his statement would remain confidential. From these facts, a jury could reasonably find an implied attorney–client relationship or, minimally, a fiduciary relationship imposing duties of confidentiality. That sufficed to defeat summary judgment on formation of the relationship and breach. The court further reasoned that, if Perez was a client, the attorneys' unilateral disclosure of his recorded statement to the district attorney without his consent could constitute a breach of the attorney–client privilege and fiduciary duty. The privilege belongs to the client and cannot be waived by the attorney. The firm's arguments that their disclosure was protected by an absolute privilege or attorney immunity failed at the summary-judgment stage because the disclosure occurred outside a judicial proceeding and was voluntarily made to a prosecutorial authority, not as part of advocacy in litigation; thus, the asserted privileges did not categorically foreclose liability. Finally, disputed issues remained as to causation and damages, including whether the disclosure contributed to Perez's indictment and the harms he alleged (such as legal expenses, reputational damage, and emotional distress). These fact disputes precluded summary judgment.
Perez is a leading case on implied attorney–client relationships, attorney confidentiality, and corporate-counsel practice. It teaches that corporate attorneys interviewing employees after an incident must provide clear Upjohn warnings—identifying the organization as the client, explaining that the lawyer does not represent the employee personally, and clarifying that the company controls the privilege and may disclose the employee's statements. Assurances of confidentiality or suggestions of personal representation can create fiduciary duties and privilege in favor of the employee, exposing counsel and the firm to malpractice and breach-of-duty claims if confidences are later revealed. The case also signals the limits of attorney immunity for extra-judicial conduct, especially voluntary disclosures to third parties that are not necessary to the representation of the organizational client.
Perez v. Kirk & Carrigan stands as a powerful reminder that an attorney–client relationship is grounded in conduct and reasonable expectations, not formalities. Corporate lawyers who imply personal representation or promise confidentiality to employees can inadvertently create fiduciary duties and privileges that constrain disclosure and expose counsel to malpractice and breach-of-duty claims.