Anheluk v. Kubik

374 N.W.2d 67, 28 Educ. L. Rep. 573, 1985 N.D. LEXIS 386
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1985
DocketCiv. 10900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 374 N.W.2d 67 (Anheluk v. Kubik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anheluk v. Kubik, 374 N.W.2d 67, 28 Educ. L. Rep. 573, 1985 N.D. LEXIS 386 (N.D. 1985).

Opinion

GIERKE, Justice.

Joseph H. Kubik appeals from a county court judgment in the amount of $2,383.99 in a contract action for court reporting services rendered by Richard D. Anheluk. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

The underlying action in which Anheluk rendered court reporting services was a quiet title and slander of title action entitled Anderson Petroleum, Inc. v. John P. and Darlene V. Sikorski and was filed in the Southwest Judicial District of North Dakota. The Sikorskis had retained John B. Stone of Denver, Colorado, to defend them in the action, and Stone contacted Kubik to act as resident counsel for the action. During the course of that action, pretrial depositions of the Sikorskis were taken by Anheluk in April 1982, at Dickinson, North Dakota. Anheluk was aware that several depositions in that case were scheduled to be taken on May 14, 1982, in Denver, Colorado, and he approached Ku-bik and requested that Kubik consider using him as the court reporter for those depositions because he wanted to go to Denver on a vacation and he was willing to do the depositions for the standard reporting fees without charging traveling expenses. Kubik contacted Stone and they *68 agreed that Anheluk would take the Denver depositions. Kubik’s office notified Anheluk that he could take the Denver depositions. Anheluk subsequently provided court reporting services for those depositions and billed Stone $815.90 for his services.

In April 1983, the Anderson Petroleum, Inc. v. Sikorski case came to trial. During the course of the trial, John Sikorski became ill and informed the court that he was unable to continue with the trial as scheduled. The court granted a continuance and also ordered sua sponte that John Sikor-ski’s deposition be taken in order to preserve evidence for trial and that Sikorski be responsible for the costs incurred in taking the deposition. Counsel for Anderson Petroleum served Kubik with a Notice of Deposition and arranged to have Anheluk take the deposition. Sikorski’s deposition was taken by Anheluk on June 1 and 2, 1983, in Dickinson, North Dakota, and An-heluk billed Kubik $1264.65 for that deposition. The Sikorskis subsequently went through bankruptcy and the bills for the May 1982 depositions in Denver and Sikor-ski’s June 1983 deposition were not paid.

Anheluk then commenced the instant action against Kubik in small claims court, and Kubik removed it to county court. After a bench trial, the county court ordered judgment against Kubik for Sikorski’s June 1983 deposition and dismissed Anheluk’s claim for services rendered for the Denver depositions. Anheluk filed a motion to reconsider his claim for the May 1982 deposition, and the court, after noting that Kubik had failed to resist Anheluk’s motion, 1 granted Anheluk’s claim for the May 1982 depositions. Judgment was entered against Kubik in the amount of $2383.99 for the costs of the May 1982 and June 1983 depositions.

The underlying issue raised by this appeal is whether an attorney or the client is liable for court reporter costs incurred in the course of a lawsuit.

The county court followed the rule that an attorney is personally liable to third parties for litigation expenses unless the attorney expressly and specifically disclaims liability for those expenses in advance of or prior to the services being rendered.

Kubik contends that the county court erred in following this rule of law and should have followed general agency law that an attorney, as an agent of the client, is not personally liable on contracts made for the disclosed principal, in the absence of an express agreement by the attorney to be bound.

Anheluk contends that the county court correctly applied the better rule that an attorney is liable for litigation expenses unless he specifically disclaims responsibility for those expenses.

The question of an attorney’s personal liability for services obtained in aid of litigation for a named client absent an express agreement on the subject has been considered in other jurisdictions and there exists a split of authority as to the proper resolution of this issue. See Annot., 15 A.L.R.3d 531 (1967). Some jurisdictions refuse to hold the attorney personally liable on the general agency rule that an agent, the attorney, who is acting for a disclosed principal, the named client, should not be liable for services contracted on behalf of the client. See Annot., supra, § 3, pp. 536-538.

Other jurisdictions have modified this rule of agency and concluded that, in the absence of an express disclaimer of responsibility, an attorney requesting services in connection with litigation is treated as a *69 principal and held personally liable for expenses for those services. See Annot., supra, § 4, pp. 538-540. The rationale underlying this rule is that the attorney-client relationship differs from the general agency relationship because the attorney-client relationship is subject to an established code of professional responsibility governing members of the Bar, and the attorney, not the client, is in charge of the litigation and determines the services necessary to promote the best interests of the litigation. See Judd & Detweiler v. Gittings, 43 App.D.C. 304 (1915); Molezzo Reporters v. Patt, 94 Nev. 540, 579 P.2d 1243 (1978); Burt v. Gahan, 351 Mass. 340, 220 N.E.2d 817 (1966); Monick v. Melnicoff, 144 A.2d 381 (D.C.Mun.App.1958); Roberts, Walsh & Co. v. Trugman, 109 N.J.Super. 594, 264 A.2d 237 (1970); Brown & Huseby, Inc. v. Chrietzberg, 242 Ga. 232, 248 S.E.2d 631 (1978).

The rationale for this rule was perhaps best stated in Judd & Detweiler v. Gittings, 43 App.D.C. at 310-311:

“While it is true that an attorney is the agent of his client, the relation between them, we think, is such that it calls for some modification of the general rule which the law recognizes as existing between principal and agent. In ordinary transactions, the agent is subordinate to the principal, the principal standing out as the real actor, and the agent merely as a subordinate representative. But the relation between attorney and client is different. The attorney has complete charge of the litigation, is so recognized by the court, and, as such, dominates in all matters pertaining to the conduct of the litigation. ‘While in one sense the client is the principal and the attorney the agent, and while the attorney is professionally and constantly acting for clients, whose names from the records of the courts and other means of publicity are almost always known or may be so, yet there are peculiarities in his case which make it necessary to apply to it with some qualification the general principles of agency. In most cases of agency the principal is what the name imports, — the leading person in the transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
374 N.W.2d 67, 28 Educ. L. Rep. 573, 1985 N.D. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anheluk-v-kubik-nd-1985.