Aresh v. Marin-Morales

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 2023
DocketG060579
StatusPublished

This text of Aresh v. Marin-Morales (Aresh v. Marin-Morales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aresh v. Marin-Morales, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 5/16/23; Certified for Publication 6/5/23 (order attached)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

ZAAL ARESH,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G060579, G060827

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2020-01153341)

MONICA MARIN-MORALES et al., OPINION

Defendants;

DANIEL WILLIAMS,

Respondent.

Appeal from a judgment and postjudgment order of the Superior Court of Orange County, James Crandall, Judge. Reversed in part and remanded. Appellant’s request for judicial notice denied. Jonathan Lee Borsuk for Plaintiff and Appellant. Daniel J. Williams, in pro. per., for Respondent. * * * Zaal Aresh appeals from an order vacating the judgment he obtained to enforce his attorney fee lien and to collect the fees and costs he earned in two cases from the settlement funds recovered in those cases. His current dispute is not with his former clients, 1 however; it is with respondent Daniel J. Williams, the attorney who took over the clients’ representation after Aresh’s services were terminated. Aresh had initially included Williams as a defendant in his lawsuit, along with all the other potential claimants to the settlement funds recovered in the cases, with the intent that all interested parties could participate in resolving their claims to those funds in a single action. But Williams demurred, arguing Aresh was required to establish the validity, value, and enforceability of his own attorney fee liens in an action against just his former clients before he could state any cause of action involving a third party. Aresh then dismissed Williams and the other third parties as defendants in the case and litigated his fee claims against only his former clients. Following a trial, the court determined Aresh was entitled to recover his earned fees and costs from the settlement amounts pursuant to his liens. However, over Aresh’s objection, the court also purported to determine the amount of fees and costs Williams was entitled to be paid from the settlement funds in the two cases, and ordered that the remainder of the two settlement funds be dispersed to the clients. The court entered a judgment incorporating all of those issues. Aresh filed a notice of appeal as to the judgment. Williams thereafter moved to vacate the judgment, correctly arguing the court could not adjudicate the amount of fees and costs he was entitled to receive in a case in which he was not a party. But Williams did not stop there. He argued the court was required to vacate the entire judgment—not just the provisions addressing his fees and costs—because if the court allowed the remaining provisions of the judgment to stand, it would dispose of all the

1 Defendants Monica Marin-Morales, Akin Arikan, Glafira Cruz Sumano, Beatriz Marin-Morales, and David Marin Romero (former clients).

2 settlement funds other than those awarded to Williams, and thus would implicitly preclude him from recovering a greater share of the settlement funds than had been awarded in his absence. The trial court agreed and vacated the entire judgment. We disagree and therefore reverse in part. Where the trial court erred was in failing to distinguish between the provisions of the judgment awarding fees and costs to Aresh, and those awarding the remaining portion of the settlement funds to Aresh’s former clients. Only the latter cannot be severed from the properly vacated provisions adjudicating Williams’s rights. As Williams himself initially argued, Aresh’s fee claims and the validity of his liens against the settlement funds are contractual matters to be determined between Aresh and the former clients, who are the parties to his fee agreements and, as a result, his liens. Williams was not required to be—and objected to becoming—a party to litigation addressing Aresh’s fee claims. The court had jurisdiction to adjudicate those claims without Williams’s participation; that judgment is therefore valid. The fact that Williams, as subsequent counsel, has his own fee claim against the same clients, does not require reversal of Aresh’s part of the judgment. By contrast, the judgment’s provisions ordering that all remaining funds be paid to the former clients implicitly adjudicates the lien claims of any third parties (such as Williams) who also claim a right to share in those settlement funds. The court lacked jurisdiction to determine the validity and value of Williams’s lien claim; it also lacked jurisdiction to determine the amount of remaining settlement funds to be paid to the former clients. Thus, the invalidity of the judgment provisions awarding fees to Williams could not be severed from the provisions awarding specific amounts to the former clients. As a result, we reverse the order vacating the judgment and remand the case to the trial court with directions to enter a new order vacating only the provisions purporting to adjudicate (1) Williams’s rights to the settlement funds and (2) Aresh’s former clients’

3 entitlement to be paid specific amounts of the settlement funds. The provisions adjudicating Aresh’s rights to specific portions of the settlement funds remain intact. 2

FACTS Aresh initiated litigation to obtain recovery of the attorney fees and costs he earned while representing Marin-Morales in an employment case. Aresh also represented Marin-Morales and four other individual defendants, Akin Arikan, Glafira Cruz Sumano, David Marin Moreno, and Beatriz Marin Morales, in a personal injury case (collectively, former clients). Aresh alleged that the former clients had granted him a contractual lien against any recovery in both cases, to ensure payment of his attorney fees and costs out of any such funds. Aresh’s services were terminated by his former clients in both cases after he had done substantial work on them, and shortly before the matters were settled. Williams took over the employment case, while he and a third attorney took over the personal injury case. Aresh alleged that after both cases had been resolved, he filed notice of his liens, but his former clients refused to pay him any share of the settlement funds as his fees. He alleged the former clients and Williams claimed he had no valid lien against the settlement funds in either the employment case or the personal injury case and also that there were conflicting demands by various parties against both settlements. Aresh’s lawsuit alleged causes of action for breach of contract and quantum meruit, and for interpleader and declaratory relief against all defendants, including (1) the individual former clients, (2) Williams, (3) the third attorney and law firm who succeeded Aresh and Williams as counsel in the personal injury case, and (4) various professionals

2 Aresh has also asked us to take judicial notice of a stipulation he entered into with his former clients, reflecting the clients’ non-opposition to the provisions of the judgment favoring Aresh. We deny the request. The stipulation was entered into after the court issued the order vacating the judgment which is at issue in this appeal; the stipulation is therefore irrelevant to our analysis.

4 who provided service in connection with each case. The claim for declaratory relief alleges that the former clients and Williams (but not the third attorney) dispute the “validity, priority, and amount” of his attorney liens, and seeks a declaration that his lien is “valid and perfected, first-priority . . . [and] in the amount of the value of the services” he rendered. Williams demurred, citing Mojtahedi v. Vargas (2014) 228 Cal.App.4th 974 (Mojtahedi), for the proposition that a discharged attorney could not sue to enforce his fee lien against a successor attorney holding settlement funds unless he first established the validity and value of the lien in an action against the client.

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Bluebook (online)
Aresh v. Marin-Morales, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aresh-v-marin-morales-calctapp-2023.