Arneetria Bourne v. Morgan & Morgan, PLLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 27, 2019
Docket2018-CA-00143-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Arneetria Bourne v. Morgan & Morgan, PLLC (Arneetria Bourne v. Morgan & Morgan, PLLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arneetria Bourne v. Morgan & Morgan, PLLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-00143-COA

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF RUTH APPELLANT BOURNE, DECEASED: BAILEY LAW PLLC

v.

MORGAN & MORGAN PLLC APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/09/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ANTHONY ALAN MOZINGO COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JEFFERSON DAVIS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: CHYNEE ALLEN BAILEY JOHN CURTIS HALL II ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: PHILIP W. THOMAS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 08/27/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

WESTBROOKS, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. This appeal is about an attorney-fee dispute between two firms that represented

Arneetria Bourne (Arneetria) and other family members of Ruth Bourne (Ruth) at different

stages of their mother’s wrongful death lawsuit.1 The Jefferson Davis County Circuit Court

awarded 95% of the fee to Morgan & Morgan PLLC (Morgan & Morgan) and 5% to Bailey

1 In the record, there is a contingency fee contract signed only by Arneetria, individually, with Morgan & Morgan P.A. The lawsuit was initiated in Arneetria’s name, individually, as well as the Estate of Ruth Bourne. But the settlement release named each heir individually and as “Statutory Wrongful Death Beneficiaries.” During the later fee dispute hearing, it was undisputed that both Morgan & Morgan and Bailey Law PLLC represented the heirs of Ruth Bourne at different points in time. Law PLLC (Bailey).2 Bailey appeals. Based on our review of the record and the circuit

court’s opinion, we reverse and remand.

FACTS

¶2. On April 9, 2011, Ruth suffered bilateral hip fractures from an accident while being

transported by Grove Transportation. She eventually died from these injuries, and her

daughter Arneetria retained the Morgan & Morgan law firm3 in Jackson to file a civil

complaint for wrongful death. According to an April 19, 2011 retainer agreement with

Morgan & Morgan P.A., Arneetria agreed to pay the law firm 40% of any potential total

monetary recovery, and she agreed to the contract provision that stated:

(3) If Client seeks to dismiss Attorney, Client hereby agrees that Attorney shall have a lien against any recovery by Client for any and all of Attorney’s unreimbursed expenses and for reasonable attorney’s fees measured by the value of the Attorney’s services and the risks undertaken by Attorney.

¶3. Between April 2011 and March 2016, while at Morgan & Morgan, the case was

assigned to three different attorneys: Joel Gatlin, John Hall, and Sam Creasy.

1. Joel Gatlin’s Work

¶4. There was no affidavit from Gatlin concerning the work he contributed to the case.

2 The owner of Bailey Law PLLC is Chynee Bailey (Attorney Bailey). 3 As will be discussed later, there are two entities: Morgan & Morgan PLLC and Morgan & Morgan P.A. We will refer to them both as “Morgan & Morgan” until it is necessary to distinguish them.

2 According to Morgan & Morgan’s case “Comments records,”4 on May 13, 2011, Gatlin:

spoke to the client; obtained information about the driver and the driver’s employer, Grove

Transportation; and, investigated the employer’s contract with a company named Logisticare.

He directed legal assistants to secure medical records and spoke to a person named Regina

at the dialysis unit about being a witness. Shortly thereafter, Gatlin ascertained who the

defendants would be. Between May 2011 and September 2012, Mr. Gatlin obtained and

reviewed medical records, phoned potential experts and spoke to a loan company at

Arneetria’s request. He directed legal assistants to open the estate, but although Arneetria

signed the petition, the estate work was not filed. Nor was any lawsuit drafted or filed. The

last entry of any work Gatlin contributed to the case was in February of 2013.

¶5. Between February 2013 and April 2014, the Comments record reflects no legal work

by an attorney, only work by legal assistants, who were primarily providing information to

Arneetria’s litigation loan company.5

2. John Hall’s Work

¶6. According to John Hall’s affidavit, when he was assigned the case in April 2014, he

immediately filed the wrongful death action. He also stated that, for the most part, paralegals

took care of dealing with lienholders and preparing pleadings and discovery materials. The

4 The “Comments record” is the firm’s running record of work on a case with dated entries by staff who performed the task. 5 During the pendency of the case, Arneetria borrowed money using the lawsuit as collateral.

3 Comments records in 2014 and 2015 confirm that paralegals were the ones who spoke with

Arneetria, answered discovery questions with her over the phone, and gave updates. The

Comments records also show that legal assistants mailed discovery and provided medical

records to the defense counsel.

¶7. Although Hall did not make entries into the Morgan & Morgan Comments record

system, he claims he reviewed the complaint and discovery materials sent to the defendants,

spoke with the client, prepared for and took the deposition of the driver of the transport van,

and defended the depositions of Arneetria and other family members. He estimated that he

spent a total of 22.5 hours on the case while at Morgan & Morgan. He also estimated that

paralegals spent a total of 16.5 hours on the case. Of those paralegal hours, 6.5 were

performed while he was assigned to the case, and the rest were done before and after he left.

Hall left Morgan & Morgan in August 2015, and Sam Creasy inherited the case.

3. Sam Creasy’s Work

¶8. Sam Creasy said in his affidavit that he worked 20 hours on the case. But based on

the documents in the record, it appears that he only spoke to Arneetria about the status of the

case and her desire for a loan, talked to a loan company on her behalf, and exchanged two

emails with defense counsel. In one email, the defense counsel asked Creasy if he had

reviewed the case, and in the other dated November 2015, defense counsel discussed possible

mediators. Creasy took no action on defense counsel’s offer to mediate. Arneetria

terminated her relationship with Morgan & Morgan in February 2016. At this point, neither

4 party had made a settlement offer. In the nearly five years that it had the case, Morgan &

Morgan had only obtained medical records, identified witnesses and parties, filed the lawsuit,

exchanged written discovery and participated in four depositions – three initiated by the

defense and one by the Morgan firm. Trial on the lawsuit had not been set and no estate

work was filed.

4. Attorney Bailey’s Work

¶9. In March 2016, Arneetria hired Chynee Bailey, a solo practitioner in Columbus,

Mississippi, and her law firm, Bailey Law PLLC, with whom Arneetria signed a contingency

fee contract. By accepting the case, Bailey assumed the future costs and risks of the

litigation. Attorney Bailey advised Morgan & Morgan of the representation and asked for

its lien twice in March 2016. Attorney Bailey was advised they were working on it.

¶10. According to Attorney Bailey’s affidavit, she spent 9 hours reviewing the file, which

contained 6,473 pages that included 2,500 pages of medical records. She contacted the

defense counsel about a scheduling order, called the court administrator for potential trial

dates, and drafted a scheduling order which she said took 2 hours. She was able to get the

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