Baker v. Whitaker

887 S.W.2d 664, 1994 WL 521609
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 27, 1994
DocketWD 48382, WD 48430
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 887 S.W.2d 664 (Baker v. Whitaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Whitaker, 887 S.W.2d 664, 1994 WL 521609 (Mo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

HANNA, Judge.

This action involves a dispute over attorney fees between Elvira Baker, 1 now deceased, and her former attorneys, Glen Whitaker and Robert Shirkey, who represented her in a personal injury suit. The court entered judgment in favor of Ms. Baker for the amount of three unpaid medical bills and both parties appealed. Reversed and remanded.

On April 14, 1989, Ms. Baker was struck and run over by a school bus owned by D & *666 R Transportation (D & R) as she was walking in a crosswalk at the intersection of Linwood and Woodland Avenue. The accident occurred when the school bus, driven by Michael Wagner, an employee of D & R, made a left hand turn onto Linwood and failed to yield to Ms. Baker who was crossing in the crosswalk on a green light. Ms. Baker, who was 81 years old at the time of the accident, sustained several serious and permanent injuries. As a result of her extensive injuries, Ms. Baker remained in hospitals and nursing homes until her death on February 28, 1993. Wagner subsequently plead guilty to careless driving. There was no indication of any fault on the part of Ms. Baker. D & R and Wagner were insured by State Farm Insurance Company. Within two weeks of the accident, a State Farm adjuster contacted Truman Medical Center and some family members of Ms. Baker.

After the accident, Ms. Baker was taken to Truman Medical Center where she remained until October 31, 1989. Ms. Baker and Mr. Whitaker had previously met as members of the Heart of American Genealogical Society. When Mr. Whitaker, at Ms. Baker’s request, visited her at the hospital on June 30, 1989, she was attached to a ventilator, under medication, unable to talk, and hard of hearing and sight. Mr. Whitaker met with Ms. Baker to discuss preparing a will for her and representing her in her claim against the bus company. All communications between them were handwritten. Mr. Whitaker discussed the cost of preparing the will and advised her that his fee for representing her in the lawsuit would be determined on a contingency basis with his fee being 50% of the money paid to her.

Mr. Whitaker returned to the hospital on July 12, 1989, with a prepared will. At that time, Ms. Baker informed him that she had heard that State Farm would pay all her medical expenses. Mr. Whitaker responded that State Farm had done nothing but delay matters and asked Ms. Baker if she wanted to file a lawsuit. She indicated that she did. On that same day, Mr. Whitaker prepared a handwritten contingent fee contract which Ms. Baker signed. The contract in its entirety was as follows:

I HEREBY HIRE GLEN L. WHITAKER AND ASSOCIATES TO REPRESENT ME AS MY ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW AND PROSECUTE FOR ME ANY AND ALL CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES AND INJURIES SUSTAINED BY ME RESULTING FROM OR TO RESULT FROM THE D & R BUS COMPANY BUS (D & R BUS) CARELESSLY HITTING ME APRIL 14, 1989, AND MR. WHITAKER AND HIS ASSOCIATES’ FEE SHALL BE 50% CONTINGENT OF ANY AMOUNTS PAID ME BY ANYONE OR ANY COMPANY BECAUSE OF MY CLAIMS, AND COURT COSTS AND REQUIRED PROSECUTION OF CLAIMS OR LAWSUITS SHALL BE PAID BY ME.

Mr. Whitaker subsequently made an oral agreement with Mr. Robert Shirkey that they would split the attorney fee 1/3 to Mr. Whitaker and 2/3 to Mr. Shirkey. This agreement was not discussed with Ms. Baker, although later she became aware that Mr. Shirkey was handling the litigation.

On July 21, 1989, Mr. Shirkey filed a lawsuit on her behalf against D & R and Wagner. On being informed of the amount of coverage on the school bus and driver, Mr. Shirkey made a demand on State Farm for $1,000,000 in full settlement of all claims Ms. Baker had against D & R and Wagner. During the negotiations, Mr. Shirkey advised State Farm’s counsel that Ms. Baker’s medical bills exceeded $250,000. 2

In August 1990, State Farm agreed to pay $1,000,000 to settle the lawsuit. On August 15, 1990, the defendants presented Ms. Baker with a release prepared by State Farm for her to sign. This document was a release of all of her claims against D & R and Wagner. Dr. Ronald LaHue, Ms. Baker’s treating physician at Swope Ridge, signed the second page of the release but crossed out the lan *667 guage which stated that Ms. Baker was of sound mind and under no constraint or undue influence. Mr. Shirkey subsequently hired Dr. Logan, a physician from the Men-ninger Clinic, to perform a psychiatric examination on Ms. Baker. Dr. Logan found Ms. Baker to be of sound mind and witnessed her signature on a second and identical release form stating that she was accepting the $1,000,000 as a release of her claims against D & R and Wagner.

State Farm requested a competency hearing, which was conducted in September 1990. The court held that Ms. Baker was competent to sign the release. State Farm issued three separate checks totaling $1,000,000. One check for $767,000 was payable to Ms. Baker and her attorneys, Whitaker and Shir-key. Two additional checks totaling $233,000 were payable to and tendered directly to Truman and Baptist for hospital bills incurred by Ms. Baker. While Ms. Baker was present and testified at the hearing, she was not questioned about her understanding of the terms of the settlement or the distribution of the proceeds, with one exception. She did testify that she wanted all the hospital bills paid. When asked whether she understood that she had signed a full release and whether she wanted the court to approve it, she answered, “I guess so.”

Some months later after the court hearing, in December 1990, Ms. Baker signed a settlement statement prepared by Mr. Shirkey which itemized the litigation expenses and summarized the following amounts:

1,000,000.00 RECEIVED IN SETTLEMENT Vil
[itemized litigation expenses listed]
1,757.95 TOTAL EXPENSES VST
998,242.05 NET RECEIVED IN SETTLEMENT vJ
499,121.02 Attorney’s Fee per contract (50%) \f»J
499,121.03 NET DUE CLIENT V/«T

As reflected in the statement, the defendants received a total of $499,121.02 as their attorneys’ fee. The litigation costs, which are shown as $1,757.95, were deducted from the total settlement proceeds prior to the calculation of attorney fees. The statement shows that Ms. Baker received a “net” amount of $499,121.03. At the bottom of the statement are handwritten figures reflecting the deduction of medical expenses from Ms. Baker’s portion of the settlement totalling $237,051.84. 3 These deductions are not reflected in the typewritten portion of the statement, nor does the statement reflect what was later determined to be Ms. Baker’s outstanding medical and nursing care bills. Pursuant to the agreement between the defendants, Mr. Whitaker’s fee was $166,000 and Mr. Shirkey’s fee was $333,000.

What apparently prompted this lawsuit was that, after State Farm made its payments to the hospitals, Truman Medical Center sued Ms. Baker for $50,838.17 in unpaid medical bills. Subsequently, Ms. Baker received bills from Baptist for $13,890.13 and Swope Ridge for $24,304.50.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
887 S.W.2d 664, 1994 WL 521609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-whitaker-moctapp-1994.