Barbara ROBERTS v. Steve LANIER Et Al.

72 So. 3d 1174, 2011 WL 1449028
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 10, 2011
Docket1100045
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 So. 3d 1174 (Barbara ROBERTS v. Steve LANIER Et Al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barbara ROBERTS v. Steve LANIER Et Al., 72 So. 3d 1174, 2011 WL 1449028 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

WOODALL, Justice.

Barbara Roberts sued Steve Lanier (“Lanier”), Steve Lanier, P.C. (“the firm”), Rodney Loring Stallings (“Stallings”), and Coggin & Stallings, L.L.C. (“Coggin”), asserting claims related to Lanier’s and Stallings’s representation of Roberts regarding a certain criminal matter in Alabama. 1 The circuit court entered summary judgments in favor of Lanier and the firm, Stallings, and Coggin. We affirm in part and reverse in part, and we remand the case to the circuit court for further proceedings.

Facts and Procedural History

On April 21, 2006, Roberts was arrested on a charge of murder and was placed in the Cherokee County, Alabama, jail. She contacted Lanier, an attorney licensed to practice law in Georgia, who was then representing Roberts on a misdemeanor charge in Georgia. Lanier has been doing business as Steve Lanier, P.C., since 1997 and is the sole attorney associated with the firm.

Lanier traveled to Cherokee County and met with Roberts while she was in the Cherokee County jail. Roberts and Lanier executed an employment agreement, by which Lanier agreed to provide legal services to Roberts in Alabama on the then *1177 pending charge of noncapital murder (“the contract”). The contract provided that Roberts would pay Lanier a “nonrefundable retainer” of $50,000 for his services. 2 Roberts also executed a power of attorney to allow Lanier to withdraw $50,000 from her bank accounts. Shortly thereafter, Lanier withdrew the $50,000 from Roberts’s accounts and, according to his deposition testimony, deposited the money in the firm’s business account, not its trust account.

Roberts claims that, at the time they executed the contract, Lanier “failed to disclose to [her] that he was not licensed [to practice law] in Alabama; that he would have to associate local counsel in Alabama on the case in order to seek permission to be allowed to participate in the case; and that Roberts would be solely responsible for Alabama counsel’s fees.” Roberts’s brief, at 15. Lanier testified that “he explained to [Roberts] in their initial meeting or within a few days thereafter that since he was not licensed in Alabama, he would be required to apply for permission to represent her, and that an Alabama attorney would have to be involved in her defense.” Lanier and the firm’s brief, at 7.

After meeting with Roberts, Lanier associated Stallings as local counsel. At that time, Stallings was a member at Coggin, which was dissolved in December 2008.

Roberts says that on April 27, 2006, at a hearing in the Cherokee District Court on her noncapital-murder charge, she learned for the first time that Lanier was not licensed to practice law in Alabama and that Stallings had been associated on her case. She says that Stallings told her at the hearing that she would have to enter into a separate fee agreement with him. Roberts alleges that on May 1, 2006, she executed a fee agreement with Stallings, thereby agreeing to pay him $85,000 to represent her on the noncapital-murder charge. Lanier responds that there is no written contract between Roberts and Stallings in the record and that he paid Stallings $5,000 out of the $50,000 he had withdrawn from Roberts’s accounts.

Roberts says that on May 1, 2006, she attempted to terminate Lanier’s representation because she saw no need for' two attorneys to represent her on the noncapi-tal-murder charge. According to Roberts, she requested a refund of the $50,000 previously withdrawn from her bank accounts by Lanier as his “nonrefundable” retainer. Roberts also says that Lanier told her that “based on the ‘non-refundable’ retainer language of his employment contract she was not entitled to a refund of any fees. Lanier further explained that Roberts might as well let him continue working on her case since she would not be receiving a refund of any fees even if he was terminated.” Roberts’s brief, at 19. Roberts says she then agreed to allow Lanier to continue his representation until his billable hours equaled $50,000 or she was indicted for capital murder, whichever came first.

In July 2006, Lanier filed an application for pro hac vice admission in order to appear as counsel in Roberts’s case. 3 He was granted pro hac vice status on August 3, 2006. That same day, the district court finished its preliminary hearing on Roberts’s noncapital-murder charge and sent *1178 her case to the grand jury. Stallings alone was present to represent Roberts at the preliminary hearing in the district court.

On November 2, 2006, the grand jury indicted Roberts for capital murder. Roberts was returned to the Cherokee County jail, where she was held without bond. Roberts claims that

“at Stallings’[s] request, Roberts had all of her mail forwarded to [his] law office so that Stallings could tend to and oversee every aspect of Roberts’[s] personal life, to include but not limited to: the payment of all of her monthly bills and expenses. At Stallings’[s] request, Roberts also relinquished her banking account information and check book(s) to Stallings.
“Thereafter, Stallings would periodically appear at the Cherokee County Jail and have Roberts sign blank cheeks for the stated purpose of using the checks to pay Roberts’[s] monthly bills and expenses (i.e., home utilities, credit card bills, etc.) and expenses associated with Roberts’s criminal case.”

Roberts’s brief, at 21.

Roberts alleges that, instead of using the blank checks for purposes she had intended, Stallings made the checks payable to himself and took the funds for his personal use. She claims that, between November 2006 and October 2008, Stall-ings misappropriated approximately $100,000 of her funds.

On November 2, 2006, Lanier met with Roberts and presented her with a second employment contract, which provided that Roberts would pay Lanier an additional $50,000 “nonrefundable retainer” to represent her on the capital-murder charge. Roberts refused to sign the second contract. Lanier testified in his deposition that he continued to work on the case under the assumption that Roberts wanted him to continue and that he ultimately would be retained by her. He withdrew from representing Roberts in March 2007.

Roberts was ultimately convicted of capital murder and was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. On February 10, 2009, in consultation with another attorney, Roberts says she learned for the first time that the nonrefundable-retainer language in the contract is unenforceable in Alabama and that Lanier’s reliance on that language in refusing to refund any part of the fee to Roberts was improper.

Eight days later, on February 18, 2009, Roberts filed a legal-malpractice action in the Cherokee Circuit Court, naming Lanier, the firm, 4 and Stallings as defendants. Roberts amended her complaint to add a claim requesting a declaratory judgment and to add the Alabama State Bar 5 and Coggin as defendants.

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72 So. 3d 1174, 2011 WL 1449028, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbara-roberts-v-steve-lanier-et-al-ala-2011.