Berkson v. Berryman

488 A.2d 504, 62 Md. App. 79, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 350
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 6, 1985
Docket411, September Term, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 488 A.2d 504 (Berkson v. Berryman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berkson v. Berryman, 488 A.2d 504, 62 Md. App. 79, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 350 (Md. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

KARWACKI, Judge.

This appeal arises out of circumstances surrounding the demise of a short-lived partnership formed by two lawyers engaged in the practice of law. The matter originated with a Bill of Complaint for an Accounting and Other Related Relief filed on June 1, 1981 in the Circuit Court for Washington County (Moylan, J.) by the appellee, Susan Elgin Berryman, now Susan Carol Elgin. The appellee sought to establish the existence of a partnership between herself and the appellant, Jacob B. Berkson, and requested an accounting of partnership profits allegedly withheld from the appellee by the appellant.

The trial on the issues was bifurcated by the trial court upon the appellant’s motion. In his May 25, 1982 order granting that motion the trial judge stated that the case would proceed to trial solely on the issue of the existence of a partnership, and if one was found to exist between the *82 parties, additional proceedings would be had to determine the nature and extent of any accounting.

On April 18, 1988, the date scheduled for the first phase of the trial, the appellant, without prior notice to the court or to the appellee, stipulated to the existence of a partnership between the parties. Counsel for the appellant then requested a continuance of the trial stating as grounds for his request that he was unprepared to go forward on the issue of the terms of the partnership. This request was denied and trial proceeded on the issue of the terms of the partnership. At the close of this two day hearing, the court issued a memorandum opinion, including considerable findings of facts which are summarized below.

On December 4, 1979, the day of her admission to the Maryland Bar, the appellee became an associate of the appellant in the practice of law. Before that time, the appellant was a sole practitioner, and the appellee was employed by him as a law clerk. On June 1, 1980 the parties formed a partnership. Their oral agreement to do so provided that the, net profits from their practice were to be divided two-thirds to the appellant and one-third to the appellee. The parties were to contribute toward losses sustained by the partnership according to their respective shares in the profits and were to receive equal draws against anticipated profits of $100 per week. The formation of the partnership was announced in the newspaper that June, and in the telephone directory the following August. The firm applied for malpractice insurance in the name of the partnership. The stationery was changed and the manner in which the telephone was answered was amended to reflect the new partnership name, Berkson and Berryman.

In addition to payment of the normal operating expenses of the firm, the parties agreed to the payment of certain consultation and legal fees to other attorneys who had participated in the representation of clients. The parties also agreed to make payments of $100 per month on the *83 principal and the quarterly interest payments due on a loan obligation incurred by the appellant before the partnership was formed. In mid-June, the partners made a loan to the partnership in the amount of $1,000, of which the appellant contributed two-thirds and the appellee one-third. This loan was repaid to the partners shortly thereafter.

It is undisputed that under their partnership agreement all open files and pending cases of both parties were to become partnership cases subject to the agreed upon division of profits and losses. The parties did not anticipate or discuss dissolution of the partnership, and there were no express provisions agreed upon pertaining to their respective rights and obligations upon dissolution.

Having determined that a partnership existed and the terms thereof the lower court scheduled the second phase of the trial dealing with the accounting for July 25, 1983. At that hearing the court determined that the partnership was dissolved on November 2, 1980 when the appellant denied the appellee access to their offices and files. This abrupt move by the appellant was an apparent response to events which occurred in late October. Several days before the dissolution the partners met with Dr. David Berryman, who was at that time married to the appellee. Dr. Berry-man, a physician, demanded a contingent fee amounting to one-sixth of the legal fees recovered in one of the firm’s cases entitled Cool v. Stapleford (The Cool case). 1 Apparently Dr. Berryman had acted as a medical consultant to the partners in that case. Earlier, Dr. Berryman had made a similar written demand of the appellant in a letter dated October 25, 1980. The trial court specifically found that the *84 appellee did not join in her husband’s demand, and no agreement was reached by the partners and Dr. Berryman as a result of their meeting. Dr. Berryman’s claim is the subject of a pending lawsuit. About the same time, the appellee requested that her share in the partnership profits and losses be increased from a one-third interest to a one-half interest. The parties did not reach an agreement regarding this request.

The lower court at the hearing of July 25, 1983 was persuaded by evidence offered by the appellee that following the dissolution she at all times was willing and able to participate in the winding up of the partnership’s cases, but that she was prevented by the appellant from doing so. Rather, after November 2, 1980, the appellant resumed his sole practice and in addition proceeded to conclude the cases which were those of his partnership with the appellee. The evidence showed that the winding up of the partnership cases produced legal fees of $359,061.00. $302,327.00 of that amount was received in the Cool case mentioned above. In connection with the Cool case, the appellant subsequent to November 2, 1980, without any consultation with the appellee, employed Max R. Israelson, Esq., of the Baltimore Bar to assist him in its conclusion. The appellant paid Mr. Israelson $60,465.00 from the fee received in the Cool case without the consent of the appellee.

Upon making the above outlined factual findings, the trial judge determined that the appellee was entitled to $115,-756.38 (her one-third share of the $359,061.00 fees earned in the winding up of the partnership cases, or $119,687.00, less certain credits in the amount of $3,930.62 due to the appellant). He specifically rejected the appellant’s claim of credits for expenses incurred in winding up the partnership cases and for the fee he paid to Mr. Israelson for the latter’s assistance in concluding the Cool case. From the order implementing this determination, the appellant has appealed, raising the following contentions:

I. The trial court abused its discretion in denying the appellant’s motion for a continuance;
*85 II. The appellee is estopped from claiming any share of the profits earned after dissolution of the partnership;
III. The trial court erred in failing to deduct certain expenses and liabilities from the total amount of fees earned in winding up partnership cases; and,
IV.

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Bluebook (online)
488 A.2d 504, 62 Md. App. 79, 1985 Md. App. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berkson-v-berryman-mdctspecapp-1985.