Blankenship v. Delta Pride Catfish, Inc.

676 So. 2d 914, 1996 Miss. LEXIS 319, 1996 WL 317022
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1996
Docket93-CC-00748-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 676 So. 2d 914 (Blankenship v. Delta Pride Catfish, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blankenship v. Delta Pride Catfish, Inc., 676 So. 2d 914, 1996 Miss. LEXIS 319, 1996 WL 317022 (Mich. 1996).

Opinion

676 So.2d 914 (1996)

Tony W. BLANKENSHIP
v.
DELTA PRIDE CATFISH, INC.

No. 93-CC-00748-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

June 13, 1996.

Dana J. Swan, Chapman Lewis & Swan, Clarksdale, for appellant.

Charles C. Jacobs, Jr., Cleveland, for appellee.

En Banc.

McRAE, Justice, for the Court:

This appeal arises from a dispute over fees between Tony Blankenship and the attorneys who have represented him in a workers' compensation claim against his employer, Delta Pride Catfish, which is not a party to the case sub judice. Blankenship appeals an April 20, 1993 order of the Sunflower County Circuit Court which reversed a December 22, 1992 order of the Workers' Compensation Commission and awarded his former attorney, Charles Jacobs, attorney fees based on twenty-five percent of the temporary total disability payments received by the claimant *915 and expenses, asserting that the Commission's December, 1992 order was not final and the circuit court's April, 1993 order, therefore, is a nullity. We find, however, that the Commission's order was final and properly before the circuit court, thus affirming the lower court's decision.

I.

This appeal is concerned not with whether Tony Blankenship has received all of the Workers' Compensation benefits to which he is entitled for a compensable injury which occurred on January 3, 1991, but with whether his various attorneys, particularly Charles Jacobs, should be compensated for their efforts in obtaining temporary total disability benefits for him. It should be noted, as the Commission has stated in several of its orders, that the fee controversy consumes more of the record than does the compensability of Blankenship's particular ailments.

Blankenship first retained Charles Jacobs on October 9, 1989, to represent him after he sustained an on-the-job injury while working for Delta Pride Catfish on May 4, 1989. On March 19, 1991, the Commission approved an order awarding Jacobs attorney fees in the amount of twenty-five percent of any compensation received by Blankenship for those injuries.

On October 8, 1991, Blankenship retained Frank Shaw, Jr. to represent him in his efforts to obtain compensation for still another on-the-job injury sustained on January 3, 1991. In addition to the standard twenty-five percent attorney fees for compensation cases, the contract provided for the attorney's out-of-pocket expenses in pursuing the claim, not to exceed $200.00.

By letter dated January 22, 1992, Blankenship notified Shaw that his services were no longer needed because he was reinstating his former attorney, Charles Jacobs. Shaw ultimately was allowed to withdraw by Commission order dated October 27, 1992.

Blankenship advised Jacobs of his reinstatement in January, 1992, also furnishing the attorney with an appointment of representation form to represent him on a Social Security claim. According to Jacobs' January 24, 1992 letter to the Commission, he was reinstated pursuant to his original October 9, 1989 contract, which provided for the customary twenty-five percent attorney fees and provided that "[i]t is understood and agreed between the parties that the said attorneys shall be reimbursed for all reasonable expenses incurred in the prosecution of said claim from any proceeds recovered in said claim." Blankenship dismissed Jacobs in a letter dated October 26, 1992, asserting that Jacobs' billing was unfair.

The Workers' Compensation Commission entered an order on September 25, 1992 finding that Blankenship had not sustained any permanent disability as a result of his May 4, 1989 accident. It further found that he had sustained a compensable neck injury on January 3, 1991, entitling him to receive temporary total disability benefits until such time as he reached maximum medical recovery. After becoming aware of a dispute between Blankenship's attorneys over their respective claims to fees, the Commission entered an order on November 19, 1992, requiring that seventy-five percent of the benefits awarded be disbursed to Blankenship and the remaining twenty-five percent placed in an escrow account until the attorneys settled their dispute.

Blankenship filed his "Petition to Have Full Commission Direct Disbursement of Funds Paid Pursuant to Commission Order, for Return of Funds Withheld by Former Attorney, for Order Relieving Former Attorney of Employment, and for Other Relief" on November 18, 1992. Home Insurance Company filed a motion to compel Blankenship to reimburse it for $8,500.00 in advances made to him based on his claim of financial hardship. Jacobs filed a motion for sanctions and attorney fees against Delta Pride, the employer. He then filed a motion for recovery of attorney fees and expenses pursuant to his contract with Blankenship. The Commission considered these motions together and entered an order on December 22, 1992, finalizing, among other things, the compensation to which Jacobs and Shaw respectively were entitled. That order, which is the subject of this appeal, is addressed in detail infra.

*916 Neil White, who had contracted to represent the claimant on November 2, 1992, filed a Motion for Leave to Withdraw on December 31, 1992, stating that Blankenship "has specifically attempted to instruct his counsel in reference to the institution of additional litigation in this matter; undersigned counsel has advised the Claimant that he will not undertake the litigation contemplated by the Claimant; accordingly the Claimant states that he wants to obtain other counsel to represent him and he has asked to obtain his file from his attorney; to this his attorney has agreed."

Jacobs filed a motion for the Commission to reconsider that part of its order disallowing attorney fees on benefits payable to Blankenship after December 22, 1992, asserting that this was in contravention to his contract with Blankenship and allowed the claimant to save on attorney fees by firing his lawyer. On January 7, 1993, he filed an amended motion seeking recovery of reasonable expenses incurred pursuant to his contract with Blankenship. He claimed expenses of $1,874.48. The Commission denied the motions on January 14, 1993.

Jacobs filed his Notice of Appeal to Circuit Court on January 20, 1993, charging that the Commission's decision violated his contract with Blankenship. Blankenship also filed a Notice of Appeal, citing the Commission's refusals to award him sanctions against his employer in the form of attorney fees. That pleading was signed by Dana Swan, his attorney on appeal.

The Sunflower County Circuit Court entered an order on April 20, 1993 reversing the Commission's order with regard to attorney fees for Jacobs, awarding him fees as agreed in his contract with Blankenship. Thus, Jacobs was awarded twenty-five percent of the total temporary disability benefits paid to Blankenship subsequent to December 22, 1992, until those benefits are discontinued. The circuit court further ordered that when the Commission decides the issue of permanent disability and lump sum benefits are adjudicated for attorney fees, those shall be divided between Attorneys Jacobs and Swan on a quantum meruit basis. The circuit court also found that Jacobs was entitled to recover the expenses incurred in pursuing Blankenship's compensation claims. Finally, the circuit court ordered expenses and past due attorney fees to be withheld from benefits accruing to Blankenship and granted a lien to Jacobs on future benefits to secure these payments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
676 So. 2d 914, 1996 Miss. LEXIS 319, 1996 WL 317022, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenship-v-delta-pride-catfish-inc-miss-1996.