Braddock Law Firm, PLLC v. Becnel

949 So. 2d 38, 2006 WL 997855
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 18, 2006
Docket2004-CA-01237-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 949 So. 2d 38 (Braddock Law Firm, PLLC v. Becnel) 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
Braddock Law Firm, PLLC v. Becnel, 949 So. 2d 38, 2006 WL 997855 (Mich. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

949 So.2d 38 (2006)

BRADDOCK LAW FIRM, PLLC, Appellant.
v.
Daniel E. BECNEL, Jr., Michael T. Gallagher and Gallagher, Lewis, Downey & Kim, Appellees.

No. 2004-CA-01237-COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

April 18, 2006.
Rehearing Denied August 22, 2006.

*41 C. Eric Malouf, Michael J. Malouf, Jr., Jackson, attorneys for appellant.

Daniel E. Becnel, Jr. (pro se), attorney for appellees.

Kevin P. Kilbert, Todd Brentley Ott, and Sheila M. Bossier, Jackson, attorneys for appellees.

Before MYERS, P.J., CHANDLER and GRIFFIS, JJ.

GRIFFIS, J., for the Court.

¶ 1. Braddock Law Firm, PLLC, ("Braddock") sued Daniel E. Becnel, Jr., Michael T. Gallagher, and his firm, Gallagher, Lewis, Downey and Kim, for breach of a fee splitting agreement. On the morning of trial, the chancellor granted summary judgment to Becnel. At the close of Braddock's case-in-chief, the chancellor dismissed the Gallagher defendants. Braddock appeals, and he claims the chancellor erred by: (1) not allowing Braddock to amend its complaint, (2) by not granting Braddock's motion for summary judgment, (3) by granting Becnel's motion for summary judgment, and (4) by dismissing the case against the Gallagher defendants. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

FACTS

¶ 2. Gallagher successfully tried a products *42 liability case against Manufacturer[1]. Because of this, Manufacturer offered to settle a limited number of Gallagher's future cases for a certain dollar sum for each case. Although Gallagher practices law in Texas, he was associated with three Mississippi firms in other litigation. Those firms were Grenfell, Sledge and Stevens ("Grenfell, Sledge"), Schwartz and Associates ("Schwartz"), and Braddock. As a result of this prior association, Gallagher presented these Mississippi firms with this "window of opportunity" to accept Manufacturer's offer and settle their clients' cases, with Gallagher receiving a portion of the settlement proceeds.

¶ 3. According to Braddock, Gallagher agreed to split the fee forty percent to Gallagher, Grenfell, Sledge and Schwartz and sixty percent to Braddock on any of Braddock's clients. Braddock claimed that this was an oral contract, which was memorialized in writing a few months later. Braddock also testified this agreement was similar to other referral agreements his firm had with Gallagher in the past, all of which were oral. Gallagher testified that his referral agreements with other attorneys were always oral. However, Gallagher denies having this particular agreement.

¶ 4. Braddock contacted Bobby Gill and Richard Martin of the Eaves Law Firm. Braddock relayed this "window of opportunity" to them, and they agreed to split Braddock's referral fee among themselves, with three percent to Braddock and fifty-seven percent to Gill and Martin on any of Gill and Martin's clients.

¶ 5. Martin contacted Becnel with this offer. They agreed to split Gill and Martin's share of the referral fee, fourteen and a half percent to Gill and Martin and forty-two and a half percent to Becnel, on any of Becnel's clients. Becnel recognized that the Manufacturer's offer to Gallagher was more than three times the offer Becnel was able to secure from the Manufacturer for a majority of his clients. He accepted Gill and Martin's offer.

¶ 6. Subsequently, in breach of his agreement with Gill and Martin, Becnel personally met with counsel for the Manufacturer in order to get his cases settled on his own. Counsel for the Manufacturer would not settle with Becnel directly and told him that Gallagher was the only attorney with whom the Manufacturer was settling cases with at that time.

¶ 7. On June 21, 2001, Becnel met in New Orleans with Gallagher and Tim Goss, who worked with Gallagher. Just before the meeting, Gallagher had his secretary, in Houston, send a fax to Braddock to inform him that it looked like Becnel was going to pull his cases out of their settlement group. Becnel told Gallagher that members of Gallagher's Mississippi association "bad mouthed" Gallagher, and this made Gallagher angry. When Becnel talked about possibly firing the Mississippi association, Gallagher did not talk him out of it.

¶ 8. The next day, at 11:19 a.m., Gallagher faxed Braddock a letter that stated, "[w]e have all been fired by Danny Becnel." Nevertheless, Gallagher continued to work on Becnel's cases. In fact, a mere two hours later, immediately after lunch, Gallagher faxed a letter to Becnel to discuss obtaining proof on several of the clients.

*43 ¶ 9. There were two draft referral agreements between Gallagher and Becnel on Becnel's cases. The drafts called for a fee split of forty percent to Gallagher and sixty percent to Becnel. These drafts were dated June 22 and June 25, 2001, and both were typed by "ILY." On June 25, Becnel's office faxed a letter to Gallagher and Goss that confirmed the agreement reached June 21. It stated that Gallagher would continue to work on the cases, and "[w]e agreed on Thursday [June 21] that you would receive 40% of the fee in these cases, and we would retain 60% of same." While the fax was addressed to Gallagher and Goss, it was only addressed and faxed to Gallagher's office. In fact, all communications on the remaining cases were solely between Gallagher's and Becnel's offices.

¶ 10. Gallagher expressed concern that he might not be able to contract with Becnel. In the end, the contract was signed between Goss and Becnel on July 6. The contract was virtually identical to the June 25 draft Gallagher had prepared, and it was typed by "ILY" as well. However, the words "Mike Gallagher" were substituted with "Tim Goss." The record indicates that Gallagher emailed the June 25 draft to Goss, so Goss could print the contract out on his own firm's letterhead. We note that "Via Facsimile 504.536.6445" appears at the same place on both contracts, but because the rest of Becnel's address would run into preprinted information on Goss's letterhead, the rest of the contract is set further down on the page.

¶ 11. The settlement and payment of fees occurred soon after the New Orleans meeting. When Goss received the attorney's fees, he forwarded forty percent to Gallagher and sixty percent to Becnel. It was not until later, that Gallagher paid six percent of the fees to Goss.

¶ 12. During the same week, Gallagher drafted a complaint for declaratory judgment action, wherein Becnel sued Gallagher, Braddock, and the other Mississippi firms in federal court in Louisiana. The action sought to determine who had an interest in the fees that had been received. Gallagher never answered the complaint. The lawsuit was dismissed by the federal court for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

¶ 13. Gill and Martin commenced a lawsuit against Becnel in Hinds County Chancery Court for intentional breach of contract. Braddock, Grenfell, Sledge, Schwartz, and Robert Arledge[2] intervened. Gallagher settled with Grenfell, Sledge, Schwartz and Arledge. Braddock then added the Gallagher defendants as parties.

¶ 14. The chancellor granted partial summary judgment against Becnel in favor of Gill and Martin. The chancellor found that Becnel owed Gill and Martin fourteen and a half percent of the attorney fees on a majority of the cases. Thus, Braddock claimed that he was due three percent in attorney fees for breach of the sixty percent referral agreement.

¶ 15. All parties agree that Becnel has in his possession fees that total three percent more than what he is owed. No other party claims this three percent except for Braddock.

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Bluebook (online)
949 So. 2d 38, 2006 WL 997855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/braddock-law-firm-pllc-v-becnel-missctapp-2006.