Brasch v. Brasch
This text of 109 So. 2d 584 (Brasch v. Brasch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Jane Reif BRASCH, Appellant,
v.
Irving W. BRASCH and Robert King High, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Third District.
*585 Copeland, Therrel, Baisden & Peterson and Fred R. Baisden, Miami Beach, for appellant.
Charles H. Snowden, Miami, and Monrad R. Thue, for appellee Irving W. Brasch.
Robert King High and Burton M. Michaels, Miami, for appellee Robert King High.
HORTON, Judge.
The facts that gave rise to this appeal are not in dispute. The appellant and the appellee-Brasch were divorced by decree of the Circuit Court of Dade County in 1952.
On March 20, 1957, appellee-High, as attorney for appellant, filed a petition against appellee-Brasch to enforce certain rights granted the appellant under the terms of the final decree of divorce aforesaid, and for an accounting. At about the same time, the appellant and appellee-High entered into a written contingency fee contract providing for High's employment as appellant's attorney and compensation for his services. On May 8, 1957, the chancellor entered an order referring the cause to a special master in chancery "for the purpose of taking testimony with reference to an accounting between the plaintiff, Jane Reif Brasch, and the defendant, Irving W. Brasch". Sometime subsequent to the appointment of the special master, but in May, 1957, the appellant and appellee-Brasch compromised their differences and entered into a written agreement securing to the appellant the rights granted to her under the terms of the final decree, and an agreed accounting of income received by appellee-Brasch. After the agreement between the appellant and appellee-Brasch, High and the appellant entered into another employment contract which superseded the contract of March, 1957.
In a letter dated July 20, 1957, the appellant notified appellee-High that he was discharged as her counsel and that she had hired an Ohio firm of attorneys to represent her. A letter to a similar effect was directed to the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dade County under date of July 22, 1957, by Ohio attorneys requesting that said attorneys be entered of record as representing the appellant.
On August 8, 1957, appellee-High filed a petition for equitable relief and a bill of intervention, setting out his written *586 contract with the appellant and delineating the services which he had rendered her. Upon the basis of the petition, the court, on the same day, entered a restraining order, without notice, against the appellant, as well as the appellee-Brasch, which order directed that service of process of the petition for intervention filed by High should be had on the appellant by mail at her Ohio address. This was done, and proof of the service of same was filed in the cause.
On August 27, 1957, appellee-High filed in the cause, on behalf of the appellant as her attorney, a motion to compel the appellee-Brasch to answer certain interrogatories which had theretofore been propounded and had not been answered. Pursuant to said motion, the court, on September 3, 1957, entered its order requiring appellee-Brasch to answer the interrogatories and to furnish a copy of such answers to appellee-High as appellant's counsel.
Under date of August 29, 1957, a second letter from the Ohio attorneys was directed to one of the judges of the Circuit Court of Dade County, again reiterating the fact that appellant had discharged appellee-High as her counsel and that he had no authority to continue to act in her behalf. Simultaneously with the aforesaid letter, Ohio counsel directed a letter to appellee-High, again reminding him that he had been dismissed as the appellant's counsel and requesting that he desist from any further activity in the case on her behalf.
On September 9 and September 19, 1957, hearings were had before the special master in chancery. At the hearing on September 19th, there was offered and admitted into evidence a settlement agreement bearing the witnessed signature of the appellant, which purported to settle all differences existing between the parties. The special master, after the two hearings aforesaid, proceeded, on September 25, 1957, to file his report in which he recommended that an order be entered pursuant to the settlement agreement between the parties; that a judgment be entered in favor of the appellee-High in the sum of $8,333.33; that certain oil companies be notified that the appellant was to transfer certain interests in oil royalties to the appellee-High and that a reasonable master's fee should be awarded with 90% thereof to be assessed against the appellant and 10% against the appellee-High. Thereafter, on October 4, 1957, the appellee-High, on behalf of the appellant, and for himself, filed exceptions to the special master's report. These exceptions to the report were resolved by an order of the court, dated October 14, 1957, substantially in accordance with the objections filed by appellee-High. Three days later, present counsel for the appellant appeared in the cause via special appearance and motion to quash in which they questioned the court's jurisdiction over the appellant as well as the subject matter of appellee-High's petition. The motion to quash was denied and the appellant was directed to answer appellee-High's petition within ten days. This was not done and a decree pro confesso resulted.
The court then proceeded, on December 23, 1957, to enter a money judgment against the appellant for the sum of $8,333.33 found to be due under the terms of the employment contract, a judgment for contingent sums accrued and to accrue and other relief. Execution on the judgment was directed by the court. On the same day the court entered an order setting the fee of the special master and assessing 90% of said fee against the appellant and 10% against appellee-High. It is from the final money judgment and the order setting special master's fee and assessing the same that this appeal has been taken.
The appellant contends on this appeal: (1) that the appellant's motion to quash the purported service of process should have been granted, and (2) that a divorced wife who seeks to enforce an alimony provision *587 of a final decree is not chargeable with costs incident thereto.
On the first point, the appellant's principal contention is that the court below had no authority to enter a money judgment in favor of the appellee-High in a proceeding instituted originally by the appellant for the enforcement of a right against her former husband. In other words, the appellant complains that the petition to enforce the alleged contract for attorney's fees brought a new subject matter into the main proceedings which should have been litigated in a separate action at law, and that in any event the court was without jurisdiction to render a money judgment without personal service of process. We agree with appellant that the trial court was without authority to enter a money judgment for attorney's fees under the circumstances demonstrated by this record.
The appellant had a perfect right to discharge the appellee-High as her attorney at any time with or without just cause, and apparently she attempted to do this by her letter of July 20, 1957 and subsequent communications. See Goodkind v. Wolkowsky, 132 Fla. 63, 180 So. 538; Diem v. Diem, 136 Fla. 824, 187 So. 569; Carey v. Town of Gulfport, 140 Fla. 40, 191 So. 45; Harvey v. Rowe, 141 Fla. 287, 192 So. 878.
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109 So. 2d 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brasch-v-brasch-fladistctapp-1959.