Britt Virden v. Campbell Delong, LLP, Harold H. Mitchell, Jr., Robert N. Warrington, P. Scott Phillips, Bradley F. Hathaway and Frank G. Power

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 28, 2023
Docket2021-CT-00478-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Britt Virden v. Campbell Delong, LLP, Harold H. Mitchell, Jr., Robert N. Warrington, P. Scott Phillips, Bradley F. Hathaway and Frank G. Power (Britt Virden v. Campbell Delong, LLP, Harold H. Mitchell, Jr., Robert N. Warrington, P. Scott Phillips, Bradley F. Hathaway and Frank G. Power) 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
Britt Virden v. Campbell Delong, LLP, Harold H. Mitchell, Jr., Robert N. Warrington, P. Scott Phillips, Bradley F. Hathaway and Frank G. Power, (Mich. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2021-CT-00478-SCT

BRITT VIRDEN

v.

CAMPBELL DELONG, LLP, HAROLD H. MITCHELL, JR., ROBERT N. WARRINGTON, P. SCOTT PHILLIPS, BRADLEY F. HATHAWAY, AND FRANK G. POWER

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/10/2020 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. BARRY W. FORD TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: PHILIP MANSOUR, JR DAVID W. MOCKBEE D. WESLEY MOCKBEE COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: WASHINGTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: PHILIP MANSOUR, JR ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: DAVID W. MOCKBEE D. WESLEY MOCKBEE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - CONTRACT DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 09/28/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

BEAM, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. The Circuit Court of Washington County granted law firm Campbell DeLong, LLP,

a declaratory judgment against a former partner of the firm, Britt Virden, who had alleged

breach of contract, among other claims. Virden appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

Virden v. Campbell DeLong, LLP, No. 2021-CA-00478-COA, 2022 WL 4478393, at *11 (Miss. Ct. App. Sept. 27, 2022). On certiorari review, we find that Virden’s prewithdrawal

claims are not precluded by a signed agreement, which only comes into operation in the event

of death, termination, withdrawal, or retirement of a partner.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. Britt Virden practiced law in Greenville, Mississippi, with Campbell DeLong, LLP,

since 2001. Although Campbell DeLong, LLP, has operated as a law firm for nearly twenty-

five years, it has never had a written partnership agreement that controlled the compensation

paid to its partners. The only document signed among the partners was a Restated and

Amended Memorandum Agreement, which governed the “withdrawal, termination, or

retirement of any of the partners from the firm.”

¶3. According to Virden, Campbell DeLong never compensated its partners as a

traditional partnership in which the partners share equally in all expenses as well as profits.

Rather, Campbell DeLong practiced a partner compensation strategy of “eat what you kill,”

meaning after an individual partner contributes from his revenue an equal share of the

operating expenses of the law firm for calendar year, he or she keeps the remainder as his

own personal income.

¶4. In 2018, Virden worked on a case for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill that settled for

$12.3 million. Attorneys’ fees were $3.1 million. Virden emailed his partners about the

settlement’s result, making his recommendation for distribution.1 The partners did not

1 In the same email, Virden suggested his balance was $2.8 million and also suggested the firm pay a bonus to each staff member and associate, pay off a bank loan, and deposit some money into a profit-sharing plan.

2 immediately respond to Virden’s request. When Virden asked the firm’s bookkeeper for a

distribution of a special draw of his claimed portion to the fee, however, he was denied.

¶5. The partners then called for a meeting at which the allocation was discussed. The firm

asserts that there is an implied contract between the partners that the firm’s compensation

committee would decide how to split any profits. The firm allocated Virden $1.9 million and

each of the five other partners $277,000. Virden immediately sent a written objection to the

distribution and demanded the amounts be reconsidered and recalculated to allocate the fee

pursuant to the normal and customary method.

¶6. A month later, Virden gave notice he was withdrawing from the firm. Virden then

sued the firm for breach of contract, unjust enrichment, conversion, breach of fiduciary

duties, violation of the Mississippi Partnership Act, and other claims. Virden alleged that the

firm breached an implied contract among the partners by allocating to themselves a share of

a significant fee that Virden generated.

¶7. The firm and its partners filed their answer and affirmative defenses, which included

a motion for declaratory relief, a request to stay discovery, and a counterclaim. In the firm’s

motion for declaratory judgment, it sought a ruling that all of Virden’s claims were

encompassed by the Agreement Virden had signed in 2001.

¶8. After a hearing, the circuit court granted the motion for declaratory judgment, stating

“that paragraphs 7, 12, 13 and 14 of the Agreement” controlled the outcome of the case.

¶9. The firm prepared an order, but the parties could not agree on the language. As a

result, both Virden and the firm submitted proposed orders.

3 ¶10. The order Virden drafted was brief, holding that the circuit court had jurisdiction over

the parties, that the motion for declaratory judgment was granted, and that all discovery was

stayed.

¶11. The firm’s order was lengthier and explained that the Agreement sets forth “[t]he

payment obligations in paragraphs 7, 12, and 13 and are the only payment obligations that

the [law firm] owed to Virden upon Virden’s voluntary withdrawal from the Firm on March

7, 2019.”

¶12. The firm’s order declared the Agreement was enforceable and said, “Virden is

estopped from claiming entitlement to any monetary amount from the [law firm] for acts

and/or events which occurred when Virden was a Partner in the Firm except to Virden’s

entitlement to the amount of Virden’s Working Capital Account at the time of his

withdrawal.”

¶13. Lastly, “Virden has a legal and binding contractual obligation to convey his entire

interest in the Firm and in Campbell DeLong Properties, LLC, and in their respective assets

to the Firm and Campbell DeLong Properties, LLC . . . .”

¶14. The circuit court signed both orders, and both were then stamped filed by the circuit

court clerk.2 Virden moved for reconsideration. The circuit court denied the motion, and

Virden appealed. The Court of Appeals affirmed, and we granted certiorari review. Virden,

2022 WL 447893, at *11.

DISCUSSION

2 The parties asked why both orders were signed but did not get a response. We do not find this affects the outcome of the case.

4 ¶15. The question before us is whether the Agreement, which only comes into operation

in the event of the death, termination, withdrawal, or retirement of a partner, governs the

dispute that arose over the split of the fee earned by Virden and distributed before Virden

withdrew. The Court of Appeals was evenly divided. Virden, 2022 WL 4478393, at *11.

¶16. “This Court applies a de novo standard of review to questions of law, including a

motion for a declaratory judgment.” S.C. Ins. Co. v. Keymon, 974 So. 2d 226, 229 (Miss.

2008) (quoting Pre-Paid Legal Servs. v. Battle, 873 So. 2d 79, 82 (Miss. 2004)).

¶17. It is undisputed that the only written contract that ever existed between Virden and the

other partners was the signed Agreement from 2001, which governed “the withdrawal,

termination, or retirement of any of [the partners] from the Partnership.”

¶18. Virden’s complaint lies not in this Agreement but in the implied contract regarding

annual partner compensation that he contends the firm has been operating under for the last

twenty-five years. Virden contends that “all partners at Campbell DeLong have an accepted

implied contract . . . whereby each partner ‘eats what he kills,’ after payment of overheard

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Bluebook (online)
Britt Virden v. Campbell Delong, LLP, Harold H. Mitchell, Jr., Robert N. Warrington, P. Scott Phillips, Bradley F. Hathaway and Frank G. Power, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/britt-virden-v-campbell-delong-llp-harold-h-mitchell-jr-robert-n-miss-2023.