Brown & Sturm v. Frederick Road Ltd. Partnership

768 A.2d 62, 137 Md. App. 150, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 34, 2001 WL 210104
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 5, 2001
Docket85, Sept. Term, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 768 A.2d 62 (Brown & Sturm v. Frederick Road Ltd. Partnership) 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
Brown & Sturm v. Frederick Road Ltd. Partnership, 768 A.2d 62, 137 Md. App. 150, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 34, 2001 WL 210104 (Md. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

RAYMOND G. THIEME, Jr., Judge,

Ret’d, Specially Assigned.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County rejecting the efforts of appellants to recover legal fees in the amount of $4,810,919.75 pursuant to a reverse contingency fee agreement for representation before the United States Tax Court during 1987 and 1988. Appellants, attorneys R. Edwin Brown and Rex L. Sturm, and their respective law firm of Brown & Sturm, represented and provided legal advice to the children of Lawson and Cordelia King (“the senior Kings”), who bought the 438-acre farm of their parents and subsequently incurred massive tax deficiencies after their parents died. Brown & Sturm had represented both the senior Kings in implementing that sale. Appellants filed this action against their daughter Elizabeth J. Jacobs, 1 her sister Lois K. Aschenbach, and Frederick Road Limited Partnership (“Frederick Road”), a partnership involving Aschenbach (collectively, “appellees”).

The case sub judice is related to a separate legal malpractice action filed against Brown & Sturm by Aschenbach and Frederick Road. That action is now pending in the Circuit *157 Court for Montgomery County, following a decision by the Court of Appeals in Frederick Road Ltd. P’ship v. Brown & Sturm, 360 Md. 76, 756 A.2d 963 (2000) (reversing summary judgment in favor of Brown & Sturm). This case is also related to Brown & Sturm’s claim in United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland to recover its fee from Jacobs’ and Aschenbach’s brother, William I. King, and Field Farms Limited Partnership (“Field Farms”), of which Jacobs was a member. The Bankruptcy Court rejected Brown & Sturm’s claim, and the United States District Court and United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit affirmed.

In the instant case, the court below rejected appellees’ motion for summary judgment and held a nine-day bench trial between January 12 and February 20, 1999. Following trial, the court issued a lengthy memorandum opinion and order favoring appellees on one of their three original theories, 2 that a confidential relationship existed between the parties at the time of the retainer agreement and Brown & Sturm failed to meet its burden of proving such fee agreement was voluntary and reasonable. Appellants now ask:

1. Did the court below err when it found that the retainer agreement between the parties was not voluntary?
*158 2. Did the court below err when it found that the retainer agreement between the parties was not reasonable?

On cross-appeal, appellees ask:

1. Did the court below err when it found that collateral estoppel did not apply to this action?
2. Did the court below err when it declined to rule that the fee was unethical and unreasonable as a matter of law?

To these questions we answer “no” and explain.

Facts

The trial court issued the following findings of fact, which we paraphrase.

Appellant R. Edwin Brown is an attorney licensed to practice in Maryland. At the time of the trial below, he had been engaged in private practice for fifty-seven years, specializing in condemnation and other land valuation cases. Brown has handled 500 such cases during his career and has tried many of them before juries. Throughout his career, he has worked with appraisers in the process of determining land values. Appellant Rex L. Sturm is an attorney licensed to practice in Maryland, Nebraska, and the District of Columbia. At the time of the trial, he had been engaged in the private practice of law for thirty years, twenty-nine of which had been as Brown’s partner in Brown & Sturm.

Defendants at trial were Elizabeth J. Jacobs, Lois K. Aschenbach, and William I. King, all of whom are the children of the late W. Lawson and Cordelia E. King (collectively, “the King children” or “the King siblings”). Jacobs is also a general partner in defendant Field Farms, although neither Jacobs nor Field Farms is a party to this appeal. Aschenbach is a general partner in appellee Frederick Road. Appellants also named as defendants the Frederick Road General Partnership, its partners, and the trustees of the Aschenbach Children’s Trust. As the trial court noted, however, no evidence was produced at trial regarding the liability of these defendants, and defendant Conrad V. Aschenbach, as personal representative of the Estate of Robert V. Aschenbach, pre *159 vailed on summary judgment by showing that the claim against decedent had not been filed timely.

A

Sale of the King Farm

In 1981 Lawson and Cordelia King owned a 438-acre farm in Montgomery County. During that year, August C. Bonsall, long-time certified public accountant to both William King and Lawson King, recommended that the elder King sell the farm to his children or to a partnership created by the children. The purpose of the sale was to keep the property in the family and to reduce the enormous estate taxes that the children would pay if they inherited the farm from their parents. After changing his mind a few times, Lawson King finally decided to sell to the children.

In late September 1981, Bonsall contacted Stanard Klinefelter, Esq., of the firm of Piper & Marbury and advised him of the proposed sale. Bonsall told Klinefelter that the land had been appraised “for farm use only” at $550,000, 3 and such price could be used as the sale price in this transaction, provided that a three-year agricultural easement was placed on the property. Klinefelter informed Bonsall that his plan was badly flawed, for any tax liability would be based not on the parcel’s agricultural value, but instead on the fair market value for its highest and best use. 4

*160 Accordingly, Bonsall authorized Klinefelter to investigate other alternatives, and he did. He approached G. Van Velsor Wolf, Esquire, a senior partner in Piper & Marbury’s Estates and Trusts Department, and they began researching other options. The senior Kings had a long association with Wolf, having depended upon his advice and representation in tax and estate planning matters for several years. After Wolf and his colleagues developed several alternatives, two meetings took place—one in November 1981, with Wolf, Bonsall and Lawson King, and the other on January 2, 1982, with Wolf, Bonsall and Klinefelter. 5 King approved one of the proposals during the November meeting, 6 but by January, he wavered in his intentions again, and Bonsall reported to the lawyers that he was reluctant to sell the farm.

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Bluebook (online)
768 A.2d 62, 137 Md. App. 150, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 34, 2001 WL 210104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-sturm-v-frederick-road-ltd-partnership-mdctspecapp-2001.