Burrow v. Arce

997 S.W.2d 229, 42 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 932, 1999 Tex. LEXIS 86, 1999 WL 450770
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1999
Docket98-0184
StatusPublished
Cited by714 cases

This text of 997 S.W.2d 229 (Burrow v. Arce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burrow v. Arce, 997 S.W.2d 229, 42 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 932, 1999 Tex. LEXIS 86, 1999 WL 450770 (Tex. 1999).

Opinion

Justice HECHT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The principal question in this case is whether an attorney who breaches his fiduciary duty to his client may be required to forfeit all or part of his fee, irrespective of whether the breach caused the client actual damages. Like the court of appeals, 1 we answer in the affirmative and conclude that the amount of the fee to be forfeited is a question for the court, not a jury. We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment only insofar as it affirms defendants’ summary judgment based on affidavits we find to be conclusory.

.1

Explosions at a Phillips 66 chemical plant in 1989 killed twenty-three workers and injured hundreds of others, spawning a number of wrongful death and personal injury lawsuits. One suit on behalf of some 126 plaintiffs was filed by five attorneys, David Burrow, Walter Umphrey, John E. Williams, Jr., F. Kenneth Bailey, Jr., and Wayne Reaud, and their law firm, Umphrey, Burrow, Reaud, Williams & Bailey. The case settled for something close to $190 million, out of which the attorneys received a contingent fee of more than $60 million.

Forty-nine of these plaintiffs then filed this suit against their attorneys in the Phillips accident case alleging professional misconduct and demanding forfeiture of all fees the attorneys received. More specifically, plaintiffs alleged that the attorneys, in violation of rules governing their professional conduct, solicited business through a lay intermediary, 2 failed to fully investigate and assess individual claims, 3 failed to communicate offers received and demands made, 4 entered into an aggregate settlement with Phillips of all plaintiffs’ claims without plaintiffs’ authority or approval, 5 agreed to limit their law practice by not representing others involved in the same incident, 6 and intimidated and coerced their clients into accepting the settlement. 7 Plaintiffs asserted causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, violations of the Deceptive Trade Practices — Consumer Protection Act, 8 negligence, and breach of contract. The attorneys have denied any misconduct and plaintiffs’ claim for fee forfeiture.

The parties paint strikingly different pictures of the events leading to this suit:

• The plaintiffs contend: In the Phillips accident suit, the defendant attorneys signed up plaintiffs en masse to contingent fee contracts, often contacting plaintiffs through a union steward. In many instances the contingent fee *233 percentage in the contract was left blank and 38-1/3% was later inserted despite oral promises that a fee of only 25% would be charged. The attorneys settled all the claims in the aggregate and allocated dollar figures to the plaintiffs without regard to individual conditions and damages. No plaintiff was allowed to meet with an attorney for more than about twenty minutes, and any plaintiff who expressed reservations about the settlement was threatened by the attorney with being afforded no recovery at all.
• The defendant attorneys contend: No aggregate settlement or any other alleged wrongdoing occurred, but regardless of whether it did or not, all their clients in the Phillips accident suit received a fair settlement for their injuries, but some were disgruntled by rumors of settlements paid coworkers represented by different attorneys in other suits. After the litigation was concluded, a Kansas lawyer invited the attorneys’ former clients to a meeting, where he offered to represent them in a suit against the attorneys for a fee per claim of $2,000 and one-third of any recovery. Enticed by the prospect of further recovery with minimal risk, plaintiffs agreed to join this suit, the purpose of which is merely to extort more money from their former attorneys.

These factual disputes were not resolved in the district court. Instead, the court granted summary judgment for the defendant attorneys on the grounds that the settlement of plaintiffs’ claims in the Phillips accident suit was fair and reasonable, plaintiffs had therefore suffered no actual damages as a result of any misconduct by the attorneys, and absent actual damages plaintiffs were not entitled to a forfeiture of any of the attorneys’ fees. In disposing of all plaintiffs’ claims on these grounds, the court specifically noted that factual disputes over whether the attorneys had engaged in any misconduct remained unresolved.

Before summary judgment was granted and less than two weeks before trial was set, plaintiffs amended their pleadings and named four additional plaintiffs. Defendants objected to the addition of these plaintiffs “due to the lack of service of citation and untimeliness of their appearance”. In its summary judgment, the district court granted defendants’ objection and struck the additional plaintiffs as parties.

All but one of the plaintiffs (Austin Gill, pro se) appealed. The court of appeals agreed with the district court that defendants had established that plaintiffs had suffered no actual damages caused by any misconduct, and thus it affirmed the summary judgment on all plaintiffs’ claims except breach of fiduciary duty. 9 The court" disagreed, however, that actual damages are a prerequisite for fee forfeiture. 10 Observing that Texas law has long recognized fee forfeiture as a remedy for an agent’s breach of fiduciary duty to his principal with or without actual damages, the court discerned “no reason to carve out an exception for breaches of fiduciary duty in the attorney-client relationship.” 11 However, the court refused to hold that fee forfeiture was either automatic or total for an attorney’s breach of fiduciary duty to his client; 12 rather, the court concluded that whether a fee should be forfeited, and how much of it, depends on the following factors:

(1) the nature of the wrong committed by the attorney or law firm; (2) the character of the attorney’s or firm’s conduct; (3) the degree of the attorney’s or firm’s culpability, that is, whether the attorney committed the breach inten *234 tionally, willfully, recklessly, maliciously, or with gross negligence; (4) the situation and sensibilities of all parties, including any threatened or actual harm to the client; (5) the extent to which the attorney’s or firm’s conduct offends a public sense of justice and propriety; and (6) the adequacy of other available remedies. 13

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 S.W.2d 229, 42 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 932, 1999 Tex. LEXIS 86, 1999 WL 450770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrow-v-arce-tex-1999.