Champion v. Superior Court

201 Cal. App. 3d 777, 247 Cal. Rptr. 624, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 499
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1988
DocketA039803
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 201 Cal. App. 3d 777 (Champion v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champion v. Superior Court, 201 Cal. App. 3d 777, 247 Cal. Rptr. 624, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 499 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

*780 Opinion

WHITE, P. J.

This petition invites us to examine the intricate web woven by a legal partnership specializing in personal injury litigation. A former partner asks us to (1) find that the partnership’s agreement for sharing fees for unfinished cases taken by a departing partner violates several rules of professional conduct, and (2) declare that he is entitled to share in the profits of the partnership from all cases pending at the time of his departure. Other former partners and a former client appear as amici curiae in support of the petition. We examine the web because it reaches far into the community, entangling other former partners and former clients. We conclude that because of rule 2-107 of the Rules of Professional Conduct of the State Bar of California and because of public policy, the partnership agreement may not be enforced. We conclude, however, that petitioner is not entitled to share the fees from all cases pending at the time of his departure. In the second part of our opinion, we consider requests to seal the record of this proceeding. We explain the procedures to be used in appellate courts when seeking to file or lodge confidential documents.

In March of 1985, the Boccardo Law Firm amended its partnership agreement to change the way pending cases were treated upon termination or withdrawal of a partner. Whereas former section 9.9 presented different formulae for sharing client fees between the partnership and the departing partner, depending upon the progress of the cases, new section 9.9 established a uniform rule. It provided that “in the event of termination or withdrawal all clients and client files remain the property of the Partnership and in the event that a client desires to have the withdrawing partner as his, her, or its attorney, he, she or it may do so but any fees realized in any such case shall remain the property and asset of the Partnership. The withdrawing partner shall be entitled to receive that percentage of the fees equal to his percentage in the Partnership at the time of his departure. The Firm shall have a lien on the case and its proceeds to protect and secure the Partnership’s interest in such case or cases.”

At the time of the amendment some 15 attorneys were members of the Boccardo Law Firm. James F. Boccardo held a 51 percent interest in the firm and the other partners held interests ranging from 2.8 percent to 5.4 percent. Petitioner, a five-year associate of the firm, joined the firm, taking a 1.0 percent interest and signing an agreement to be bound by the terms of the partnership agreement and all amendments thereto. (In this opinion, we use the term “petitioner” to refer to Jan Champion and Jan Champion, a professional law corporation.) For reasons not pertinent here, petitioner resigned on June 30, 1986, holding a 1.79 percent interest in the firm. At *781 least eight former clients of the Boccardo Law Firm elected to be represented by petitioner after his departure.

Shortly after petitioner’s departure, the Boccardo Law Firm and its remaining partners, real parties in interest here, filed an action against petitioner and others seeking, inter alia, a declaration of rights and duties of the partners under the agreement. Petitioner answered and cross-complained, asserting a different interpretation of the partnership agreement. Both petitioner and real parties moved for summary adjudication, seeking to establish and enforce their differing interpretations of section 9.9 of the partnership agreement. After briefing and argument, the court ruled in real parties’ favor. This petition followed.

After the petition was filed we were deluged with requests to seal parts of the record. We also received two applications to appear as amici curiae. We granted the requests of amici curiae, and at first we granted some requests to seal documents. But more requests to seal were filed and briefs arrived addressing public and sealed information without distinction, often assuming confidential treatment without specifically requesting it. It became increasingly apparent that the situation called for a more deliberate approach to the question of sealing documents. We deferred ruling on other requests for sealing, but held the documents in confidence while we considered the requests. We are now prepared to rule on both the petition and the requests to seal documents. We address the merits of the petition first.

The Merits of the Petition

Petitioner takes the position that new section 9.9 of the partnership agreement is ambiguous and may be interpreted to call for sharing between former partners and the partnership of fees from all pending cases of the firm, not just cases taken by the departing partner. Petitioner contends that if the section is not so interpreted it violates several rules of professional conduct. Petitioner asserts that the court erred in interpreting the section to cover only fees from cases taken by petitioner and in ruling that the section so interpreted was enforceable.

In order to demonstrate conflict with rules of professional conduct, petitioner presents the example of a partnership client who chose to retain him after his departure from the partnership. Petitioner points out that since his departure he has taken several depositions in her case and plans to conduct further discovery, and that he expects to conduct a two-week trial in the case. But if the jury returns a verdict of $160,000, petitioner will receive a fee of only $912, while the partnership will receive $50,088. Petitioner contends that this arrangement: (1) provides an unconscionable fee to the *782 Boccardo Law Firm in violation of rule 2-107 of the Rules of Professional Conduct, (2) constitutes unlawful fee splitting without the consent of the client, in violation of rule 2-108 of the Rules of Professional Conduct, and (3) unlawfully restricts him in the practice of law, in violation of rule 2-109 of the Rules of Professional Conduct. He also argues that enforcement of the provision as interpreted by the court violates public policy by infringing upon his client’s right to representation by the attorney of her choice. Because of the economics of law practice, he will be unable to represent this client (and others) if the court’s application of section 9.9 is upheld.

Our reading of section 9.9 fails to uncover the ambiguity to which petitioner refers. The section states that “all clients and client files” remain the property of the partnership and that if a client desires to hire the withdrawing party, “any fees realized in any such case shall remain the property and asset of the Partnership,” subject to the withdrawing partner’s right to receive his partnership percentage of the fees. Under section 9.9, fees to be shared are the fees of “any such case,” which refers to the case of a client who desires to hire the withdrawing partner, not to the cases of all clients of the firm, as urged by petitioner.

Petitioner argues violation of several rules of professional conduct. We examine only one, because we find it, and considerations of public policy, dispositive, We conclude, as a matter of law, that the agreement here provides an unconscionable fee to the Boccardo Law Firm, in violation of rule 2-107 of the Rules of Professional Conduct.

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Bluebook (online)
201 Cal. App. 3d 777, 247 Cal. Rptr. 624, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champion-v-superior-court-calctapp-1988.