Cherry v. Zucker

57 Pa. D. & C.4th 33, 2002 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County
DecidedJanuary 18, 2002
Docketno. 96-2625
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 57 Pa. D. & C.4th 33 (Cherry v. Zucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherry v. Zucker, 57 Pa. D. & C.4th 33, 2002 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

BURR, J.,

The plaintiff, Garland D. Cherry Jr., Esquire, appeals from the denial of his post-trial motion in this action to recover compensation for services rendered prior to his dismissal from representing the defendant in an underlying medical malpractice lawsuit.1

[35]*35The plaintiff and the defendant, Edward L. Zucker, entered into a contingency fee agreement on November 21, 1990, whereby defendant employed the plaintiff to represent him in prosecuting a medical malpractice action against John U. Doherty M.D., and Paul Jennings M.D. The alleged negligence of Drs. Doherty and Jennings in diagnosing and treating Mr. Zucker’s supraventicular tachycardia (S VT) of the heart, purportedly caused Zucker to pass out at the wheel of his car and become injured in an ensuing automobile accident on January 17, 1989, and thus lose a promising professional basketball career. The agreed upon compensation for plaintiff’s services for prosecuting defendant’s lawsuit was a third of the gross amount recovered by way of a settlement, or 40 percent of the gross recovery following commencement of a trial. Defendant also agreed to pay for all expenses incurred by plaintiff in preparing the case for trial, “not limited to costs and fees associated with conducting an investigation, filing suit, obtaining records and reports, deposing witnesses, hiring experts, etc.” The agreement states that “[t]hese expenses will be initially advanced by Mr. Cherry, but he will be entitled to reimbursement of these expenses in full, separate and in addition to his fee, if and when there is a recovery in our case.” The agreement provides that defendant was not obligated to reimburse plaintiff’s expenses if there were no recovery in the case. (See contingency fee agreement, trial exhibit P-1.) Plaintiff maintains that his representation of Mr. Zucker actually commenced [36]*36a year before the agreement was signed, in “September or October of 1989,” and continued until the date of a termination letter from Mr. Zucker dated February 21, 1995. (4/23/99 N.T. 86.)

In an amended complaint filed on May 30,1996, plaintiff pleaded his intention to assert a lien on any proceeds recovered in the malpractice action, and “alternatively, if there is no recovery in the malpractice action, plaintiff still seeks quantum meruit recovery for the reasonable value of his professional services rendered to defendant up to the date of discharge plus expenses of litigation.” (Amended complaint, ¶¶29 and 30.) Plaintiff presented a bill at trial for the foregoing expenses in the amount of $9,467.84. (4/23/99 N.T. 82-83, plaintiff’s costs and expenses — trial exhibit P-7, see also, defendant’s motion for compulsory nonsuit and/or summary judgment.)2 Plaintiff testified that he has never been reimbursed for the expenses he put forth in the underlying litigation. (4/23/99 N.T. 84-85.) Plaintiff stated that he had never kept any diaries or calendars or billing records or any other written records that would substantiate the amount of time spent on tasks relative to his representation of Mr. Zucker. (4/23/99 N.T. 154.) Plaintiff presented a “chronology” of milestones in the malpractice case, be[37]*37ginning with the automobile accident on January 17, 1989, through his termination in February of 1995.

Plaintiff filed the underlying lawsuit, Zucker v. Doherty, captioned at number 91-291, in the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas, by writ on January 9, 1991.3 The case docket reflects plaintiff’s filing of a praecipe to withdraw his appearance for the defendant, Mr. Zucker, some four years later, on March 29, 1995. The docket also indicates that Mr. Zucker moved in that matter on June 29, 1995, to compel the plaintiff to produce defendant’s case file to successor counsel. The Honorable Maureen Fitzpatrick granted defendant’s motion in an amended order issued on July 18, 1995.4 The medical malpractice action then proceeded to trial in the spring of 1997, before the Honorable R. Barclay [38]*38Surrick, formerly of this court, some two years after plaintiff’s withdrawal from representing Mr. Zucker A jury awarded damages to Mr. Zucker in the amount of $2.7 million on May 27, 1997. The underlying defendant, Dr. Doherty, filed a motion for post-trial relief on May 29, 1997. It was at this juncture that plaintiff filed his action to recover attorney compensation against the attorneys and law firm that successfully prosecuted the medical malpractice action to verdict. That action, captioned Cherry v. Weiss, at number 97-7915, was filed in the Delaware County Court of Common Pleas on June 2, 1997.5

[39]*39Judge Surrick denied Dr. Doherty’s motion for post-trial relief in the medical malpractice action on December 31,1997. On January 22,1998, Judge Surrick molded the jury’s award to $1,755,000 to reflect the jury’s finding of 35 percent contributory negligence on Mr. Zucker’s part, and granted delay damages to Mr. Zucker in the amount of $523,666.78, bringing the total amount of the verdict recovered in the underlying action to $2,278,666.78. Judgment on the molded verdict was entered in the trial court on February 6,1998. Notice of Dr. Doherty’s appeal from denial of his post-trial motions was filed on February 23, 1998, along with an appeal bond in the amount of $1,534,400.14. Judge Surrick filed his opinion on January 25, 1999. The Superior Court’s order affirming Judge Surrick’s denial of Dr. Doherty’s post-trial motion was filed on December 13,2000, some 14 months following conclusion of trial in the instant case. There was no appeal from that decision.

Trial in the instant action commenced on April 22, 1999, with a request from plaintiff for a new trial listing, thus carrying on a delaying process that began after the first listing of this case for trial on November 7, 1997, when plaintiff asked for the matter to be removed from the list because it had settled. (4/22/99 N.T. 3-4, 28-29.) However, after the parties’ notification to the court of their rescission of the settlement agreement, plaintiff’s case was called to trial on March 16, 1998. Nevertheless, on that date, after a jury panel was seated, but be[40]*40fore it was sworn, plaintiff requested and was granted another continuance in order for discovery to proceed. The case was subsequently rescheduled for trial on July 27, 1998, but plaintiff again requested a continuance pending completion of the appeal in the underlying case on grounds that there was no fund or “res” before the court from which the fees in dispute could be distributed to the plaintiff. Plaintiff also sought, at this time, consolidation of this action with the above-mentioned case of Cherry v. Weiss, supra. That motion was denied and trial was rescheduled for January 4, 1999. Plaintiff then requested that the case be removed from the January list because he had pre-purchased nonrefundable airline tickets for a vacation in Florida from January 12 through January 23, 1999.

Trial was rescheduled for the term beginning February 8, 1999, at which time plaintiff filed a motion seeking clarification of the law of quantum meruit by discharged counsel, asking the court to determine for him whether a discharged attorney seeking quantum meruit compensation may recover a proportionate share of the fund he helped create, or whether he is limited to relief in the form of hourly compensation only.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 Pa. D. & C.4th 33, 2002 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherry-v-zucker-pactcompldelawa-2002.