Collins v. Levine

274 S.E.2d 841, 156 Ga. App. 502, 1980 Ga. App. LEXIS 3094
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 19, 1980
Docket60319
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 274 S.E.2d 841 (Collins v. Levine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Levine, 274 S.E.2d 841, 156 Ga. App. 502, 1980 Ga. App. LEXIS 3094 (Ga. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Birdsong, Judge.

The appellant here is the plaintiff in a suit below against a law firm and an attorney, wherein she alleged that defendants are indebted to her for neglect of professional duties. The appellee, the firm of Parks & Eisenberg, was granted summary judgment on grounds that there was at no time any privity of contract between plaintiff Collins and defendant Parks & Eisenberg but rather that at all times the attorney-client contract and relationship existed only between plaintiff and defendant Levine; that Parks & Eisenberg did not represent, plaintiff in the action in question and at no time counseled her relative to it. Further, appellee asserted that even had there been such an attorney-client relationship, it would have ended . in July of 1973 when her true attorney Levine moved out of the firm’s law offices and took his case with him, so that plaintiff Collins’ claim against Parks & Eisenberg is barred by the statute of limitations. Held:

1. We affirm the grant of summary judgment to Parks & Eisenberg. The pleadings, depositions, affidavits and exhibits reveal that Mrs. Collins had first retained another attorney to represent her in a medical malpractice action. She was referred by that lawyer, during the pendency of the case (because he had been disbarred) to a friend (Mr. Levine) who had agreed to handle the case. The disbarred attorney sent Mrs. Collins a copy of his letter to the medical malpractice defendants’ attorney, which advised: “I have discussed this case with the law firm of Parks & Eisenberg in Atlanta and they have agreed to handle same if litigation becomes necessary.” There was handwritten at the bottom of this letter copy a note to Mrs. Collins from the attorney. Mrs. Collins received, executed and returned a retainer agreement in which she agreed to “hereby retain David N. Levine, attorney at law, to represent” her in the case; however, the retainer agreement was enclosed with a cover letter on *503 stationery bearing the letterhead, in large center print, “Parks & Eisenberg, Attorneys at Law, 1902 Peachtree Street”; and at the top left were printed the names of Sidney Parks and David Eisenberg immediately underscored with a line under which was printed in identical type “David N. Levine.” The letter was signed by David N. Levine. All pleadings filed in Mrs. Collins’ medical malpractice case were signed “Parks & Eisenberg, By: David N. Levine.” Service of the original answer was requested on “plaintiffs attorneys, whose address is Parks & Eisenberg, Atlanta, Georgia”; and the back cover sheet of the complaint showed plaintiffs attorney as “Parks & Eisenberg — Atlanta, Ga.”

The defendants, Parks & Eisenberg as a firm and David Levine as an individual, both maintain that they were sharing office space only, that Levine was not a part of the Parks & Eisenberg law firm; that while he sometimes had done work on a cash-for-work-done basis, he did not work for the firm as a member or associate. Levine worked in the firm’s offices, or shared space, from 1967 until June or July, 1973, a total of six years. Parks & Eisenberg admits that Levine was permitted to use the firm’s stationery, that he did so for several years; that he was permitted to have his name on firm stationery, and Parks & Eisenberg was aware that he regularly used the stationery. However, Parks & Eisenberg denies that Levine was permitted to use the firm’s name on his pleadings or that they knew he was using the firm’s name as the attorney on pleadings. Levine, to the contrary, testified in deposition that the firm knew he was using its name on pleadings, and apparently approved. Levine admitted that from the stationery with Parks & Eisenberg letterhead and the use of the firm name that it would be reasonable for another to assume he was a member of the firm. Both Parks & Eisenberg and Levine contend they were only sharing office space and that the firm never represented Mrs. Collins (see, in this connection, State Bar of Georgia Canon of Ethics, Ethical Consideration, 2-13; 2-11; DR2-102 (A) (4); 2-102 (B)). Parks & Eisenberg maintain that because the retainer agreement signed by Mrs. Collins was with David N. Levine alone and nowhere in its four corners mentioned Parks & Eisenberg, she had no privity with Parks & Éisenberg and there was no attorney-client relationship.

We agree that no material issue of fact remains in the case and that Parks & Eisenberg was entitled to summary judgment, but not because Mrs. Collins had privity only with Levine. We think the fact that Mrs. Collins had a retainer agreement only with Levine begs the question in this case. If Levine was the real or apparent agent for the firm with regard to Mrs. Collins’ lawsuit, then his contract with Mrs. Collins binds the firm, and extrinsic evidence may prove it. See Code *504 Ann. §§ 4-302,4-304; Raleigh & G. R. Co. v. Pullman Co., 122 Ga. 700, 709-711 (50 SE 1008); Fitzgerald Cotton Oil Co. v. Farmers' Supply Co., 3 Ga. App. 212 (1) (4), 215-217 (59 SE 713). The law firm would have benefit of that contract (Code Ann. § 4-313). It can easily be seen that notwithstanding that the client’s retainer agreement on its face was with Levine alone, had the medical malpractice suit proceeded to judgment against the defendant doctor, Parks & Eisenberg could raise a litigable issue as to whether it was entitled to some benefit of the fee as attorneys for Mrs. Collins, based at the very least on the arguably authorized use of the firm name as plaintiffs attorney in all pleadings of the suit, and the real or apparent authority of Levine to act and represent himself as being part of the firm, and the belief of the client that she had retained the firm or that in retaining Levine she retained the firm (see Fleming v. Hill, 62 Ga. 751, 753).

Real issues of fact might have been raised by evidence in this case that would indicate that Parks & Eisenberg might actually have been involved in the case, or that Levine actually or impliedly held himself out to be a member of the firm and represented by his actions to Mrs. Collins that she was represented by Parks & Eisenberg, and further that Levine had apparent authority to do so. But the relevancy of all of these factual determinations falls away in the face of Mrs. Collins’ inconsistent statements in her deposition and affidavit. She contends in her affidavit in response to Parks & Eisenberg’s motion for summary judgment that she at all times believed Levine was a member or part of the Parks & Eisenberg firm, and that after Levine moved from their offices in 1973, no one, not Levine or Parks & Eisenberg, “bothered to tell” her or the court that Parks & Eisenberg was not associated with Levine; that all the facts and circumstances led her to believe that Parks & Eisenberg and Levine were responsible for the handling of her suit and that she never had any reason to think differently until long after the medical malpractice suit was dismissed. In her deposition Mrs. Collins maintained that she looked to Levine as her attorney and she never had any contact with Mr. Parks or Mr. Eisenberg. She also stated that she believed Levine was a partner in the firm. But there is no dispute that Mrs. Collins knew Levine moved to other offices in 1973 and that never before that time nor, especially, after did she have any contact with Mr. Parks or Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.E.2d 841, 156 Ga. App. 502, 1980 Ga. App. LEXIS 3094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-levine-gactapp-1980.