Falconer v. Adams

20 P.3d 583, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 35, 2001 WL 333620
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 2001
DocketS-9290
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 P.3d 583 (Falconer v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Falconer v. Adams, 20 P.3d 583, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 35, 2001 WL 333620 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Charlie Falconer sued Karia Taylor Welch and Donald Adams because of a motor vehicle accident. Falconer obtained a verdict against Taylor-Welch, but Adams was exonerated and was awarded attorney's fees and costs. The question before us is whether Adams or Falconer's attorney who has a lien on Falconer's judgment against Taylor-Welch is entitled to the judgment proceeds. We conclude that because Adams is not a party to Faleoner's judgment against Taylor-Welch, the attorney's lien has priority.

II, FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On February 3, 1992, Karla Taylor Welch was driving a vehicle that rear-ended a stopped vehicle driven by Charlie Falconer. Falconer sued Taylor-Welch and a third driver, Donald Adams, who had allegedly forced Falconer to stop. A jury found that Taylor-Welch was negligent and that Adams was not negligent. Falconer's attorney filed a notice of an attorney's lien for attorney's fees and costs of $18,583 on any judgment in favor of Falconer. The trial court awarded attorney's fees and costs to Adams against Falconer for $10,623.25." After complex post-verdict proceedings, including an appeal, 1 a judgment of $13,873 was entered against Taylor-Welch in favor of Falconer.

Adams and Falconer disputed who was entitled to the Taylor-Welch judgment proceeds. The trial court initially ruled that Falconer's attorney had first priority. But after Adams filed a motion for reconsideration, the court ruled that Adams had priority. Falconer appeals.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

The question of priority is a legal one, to which we apply our independent judgment. 2 We will "adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy." 3

IV, DISCUSSION

Falconer argues that the attorney's lien has priority over Adams's claim both under AS 34.35.430 4 and the "common fund" *585 doctrine. Adams contends that AS 84.35.430(b) gives him priority over the attorney's lien and that the common fund doctrine is inapplicable. Because we conclude that the attorney's lien has priority under AS 34.35.4830, we do not resolve the common fund doctrine argument.

Adams argues that AS 84.35.480(b) subordinates the attorney's lien to his claim. Falconer responds that Adams is a judgment creditor who needed to garnish the judgment in favor of Falconer before the attorney's lien attached, rather than a party whose rights supercede the attorney's lien.

Subsection .480(b) speaks of "the parties to the action or proceeding" and is thus broad enough to subordinate an attorney's lien to the rights of any other party to the case. But we have interpreted this subsection more narrowly to apply only to the rights of the party paying the proceeds against which the lien is asserted. We so held as to settlement proceeds in Williams v. Utility Equipment, Inc. 5

In Williams, Leslie Williams filed products liability claims against Utility Equipment, Kodiak Motors, and Service Manufacturers. 6 Before trial, Williams settled with Service and Kodiak. 7 A jury found for Utility Equipment, and the court awarded attorney's fees to Utility Equipments. 8 Williams's attorneys still held some of the settlement proceeds in their possession and thus had a lien on those proceeds under AS 34.35.430(a)(2). 9 Utility Equipment argued that this lien was subordinate to its rights to court-awarded fees against Williams under subsection .430(b). 10 We concluded that subsection .480(b) could only benefit the parties responsible for paying the funds on which the lien was asserted. 11 We therefore held "that this section is properly interpreted to apply only to the parties actually involved in each settlement. Utility Equipment was not a party to either pretrial settlement, and therefore is not entitled to priority under AS $4.35.480(b)." 12

At common law it was a much disputed question whether an attorney's lien should be subordinated to an offsetting judgment. 13 But the debate ouly applied to "mutual" judgments: "To be mutual, they must be due to and from the same persons in the same capacity." 14 Where mutuality was lacking, there was no debate; the authorities agreed that the lien of the attorney had priority. 15

Language in attorney's lien statutes in other states with similar subordination clauses has been interpreted to apply to set-offs. 16 One commentator observed of the Oregon statute-on which AS 34.35.4830 is based 17 *586 that "[it seems that, from the language of the statute, the right of set-off between the parties would be superior to the rights of the attorney." 18

Based on this background, it seems that subsection 480(b) of the statute should be limited to cases of set-offs of mutual debts. It was meant to resolve the "ancient judicial controversy" in favor of the party holding the right of set-off, There is, however, little reason to suppose that it was also intended to change a rule about which there was no debate, namely that an attorney's lien would prevail over a debt that was not mutual.

This case is not about a set-off or a mutual debt. Set-offs exist between two parties each of whom owes an ascertained amount to the other. 19 Likewise, as noted above, mutual debts "must be due to and from the same persons in the same capacity." 20 Here, neither definition is satisfied, for Adams wants to apply the proceeds from Falconer's judgment against Taylor-Welch to his own judgment against Falconer.

The authorities discussed above confirm the correctness of our holding in Williams that subsection .480(b) only applies to the parties actually involved in a particular settlement. They also warrant the extension of the Williams holding to the facts of this case. Thus a fair reading of this statute is that "rights existing between the parties" refers to each plaintiff's rights vis-a-vis each defendant's rights. The statute's use of "between" supports reading the statute as applying to two-party relationships rather than multi-party situations, for which "among" would have been a more fitting word choice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 P.3d 583, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 35, 2001 WL 333620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falconer-v-adams-alaska-2001.