Garden Hill Land Corp. v. Cambre

354 So. 2d 1064
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1978
Docket8676
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 354 So. 2d 1064 (Garden Hill Land Corp. v. Cambre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garden Hill Land Corp. v. Cambre, 354 So. 2d 1064 (La. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

354 So.2d 1064 (1978)

GARDEN HILL LAND CORPORATION
v.
Succession of Edwin CAMBRE et al.

No. 8676.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

January 11, 1978.
Rehearings Denied February 14, 1978.
Writs Refused March 27, 1978.

*1065 D. A. McGovern, III, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

James R. Pertuit, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.

Before GULOTTA, BEER and BOWES, JJ.

BEER, Judge.

Kenneth V. Ward seeks to recover attorney's fees allegedly due under a 50% contingent fee contact or, alternatively, to recover in quantum meruit for services rendered in representing the minor daughter of Mrs. Cambre, Renette Maria Cambre, in the succession of her grandfather, Edwin Cambre, Sr.[1]

Ward, by intervention, asserts his attorney's privilege (La.R.S. 9:5001) on certain property known as Woodland Plantation in which the succession of Edwin Cambre, Sr. had an ownership interest and which was the subject of partition proceedings. Renette Maria Cambre had been placed in possession of an undivided one-third of the succession property plus an additional ten acres of a tract known as St. John Plaza. Against these assets, Ward asserted a 50% claim.

The lengthy history which gave rise to this claim was summarized by the Louisiana Supreme Court, in Garden Hill Land Corp. v. Succ. of Cambre, 306 So.2d 718 (La.1975).

In his intervention, Ward sought to recover under the terms of his contract with Renette Maria Cambre. The district court recognized his claim and granted him a *1066 privilege on 50% of the proceeds realized from sale of the property to be partitioned. Thereafter, on devolutive appeal to this court, the contingent fee contract was held invalid, but Ward's right to seek reasonable attorney's fees was reserved.

The Supreme Court granted writs, and, in Garden Hill Land Corp. v. Succ. of Edwin Cambre, supra, we were reversed and the case remanded to the district court with the following instructions:

"Normally we would be inclined to hold that plaintiff, having failed to make out his case, is limited to the relief that the Court of Appeal afforded him, that is, a claim for reasonable compensation for his services to the minor, to be proven in the court entertaining the tutorship proceeding.
Because of extenuating circumstances, however, we feel that fairness and justice would better be served if plaintiff in intervention were allowed to try to prove that his 50% contingency fee contract, as and when executed on March 10, 1971, was reasonable. Should he fail on remand to satisfy the court that his 50% contingency fee contract was reasonable and thus legally binding, taking into account among other things the risk of non-recovery, the amount of legal work, the size of the minor's estate, and the anticipated delay in receipt of his fee, he should be able to establish the amount he is due as reasonable compensation for his services, possibly under amended pleadings seeking alternative relief in the District Court on remand, or, independently of these proceedings, in the tutorship in the same district court.
Relative to the $6,022.05, which the attorney has already received in the district court in these partition proceedings pending appeal; since he may yet prove that he has a recoverable claim for legal services in these proceedings we are not inclined to act prematurely concerning Mr. Ward's receipt of this money, a fact which incidentally forms no part of the record before us.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeal reversing the trial court judgment and invalidating intervenor's attorney fee contract is reversed. The case is remanded to the District Court for reconsideration of the validity of the attorney fee contract (for a determination as to whether the prescribed fee is reasonable and the contract accordingly legal) and for such other matters as may properly be brought before the trial court.
The fixing of costs for this appeal is reserved until this case is concluded." Id., at 723, 724.

On remand to the district court, Ward filed an amended petition, which:

a. alleged further facts in support of reasonableness of the contract;
b. joined the minor who had become a major as a defendant in intervention; and
c. pled in the alternative that fee for legal services from June 27, 1971 through August 2, 1972, date of Ward's dismissal as attorney, be set on a quantum meruit basis.

Cambre answered the amended petition and also filed a motion styled "Motion for Restitution on a Vacated Judgment," seeking restitution of the $6,022.05 awarded Ward as well as restitution of an additional $24,750.00 awarded him later but still based upon the original recognition of his 50% contract.

After a hearing on remand, the district court held the 50% contingent fee unreasonable, and awarded $8,000.00 attorney's fees for services rendered Renette Maria Cambre up until August 2, 1972.

From that judgment, Ward has suspensively appealed, seeking recognition of the reasonableness of his contingent fee contract. Appellee Renette Maria Cambre has answered the appeal, seeking restitution of $30,772.05 (the sum total of the $6,022.05 plus the $24,750.00 noted above).

Prior to trial on remand, appellee filed a peremptory exception of prescription to appellant's claim in quantum meruit. The quantum meruit claim was made by amendment *1067 to the original petition and was filed on March 13, 1975. Because the applicable prescriptive period set forth in La.Civ.Code art. 3538 is three years, appellee contends that the March 13, 1975 filing of the amended petition presenting a quantum meruit claim was too late, and the claim was prescribed.

It is further argued that amendment of the petition did not relate back under La.C. C.P. art. 1153,[2] because it is alleged, the quantum meruit claim is a separate cause of action from the original contract claim.

In considering this argument, the initial determination to be made is whether the prescriptive period for Ward's fee claim did indeed commence on the date of rendition of judgment of possession on January 18, 1972, or if it commenced on the date Ward was dismissed by Mrs. Cambre, August 2, 1972 (which is within three years of filing of the amended petition).

The employment contract, regardless of its validity, is instructive in determining the intent of the parties with regard to the point at which attorney's fees would be due and exigible. By their employment contract, Mrs. Venita Cambre and Ward agreed:

"MRS. VENITA CAMBRE hereby employs KENNETH V. WARD as her attorney to compromise, or otherwise collect by suit, all claims of the minor, RENETTE MARIA CAMBRE, in the succession of her grandfather, Succession of Edward Cambre, Sr. Probate Docket No. 638, Twenty-Ninth Judicial District Court, Parish of St. John, Louisiana.
The said KENNETH V. WARD accepts said employment, and in consideration of his services rendered and to be rendered MRS. VENITA CAMBRE, as tutrix of the minor, RENETTE MARIA CAMBRE, hereby agrees to pay him fifty (50) per cent of the amount received by the minor, RENETTE MARIA CAMBRE, in the above succession proceedings whether the minor's claim is compromised or settled by legal proceedings. (Emphasis added.)"

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Bluebook (online)
354 So. 2d 1064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garden-hill-land-corp-v-cambre-lactapp-1978.