Garden Hill Land Corp. v. Succession of Cambre

306 So. 2d 718, 1975 La. LEXIS 3877
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 20, 1975
Docket54999
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 306 So. 2d 718 (Garden Hill Land Corp. v. Succession of Cambre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana 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. Succession of Cambre, 306 So. 2d 718, 1975 La. LEXIS 3877 (La. 1975).

Opinion

306 So.2d 718 (1975)

GARDEN HILL LAND CORPORATION
v.
SUCCESSION OF Edwin CAMBRE et al.

No. 54999.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

January 20, 1975.

Charles J. Rivet, New Orleans, for intervenor-applicant.

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

CALOGERO, Justice.

This case involves a contest over entitlement to a fee for legal services. It arises in a partition proceeding wherein the attorney, Kenneth V. Ward, intervened, asserting an attorney's privilege (under the provisions of R.S. 9:5001) on the portion of the involved property belonging to a minor, one Renette Maria Cambre.[1]

In his intervention he claimed a 50% interest of the minor's interest in the property which is the subject of the partition proceedings (namely 10 lots or parcels of *719 ground on Woodland Plantation on the West Bank of the Mississippi River in the Parish of St. John the Baptist). The Succession of Edwin Cambre had owned an undivided ¼th interest in such property jointly with Garden Hill Land Corporation and four other persons. Mr. Ward had represented the minor and had secured a judgment of possession placing his client in possession of an undivided 1/3 of various succession property including the succession's ¼th interest in the subject property. As is evident from the title in the case, Garden Hill Land Corporation had instituted the partition proceedings.

The District Judge found that Mr. Ward had a valid and legally binding 50% contingency contract with the minor and thus a valid 50% claim against the minor's interest in the property sought to be partitioned. He rendered judgment granting the attorney a "first privilege claim against the property and/or proceeds of any sale of ... property belonging to the minor... to the extent of 50%."

The Court of Appeal reversed, holding the attorney's contract invalid, preserving "the right of Mr. Ward to return to the court which entertained the tutorship proceedings in order than an award of reasonable attorney's fees be set." While the appeal was pending, Mr. Ward was awarded, by order of the Twenty-Ninth Judicial District Court, a portion of the proceeds of the sale of the minor's property ($6,022.05). Finding that Mr. Ward had no claim on the minor's estate arising from the contract, and because the Court recognized that he did have a right to an attorney's fee, and since the tutrix had not yet paid any of the attorneys she had hired and fired, the Court of Appeal held that Ward should not be required to return the $6,022.05 until his fee is in fact set in the tutorship proceedings, provided he should exercise his rights within a reasonable period of time. They asserted that the $6,022.05 may be used as a credit if the set fee is more or may be used as a credit if fee is more or may be returned in part if the fee is less.

We granted the attorney writs, concerned as we were with the Court of Appeal's conclusions 1) that Article 4271, Code of Civil Procedure, mandatorily required prior court approval of the attorney contract and 2) that in this case there had been neither court approval nor ratification of the contract.

In 1964, Mrs. Venita Jacob Cambre qualified as tutrix of her minor daughter, Renette Maria Cambre. The child's grandfather, Edwin Cambre, died in 1966 and his succession was opened in the Twenty-Ninth Judicial District Court for the Parish of St. John the Baptist. In 1969 after having first employed and discharged another attorney, the tutrix hired Mr. Thomas J. Kliebert, as attorney to represent her daughter in recovering from the grandfather's succession the child's proper interest therein. She procured court authorization evidenced by the following order in the tutorship proceeding, dated October 8, 1969:

"IT IS ORDERED that Venita Cambre, natural tutrix of the minor Renette Maria Cambre be and she is hereby authorized and directed to employ counsel for the minor and to enter into a contract with counsel providing for the payment of a reasonable fee, including a contingency fee not exceeding an undivided one-half interest of the minor's interest in the Estate of Edwin Cambre, Sr., for services to be rendered in pursuing the pending litigation and to bring such other actions as may be deemed appropriate or necessary to protect said interest of the minor in the final settlement of the Estate of Edwin Cambre, Sr." (emphasis provided)

Thereafter, the tutrix apparently had some differences with Mr. Kliebert and sought to employ instead, Mr. Ward. He originally advised her that he could not take on the legal representation because she was then being represented by Mr. *720 Kliebert. However, when the tutrix later telephoned Mr. Ward and advised him that Mr. Kliebert had withdrawn from the case, Mr. Ward undertook to examine the matter more closely. He went to St. John the Baptist Parish, examined the succession proceedings, and found in the record notification that Mr. Kliebert had formally withdrawn. He thereupon negotiated with the attorney for the succession of Edwin Cambre, Sr. and received by letter dated March 8, 1971, from the attorney for the succession, an offer in connection with a possible settlement of the minor's interest in the estate.

Two days later on March 10, 1971, he called Mrs. Cambre back into his office and told her that he would accept the case. At that meeting in his office, she agreed to employ him on a 50% contingency fee contract akin to what she apparently earlier had entered into with Mr. Kliebert, and she agreed to settle the minor's interest in the estate on terms essentially the same as what was contained in the letter offer that Mr. Ward had received from the attorney for the succession.[2]

The contingency fee contract which the tutrix signed on March 10, 1971 reads in part as follows:

"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."

About nine weeks later, the tutrix and her sister, who was under-tutrix, signed, and Mr. Ward filed in the tutorship proceedings, a petition for court approval of the employment of counsel, pretty much tracking the earlier petition filed by Mr. Kliebert in 1969. The pertinent court order, dated May 19, 1971, signed by Judge William Bradley was as follows:

"IT IS ORDERED that Mrs. Venita Jacob Cambre, natural tutrix of the minor, Renette Maria Cambre, be and she is hereby authorized and directed to employ Kenneth V. Ward as counsel for the minor and to enter into a contract with counsel providing for the payment of a reasonable fee on a contingency fee basis not exceeding a one-half interest of the minor's interest in the Estate of Edwin Cambre, Sr., after such interest is reduced to cash, for services to be rendered in pursuing the pending litigation and to bring such other actions as may be deemed appropriate or necessary to protect said interest of the minor." (emphasis provided)

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 So. 2d 718, 1975 La. LEXIS 3877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garden-hill-land-corp-v-succession-of-cambre-la-1975.