Gary W. Rich and Law Office of Gary W. Rich v. Joseph Simoni, etc.

772 S.E.2d 327, 235 W. Va. 142, 2015 W. Va. LEXIS 257
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 2015
Docket14-0998
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 772 S.E.2d 327 (Gary W. Rich and Law Office of Gary W. Rich v. Joseph Simoni, etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary W. Rich and Law Office of Gary W. Rich v. Joseph Simoni, etc., 772 S.E.2d 327, 235 W. Va. 142, 2015 W. Va. LEXIS 257 (W. Va. 2015).

Opinions

LOUGHRY, Justice:

This case is before us on certified question from the United States District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia and presents the issue of whether the West Virginia Rules of Professional Conduct (“Rules of Professional Conduct”) are statements of public policy with the equivalent legal force and effect as statutes enacted by the West Virginia Legislature. The underlying case involves the issue of whether a fee-sharing agreement between the individual petitioner, an attorney, and the respondent, a non-lawyer, is enforceable. Upon our consideration of this issue, we answer the certified question, as modified, in the affirmative.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Beginning in the 1990s and continuing until 2011, the petitioner, Gary W. Rich, practiced law in Morgantown, West Virginia.1 The respondent, Joseph Simoni, PhD., is a former professor in West Virginia University’s (“WVU’s”) Department of Sociology and Anthropology. While on the faculty at WVU, Dr. Simoni attended the West Virginia University College of Law; he successfully obtained a doctor of jurisprudence from the WVU College of Law in 1995. Despite sitting for the West Virginia bar examination four separate times, Dr. Simoni never obtained a passing score on the examination.2 As a result, he has never been admitted to practice law in this state or in any other jurisdiction.

In 1999, Mr. Rich and Dr. Simoni met through a mutual friend due to their respective interests in an asbestos case known as the WVU litigation.3 Addressing that litiga[144]*144tion, Dr. Simoni stated that he and another “WVU faculty colleague were the driving force behind the organization of University employees and the investigation of asbestos exposure in many University buildings.” Through this collaboration, Mr. Rich and Dr. Simoni learned of other potential environmental and toxic tort mass eases, including two actions known as the Fairmont4 litigation and the Spelter5 litigation. According to Dr. Simoni, he organized initial meetings and was the primary contact for the plaintiffs in the Fairmont and Spelter litigations. In addition to serving as the critical liaison between counsel and the plaintiffs, Dr. Simoni claims to have obtained key documents; organized property access for sample collection purposes; and researched filing fees, environmental cases, and pivotal toxic tort questions. Due to Mr. Rich’s lack of expertise in these areas of practice6 and his lack of resources to prosecute those cases, the decision was made to engage several out-of-state law firms to assist with these class actions.

The underlying litigation arose from an agreement between Mr. Rich and Dr. Simoni to compensate Dr. Simoni for his efforts in connection with various class action suits, including the Fairmont and Spelter litigations. According to Dr. Simoni, his initial understanding when he and Mr. Rich first agreed to work together was that they would “share the benefits half/half, 50/50.” That notion of an even split continued until April 2002 when a discussion ensued outside Mr. Rich’s Morgantown, West Virginia, office. During this meeting, Mr. Rich purportedly informed Dr. Simoni that “he was reducing [Dr. Simoni’s] share from 50 percent to 20 percent.”

As related by the district court in its memorandum order,7 Mr. Rich allegedly agreed several months later to reinstate the 50/50 fee split between Dr. Simoni and himself. Further discussions reportedly ensued in December 2003 between Dr. Simoni and Mr. Rich regarding the issue of compensation. While the two individuals were at a coffee shop in Waynesburg, Pennsylvania, Dr. Simoni recalled Mr. Rich broaching the fee arrangement topic, stating “he was changing the agreement again from the 50/50 that we had gotten to, back to in the late fall of 2002, that he was changing it back to the 80/20.”8

The next fee-related discussions between Dr. Simoni and Mr. Rich reportedly occurred in June 2005 while the two individuals were at a picnic shelter along the Rail-Trail path in Morgantown, West Virginia. During that meeting Mr. Rich suggested that they should communicate in writing rather than verbally. Dr. Simoni’s notes from that meeting “reflect that Rich confirmed his intention to pay Simoni 20% of the total compensation Rich received from the Fairmont and Spelter Litigations.” As he clarified during his deposition, Dr. Simoni’s expectation of compensation was tied to a successful result. If the case did not result in a plaintiffs’ verdict, he would “[g]et zero.”

During the summer of 2007, Dr. Simoni spoke with an attorney from the Cochran firm, one of the out-of-state law firms engaged by Mr. Rich, with regard to compensation tied to the Spelter litigation. Concerned that he “was being left out, you know, ... left out to dry,” Dr. Simoni asked this attor[145]*145ney to inform him when the Spelter litigation was finalized. After notifying him several months later regarding the conclusion of the Spelter litigation, the Cochran law firm subsequently emailed Dr. Simoni to “make sure you have submitted all final invoices to our office concerning” the Spelter litigation. Dr. Simoni indicated he “didn’t send any invoices” in response to this request. In explanation, he testified: “[S]ince my compensation, as I understood, would come from the agreement that I had with Rich, ... not until the cases were settled and based on my contributions and the value of my contributions, [I] never had the thought or expectation of having to keep hours of work or anything like that.”9 The record makes clear that Dr. Simoni’s expectation of fee recovery was linked to “the prospect of ‘percentage split of attorney fees earned by Rich.’ ”10

In response to Dr. Simoni’s recitation of the fee-related agreement and discussions, Mr. Rich represents that he was initially under the impression that Dr. Simoni was a licensed attorney.11 Thus, the possibility of a fee-sharing agreement initially arose while he was under the mistaken impression that Dr. Simoni had been admitted to the bar. Once he realized in 2000 or 2001 that Dr. Simoni was not a licensed attorney, Mr. Rich states he informed Dr. Simoni that he would first need to pass the bar before he could participate in any fee-sharing arrangement.12 Based on concerns he had regarding the propriety of fee-sharing for work performed prior to licensure, Mr. Rich contacted Sherri Goodman, former Chief Lawyer Disciplinary Counsel of the West Virginia State Bar.13 She reportedly informed Mr. Rich that Dr. Simoni “might not be able to get paid ethically.”

On January 13, 2012, Mr. Rich filed a complaint in the district court seeking a declaratory judgment on the issue of whether Dr. Simoni was entitled to compensation for services or activities performed in connection with the Fairmont and the Spelter litigations.14 He sought a ruling as to whether a sharing of legal fees with Dr. Simoni would violate Rule 5.4 of the West Virginia Rule of Professional Conduct.15 In response, Dr. Simoni filed a counterclaim and then an amended counterclaim, through which he alleged that Mi'.

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772 S.E.2d 327, 235 W. Va. 142, 2015 W. Va. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-w-rich-and-law-office-of-gary-w-rich-v-joseph-simoni-etc-wva-2015.