Gilbert & Grief, P.A. v. Blackmer

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 20, 2005
DocketPENcv-04-82
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gilbert & Grief, P.A. v. Blackmer (Gilbert & Grief, P.A. v. Blackmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilbert & Grief, P.A. v. Blackmer, (Me. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

STATE O F MAINE SUPERIOR COURT PENOBSCOT, SS. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. CV-04-82 T 1,- . f

Gilbert & Grief, P.A., Piainriff

Order (Motions for Parti Summary Judgment)

Bruce Blackmer et al., Defendants

Pending before the court are two motions for summary judgment, one filed jointly by defendants OneBeacon Insurance Co. and Northern Assurance Company of America ("the insurance companies"), and the other (a motion for partial summary judgment) filed by the plaintiff, Gilbert & Grief, P.A. The court has reviewed the parties' submissions on these motions. The motions are directed toward Gilbert & Grief's claims against the insurance companies, which are predicated on its contention that it had perfected an attorneys' fees lien on settlement proceeds that the insurance companies paid directly to Gilbert & Grief's former client, defendant Bruce Blackmer. For the reasons set out below, the court concludes that the fee agreement between Gilbert & Grief and Blackmer was insufficient as a matter of law to generate such a lien, even if Maine law recognizes liens to secure payment of attorney's fees. A party is entitled to summary judgment when the record shows that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. M.R.Civ.P. 56(c); see also Darlings v. Ford Motor Co., 2003 ME 21, g 14, 817 A.2d 877, 879. The motion court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, Benton Falls Associates v. Central Maine Power Company, 2003 ME 99, 10, 828 A.2d 7 5 9 , 7 6 2 , and it does not search or consider any part of the record not specifically referenced in the parties' separate statements of material facts. M.R. Civ. P. 56(h)(4); see also Gilbert v. Gilbert, 2002 ME 67,g 15,796 A.2d 57,60-61 Pursuant to a contingency fee agreement executed in October 1998, Charles E. Gilbert, 111, an attorney practicing with Gilbert & Grief, represented the defendant Bruce Blackmer in connection with a fire loss claim against two insurance companies, OneBeacon Insurance Co. and Northern Assurance Company of America, who appear as co-defendants here.' Piaintiff's Statement of iviateriai Facts (PSivFj, 9 i. Through the law firm, Blackmer filed suit against the two insurance companies, seeking recovery under insurance policies that the companies had issued. PSMF, 12; Defendants' Statement of Material Fact (DSMF), g 5. The suit led to discovery events and dispositive motion practice, finally resulting in an agreement among the parties to proceed to arbitration. PSMF, 12. As part of the arbitration process, the parties agreed to a high- low framework, under which Blackmer was assured of receiving at least $35,000, regardless of the outcome of the arbitration. PSMF, 18. Nonetheless, prior to the issuance of an arbitration award, Gilbert purported to settle Blackmer's claims, with authority from Blackmer, for $51,629.55. PSMF, 9 2. Even after the parties reached the apparent settlement and the insurance companies' attorney, Samuel Lanham, tendered a release, outstanding issues prompted Blackmer to hold off from consummating the deal. PSMF 13. Gilbert continued to negotiate with the carriers, and the remaining issues ultimately were resolved to the satisfaction of Gilbert and Blackmer. PSMF 14. In light of the agreement, the two carriers issued checks and delivered them to Lanham, who was prepared to give them to Gilbert and Blackmer once Blackmer signed the release. PSMF, 1 7 . Despite the agreement, however, Blackmer refused to execute the release and instructed Gilbert to pursue a course of action that Gilbert felt was unethical. PSMF g 5. Gilbert sought - and, in late May 2003, was granted -- leave to withdraw because of the prospects that he would become a witness in an anticipated proceeding brought by the carriers to enforce the terms of the settlement. PSMF, g 6; DSMF, g 7. In a letter dated April 21, 2003, and received on April 22, PSMF, 112, Gilbert advised Lanham of his intention to withdraw from the case. DSMF, 16. In that letter, Gilbert also advised Lanham that he (Gilbert)

1 To put it more precisely, Defendant OneBeacon formerly did business as Commercial Union Insurance Company, which was the party in the underlying proceeding. Defendants' Statement of Material Fact, 13. OneBeacon is therefore Commercial Union's successor in interest. claimed a lien against the settlement proceeds, amounting to attorney's fees of $16,844.61 and disbursements of $696.43, for a total of $17,54.1.04. PSMF, 9, 11, 13; DSNIF, 9 6. At various times, Gilbert also notified Blackmer that he claimed those amounts of fees and disbursements that Gilbert believed he had earned under the contingent fee agreement. PSXF y" iO. PSiviF, y" 9. After Gilbert was granted leave to withdraw as Blackmer's counsel, Blackmer proceeded pro se from that time through the execution of his settlement on the fire loss claim. DSMF, g 8. On November 26,2003, Blackmer and the insurance companies reached a settlement agreement. DSMF, jl 10. On December 1, Blackmer told Lanham that he (Blackmer) did not want ,Gilbert to be paid from the settlement proceeds and that he would deal directly with Gilbert to address Gilbert's claim for attorney's fees. DSMF g 15. The same day, Lanham notified Gilbert that the parties had reached a settlement and that the insurers were paying Blackmer on the claim. DSMF, 9 12. Lanham also told Gilbert that he (Gilbert) and Blackmer would have to resolve the fee dispute directly. DSMF, 9 13. Gilbert advised that he would file suit to collect attorney's fees. DSMF, jl 14. The insurance companies then tendered payments totaling $51,629.55 directly to Blackmer by two checks dated December 1,2003. PSMF 99 14, 15; DSMF 7 16. This is the same amount that the carriers were prepared to pay earlier, based on the settlement the parties reached while Gilbert represented Blackmer. PSMF, jl 14. The settlement payment checks were made payable to Blackmer only. PSMF, jl 16. Gilbert & Grief filed a complaint against Blackmer for breach of contract (count I), unjust enrichment (count 2) and quantum meruit (count 3). The plaintiff also filed a claim against the insurance companies for recovery on an attorneys' fee lien (count 4) and for conversion (count 5). OneBeacon and Northern Assurance have filed a joint motion for summary judgment on counts 4 and 5. Gilbert & Grief has filed a cross motion for partial summary judgment against the insurance companies on count 4 only, seeking a ruling that there existed an attorney's fees lien on the settlement proceeds that the insurance companies elected to pay entirely and directly to Blackmer. The motions at bar do not implicate Gilbert & Grief's claims against Blackmer. When it addressed the issue most recently, the Law Court reserved ruling on the question of whether a fee agreement between an attorney and that attorney's client may generate a lien on the proceeds of any recovery awarded to the client. See Libner v. Maine County Commissioners' Ass'n, 2004 ME 39,g 10, 845 A.2d 570, 573. There, the Court did not reach the ultimate issue of whether this type of lien exists under Maine law because it held that even if attorneys' fees liens do exist in Maine, the attorney-plaintiff in that case couid not benefit from such a remedy because he had not satisfied the eiemental notice requirement of any such lien. Id. This court reaches a comparable result here: even if attorney's fees liens are a feature of Maine's legal landscape, Gilbert & Grief would not be entitled to any remedy based on a lien claim here because as a matter of law the contingency fee agreement executed between the firm and Blackmer was not sufficient to create such a lien.

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Bluebook (online)
Gilbert & Grief, P.A. v. Blackmer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilbert-grief-pa-v-blackmer-mesuperct-2005.