Groves v. Goodsell & Oviatt LLP

CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 2026
Docket31183, 31194
StatusPublished

This text of Groves v. Goodsell & Oviatt LLP (Groves v. Goodsell & Oviatt LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Groves v. Goodsell & Oviatt LLP, (S.D. 2026).

Opinion

#31183, #31194-aff in pt & rev in pt-SRJ 2026 S.D. 33

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

ELIZABETH L. GROVES, as Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF WILLIAM JASON GROVES and GROVES LAW OFFICE, Plaintiffs and Appellants,

v.

GOODSELL & OVIATT, LLP, Defendant and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT PENNINGTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE STACY L. WICKRE Judge

JOHN K. NOONEY CASSIDY M. STALLEY JARED D. NOONEY of Nooney & Solay, LLP Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiffs and appellants.

MICHAEL S. BEARDSLEY STEVEN C. BEARDSLEY of Beardsley, Jensen & Lee, Prof. L.L.C. Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant and appellee.

ARGUED MARCH 18, 2026 OPINION FILED 05/27/26 #31183, #31194

JENSEN, Chief Justice

[¶1.] William Jason Groves, a solo practitioner operating as Groves Law

Office (Groves), and Verne Goodsell, on behalf of Goodsell & Oviatt, LLP (Goodsell),

entered into contingency fee agreements with three clients to provide legal

representation on unrelated claims involving the denial of workers’ compensation

benefits. The agreements set out the fee arrangement with each client and provided

for a split of attorney’s fees between the two firms “on a pro rata Fifty/Fifty percent

(50%-50%) basis[.]” A dispute arose concerning the fees owed to Groves on the cases

after he passed away on October 18, 2021. Client #1’s case had settled shortly

before Groves’s death, and the case for Client #2 resolved a few months later.

[¶2.] Groves’s wife, Elizabeth Groves, on behalf of the William Groves

Estate (the Estate), filed this action to recover 50% of any fees paid by Clients #1

and #2 and for a declaratory judgment of the Estate’s right to recover 50% of the

fees paid by Client #3. Goodsell later paid the Estate 50% of the attorney’s fees paid

by Client #1 but less than 50% of the attorney’s fees paid by Client #2. After ruling

on multiple summary judgment motions, the circuit court determined that Groves’s

contracts with Clients #2 and #3 expired at the time of his death and that the

Estate had been fully paid for attorney’s fees earned on the cases for Clients #1 and

#2. The circuit court ordered Goodsell to pay the Estate prejudgment interest for

the delayed payment of attorney’s fees on Client #1’s case. The court also ordered

the Estate to pay prejudgment interest to Goodsell on the disputed portion of the

attorney’s fees for Client #2 that Goodsell had deposited with the clerk of courts.

The Estate appeals. Goodsell cross-appeals the circuit court’s award of prejudgment

-1- #31183, #31194

interest to the Estate for Client #1. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand

for further proceedings.

Factual and Procedural History

[¶3.] Groves and Goodsell entered into a fee agreement with Client #1 on

July 27, 2016. Client #1’s case settled on August 4, 2021. On September 1, 2021,

Goodsell received the settlement proceeds and deposited them into its trust account.

Due to the complexity of calculating the attorney’s fees owed by Client #1, the fee

agreement was amended on September 15, in which Client #1 agreed to pay

attorney’s fees of $1,062,500. The amended agreement continued to provide for a

fee split of “50/50 between [Goodsell and Groves].” Goodsell paid itself 50% of the

attorney’s fees earned ($531,250) in two installments on September 15 and October

13, 2021. Goodsell did not pay Groves attorney’s fees from Client #1’s case at this

time.

[¶4.] The Estate filed suit to determine the fees owed under all three

agreements in May 2022. Goodsell subsequently delivered a check to the Estate in

the amount of $425,000.1 A letter accompanying the check provided that the check

was “for attorney’s fees in the [Client #1] matter.” Additionally, it provided, “The

payment of $425,000.00 shall not constitute a waiver of any right, claim, or defense

[either party] may have in [the litigation].” The Estate responded to Goodsell by

letter, acknowledging the check and stating:

1. This amount was paid based upon discussions Goodsell had with an out-of- state law firm purportedly representing the Estate. Shortly thereafter, the Estate clarified that it would not settle for less than 50% of the fees collected from Client #1. -2- #31183, #31194

That check is not an unconditional payment and because there are conditions attached to it, we will remit the check to you and pre-judgment interest will continue to accrue on that sum. If you would like to provide an unconditional tender of those monies, please do so and my client will accept an unconditional tender.

The Estate subsequently returned the check. Goodsell later paid the Estate 50% of

the attorney’s fees earned from Client #1’s case ($531,250) on November 4, 2022,

before the circuit court had ruled on any of the summary judgment motions.

[¶5.] Groves and Goodsell entered into a contingency fee agreement with

Client #2 on May 14, 2014. Following workers’ compensation proceedings, Client #2

filed a bad faith action that was tried to a jury in state court in November 2017.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of Client #2 for approximately $45.5 million. A

large portion of the award was punitive damages. The circuit court reduced a

portion of the punitive damages verdict by remittitur and entered a judgment for

approximately $10.5 million. Both parties appealed from the judgment. Groves and

Goodsell retained Robert Peck, an appellate lawyer, to argue the issue of punitive

damages on appeal for a flat fee of $100,000. This Court reversed the bad faith

judgment and remanded for a new trial.

[¶6.] Client #2’s bad faith claim was retried to a jury less than one month

after Groves’s death. The second trial resulted in a jury verdict of approximately

$42 million. After trial, the circuit court reduced the verdict by remittitur to

approximately $21.1 million. Both parties appealed the judgment but reached a

settlement on May 10, 2022.

[¶7.] Per the terms of the contingency fee agreement, Client #2 paid total

attorney’s fees of $7,680,000 from the settlement proceeds. From these fees,

-3- #31183, #31194

Goodsell paid Peck $100,000. Goodsell paid itself 50% of the remaining fees

($3,790,000) in three installments on June 2, June 22, and June 30, 2022. On

November 7, 2022, Goodsell delivered a check to the Estate in the amount of

$1,500,000 for “fees payable in the [Client #2] matter” as an “unconditional

tender[.]” The Estate accepted the check but continued to assert that it was owed

50% of the attorney’s fees paid by Client #2.

[¶8.] The third fee agreement at issue in this case is the contingency fee

agreement that Groves and Goodsell entered into with Client #3 on April 6, 2017.

Client #3’s case is still pending. No fees have been paid by Client #3.

[¶9.] After the Estate filed suit, Goodsell counterclaimed, alleging Groves

breached the contracts with all three clients and seeking interpleader to deposit the

disputed portion of the fees claimed by Groves for Client #2 with the clerk of courts.

Goodsell subsequently filed a motion to deposit the disputed portion of attorney’s

fees in the amount of $2,340,000 received from Client #2 with the clerk of courts.

The circuit court granted the motion.

[¶10.] The Estate filed an amended complaint, alleging breach of contract as

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Groves v. Goodsell & Oviatt LLP, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groves-v-goodsell-oviatt-llp-sd-2026.