Hardisty v. HINTON & ALFERT

21 Cal. Rptr. 3d 835, 124 Cal. App. 4th 999
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 4, 2005
DocketA107318
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 21 Cal. Rptr. 3d 835 (Hardisty v. HINTON & ALFERT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardisty v. HINTON & ALFERT, 21 Cal. Rptr. 3d 835, 124 Cal. App. 4th 999 (Cal. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*1002 Opinion

KLINE, P. J.

As part of the posttrial settlement of this action, all parties stipulated to vacate the judgment entered in by the Contra Costa Superior Court on May 25, 2004. To effectuate their stipulation, the parties filed in this court an “Application for Order Vacating Judgment” 1 pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 128, subdivision (a)(8). 2 The record is not complete and briefing on the noticed appeal and cross-appeal has not commenced.

We shall deny the motion to vacate the judgment.

FACTS

This nonjury case was tried over three days before Contra Costa County Superior Court Judge Joyce Cram. The “Findings of Fact and Judgment after Court Trial” (hereafter findings and judgment) Judge Cram filed on March 25, 2004, may be summed up as follows: Plaintiff George Hardisty, an attorney, referred a client, James Gracey, to attorney and coplaintiff John Peterson. The case related to an automobile accident in 1999 in which Gracey’s incompetent brother, Todd Larsen, sustained severe injuries. Acting as guardian ad litem for Larsen, Gracey entered into a written fee agreement with Peterson. The agreement required Peterson to handle the case for a contingent fee of 20 percent and provided that he would share the fee with Hardisty, the referring attorney.

Hulita Kisi, the driver of the van in which Todd Larsen was a passenger, also retained Peterson to represent her. When Kisi was sued by other passengers, another attorney involved in the case moved to disqualify Peterson from representing Larsen based upon the conflict of interest posed by his representation of parties with adverse interests. The motion was granted and Peterson referred the representation of Larsen to the firm of *1003 Hinton & Alfert, which agreed to substitute as attorneys of record. Hinton & Alfert did not obtain a written fee agreement with Gracey or Larsen.

After Larsen’s case settled for $950,000, Hilton & Alfert petitioned for approval of the settlement in the Alameda County Superior Court, where the personal injury case had been filed. At the hearing on the petition, counsel associated with Hinton & Alfert represented to the court that the firm had a written fee agreement providing for a 20 percent contingency fee, and that Peterson was not requesting attorney fees but only reimbursement of his costs. The petition to confirm the compromise of Larsen’s claim was granted by the Alameda County Superior Court on August 16, 2002, and Hilton & Alfert was awarded attorney fees of $181,518.22.

Shortly after receiving the attorney fee award, Hinton & Alfert asked Peterson to document the amount of fees he felt entitled to receive in quantum meruit and his costs. Peterson claimed 170 hours at $200 per hour, for a total of $34,000, as well as costs of $4,098.29. However, in addition to these amounts, Peterson also asked Hinton & Alfert to pay Attorney Hardisty the referral fee called for by Peterson’s fee agreement. Hinton & Alfert agreed to pay Peterson or Hardisty, but not both, though the firm did reimburse Peterson for his costs. This lawsuit ensued.

The parties’ motion states that, by their complaint (which is not now a part of the record), Hardisty and Peterson “alleged that Hinton & Alfert agreed to pay each of them a ‘referral fee’ in connection with Hinton & Alfert’s representation of Todd Larsen, an incompetent adult who was injured in a single-vehicle accident. Messrs. Hardisty and Peterson alleged Hinton & Alfert was contractually obligated to share 1/3 of a 20% contingency fee it collected with them. Hinton & Alfert asserted it was not so obligated.”

Judge Cram’s findings and judgment included the following determinations: (1) Hinton & Alfert’s representations to the Alameda County Superior Court were false, in that the firm had no written fee agreement with its client, and Peterson had requested and been promised reimbursement in quantum meruit for the time he spent on the case prior to the substitution of Hinton & Alfert; (2) Peterson was not entitled to any attorney fees, because “he accepted representation of two parties with adverse interests, and did not have a signed waiver of the conflict”; (3) “Hinton & Alfert is estopped from denying the contract which called for a referral fee to Plaintiff George Hardisty . . . [as] the firm adopted the terms of the contract in their representations to the Alameda County court, and they realized a benefit from *1004 that adoption. Had the Alameda County judge been aware that there was no written contract, Hinton & Alfert would have been [able] to recover only under quantum meruit. The attorneys’ fees they actually received as a result of adopting the contract substantially exceeded the fees to which they would have been entitled under quantum meruit”; 3 and (4) the contract adopted by Hinton & Alfert “called for a referral fee of ‘up to one-third’ to Plaintiff George Hardisty . . . [and] this term is sufficiently clear to be enforced. The evidence as to when a lesser referral fee would be given was that this would only happen if there was only a nominal recovery, a situation that did not occur here.”

In the judgment, Judge Cram decreed: “1. Plaintiff JOHN H. PETERSON shall take nothing, [f] 2. Plaintiff GEORGE D. HARDISTY shall recover from Defendant HINTON & ALFERT the sum of $60,506, representing a referral fee of one-third, plus costs of suit, [f] 3. Defendants PETER HINTON and PETER ALFERT are entitled to judgment in their favor.”

The motion to vacate the judgment avers that “Hinton & Alfert objected to the ‘Findings of Fact and Judgment’ on several grounds including that the court did not comply with [California Rules of Court, rule] 232(e) and had never taken the first procedural step that would have permitted it to request a Statement of Decision. Although Hinton & Alfert did not believe that the ‘Findings of Fact and Judgment’ was a valid judgment, it appealed from it out *1005 of an abundance of caution.[ 4 ] Messrs. Hardisty and Peterson also appealed from the ‘Findings of Fact and Judgment.’ ” 5

DISCUSSION

I.

The parties acknowledge that motions to reverse or vacate duly entered judgments are governed by section 128, subdivision (a)(8). Subdivision (a) enumerates the powers of the courts of this state. Prior to 1999, the last enumerated power, set forth in subdivision (a)(8), simply provided that every court shall have the power “(8) to amend and control its process and orders so as to make them conform to law and justice.” Legislation in 1999 added to that sentence the following language: “An appellate court shall not reverse or vacate a duly entered judgment upon an agreement or stipulation of the parties unless the court finds both of the following: [][] (A) There is no reasonable possibility that the interests of nonparties or the public will be adversely affected by the reversal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Cal. Rptr. 3d 835, 124 Cal. App. 4th 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardisty-v-hinton-alfert-calctapp-2005.