Harris v. Mississippi State Bar

393 So. 2d 1307, 1980 Miss. LEXIS 2181
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1980
DocketMisc. No. 832
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 393 So. 2d 1307 (Harris v. Mississippi State Bar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Mississippi State Bar, 393 So. 2d 1307, 1980 Miss. LEXIS 2181 (Mich. 1980).

Opinion

COFER, Justice,

for the Court:

Attorney David A. Harris has appealed from the action of a Complaint Tribunal assembled under Mississippi Code Annotated, section 73-3-301 et seq. (Supp.1980). The Mississippi State Bar has filed cross assignments of error.

Appellee (Bar) filed its petition alleging several counts of violations of rules governing conduct of attorneys, in three matters wherein the appellant (Harris) was attorney:

(1) A suit in Alabama involving some interests in land held by Harris’ clients and judicially established for them and sold by the Court, this being during 1973.

(2) A domestic relations suit in Hinds County, wherein Harris represented a party. This took place in 1975.

(3) A claim by the same client as next above involving an automobile collision in 1976.

The bar invoked several disciplinary rules approved by this Court of which applicable ones appear as the appendix to this opinion.

After hearing held, the Complaint Tribunal found Harris guilty of certain of the assertions of the Bar as to the Alabama suit, and imposed upon him a three year suspension from the practice of law. It also provided a private reprimand of him for questionable application of his fee arrangement to funds received by his clients in the automobile collision settlement. He has not appealed from the reprimand feature of the tribunal’s orders. The Bar has assigned as error the failure of the tribunal to order disbarment, in considering the three areas of the accusations in isolation, and in its failure to find as sustained the charge that Harris had overcharged his client for services in the collision adjustment handling.

Both he and it complained of the tribunal’s failure to reveal its view of a correct fee in the Alabama matter.

We consider the transactions in the Alabama matter. About March 1973 Harris was approached, and a contract was executed, by Lonnie C. Johnson and William N. Rucker, Jr., who spoke for themselves and apparently undertook to speak for others, including one Brick Mason, who claimed interests in the land. The contractual fee and Harris’ conduct relative thereto are the bases for the suspension by the tribunal, mentioned above.

The services undertaken were “for recovery of our interest in ...” and the compensation therefore was to be “.. . 33%% of any recovery made before suit is filed, 40% thereafter, through trial; 50% for appeal.” It was strictly a contingent fee: “... and if no recovery is made, I will not owe my attorney any sum whatsoever as attorney’s fees.”

Harris associated one Scott, an Alabama attorney, in the suit. Suit was filed, wherein Harris asked, for his clients, that the court allow attorney’s fee for his client. The Alabama court adjudged the claims against the land, and the share, subject to such claims, each owner held therein, and what percentage each was entitled to receive from the proceeds derived from the court’s sale of the land. In its order, the court fixed a fee of $1,875 to be paid to the plaintiff’s attorneys (Harris and Scott) and a fee in the same amount to be paid to the defendants’ counsel. It found an earlier realtor charge was owed and should be paid out of the sale proceeds; it found that two [1309]*1309defendants were entitled to reimbursement for amounts they had respectively paid on account of the land.

The court-ordered sale grossed $16,200, from which there were paid several deductions in the total amount of $11,832.90, leaving a net amount of $4,367.10 to be distributed to the several owners of interests therein, with $2,608.75, belonging to the Harris litigants. Peeling that the court had erred, Harris filed petition for review by the court which was of no avail. No appeal was taken by any party and the orders of the court became a verity.

The share of Harris’ clients was paid to Scott, who took from the whole remittance his one-half (agreed division between Harris and Scott) of the court-fixed fee and one-half of the 40% of the $2,608.75, identified hereinabove, and sent the remainder of the recovery to Harris.

Harris, on the other hand, applied the 40% against the clients’ share of the gross recovery, and emerged with the claim of $4,164.05, as fee, and contended with Johnson and Rucker that he was entitled to $431.87 in addition to what he had received. (The record shows no effort to collect this claimed additional amount).

Weeks passed and the disappointment of Johnson and/or Rucker, in particular, brought Harris and Johnson into a conference which had the participation of Attorney Roberts, Johnson’s friend in whose behalf he was in the conference. There the parties arrived at an understanding not very clear in the record. When Roberts had left the conference, Harris gave to Johnson and Rucker a check each in the amount of $154, and wrote up an agreement which was signed by the three of them, wherein it was stated that Johnson and Rucker would each be entitled up to $1,500, less $154, of any proceeds “finally awarded [by the Alabama Court] on rehearing of prior disbursement by register.” (It is repeated here that the petition for rehearing was denied.) The $154 checks showed that they were partial disbursements.

In his fee activities with Johnson and Rucker, had he otherwise been correct in his computation for the fee, he took incongruous positions that (1) he was bound by the Alabama’s court order and that, in addition, there was more that that Court might adjudge against them, and (2) his attorney-client relation is by a Mississippi contract, and the Alabama court could not direct them as to payment of the fee.

The Alabama suit was brought on behalf of multiple plaintiffs including one Brick Mason, as shown above. When the trial began Mason disclaimed his status as a plaintiff, and the record is sufficient to conclude that he actually lent assistance to the defense, or otherwise identified himself with the defendants. In spite of this fact, Harris continued to calculate his fee as if Mason’s share was involved, did not reduce the total percentage of his clients’ share to eliminate therefrom Mason’s recovery, and took the position that he was entitled to payment of the fee represented by Mason’s share, because Johnson and Rucker occupied or assumed a position of agency toward Mason and were liable to Harris if Mason did not pay him.

It is to be noted further that while his fee as calculated by him exhausted all of the shares of the other clients whom he represented, his further transactions with Johnson and Rucker were between him and the two of them, and he made no further payment to those other clients (as would have been consistent with the $154 he paid to Johnson and Rucker each), and he did not include them in the agreement to share to any extent in any benefit that might be realized from the Alabama court rehearing.

We are at a loss to understand how the shares of the clients other than Johnson and Rucker could have been exhausted, in view of the fact that their shares bore the same proportions of value and liability, as did those of Johnson and Rucker, nor do we see how it might be argued that these dissident and complaining clients should receive other, partial amounts of $154 each while those clients of lesser proportions should receive nothing, and should not be included in any subsequent distribution expected to be received in the rehearing or in any other rehearing.

[1310]

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Related

Terrell v. Mississippi Bar
662 So. 2d 586 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1995)
Myers v. Mississippi State Bar
480 So. 2d 1080 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
393 So. 2d 1307, 1980 Miss. LEXIS 2181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-mississippi-state-bar-miss-1980.