In re Kugel Patch

CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 2024
Docket2020-0285-Appeal.
StatusPublished

This text of In re Kugel Patch (In re Kugel Patch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Kugel Patch, (R.I. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court

No. 2020-285-Appeal. (PC 08-9999)

In re Kugel Patch. :

ORDER

This case stems from a dispute between attorneys who together represented

numerous claimants in personal-injury lawsuits against the makers of a hernia repair

patch. The defendants, Steven M. Johnson and the Law Offices of Steven M.

Johnson, P.C., d/b/a The Johnson Law Firm (collectively, Johnson), appeal from an

order of the Superior Court denying their motion to stay proceedings pending the

resolutions of two arbitrations in the State of Texas. At issue in the Superior Court

proceedings is another motion, filed by the plaintiff, John Deaton, to disburse legal

fees arising from the lawsuits to which he claims he is entitled.

We briefly recount the complex travel of this case, which spans over ten years

and has involved at least seven courts. The defendants, a Texas-based attorney and

law firm, represented hundreds of clients in personal-injury lawsuits against the

Rhode Island-based manufacturer of a surgically implanted hernia repair product

known as the Kugel Patch or Kugel Mesh. Each of defendants’ clients signed an

Attorney Representation Agreement (ARA), which provides in part that “any dispute

-1- arising from the interpretation, performance, or breach of [the agreement], including

any claim of legal malpractice, * * * shall be resolved by final and binding

arbitration conducted in” Texas. The ARAs further provide that clients shall pay

their attorneys on a contingency basis and be represented by “associate counsel” at

defendants’ discretion and expense.

Deaton never signed and is not a party to the ARAs between defendants and

their clients. He did, however, enter into agreements with defendants to represent,

as local counsel, the 176 clients who filed their claims in the Providence County

Superior Court, along with another client who sought relief in the United States

District Court for the District of Rhode Island. The agreements provided that Deaton

would receive a share of the contingency fees recovered under the ARAs.

Nearly six years after the parties entered into their first agreement, in 2014, a

global settlement was reached in the Superior Court that resolved the universe of

Kugel Mesh claims brought by Johnson’s clients, including those in which Deaton

was local counsel. The resulting settlement agreement provided not only that all

disputes “arising under” or “relating to the subject matter” of the agreement “shall

be filed only in the Superior Court of Rhode Island,” but also that defendants and

their “[c]o-[c]ounsel” would submit to the personal jurisdiction of that court and that

the agreement would be governed by the laws of Rhode Island. The agreement

further provided that defendants would file a motion in the Superior Court to

-2- establish a Qualified Settlement Fund (QSF), which would serve as a repository for

settlement awards and associated attorneys’ fees. The agreement was signed by

Steven M. Johnson on behalf of the Johnson Law Firm, but it was not signed by

Deaton.

The 2014 global settlement appears to have suppressed one fire and ignited

several others, including the dispute at the heart of this case. According to Deaton,

Johnson negotiated the settlement without his knowledge; indeed, Deaton avers that

he was unaware of the settlement until he contacted one of the clients for whom he

served as local counsel. In October 2015, after what Deaton characterized as

Johnson’s “repeated failure” to respond to his inquiries about the settlement, plaintiff

sent counsel for the Kugel Mesh defendants notice of a lien for $1 million in

attorneys’ fees related to his service as local counsel in the Kugel Mesh litigation.

Weeks later, in November 2015, Johnson sent Deaton a letter discharging him, with

cause, from the representation of their clients.

Then, on March 7, 2016, Deaton filed a motion in the Superior Court not only

to compel Johnson to disclose both the settlement amount and the allocations for

each case, but also to enforce a $1 million attorneys’ lien on the settlement funds.

The Superior Court heard Deaton’s motion soon thereafter, along with a stipulation

from Johnson and the Kugel Mesh defendants to establish a QSF. The resulting

order established the QSF and required the QSF administrator to segregate $1

-3- million of the settlement funds to be distributed only upon further order of the

Superior Court. The order also provided that Deaton would receive the information

about the settlement that defendants had withheld.

Meanwhile, two separate disputes over the parties’ representation of their

clients arose in the Texas state courts. The facts and travel of each dispute are

intricate, but two points about them are relevant to this appeal. First, the resulting

arbitrations are the same as those at issue in Johnson’s motion to stay proceedings

in the Superior Court. Second, a pair of state appellate courts in Texas held that

Deaton was bound to the arbitration provisions of the ARAs, even though he was

not a signatory to those agreements, because defendants had hired him to represent

their clients pursuant to the agreements’ terms. See Deaton v. Johnson, No. 05-16-

01221-CV, 2017 WL 2991939, at *3 (Tex. App. July 14, 2017); Deaton v. Moreno,

No. 02-16-00188-CV, 2017 WL 4683940, at *5 (Tex. App. Oct. 19, 2017).

Back in Rhode Island, in January 2020, Deaton filed in the Superior Court a

motion to disburse to him the $1 million that had been segregated from the settlement

funds as payment for attorneys’ and other fees to which he claimed he was entitled

under his agreements with Johnson. The defendants filed a motion to intervene,

which the Superior Court granted, and then Johnson removed the disbursal motion

to the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island, which in turn

granted Deaton’s motion to remand. Now back in the Superior Court, Johnson filed

-4- a motion to stay proceedings pending completion of the arbitrations in Texas. The

Superior Court found that a stay was not required under the Federal Arbitration Act

(FAA) or its state analogue, the Rhode Island Arbitration Act (RIAA), because “no

written agreement to arbitrate exists between the parties.” The Superior Court

further declined to grant a discretionary stay.

On November 2, 2020, the Superior Court entered its order denying the

motion to stay proceedings. Johnson filed a premature but valid notice of appeal on

October 22, 2020. On September 15, 2022, Deaton moved to dismiss the appeal as

moot because the arbitrations in Texas that defendants referenced in their motion to

stay had concluded. According to Johnson, however, the appeal was not moot in

part because Deaton had himself appealed from the final judgment confirming one

of the arbitration awards, which appeal was still pending. This Court denied

plaintiff’s motion to dismiss on September 11, 2023.

It is clear to us that the circumstances in this case are far different now than

on October 22, 2020, when the Superior Court issued its decision on Johnson’s

motion to stay. The two arbitrations in Texas have both concluded, final awards

have been issued, and judgments have entered confirming both awards in their

-5- entirety.1 Deaton has appealed from one such judgment, however, which appeal

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In re Kugel Patch, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kugel-patch-ri-2024.