Opinion
COBEY, Acting P. J.
Samuel Borson appeals from a judgment ordering him to pay in a marital dissolution proceeding, pursuant to Civil Code sections 4370 and 4371, Block, Bulloch & Scully and Morris Singer, the former attorneys of his former wife, Sophia Borson, additional fees in the sum of $7,500 and additional litigation expenses in the sum of $1,027.40 together with interest.
Appellant asks us to reverse this judgment on the grounds generally that it is in excess of the trial court’s jurisdiction and is both improper and excessive. We find no error and affirm.
Facts
On August 26, 1970, Sophia Borson filed a petition to dissolve her marriage to appellant. The Borsons had then been separated about 13!^ years, during which time Sophia had been living in the family residence in Whittier and receiving from appellant $25 a week. Following the separation appellant went into business for himself. He incorporated a business (Huron Gage Mfg., Inc.) in 1962 and subsequently set up another incorporated business at the same address (Huron Engineering Co.) under the ostensible ownership of a brother and an employee to do the machine shop work incident to his corporations’ manufacture of gauges.
In his response to Sophia’s petition appellant alleged in effect that there was no community property of the parties and in the protracted and extensive discovery proceedings undertaken by Sophia’s aforementioned former attorneys he claimed that his business had been started with monies given him by his late father and another brother, that in any event he had made an oral property settlement agreement with Sophia at the time of the separation giving her only what she then took—namely, the family residence, furnishings and personal effects, and support of $25 a week and that one-half of the stock of his corporation belonged to a key employee under an agreement made with that employee.
Sophia, in her petition to dissolve her marriage with appellant, which she personally verified, asked that she be awarded support and attorneys’ fees and costs. Furthermore, in her declaration in support of an accompanying order to show cause filed at the same time, she averred that she did not have sufficient funds to support herself or to pay attorneys’ fees and costs in the proceeding and that appellant had ample funds for the same.
On November 30, 1970, by oral stipulation in open court, the parties stipulated, among other things, that appellant would pay Sophia $60 a week commencing December 1, 1970, and that appellant would pay directly to Sophia’s aforementioned attorneys $2,500 in fees and $750 in costs. In its order filed on January 27, 1971, based upon this stipulation, the trial court expressly reserved “the right to further order of the Court to fix any additional fees or costs.”
Sophia’s counsel then undertook extensive discovery to determine whether there was any community property of the parties. They took the deposition of appellant four separate times and that of his accountant twice. They also took the depositions of the aforementioned key employee, the woman who had worked for and lived with appellant, and appellant’s brother who was in business with him. They then had these other persons (except for the accountant) joined as parties respondent. They made a detailed analytical examination of appellant’s business records, the income tax returns of himself and the corporations, his numerous individual stock transactions, and
his joint bank accounts with his children and another. From this discovery they concluded that appellant’s assets were community property, that this property was worth about $200,000 and perhaps over the years appellant had misappropriated an additional $50,000 in community property through so-called loans, discount and interest payments to employees.
On November 30, 1971, Sophia’s attorneys’ discovery was nearing completion, but in view of the numerous irregularities and inconsistencies they had uncovered, they did not think they should stop their discovery while it was incomplete. They did agree, however, at this time that a nonappealable judgment of dissolution might be entered
and the remainder of the proceeding, namely, the division of community property and permanent support for Sophia, might be continued.
Following an appearance in court that same day (Nov. 30, 1971) to discuss, among other things, the form and contents of the interlocutory decree, Sophia’s attorneys met with her. She did not wish to wait any longer for the completion of the proceeding. When they indicated that they probably would not have their discovery completed by the following March, when the remainder of the case was scheduled for trial (after three continuances for completion of discovery by her), she became upset and discharged them.
Thereafter, on December 22, 1971, without obtaining any express authority from Sophia to do so, Sophia’s attorneys moved (Code Civ. Proc., § 1005.5), on her behalf, that appellant be directed to pay them additional attorneys’ fees for services rendered Sophia and costs incurred subsequent to the initial award and prior to their discharge by Sophia. They also moved separately at the same time for permission to withdraw from the case as Sophia’s attorneys. Despite Sophia’s testimony to the contrary, she presumably received by mail true copies of these notices of the motions together with the supporting declarations of her attorneys. (Evid. Code, § 641.)
On January 5, 1972, the trial court heard both motions. Sophia was not personally present. The court granted the motion of the attorneys to withdraw from the case and substituted Sophia in propria persona for them. The court postponed consideration of Sophia’s motion that appellant pay her attorneys additional fees and costs until the trial of the remaining issues
in the proceeding or until after such issues were settled. The attorneys immediately gave Sophia notice by mail of these rulings.
In February 1972 Sophia obtained new attorneys to represent her in the proceeding. These attorneys, on the basis essentially of the discovery made by Sophia’s former attorneys, negotiated in June 1972 a settlement of the remaining issues in the marital dissolution proceeding. Under this settlement Sophia received $63,000 in real estate and $40,000 in nonmodifiable secured weekly support payments over a 12-year period. As a part of this settlement she also agreed to pay her then attorneys $3,000 for their services and she further agreed that she and appellant would split equally whatever amount might be awarded her former attorneys in fees and costs and that she would cooperate with her former husband in this aspect of the matter.
Discussion
The Trial Court Had Jurisdiction to Make the Award.
Appellant’s first contention is that the award of additional attorneys’ fees and costs to Sophia’s first attorneys was in excess of the trial court’s jurisdiction.
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Opinion
COBEY, Acting P. J.
Samuel Borson appeals from a judgment ordering him to pay in a marital dissolution proceeding, pursuant to Civil Code sections 4370 and 4371, Block, Bulloch & Scully and Morris Singer, the former attorneys of his former wife, Sophia Borson, additional fees in the sum of $7,500 and additional litigation expenses in the sum of $1,027.40 together with interest.
Appellant asks us to reverse this judgment on the grounds generally that it is in excess of the trial court’s jurisdiction and is both improper and excessive. We find no error and affirm.
Facts
On August 26, 1970, Sophia Borson filed a petition to dissolve her marriage to appellant. The Borsons had then been separated about 13!^ years, during which time Sophia had been living in the family residence in Whittier and receiving from appellant $25 a week. Following the separation appellant went into business for himself. He incorporated a business (Huron Gage Mfg., Inc.) in 1962 and subsequently set up another incorporated business at the same address (Huron Engineering Co.) under the ostensible ownership of a brother and an employee to do the machine shop work incident to his corporations’ manufacture of gauges.
In his response to Sophia’s petition appellant alleged in effect that there was no community property of the parties and in the protracted and extensive discovery proceedings undertaken by Sophia’s aforementioned former attorneys he claimed that his business had been started with monies given him by his late father and another brother, that in any event he had made an oral property settlement agreement with Sophia at the time of the separation giving her only what she then took—namely, the family residence, furnishings and personal effects, and support of $25 a week and that one-half of the stock of his corporation belonged to a key employee under an agreement made with that employee.
Sophia, in her petition to dissolve her marriage with appellant, which she personally verified, asked that she be awarded support and attorneys’ fees and costs. Furthermore, in her declaration in support of an accompanying order to show cause filed at the same time, she averred that she did not have sufficient funds to support herself or to pay attorneys’ fees and costs in the proceeding and that appellant had ample funds for the same.
On November 30, 1970, by oral stipulation in open court, the parties stipulated, among other things, that appellant would pay Sophia $60 a week commencing December 1, 1970, and that appellant would pay directly to Sophia’s aforementioned attorneys $2,500 in fees and $750 in costs. In its order filed on January 27, 1971, based upon this stipulation, the trial court expressly reserved “the right to further order of the Court to fix any additional fees or costs.”
Sophia’s counsel then undertook extensive discovery to determine whether there was any community property of the parties. They took the deposition of appellant four separate times and that of his accountant twice. They also took the depositions of the aforementioned key employee, the woman who had worked for and lived with appellant, and appellant’s brother who was in business with him. They then had these other persons (except for the accountant) joined as parties respondent. They made a detailed analytical examination of appellant’s business records, the income tax returns of himself and the corporations, his numerous individual stock transactions, and
his joint bank accounts with his children and another. From this discovery they concluded that appellant’s assets were community property, that this property was worth about $200,000 and perhaps over the years appellant had misappropriated an additional $50,000 in community property through so-called loans, discount and interest payments to employees.
On November 30, 1971, Sophia’s attorneys’ discovery was nearing completion, but in view of the numerous irregularities and inconsistencies they had uncovered, they did not think they should stop their discovery while it was incomplete. They did agree, however, at this time that a nonappealable judgment of dissolution might be entered
and the remainder of the proceeding, namely, the division of community property and permanent support for Sophia, might be continued.
Following an appearance in court that same day (Nov. 30, 1971) to discuss, among other things, the form and contents of the interlocutory decree, Sophia’s attorneys met with her. She did not wish to wait any longer for the completion of the proceeding. When they indicated that they probably would not have their discovery completed by the following March, when the remainder of the case was scheduled for trial (after three continuances for completion of discovery by her), she became upset and discharged them.
Thereafter, on December 22, 1971, without obtaining any express authority from Sophia to do so, Sophia’s attorneys moved (Code Civ. Proc., § 1005.5), on her behalf, that appellant be directed to pay them additional attorneys’ fees for services rendered Sophia and costs incurred subsequent to the initial award and prior to their discharge by Sophia. They also moved separately at the same time for permission to withdraw from the case as Sophia’s attorneys. Despite Sophia’s testimony to the contrary, she presumably received by mail true copies of these notices of the motions together with the supporting declarations of her attorneys. (Evid. Code, § 641.)
On January 5, 1972, the trial court heard both motions. Sophia was not personally present. The court granted the motion of the attorneys to withdraw from the case and substituted Sophia in propria persona for them. The court postponed consideration of Sophia’s motion that appellant pay her attorneys additional fees and costs until the trial of the remaining issues
in the proceeding or until after such issues were settled. The attorneys immediately gave Sophia notice by mail of these rulings.
In February 1972 Sophia obtained new attorneys to represent her in the proceeding. These attorneys, on the basis essentially of the discovery made by Sophia’s former attorneys, negotiated in June 1972 a settlement of the remaining issues in the marital dissolution proceeding. Under this settlement Sophia received $63,000 in real estate and $40,000 in nonmodifiable secured weekly support payments over a 12-year period. As a part of this settlement she also agreed to pay her then attorneys $3,000 for their services and she further agreed that she and appellant would split equally whatever amount might be awarded her former attorneys in fees and costs and that she would cooperate with her former husband in this aspect of the matter.
Discussion
The Trial Court Had Jurisdiction to Make the Award.
Appellant’s first contention is that the award of additional attorneys’ fees and costs to Sophia’s first attorneys was in excess of the trial court’s jurisdiction. He concedes that the court had reserved to itself jurisdiction of the subject matter of this award but he claims that Sophia’s attorneys had no authority to request these additional fees and costs, once they had been discharged. He asserts that upon such discharge the attorney-client relationship was completely terminated.
We disagree. We think that the attorney-client relationship by Sophia and her first attorneys terminated upon their discharge on November 30, 1971, for all purposes except the winding-up of the relationship. Such winding-up
in this case
involved the doing of two things—(1) the making of the motion on her behalf that appellant pay additional fees and costs to her attorneys, and (2) the formal change in Sophia’s representation in the proceeding. In the interval between the discharge and the substitution of representation, Sophia’s attorneys,
as her attorneys of record,
alone could appear in court for her and continued as her only attorneys in the proceeding. (See
Epley
v.
Califro,
49 Cal.2d 849, 854 [323 P.2d 91].)
We hold that, notwithstanding Sophia’s discharge of these attorneys, they, as her agents, had the implied authority to file thereafter the motion on her behalf that appellant pay these additional sums. Unlike the situation in
Meadow
v.
Superior Court,
59 Cal.2d 610 [30 Cal.Rptr. 824, 381 P.2d 648], Sophia had at this time no disagreement with her attorneys oyer
her former husband paying these additional fees and costs. In her personally verified petition initiating the dissolution proceeding she had requested such fees and costs and, unlike
Meadow,
she had personally alleged in her declaration in support of her proposed order to show cause, accompanying her dissolution petition, that she needed these fees and costs and that appellant had the ability to pay them. In view of her personal invocation of the court’s jurisdiction to grant this relief and in view of the court’s subsequent grant of this relief in part and express reservation of its power to grant further such relief, we hold that her attorneys reasonably believed that, notwithstanding their discharge, they, as her attorneys of record, had implied authority from her to file for her this motion for additional fees and costs.
They remained her attorneys in the dissolution proceeding until one or the other of the requirements of Code of Civil Procedure section 284, had been satisfied.
We label the motion for additional fees and costs as being on Sophia’s behalf because it was then in her interest. Otherwise she would have then been liable to pay by herself to these attorneys the reasonable value of their services to the extent the same had not been paid by the initial award. (See
Fracasse
v.
Brent,
6 Cal.3d 784, 792 [100 Cal.Rptr. 385, 494 P.2d 9].) Her motion that appellant pay this liability directly to the attorneys, pursuant to Civil Code sections 4370 and 4371, avoided circuity in litigation—they suing her and she then asking the court to order appellant to pay what she had paid.
Furthermore, by not appearing at the hearing of the two motions after prior notice of them and there objecting to the motion for additional fees and costs, she acquiesced in their having made the motion for her. She further acquiesced when she made no objection to this relief being granted her until the motion actually was heard. Her then change of position can be explained by her intervening promise in the overall settlement of the dissolution proceeding to cooperate with her former husband with respect
to this dispute over the fees and costs due her former attorneys and to pay one-half of whatever fees and costs were awarded them.
We hold that her withdrawal of her consent to prosecute the motion was legally ineffective because the attorney-client relationship between herself and her former attorneys prosecuting the motion had completely terminated on January 5, 1972. After that time neither could alter the incidents of their previous principal-agent relationship.
Accordingly, we hold that the trial court had jurisdiction to make the challenged award. (Cf.
Davis
v.
Davis, supra,
219 Cal.App.2d 83; see
Yanchor
v.
Kagan,
22 Cal.App.3d 544, 549 [99 Cal.Rptr. 367]; Rest. 2d Agency (1958) § 26, coms, (a), (d), § 43, subd. (1).)
The Award Was Proper.
Appellant attacks the award itself on several grounds. First, he contends that in view of the $63,000 in real estate (part of which was income-producing property) that Sophia received in the final settlement, she then had no need for this award thereafter made to her former attorneys. Appellant’s premise is faulty. A former wife is not required to impair her capital in order to finance marital dissolution litigation. (See
Sigesmund
v.
Sigesmund,
115 Cal.App.2d 628, 632 [252 P.2d 713];
Howard
v.
Howard,
141 Cal.App.2d 233, 237 [296 P.2d 592];
Wright
v.
Wright,
148 Cal.App.2d 257, 270 [306 P.2d 536];
Goto
v.
Goto,
187 Cal.App.2d 594, 598 [10 Cal.Rptr. 14].)
Secondly, appellant asserts that the work done by Sophia’s initial attorneys was unnecessary because it all related to his business and he received
the stock of this business in the final settlement. We disagree. As previously indicated, without the protracted and extensive discovery done by these attorneys there would have been no basis for the final settlement.
Finally, appellant contends that the award is excessive in amount. This contention is likewise without merit. The trial court determined that these attorneys (one of whom is also a certified public accountant) spent 143 hours on the case. The court placed a value of $70 per hour on this work. Although this rate was in excess of the value placed upon the work by the attorneys themselves initially and by successor counsel on their work, it was less than the rates of $75 and $100 an hour placed on the work by an expert witness who considered quite properly the standing, experience, professional competence and special expertise of these attorneys and the results they obtained for their client.
(See
Dietrich
v.
Dietrich,
41 Cal.2d 497, 506 [261 P.2d 269].)
We hold that the work done by these attorneys was reasonably necessary for Sophia’s prosecution of the marital dissolution proceeding (see Civ. Code, § 4370, subd. (a)) and that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in evaluating the reasonable value of the work.
In closing, we note that the motion at issue is incorrectly described in the judgment as being that of the attorneys rather than that of Sophia. The judgment must be modified to correct this mistake.
The judgment is modified to strike therefrom all reference to the motion at issue as being that of Block, Bulloch & Scully and Morris Singer rather than that of Sophia Borson and by identifying the motion appropriately in the judgment as being that of Sophia Borson. As so modified the judgment is affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded directly to Block, Bulloch & Scully and Morris Singer.
Allport, J., and Loring, J.,
concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 26, 1974.