IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2019-WC-00581-COA
JAY FOSTER APPELLANT
v.
SANDERS CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDERS & APPELLEES CONTRACTORS ASSOCIATION OF MISSISSIPPI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/26/2019 TRIBUNAL FROM WHICH MISSISSIPPI WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALED: COMMISSION ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: CHUCK McRAE JAMES (JAY) R. FOSTER II ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES: BRYAN GRAY BRIDGES NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WORKERS’ COMPENSATION DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED - 04/07/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE J. WILSON, P.J., WESTBROOKS AND LAWRENCE, JJ.
J. WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Richard Corsby hired attorney Jay Foster to pursue a workers’ compensation claim,
but Corsby later fired Foster and hired a new attorney. Foster then filed an attorney’s fee lien
in Corsby’s case. After Corsby settled his workers’ compensation claim, he filed a motion
to cancel or reduce Foster’s lien. The Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission
eventually held a hearing on the motion. Foster, Corsby’s new attorney, and counsel for the
employer/carrier all appeared. After the hearing, the Commission sanctioned Foster pursuant
to Mississippi Code Annotated section 71-3-59 (Rev. 2011) by ordering him to pay $4,000
in attorney’s fees to Corsby’s new attorney and $4,000 in attorney’s fees to counsel for the employer/carrier. On appeal, Foster challenges the order requiring him to pay attorney’s fees
to counsel for the employer/carrier.1 We hold that the Commission’s order must be reversed
in relevant part because the employer/carrier should have simply held the disputed attorney’s
fees until the dispute between Corsby and Foster was resolved. Nothing that Foster did
should have required any action or material work by counsel for the employer/carrier.
Therefore, we reverse and render the order of the Commission in relevant part.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. In June 2017, Richard Corsby hired attorney Jay Foster to file a workers’
compensation claim against Corsby’s employer, Sanders Construction.2 However, just two
months later, Corsby terminated Foster as his attorney. Corsby notified Foster of his decision
by certified mail, which Foster received on August 7, 2017. On August 15, 2017, Foster filed
a motion to withdraw as Corsby’s counsel and asserted an attorney’s fee lien against any
recovery by Corsby. Foster claimed that he was entitled to be paid $9,231 for 30.77 hours
of work at $300 per hour. Corsby thereafter hired John T. Lamar III to represent him, and
Lamar eventually negotiated a settlement with Sanders. Corsby filed a petition for approval
of a final compromise settlement with the Commission on September 25, 2018.
¶3. On September 18, 2018—one week before he petitioned the Commission to approve
1 Foster informed the Commission that “the issue of attorney’s fees [was] completely settled with [Corsby’s] current attorney,” and Corsby’s current attorney did not enter an appearance or file a brief on appeal. Foster’s briefs on appeal specifically address only the order to pay fees to counsel for the employer/carrier. Therefore, we address only that part of the Commission’s order. 2 We will refer to Corsby’s employer and its workers’ compensation insurance carrier collectively as “Sanders.”
2 his settlement—Corsby filed a motion to cancel or reduce Foster’s lien. Corsby disputed the
amount of time that Foster claimed to have spent on the case. Corsby also noted that the
hourly rate charged by Foster ($300) was more than the rate stated in his contract ($280).
Finally, Corsby complained that Foster billed him for significant time after Foster had
already received Corsby’s letter terminating his services.
¶4. On September 26, 2018, the Commission approved a settlement between Corsby and
Sanders. The settlement provided for a lump sum payment of $145,000, which included a
twenty-five percent attorney’s fee ($36,250). Pursuant to the Commission’s order, Sanders
agreed to retain that amount in trust pending resolution of Foster’s lien.
¶5. On October 1, 2018, Foster responded to Corsby’s motion to cancel his lien with a
motion for summary judgment. Foster asked the Commission to deny Corsby’s motion and
to order Corsby to pay his attorney’s fee.
¶6. On October 8, 2018, Sanders filed a combined response to Corsby’s motion to cancel
the lien and Foster’s motion for summary judgment. In the two-page document, Sanders
stated that “[w]hile it [might] seem [that Sanders would] have no interest with respect to this
attorney fee dispute, that [was] not the case.” Sanders stated that it could not “close this open
claim until this issue [was] resolved . . . and funds [were] disbursed.” Therefore, Sanders
requested a prompt ruling on the issue.
¶7. On November 9, 2018, the Commission ordered Foster and Lamar to appear before
the Commission concerning the dispute over $9,231 in attorney’s fees. The Commission also
ordered Sanders to release the rest of the attorney’s fees ($27,019) to Lamar.
3 ¶8. The Commission set a hearing for January 28, 2019. However, on January 25, 2019,
Foster filed a motion for a continuance, stating that he was “very sick and [could] hardly
talk.” The hearing was rescheduled for February 21, 2019.
¶9. On February 15, 2019, Sanders filed a motion for reimbursement of attorney’s fees,
citing Rule 11 of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure, the Litigation Accountability Act,
Miss. Code Ann. §§ 11-55-1 to -15 (Rev. 2019), and Mississippi Code Annotated section 71-
3-59. Sanders asked the Commission to order Foster to pay “sanctions, attorneys’ fees, and
expenses”—but “[o]nly in the event the Commission [found] that [Foster’s] lien . . . [was]
not valid.” On February 18, 2019, Corsby filed a similar motion asking the Commission to
order Foster to pay attorney’s fees and expenses if Foster’s lien was deemed invalid.
¶10. At the February 21, 2019 hearing before the Commission, Foster admitted that his
contract provided for an hourly rate of $280 but that his lien charged an hourly rate of $300.
He attributed the discrepancy to a software error. The Commission asked Foster why he had
not filed a corrected lien. Foster admitted that he had been “on notice” of the error for
several months and that he should have corrected it.
¶11. Foster also admitted that although his bill indicated that he had personally performed
all of the work on the case file, it was possible that a paralegal did some of the work. He said
that any work that a paralegal performed should have been billed at a rate of only $75 per
hour. Foster also attempted to explain an entry for 8.75 hours ($2,625) on August 15,
2017—i.e., eight days after Foster knew that Corsby had terminated him. The only
description for that block of time was “35 emails to client.” According to Foster, these were
4 “form emails” that “let[] the client know how workers’ comp works and what needs to be
done.” Foster stated that he had sent the emails to Corsby earlier but did not record that time
contemporaneously. Foster stated that he charged 0.25 hours for each form email, which he
considered “under billed” because it took him much longer than that to create the forms
(when he originally created them, years ago). Foster also denied that Lamar had ever tried
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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2019-WC-00581-COA
JAY FOSTER APPELLANT
v.
SANDERS CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDERS & APPELLEES CONTRACTORS ASSOCIATION OF MISSISSIPPI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/26/2019 TRIBUNAL FROM WHICH MISSISSIPPI WORKERS’ COMPENSATION APPEALED: COMMISSION ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: CHUCK McRAE JAMES (JAY) R. FOSTER II ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES: BRYAN GRAY BRIDGES NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WORKERS’ COMPENSATION DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND RENDERED - 04/07/2020 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE J. WILSON, P.J., WESTBROOKS AND LAWRENCE, JJ.
J. WILSON, P.J., FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Richard Corsby hired attorney Jay Foster to pursue a workers’ compensation claim,
but Corsby later fired Foster and hired a new attorney. Foster then filed an attorney’s fee lien
in Corsby’s case. After Corsby settled his workers’ compensation claim, he filed a motion
to cancel or reduce Foster’s lien. The Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission
eventually held a hearing on the motion. Foster, Corsby’s new attorney, and counsel for the
employer/carrier all appeared. After the hearing, the Commission sanctioned Foster pursuant
to Mississippi Code Annotated section 71-3-59 (Rev. 2011) by ordering him to pay $4,000
in attorney’s fees to Corsby’s new attorney and $4,000 in attorney’s fees to counsel for the employer/carrier. On appeal, Foster challenges the order requiring him to pay attorney’s fees
to counsel for the employer/carrier.1 We hold that the Commission’s order must be reversed
in relevant part because the employer/carrier should have simply held the disputed attorney’s
fees until the dispute between Corsby and Foster was resolved. Nothing that Foster did
should have required any action or material work by counsel for the employer/carrier.
Therefore, we reverse and render the order of the Commission in relevant part.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. In June 2017, Richard Corsby hired attorney Jay Foster to file a workers’
compensation claim against Corsby’s employer, Sanders Construction.2 However, just two
months later, Corsby terminated Foster as his attorney. Corsby notified Foster of his decision
by certified mail, which Foster received on August 7, 2017. On August 15, 2017, Foster filed
a motion to withdraw as Corsby’s counsel and asserted an attorney’s fee lien against any
recovery by Corsby. Foster claimed that he was entitled to be paid $9,231 for 30.77 hours
of work at $300 per hour. Corsby thereafter hired John T. Lamar III to represent him, and
Lamar eventually negotiated a settlement with Sanders. Corsby filed a petition for approval
of a final compromise settlement with the Commission on September 25, 2018.
¶3. On September 18, 2018—one week before he petitioned the Commission to approve
1 Foster informed the Commission that “the issue of attorney’s fees [was] completely settled with [Corsby’s] current attorney,” and Corsby’s current attorney did not enter an appearance or file a brief on appeal. Foster’s briefs on appeal specifically address only the order to pay fees to counsel for the employer/carrier. Therefore, we address only that part of the Commission’s order. 2 We will refer to Corsby’s employer and its workers’ compensation insurance carrier collectively as “Sanders.”
2 his settlement—Corsby filed a motion to cancel or reduce Foster’s lien. Corsby disputed the
amount of time that Foster claimed to have spent on the case. Corsby also noted that the
hourly rate charged by Foster ($300) was more than the rate stated in his contract ($280).
Finally, Corsby complained that Foster billed him for significant time after Foster had
already received Corsby’s letter terminating his services.
¶4. On September 26, 2018, the Commission approved a settlement between Corsby and
Sanders. The settlement provided for a lump sum payment of $145,000, which included a
twenty-five percent attorney’s fee ($36,250). Pursuant to the Commission’s order, Sanders
agreed to retain that amount in trust pending resolution of Foster’s lien.
¶5. On October 1, 2018, Foster responded to Corsby’s motion to cancel his lien with a
motion for summary judgment. Foster asked the Commission to deny Corsby’s motion and
to order Corsby to pay his attorney’s fee.
¶6. On October 8, 2018, Sanders filed a combined response to Corsby’s motion to cancel
the lien and Foster’s motion for summary judgment. In the two-page document, Sanders
stated that “[w]hile it [might] seem [that Sanders would] have no interest with respect to this
attorney fee dispute, that [was] not the case.” Sanders stated that it could not “close this open
claim until this issue [was] resolved . . . and funds [were] disbursed.” Therefore, Sanders
requested a prompt ruling on the issue.
¶7. On November 9, 2018, the Commission ordered Foster and Lamar to appear before
the Commission concerning the dispute over $9,231 in attorney’s fees. The Commission also
ordered Sanders to release the rest of the attorney’s fees ($27,019) to Lamar.
3 ¶8. The Commission set a hearing for January 28, 2019. However, on January 25, 2019,
Foster filed a motion for a continuance, stating that he was “very sick and [could] hardly
talk.” The hearing was rescheduled for February 21, 2019.
¶9. On February 15, 2019, Sanders filed a motion for reimbursement of attorney’s fees,
citing Rule 11 of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure, the Litigation Accountability Act,
Miss. Code Ann. §§ 11-55-1 to -15 (Rev. 2019), and Mississippi Code Annotated section 71-
3-59. Sanders asked the Commission to order Foster to pay “sanctions, attorneys’ fees, and
expenses”—but “[o]nly in the event the Commission [found] that [Foster’s] lien . . . [was]
not valid.” On February 18, 2019, Corsby filed a similar motion asking the Commission to
order Foster to pay attorney’s fees and expenses if Foster’s lien was deemed invalid.
¶10. At the February 21, 2019 hearing before the Commission, Foster admitted that his
contract provided for an hourly rate of $280 but that his lien charged an hourly rate of $300.
He attributed the discrepancy to a software error. The Commission asked Foster why he had
not filed a corrected lien. Foster admitted that he had been “on notice” of the error for
several months and that he should have corrected it.
¶11. Foster also admitted that although his bill indicated that he had personally performed
all of the work on the case file, it was possible that a paralegal did some of the work. He said
that any work that a paralegal performed should have been billed at a rate of only $75 per
hour. Foster also attempted to explain an entry for 8.75 hours ($2,625) on August 15,
2017—i.e., eight days after Foster knew that Corsby had terminated him. The only
description for that block of time was “35 emails to client.” According to Foster, these were
4 “form emails” that “let[] the client know how workers’ comp works and what needs to be
done.” Foster stated that he had sent the emails to Corsby earlier but did not record that time
contemporaneously. Foster stated that he charged 0.25 hours for each form email, which he
considered “under billed” because it took him much longer than that to create the forms
(when he originally created them, years ago). Foster also denied that Lamar had ever tried
to contact him to negotiate a settlement of the lien.
¶12. Lamar stated to the Commission that Corsby reviewed Foster’s bill and disputed the
amount of work Foster claimed to have done. Corsby decided that he wanted to file a motion
to cancel the lien. Lamar also stated that beginning in September 2018, he called Foster
several times to try to settle the dispute, but Foster never returned his calls until the week of
the hearing. Lamar believed that Foster had unduly delayed resolution of the case.
¶13. The Commission took the matter under advisement. Before the Commission ruled,
Foster and Lamar settled all of their pending motions related to the attorney’s fee lien and
asked the Commission to dismiss those motions. The Commission granted their joint request
to dismiss their pending motions as moot. On February 26, 2019, the Commission ordered
Foster to tender $4,000 to Lamar and $4,000 to counsel for Sanders. The Commission based
the sanctions on assumptions of twenty hours of work related to the attorney’s fees motions
at a rate of $200 per hour. The Commission’s order was entered “on its own motion” and
pursuant to its authority under Mississippi Code Annotated section 71-3-59.
¶14. On appeal, Foster advances several arguments. He argues that the Commission’s
decision is arbitrary and violates due process because there is no evidence of any attorney’s
5 fees incurred by Sanders and because he was unable to cross-examine witnesses on the issue.
He also argues that he did not improperly delay the case or resolution of the lien. He also
argues that Sanders lacks “standing” to recover attorney’s fees and should not have incurred
any fees because it had no stake in the fee dispute between him and Lamar. Finally, he
argues that the Commission’s decision should be reversed because it failed to consider the
McKee factors. See McKee v. McKee, 418 So. 2d 764, 767 (Miss. 1982).
ANALYSIS
¶15. Although Foster has asserted several issues on appeal, the real issue is simply whether
the Commission erred by ordering Foster to pay attorney’s fees to Sanders. In general, our
“review of a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission is limited to determining
whether the decision was supported by substantial evidence, was arbitrary and capricious,
was beyond the scope or power of the agency to make, or violated . . . constitutional or
statutory rights.” Gregg v. Natchez Trace Elec. Power Ass’n, 64 So. 3d 473, 475 (¶8) (Miss.
2011). However, “we review issues of law de novo.” Miss. Mfrs. Ass’n Workers’ Comp.
Grp. v. Miss. Workers’ Comp. Grp. Self-Insurer Guar. Ass’n, 281 So. 3d 108, 114 (¶24)
(Miss. Ct. App. 2019) (quoting Huey v. RGIS Inventory Specialists, 269 So. 3d 362, 366
(¶12) (Miss. Ct. App. 2018), cert. denied, 258 So. 3d 286 (Miss. 2018)).
¶16. If the Commission determines that a party has “instituted, continued or delayed”
proceedings “without reasonable ground,” then the Commission may require the guilty party
to reimburse the opposing party for its “reasonable expenses, including attorney’s fees,
caused by such institution, continuance or delay.” Miss. Code Ann. § 71-3-59(2). As noted,
6 the Commission exercised this authority and sanctioned Foster for delaying the proceedings
by ordering him to pay $4,000 to both Lamar and counsel for Sanders.
¶17. As noted above, see supra n.1, it appears that Foster settled any dispute with Lamar,
and his brief on appeal does not address the Commission’s order to pay fees to Lamar.
Therefore, we address only the Commission’s order insofar as it required Foster to pay fees
to counsel for Sanders. At the hearing before the Commission, counsel for Sanders only
spoke briefly. Counsel stated that Sanders did not “have much of a dog in the hunt” and took
“no position” regarding the validity of Foster’s lien. Rather, Sanders just had “an open file”
that it wanted to close. Counsel represented that his firm had expended “over 30 hours of
attorney and paralegal time” because of “non-communication, non-cooperation” by Foster.
And counsel stated that Sanders was asking for its “expenses to be reimbursed in the event
the lien is found to be invalidated.”3
¶18. We conclude that the Commission abused its discretion by ordering Foster to pay
attorney’s fees to counsel for Sanders pursuant to section 71-3-59. Nothing that Foster filed
or did should have “caused” Sanders to incur any material expense or attorney’s fees. Miss.
Code Ann. § 71-3-59(2). Counsel for Sanders acknowledged that his client had no “dog in
the hunt” and took “no position” with respect to the fee dispute between Foster and Lamar.
On November 9, 2018, the Commission ordered Foster and Lamar to appear before the
Commission concerning their dispute over $9,231, but the Commission never ordered
3 Both Corsby and Sanders requested an award of attorney’s fees only if Foster’s lien was deemed invalid. The Commission never deemed the lien invalid, in whole or in part, because Foster and Lamar settled the dispute. However, the Commission ultimately awarded fees “on its own motion” and not on the motion of either party.
7 Sanders to appear. Indeed, the Commission did not order Sanders to do anything but
continue to hold the funds until the Foster-Lamar dispute was resolved. No further action
by Sanders was necessary. Rather than filing a motion and responses and appearing for a
hearing, Sanders should have simply waited for a further ruling from the Commission. Had
it done so, it could have avoided any additional expense. Any additional expense that it
incurred in relation to the Foster-Lamar fee dispute was not “caused by” Foster. Miss. Code
Ann. § 71-3-59(2). Therefore, the Commission abused its discretion by ordering Foster to
pay $4,000 to counsel for Sanders.
¶19. We understand that an “open file” may be an annoyance for a carrier. However, that
is simply part of being a workers’ compensation insurance carrier. Occasionally a dispute
will arise between a current and former attorney for the claimant, as it did in this case, and
it may require the carrier to hold some funds until the dispute can be resolved. But that is all
that it requires the carrier to do—hold the funds. Whatever minimal administrative burden
that involves is just part of the cost of doing business as a carrier.
¶20. We also acknowledge that the Commission was concerned by Foster’s failure to
correct errors in his billing statement. The Commission may also have been concerned by
some specific entries in Foster’s billing statement. Such issues may be a valid basis for a
penalty or an award of attorney’s fees under section 71-3-59, and nothing in our opinion
addresses or disturbs the Commission’s order insofar as it ordered Foster to pay $4,000 to
Lamar. As stated, the Foster-Lamar dispute appears to have been settled, and Foster’s brief
on appeal does not address the award to Lamar. We simply hold that the Commission abused
8 its discretion by awarding attorney’s fees to Sanders when Sanders was not required to do
anything but hold funds until an attorney’s fee lien was resolved.
¶21. REVERSED AND RENDERED.
BARNES, C.J., GREENLEE, WESTBROOKS, TINDELL, McDONALD, LAWRENCE, McCARTY AND C. WILSON, JJ., CONCUR. CARLTON, P.J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
CARLTON, P.J., DISSENTING:
¶22. I dissent because under our limited appellate review of a Commission’s decision, I
find that the Commission did not abuse its discretion in sanctioning Foster pursuant section
71-3-59 by ordering him to pay $4,000 in attorney’s fees to counsel for the employer/carrier
(Sanders).4
¶23. In reversing and rendering the Commission’s decision, the majority finds that there
was no need for Sanders to take any action with respect to Foster’s disputed attorney’s fee
lien, other than hold the funds until the dispute was resolved. For this reason, according to
the majority, any expense that Sanders incurred relating to this dispute was not “caused by”
Foster, see Miss. Code Ann. § 71-3-59(2), and the Commission therefore abused its
discretion in awarding attorney’s fee to Sanders.
¶24. I disagree. Although the Commission’s November 9, 2018 order did not specifically
require Sanders to appear at the hearing on the disputed attorney’s fee lien, I find that it is
apparent from the February 21, 2019 transcript of that hearing that the Commission found
4 As the majority recognizes, our “review of a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Commission is limited to determining whether the decision was supported by substantial evidence, was arbitrary and capricious, was beyond the scope or power of the agency to make, or violated . . . constitutional or statutory rights.” Gregg, 64 So. 3d at 475 (¶8).
9 it proper for Sanders to be there and for its counsel to participate in the hearing. I find
nothing in the record that restricts or in any way would prohibit Sanders’s counsel from
representing it at the Commission hearing, nor do I find anything in the record that would
indicate that the Commission did not want or expect Sanders’s counsel to be there.
¶25. In particular, Sanders’s counsel was allowed the same amount of time to present
Sanders’s position to the Commission as the Commission allowed Foster and Corsby’s
current counsel, Lamar. Indeed, Sanders’s counsel was asked to be the first one to present
his argument. In presenting his argument, Sanders’s counsel detailed the delay and
unnecessary motion practice that Foster caused Sanders, as follows:
This hearing was scheduled, a few times, by the Commission. Ultimately, last week, the employer/carrier filed a motion for reimbursement of expenses.
It’s the position of the employer/carrier that this matter should have been handled, five, six months ago. We should have been able to negotiate a lien. We should have been able to get this settlement approved by the Commission, funds disbursed[,] and the employer/carrier close the file.
At this point, my office has over 30 hours of attorney and paralegal time tied up in this matter just simply because we’re dealing with non-communication, non-cooperation here . . . . The employer/carrier are asking for expenses to be reimbursed in the event the lien is found to be invalidated.
¶26. Later in the hearing, the Commission specifically asked Foster, Lamar, and Sanders’s
counsel to provide their input on the “fee or the amount of time spent due to the delay.”
Sanders’s counsel responded, “Mr. Chairman, I’m at, approximately, [thirty] hours up until
today. And, I’m of course, as the employer/carrier attorney, I bill out less than the $280.00,
$250.00 or $300.00 that’s been discussed here.”
¶27. After reviewing the record as a whole, as well as hearing Mr. Foster’s testimony at the
10 hearing and the argument of counsel, the Commission found that Foster delayed the
proceedings of the claim without reasonable grounds and awarded attorney’s fees as
contemplated by section 71-3-59. In its order, the Commission described the errors in
Foster’s lien and Foster’s failure to correct that lien after being put on notice of those errors.
The Commission also described in its order the unnecessary motion practice caused by
Foster’s actions, including motion practice involving Sanders.
¶28. I find that it was well within the Commission’s discretion to find this delay created
unnecessary litigation not just for the claimant, but also for the employer/carrier, and
sanctions against Foster under section 71-3-59, including payment of $4,000 in attorney’s
fees to Sanders’s counsel, were appropriate. Sanders was not able to close the open claim
until the Commission entered an order, and, after Foster failed to communicate with Lamar
regarding the lien, Sanders’s counsel believed that in order to protect his client’s interest, he
was required to litigate this matter through motions, responses to motions, scheduling and
rescheduling, and preparing for and appearing at the hearing before the Commission to argue
this matter. I do not believe it is our role to dictate the scope or parameters of a lawyer’s
representation of his or her client under the circumstances in this case. For these reasons, and
under our limited standard of review, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to
reverse and render in this case.