JOEL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, PC v. Chastain

562 S.E.2d 746, 254 Ga. App. 592, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 835, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 318
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 12, 2002
DocketA01A2501
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 562 S.E.2d 746 (JOEL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, PC v. Chastain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JOEL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, PC v. Chastain, 562 S.E.2d 746, 254 Ga. App. 592, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 835, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 318 (Ga. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Andrews, Presiding Judge.

A jury found David C. Joel, Attorney at Law, P.C. (the P.C.) breached its fiduciary duty to its client, Brenda Chastain, and awarded Chastain $4,000 in compensatory damages and $20,000 in attorney fees pursuant to OCGA § 13-6-11. The jury found in favor of the P.C. on Chastain’s claims under the Fair Business Practices Act and for fraud. The P.C. claims the evidence did not support the verdict and that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury. Because we find no error in the instructions, and find evidence supporting the jury’s conclusion that the P.C. breached its fiduciary duty and harmed Chastain, we affirm as to the breach of fiduciary duty and compensatory damages. Although we conclude there was sufficient evidence of bad faith to support the award of attorney fees pursuant to OCGA § 13-6-11, we vacate the award and remand the case to the trial court for a hearing to determine what portion of the $20,000 awarded was attributable to Chastain’s successful claim.

1. The evidence viewed in favor of the verdict was sufficient to show a breach of fiduciary duty and damages flowing from the breach.

*593 After Chastain was injured in an automobile accident in March 1996, she retained Joel’s P.C. in May 1996 to represent her on a personal injury claim. Joel, who at the time was the sole shareholder of the P.C., testified that he developed the P.C. into a “volume practice” using television and other advertising. Joel was not in the P.C.’s office on a regular basis, took no part in handling the cases, and was notified by weekly faxes of case dispositions after they had settled. According to Joel, “generally the case management decisions for the Georgia clients would have been left primarily to those persons who staffed the Atlanta office.” Evidence showed that, during some periods when important settlement decisions were being made on Chas-tain’s case, the P.C. employed one attorney other than Joel at the Atlanta office and eleven nonattorney support staffers to handle up to 500 pending cases. To manage the high volume, the P.C. employed nonattorney “case negotiators” who were authorized under the P.C.’s guidelines to relay settlement offers from insurance companies to clients, respond for the client to the offers, and, under supervision and instructions from the attorney, advise the client on accepting or rejecting the offers.

Under this system, Joel testified that Chastain’s case was assigned to a nonattorney employee of the P.C., Terry Lee, who acted as Chastain’s “case negotiator.”

Q: As a case negotiator for [the P.C.], it would not be possible for Terry Lee to have given Ms. Chastain legal advice on whether she should accept or reject a particular offer, would it?
A: I’m not sure that he would have, but it is possible.
Q: He was authorized to do that, correct?
A: He was authorized to transmit the offers from the insurance company and relay the client’s wishes back to the insurance company. Now, what the parameters of that authorization was in his mind, I don’t know.
Q: And he could also advise your clients on accepting or rejecting the offers, isn’t that what you told us at your deposition?
A: Within the guidelines that were set, he could do that.
Q: Mr. Joel, is your contention that in addition to Mr. Lee and any other lay person that might have worked on Ms. Chastain’s file that an actual attorney was assigned to the case from the time she initially retained [the P.C.]?
A: That’s not how we operate it, but she would have been able to speak to a lawyer at any time during that two-year period.
Q: Which attorneys had reviewed Ms. Chastain’s case file before July of 1997?
*594 A: I don’t know.
Q: There’s no way for you to determine if any attorney was involved with that case, is there?
A: No. But it would have been [the attorney] who was there. ... I wasn’t there, so I don’t know.

Upon review of the P.C.’s file on Chastain, Joel was unable to find any reference to an attorney’s involvement in the case prior to January 1998. He stated that there may be evidence of attorney involvement in the P.C.’s computerized case management system, but no such evidence was produced. Joel testified that there was no procedure in place for client files to be reviewed by an attorney on a periodic basis, and he acknowledged that the system he created for operation of the P.C. was fraught with potential trouble.

Q: So you had 11 administrative employees, with one attorney who wasn’t there all the time. Isn’t that ratio just asking for trouble?
A: Could be. 1

After seeing the P.C.’s television advertisements, Chastain contacted the P.C., met with nonattorney employees, and signed a fee contract with the P.C. in May 1996. Thereafter, the P.C. assisted her through nonattomey employees in seeing physicians for treatment of her injuries through November 1996. In July 1997, Lee, a nonat-torney case negotiator for the P.C., contacted Chastain. Lee introduced himself to Chastain as the P.C.’s attorney who had been assigned to handle negotiations with the insurance company in her case. Lee subsequently conveyed several offers to Chastain from the insurance company (all of which Chastain rejected), advised Chas-tain not to pay pending medical bills, and recommended that she take the insurance company’s final offer of $10,000. Despite her directions to Lee to reject the $10,000 offer, a few days later Chastain received correspondence from the P.C. dated September 5, 1997, containing settlement and release documents indicating her case had been settled with the insurance company for $10,000. When Chas-tain contacted Lee about the documents, he told her they were sent by mistake and to throw them away. Evidence showed, however, that Lee had in fact accepted the insurance company’s $10,000 offer on behalf of Chastain without her consent, although Chastain was not informed of this fact.

*595 Unhappy with Lee, Chastain called the P.C. asking to speak to Joel, but he never returned her calls. Joel testified that he was never told by the P.C. that she called. In November 1997, Chastain called the P.C. to determine the status of her case and was informed that Lee was no longer employed by the P.C. At that time, she asked again to speak with Joel but was told he was unavailable. Over a period of several weeks, Chastain called the P.C. on numerous occasions asking to speak to Joel or another attorney about her case. She was told no one was available, and her calls were not returned. Chastain persisted, and during yet another call to the P.C. in January 1998, she finally spoke to an attorney employed by the P.C.

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Bluebook (online)
562 S.E.2d 746, 254 Ga. App. 592, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 835, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joel-attorney-at-law-pc-v-chastain-gactapp-2002.