John Hankins v. City of Inkster

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 2019
Docket18-1645
StatusUnpublished

This text of John Hankins v. City of Inkster (John Hankins v. City of Inkster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John Hankins v. City of Inkster, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION

File Name: 19a0142n.06

CASE NO. 18-1645

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

JOHN HANKINS, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) FILED Mar 22, 2019 v. ) ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk CITY OF INKSTER, et al., ) ) Defendants, ) _____________________________________ ) BARRY SEIFMAN; BARRY SEIFMAN, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED P.C., ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) MICHIGAN RAYMOND GUZALL III; RAYMOND ) GUZALL III, P.C., ) ) Third-Party Defendants-Appellants. )

Before: COLE, Chief Judge; BATCHELDER and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM. This appeal stems from a dispute between two lawyers, formerly partners,

over an attorney contingency fee derived from the monetary settlement in a civil action and the

district court’s judgment that resolved that dispute. We AFFIRM.

I.

In 2009, Barry Seifman and Raymond Guzall were partners in the law firm of Seifman

& Guzall P.C. (the “Firm”). John Hankins, a fired police officer, retained the Firm, specifically

Guzall, to bring an employment-discrimination action in federal court against the City of Inkster

and the City’s Police Chief (“defendants”). The district court scheduled trial for February 2012. Case No. 18-1645, Hankins v. City of Inkster, et al.

According to Guzall, in September 2011, Seifman revealed that he had been engaging in

certain illegal and unethical conduct. This, Guzall claims, required him to quit the Firm to avoid

potential prosecution as an accomplice. Seifman denies any such misconduct or wrongdoing.

When Guzall left the Firm in early February 2012, Hankins chose Guzall to continue his

representation and discharged Seifman and the Firm. A few weeks later, on the eve of trial, the

case settled with the defendants agreeing to pay Hankins a large monetary award, one-third of

which would go to Guzall under the contingent fee agreement. But Seifman claimed that the Firm

was entitled to that fee, filed a lien on Hankins’s settlement, and moved to intervene. The district

court granted the motion, ordered the defendants to remit one-third of the settlement amount

(i.e., the attorney’s contingent-fee amount) to the court for deposit in an interest-bearing escrow

account, and permitted Seifman to file a third-party complaint against Hankins, the defendants,

and non-party Guzall. Because the defendants paid the entire settlement amount and Hankins

received his two-thirds, neither is an interested party at this stage of the case.

Meanwhile, Seifman had sued Guzall in Oakland County (Mich.) state court in February

2012, claiming that Guzall had improperly taken client files when he left. Guzall counter-claimed,

accusing Seifman of numerous criminal and unethical acts. Despite the stipulated exclusion of the

present fee dispute from that lawsuit, the district court held this case in abeyance pending the

outcome of that action due to the similarities of the accusations and claims, and the risk of

inconsistent judgments. Eventually, the state court held that Guzall had improperly taken the client

files but that no other claims by either party remained because Guzall and Seifman had accepted

their “case evaluations” (alternative-dispute-resolution decisions). The court closed the case. The

Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed, Seifman v. Guzall, No. 328643, 2017 WL 187989 (Mich.

App. Jan. 17, 2017), and the Michigan Supreme Court denied leave to appeal further, Seifman v.

Guzall, 898 N.W.2d 604 (Mich. 2017). The district court reopened this fee-dispute.

2 Case No. 18-1645, Hankins v. City of Inkster, et al.

The magistrate judge held a hearing but limited admissible evidence and argument to six

issues: (1) the Firm’s shareholder agreement between Seifman and Guzall; (2) when Guzall quit

the Firm and when he told Seifman; (3) when and how Hankins told Seifman and Guzall he was

firing the Firm; (4) when and how Hankins retained Guzall; (5) when and how Guzall took the

Hankins file from the Firm; and (6) the hours Guzall and Seifman each spent on the case, their

hourly rates, and whether Seifman was entitled to compensation in quantum meruit. The

magistrate judge expressly and emphatically barred evidence, argument, or discussion regarding

misconduct, specifically Guzall’s accusations against Seifman: “We will not try the [Michigan

state court] lawsuit de facto in the context of this evidentiary hearing on attorney fees.” Three

witnesses testified at the hearing (Hankins, Guzall, and Seifman), and the magistrate judge

admitted several documents, including the shareholder agreement. It was established that, at the

time he left, Guzall was a 25% shareholder in the Firm. Guzall insisted the shareholder agreement

was not a fee splitting agreement whereas Seifman insisted that it was.

The magistrate judge issued a Report and Recommendation, which the district court, after

thoroughly addressing and overruling Guzall’s objections to it, adopted as its final judgment. The

district court determined that Guzall’s individual work on the case was reasonably quantified at 80

hours, at $300 per hour, for direct compensation of $24,000. The court did not award Seifman any

direct compensation for work on the case. Further, the court determined that the shareholder

agreement was effectively a fee-splitting agreement, and the Hankins case was a corporate asset

subject to that contractual agreement, but which Guzall had taken from the Firm. Therefore, the

court held that Guzall was entitled to 25% of the Hankins contingency fee and the Firm (Seifman)

to 75%. The court rejected Guzall’s claims that Seifman breached the agreement and committed

illegal acts, criticizing those claims as “improper attempts to circumvent the findings and

conclusions of the Michigan state courts” and concluding that Guzall “previously agreed to dispose

3 Case No. 18-1645, Hankins v. City of Inkster, et al.

of those claims in the [Michigan state court] case.” Guzall had agreed that the district court—

rather than the state court—would decide the contingency-fee issue and the district court explained

that resolving attorney fee disputes is part of the overall litigation. Thus, its admission of Seifman

into the suit and its judgment on that issue were not improper. Finally, the court rejected Guzall’s

claims that he was denied a fair opportunity to present evidence, as he was invited to and did

present evidence at the hearing.

II.

We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error and conclusions of law de

novo. See Alexander v. Local 496, Laborers’ Int’l Union, 177 F.3d 394, 402 (6th Cir. 1999). We

review a decision on a Rule 24(b) motion to intervene for abuse of discretion. Grubbs v. Norris,

870 F.2d 343, 345 (6th Cir. 1989) (“permissive intervention . . . is clearly only reviewable under

an abuse of discretion standard”). We also review a district court’s evidentiary rulings for abuse

of discretion. United States v. Morales, 687 F.3d 697, 701–02 (6th Cir. 2012).

Guzall presses eleven claims that fall into four general categories: (1) Guzall’s accusations

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