Keyworth v. Israelson

214 A.2d 168, 240 Md. 289, 1965 Md. LEXIS 453
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 8, 1965
Docket[No. 404, September Term, 1964.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 214 A.2d 168 (Keyworth v. Israelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keyworth v. Israelson, 214 A.2d 168, 240 Md. 289, 1965 Md. LEXIS 453 (Md. 1965).

Opinion

*293 Oppenheimer, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the rights of attorneys and client in a settlement fund under a fee agreement and the right of a creditor of the client to an equitable lien against the fund. The client, Charles E. Keyworth (Keyworth) has appealed from an order of the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City directing that one-third of the fund (after expenses and costs) be paid to the attorneys, Max R. Israelson (Israelson) and Stafford H. Plimack (Plimack) and from a decree of that court ordering the amount advanced to Keyworth by his employer, Industrial Sales Co., Inc. (the Employer) retained from the proceeds of the fund pending the final determination of a law suit between the Employer and Keyworth.

On September 29, 1959, Keyworth, while in the employ of the Employer, sustained serious injuries when an automobile which he was operating in the course and scope of his employment was struck by a truck operated by Stephen Brown while on business of Brown’s employer, Fleet Transfer Company. Some three days after the collision, Plimack who, it is claimed, was the attorney for the Employer, came to see Keyworth and was employed by him, under circumstances to which reference will be made hereafter. Keyworth and his wife signed an agreement under which Plimack undertook to represent the Keyworths in connection with their claim against Brown and Fleet Transfer Company. This agreement provided for a fee to Plimack of twenty-five per cent of any amount received, if the case were to be settled out of court, and one-third of any recovery in litigation. On October 10, 1959, Keyworth executed a claim for compensation, which was filed for him by Plimack with the Maryland Workmen’s Compensation Commission on October 16, 1959. On November 9, 1959, the Commission ordered that Keyworth receive temporary total disability benefits of $40 a week, which he received from the date of the injury through June 19, 1960. He also received temporary partial disability benefits from June 20, 1961 through September 24, 1961, and medical and hospital expenses under the Employer’s compensation insurance. The temporary total and temporary partial disability benefits amounted to $3201.43, and the *294 medical and hospital expenses totaled $1030. While Plimack had requested a hearing on behalf of Keyworth to determine the nature and extent of permanent disability, no hearing was held on this issue until April 21, 1964, after Keyworth’s present counsel had entered the case and Plimack’s name, at Key-worth’s request, had been removed as Keyworth’s attorney from the compensation proceedings. On April 27, 1964, the Commission found that Keyworth had sustained a permanent partial disability under “Other Cases” amounting to fifty per cent industrial loss of the use of his body and ordered compensation at the rate of $25 a week beginning September 25, 1960, not to exceed the sum of $6250. The Employer and its insurer, in another case, have appealed this order of the Commission.

On March 8, 1960, Plimack filed suit on behalf of Keyworth against Brown and Fleet Transfer Company as third-party tortfeasors. On May 28, 1962, on Plimack’s recommendation, Key-worth agreed to employ both Plimack and Israelson as his attorneys to try this case. This agreement expressly provided that it superseded the original fee agreement between Keyworth and Plimack. Under the 1962 agreement, Keyworth authorized Plimack and Israelson to carry on the suit or compromise it and agreed to pay them one-third of the amount recovered; he also authorized the attorneys to pay the necessary medical and hospital and other expenses out of his share of any recovery.

The trial of the third-party case concluded on December 3, 1962 and resulted in a jury verdict in Keyworth’s favor for $15,000, an amount which was disappointingly low to Keyworth and his attorneys. It is agreed that the main reason for what is claimed to be the relatively small judgment was that the defendants produced and showed motion picture films depicting Keyworth’s movements prior to the trial, which contradicted Keyworth’s claims of disability resulting from the collision.

An appeal was immediately discussed, a motion for a new trial was made and denied, and Israelson ordered the transcript written up. In February, 1963, Keyworth raised and gave to Israelson the necessary monies to perfect the appeal. Israelson was pessimistic as to the chances on appeal. Key-worth was convinced there was something wrong with the films. Israelson obtained an offer of an additional $1600 to settle the *295 appeal. Israelson contends, and Keyworth denies, that Key-worth authorized the dismissal of the appeal in view of the offer totalling $16,600.

Keyworth refused to sign the settlement papers and Israel-son filed an order with the court clerk to have the judgment entered to his and Plimack’s use to the extent of the agreed fee, in accordance with the express authorization contained in the fee agreement of May 28, 1962, and a judgment was entered to their use to the extent of their one-third attorney’s fees. Thereafter, Israelson and Plimack petitioned for the appointment of a trustee to execute settlement papers and to hold and disburse the funds and, after an answer had been filed by Key-worth, the case was transferred by consent to the Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City and an order signed appointing the clerk of that court trustee to hold the settlement fund subject to further order.

On December 31, 1959, the Employer and Keyworth entered into an agreement which recited that while Keyworth was then receiving $40 a week under the Commission’s order of November 9, 1959 as compensation for temporary total disability, he had been earning approximately $100 a week take-home pay and wished to receive weekly advances from the Employer in the amount of $100. The agreement, which was prepared by Plimack, provided that the Employer would pay Keyworth $100 a week from the time of the accident until he returned to work on a full-time basis; that Keyworth would maintain his suit against Brown and the Fleet Transfer Company through his attorney, Plimack, and that, upon the successful conclusion of the case, he authorized Plimack to issue a check to the Employer for the amount to be advanced by the Employer, excluding any bonuses or presents. The Employer made advances to Key-worth under this agreement in the total amount of $7200. After the court below had appointed the clerk as trustee of the sum of $16,600, the Employer filed a petition in the proceedings alleging that the sum on deposit was subject to an assignment-lien in its favor in the amount of $7200 under its agreement with Keyworth and asking that the court order payment of this sum to the Employer out of the fund. Keyworth answered this petition denying that the Employer was entitled to the re *296 lief it prayed; the Employer thereupon filed a petition to intervene and was authorized to do so on September 23, 1964. On September 11, 1964, the date the Employer filed its petition to intervene in the proceedings in the Circuit Court No. 2, it filed a lawsuit against Keyworth in the Baltimore City Court for the sum of $7200 under its agreement, asking for summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
214 A.2d 168, 240 Md. 289, 1965 Md. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyworth-v-israelson-md-1965.