Law Offices of Lin & Associates and Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C. v. Memorial Hermann Hospital System and Seyed Mohammad Salimi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 2011
Docket01-08-00891-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Law Offices of Lin & Associates and Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C. v. Memorial Hermann Hospital System and Seyed Mohammad Salimi (Law Offices of Lin & Associates and Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C. v. Memorial Hermann Hospital System and Seyed Mohammad Salimi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Law Offices of Lin & Associates and Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C. v. Memorial Hermann Hospital System and Seyed Mohammad Salimi, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued January 31, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-08-00891-CV

                                          ———————————                 

LAW OFFICES OF LIN & ASSOCIATES AND
DAWN LIN & ASSOCIATES, P.C., Appellants

V.

Memorial Hermann Hospital System and
Seyed Mohammad Salimi
, Appellees

On Appeal from County Civil Court at Law No. 1

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 907162

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          This case involves the allocation of insurance‑settlement proceeds between the claimant’s former law firm and the hospital that treated him.  The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the hospital, and the law firm appeals.  We modify the trial court’s judgment and affirm.

Background

          The appeal arises out of a traffic accident in which appellee Seyed Mohammad Salimi was injured.  Salimi was a passenger in his brother’s car, and the other vehicle was driven by Todd Fisher.  Salimi was treated by two different hospitals associated with appellee Memorial Hermann Hospital System.  As a result of his treatment, Salimi incurred $44,808.50 in medical expenses.  Memorial Hermann Northwest Hospital timely filed a hospital lien with the Harris County Clerk to secure its interest in any cause of action that Salimi might bring as a result of the accident.  See Tex. Prop. Code Ann. §§ 55.001–.008 (West 2007).

          After his discharge from the hospital, Salimi retained a lawyer to represent him concerning his personal injuries.  The lawyer negotiated a settlement agreement with Fisher’s insurer to tender the policy limits of $25,000.  When Salimi refused to sign a release, that lawyer withdrew from the representation.

Salimi subsequently contacted appellant Law Offices of Lin & Associates (“Lin”) about filing suit against Fisher, and Salimi signed a contingency‑fee agreement with Lin.  The fee proposed by Lin was “an undivided 33 1/3% interest in all money and things of value associated with Client’s claims, causes of action, and requests for damages, if such are settled prior to the filing of a lawsuit.”  Upon the filing of a lawsuit, Lin’s fee increased to 40% of the recovery.  The agreement further provided for fee increases to 45% “after a trial is commenced” and 50% “if a post-judgment remedy . . . is filed.”  The agreement provided in part that Lin would continue to claim its full interest in the contingency fee even if it withdrew from the representation.

One day after the fee agreement was executed, Lin filed a lawsuit against Fisher on Salimi’s behalf.  Fisher counterclaimed for breach of contract based on his insurer’s prior acceptance of an offer to settle the claim for policy limits.  Lin withdrew as Salimi’s counsel, and the district court eventually rendered summary judgment that Salimi take nothing and that the insurance settlement proceeds be subject to all liens and subrogation interests.

          Lin filed the current lawsuit against Salimi in county civil court at law, claiming that its former client breached his contingency‑fee contract by terminating the representation.  Lin originally sought a declaration that it was entitled to an unspecified assigned interest in Salimi’s recovery, along with actual damages, attorney’s fees, costs, and interest.  Memorial Hermann intervened in the suit, asserting its lien on the insurance proceeds through a cross‑claim for a declaratory judgment, as well as a cross‑claim for attorney’s fees.  Lin filed an amended petition, in which it referred to itself as “Law Offices of Lin & Associates as assignee of Seyed Mohammad Salimi” and named Memorial Hermann as the defendant.  Lin claimed Memorial Hermann’s hospital lien was defective and sought a declaration that it was entitled to $8,333.33 of the insurance proceeds as its one‑third contingency fee.

          The case was tried to a jury, which rendered a verdict that Memorial Hermann’s hospital lien contained all information required by statute, Memorial Hermann’s reasonable expenses for providing treatment to Salimi were $44,808.50, a valid contract for medical services existed between Memorial Hermann and Salimi, Lin and Salimi did not have a valid contingency‑fee agreement, Salimi still owed Memorial Hermann $16,666.66, and Memorial Hermann was entitled to attorney’s fees.  The trial court accepted the verdict and rendered judgment that Memorial Hermann had a valid hospital lien for $48,808.50, that Memorial Hermann recover $16,666.66 from Salimi out of the insurance proceeds, that Lin take nothing on its claims, and that Memorial Hermann recover attorney’s fees from Lin.  The final judgment stated that it was rendered against “Law Offices of Lin & Associates, a/k/a Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C., also appearing ostensibly as Law Offices of Lin & Associates as assignee of Seyed Mohammad Salimi.”  Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C. filed a postjudgment plea to the jurisdiction on the grounds that it was never named in the lawsuit, never served with process, and had never appeared.  The trial court never ruled on the plea to the jurisdiction.

          A notice of appeal was filed on behalf of two purported appellants, “Law Offices of Lin & Associates as assignee of Seyed Mohammad Salimi” and “Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C.”  A response brief was filed by Memorial Hermann, but no response was filed by Salimi.

Analysis

I.                  Sufficiency of the evidence

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Law Offices of Lin & Associates and Dawn Lin & Associates, P.C. v. Memorial Hermann Hospital System and Seyed Mohammad Salimi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/law-offices-of-lin-associates-and-dawn-lin-associa-texapp-2011.