Lee v. Thompson

167 So. 3d 170, 2014 WL 793645, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 138
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2014
DocketNo. 2012-CA-01260-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 167 So. 3d 170 (Lee v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Thompson, 167 So. 3d 170, 2014 WL 793645, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 138 (Mich. 2014).

Opinion

CHANDLER, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. This is the second appeal to this Court’of this case involving the 2001 settlement of thirteen diet-drug claims for approximately $32 million. Herbert Lee Jr., the attorney who handled the settlement, agreed that six percent of the gross settlement would be used to pay for “common benefit” discovery materials generated in the federal multi-district litigation (MDL) of diet-drug claims. At the settlement, Lee billed the MDL fee to the plaintiffs. After the settlement, the MDL court ordered a partial refund of the MDL fee.

¶ 2. Two of the plaintiffs, Gloria Thompson and Deborah Dixon (collectively, “the plaintiffs”), sued Lee, alleging that his attorney’s fee had exceeded the amount set out in the retainer agreement and that he had failed to accurately refund their portions of the MDL fee. The trial court granted summary judgment to Lee on the contract issue and to the plaintiffs on the MDL fee issue. Both Lee and the plaintiffs appealed, and in Lee v. Thompson, 43 So.3d 1104 (Miss.2010) (Lee I),1 this Court reversed and remanded for a trial on the contract issue. We affirmed the grant of summary judgment on the MDL fee issue, but remanded for the trial court to “determine if the MDL fees were paid in accordance with MDL Pre-Trial Order 2152, and if not, to order such distribution.” Id. at 1115.

¶ 3. After the trial on the contract issue, the jury found in favor of Lee. The trial court determined that the MDL fees had not been paid in accordance with the MDL pretrial order, and ordered that Lee pay Thompson $420,000 and Dixon $180,000. Lee appeals, arguing that (1) this Court erred in Lee I by finding that the MDL order required him to pay the entire MDL fee from his attorney’s fees; (2) the plaintiffs are entitled to only $140,000 and $60,000 based on a prior representation of their attorney as to the amount owed; and (3) the plaintiffs’ case warrants dismissal with prejudice due to their wrongful conduct.

¶ 4. We find that Lee’s assertion that the pretrial orders did not require to him to pay the entire MDL fee was decided in the first appeal and is barred by the law of the case doctrine. We further find that the plaintiffs’ letter brief did not constitute [173]*173a binding admission on the amount of damages and that Lee’s assertion that the plaintiffs should be sanctioned for misconduct is proeedurally barred.

FACTS

¶ 5. Thompson and Dixon hired Lee to represent them in litigation arising out of their consumption of certain diet drugs commonly referred to as Fen/Phen. Lee filed the lawsuit in the Circuit Court of Holmes County on behalf of Thompson, Dixon, and eleven other plaintiffs. Lee I, 43 So.8d at 1106. During the pendency of the lawsuit, Lee entered into an agreement with the Plaintiffs’ Management Committee (PMC) appointed by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in MDL 1203, In re Diet Drugs. The agreement provided that, in exchange for Lee’s use of certain “common benefit” discovery materials, Lee would deposit six percent of “the gross amount of recovery of each ... client” in the MDL 1203 Fee and Cost Account.

¶ 6. The case settled in 2001. At the settlement, Thompson and Dixon signed disclosure sheets documenting the disbursal of funds prior to receiving their portions of the settlement. Thompson received the largest award, totaling more than $7.4 million. Dixon received the third-largest award, totaling more than $3.1 million. A document entitled “Global Case Expenses For Amos, et al. v. American Home Products” reflects that the global settlement amount was $32 million. The document shows that the MDL fee of $1,920,000 was deducted from the global settlement amount. The “amount to be distributed” is listed as $30,080,000, which is $32 million minus six percent, or $1,920,000. Thompson and Dixon’s individual settlement sheets show that each received a percentage of the $30,080,000, minus case expenses and Lee’s attorney’s fee. The individual settlement sheets did not account for the six-percent MDL fee. In his brief, Lee asserts that the thirteen plaintiffs agreed to pay the MDL fee when they agreed to participate in the settlement. He asserts that he paid forty-five percent of the MDL fee, and his clients paid fifty-five percent of the fee.

¶ 7. In 2003, the MDL 1203 court determined that one-third of all the sums deposited in the MDL 1203 Fee and Cost Account should be returned to those who had contributed to them. Pursuant to this determination, two percent of the $32 million settlement amount was returned to Lee. Lee allocated the refund by retaining forty-five percent for himself as his attorney’s fee and refunding each client one thirteenth of the remaining fifty-five percent. Thompson and Dixon contested the amount of the refund and subsequently filed this lawsuit concerning the percentage amount of Lee’s attorney’s fee and the amount of the MDL fee refund. The trial court granted summary judgment to Thompson and Dixon on the refund issue, finding that certain MDL pretrial orders required disbursement of the refund on a pro rata basis.

¶ 8. ' Regarding the attorney’s fee, Thompson and Dixon alleged that, when Lee undertook their representation, they had signed contingency-fee agreements providing that Lee would receive forty percent of any settlement of their diet-drug claims. But they alleged that, at the settlement, Lee instead had charged forty-five percent. In contrast, Lee claimed the contingency-fee contracts had provided for a forty-five percent fee. However, Lee was unable to produce the original contingency-fee contracts. The trial court granted Lee’s motion for summary judgment on this claim, finding that Thompson and Dixon had ratified the forty-five percent fee when they signed the settlement agree[174]*174ment. In Lee I, this Court reversed the grant of summary judgment and remanded for a trial, finding that Thompson and Dixon could recover if the jury determined they had been coerced into entering the settlement agreement by Lee’s statement that their failure to do so would delay or prevent their compensation. Lee I, 43 So.3d at 1115.

¶ 9. In Lee I, this Court further held that Lee improperly had allocated the MDL fee to the plaintiffs in contravention of certain pretrial orders entered in MDL 1203 that applied to Lee’s contract with the PMC. The first of these pretrial orders, PTO 467, recognized that the PMC had authorized certain attorneys to perform work for the common benefit of the plaintiffs in MDL 1203, known as “common benefit attorneys.” MDL 1203 Pre-Trial Order 467 (Feb. 10,1999). PTO 467 established a procedure under which a percentage of any payment by the defendant to the plaintiffs would be sequestered to provide reimbursement of costs and attorney’s fees to the common benefit attorneys. The sequestered funds would be held in the MDL 1203 Fee and Cost Account. PTO 467 provided that the defendant was to deduct nine percent from any payment to a plaintiff in MDL 1203 and that amount would be deposited in the MDL 1203 Fee and Cost Account. For state-federal coordinated cases, the amount was six percent.2

¶ 10. Pre-Trial Order 2152 stated that it clarified PTO 467. MDL 1203 Pre-Trial Order 2152 (Sept. 12, 2001). PTO 2152 provided that the defendant was to “withhold nine percent from the gross amount of each Claim Payment for deposit into the MDL Fee and Cost Account.” PTO 2152 also stated that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 So. 3d 170, 2014 WL 793645, 2014 Miss. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-thompson-miss-2014.