McAlpine v. Priddle

321 P.3d 345, 2014 WL 685854, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 18
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 2014
Docket6866 S-14891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 321 P.3d 345 (McAlpine v. Priddle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAlpine v. Priddle, 321 P.3d 345, 2014 WL 685854, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 18 (Ala. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal arises from an attorney's fee dispute arbitration conducted under Alaska's Revised Uniform Arbitration Act (Revised Arbitration Act). 1 The two primary issues relate to the appropriate standard of review when a party asserts an arbitration decision was procured by fraud and the possible application of non-statutory public policy grounds to vacate an arbitration award. We adopt the federal standard for reviewing a claim that an arbitration decision was procured by fraud, and we conclude the arbitration panel's decision that there was no fraud is not reviewable. We also conclude that on the facts found by the arbitration panel, there is no basis to vacate the arbitration decision on public policy grounds. We therefore affirm the superior court's decision to confirm the arbitration decision.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Background

The background facts underlying this attorney's fee dispute are fully set out in the arbitration panel's decision, attached as Appendix A, and the superior court's decision to confirm the arbitration decision, attached as Appendix B. A few basic facts are set out here for context.

Jierum Duarte was arrested on federal drug conspiracy charges in November 2008. Duarte asked his girlfriend, Kalindi MecA pine, to contact attorney Steven Priddle about representing Duarte in the federal criminal proceedings and in a concurrent state probation proceeding. Both Duarte and McAlpine later asserted that Priddle told them he would charge up to $25,000 if the case did not go to trial, up to $50,000 if the case went to trial, and up to $75,000 if the case went to trial and required hiring experts.

McAlpine and Priddle signed a written agreement for Priddle to represent Duarte. McAlpine and Duarte later claimed they were never provided a copy of the signed agreement. The day after the agreement was signed, McAlpine gave Priddle $75,000 cash wrapped in a plastic grocery bag.

Duarte's case was set for trial in February 2009, but he entered a guilty plea the morning of trial. Following Duarte's sentencing, McAlpine asked Priddle to refund "at least" $50,000 of the fee because the case did not go to trial In October 2010 MeAlpine petitioned for an attorney's fee arbitration with the Alaska Bar Association. 2 The arbitration panel issued a decision in June 2011, conclud *347 ing that the $75,000 fee was reasonable under the facts and cireumstances of the case.

During the arbitration hearing, Priddle offered into evidence the three-page written fee agreement that he asserted was the one McAlpine signed in November 2008. MecA pine disputed the document's authenticity. McAlpine testified that she recalled signing a one-page - agreement-not a - three-page agreement-and that the agreement Priddle presented did not reflect the parties' prior verbal agreement to a graduated fee. McA pine also testified she could not confirm that her purported signature and initials on the agreement were authentic.

The fee agreement contained a provision specifying, "A flat fee of $75,000.00 will be charged.... This flat-rate is earned and owing upon execution of this fee agreement.... THIS FLAT-RATE FEE, OR ANY PART THEREOF, IS NON-REFUNDABLE AND WILL NOT BE REFUNDED/RETURNED - UNDER ANY - CIRCUMSTANCES." The panel noted that "[the written fee agreement on its face violates Ethics Opinion 2009-1, which concludes that it is misleading to describe a fee retainer in any way as 'non-refundable.' 3 But the panel concluded that the agreement "accurately reflected the terms of the fee agreement entered into between the parties,] satisfied the requirement of the Code of Professional Conduct that all fee agreements be in writing[, and] clearly contemplates a fixed fee and not a graduated fee."

The panel then analyzed whether the agreed-upon $75,000 fee was reasonable for the work performed. 4 The panel ultimately concluded that "$75,000 was a reasonable fee to charge in this case based upon all of the factors contained in Bar Rule 35(a)" But the panel referred the matter to bar counsel to investigate whether disciplinary proceedings were appropriate for Priddle's use of the "non-refundable" and "already earned" language in the fee agreement and his acceptance of a large sum of cash that may have come from illegal sources.

McAlpine filed a "motion to amend" the panel's decision in the superior court in January 2012. MeAlpine advanced several arguments for overturning the arbitration decision: (1) the panel failed to analyze the reasonableness of the fee in relation to work actually performed; (2) the panel failed to weigh the fact that neither MeAlpine nor Duarte was given a copy of the agreement; (8) Priddle misled Duarte on his experience with federal drug cases; (4) Priddle's fee was not reasonable; (5) Priddle did not provide an accounting of time spent on the case; (6) the panel could not assess the reasonableness of the fee without timekeeping records; (7) the panel should have held Priddle to a "higher standard" in assessing the reasonableness of the fee charged; (8) the panel should have given greater weight to the fact that the fee agreement contained provisions in violation of the rules of professional conduct; (9) Priddle coerced his client into entering the fee agreement and ultimately pleading guilty; and (10) the fee agreement considered by the panel was fraudulent.

The superior court reviewed MeAlpine's petition under the narrow judicial review standards of the Revised Arbitration Act. 5 The court rejected most of MeAlpine's arguments as falling outside the statutory judicial review provisions and therefore being unre-viewable. The court acknowledged that McAlpine's fraudulent agreement argument fell within one of the statutory review provisions-that "the award was procured by corruption, fraud, or other undue means." 6 The court concluded, however, that the panel's finding that the document was not fraudulent was not reviewable. Concluding that MeAl-pine "hald] not established any of the statutory grounds to vacate or modify an arbitration award as set forth in AS 09.48.500 or 510," the superior court affirmed the arbitration decision.

MeAlpine, appearing pro se, appeals.

*348 B. Standard Of Review

We "review de novo the superior court's decision to confirm [an] arbitration award." 7

C. MceAlpine's Appeal

"[Wle consider pro se [papers] liberally in an effort to determine what legal claims have been raised." 8 MeAlpine generally challenges the merits of the panel's decision; she also appears to claim that the arbitration decision was fraudulently obtained and that the panel violated public policy by giving effect to an "unconscionable" fee agreement. 9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
321 P.3d 345, 2014 WL 685854, 2014 Alas. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcalpine-v-priddle-alaska-2014.