Michael G. Stag, LLC v. Stuart H. Smith, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 2020
Docket2:18-cv-03425
StatusUnknown

This text of Michael G. Stag, LLC v. Stuart H. Smith, LLC (Michael G. Stag, LLC v. Stuart H. Smith, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael G. Stag, LLC v. Stuart H. Smith, LLC, (E.D. La. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

MICHAEL G. STAG, ET AL. CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO: 18-3425 c/w 20-991

STUART H. SMITH, LLC, ET AL. SECTION: "A" (2)

ORDER AND REASONS The following motions are before the Court: Motion for Summary Judgment (Rec. Doc. 241) filed by plaintiffs/defendants-in-counterclaim Michael G. Stag, LLC, Stag Liuzza, LLC (formerly known as Smith Stag, LLC), and Michael G. Stag (referred to at times collectively as “the Stag Parties”); Motion to Rescind Conditional Order of Dismissal (Rec. Doc. 234) filed by defendants/plaintiffs-in-counterclaim Stuart H. Smith, LLC and Stuart H. Smith (referred to at times collectively as “the Smith Parties”). Both motions are opposed. The motions, submitted for consideration on March 18, 2020, are before the Court on the briefs without oral argument.1 For the reasons that follow, the motion for summary judgment is DENIED and the motion to rescind is GRANTED. I. Background2 On December 17, 2019, the Court, having been informed that this matter had settled as to all parties and all claims, entered its standard 60 day order of dismissal.

1 The Court notes that the parties have requested oral argument on their respective motions. The Court is persuaded that the arguments presented by counsel in the numerous memoranda that have been filed will suffice to convey each parties’ position.

2 The dispute that gave rise to this case is described in greater detail in prior rulings of the Court and of the magistrate judge. Michael G. Stag and Stuart H. Smith are former law partners of (Rec. Doc. 222, Order of Dismissal). It is apparent from the record that counsel for the parties contacted the Court after executing a “Term Sheet” that ostensibly contains the terms of the parties’ settlement.3 (Rec. Doc. 223-4 at 12). The Term Sheet is only two pages long. It references a mutual, general release that will ultimately be executed by the parties (id. ¶ 8) and “further documents

consummating the agreement to settle” that will be generated within three weeks (id. ¶ 1). Notably, the Term Sheet includes signatories that are not parties to the litigation before this Court and it compromises state court litigation (and an arbitration) that are not part of the case before this Court.

Smith Stag, LLC. In 2015, Smith withdrew from the firm due to a serious illness. The terms of the withdrawal were governed both by the firm’s Operating Agreement and by a negotiated Separation Agreement between Stag and Smith. (Rec. Doc. 1-1). After Smith returned to the practice of law, Stag initiated this action against Smith alleging that Smith embellished the severity of his illness in order to withdraw from the firm on more favorable financial terms.

3 The Court was informed about the now-disputed settlement by a joint phone call received from counsel for both Stag and Smith. The Court’s law clerk with whom they spoke asked whether entry of a 60 day order of dismissal would be appropriate. Counsel for both sides confirmed that a 60 day order of dismissal should be entered. But Smith now advises that he did not authorize this. According to Smith, he was not advised about and did not consent to “an administrative dismissal” of this case, and he contends that the case should have been stayed and not dismissed. (Rec. Doc. 243-13, Stuart H. Smith declaration ¶¶ 10(e),(f)). Smith points out that the Term Sheet expressly provides that all parties agree to entry of a 60 day order of dismissal in this case “upon signing of the settlement documents.” (Rec. Doc. 243-3, Term Sheet ¶ 6). It does not state that the parties agree to an order of dismissal upon signing of the Term Sheet itself. It is clear, however, that Smith ratified his counsel’s actions by acquiescing in having the case dismissed based upon the signing of the Term Sheet. Smith, who remains an active attorney in this district, is enrolled as counsel of record for the Smith Parties, and the Court’s CM/ECF electronic delivery receipt confirms that a copy of the 60 day order of dismissal was sent to Smith on December 17, 2019. The order of dismissal is clear on its face that it effects a dismissal, not a stay, and the first sentence of the order states that “all of the parties to this action have firmly agreed upon a compromise.” (Rec. Doc. 222, Order of Dismissal). Yet Smith did not seek to have the dismissal order vacated until he filed his Motion to Rescind on February 12, 2020, and the basis of that motion was that there had been no meeting of the minds as to a settlement, not that his counsel had exceeded his authority in agreeing to a dismissal as opposed to a stay. (Rec. Doc. 234). Smith’s declaration, which was filed on March 10, 2020 as part of his opposition to the Stag Parties’ motion for summary judgment, is the first time that Smith has suggested that an order of dismissal had been entered without his consent. Counsel for the Stag Parties was asked to and graciously agreed to draft the receipt and release document for the settlement. (Rec. Doc. 223-6 at 2). While the Term Sheet was only two pages long, the substance of the Settlement, Release, and Indemnity Agreement that the Stag Parties prepared was eight single-spaced pages in length, and like the Term Sheet included parties and litigation that are not before this

Court. On February 5, 2020, the Court denied the Stag Parties’ first motion to enforce the settlement, in part because the Court was persuaded that the Stag Parties had prematurely moved for relief, not having allowed the Smith Parties sufficient time to consider and provide input to the draft Settlement, Release, and Indemnity Agreement that the Stag Parties had prepared. (Rec. Doc. 232, Order and Reasons). The Court expressly declined to usurp the Smith Parties’ role of determining whether the Settlement, Release, and Indemnity Agreement, as drafted by the Stag Parties, conformed to or deviated from the provisions of the Term Sheet. (Id. at 3). In their

opposition to the motion to enforce, the Smith Parties did not deny that they had settled with the Stag Parties although they did begin to question whether no meeting of the minds had occurred and that no valid compromise had been reached given the parties’ inability to agree on a version of a release and indemnity agreement that conformed to the Term Sheet. (Rec. Doc. 225, Opposition at 2). The most salient obstacle that the Smith Parties complained about was the Stag Parties’ refusal to provide documentation pertaining to the monies contained in the escrow account previously ordered by the Court.4

4 In its Minute Entry of 7/24/18, the Court directed the Stag Parties to hold in escrow in a separate account all attorney’s fees associated with the schedule of active cases listed on the The parties presumably made additional attempts to finalize the settlement documents and to preserve what both sides had believed at one time to be a valid settlement. Unfortunately, on February 12, 2020, the Smith Parties filed the instant motion to rescind the order of dismissal contending that the Smith Parties and the Stag Parties did not make the same agreement and that there was no meeting of the minds

regarding an actual, final settlement agreement. The Smith Parties deny that the Term Sheet by itself constitutes a binding settlement agreement. According to the Smith Parties, the Stag Parties are once again trying to strong arm their self-serving version of a settlement that they know the Smith Parties would never have agreed to. Therefore, the Smith Parties asseverate that the Court must reopen this case in order to either proceed with the litigation or address these issues. On February 18, 2020, the Court granted the Stag Parties’ motion to extend the deadline for any party to move to enforce the compromise. (Rec. Doc. 238, Extension on Order of Dismissal).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ronald Crowell v. CIGNA Group Insurance
410 F. App'x 788 (Fifth Circuit, 2011)
American Bank & Trust Co. v. Hannie
568 So. 2d 216 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1990)
City of Baton Rouge v. Douglas
984 So. 2d 746 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2008)
Amy v. Schlumberger Technology Corp.
771 So. 2d 669 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2000)
Walk Haydel & Assocs. v. Coastal Power
720 So. 2d 372 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1998)
Trahan v. COCO COLA BOTTLING CO. UNITED
894 So. 2d 1096 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2005)
Sileo v. Berger
74 So. 3d 753 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2011)
Feingerts v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
117 So. 3d 1294 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2013)
Morris, Lee & Bayle, LLC v. Macquet
192 So. 3d 198 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2016)
Elder v. Elder & Elder Enterprises, Ltd.
948 So. 2d 348 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2007)
Weeks v. Merck & Co.
412 F. App'x 653 (Fifth Circuit, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Michael G. Stag, LLC v. Stuart H. Smith, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-g-stag-llc-v-stuart-h-smith-llc-laed-2020.