MURRAY, MURRAY, ELLIS v. Minge
This text of 516 So. 2d 213 (MURRAY, MURRAY, ELLIS v. Minge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MURRAY, MURRAY, ELLIS, BRADEN & LANDRY
v.
James H. MINGE, Amica Mutual Insurance Company, and Oscar A. Cuellar.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*214 Lamar M. Richardson, Jr., Mandeville, for plaintiffs-appellants.
James H. Minge, New Orleans, in pro. per.
Before GULOTTA, C.J., and BARRY, KLEES, WILLIAMS and ARMSTRONG, JJ.
ARMSTRONG, Judge.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court sustaining defendant's exceptions of Res Judicata, Failure to Join an Indispensable Party, No Right of Action, No Cause of Action and Vagueness. The suit originated out of a claim for attorney fees by Appellant who was discharged from a litigant's case prior to settlement. We reverse.
On September 30, 1983, a car struck Oscar Armando Cuellar, a citizen of El Salvador, as he walked along a highway in St. Charles Parish. On October 4, 1983 Cuellar hired Appellant, the law firm of Murray, Murray, Ellis, Braden and Landry ("Murray"), to represent him in a personal injury claim against the driver of the car and her insurance carrier. Cuellar executed a contingency fee contract with Murray which granted Murray an undivided 35% interest in any claim or suit arising from the accident. In addition, the contract stated that neither party could settle the case without the other's consent. However, the contract could be terminated upon written notice of either party.
Shortly after it was hired Murray began to investigate the circumstances of Cuellar's accident, negotiate with the defendant and her insurer, and hire photographers and accident reconstruction experts in order to develop Cuellar's case.
On November 5, 1983, Romualdo Gonzalez, the Murray attorney who was handling Cuellar's case, received a letter from James H. Minge, an attorney, stating that Cuellar wanted to terminate his contract with the Murray firm and to hire Minge instead. Cuellar and his sister, Angela Cuellar Lado, also signed the letter. In the letter Minge requested that the Murray firm "take no further action in this matter on Mr. Cuellar's behalf" and that, "as soon as possible," Gonzalez should present an "itemization of costs incurred [by Murray] to date" and "any claims which [Murray] might care to assert for attorney fees on a quantum meruit basis."
Gonzalez then met with Cuellar and was informed that Cuellar had no problem with Murray's representation but that Cuellar's sister wished to hire Minge. On the basis of that information Murray continued to act as Cuellar's legal representative.
On November 21, 1983, Minge wrote Murray another letter informing them of his representation of Cuellar and again requested that Murray take no further action on Cuellar's behalf. In his letter to Murray, Minge included a letter from Cuellar to Gonzalez, also dated November 21, 1983, in which Cuellar stated he no longer wanted Murray to represent him. On the same day, Gonzalez sent a letter to Minge advising him that Murray had hired counsel to represent it in asserting a right to attorney fees from any recovery obtained on Cuellar's behalf. Gonzalez also stated that, "We intend to file our contract for protection of work performed by this office. By copy of this letter I am advising the insurance company involved not to issue any drafts in settlement of this matter without including my name among the loss payees.
By letter dated December 14, 1983, Gonzalez requested copies from Minge of any pleadings filed on behalf of Cuellar. In a letter dated December 21, 1983, Minge notified Murray that he had filed a lawsuit in federal court on behalf of Cuellar, Minge also enclosed a copy of the petition in that suit. The suit was settled for $214,000 on May 14, 1984 and on May 15, 1984 the federal district court dismissed that suit with prejudice. The settlement funds were dispersed and Cuellar then apparently returned to El Salvador.
In late June 1984, counsel for the Murray firm informed Minge that he was planning to file a motion on the firm's behalf to intervene in Cuellar's suit in order to assert a right to attorney fees. Counsel was notified at that time that the dispute had been *215 settled and that the case had been dismissed.
On August 20, 1984, Murray filed a "Motion to Set Aside Dismissal, For Recognition of Professional Fee Contract and For Injunctive Relief" in U.S. District Court. The motion was denied as procedurally untimely. Murray appealed the denial of that motion. The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court but pointed out that Murray still had remedies available in state court. Cuellar v. Macisaac, 767 F.2d 917 (5th Cir.1985). The federal courts did not address the merits of Appellant's claim.
On November 2, 1984, Murray filed a suit against Minge, Amica Insurance Co. (the original defendant's insurance carrier), and Cuellar in Civil District Court, Orleans Parish, alleging that Minge's interference without just cause with the Murray-Cuellar contract resulted in a loss of Murray's recovery of a portion of the contingency fee. Murray amended the petition on November 21, 1984 to name only Minge and Minge's professional liability carrier as defendants. In his amended petition Murray requested that the fee Minge received in the Cuellar case be apportioned between Murray and Minge. In response to that petition Minge filed exceptions of res judicata, failure to join an indespensable party, no right or cause of action and vagueness. The trial court maintained the exceptions on March 17, 1986. Murray appeals from that judgment.
By his sole assignment of error Appellant avers that the trial court erred in sustaining Appellee's exceptions. Appellant argues that strict compliance with the recordation provisions of LSA-R.S. 37:218[1] is not necessary for the court to order an apportionment of the contingency fee between serial attorneys when one of them has been discharged without cause. We agree.
First of all we note that the trial court sustained all of the exceptions.
LSA-R.S. 13:4231 governs res judicata it states as follows:
The authority of the thing adjudged takes place only with respect to what was the object of the judgment. The thing demanded must be the same; the demand must be founded on the same cause of action; the demand must be between the same parties, and formed by them against each other in the same quality.
It is clear from a review of the court's opinion in Cuellar v. Macisaac, supra that the only thing determined by the federal district court, and affirmed by the appellate court, was that pursuant to the federal rules of civil procedure Murray's motion to intervene had not been timely filed. Since the federal court never ruled upon the merits of Murray's case in any fashion we do not think that the issues in the case before us have been adjudicated, and hence the trial court improperly upheld the exception of Res Judicata.
We next consider the trial court's maintenance of the appellee's exceptions of failure to join an indispensible party and no cause of action. Appellee asserts that Murray was required to join Mr. Cuellar as a party "for only Cuellar can give competent testimony concerning the circumstances surrounding his alleged employment and *216 subsequent discharge of plaintiff." In addition appellees claim that "plaintiff has failed to allege any facts or circumstances on which a judgment against defendant can stand."
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516 So. 2d 213, 1987 WL 1656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-murray-ellis-v-minge-lactapp-1987.