Northern States Power Co. v. Gas Services, Inc.

690 N.W.2d 362, 2004 Minn. App. LEXIS 1487, 2004 WL 2984367
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 28, 2004
DocketA04-913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 690 N.W.2d 362 (Northern States Power Co. v. Gas Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northern States Power Co. v. Gas Services, Inc., 690 N.W.2d 362, 2004 Minn. App. LEXIS 1487, 2004 WL 2984367 (Mich. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

HUSPENI, Judge.

Respondent, an attorney, moved the district court to establish an attorney lien on funds to which the rights of appellant, his client, were then being litigated and on funds appellant received from an arbitration award in a federal action. The district court established a lien for 24% of the arbitration award plus interest and ordered that 24% of the funds still subject to litigation be held pending resolution of the litigation. Appellant challenges the award. Because we conclude that the district court had jurisdiction to establish the lien under Minn.Stat. § 481.13 (2002) and established the lien in an appropriate" amount, we affirm.

FACTS

In 1999, appellant Gas Services, Inc., through its owner and sole agent Manjit Bajwa (collectively, Bajwa), hired attorney Thomas A. Foster of Thomas A. Foster & Associates, Ltd. (collectively, Foster), to represent it in an action in the federal district court of Minnesota (the federal action) to recover about $2,000,000 from a Michigan corporation, Howard Avista Energy (Howard). While this action was pending, Northern States Power Company (NSP) brought an interpleader action in Ramsey County District Court (the state action) against Bajwa and Howard to determine which of them should' receive $600,000 held by NSP. Foster also represented Bajwa in the state action, which was stayed pending resolution of the federal action.

Five documents are relevant to the fee dispute that resulted from Foster’s representation of Bajwa. The first, headed “Employment Agreement,” was signed and dated by Foster on March 3, 1999, and by Bajwa on June 30, 1999. It provided for a 16% contingency fee if the federal action was settled during discovery, 25% if it was settled prior to trial, and 33% if it went to trial.

The second, headed “Agreement,” was signed by both Bajwa and Foster on February 26, 2001. It acknowledged that the federal action had.been resolved through arbitration and provided that the contin- *364 geney fee would be 24% of the gross award.

The third, headed “Agreement!:] Arbitration of Attorney Fees,” was signed by both Bajwa and Foster on October 10, 2001. It provided that (1) their attorney fee dispute would be submitted to a particular district court judge, and if he declined to arbitrate, to another named district court judge; (2) the agreement pertained only to GSI’s action against Howard, not to GSI’s action against NSP, for which Foster was owed no fees; and (3) the arbitrator’s decision would be binding and non-appealable.

The fourth, handwritten by Bajwa, dated March 13, 2002, and signed by Bajwa and Foster, recited that (1) the arbitrators in the underlying action had awarded GSI approximately $2.8 million; (2) the award had been vacated by the federal district court; (3) Bajwa and Foster agreed that a major law firm should handle the appeal to the Eighth Circuit; (4) Foster had an agreement whereby he would receive 24% of the gross recovery, excluding the $600,000 recovered as the result of an in-terpleader action brought by NSP; and (5) the parties had had a fee dispute in August 2001 that they agreed to resolve by arbitration, but this agreement resolved all past fee disputes. The agreement provided that (1) Foster’s fee would be reduced from 24% to 12%; (2) Foster would be responsible, but receive no additional fee, for collection, further arbitration or trial, and release of the $600,000 in the NSP action; and (3) Foster would handle, for a contingency fee of 33%, a further action that GSI would bring against NSP.

The fifth document is a letter from Bajwa to Foster dated April 5, 2002, stating:

[W]e had discussed your fee schedule as it pertains to getting [one of two large law firms] to join us for legal representation during [ajppeal [to the Eighth Circuit], We do not have either firm under contract....
You have reduced your fee in anticipation of an agreement with one of these firms. I contacted two other firms and they both refused to consider a “contingency” arrangement. So, we are not certain that we can find representation that will fit our need to pay on a “contingency” basis. In short, we have no agreement with a third party and no proposals either.
I am concerned that we will not have adequate time to have another law firm prepare a “stellar brief.” Absent some good news next week, we may have to go it alone on the [a]ppeal. If that is the case, your fee will not have to be reduced because we were unable to find legal representation that fit our financial criteria.

Foster represented Bajwa on appeal to the Eighth Circuit, which resulted in Bajwa recovering $2,105,392.25. 1 But Foster did not represent Bajwa on his appeal to the Eighth Circuit of the federal district court’s determination that Howard could offset the $600,000 NSP receivable against its debt to GSI. 2

Bajwa told Foster that Foster was entitled to 12% of the award, pursuant to the *365 agreement of March 13, 2002. Bajwa also threatened to sue Foster for malpractice. On the advice of his malpractice insurer, Foster then withdrew from representation of Bajwa. Foster then moved the Ramsey County District Court, which was handling the NSP interpleader action, pursuant to both Minn.Stat. § 481.13 (2002) and the parties’ arbitration agreement, to establish a lien on the $600,000 held by that court and on whatever funds Bajwa would recover in the federal action and “for an order defining the rights and obligations” of himself and Bajwa relative to his representation of Bajwa in both the federal action and the state action.

The transcript of the hearing on Foster’s motion indicates that Bajwa argued that the March 13, 2002 agreement, which provided a 12% fee for Foster, governed, and Foster argued that the February 26, 2001 agreement, providing a 24% fee, governed because Bajwa had not hired another law firm to conduct the appeal and Foster had handled it. Foster also relied on Bajwa’s letter of April 5, 2002, stating that, because Bajwa had not been able to hire other counsel to handle the appeal, Foster’s fee would not be reduced. The transcript also shows that the district court was reluctant to act as an arbitrator and that the parties agreed to accept the district court’s decision.

Acting judicially rather than as an arbitrator, the district court awarded Foster “24 percent of the $2,105,392.25 award, plus interest, which was obtained in arbitration and was ultimately affirmed by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.” The district court established an attorney’s lien for that amount and ordered that 24% of the $600,000 be held pending resolution of the Eighth Circuit decision on whether Howard could offset the $600,000 against the amount it owed Bajwa.

ISSUE 3

Did the district court have jurisdiction to determine and establish attorney liens?

ANALYSIS

Bajwa argues first that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because the fees Foster claimed resulted from the federal action, not the state action. Questions of subject-matter jurisdiction- are reviewed de novo. Johnson v.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
690 N.W.2d 362, 2004 Minn. App. LEXIS 1487, 2004 WL 2984367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-states-power-co-v-gas-services-inc-minnctapp-2004.