Olson v. Reynolds

484 F. App'x 61
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 2012
DocketNo. 11-2273
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 484 F. App'x 61 (Olson v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olson v. Reynolds, 484 F. App'x 61 (7th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER

Donn Olson sued one of his former attorneys, Michael Reynolds, for mishandling a prior lawsuit and won a judgment for treble damages. Seeking an even greater victory, Olson appeals the district court’s denial of his motions for sanctions and attorneys’ fees, contending that Reynolds opposed Olson’s complaint frivolously and vexatiously. Because the district court did not abuse its discretion or commit legal error, we affirm.

The dispute between Olson and Reynolds grows out of two earlier lawsuits. The first suit began in 1998 when Olson, a pharmacist, sued his former employer, Al-ick’s Drug Stores. The parties orally settled the case for $120,000, and Olson’s attorney, Georgia Luks-McFarland, drafted a written settlement agreement. Al-ick’s signed the draft and sent Luks-McFarland a check for $120,000. Olson, however, refused to sign. He complained that the draft did not include a mutual nondisclosure and nondisparagement term, which Olson believed the parties had orally agreed to. Olson demanded that Luks-McFarland turn over the settlement check to him anyway, but she declined and withdrew as Olson’s counsel.

Olson, now pro se, sought to rely on the oral settlement agreement. He filed a copy of the settlement conference transcript with the court to explain why he would not sign the written agreement. Because he did not file the transcript under seal, Alick’s moved for liquidated damages under the confidentiality clause of the oral agreement. Alick’s also moved to compel Luks-McFarland to return its settlement check. The district court ruled [63]*63that the oral settlement agreement was binding, awarded Aliek’s $30,000 in liquidated damages, but denied its motion to recover the check. Alick’s then stopped payment on the check, reasoning that it now owed Olson only $90,000. Olson responded by moving to compel Luks-McFarland to hand over the check. The court ordered Luks-McFarland to deliver the check to Olson, but by this time the check was more than six months old and thus statutorily invalid. Olson eventually paid the liquidated damages, prompting Alick’s to attempt to deliver a fresh check for the $120,000. But now Olson refused to accept it, evidently because he considered himself injured from the stop-payment action.

These events led Olson to file his second lawsuit. He sued Alick’s and Luks-McFarland in Indiana state court, alleging that Alick’s had unlawfully stopped payment on its first settlement check and that Luks-McFarland had committed conversion by refusing to deliver the check to him. Olson retained an attorney who collected Alick’s check for Olson, but that lawyer declined to represent Olson in his new suit. Eventually Olson retained yet another lawyer, Michigan attorney Michael Reynolds, who agreed to work on his Indiana case against Alick’s and Luks-McFarland, even though he was not licensed to practice in Indiana. After at least six months of inactivity in the Indiana case, the two defendants moved to dismiss for failure to prosecute. Although Reynolds had never filed an appearance, he showed up to contest the motions to dismiss, telling the court that he was attending only on Olson’s last-minute request. The trial court denied his request to oppose the motions because Reynolds had not sought admission pro hac vice. The court then dismissed the case; the Indiana Court of Appeals affirmed. Olson v. Alick’s Drugs, Inc., 863 N.E.2d 314, 320-21 (Ind.Ct.App.2007).

Blaming Reynolds for losing that suit, Olson filed his next case, the current lawsuit. Olson sued Reynolds in Indiana state court for negligence and attorney deceit, see Ind.Code § 33-43-1-8. He charged that Reynolds bungled his second suit and then lied to the court by asserting that Olson had asked him only at the last minute to appear. He sought recovery of his out-of-pockect losses — the $5,000 retainer that he paid Reynolds and the $41,000 that he spent on his unsuccessful appeal — amounts that could be trebled under the attorney-deceit statute. Reynolds removed the case to federal district court. He raised 20 affirmative defenses and advanced three counterclaims. (He later withdrew two of the counterclaims, and the third — seeking a declaratory judgment— the judge rejected.) He also twice moved for summary judgment, but these motions were denied because he ignored the court’s rule requiring him to attach a list of undisputed material facts. Under Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 113 S.Ct. 2786, 125 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993), he sought to bar certain expert testimony but this motion was also defective, and denied, for failure to cite relevant authority.

During a three-day jury trial, Reynolds denied that he had agreed to represent Olson in court. He testified that he warned Olson that he would need to hire an Indiana-licensed lawyer and that Reynolds would only assess whether the claims were plausible. Reynolds also argued that Olson’s own inactivity in the case before retaining Reynolds contributed to its dismissal and that by pursuing a doomed appeal, Olson exacerbated his damages. The jury rejected most of this and returned a verdict of nearly $120,000 for Olson. The figure represents Olson’s [64]*64damages reduced by 15 percent for comparative fault, then trebled.

Next, Olson asked the court for attorney fees. Olson maintained that Reynolds’s counterclaims, his summary-judgment and Daubert motions, and his affirmative defenses were frivolous and vexatious. He sought to recover nearly $150,000 in attorney fees and costs incurred in his suit against Reynolds under 28 U.S.C. § 1927 and under the Indiana attorney-deceit statute. In the alternative, under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Olson sought to recover $20,000 in fees that he attributed to Reynolds’s allegedly baseless filings. The district court declined to award attorney fees or otherwise sanction Reynolds under Rule 11 or § 1927, finding that his behavior did not rise to the level of unreasonable or vexatious. Although Reynolds’s motions, counterclaims, and affirmative defenses ultimately failed, the court was not convinced that Reynolds knew when he filed them that they lacked legal basis; it found his tactics more consistent with strong advocacy. The court further observed that the Indiana attorney-deceit statute did not appear to allow a party to recover his fees in securing relief and declined to award fees under the statute.

Olson appeals, arguing that the district court abused its discretion in declining to award fees under Rule 11 and § 1927 and that it legally erred in holding that attorneys’ fees are not recoverable under the Indiana attorney-deceit statute. Under Rule 11 and § 1927, he asserts that the majority of Reynolds’s affirmative defenses lacked any factual support. The counterclaims, Olson further argues, were frivolous because Reynolds failed to produce evidence or tender jury instructions to support them. Olson also contends that Reynolds's motions for summary judgment and his Daubert motion contained fatal procedural defects that he never even attempted to cure, betraying these motions’ lack of merit.

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484 F. App'x 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olson-v-reynolds-ca7-2012.