PERLMAN, BAJANDAS, YEVOLI & ALBRIGHT, P.L. v. ATLAS HOLDING CORPORATION

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 30, 2023
Docket22-1827
StatusPublished

This text of PERLMAN, BAJANDAS, YEVOLI & ALBRIGHT, P.L. v. ATLAS HOLDING CORPORATION (PERLMAN, BAJANDAS, YEVOLI & ALBRIGHT, P.L. v. ATLAS HOLDING CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PERLMAN, BAJANDAS, YEVOLI & ALBRIGHT, P.L. v. ATLAS HOLDING CORPORATION, (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT

PERLMAN, BAJANDAS, YEVOLI & ALBRIGHT, P.L., Appellant,

v.

ATLAS HOLDING CORPORATION, Appellee,

No. 4D22-1827

_______________________________

KATIE PHANG, P.A., Appellant,

No. 4D22-2048

ATLAS HOLDING CORPORATION, JACK T. KEISER AND PAMELA KEISER, AS TRUSTEES OF THE KEISER FAMILY LIVING TRUST DATED JANUARY 16, 2013, and JACK T. KEISER, Appellants,

TD BANK N.A., Appellee,

Nos. 4D22-2060 & 4D22-2223

[September 6, 2023] Consolidated appeals and Petition for Writ of Prohibition to the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit, Broward County; Carlos A. Rodriguez, Judge; L.T. Case No. CACE17-007675 (14).

Elliot B. Kula and W. Aaron Daniel of Kula & Associates, P.A., Miami, for appellant Perlman, Bajandas, Yevoli, & Albright, P.L.

Douglas F. Eaton of Eaton & Wolk, P.L., Miami, for appellant Katie Phang, P.A.

Matthew P. Leto and Charles P. Gourlis of Leto Law Firm, Miami, and Raoul G. Cantero of White & Case LLP, Miami, for appellants Atlas Holding Corporation, Jack T. Keiser, and Jack T. Keiser and Pamela Keiser, as Trustees of the Keiser Family Living Trust Dated January 16, 2013.

Bruce S. Rogow, Cedar Mountain, North Carolina, and Tara A. Campion, Boca Raton, of Bruce S. Rogow, P.A., and William R. Scherer of Conrad & Scherer LLP, Fort Lauderdale, for appellee Conrad & Scherer LLP.

CONNER, J.

Appellee Conrad & Scherer LLP (“former counsel”) initially represented Appellants Atlas Holding Corporation, Jack T. Keiser, individually, and Jack T. Keiser and Pamela Keiser, as Trustees of the Keiser Family Living Trust Dated January 16, 2013 (collectively, “the clients”), as plaintiffs in a lawsuit. During the underlying suit, the clients discharged former counsel and hired Appellants Perlman, Bajandas, Yevoli & Albright, P.L. (“PBYA”) and Katie Phang, P.A. (collectively, “successor counsel”). Former counsel filed a charging lien in the underlying suit and sought to enforce it after successor counsel settled the case. This opinion addresses four consolidated appeals, all challenging the final judgment enforcing the charging lien. 1

We affirm without discussion on the arguments raised by the clients in case numbers 4D22-2060 and 4D22-2223, challenging the fee award to former counsel. We agree with successor counsel, however, that the trial court erred in ordering successor counsel to disgorge fee payments. Thus, we reverse and remand in case numbers 4D22-1827 and 4D22-2048 for

1 We previously issued orders consolidating the appeals for record and panel purposes. By virtue of the consolidation orders, case number 4D22-2223 was converted from a petition proceeding to an appeal. Because all four appeals arise out of the same final judgment, we issue one opinion to address all four appeals.

2 revision of the final judgment consistent with this opinion.

Background

The Underlying Lawsuit

The clients engaged former counsel to file the underlying lawsuit on a contingency fee basis. The engagement agreement provided that if the case settled after a motion to dismiss was denied but before summary judgment, former counsel would be entitled to 23% of the settlement. This applied even if the clients switched counsel.

After the engagement agreement was signed, former counsel filed suit against the defendants. Throughout its representation, former counsel incurred approximately 2,254.35 hours of work.

In September 2019, the clients sent former counsel a termination letter listing perceived shortcomings in its representation. The letter stated, however, that when the case settled, the clients would still pay former counsel’s fees and costs. Former counsel filed a charging lien.

The clients then hired successor counsel pursuant to another contingency fee agreement. Eighteen months later, the parties settled the underlying suit for a confidential amount payable to the clients.

Resolution of Former Counsel’s Charging Lien

Once successor counsel received the settlement funds, former counsel sought to enforce its charging lien against the clients, asserting an amount due. By an agreed order, the trial court permitted successor counsel to disburse all settlement funds “in excess of the amount claimed by [former counsel] pursuant to its charging lien” but did not specify the dollar amount or percentage of the settlement to be withheld in escrow.2 Successor counsel then withdrew from the case and the clients hired new counsel to litigate the charging lien. The charging lien matter was eventually set for trial.

During the charging lien nonjury trial, former counsel argued it was terminated “without cause” and was responsible for the majority of the work done in moving the case forward. Former counsel argued it was

2 Although not contractually required, successor counsel agreed to reduce its fees

by $250,000 and to hold that amount in PBYA’s trust account to reimburse the clients for legal expenses the clients incurred in the charging lien litigation.

3 entitled to its 23% contingency fee or, at least, to the value of its services (approximately $725,000 to $745,000).

The clients argued former counsel was terminated “for cause” and was not entitled to any portion of the settlement because nothing former counsel did contributed to the eventual settlement. The clients also asserted, somewhat inconsistently, that “[n]obody’s disputing” that certain of former counsel’s actions “definitely . . . help[ed] the case,” and that the trial court should “give them credit for that.” The clients maintained, however, that former counsel could not prove its work contributed to the settlement.

Successor counsel was not involved in the charging lien nonjury trial as a party and was not represented in those proceedings.

After making credibility determinations and weighing testimony, the trial court found former counsel, not successor counsel, responsible for most of the legal work that led to the settlement. The trial court also found former counsel had shown the charging lien was valid and rejected the clients’ arguments to the contrary. The trial court then evaluated the appropriate amount due to former counsel under the charging lien. It found, upon weighing the totality of the circumstances, that former counsel was entitled to a sum certain 3 in fees and costs.

The trial court also raised concerns over successor counsel’s treatment of the settlement proceeds (despite the prior agreed order approving distribution of the settlement funds). It found the 23% contingency fee was a combined cap on fees for both former and successor counsel, and successor counsel had acted improperly in distributing the funds:

The Court has asked several times . . . [for an] explanation as to why the client’s funds are being held in trust to pay [former counsel’s] lien and not the 23% attorney fees so the Court could make the decision as to the amount of the lien such that the client is not charged more than the maximum contractual rate of 23%. The total attorney fee amount paid by the client to all the lawyers is limited by the maximum amount allowed in the client’s Contingency Fee Agreement. . . . [Successor counsel] has not answered the question as to how the total attorney fees can exceed the contractual rate.

3 The specific monetary amounts are not discussed in this opinion as they pertain

to the confidential settlement figure, which is maintained as confidential by order of this Court.

4 The trial court subsequently issued a detailed final judgment, ruling in favor of former counsel and chiding successor counsel for its distribution of the settlement proceeds. The trial court made the following findings:

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Bluebook (online)
PERLMAN, BAJANDAS, YEVOLI & ALBRIGHT, P.L. v. ATLAS HOLDING CORPORATION, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perlman-bajandas-yevoli-albright-pl-v-atlas-holding-corporation-fladistctapp-2023.