Poole v. Gwin, Lewis & Punches, LLP
This text of 792 So. 2d 987 (Poole v. Gwin, Lewis & Punches, LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Rhonda Lopez Drouet POOLE
v.
GWIN, LEWIS & PUNCHES, LLP, A Partnership.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*988 Alex A. Alston, Jr., Richard L. Jones, Jackson, Attorneys for Appellant.
William C. Griffin, Jackson, Attorney for Appellee.
Before BANKS, P.J., WALLER and COBB, JJ.
WALLER, J., for the Court:
¶ 1. We granted this interlocutory appeal under M.R.A.P. 5 to review an order denying transfer from chancery court to circuit court of a civil action filed by Gwin, Lewis & Punches, LLP (the Gwin firm), a law firm in Natchez, Mississippi, seeking recovery of attorneys' fees from its former client Rhonda Lopez Drouet Poole. The Gwin firm performed services under a contingent fee arrangement to protect Poole's interest in her husband's estate. The Gwin firm contends that Poole fired it after it had performed most of the work to settle, to Poole's benefit, the dispute, but before Poole actually received any assets from the estate. Poole filed a motion to transfer to the circuit court, claiming that the Gwin firm sought damages for a breach of a contract of employment, for which she was entitled to a trial by jury. The chancellor found that the suit was not one for damages and denied the motion. Because the relief sought by the law firm is equitable in nature, we affirm the chancellor's denial of Poole's motion to transfer and remand this case for further proceedings.
FACTS
¶ 2. Poole was engaged to be a "sitter" for Joseph M. Drouet, Jr., and his wife. After Mrs. Drouet died, Drouet, who was around 76 years of age, and Poole, who was around 36 years of age, became romantically involved. When Drouet and Poole began discussing marriage, Poole hired the Gwin firm to draft a pre-nuptial agreement. Before the agreement was signed, however, Drouet and Poole eloped. At this point, the Drouet family threatened to have the marriage annulled and to contest any will Drouet might make. The *989 Gwin firm agreed to perform legal work to ensure that Poole would share in Drouet's estate, which was valued at over three million dollars.
¶ 3. Poole entered into a contract of employment/contingent fee agreement with the Gwin firm. This contract was later modified to lower the percentage of the contingency fee from 33 1/3% to 20%, if the dispute was settled prior to going to trial. As a result of the negotiations by the Gwin firm, Poole and the Drouet family entered into an agreement whereby Poole "became contractually entitled to absolutely recover substantial sums of money and real property" from her husband's estate. The settlement agreement was not included in the record, though there is a reference to Poole being entitled to more than one million dollars of property from the estate. Drouet died less than a month after the date of the settlement. Within the next year, Poole remarried and was committed to the Mississippi State Hospital at Whitfield. A conservatorship has been established to protect her estate.
¶ 4. The Gwin firm contends that Poole never paid to them the 20% she was obligated to pay under the employment contract. It filed a complaint for declaratory judgment against Poole in the Chancery Court of Wilkinson County, where Poole resided. The complaint was later amended to add claims for an accounting and a partition of the Wilkinson County land and personalty owned by Poole.
¶ 5. Poole responded to the complaint by filing an answer and a motion to transfer the case to the Circuit Court of Wilkinson County, contending that the cause of action raised in the complaint was for specific performance or a suit for money damages arising from a breach of contract. She later amended the answer to ask the court to void the contract on the bases that she signed it when she was under duress and that it was unconscionable because of the unreasonable contingency fee and because the law firm breached its fiduciary duty to her. She also added a counter-claim that the law firm induced her to sign the contract on false pretenses, telling her that Drouet's family would contest the will, when, in fact, they had no plans to do so. Poole finally contended that her constitutional right to a jury trial would be violated if the chancery court retained jurisdiction over the lawsuit.
¶ 6. The chancellor denied Poole's motion to transfer, finding that the law firm was "seeking to recover a contingency fee under an employment contract" and that the matter was "not a suit for damages."
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 7. The Court may reverse the chancery court only if it finds that the chancellor abused his discretion in denying the motion to transfer. Robertson v. Evans, 400 So.2d 1214, 1215 (Miss.1981).
ANALYSIS
¶ 8. The issue presented to the Court is whether the chancellor committed a clear abuse of discretion in concluding this action was one whose subject matter falls within the jurisdiction of the chancery court. The issue will be addressed as two separate issues which we find dispositive.
I. WHETHER THE GWIN FIRM'S SUIT FOR BREACH OF A CONTINGENT FEE CONTRACT IS A SUIT AT LAW, TO WHICH POOLE IS ENTITLED TO TRIAL BY JURY.
¶ 9. We disagree with Poole's characterization of the law firm's claim as being one for "breach of contract." It is a settled rule that because of the special relationship of trust and confidence between attorney and client, the client may *990 terminate the relationship at any time, with or without cause. 7A C.J.S. Attorney and Client § 220, at 387-90 (1980). A client's discharge of his attorney is not a breach of contract because "it is a basic term of the contract, implied by law into it by reason of the special relationship between the contracting parties, that the client may terminate the contract at will." Fracasse v. Brent, 6 Cal.3d 784, 100 Cal. Rptr. 385, 494 P.2d 9, 13 (1972). The law firm may recover the reasonable value of its services upon termination of its employment under the contingent fee contract with Poole. See Kroff v. Larson, 167 Cal. App.3d 857, 860, 213 Cal.Rptr. 526, 527 (1985); Wegner v. Arnold, 305 Ill.App.3d 689, 238 Ill.Dec. 1001, 713 N.E.2d 247, 250 (1999); Clerk of Superior Court of Guilford County v. Guilford Builders Supply Co., 87 N.C.App. 386, 361 S.E.2d 115, 118 (1987). Because a court is called upon to decide what "reasonable compensation" might be and because the amount sought is not liquidated, it is appropriate that a chancery court, sitting in equity, make these determinations.
¶ 10. Many jurisdictions hold that a contingent fee contract may amount to an equitable assignment of a prospective settlement. See Annotation, Agreement for Contingent Fee as Assignment of Interest in Judgment, 19 A.L.R. 99; Annotation, Attorney's Contract for Contingent Fee as Amounting to an Equitable Assignment of Interest in Cause of Action, or Proceeds of Settlement Thereof, 124 A.L.R. 1508, 1509 (1940). See also De Winter v. Thomas, 34 App.D.C. 80, 84 (1909); Lewsader v. Wal Mart Stores, Inc., 296 Ill.App.3d 169, 230 Ill.Dec. 560, 694 N.E.2d 191, 196-99 (1998); Clerk of Superior Court of Guilford County, 361 S.E.2d at 117.
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