Prospect Funding Holdings, LLC v. Saulter

2018 IL App (1st) 171277, 102 N.E.3d 741
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 13, 2018
Docket1-17-1277
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2018 IL App (1st) 171277 (Prospect Funding Holdings, LLC v. Saulter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prospect Funding Holdings, LLC v. Saulter, 2018 IL App (1st) 171277, 102 N.E.3d 741 (Ill. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

¶ 1 This case raises issues of first impression concerning an attorney's liability to a business that loans a client money to be repaid, plus fees and interest, from any settlement or judgment. Attorney Keenan J. Saulter arranged for his client, Angela Wright-Housen, the plaintiff in a wrongful death lawsuit, to borrow $25,000 from Prospect Funding Holdings, LLC, under a purchase agreement. The agreement provided that any disputes were to be heard in Hennepin County, Minnesota, and to be governed by Minnesota law. Wright-Housen also signed an irrecovable letter of direction instructing Saulter to hold settlement money in his client trust account and to pay Prospect before disbursing settlement money to her. Saulter signed an attorney acknowledgement agreeing to abide by Wright-Housen's instructions.

*744 ¶ 2 When the wrongful death case settled and Wright-Housen failed to repay Prospect, Prospect sued her and Saulter in Minnesota. The Minnesota court dismissed Saulter on jurisdictional grounds, finding Saulter not a party to the purchase agreement so the forum selection clause did not apply to him. Wright-Housen did not appear, and the court entered a default judgment against her. When Wright-Housen failed to satisfy the default judgment, Prospect sued Saulter in Illinois for breach of contract and professional negligence. Prospect argued that Saulter breached his agreement to abide by his client's letter of direction and his fiduciary and professional duties by failing to maintain the settlement funds in his trust account and to repay Prospect. The trial court granted Saulter's motion to dismiss, finding Prospect's agreement with Wright-Housen was a contract for champerty, which Minnesota law prohibits.

¶ 3 Prospect argues the trial court should not have dismissed the case because (i) when the Minnesota court entered a default judgment against Wright-Housen, it found the purchase agreement valid and an Illinois court must give full faith and credit to that judgment, (ii) the Minnesota choice of law provision does not apply to the letter of direction and, even if Minnesota law does apply, Saulter cannot raise champerty as a defense as he was not a party to the purchase agreement, and (iii) the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct obligated Saulter to hold the settlement money in his trust account until the dispute was resolved.

¶ 4 Saulter argues the trial court properly dismissed the complaint as he did not have a contract with Prospect and, alternatively, if there was a contract, it was void as champertous under Minnesota law.

¶ 5 We affirm the dismissal. The trial court was not obligated to give full faith and credit to a Minnesota default judgment that was not on the merits and was not directed against Saulter. The purchase agreement and letter of direction were interdependent, and because the purchase agreement is unenforceable under controlling Minnesota law, the letter of direction was also not enforceable. Lastly, an alleged violation of the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct does not give rise to a private cause of action as our supreme court has given the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission (ARDC) exclusive power to discipline attorneys for violations. We direct, however, the clerk of the court to forward a copy of this opinion to the ARDC for further investigation.

¶ 6 BACKGROUND

¶ 7 Saulter and his law firm, Saulter Tarver PC, represented Wright-Housen in a wrongful death lawsuit. (Wright-Housen is not a party to this case.) Saulter contacted Prospect, a litigation financing firm, to inquire about selling a portion of Wright-Housen's lawsuit in exchange for a nonrecourse interest in any proceeds from the suit. Prospect agreed to loan Wright-Housen $25,000 (plus a $4500 fee) in exchange for a return of the loan plus 4% interest compounded monthly from any judgment or settlement. If Wright-Housen did not obtain a judgment or settlement, she did not have to repay Prospect.

¶ 8 Prospect and Wright-Housen entered into a purchase agreement detailing the terms of the loan. The parties agreed that "all disputes, claims, or controversies arising out of or relating to this Agreement or the relationships that result from this Agreement shall be governed, construed and enforced in accordance with the law of the State of Minnesota." The agreement also provided that "all actions or proceedings in any way, manner or respect, *745 arising out of or related to this agreement" would be litigated in Hennepin County, Minnesota. The purchase agreement included a "Certification of Seller's Attorney," which Saulter signed, certifying that "[a]ll proceeds of the legal claim will be disbursed via the attorneys [ sic ] trust account" and that he would abide by written instructions from his client with regard to the purchase agreement.

¶ 9 Wright-Housen also executed an irrevocable letter of direction instructing Saulter to disburse all proceeds of the lawsuit through an attorney's trust account. Under the letter of direction, the settlement funds would not be released to Wright-Housen until after Saulter's legal fees and costs were paid and Prospect was paid in full. Saulter signed an "Attorney Acknowledgement" to honor the letter of direction.

¶ 10 The wrongful death case settled in July 2014. Prospect contacted Saulter about repayment on its loan. Saulter told Prospect he was not holding client funds from the settlement in his trust account and advised Prospect to contact Wright-Housen directly for repayment.

¶ 11 After being unable to collect from Wright-Housen, Prospect sued her and Saulter in Hennepin County, Minnesota. The Minnesota court found that Saulter was not subject to personal jurisdiction in Minnesota because he was a Chicago lawyer, who was not licensed to practice in Minnesota, and had not been in the state for eight years. The court also found that the Minnesota forum selection clause in the purchase agreement did not apply to Saulter, rejecting Prospect's argument that the "Certification of Seller's Attorney" to the purchase agreement or the "Attorney Acknowledgment" to the letter of direction bound Saulter to the terms of the purchase agreement. The court stated, "By agreeing to certain obligations that may be contained in, or derivative of, terms of the Purchase Agreement, Saulter is not adopting the entire Purchase Agreement nor signifying any intent to be bound by provisions that are not included in the forms he signed." The court found that because Saulter was not bound by the forum selection clause, the court did not have personal jurisdiction over him and dismissed the case against him, without prejudice.

¶ 12 After dismissing Saulter, the Minnesota court entered a default judgment against Wright-Housen. As to the legality of the purchase agreement in light of Minnesota's common law against agreements of champerty, that is, third-party financing of lawsuits, the court said, "on the facts of this case, it is unclear whether the doctrine of champerty, assuming it's still viable in Minnesota, would bar this action." The court also noted that illegality of contract is an affirmative defense that could only be asserted by Wright-Housen, who did not appear and thus could not raise it.

¶ 13 After collection efforts on the default judgment failed, Prospect sued Saulter and his law firm in Illinois.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 IL App (1st) 171277, 102 N.E.3d 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prospect-funding-holdings-llc-v-saulter-illappct-2018.