Riscassi and Davis, P.C. v. Peck, No. Cv89-369798 (Sep. 27, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7889, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 932
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1991
DocketNo. CV89-369798 CV89-355617
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7889 (Riscassi and Davis, P.C. v. Peck, No. Cv89-369798 (Sep. 27, 1991)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riscassi and Davis, P.C. v. Peck, No. Cv89-369798 (Sep. 27, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7889, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 932 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The two cases identified above involve the same CT Page 7890 parties and were consolidated by the court and tried together. The court will consider these cases in the order in which they appear in the heading.

The essential decisions to be made in these cases are straightforward. Two law firms both did work on each of two separate cases. Each firm was the initial attorney on an underlying case and each was replaced by the other. Contingent fees were collected by the succeeding firms. In each case the initial-firm has sued the succeeding firm for a portion of the fee. The court must decide how to fairly apportion the contingent fees in each case.

I. RISCASSI AND DAVIS v. MICHAEL A. PECK, ESQ.

This case involves the division of legal fees earned in the case of Nellie Legnos, Conservatrix of the Estate of Barbara Jane Beck v. Gerald Strauch, et al., hereinafter the "Legnos case". This was a medical malpractice case which the plaintiff accepted on May 17, 1982 and in which the plaintiff represented Nellie Legnos until October 14, 1985, when she arose from the alleged negligent treatment of Ms. Legnos' niece, Ms. Barbara Jane Beck, on or about March 2, 1982. The case was accepted by the plaintiff on the basis of a standard contingency fee arrangement whereby the plaintiff would be reimbursed for its expenses and would receive as a fee one-third of any recovery in the case.

The matter was taken over by Mr. Peck and pursued to a settlement in December of 1986. Mr. Peck accepted the case on the basis of a standard one-third contingency fee and received a structured legal fee in the amount of $444,000. The plaintiff claims a pro rata share of the total attorney's fees, reimbursement for its expenditures in relation to this case, imposition of a constructive trust as to the entire legal fee and treble damages based upon Section 52-564 C.G.S.

The defendant does not deny that compensation and reimbursement are due the plaintiff in this case. It maintains, however, that the correct applicable law in this case is strict quantum meruit which it interprets as the reasonable value of the services rendered by the plaintiff to the date that it was discharged, which the defendant further translates into a straight multiplication of the hours spent times the standard hourly fee charged by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff claims a pro rata share of the aggregate attorney's fee. The plaintiff denies that this is to be interpreted as a strict multiplication of the hours spent times an hourly fee but rather maintains that it is entitled to the CT Page 7891 reasonable value of the services which it has rendered translated, however, into what the defendant has termed an expanded quantum meruit claim, that is reimbursement from the entire legal fee based upon the work which it performed and the benefit to the client, taking into account the result reached in the case and numerous other factors which will be discussed below.

Both parties agree that a starting place in the analysis of the law applicable to this case is Cole v. Myers, 128 Conn. 223,21 A.2d 396 (1941). In Cole our Supreme Court stated at page 230,

An attorney at law . . . is entitled to fair compensation for his services, but since, because of the highly confidential relationship, the client may discharge him even without just cause, he should receive reasonable compensation for the work he has done up to that point, and not the agreed fee he probably would have earned had he been allowed to continue his employment. This rule is not unfair to the attorney. He will receive fair compensation for what he has done; his position as an officer of the court does not entitle him to receive payment for services he has not rendered.

The defendant puts great emphasis upon the words "up to that point" and maintains that the initial attorney in such a case as this should not be entitled to any portion of the fee based upon considerations pertaining to action in the case which took place after the date of its discharge.

Neither party has found any case directly in point in Connecticut. The plaintiff has cited Knudsen Brothers Dairy, Inc., 24 Bankruptcy Reports 418 (1982), which discusses the term "reasonable value" as set forth in the Bankruptcy Act, pointing out at page 420 that the principal factors which enter into a determination of what is reasonable are the time spent, the intricacy of the questions involved, the size of the estate, the opposition encountered, the results obtained, etc. Beyond the general consideration that "reasonable value" may in some situations involve more than the time spent and may include other factors, this case is not very helpful in this particular situation involving a contingent fee in a medical malpractice case.

The plaintiff also cites the case of Lai Ling Cheng v. Modansky Leasing Company, Inc., 73 N.Y. 2nd 454, 539 N.E. 2nd 570 (1989). In that case, citing several other New York cases, the court stated, page 572 N.E.2d, CT Page 7892

Where the dispute is only between attorneys, however, the rule is somewhat different. The outgoing attorney may elect to take compensation on the basis of a presently fixed dollar amount based upon quantum meruit for the reasonable value of services or, in lieu thereof, the outgoing attorney has the right to elect a contingent percentage fee based on a proportionate share of the work performed on the whole case. The percentage may be fixed at the time of substitution but, as several courts have recognized, is better determined at the conclusion of the case when such factors as the amount of time spent by each lawyer on the case, the work performed and the amount of recovery can be ascertained.

In this case which was a medical malpractice case, the court found that the first attorney possessed a common law retaining lien on the client's file in his possession which secured his right to the reasonable value of the services he performed. The court held that immediately upon his discharge he was entitled to be compensated in a fixed dollar amount in quantum meruit before he released the file and thereby relinquished his lien. The court further found that when establishing such a fee the court could take into consideration the original retainer agreement, but it could not consider the size of the recovery. The court stated, page 573 N.E.2d, "Indeed, if the fee is computed at the time of discharge, it is difficult to see how it could be considered." In this case, however, the succeeding firm sent a letter to the first attorney requesting that he turn over his file and acknowledging that he had a lien for prior legal services rendered, the amount of which would be determined at the conclusion of the litigation. The letter provided that if the attorneys were unable to agree on the value of the first attorney's services at the conclusion of the action, the matter was to be submitted to a court for determination. The first attorney accepted the terms of the letter by signing and returning a copy to the succeeding firm.

The succeeding firm subsequently commenced a negligence action which was settled before trial for a substantial sum on the basis of which a substantial fee was awarded by the court.

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656 P.2d 105 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 1982)
Cole v. Myers
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1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 7889, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riscassi-and-davis-pc-v-peck-no-cv89-369798-sep-27-1991-connsuperct-1991.