Robert L. Crill, Inc. v. Bond

76 S.W.3d 411, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 6943, 2001 WL 1231865
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 2001
Docket05-98-01796-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 76 S.W.3d 411 (Robert L. Crill, Inc. v. Bond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert L. Crill, Inc. v. Bond, 76 S.W.3d 411, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 6943, 2001 WL 1231865 (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

CARLTON B. DODSON, Justice (Assigned).

This appeal involves a dispute among attorneys over a referral fee. Following a *415 bench trial, the court determined that ap-pellee Monte Bond was entitled to the referral fee in dispute and rendered judgment against appellants in the sum of $100,000, plus prejudgment interest of $61,040. In fourteen issues, appellants generally contend the trial court erred in determining Bond was entitled to the referral fee. We affirm.

Factual and PROCEDURAL Background

This is the second appeal of this matter. In the first appeal, we reversed the trial court’s take-nothing summary judgment against Bond and remanded the cause for further proceedings. Bond v. Crill, 906 S.W.2d 103, 107 (Tex.App.—Dallas 1995, no writ). The case was subsequently tried to the court, and the trial court rendered judgment in favor of Bond against all appellants. We recount the following facts as they were developed at trial.

Bond alleged that in April 1991, he was informed by Katherine Adams, a legal assistant at his firm, of a conversation she had with an acquaintance, Gaye Leach, 2 regarding a personal injury matter involving Leach’s comatose sister, Cathey Wright. Adams requested that Bond speak with Leach, and he agreed to do so. Leach later called Bond and discussed her sister’s situation at length, including various insurance coverage disputes and abuse Wright had suffered at a healthcare facility known as the Greenery Rehabilitation Center (the Greenery). Neither Bond nor his firm handled personal injury matters. Bond therefore called Melody Burke, an attorney with the Law Offices of Robert L. Crill, Inc. (Crill, Inc.) in Fort Worth, to determine whether her firm would be interested in pursuing the matter. Bond previously had referred a case to Burke’s firm and received a referral fee of 50% of the attorney’s fees.

Bond and Burke discussed the matter that day, including the possibility that the statute of limitations for Wright’s claims against certain of her insurers, including BSC Life Insurance Company (BSC), arguably would expire the next day. Based on her conversation with Bond, Burke contacted Wright’s mother, Patricia McCain, who was Wright’s primary care provider, and arranged a meeting with her that evening. Robert L. Crill, the principal of Crill, Inc., also attended the meeting. At the meeting, Crill and Burke agreed to represent McCain, Wright, and Wright’s son (the Wright family). Burke testified that the representation was to include all claims arising out of the facts giving rise to Wright’s injuries, including both litigation against BSC and the Greenery.

According to Bond and Burke, the two talked the next day and Burke confirmed that Crill, Inc. had “signed up” the matter and Bond would receive a 50% referral fee of any attorney’s fees recovered, as he had for the previous matter he referred. Later, Burke contacted Bond at Crill’s request and asked him to reduce his referral fee to one-third in order to associate an additional attorney on the matter, Michael K. Russell. Bond agreed. At trial, Russell confirmed that the day following the referral he assisted Burke in drafting the initial pleading in a suit filed that day against BSC (the BSC case). Burke testified that Russell was aware of Bond’s financial interest in the matter from the beginning of the representation. Russell also acknowledged that he understood Bond was asserting a claim for a referral fee.

*416 After Russell and Burke finished drafting the original petition in the BSC ease, Burke faxed the pleading to Bond in Dallas for filing. According to Bond and Burke, Bond agreed to be added to the pleadings as an accommodation to assist in filing the lawsuit in Dallas. The BSC case, however, did not result in any recovery for the Wright family. Instead, sanctions were imposed against the filing attorneys, including Bond, and the case was dismissed. Bond successfully obtained relief from the sanctions order by arguing that he appeared in the case merely as an accommodation to facilitate filing the suit in Dallas. Subsequently, the trial court’s order of dismissal was reversed, and the case was remanded for further proceedings. By way of deposition, McCain testified that the plaintiffs received a pledge of cooperation from the defendants in exchange for dismissing the BSC case following remand.

A few months after filing the BSC case, Burke left Crill, Inc. and took over the practice of another attorney. Thereafter, Robert Crill sought to refer the Cathey Wright matter to other attorneys and urged McCain to seek representation elsewhere. In late 1991, after being unsuccessful in securing other representation for the Wright family, Crill filed suit on their behalf against the Greenery (the Greenery case). Russell also participated in the Greenery case and from time to time discussed the status of the case with Bond. By letter dated August 30, 1993, Crill requested that both Russell and Bond pay one-third of the cost to hire an expert witness in the Greenery case. Bond refused because he believed his referral fee agreement did not require him to share in expenses. Burke also testified that typically a referring attorney’s involvement in a case with Crill is limited to “one call” and Crill always fronted expenses himself. Russell did participate in sharing the costs, and Crill also enlisted another attorney, Gary D. Corley, to assist in prosecuting the case and sharing expenses.

In December 1993, after the Greenery case had been ongoing for two years, McCain signed a written contingency fee agreement with Crill (in his individual capacity) and Russell authorizing them to pursue a cause of action against the Greenery and any other person liable for the mistreatment of Cathey Wright at that facility. 3 The agreement provided for a contingency fee of 40%. Additionally, in January 1994 Crill and Russell signed a fee sharing agreement with Corley in which Crill and Russell agreed to assign to Corley one-third of their interest in the 40% contingency fee contract with McCain. Neither the December 1993 agreement nor the January 1994 agreement mentioned Bond.

In May 1994, Crill filed the present case in Grayson County seeking a declaratory judgment that Bond had no interest in any recovery of attorney’s fees in the Greenery case. Crill also joined Russell and Corley in the suit. In substance, Crill’s position was that Bond’s referral, if any, was limited solely to the BSC case and Bond has no interest in the Greenery case. While the Grayson County suit was pending, the Greenery case settled, resulting in a net recovery of attorney’s fees of $300,000. Bond intervened in the Greenery case and appeared at the “prove-up” hearing for the settlement to assert his one-third interest in the attorney’s fees. At the hearing, Russell, Crill, and Bond entered into an agreement on the record to place $100,000 *417 in Russell’s trust account at The Law Offices of Arlen D. “Spider” Bynum, P.C.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W.3d 411, 2001 Tex. App. LEXIS 6943, 2001 WL 1231865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-l-crill-inc-v-bond-texapp-2001.