Rogers v. Edwards

413 F. Supp. 933, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11521
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedJuly 9, 1975
DocketNo. 5-73-Civil-128
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 413 F. Supp. 933 (Rogers v. Edwards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Edwards, 413 F. Supp. 933, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11521 (mnd 1975).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

DEVITT, Chief Judge.

At issue in this declaratory judgment action between heirs of two deceased lawyers and other lawyers is the interpretation of a contract between the two groups of lawyers providing for sharing of attorneys’ fees following successful prosecution of claims before the Indian Claims Commission.

Diversity of citizenship and requisite amount in controversy establish jurisdiction. The case was tried to the court, largely on the pleadings and admitted facts. Extensive briefs have been submitted.

The contract involved was executed in August 1953 between two Oklahoma lawyers, Charles B. Rogers and Arthur B. Honnold (“Rogers” group) and six other lawyers, two of whom, the only survivors of the group, are the named defendants here (“Edwards” group). By this contract the Rogers group assigned to the Edwards group for professional handling certain enumerated claims they had previously filed with the Indian Claims Commission on behalf of Indian clients and provided for the apportionment of legal fees between them. All signatories to the contract were experienced practitioners before the Indian Claims Commission.

Both members of the Rogers group are deceased and their heirs seek a declaration that they are entitled to receive the share of attorneys’ fees awarded by the Indian Claims Commission which Rogers and Honnold were entitled to receive under the contract. Defendants claim plaintiffs are not entitled to receive any portion of attorneys’ fees earned after the deaths of Rogers and Honnold.

The question is largely one of interpretation of the contract. Among other things, the contract provided that the Edwards [935]*935group would perform the major part of the legal work with such assistance as Honnold, “in his discretion” would be able to render and that the two groups of attorneys would divide “the net attorneys’ fees received as a result” of successful prosecution or settlement of the enumerated claims. The agreement applied to renewal of contracts with the Indian clients. The final paragraph of the contract provided:

This agreement shall be binding upon and shall inure to the benefit of the estates or personal representatives of the parties hereto, without death effecting any change in the division of fees herein provided for.

This contract was approved by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs as required by statute, 25 U.S.C. § 84. The contracts which the Rogers group had with their Indian clients authorized such an assignment.

We must interpret the contract as the parties wrote it and are not free to make a new one for them. The contract was executed August 10,1953. Rogers died in December 1954 and Honnold died in May 1955. The probability of death before successful completion of the proceedings before the Indian Claims Commission was an apparent purpose for including the paragraph quoted above providing that the benefits of the contract would inure to the heirs and personal representatives of the parties. The wording is clear and the intention manifest. The contract reflects a joint venture between the two groups of attorneys and the death of Rogers and Honnold did not terminate the right of plaintiffs to receive the benefits of the contract. Disney v. Pritzker, 385 F.2d 572 (7th Cir. 1967); Senneff v. Healy, 155 Iowa 82, 135 N.W. 27 (1912).

Defendants urge that the contract was unethical or void as contrary to public policy but cite no pertinent persuasive authority for this contention. In fact this contention was considered and rejected by the court in Disney, supra, at 577. Rogers and Honnold had worked on the cases for many years prior to 1953 and were entitled to receive compensation for themselves or their heirs. The contract was fair on its face. Its execution was authorized by the agreements Rogers and Honnold had with their Indian clients. It received the approval of the Indian Claims Commission and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.

The court declares that the death of Rogers and Honnold did not terminate plaintiffs’ entitlement to fees under the August 1953 contract.

A second issue is directed to the proper method of dividing attorneys’ fee awarded by the Indian Claims Commission’s order of August 9, 1973.

Among the cases assigned to the Edwards group by the contract was a claim, assigned docket number 58 by the Indian Claims Commission, filed by Rogers and Honnold in 1950 on behalf of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan seeking additional compensation for lands ceded to the United States under treaties of July 6, 1820 (1395 acres) and March 28, 1836 (13.5 million acres). Members of the Edwards group had filed a claim in 1949, assigned docket number 18E, on behalf of the Bay Mills Indian Community, et al., to recover for the same lands ceded under the same treaties. On motion of defendant Fitzharris, claiming to act on behalf of the claimants in both dockets, the Indian Claims Commission consolidated these actions in 1959. Following this consolidation the dockets were treated as a single case by all parties until an award was made. Joint briefs were filed and all evidence was introduced on behalf of all plaintiffs.

In 1972, over twenty years after the claims were filed, the Indian Claims Commission awarded the claimants in dockets 58 and 18E jointly, on behalf and for the benefit of the Chippewa and Ottawa Nations of Indians, the sum of $10,109,003.55. Shortly thereafter, Edwards, attorney of record in docket 18E, and Fitzharris, attorney of record in docket 58, petitioned the Indian Claims Commission for attorneys’ fees asking that $505,450 be awarded attorneys of record of docket 18E and that the same amount be awarded attorneys of record of docket 58. About six months later defend[936]*936ants filed with the Indian Claims Commission an “Amended Joint Petition of Attorneys of Record for Award of Attorneys’ Fee.” In this amended petition, defendants asked that $1,010,900 be awarded to them jointly. On August 9, 1973, the Indian Claims Commission awarded that sum jointly to defendants on behalf of all contract attorneys having an interest in the fee. 31 Ind.Cl.Comm. 73, Def.Ex.BB.

In this court, defendants urge that the $1,010,900 fee should be divided equally between dockets 58 and 18E. Therefore, they conclude, only one half of the fee is subject to division between the parties under the contract. However, the premise upon which this conclusion is based is without factual support in the record. It appears to us that the entire fee is governed by the terms of the contract.

The contract provided that, subject to the approval of the Indian Claims Commission, all claims filed by members of the Edwards group on behalf of Chippewa Indians involving, inter alia, lands ceded to the government under the 1836 treaty, be consolidated with claims listed in the contract. As experienced Indian claims attorneys, the parties to this contract should have known that the consolidation of claims seeking compensation for the same parcels of land would not increase the compensation received by Indian claimants or the resulting attorneys’ fees. If a consolidated claim were successfully prosecuted, only one award would be made. Therefore, only one attorneys’ fee would be awarded to the lawyers representing the successful Indian claimants.

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Bluebook (online)
413 F. Supp. 933, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-edwards-mnd-1975.