Roy M. Bowes D/B/A Roy M. Bowes and Associates Versus Michael H. McIntire

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 6, 2022
Docket21-CA-672
StatusUnknown

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Bluebook
Roy M. Bowes D/B/A Roy M. Bowes and Associates Versus Michael H. McIntire, (La. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

ROY M. BOWES D/B/A NO. 21-CA-672 ROY M. BOWES AND ASSOCIATES FIFTH CIRCUIT VERSUS COURT OF APPEAL MICHAEL H. MCINTIRE STATE OF LOUISIANA

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 798-315, DIVISION "K" HONORABLE ELLEN SHIRER KOVACH, JUDGE PRESIDING

July 06, 2022

FREDERICKA HOMBERG WICKER JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Susan M. Chehardy, Fredericka Homberg Wicker, and Jude G. Gravois

AFFIRMED; REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS FHW SMC JGG COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, ROY M. BOWES D/B/A ROY M. BOWES AND ASSOCIATES Roy M. Bowes Mitchell A. Palmer

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE-2ND APPELLANT, MICHAEL H. MCINTIRE S. Catherine Leary Michael H. McIntire WICKER, J.

After a bench trial on Plaintiff, Roy M. Bowes’ (d/b/a Roy M. Bowes and

Associates) Petition for Breach of Contract and Open Account against Defendant,

Michael H. McIntire, relating to legal representation, both parties seek review of

the trial court’s award of $20,000.00 to Bowes for his attorney fees and costs

relating to his representation and $10,000.00 for his collection fees associated with

the prosecution of this action. McIntire further alleges on appeal that the trial court

improperly found no damages were owed on his reconventional demand. We find

no error in the trial court’s determination of appropriate attorney fees and damages,

but remand for an award of interest agreed to by the parties in their employment

contract.

Background of Bowes’ Representation of McIntire

On March 29, 2019, Michael H. McIntire hired Roy M. Bowes (and his firm

Roy M. Bowes and Associates) to represent him in an intervention suit relating to

the legal fee settlement in a mass tort suit.1 A motion for leave to file an

intervention had been filed against McIntire by his former co-counsel, Henry Dart,

to determine the division of the legal fees. McIntire and Bowes signed an attorney-

client employment agreement, specifying that legal services would be billed at

$350.00/hour, but a handwritten provision provided for deferred payment of fees,

costs, and interest “due and payable upon the resolution of the above captioned

Roache v. Alpha case.” The contract also specifies that attorney fees for collection

efforts will be charged at hourly rate of $350.00 or 33 1/3% of gross amount due.

Bowes and his associate, Mitchell Palmer2, drafted and filed an answer to

Dart’s intervention suit and represented McIntire at an April 12, 2019 hearing on

1 Brittany Roache v. Alpha Technical was a mass tort suit arising out of naturally occurring radioactive materials (“NORM”) contamination from oil and gas facilities, filed in the 24th Judicial District Court. It will be referred to as the “Roache case” in this opinion. 2 The testimony at the hearing reveals that while McIntire wanted to hire Bowes and desired him to be involved in the case, Palmer did the majority of the “grunt” work in the case.

21-CA-672 1 the motion to intervene. Both parties testified that the answer, listing several pages

of Dart’s professional misconduct, was anticipated to lead to a settlement. The

trial judge granted the motion to intervene, and he ordered the parties to refile their

petition and answer3, as well as to submit briefing on the issue of whether the

parties were entitled to a jury trial.

While there is disagreement over whether a jury trial was desired before this

hearing, emails between Palmer and McIntire during April 13 and 15, 2019 reveal

their agreement that a jury trial may be best. Bowes’ billing records indicate that

April 26, 2019 was the first time Palmer reviewed the “status of record and issues

for jury” when a request for jury trial would already have been untimely. Palmer

drafted a first and supplemental answer requesting a jury trial and filed it on May

2, 2019.4 A supplemental memorandum in support of jury trial was prepared and

filed on May 31, 2019. Palmer also worked on responding to Dart’s discovery

with McIntire, resulting in several agitated emails from Bowes and Palmer to

McIntire regarding McIntire’s responses.5 Bowes’ billing slips show that Palmer

and Bowes met on May 31, 2019 for a half hour to discuss whether they should

withdraw due to McIntire’s “failure to properly provide appropriate discovery

documents.”

At a hearing on June 7, 2019, the trial judge heard motions on the mode of

the trial and substitution of Dane Ciolino as new counsel for Dart. The trial judge

found that the request for jury trial was untimely, as it was filed more than 10 days

after service of the last pleading directed to any issue triable by a jury under La.

3 The petition was refiled by Dart on April 24, 2019 and the answer was refiled on May 2, 2019. 4 McIntire emailed Palmer on May 2, 2019, stating he would prefer his answer was filed requesting a jury, rather than merely filing briefs on the issue of a jury trial as both McIntire and Palmer anticipated that refiling might not void the first answer and the deadline for a request for jury trial. 5 It appears that Bowes and Palmer felt that McIntire was trying to hide information relating to client settlements from Dart, while McIntire felt that Bowes and Palmer did not understand the confidential nature of the settlements or how the settlements were funded and paid.

21-CA-672 2 C.C.P. art. 1733(C).6 The trial judge also denied the motion for substitution of

counsel. A trial date was set for October 28, 2019. Thereafter, McIntire inquired

of Bowes as to the status of his case with regard to the jury issue, but he received

no response.

Palmer began working on a reconventional demand on June 12, 2019, and

emails from McIntire show that he was not satisfied with Palmer’s draft. Bowes

and McIntire met on June 14, 2019, presumably for a status conference, during

which Bowes presented him with copies of the invoices, and informed him that he

would provide no further services without approval of the invoiced amount.

McIntire concluded the meeting. After a June 18, 2019 telephone call between

Bowes and McIntire, Bowes sent McIntire an email attached to which was a letter

of discharge that McIntire was requested to sign.

On June 20, 2019, Palmer sent McIntire a copy of the Motion to Withdraw

by Bowes, Palmer, and Bowes & Associates, which he intended to file if McIntire

refused to discharge them from representation. The draft motion alleged that the

client failed to “fulfill an obligation to the lawyer” and “representation will result

in unreasonable financial burden on lawyer or has been rendered unreasonably

difficult by the client.” It specified that counsel was unable to “effectively

communicate with, meet with, and/or reach agreement with McIntire,” which

resulted in difficulty completing responses to opposing counsel’s discovery,

inability to analyze Dart’s responses to discovery, a lack of thorough and clear

input from McIntire regarding the reconventional demand, failure to transmit

information regarding an economic/accounting expert, and a lack of input on

specifics for the Scheduling Order.

6 This judgment was issued on July 8, 2019.

21-CA-672 3 Bowes left McIntire a voicemail on June 27, 2019 stating that he had not

heard from him since June 18, and did not want to file the motion as drafted and

put in the court record all the troubles they had experienced with him.7 On July 8,

2019, McIntire proposed a joint motion to substitute himself as counsel, and

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Roy M. Bowes D/B/A Roy M. Bowes and Associates Versus Michael H. McIntire, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-m-bowes-dba-roy-m-bowes-and-associates-versus-michael-h-mcintire-lactapp-2022.