Sanders v. Mueller

133 F. App'x 37
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 2005
Docket03-2505
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 133 F. App'x 37 (Sanders v. Mueller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Mueller, 133 F. App'x 37 (4th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

SHEDD, Circuit Judge.

Robert Sanders, a Maryland attorney, filed suit against Olsman, Ganos & Mueller (“OGM”), a Michigan law firm, claiming entitlement to a share of attorneys fees recovered by OGM for representing clients in three separate personal injury cases— the Ambrose, Greer, and Holtquist cases. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of OGM on Sanders’ claim for attorneys fees in the Greer and Holtquist cases. After the jury awarded Sanders $300,000 for the reasonable value of the services he rendered in the Ambrose case, the district court granted OGM’s motion for judgment as a matter of law on the issue of damages and reduced Sanders’ award to $1. For the following reasons, we reverse the grant of judgment as a matter of law in favor of OGM in the Ambrose case, reverse the grant of summary judgment in favor of OGM in the Greer and Holtquist cases on Sanders’ breach of contract claims, and affirm the grant of summary judgment in the Greer and Holtquist cases on Sanders’ quantum meruit and unjust enrichment claims.

I.

Because we are reviewing a grant of judgment as a matter of law and summary judgment, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to Sanders. See Anderson v. G.D.C., Inc., 281 F.3d 452, 457 (4th Cir.2002) (judgment as a matter of law); Williams v. Staples, Inc., 372 F.3d 662, 667 (4th Cir.2004) (summary judgment). In 1995, Sanders’ young daughter was killed in a low-impact automobile collision. Sanders claims that his daughter’s death resulted from the deployment of the air bag in his Chrysler minivan rather than from the force of the collision. Soon after his daughter’s tragic death, Sanders helped form a public interest group to lobby Congress to require air bag warn *39 ings in vehicles and to strengthen federal air bag performance requirements.

Sanders also retained Wolfgang Mueller, a former Chrysler engineer and an associate at OGM, to file a products liability lawsuit against Chrysler. 1 Although Mueller was a young lawyer who had never handled an air bag case, Sanders liked his technical background and aggressiveness. Mueller agreed to allow Sanders to participate in preparing the case for trial.

As a result of Sanders’ involvement with his lobbying group, he came into contact with several families across the nation whose children had been killed or injured in accidents involving air bag deployments. If the families inquired about filing a lawsuit, Sanders referred them to Mueller. Sanders first recommended Mueller to Richard Kaplan, whose son suffered an eye injury from an air bag deployment. Although Sanders did not request any fee, Mueller wrote a letter to Sanders offering to pay him one-third of any attorney’s fees recovered, which Mueller represented to be the typical arrangement in Michigan. Kaplan’s son recovered from his injury, and the ease was not prosecuted. Sanders thereafter recommended Mueller to several other families, including the Ambroses from Tennessee and the Greers from Idaho. The Ambroses were originally represented by a law firm in Nashville, Tennessee. Sanders introduced Mueller to the Nashville firm, and ultimately the Nashville firm retained OGM as co-counsel in the Ambrose case. As agreed between these two firms, OGM would receive 55% and the Nashville firm would receive 45% of attorneys fees recovered in the Ambrose suit. The Greers were not represented by local counsel, so they directly retained Mueller of OGM. After the Ambroses and the Greers retained Mueller, Mueller eon-firmed that Sanders would be allowed to perform legal work on these two cases and would receive the same one-third share of OGM’s fees that Mueller had promised in the Kaplan case.

In April 1997, Mueller and Jules Olsman, the sole shareholder of OGM, proposed to modify their fee-sharing arrangement with Sanders. OGM explained that it did not want to have a straight one-third fee agreement with Sanders in the Ambrose case because it would not be financially feasible in light of its other fee-sharing agreement with the Nashville firm. OGM instead proposed that Sanders’ fee in .the Ambrose case would be based on the “totality of the circumstances,” including how much work Sanders performed in the case, his role in referring the client to OGM, how much of the litigation expenses he paid, and several other factors. Depending on how these factors weighed, Sanders could receive less than one-third or more than one-third of OGM’s fee. By contrast, in cases such as Greer, where OGM was not retained by local counsel, Sanders’ fee would remain the standard one-third. Moreover, OGM would allow Sanders to perform legal work on all the cases.

After agreeing to this modification, Sanders recommended Mueller to the Holtquists, a Minnesota family whose child had died in an air bag accident. Mueller again confirmed that Sanders would be allowed to participate in the legal work on the case and would receive one-third of the fees recovered by OGM.

The Ambrose case in Nashville was the first case scheduled for trial. All the attorneys representing the Ambroses agree that the case was hotly disputed and extraordinarily time-consuming. In the two *40 years leading up to trial in Tennessee state court, the lead partner in the Nashville firm spent half her time working on the Ambrose case. Mueller took nearly sixty depositions across the nation. Sanders discussed with Mueller the possibility of preparing a motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of liability. Mueller enthusiastically agreed with this strategy and sent Sanders several boxes of technical documents and deposition transcripts. Sanders spent half of his work days for the next six months reviewing and analyzing the technical background information on air bags that Mueller had sent and that he had discovered in his own research. For the following three months he worked full-time drafting almost fifty versions of the partial summary judgment motion. During this period, Sanders worked closely with Mueller, talking with him by telephone at least once every day. Sanders sent at least three drafts of the motion to Mueller for review and comment. The final motion advanced several technical arguments and was accompanied by nearly 1,000 pages of supporting documentation. Shortly before the scheduled trial, Mueller filed the Sanders motion on behalf of the Ambroses. Although the Tennessee court denied the motion, Mueller considered the motion to be worthwhile. Sanders also prepared several other pretrial motions to exclude certain defense evidence at trial as well as other filings to ensure admission of evidence helpful to the Ambroses. Further, Sanders traveled to Tennessee to attend and critique a mock trial. As the trial date neared, Mueller also asked Sanders to make plans to attend the trial to lend his expertise and counsel. Sanders calculated that he worked a total of nearly 1,500 hours on the Ambrose case. The vast majority of that time was spent researching and drafting the motion for partial summary judgment.

Four days before trial and soon after the motion for partial summary judgment was denied, the Ambrose case settled.

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Bluebook (online)
133 F. App'x 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-mueller-ca4-2005.