Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Goldstone & Sudalter, P.C.

128 F.3d 10, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 29058, 1997 WL 641278
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 1997
Docket97-1216
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 128 F.3d 10 (Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Goldstone & Sudalter, P.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Goldstone & Sudalter, P.C., 128 F.3d 10, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 29058, 1997 WL 641278 (1st Cir. 1997).

Opinion

LYNCH, Circuit Judge.

This case raises issues of Massachusetts law concerning the obligations that attorneys owe clients in their billing practices.

Attorney Daniel Goldstone formed Gold-stone & Sudalter, P.'C. to purchase the practice of the late Eldon Sudalter, a collection attorney. Goldstone & Sudalter then billed Sears, Roebuck & Co. in excess of one mih lion dollars for past work Goldstone said Attorney Sudalter had performed on Sears’s cases. Sears at first paid most of the bills, but eventually sued Goldstone & Sudalter for an accounting, asking for a judicial determination of its total liability, if any, for the past work. Goldstone & Sudalter, in turn, counterclaimed for the unpaid balance.

Following Goldstone’s admission that he had no personal knowledge concerning Sudalter’s billing practices to support his inter *12 pretation of the records which formed the basis for his bills, Sears amended its complaint to include common-law claims for breach of contract and breach of fiduciary duty, and a statutory claim of “unfair and deceptive trade practices” under Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A. Sears sought reimbursement for bills it had previously paid and an award of attorney’s fees. The district court granted Sears’s motion for summary judgment, and awarded it $833,409 — the entire amount of Sears’s payments on the disputed bills — and $112,000 in attorney’s fees.

Although our analysis varies from that of the district court, the summary judgment record reveals that Goldstone & Sudalter has not met its burden of substantiating its bills under Massachusetts law and that Sears has met its burden of showing unfair and deceptive practices. We affirm.

I. The Facts

We state the facts in the light most favorable to Goldstone & Sudalter, the party opposing summary judgment. Swain v. Spinney, 117 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir.1997).

In 1991, Daniel Goldstone, then a lawyer with three years of experience, began negotiations with Mrs. Janice Sudalter to purchase the law practice of her late husband Eldon Sudalter. Eldon Sudalter was a solo practitioner and had been the primary collection attorney for Sears in- eastern Massachusetts for the previous fifteen years. Mrs. Sudalter had worked in her husband’s office for most of that time and her regular duties included preparing the monthly billings for Sears and other clients.

In mid-1991, Goldstone and Mrs. Sudalter signed a letter of intent, and Goldstone formed Goldstone & Sudalter to purchase the assets of the practice and continue the business. In late 1991, the relationship broke down amid mutual recriminations, and Gold-stone sued Mrs. Sudalter in state court over the terms of their agreement.

By early 1992, Goldstone was in possession of the files of the Eldon Sudalter practice and was servicing its clients, although Gold-stone and Mrs. Sudalter did not finally settle the state court litigation until January 1993. The settlement provided for a total purchase price of $150,000 for all of the assets, tangible and intangible, of. the Eldon Sudalter practice. Goldstone had not actually worked with Attorney Sudalter, and had not discussed with him the firm’s billing practices. Goldstone had no personal knowledge of whether particular cases in Sudalter’s files had been billed or were uncollectible, or had been formally closed, whether or not billed or uncollectible;

Like many collection attorneys, the late Eldon Sudalter operated on a contingency fee basis. Before 1987, Sears paid Attorney Sudalter one-third of his recovery and reimbursed him for all court costs. That changed. On September 8, 1987, Attorney Sudalter executed a form “Attorney Retention Agreement” prepared by Sears for its collection attorneys throughout the United States.

The 1987 Agreement increased Attorney Sudalter’s fee to forty-five percent, but he was now to be responsible for all costs that were not reimbursed by debtors. According to Mrs. Sudalter, under the new agreement, “[W]e take 45 percent of what we collect. If we can recover the costs [from debtors], great. If we can’t recover the costs, that’s just part of the agreement; that’s why they’re [Sears] paying us the 45 percent.” Goldstone offered no evidence to contradict Mrs. Sudalter’s testimony that the forty-five percent contingency fee was intended to take into account all court costs.

According to the 1987 Agreement, the collection attorney was to send all monies collected to Sears on a monthly basis, accompanied by a report; Sears would then pay the attorney’s contingency fee. The 1987 Agreement provided: “Attorney will be accountable for all monies collected on any of the accounts and will submit at least monthly a report to Sears listing the accounts on which collections were made and amount collected, together with a check payable to Sears for all monies collected.” (emphasis supplied). The 1987 Agreement also states, “Attorney waives any attorney’s lien on Sears accounts and agrees not to assert such lien against Sears.”

*13 Sears did not send individual cheeks to the Sudalter firm for the particular matters for which they paid Attorney Sudalter his legal fees or costs over the years. Likewise, Attorney Sudalter did not customarily record his receipt of the contingency fee or costs from Sears on each debtor’s file. Rather, Attorney Sudalter regularly deposited money from debtors in a Sears client trust account and remitted a single check each month to Sears from the account for the total amount of that month’s collections. Sears then remitted the contingency fee for that amount and for any amounts that debtors sent directly to Sears. Before 1987, Sears would reimburse court costs in a single monthly cheek if Sudalter could not collect them from debtors. After 1987, Sears was not responsible for those costs, although it would still occasionally send Sudalter costs that debtors had sent to Sears instead of Sudalter, again in a single check for that month.

The agreement set forth a separate compensation arrangement if Sears terminated the agreement or withdrew customer accounts. In that event, Sears would pay Sudalter $60 per hour for his time and reimburse his court costs, although it would pay no such fees if Sudalter terminated the agreement or was in breach of the agreement. According to an employee for a collection agency that Sears uses, withdrawing accounts is seen as a “drastic” step because of these fees and costs and for that reason is rarely employed in the collection industry.

In early 1992, Goldstone called Karen D’Angelo, a special accounts manager at Sears, to ask why Sears had stopped sending cases to the Sudalter firm, now operating as Goldstone & Sudalter. D’Angelo was a low-level Sears employee who had been in her present job in Massachusetts for two years and had first spoken to Attorney Sudalter only shortly before he died in 1991. D’Angelo informed Goldstone that Sears rated its collection attorneys by comparing the amounts the attorneys collected monthly as a percentage of their total portfolios. According to Goldstone, D’Angelo informed him that the law practice had “never closed a file in fifteen years,” and urged the firm to close these accounts to make its percentage appear more competitive.

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Bluebook (online)
128 F.3d 10, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 29058, 1997 WL 641278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sears-roebuck-co-v-goldstone-sudalter-pc-ca1-1997.