Sheets v. FARHART LAW FIRM

2010 ND 85, 782 N.W.2d 48, 2010 N.D. LEXIS 89, 2010 WL 1856014
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 2010
Docket20090231
StatusPublished

This text of 2010 ND 85 (Sheets v. FARHART LAW FIRM) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheets v. FARHART LAW FIRM, 2010 ND 85, 782 N.W.2d 48, 2010 N.D. LEXIS 89, 2010 WL 1856014 (N.D. 2010).

Opinion

KAPSNER, Justice.

[¶ 1] Jeffrey Sheets appeals from a district court decision finding he was entitled to $11,982.18 in additional compensation under the terms of an employment agreement, but offsetting this amount against $13,000 plus interest due under two promissory notes executed in favor of defendants Farhart Law Firm and Moody Far-hart. We hold the district court’s finding that Sheets was only entitled to $11,982.18 was not clearly erroneous and affirm the judgment in favor of defendants offsetting the two awards.

I.

[¶ 2] Farhart and Sheets are both attorneys. In July 2004, Farhart contacted Sheets to ask whether Sheets was interested in moving to Minot and joining Far-hart’s law practice. Sheets agreed and signed a letter agreement regarding “Employment” drafted by Farhart. The agreement provided the name of Farhart’s professional corporation would be changed to “Farhart & Sheets, P.C.” (“Farhart & Sheets”), and Farhart would continue to personally own Farhart & Sheets “until such time as a written agreement is drafted and executed reflecting a change of ownership.” The agreement also described how Sheets would be compensated:

The firm will employ a two-system credit fund concerning fees based on the following percentages, to wit:
a) You shall receive 100% of the fees on all files you are bringing into the office initially.
b) You shall receive 80% fee credit on all files opened after July 1, 2004, by you wherein fees are billed and collected including cases taken on contingency fee basis.
*50 c) You shall be entitled to receive 50% fee credit on all files opened after July 1, 2004, by me wherein fees are billed and collected including contingency fee files.
d) You will be entitled to receive 20% fee credit on all files presently open at my office wherein you render legal services thereon. If any of the files that are open go to trial, you will be entitled to receive 50% credit. I am excluding [four specific eases]. Also excluded are all open accounts to date and judgments entered of record. It is distinctly understood that the above files, judgments, and records shall be owned by me and/or the professional corporation.

The agreement did not address whether Sheets would receive fee credits on case files opened by any other attorneys subsequently hired by Farhart & Sheets. The agreement also did not explicitly state how the firm’s expenses would be split, but an example indicated Sheets and Farhart would each pay 50 percent.

[¶ 3] The employment agreement also mentioned Farhart’s future retirement plans. It stated Farhart’s “primary concern” was closing out active files, after which he would “be in a position to discuss [Sheets] taking over the entire practice on [his] own.” Finally, the employment agreement provided “either of us may terminate our association at any time.” If either Sheets or Farhart terminated their association, the agreement called for accounts receivable collected within thirty-five days to be allocated according to the above compensation structure. However, after thirty-five days, the employment agreement stated all accounts receivable became an asset of Farhart & Sheets.

[¶ 4] After Sheets began working at Farhart & Sheets, the defendants loaned him $3,000 and $10,000, and he executed two promissory notes in their favor. Sheets also helped recruit a third attorney, Bonnie Humphrey, to join Farhart & Sheets in early 2005. Beginning in mid-2005, Sheets and Humphrey began negotiations with Farhart over the purchase of Farhart & Sheets. However, before the parties could agree to terms, Farhart terminated his professional association with both Sheets and Humphrey in October 2005. Two months later, Sheets filed a complaint against Farhart Law Firm 1 and Moody Farhart personally, claiming he was owed at least $50,000 for work he performed prior to the association being terminated. Sheets’ complaint also claimed that, when he signed the employment agreement, he and Farhart formed a legal partnership. The defendants filed a counterclaim, alleging Sheets actually owed the firm over $11,000 under the employment agreement and $13,000 plus interest under the two promissory notes.

[¶ 5] The defendants moved for summary judgment in January 2007. The district court found Sheets and Farhart did not form a partnership because the employment agreement clearly provided Far-hart was the sole owner of Farhart & Sheets. The district court also found Sheets owed $13,000 plus interest to the defendants under the promissory notes. Therefore, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on those two issues. However, the district court found the parties disputed material facts about whether either party owed money to the other under the employment agreement. As a result, the district court denied summary judgment on the remainder of the parties’ claims.

*51 [¶ 6] In October 2008, the district court held a bench trial to determine whether either Sheets or Farhart Law Firm owed additional money to the other under the employment agreement. Sheets generally testified Farhart & Sheets under-compensated him during his fifteen months with the firm. Sheets stated the firm failed to compensate him for time he spent reviewing Farhart’s active case files upon joining the firm. He testified the firm’s general ledger erroneously listed $6,000 as an advance rather than a client fee. Sheets also testified the firm incorrectly determined the percentage of fee credits he was entitled to on numerous cases. Sheets stated the firm charged him “far over what should have been my fair share of the expenses.” Sheets believed he and Far-hart would split expenses pro rata “according to the income figures and the caseload that we each respectively had.” Finally, Sheets stated he deserved compensation for cases Humphrey brought to the firm. While Sheets acknowledged the employment agreement did not specifically provide he was entitled to fees for cases brought to Farhart & Sheets by attorneys other than Farhart, he stated: “I cannot understand how I could possibly be required to pay a share of the expenses for anybody else brought in and not receive a percentage of income.”

[¶ 7] Sheets also testified Farhart & Sheets failed to bill clients after August 2005 and thereby reduced the compensation to which he was rightfully entitled. While negotiating the purchase of the firm, Sheets stated he and Humphrey accessed Farhart & Sheets’ computerized accounting records in early October 2005. Sheets testified the records indicated Farhart & Sheets had failed to send out bills since early August 2005, which caused the firm’s collections to drop dramatically. Sheets submitted a graph printed from the firm’s accounting records into evidence, which he stated demonstrated Farhart & Sheets’ failure to bill clients during this period. Sheets testified he submitted bills to the firm’s bookkeeper, Judith Bloms, from August to October 2005, and the firm would have been able to collect payments from the vast majority of his clients.

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Bluebook (online)
2010 ND 85, 782 N.W.2d 48, 2010 N.D. LEXIS 89, 2010 WL 1856014, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheets-v-farhart-law-firm-nd-2010.