Sileo v. Berger

74 So. 3d 753, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0295, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1115, 2011 WL 4486509
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 2011
Docket2011-CA-0295
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 74 So. 3d 753 (Sileo v. Berger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sileo v. Berger, 74 So. 3d 753, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0295, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1115, 2011 WL 4486509 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

EDWIN A. LOMBARD, Judge.

h Plaintiff, John D. Sileo, Jr., appeals a judgment of the district court granting a Motion to Enforce Settlement in favor of defendant, Allan Berger & Associates, ordering plaintiff to release a full sum payment of $81,777.69 to attorney Susan Earnest as part of a settlement agreement recited in court related to payment of attorney’s fees owed to Ms. Earnest for a previously-settled civil case. For the reasons provided below, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural History

This is an appeal from a lawsuit concerning claims for attorney’s fees between a law firm and a former attorney employed by the law firm. John D. Sileo, Jr., an attorney licensed to practice law in Louisiana, was hired by Allan Berger & Associates, a professional law corporation, in January 1996. Allan Berger & Associates (AB & A) is owned by Allan Berger, also *755 an attorney licensed in Louisiana. Mr. Sileo worked at AB & A for eleven years until his resignation on January 26, 2007. On March 22, 2007, Mr. Sileo filed a “Petition for Unpaid Wages, Penalties and Attorney’s Fees” against AB & A, alleging that he was owed over $200,000 in unpaid attorney’s fees from cases he had tried or settled while employed by the firm. For the next two years, arduous litigation occurred between 12the parties, including re-conventional claims, separate lawsuits, and allegations of defamation.

On May 26, 2009, the parties’ counsel, as well as Mr. Sileo and Mr. Berger personal ly, appeared before the district court to announce that they had “reached a settlement and compromise” as to all claims between the parties, which included any claims and reconventional demands for wages, reimbursements of fees and costs, damages, and breach of contract. The parties informed the Court of a percentage-based division of fees depending on certain time periods of when a particular case was settled or tried.

The parties further informed the Court that they “have agreed to enter into cross indemnity agreements to protect one another from claims by third-party attorneys who may be entitled to a referral fee ... to our knowledge there are but two of those cases.” Mr. Berger and Mr. Sileo personally informed the Court of the two known cases, which were: 1) a matter called Ryan Babineaux; and 2) Brenda L. Argiz-Pipkin, et al v. Auto Auction of New Orleans, L.L.C., filed in Division “F” of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans under Docket No. 01-02557 (the “Pipkin case”).

The parties’ counsel then began discussing the indemnity agreements on possible unknown third-party attorney fees or referral fees owed. Mr. Herman, counsel for Allan Berger & Associates, stated to the Court:

MR. HERMAN: What I would ask, Your Honor, with respect to the indemnities, that Mr. Sileo and Mr. Berger exchange a list as part of their settlement with respect to all referral fees that may be due so that they can understand what, if any, indemnities they may be assuming. Particularly with respect to the Babineaux matter and the Pipkin matter, I would suggest to Your Honor that if those are the only two that are known, that they be excluded and that the referral fee be carved out and paid if in fact it’s due.

|sMr. Schonekas, counsel for Mr. Sileo, agreed with that sentiment, and the Court acknowledged it as well:

MR. SCHONEKAS: That’s what I was going to suggest, Judge, is if there isn’t a disagreement about the payment referral fee, it’s not going to affect the net anyway. It would simply come off the top.
MR. HERMAN: Right. So that indemnity, Your Honor, would only apply to—
MR. SCHONEKAS: — the non-disclosed claims of third parties.
MR. HERMAN: In non-dispute.
THE COURT: So there is no suggestion, the agreement is that on the two that are known, they will just be paid as due and on the ones that are unknown, they’ve both mutually agreed to indemnify each other.
MR. SCHONEKAS: Correct.
THE COURT: That’s the agreement. It’s not a suggestion.
MR. HERMAN: That is correct.

Mr. Sileo then stated that he did not know what Mr. Berger’s fee agreement with Ms. Earnest was on the Pipkin case, and sought further clarification, to which Mr. Berger and the Court replied:

*756 MR. BERGER: That fee has got to come out of, I mean, it’s like anything. It has to come off the top and what is the balance would be the percentages that—
THE COURT: It would only affect what sum you would be receiving as it would affect any other case. That is to say, whatever the agreement is, that agreement is honored and that fee is paid, and then your division is what your division is.

Mr. Berger admitted that, at that moment, he did not know what percentage arrangement he had with Ms. Earnest for the Pipkin case. He then suggested that the parties look at their books and get together again to discuss cases in which fees are potentially due to third-party attorneys. Mr. Sileo then stated:

|4MR. SILEO: There’s only two, Judge, that they’ve mentioned, and the only two—
MR. HERMAN: That is correct.
MR. SILEO: Let me just make sure I am correct on this. If they come up with fifteen cases that they have agreements on that we have no idea about, I’m saying I have no idea, and Mr. Berger is reporting that that’s going to cut the money that I received, the 45% that I received on these cases, which was given in consideration for a lot of things here, Judge, I can’t enter that agreement. Because I have no idea what he’s done. And I’m not going to enter something based upon something that doesn’t exist ...
... So that we’re clear, if it’s just these two cases, if it’s those two cases and that’s all this is about, then that’s fine. Then the rest exactly goes back to the indemnification defense. I don’t, again, want something — This is way too vague because I don’t want to hear there’s fifteen million agreements he has with Mr. Herman or somebody else that exists. That wouldn’t be fair and I can’t agree to that.

The parties’ counsel then reiterated that they would meet later in the week to discuss the indemnification arguments further, but that as to the two known matters, Babineaux and Pipkin, there is no confusion. Mr. Sileo then said:

MR. SILEO: Judge, as long as it’s only these two.
THE COURT: I understand.

The district court understood that the by the end of the week, “you all will talk and have an agreement reached as it relates to this indemnity provision by Friday, and then I expect counsel to come and let me know what the agreement is.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 So. 3d 753, 2011 La.App. 4 Cir. 0295, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 1115, 2011 WL 4486509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sileo-v-berger-lactapp-2011.