Smart Document Solutions, LLC v. Michael B. Miller

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2007
DocketCA-0007-0670
StatusUnknown

This text of Smart Document Solutions, LLC v. Michael B. Miller (Smart Document Solutions, LLC v. Michael B. Miller) 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
Smart Document Solutions, LLC v. Michael B. Miller, (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

07-670

SMART DOCUMENT SOLUTIONS, LLC

VERSUS

MICHAEL B. MILLER

**********

APPEAL FROM THE CROWLEY CITY COURT PARISH OF ACADIA, NO. 20920 HONORABLE T. BARRETT HARRINGTON, CITY COURT JUDGE

ELIZABETH A. PICKETT JUDGE

Court composed of Oswald A. Decuir, Elizabeth A. Pickett, and J. David Painter, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Michael B. Miller Miller & Miller P. O. Box 1630 Crowley, LA 70527-1630 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: Michael B. Miller

Brian F. Blackwell Blackwell & Associates 9270 Siegen Lane, Suite 201 Baton Rouge, LA 70810 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Smart Document Solutions, LLC PICKETT, Judge.

The defendant, Michael B. Miller, appeals a judgment of the trial court

awarding the plaintiff, Smart Document Solutions (SDS), LLC, $4,194.76 plus legal

interest from date of judicial demand, for services rendered. We affirm the judgment

of the trial court.

FACTS

The defendant, an attorney, subpoenaed medical records from a number of

health care providers in the course of his practice. The plaintiff, as agent for the

health care providers, answered the subpoenas, supplied the records requested by the

defendant, and invoiced him for its service. The defendant accepted the records.

Subsequently, the defendant refused to pay the plaintiff’s invoices, claiming that he

had not issued subpoenas to the plaintiff, but, rather to the various health care

providers which used the plaintiff’s services. The plaintiff filed suit and was awarded

$4,194.76 plus legal interest from the date of judicial demand and all costs. The

defendant appeals.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

The trial of this matter took place on February 27, 2007. Although properly

noticed, the defendant/appellant failed to appear. The plaintiff proceeded to put on

its case. The first witness called was Ms. Lynette Nickel, the clerk of the Crowley

City Court, who testified that she was in court the last time the case was called for

trial. She stated that the defendant was also present; that the case was continued

because the defendant had yet to file his answer; that, not only was the new date

announced in open court, but that notice of the new trial date was prepared; and that

2 the notice, along with the plaintiff’s Amended Petition and Interrogatories were

served on the defendant.

The next witness called was Glenn Deville, the City Marshall, who was also

in court when the case was continued. He remembered Mr. Miller being in the court

when the new date was set and stated that he served the papers described by Ms.

Nickel on the defendant, through his secretary, at the defendant’s office.

The plaintiff then called Ms. Margaret Stevenson, the SDS Operations Director

for north, central, and southwest Louisiana, along with north Mississippi and north

Texas. Ms. Stevenson explained that medical providers contract with SDS to pull and

copy subpoenaed records so that their own employees don’t have to do so. She then

identified individually each request (along with its supporting documentation) from

Mr. Miller for medical records and the invoice sent to Mr. Miller for processing each

request.

The defendant raises six specifications of error on appeal. Assignments 1, 4

and 5 all address one issue—does the plaintiff have a right of action against the

defendant. Assignment number five also raises the issue of agency and whether

Miller, as agent for his clients, should be held liable for the records he ordered in

connection with the representation of his clients. We agree with the trial judge that

the plaintiff has a right of action. As discussed more fully below, Margaret

Stevenson, an officer of the plaintiff/company who dealt with such records as

requested by the defendant in the normal course of business established that SDS was

an agent of the medical providers, hired by them to answer requests for medical

records. Furthermore, also as discussed below, SDS meets the definition of a “health

care provider” as used in R.S. 13:3715.1(G). As either the agent of the health care

3 providers it represented or as a defined health care provider, SDS has the right to

proceed against the defendant, to whom it provided goods and services.

As to the agency issue, the defendant claims that his clients owe the medical

providers for the subpoenaed materials. Although this argument may appear to be

technically correct, we find the special relationship between an attorney and his client

does not support the defendants argument. We have not found an instance in which

a Louisiana court has ruled on this issue, so we have looked to a number of foreign

jurisdictions on which to base our conclusion. We are most impressed by the

analysis and conclusion from the North Dakota Supreme Court:

[T]he attorney-client relationship differs from the general agency relationship because the attorney-client relationship is subject to an established code of professional responsibility governing members of the Bar, and the attorney, not the client, is in charge of the litigation and determines the services necessary to promote the best interests of the litigation. See Judd & Detweiler v. Gittings, 43 App.D.C. 304 (1915); Molezzo Reporters v. Patt, 94 Nev. 540, 579 P.2d 1243 (1978); Burt v. Gahan, 351 Mass. 340, 220 N.E.2d 817 (1966); Monick v. Melnicoff, 144 A.2d 381 (D.C.Mun.App.1958); Roberts, Walsh & Co. v. Trugman, 109 N.J.Super. 594, 264 A.2d 237 (1970); Brown & Huseby, Inc. v. Chrietzberg, 242 Ga. 232, 248 S.E.2d 631 (1978).

The rationale for this rule was perhaps best stated in Judd & Detweiler v. Gittings, 43 App.D.C. at 310-311:

“While it is true that an attorney is the agent of his client, the relation between them, we think, is such that it calls for some modification of the general rule which the law recognizes as existing between principal and agent. In ordinary transactions, the agent is subordinate to the principal, the principal standing out as the real actor, and the agent merely as a subordinate representative. But the relation between attorney and client is different. The attorney has complete charge of the litigation, is so recognized by the court, and, as such, dominates in all matters pertaining to the conduct of the litigation. ‘While in one sense the client is the principal and the attorney the agent, and while the attorney is professionally and constantly acting for clients, whose names from the records of the courts and other means of publicity are almost

4 always known or may be so, yet there are peculiarities in his case which make it necessary to apply to it with some qualification the general principles of agency. In most cases of agency the principal is what the name imports,-- the leading person in the transaction. The agent is, as the term implies, a mere subordinate, important only as the representative of the principal; often representing only one principal.

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Smart Document Solutions, LLC v. Michael B. Miller, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smart-document-solutions-llc-v-michael-b-miller-lactapp-2007.