Stephen W. Holaday, P.C., and Stephen W. Holaday v. Tieman, Spencer & Hicks, L.L.C.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 7, 2020
DocketWD82792
StatusPublished

This text of Stephen W. Holaday, P.C., and Stephen W. Holaday v. Tieman, Spencer & Hicks, L.L.C. (Stephen W. Holaday, P.C., and Stephen W. Holaday v. Tieman, Spencer & Hicks, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephen W. Holaday, P.C., and Stephen W. Holaday v. Tieman, Spencer & Hicks, L.L.C., (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

STEPHEN W. HOLADAY, P.C., and ) STEPHEN W. HOLADAY, ) Appellants, ) WD82792 v. ) ) TIEMAN, SPENCER & HICKS, L.L.C., ) FILED: July 7, 2020 Respondent. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BUCHANAN COUNTY THE HONORABLE ROGER M. PROKES, JUDGE

BEFORE DIVISION ONE: LISA WHITE HARDWICK, PRESIDING JUDGE, CYNTHIA L. MARTIN AND THOMAS N. CHAPMAN, JUDGES

Stephen W. Holaday and Stephen W. Holaday, P.C. (collectively, “Appellants”)

appeal the circuit court’s judgment awarding Tieman, Spencer, & Hicks, LLC,

(“Respondent”) damages in the amount of $427,777.77 for Holaday’s breach of fiduciary

duty and tortious interference with a business expectancy. 1 For reasons explained

herein, we affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In July 2011, Holaday was hired as an associate attorney by the law firm of

Tieman, Spencer, Hook & Hicks. Holaday was later invited to become a member of the

1 We will refer to Stephen W. Holaday and the related professional corporation, Stephen W. Holaday, P.C., collectively as “Appellants” because their interests are singular for purposes of this appeal. When necessary to distinguish between Appellants, we will refer to the individual as “Holaday” and the professional corporation as “Holaday, P.C.” firm with Tieman and Spencer. Beginning April 1, 2014, the three men practiced law

together as members of the law firm Tieman, Spencer, Holaday, & Hicks (“TSHH”) until

Holaday’s departure on September 30, 2015. During this time, the lawyers’ professional

corporations, Holaday P.C., Tieman & Hicks, P.C., and John M. Spencer, P.C., were the

only members of TSHH. The firm’s operating agreement provided that each member

was entitled to an equal one-third share of TSHH’s profits and that “[n]o Member may

withdraw from the Company, except upon the written consent of fifty-one percent (51%)

of all Members.”

On April 11, 2015, “John Doe” 2 was seriously injured in a motorcycle crash.

Holaday met with Doe to discuss legal representation. During this meeting, Doe

informed Holaday that the crash occurred after a vehicle driven by an intoxicated minor

attempted an illegal U-turn, which placed the driver’s vehicle directly in the path of Doe’s

motorcycle. On April 21, 2015, Doe signed a contingency fee agreement with Holaday

and TSHH. The agreement stated that Doe would pay Holaday compensation equal to

38% of any sum received. Holaday contacted State Farm and learned, on or about May

6, 2015, that the minor driver had an insurance policy with a coverage limit of $250,000

and an umbrella policy that provided for an additional $1,000,000 in coverage.

On July 6, 2015, “Frank Smith” was severely injured after he was sucked through

a 140-foot drainage tube while assisting a friend on the friend’s farm. Smith’s arm was

severed “about three-fourths of the way off,” and he needed “multiple surgeries in a very

short amount of time[.]” Smith was in the hospital for eighteen days, and Holaday went

to his house for a consultation about a week after his release. During that meeting,

2 We will use pseudonyms to respect the privacy of law firm clients whose names are not material to the issues on appeal.

2 Smith and his wife told Holaday that the farm owner had an insurance policy with a

$1,000,000 coverage limit. The Smiths signed a contingency fee agreement with

Holaday and TSHH on August 5, 2015. The agreement stated that the Smiths would

pay Holaday compensation equal to 33.3% of any sum received.

In July 2015, and after Holaday had substantially completed his investigation into

Doe’s claim for damages, Holaday proposed that TSHH adopt a different fee-allocation

system that was not based on each member’s one-third interest in the law firm. The

new system would more closely track overall member fee origination and reward

members based on their relative productivity. Holaday believed this would result in his

receiving more of the fees from the contingency cases because he was ultimately

responsible for stewarding those cases toward completion. When Spencer and Tieman

rejected the proposal, Holaday announced his intention to withdraw from TSHH.

On September 22, 2015, Spencer and Holaday met to discuss the value of the

fifty-eight contingency fee cases being handled by Holaday and determine whether an

agreement could be reached to allow Holaday to withdraw from the firm. Spencer

asked Holaday questions about the cases and made notes based on Holaday’s

answers. Holaday told Spencer that the Doe case involved a motorcycle accident and

had liability insurance limits of $50,000. In regards to the Smiths’ claim, Holaday told

Spencer only that it involved a third-party farm claim. Spencer asked Holaday if any of

the cases had the possibility to result in a fee greater than $75,000, and Holaday stated

that no such case existed.

At this same meeting, Holaday and Spencer agreed to split the anticipated

contingency fees in ten specific cases, which were acknowledged in a document

referred to as “the carve-out list.” Any fee realized in these cases would be split

3 between Holaday, Spencer, and Tieman according to the TSHH Operating Agreement,

with two-thirds of the future fees paid to the firm and one-third paid to Holaday or by

some other specified division. Neither the Doe nor Smith case appeared on the carve-

out list because Spencer and Tieman relied on Holaday’s statement that those cases

did not involve potential fees of $75,000 or more. Spencer and Tieman agreed that

Holaday could contact any contingency fee client who did not appear on the carve-out

list and offer his continued legal services. Spencer and Tieman agreed that they would

not attempt to interfere or compete with Holaday for the clients who were not on the

carve-out list.

On September 24, 2015, Holaday hand-delivered a “choice letter” to Doe and

mailed the same letter to the Smiths. The letter stated that they could follow Holaday to

Holaday, P.C., remain with TSHH, or procure the services of a third-party attorney.

Both Doe and Smith chose Holaday’s continued representation. Holaday withdrew from

TSHH on September 30, 2015, and the firm changed its name to Tieman, Spencer, &

Hicks, LLC.

In February 2016, Holaday made a settlement demand to State Farm on Doe’s

claim. In March 2016, the parties agreed to settle the claim for $1,250,000, and Doe

paid the agreed upon contingency fee of $475,000 to Holaday in April 2016. Following

his departure from TSHH, Holaday also settled the Smiths’ claim for $500,000, and

received a fee of $166,666.66. Respondent received no portion of either contingency

fee.

After learning of these fee payments, Respondent filed claims in Buchanan

County Circuit Court alleging that Appellants had breached their fiduciary duty to TSHH

and tortiously interfered with the law firm’s business expectancy from the Doe and

4 Smith cases. At the bench trial, Tieman and Spencer testified that Holaday did not

disclose accurate information about the available liability insurance coverage and

potential fee recovery in the Doe and Smith cases before his departure from TSHH.

They further testified that the Doe and Smith cases would have been included on the

carve-out list if the information had been provided during the September 22, 2015

meeting. Absent their inclusion on the carve-out list, Tieman and Spencer testified that

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Stephen W. Holaday, P.C., and Stephen W. Holaday v. Tieman, Spencer & Hicks, L.L.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-w-holaday-pc-and-stephen-w-holaday-v-tieman-spencer-moctapp-2020.