Stewart A. Feldman & Associates, L.L.P. v. Industrial Photographic Supply, Inc., Bell Industries, Inc., and Bennett Greenspan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 2002
Docket14-01-00249-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Stewart A. Feldman & Associates, L.L.P. v. Industrial Photographic Supply, Inc., Bell Industries, Inc., and Bennett Greenspan (Stewart A. Feldman & Associates, L.L.P. v. Industrial Photographic Supply, Inc., Bell Industries, Inc., and Bennett Greenspan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart A. Feldman & Associates, L.L.P. v. Industrial Photographic Supply, Inc., Bell Industries, Inc., and Bennett Greenspan, (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified and Opinion filed September 12, 2002

Affirmed as Modified and Opinion filed September 12, 2002

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-01-00249-CV

STEWART A. FELDMAN & ASSOCIATES, L.L.P., Appellant

V.

INDUSTRIAL PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLY, INC.,

BELL INDUSTRIES, INC., and BENNETT GREENSPAN, Appellees

On Appeal from the 113th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2000-15882

O P I N I O N

This is an appeal from a final judgment confirming an arbitration award in a dispute between a law firm and its former clients.  Appellant Stewart A. Feldman & Associates, L.L.P. (the “Firm”) contends that the trial court erred in (1) awarding attorney’s fees to appellees under the Declaratory Judgments Act, and (2) refusing to vacate a portion of the award relating to appellee Bennett Greenspan.  For the reasons given below, we affirm the judgment as modified.


PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A dispute arose between the Firm and appellees Bell Industries, Inc. (“Bell”), Industrial Photographic Supply, Inc. (“IPS”), and Bennett Greenspan (“Greenspan”) during the course of the Firm’s representation of appellees in two underlying lawsuits.  The parties sought to resolve their dispute through arbitration as provided in the Firm=s engagement letter, but disagreed on the proper forum for the arbitration.  The Firm sought injunctive and declaratory relief in the trial court, arguing that the engagement letter provided that its claim for unpaid legal fees should be arbitrated in the Houston Bar Association’s Fee Dispute Committee (“FDC”) separately from the claims appellees Bell and IPS had brought before a JAMS Endispute arbitrator relating to the Firm’s representation. 

The firm obtained a temporary restraining order preventing the fee dispute from going forward in the JAMS arbitration, but the trial court subsequently denied the Firm’s request for a temporary injunction and ordered the parties to arbitrate the fee dispute before the JAMS arbitrator.  The parties then filed summary judgment motions seeking a determination of the proper forum for the disputes.  The trial court, finding that the JAMS arbitrator had jurisdiction to hear the fee dispute, granted appellees’ motion, and signed an order that left open the issue of appellees’ entitlement to attorney’s fees under the Declaratory Judgments Act. 

Thereafter, the Firm submitted its claim for unpaid fees to the JAMS arbitrator after adding Greenspan as a counter-respondent.  Following the conclusion of the arbitration, the arbitrator issued his award.  Appellees then moved for a determination of their entitlement to attorney=s fees under the Declaratory Judgments Act as provided in the trial court’s earlier order.  After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court awarded appellees attorney’s fees over the Firm’s objection.  On appellee=s motion, the trial court entered a final judgment confirming the arbitrator’s award and the attorney’s fees award.  This appeal followed.


FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Bell engaged the Firm to represent Bell, IPS, and Greenspan in two related lawsuits in Harris County, Texas.  The terms of the engagement were set out in a letter from the Firm to Bell’s counsel (the “engagement letter”).[1]  The engagement letter contained the following arbitration provision:

Should any dispute arise out of or in conjunction with any matter relating in any way to any legal work performed for Bell or Bell=s affiliates or any other matter involving The Law Offices of Stewart A. Feldman & Associates, L.L.P. or its principals, we agree to submit any and all such disputes for final and binding resolution that cannot be settled by good faith negotiation between the parties to J*A*M*S/Endispute pursuant to its Arbitration Rules.  Fee disputes, however, shall be submitted to the Houston Bar Association=s Fee Dispute Committee for binding and nonappealable resolution.

One of the lawsuits settled in March of 1998, and settlement negotiations had been attempted in the other, when a dispute arose between the Firm and appellees.  The dispute centered around the Firm’s handling of the litigation and its billings for legal services rendered.  The dispute escalated, and in January of 1999 the Firm intervened in the remaining lawsuit to recover unpaid attorney’s fees it claimed appellees owed.  At the same time, the Firm withdrew from its representation of appellees.

On February 22, 1999, Bell requested arbitration before both the FDC and JAMS.  Eventually, however, Bell declined to participate in the FDC proceeding, and pursued arbitration before a JAMS arbitrator.  In the JAMS proceeding, Bell lodged numerous claims against the Firm, including breach of fiduciary duty and constructive fraud, and sought forfeiture of attorney’s fees.  Greenspan was not a participant in the JAMS arbitration at this time. 


The Firm objected to the inclusion of its claim for unpaid attorney’s fees in the JAMS proceeding; it claimed that the plain language of the engagement letter required that the fee dispute be arbitrated before the FDC.  The issue was submitted to the JAMS arbitrator, who determined that all of the parties’ claims were appropriate for arbitration before JAMS. 

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Stewart A. Feldman & Associates, L.L.P. v. Industrial Photographic Supply, Inc., Bell Industries, Inc., and Bennett Greenspan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-a-feldman-associates-llp-v-industrial-phot-texapp-2002.