Sylvester Vorus v. Department of Corrections

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 21, 2018
Docket338474
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sylvester Vorus v. Department of Corrections (Sylvester Vorus v. Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sylvester Vorus v. Department of Corrections, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

SYLVESTER VORUS, UNPUBLISHED August 21, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

and

BRENDA VORUS,

Plaintiff,

v No. 338474 Wayne Circuit Court DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, LC No. 14-015766-CD

Defendant,

RASOR LAW FIRM PLLC,

Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and CAVANAGH and M. J. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff Sylvester Vorus appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting nonparty Rasor Law Firm PLLC (Rasor Law) an attorney’s charging lien against the proceeds of the settlement in this matter and ordering payment to Rasor Law of $49,175.15. Rasor Law cross- appeals as of right, arguing that the trial court’s award of fees was too low. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff retained Rasor Law to represent him in a lawsuit against his employer, defendant Michigan Department of Corrections. Jonathon Marko was employed by Rasor Law under an employment agreement and worked on plaintiff’s case while at the firm. Marko left Rasor Law -1- and opened his own law firm, Ernst & Marko. Plaintiff then terminated his retainer with Rasor Law and brought his case to Ernst & Marko. Rasor Law filed an equitable lien in this matter to secure fees it claimed to be owed for its representation of plaintiff. Later, Ersnt & Marko helped plaintiff successfully settle the dispute. The parties disagree about how much work each firm performed, with Rasor Law claiming most of the work was done while plaintiff was a Rasor Law client and Marko claiming most of the work was done after plaintiff followed Marko to his new firm.

Marko filed a motion to extinguish Rasor Law’s equitable lien, arguing in part that Rasor Law was not entitled to a lien because it had a legal remedy to seek recovery of the claimed fees. Rasor Law responded that it was entitled to an attorney’s charging lien because Rasor Law and plaintiff had entered into a contingency-fee retainer agreement, giving rise to the lien to secure Rasor Law’s fees in this matter. Rasor Law also argued that Marko’s claims of misconduct were both untrue and irrelevant to the question of whether Rasor Law was entitled to compensation, and that the pending litigation did not involve the question of whether Rasor Law was entitled to fees. With its response to plaintiff’s motion, Rasor Law submitted time records showing a total of 92.4 hours worked by Marko and others at the firm, with fees calculated in the amount of $17,994, before plaintiff ending his relationship with the firm. Rasor Law asserted that its billing software captures time “from everyone who works on a file” and that it is “contemporaneously recorded.” Nowhere in the billings records submitted with Rasor Law’s response, however, did any attorney but Marko have time recorded, save for an entry for time worked by a former attorney that was ultimately determined to be a “data entry error.” Rasor Law also submitted with its response a list of costs totaling $1,601.92.

After hearing the parties’ arguments, the trial court denied plaintiff’s motion and reserved the issue of the amount of the lien for either a future evidentiary hearing or a ruling on the parties’ pleadings. The trial court entered an order denying the motion to extinguish Rasor Law’s lien and directing payment of litigation costs claimed by both firms. The trial court then ordered the parties to supplement their respective billing records, in particular, by identifying who performed which services that appeared on the bills submitted.

Rasor Law submitted a document identifying the professionals by name corresponding to their initials on its billing records. Plaintiff filed a supplemental brief attaching billing records of the Ernst & Marko firm documenting over 300 hours of time expended on the case. The trial court later held an off-the-record conference, after which it entered an order directing Rasor Law to submit documentation of any claimed additional tasks performed on this matter. The order gave plaintiff time to respond to any filing Rasor Law made, and set a date for another off-the- record conference.

Rasor Law filed a supplemental brief asserting that lawyers and other professionals spent an additional 172.3 hours on this matter. The attached documentation did not come from the firm’s billing software, but from an Excel spreadsheet that Rasor Law manually prepared by reconstructing alleged time billed after the fact. While Rasor Law claimed the need to do so by criticizing Marko for not recording all the time he spent on this matter, Marko’s allegedly unbilled time only accounted for 71 of the 172.3 newly claimed hours—the remaining 101.3 hours were for six other attorneys, including firm principal James Rasor, and several paralegals and law clerks. No explanation was offered for the failure of the other professionals to document

-2- their time contemporaneously with the work completed. The billing records claimed an hourly rate of $650 for James Rasor.

Plaintiff filed a response objecting to Rasor Law’s assertion of 172.3 additional hours, particularly the lack of any affidavits or other evidentiary support for the claimed fees and hourly rates. Plaintiff claimed that many of the fees were either excessive, duplicative, or outright fabricated, and that many of them were for clerical as opposed to legal services. Plaintiff argued that Rasor Law should receive, at most, compensation for 22 hours of the time recorded in the billing records attached to Rasor Law’s initial response to plaintiff’s motion to extinguish the lien.

The trial court held another off-the-record conference that essentially ended the fact- finding portion of these proceedings. The trial court did not hold an evidentiary hearing or conduct any further proceedings. Instead, the trial court entered a written opinion and order reaffirming its ruling that Rasor Law was entitled to compensation for its period of representing plaintiff and that Rasor Law was entitled to a lien. The trial court then turned to the question of whether Rasor was entitled to a fee calculated on quantum meruit as Marko argued or, as Rasor Law argued, to a portion of the entire contingent fee as set forth in the retainer agreement. The trial court, reasoning that “Marko did more on this file than deliver a settlement to Ernst & Marko,” concluded “that the quantum meruit hourly formula for determining attorney fees more equitably addresses the risks assumed and work performed by [Rasor Law] than the contingent fee formula.”

In reviewing the parties’ dispute about the proper number of hours and amount of fees to compensate Rasor Law, the trial court began by emphasizing the lack of clarity in the documentation both parties provided:

The parties challenge the Court in performing this calculation because of their respective record-keeping discrepancies. James Rasor’s averments regarding the “sophisticated organization and reliability of the (Firm’s) electronic files . . . and the billing . . . (that) is contemporaneously recorded . . .” paint a portrait of operational efficiency that the records do not support. Marko appears to have contributed to this problem by not properly billing all of his hours with the [Rasor] Firm.

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Sylvester Vorus v. Department of Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sylvester-vorus-v-department-of-corrections-michctapp-2018.