Untiedt v. Grand Laboratories, Inc.

552 N.W.2d 571, 1996 Minn. App. LEXIS 864, 1996 WL 422493
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 30, 1996
DocketC3-96-590
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 552 N.W.2d 571 (Untiedt v. Grand Laboratories, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Untiedt v. Grand Laboratories, Inc., 552 N.W.2d 571, 1996 Minn. App. LEXIS 864, 1996 WL 422493 (Mich. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

SHORT, Judge.

This appeal involves a determination by the trial court that Charles and Wanda Un-tiedt (collectively Untiedt) executed a valid and unambiguous contingent fee agreement with Douglas E. Schmidt and Sieben, Grose, Von Hottum, McCoy & Carey, Ltd. (firm). On appeal, Untiedt argues the trial court: (1) made a clearly erroneous finding that the parties executed a valid agreement; (2) erred in concluding the 40 percent contingent fee unambiguously applies to an award of statutory attorney fees; and (3) committed plain error in basing its decision on irrelevant evidence.

FACTS

After his original counsel withdrew from litigation involving the manufacture and sale of a defective cattle vaccine, Charles Untiedt met with attorney Schmidt concerning his willingness to assume responsibility for Un-tiedt’s case. Following ten hours of discussions, Schmidt dictated a retainer agreement, which provided:

3. In the event of a cash settlement or jury verdict, I agree to pay said attorneys from any money and or [sic] property paid, received, or collected by action, compromise, or otherwise, 40 percent of any recovery for attorney fees for handling my ease to settlement or suit including appeal.
* * * * * *
5. I agree to pay for all the necessary costs and expenses incident to the performance of said services and the handling of said case, in addition to attorney fees, and after fees have been subtracted from my recovery. I agree that during the pen-dency of the action, I will advance and pay all costs relating to expert witnesses. Said firm agrees to advance and pay all other costs normally incident to the prosecution of a ease such as this including court filing fees, deposition expenses, travel expenses, et cetera. It is agreed that all of the expenses advanced by both retainer and retainee will first be deducted from our recovery, and the remaining sum left after expenses will be split in accordance with the provisions of Paragraph 3 above. In the event there is no recovery, each party will bear their new [sic] expenses.

After requesting a typist to transcribe the agreement, Schmidt left the office without obtaining Untiedt’s signature. When Un-tiedt signed the retainer later that evening, he added the following language next to paragraph 5:

I have an objection to the first part of Paragraph #5. I have signed this with the understanding that Paragraph # 5 will be corrected to our mutual agreement.

Untiedt then handed the agreement to the typist, who signed Schmidt’s name on a line, under which she had typed “Douglas E. Schmidt by Jacqueline McKone.”

For approximately three years, the parties acted in conformance with the retainer agreement; Untiedt paid the expert fees, and *573 Schmidt’s firm advanced the remaining costs. When the litigation drew to a close, the parties could not agree on how to divide the proceeds, which included a $1,038,775 jury verdict and $366,584.24 in costs and attorney fees. Initially, no one disputed the firm’s entitlement to 40 percent of Untiedt’s recovery. Rather, the parties disagreed as to whether statutory attorney fees were part of the “recovery” under the retainer agreement. Thus, Untiedt remitted 40 percent of the jury verdict to the firm and placed the attorney fees into escrow.

When the parties found themselves unable to resolve the impasse, Untiedt requested the trial court to construe the retainer agreement. In his motion, Untiedt asserted for the first time that the document was invalid because his handwritten objection transformed the agreement into a counteroffer, which the night typist had no power to accept. Alternatively, Untiedt urged the trial court to declare paragraph 3 ambiguous and to construe it in his favor. While Untiedt never requested an evidentiary hearing, he submitted an affidavit stating: (1) he met with Schmidt for ten hours on June 2, 1992; (2) Schmidt offered to take the matter on a 40 percent contingent fee and to advance litigation costs except for expert fees; (3) Untiedt raised the issue of statutory attorney fees, after which Schmidt agreed to accept as payment either the 40 percent contingent fee or the statutory attorney fees, whichever proved to be greater; (4) Schmidt then dictated the agreement, but Untiedt did not hear him mention statutory attorney fees; (5) Untiedt expressed his concern about the fees, to which Schmidt responded they would appear in paragraph 5 of the agreement; (6) Schmidt then left the office; (7) Untiedt read the agreement, found no provision regarding the statutory fees in paragraph 5, and signed the document subject to his written objection; and (8) during the course of litigation, Untiedt made numerous requests for a corrected retainer agreement, but either was “put off’ or received empty assurances.

By contrast, Schmidt’s affidavit asserts: (1) Untiedt originally proposed a 33½ percent contingency fee, which Schmidt rejected; (2) Untiedt then suggested a 40 percent contingent fee, which would not apply to a recovery under the Consumer Fraud Act; (3) Schmidt again declined the offer and explained he would take the case only if the 40 percent contingent fee applied to a recovery under the Consumer Fraud Act and Untiedt assumed responsibility for expert fees; (4) Schmidt memorialized his offer in a written retainer agreement, which Untiedt hesitated to sign; (5) Schmidt left the office because of a commitment, but allowed Untiedt to stay until he reached a decision and to return the document to the typist, who was authorized to accept it; (6) the following day, Untiedt explained he objected to the first part of paragraph 5, which suggests Untiedt would be responsible for paying the entire cost of litigation from his share of the recovery, while the last sentence more clearly provides for the deduction of costs from the total recovery, after which the parties would split the remainder according to paragraph 3; and (7) after Schmidt told Untiedt that the latter, specific language would govern their responsibilities for expenses, Untiedt gave his approval for Schmidt to proceed with the representation, which Schmidt did in reliance on the signed agreement.

At the close of the hearing on this motion, the trial court stated:

The court will take the matter under advisement. I would note that irregardless [sic] of the decision this court makes, Mr. Untiedt is ahead of the game, so to speak * * * but the court will take this particular matter under decision * * *.

Two days later, the trial court issued a brief order, finding the existence of a valid and unambiguous retainer agreement, which entitled Schmidt and the firm to 40 percent of all monies received, including statutory attorney fees.

ISSUES

I. Is the finding of a valid agreement clearly erroneous?
II. Did the trial court err in concluding that “recovery” unambiguously includes an award of statutory attorney fees?
*574 III. Did the trial court commit plain error in basing its decision on irrelevant facts?

ANALYSIS

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
552 N.W.2d 571, 1996 Minn. App. LEXIS 864, 1996 WL 422493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/untiedt-v-grand-laboratories-inc-minnctapp-1996.