Van Cleave v. Osborne, Jenkins & Gamboa, Chtd.

840 P.2d 589, 108 Nev. 885, 1992 Nev. LEXIS 160
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1992
Docket22389
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 840 P.2d 589 (Van Cleave v. Osborne, Jenkins & Gamboa, Chtd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Cleave v. Osborne, Jenkins & Gamboa, Chtd., 840 P.2d 589, 108 Nev. 885, 1992 Nev. LEXIS 160 (Neb. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

This action involving attorney’s fees has its origin in an automobile rollover accident that occurred in 1979 in which appellant Virginia Van Cleave was paralyzed. The facts of the underlying suits are discussed in our prior opinions of Van Cleave v. Gamboni Construction Co., 99 Nev. 544, 665 P.2d 250 (1983); and Van Cleave v. Gamboni Construction Co., 101 Nev. 524, 706 P.2d 845 (1985). The controversy before us began when Van Cleave hired the respondent law firm of Osborne, Jenkins & *886 Gamboa, Chtd. (“Osborne firm”) to represent her in her personal injury action. 1

With minimal effort, the Osborne firm obtained two settlements for Van Cleave totalling $71,000. The driver of the vehicle involved in the accident paid $50,000, and Washoe County, which designed and maintained the road on which the accident occurred, paid $21,000. On the advice of the Osborne firm, Van Cleave released these parties from further liability. The Osborne firm received one-third of these settlements as attorney’s fees, plus its costs, pursuant to a contingency fee contract. After settling with the driver, however, the Osborne firm realized that it had overlooked a potential avenue of relief in the driver’s employer, Gamboni Construction. At the time of the accident, the driver, although in his own car returning from a weekend outing with Van Cleave, was apparently on a short deviation from the personal excursion to check on the status of the construction site where he was employed. Substantial time, effort and expense were thereafter spent on the two appeals referenced below, in determining whether Van Cleave’s release of the driver of the vehicle also served to release the driver’s employer, Gamboni Construction. Although we ultimately decided that Gamboni was not released by virtue of its employee’s discharge, the recovery was jeopardized and the action was delayed for several years, during which Gamboni went bankrupt.

In October of 1985, a dissatisfied Van Cleave replaced the Osborne firm with the firm of Durney & Brennan (“Durney firm”). At this time, causes of action were pending against Gamboni and the manufacturers of the car and the tires involved in the accident. After transferring the case file, the Osborne firm notified the Durney firm pursuant to NRS 18.015 that it claimed an attorney’s lien on any recovery received by Van Cleave.

The Durney firm obtained settlements for Van Cleave of $500,000 from Gamboni (one of Gamboni’s few remaining assets was a $500,000 liability insurance policy) and $10,000 from the automobile manufacturer. 2 The Durney firm forwarded the settlement check to the Osborne firm, which endorsed and returned it to the Durney firm with the condition that the Durney firm set aside all attorney’s fees (one-third of the settlement) and the Osborne firm’s costs ($12,288) pending an appropriate allocation of attorney’s fees. The Durney firm disputed the Osborne firm’s entitlement to any attorney’s fees, but nevertheless agreed to “set aside sufficient monies to satisfy [the] lien if it is ultimately proven to be valid.”

*887 On June 12, 1986, the Osborne firm filed a Motion to Adjudicate and Enforce Attorney’s Lien. The district court ordered the parties to schedule an evidentiary hearing on the motion. Van Cleave thereafter initiated a legal malpractice lawsuit against the Osborne firm for the way it handled her personal injury case. 3 Van Cleave accepted an offer of judgment in connection with the malpractice action, and a consent judgment was entered against the Osborne firm on November 30, 1989 in the amount of $127,098.47. 4 Van Cleave signed a release which stated that the payment was not to be construed as an admission of guilt.

After the resolution of the malpractice action, the Osborne firm began actively pursuing its attorney’s lien. On March 1, 1990, Van Cleave moved for summary judgment in the lien proceeding on the basis that the Osborne firm’s attorney’s lien was not enforceable. After a four-day hearing, the district court determined that the Osborne firm was entitled to thirty-five percent of the one-third contingency fee retained by the Durney firm. Judgment was entered awarding the Osborne firm $55,560.45 in attorney’s fees, plus $12,288.00 in costs. The district court also ordered interest to be paid on those sums at the rate of twelve percent from June 20, 1986 to the date of the judgment. Van Cleave appealed from this judgment. She asserts that the Osborne firm’s attorney’s lien was unenforceable after the consent judgment was entered in the malpractice case. We agree.

Pursuant to the parties’ agreement, the order settling the malpractice case stated, in part, that “[tjhis Judgment shall constitute an adjudication of all claims of the parties in any way arising out of or relating to the subject matter of this case.” Although the Osborne firm contends that the malpractice claim and the attorney’s lien proceeding are wholly different matters, we conclude that both actions are founded upon the same events, and therefore the Osborne firm’s attorney’s lien claim was extinguished upon the entry of the above judgment. The services provided by the Osborne firm are the basis for both the malpractice action and the attorney’s lien, and we cannot logically conclude that the subject matter of the two actions are separate. The interrelatedness of the services performed and the payment expected by an attorney is demonstrated in the principle that “the court in the action in which the attorney’s services were rendered has incidental jurisdiction to resolve disputes between a litigant and his attorney *888 relative to the establishment of an attorney’s lien.” Gordon v. Stewart, 74 Nev. 115, 118, 324 P.2d 234, 236 (1958).

Significantly, the Osborne firm’s counsel was given the opportunity to examine and amend the language of the consent judgment. The Osborne firm’s counsel did, in fact, insert language into the proposed judgment, but neglected to except the attorney’s lien proceeding from the plain language settling all claims between the parties. The failure to do so, we conclude, served to terminate the attorney’s lien action upon entry of the judgment. “A consent judgment should be strictly construed to preserve the bargained for position of the parties.” Beaver v. Kingman, 785 P.2d 998, 1001 (Kan. 1990) (citing Williams v. Vukovich, 720 F.2d 909, 920 (6th Cir. 1983). See also Hohensee v. Chemodurow, 470 P.2d 965 (Mont. 1970) (agreement which purported to settle all claims between disputing parties constituted complete settlement of specified as well as unspecified claims).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
840 P.2d 589, 108 Nev. 885, 1992 Nev. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-cleave-v-osborne-jenkins-gamboa-chtd-nev-1992.