Watson v. Gibson Capital, L.L.C.

2008 OK 56, 187 P.3d 735, 2008 Okla. LEXIS 60, 2008 WL 2439998
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 17, 2008
Docket103,997
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2008 OK 56 (Watson v. Gibson Capital, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Gibson Capital, L.L.C., 2008 OK 56, 187 P.3d 735, 2008 Okla. LEXIS 60, 2008 WL 2439998 (Okla. 2008).

Opinion

OPALA, J.

11 The dispositive issue on certiorari is whether a client, while represented by counsel of record, may file papers in an active case in which he is a party without the signature of his lawyer. We answer in the negative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

{2 Brent Watson (Watson) brought an action on 22 March 2005 against David Gibson and Gibson Capital LL.C. (collectively called Gibson) for damages to his property. He alleged that Gibson caused a fire which destroyed his property then stored on premises leased from Gibson. At the time the petition was filed (and at all other times relevant here), Watson was represented by counsel of record who had entered an appearance in the case.

T3 On 17 March 2006 Watson signed and filed a dismissal of the action with prejudice. Ten days later Watson's counsel of record brought a motion to vacate the client's dismissal, invoking the provisions of 12 0.8$.2001 *737 § 1081. According to counsel's motion, (a) Watson suffered severe emotional distress and psychological injuries caused by the destruction of his business; (b) he filed a dismissal with prejudice without the consent of counsel and without appreciating the consequences of his action; and (c) under the terms of 12 0.98.2001 § 1031.1 the court has unlimited power to vacate or modify the plaintiff's act within 80 days of its filing. Gibson responded that the motion was without merit because (a) there was no judgment to vacate; (b) it was Watson, not the trial court, who signed and filed the dismissal; and (c) in the absence of a judge-signed judgment or other court order, the terms of 12 0.98.2001 § 10831 are inapplicable to the proceeding for vacation of Watson's dismissal.

[ 4 At the hearing on the motion to vacate, testimony was introduced as to Watson's lack of mental competency at the time he filed the dismissal. Upon consideration of the witnesses' testimony and the parties' briefs, the trial court vacated the dismissal which had been filed by the plaintiff alone, acting without being joined by his lawyer. The Court of Civil Appeals (COCA) reversed the trial court's order. According to COCA, the terms of 12 0.8.2001 §$ 1031.1 2 do not apply to this case because there was here no terminal decision entered by the trial court. COCA notes that Watson's dismissal was made pursuant to the terms of 12 0.S.Supp. 2004 § 684, 3 which authorize a party's termination of suit without an order of the court.

If

THE ARGUMENTS ON CERTIORARI

T5 Watson asserts that COCA erred in concluding the trial court lacked jurisdiction either under 12 00.98.2001 § 1081 or § 1031.1 to vacate the dismissal. According to Watson, the trial court (a) had virtually unlimited power under § 1081.1 to vacate or modify a dismissal within 30 days of its filing and (b) had the authority to view the dismissal with prejudice as a nullity since it was done by a represented party without the joinder of his attorney of record.

T6 Gibson counters COCA correctly concluded that (a) Watson, although represented by counsel, was authorized by the terms of 12 0.S$.8upp.2004 § 684 to sign and file a voluntary dismissal of his own lawsuit and (b) the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction by setting aside Watson's own voluntary dismissal. According to Gibson, nothing in the text of 12 0.8.8upp.2004 § 2011(A) 4 deprives a represented party of the power voluntarily to dismiss its own action. Gibson maintains that because Watson voluntarily terminated the lawsuit, there was no terminal trial court's decision which could trigger its § 1081.1 authority to order a vacation. Watson simply filed his own termination of litigation. According to Gibson, the cases *738 relied upon by Watson are not in conflict with COCA's pronouncement. 5

XII

COMMON-LAW NORMS OF INTERACTION BY AN ATTORNEY WITH A CLIENT

17 We are committed to the common-law norms of interaction by an attorney with a client and to the duties each owes to the other. 6 As a general rule a party who is represented by counsel of record 7 stands deprived of power to act as his own attorney in the litigation. 8 While a party may, at his own election, appear either in person or by counsel of record, no litigant may do both by acting as a party and a lawyer while having a counsel of record in the litigated case.

18 Clients possess unlimited power to discharge a lawyer. 9 The client who wants to take over a lawsuit from the lawyer must first (a) discharge the counsel of record by a document on file in court and then (b) proceed independently (pro se) as an unrepresented party. But while the lawyer continues to hold the status as counsel of record, it is the lawyer alone who holds the position of magister litis-the master of the client's litigation. 10 Anterior to the lawyer's release from employment a represented client may not, without the lawyer's consent, dismiss his or her case then pending in the court. In short, judges cannot act on requests pressed before them by represented clients alone, and represented parties cannot act in court sans their lawyers of record.

19 The general rule that a party who is represented by an attorney of record will not be recognized by the court as an actor in propria persona in the conduct of his own case applies with equal force to the filing of documents. 11 While representing a client in court a lawyer has exclusive authority to file papers for the client in the case in which the lawyer appears as coun *739 sel of record. A client-filed paper, to be effective, must either bear the lawyer's signature or be preceded by the filing in the case of a document that discharges the lawyer and gives him (or her) notice of the employment's termination. The suit's dismissal under consideration here was facially flawed and hence utterly ineffective. This is so because it was filed solely by a client represented by counsel of record without having the lawyer join him in the document.

110 This broad common-law rule, which stands confined to forensic representation, 12 has never been repealed by an Oklahoma statute. None of the statutes pressed by the parties in contest deals with the precise issue here-the extent of authority, if any, a client represented by counsel of record may continue to exercise in court proceedings without having the approval of his lawyer of record.

111 The plaintiff's facially ineffective dismissal, which constitutes no impediment of record to the plaintiff's prosecution of his claim, was correctly vacated by the trial court. 13

IV

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 OK 56, 187 P.3d 735, 2008 Okla. LEXIS 60, 2008 WL 2439998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-gibson-capital-llc-okla-2008.