Attorneys’ Liens, Contingency Fee Agreements and Quantum Meruit Recovery – An Illinois Case Note

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In a prior post (http://paulporvaznik.com/tag/retaining-lien), I discussed the common law retaining lien, which allows an attorney to keep a client’s papers and property as security for the payment of past due fees.  Another legal device at a lawyer’s disposal to encourage payment is the statutory attorneys’ lien, codified in Illinois at 770 ILCS 5/1.

Grane v. Methodist Medical Center of Central Illinois, 2015 IL App (3d) 130003-U, considers the attorneys’ lien remedy where a client fires his attorney, hires someone else and later rakes in big bucks in a settlement.

The personal injury plaintiff entered a written contingency fee agreement with a law firm (Law Firm 1) whom he (the plaintiff) later fired before hiring new counsel (Law Firm 2).  Law Firm 1 served a written notice of its attorneys’ lien on the defendant hospital while it still represented plaintiff.

When the suit settled for several million dollars, Law Firm 1 sought to recover pursuant to the 30% recovery contingency fee contract.  The trial court agreed and awarded Law Firm 1 nearly $600K: 30% of the total fee award.  Law Firm 2 and plaintiff appealed.

Held: Reversed.

Q: Why?

A: To collect fees under the Illinois Attorney Lien Act, 770 ILCS 5/1, the attorney must file a petition to adjudicate her lien.  A prerequisite to filing a lien petition is that the attorney must have been hired by the client to assert a claim and the lien must have been “perfected.”

To perfect an attorney lien, the claimant must serve notice in writing of his lien upon the party against whom her client has a claim.  The lien may be served by registered or certified mail.

The lien attaches on the date of service of the statutory notice.  An attorneys’ lien must also be perfected during the time there is an attorney-client relationship. (If the attorney waits until after she’s fired to serve the notice, it’s too late.)

When a client fires a lawyer, the fee agreement signed pre-firing is extinguished and no longer exists.  Once that happens, the lawyer’s recourse is to try and recover under a quantum meruit theory: to seek the reasonable value of her services before she was fired.

The quantum meruit factors an Illinois court considers when deciding a fee award include: (1) the skill and standing of the attorney employed, (2) the nature of the case and difficulty of the questions at issue, (3) the amount and importance of the subject matter, (4) the degree of responsibility involved in the management of the case, (5) the time and labor required, (6) the usual, customary fee in the community, and (7) the benefit flowing to the client.  (¶¶ 19-22).

Since the court awarded fees based on a cancelled contingency fee agreement, the appeals court reversed so that the trial court could award the plaintiff’s its fees under the quantum meruit factors.

Takeaway:

The case’s obvious lesson for lawyers is to Track Your Time.  Even in cases where a client isn’t paying by the hour or where it seems unlikely that a fee dispute is likely to ever crystallize.

By keeping diligent time records, the attorney who is fired before a client gets a hefty settlement can show tangible proof of her services and can quantify the dollar value of them.

Lost Profits and the ‘New Business Rule’ – A Short and Sweet One

Aside from delving into some unique issues that crop up in corporate guaranty suits, Williamson Co. v. Ill-Eagle Enterprises, Ltd., 2015 WL 802250, the case I featured yesterday (http://paulporvaznik.com/business-compulsion-duress-and-guaranties-signed-after-the-underlying-contract/7667) also provides some lost profits essentials adapted to a new(ish) business relationship.

In the case, the home decor designer who vends to large retailers (think Bed Bath & Beyond) countersued against the plaintiff foreign manufacturer for lost profits resulting from defective merchandise shipped by the manufacturer.

The manufacturer moved to dismiss the counterclaim on the basis that the designer’s claimed lost profits were speculative since the designer was a “new business” with a sparse profit history.  The court disagreed and posited some key lost profit rules:

lost profits can be recovered when they’re proven with reasonable certainty – mathematical certainty is not required;

– the plaintiff seeking lost profits must show a reasonable basis for the computation of the claimed damages;

– damages must be shown with reasonable certainty and shown to have been contemplated of the defaulting party at the time the contract was entered into;

– expert testimony is sometimes considered in a lost profits claim but isn’t required;

– the “New Business Rule” (NBR) precludes lost profits recovery for a new or unestablished business since it lacks a financial track record with which to gauge future profits;

– Illinois extends the NBR to both new businesses and new products;

– courts generally permit discovery on lost profits damages before deeming them too speculative;

– If after discovery, the plaintiff can’t show an established market for a given product or business, a lost profits claim will fail.

Here, the plaintiff designer established enough of a track record to permit discovery on the issue of lost profits.  There was a five-year relationship between the wall furnishings  manufacturer and designer wall furnishings as well as a multi-year history of contracts the designer had with “big box” retailers.

As a consequence, the court held it was premature to dismiss the designer’s counterclaim without allowing the designer to take oral and written discovery to support the damages claim.

Afterwords:

The case presents a useful summary of Illinois lost profits basics in the context of a high-dollar/high-sophistication dispute between two commercial entities.

The New Business Rule (NBR) applies to new businesses as well as new products.  However, despite the newness of a given company or enterprise, courts will allow discovery on the lost profits question.  The longer the parties’ contractual relationship, the less likely the NBR will defeat a lost profits claim.

 

“But, But I’m So Busy!!” (What To Do When You’re Appointed Counsel in Federal Civil Rights Case – A 10-Step Guide)

I had barely finished congratulating myself on my Federal Trial Bar acceptance when I received a cryptic email from the Northern District’s electronic filing system. The late Judge Hibbler (perhaps the nicest judge I’ve ever been before) had appointed me to represent a pro se plaintiff – an Illinois inmate – in a Section 1983 action against Illinois prison officials and a private health company that staffed the prison.  The plaintiff alleged the defendants were deliberately indifferent to his serious medical condition.

Prior to this, my knowledge of civil rights cases consisted mainly of what I saw on bad Lifetime movies. (Redundant?)  I had a vague memory of Brian Dennehy and Jaclyn Smith frantically trying to secure justice for someone wronged by the system.  (Not to get too tangential here, but is there any Lifetime movie that doesn’t star one or both of them? Tom Skerritt and Valerie Bertinelli (of “One Day At A Time”/Eddie VH fame) seem to figure prominently in the network’s offerings, too.)

Not only had I never litigated a civil rights case, but my personal injury suit experience was correspondingly anemic.  I’d handled a few “soft-tissue-fender-benders” sporadically through the years but that was it.

I also had taken a grand total of one doctor deposition back around the Y2K  era.  All I remember from that painful experience was lots of stammering in front of a decorated surgeon whose ultra-plush office was a shrine to All Things Diploma.  This was going to be uncharted terrain in every way.

Here’s what I did:

1/ Legal Research: I first reviewed the handwritten complaint and the judge’s screening order for clues as to what allegations are necessary to sustain a deliberate indifference claim.  I then researched the pleading and proof elements of section 1983 (42 U.S.C. § 1983) deliberate indifference cases.

Luckily, in addition to Westlaw and Lexis, there are a ton of Internet resources that provide useful primers on Section 1983 suits.  The Prisoner Litigation handbook (http://www.ilnd.uscourts.gov/home/_assets/_documents/2002%20prison%20litigation%20handbook.pdf) also proved valuable.

My legal research focused on the case annotations to the Section 1983 statute and the Prisoner Litigation Reform Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e (1994 ed. & Supp. II).   My 7th Circuit and Northern District (IL) case law research honed in on “deliberate indifference” cases.  There are many.

Some of the stand-out features of deliberate indifference suits include:

No vicarious liability.  If you are suing a prison official, for instance, you must allege specific conduct that he/she participated in.  It’s not enough to say that he/she is the principal of agent staff doctors.  You must allege the official’s active participation in the civil rights deprivation (here, wilfully ignoring a serious medical condition).

– Unconstitutional custom or practice.  If you sue the private contracting entity (prisons often contract with private third parties for medical services), you have to allege an unconstitutional custom or practice – namely, a widespread practice of ignoring serious inmate medical problems – for the entity to be liable for the acts of its agents;

Med Mal “plus“: A colorable deliberate indifference claim requires allegations and proof that go beyond medical malpractice.  Negligence isn’t enough and neither is a difference of treatment opinion. (“I think the staff Dr. should have done x, y, z instead of only x and y.”)

It’s also not enough to make out a civil rights claim to show that another medical provider would have treated the inmate differently or that the prison medical staff was negligent.  The law requires specific evidence of intentional conduct, recklessness or a knowing failure to act in the face of a clear duty to do so;

Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies:  A biggie.  The Prisoner Litigation Reform Act (42 U.S.C. ¶ 1997(e)(a)) and the Illinois Administrative Code (20 Ill.Admin.Code ¶ 504.810(b), 850) require an inmate to go through an elaborate grievance procedure where he first submits a claim to a grievance counselor all the way up to an Illinois Dept. of Corrections Administrative Law Judge with some stops in between.

A failure to exhaust the statutory grievance procedure will result in dismissal of a complaint as premature.  I was lucky in the sense that my client was well-versed in the intricacies of the prisoner grievance procedure and he followed the procedures to the letter.  Others aren’t so fortunate.   I see many dispositive motions filed by Section 1983 defendants based on a prisoner’s failure to exhaust his administrative remedies.

Pacer – the Federal Pacer site also proved valuable. (see https://www.pacer.gov). I can’t tell you how many times I was able to view summary judgment motions and responses filed in deliberate indifference cases that had similar facts and personnel to my case.  Reviewing these on-line briefs gave me insight into what was to come as well as what arguments were likely to survive summary judgment.

After researching and once I was clear on the pleading and factual elements, I moved for leave to amend the complaint.

2/ Helpers and Guides: After I filed the amended complaint, I was contacted by Jim Chapman – a prisoners’ rights attorney who contracts with the Northern District.  He provided me some invaluable prison litigation literature and other resources.

I also attended an all day workshop geared towards pro bono counsel in prisoner suits.  These workshops are held once a month (I believe) at the Dirksen building and are largely attended by pro bono appointed counsel.  Alan Mills of the Uptown People’s Law Center also provided valuable insight and counsel.

Also: if you have an “in” at a large firm, many of them have pro bono departments devoted exclusively to cases like Section 1983/prisoner suits.    Chances are your “Biglaw” counterpart  will have handled a case against the same defendants you have sued.  One person in particular was extremely helpful in sharing deposition outlines, etc.

3/ Prison Litigation Coordinator: A Valuable Liaison. I then contacted the prison litigation coordinator and arranged for a telephone conference with my client.  Everything must be in writing.  You send some proposed dates for a phone call with your client and the coordinator will return a fax to you with the date and time.  You then wait for the (collect) call on the appointed date and time

4/ Client contact (phone): On the scheduled call date, I fielded the collect call, introduced myself and discussed the case.  I asked my client to send me everything – disciplinary reports, grievance documents and medical records

5/ Client contact (in-person visit) I also found it beneficial to meet in person. Again, I went through the prison litigation coordinator to arrange these visits.  Once there, I met with the client and discussed strategy.  I met with my client two more times; once to prepare for his deposition and another time to prepare for trial.

6/ Discovery: From there, the case proceeds like any other civil case – with written discovery, motion practice and depositions.  I subpoenaed medical records  and produced my client for his deposition, and deposed several defendants and their expert witnesses.

District Court Fund Regulations 1-3 allowed me to offset some of the expert witness expenses the case required.  (http://www.ilnd.uscourts.gov/home/clerksoffice/rules/admin/pdf-orders/General%20Order%2011-0003%20-%20Local%20Rules%20Appendix%20E.pdf); LR 83.36.

These Regulations provide that appointed counsel can seek prepayment of litigation expenses of up to $3,000.  I filed a motion for reimbursement of funds up to this amount and presented it to the court. From there, I took the order to the Clerk’s office and they produced a reimbursement check about a week later.

I also located and named an expert of my own and had him prepare a written report supporting my client’s theory of the case.

7/ Court Hearings: Some judges will bend over backwards to help you when they realize you are appointed counsel.  For others, it won’t matter: You will be held to the same deadlines as your opponent.  So, expect the “look at me! I’m altruistic” excuse for missing a deadline to fall on deaf ears.

8/ Settlement Conference: Expect a referral to a Magistrate judge for a settlement conference.  My client attended by video feed.  The Magistrate did a good job of outlining the strengths and weaknesses to my client directly and discussed the merits of settlement.

9/ Summary Judgment: If the settlement conference doesn’t resolve the case, and mine didn’t,  FRCP 56 and Local Rule 56 take center stage here – just like any other case.  The movant must supply a statement of facts that dictate summary judgment while the respondent must offer its own version of facts that create a triable question of fact.

10/ Trial. We survived summary judgment and the case went to trial.  Jury selection took a long time.

I wanted jurors whom I thought might harbor some animosity towards penal institutions; either based on their personal experiences or those of close friends or family members. The defense, of course, wanted jurors who fit the profile of someone who espoused respect for authority and correctional institutions. There were multiple jurors that fit each demographic and each side made numerous challenges for cause.

Then, just like that, it was time for opening statements.

Afterwords

We settled on day one of the trial.  My client was relieved and very appreciative that he had someone in his corner fighting for him after a lifetime of experiencing quite the opposite.

So – after nearly four years of sometimes acrid litigation with a tough defense firm opponent, I ask myself, Would I Want To Do It Again? Probably not.  The reason is purely economic.  Litigating a civil rights case involving multiple doctors and experts is simply cost-prohibitive; especially if you are a solo practitioner or work for a small firm.  Yes, you can recover fees if you win, but the odds aren’t in your favor on that score.

I saw firsthand the disparity between large law firms and smaller ones in pro bono litigation.  The former have the resources and infrastructure to spare no expense (e.g. they can fly across the country taking depositions) while the latter smaller firms are forced to litigate on a shoestring budget. But that’s a topic for another time.

Putting the financial issue aside, I can say that my appointed counsel case was rewarding both professionally and personally.  It forced me out of my Precious Comfort Zone and I felt I truly helped someone.  The experience tested my limits in terms of legal procedure, substantive law, and logistics and is one I won’t soon forget.