SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-0915-00T2
DELLA E. STRAUBINGER AND
BARBARA GREGOIRE,
Plaintiffs,
v.
MARGARET KRELL SCHMITT
AND CHARLES SCHMITT,
Defendants.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued December 11, 2001 - Decided March 5,
2002
Before Judges Skillman, Carchman and Wells.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Hudson County, Docket
No. L-7063-98.
Harvey Levine argued the cause for appell-
ant/cross-respondent Levine & Wallerstein
(Levine & Wallerstein, attorneys; Martin B.
Wallerstein, on the brief).
Joseph P. Kelly argued the cause for
respondent/cross-appellant Doyle & Brady
(Doyle & Brady, attorneys; Nelson A. Miranda,
on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
WELLS, J.A.D.
The law firm of Levine and Wallerstein (Wallerstein),
attorneys for plaintiff Della Straubinger, appeals from a judgment
of the Law Division, Hudson County, which awarded it one-third of
a contingent fee generated by a personal injury recovery secured by
Straubinger and two-thirds to the law firm of Doyle and Brady
(Brady) who formerly represented Straubinger. Brady cross appeals,
asserting that the trial judge erred by failing to follow
established criteria for the award to Wallerstein.
The underlying facts of the dispute are not materially
contested. On March 10, 1998, plaintiffs Della Straubinger and
Barbara Gregoire were injured in a two-car accident with defendant
Margaret Krell Schmitt. Straubinger and Gregoire were the driver
and passenger, respectively, of one car while Schmitt was the
operator of the other car. Apparently, Schmitt was intoxicated and
turned left in front of Straubinger causing the accident.
Straubinger and Gregoire both retained Brady to represent them
in pursuing a claim against Schmitt. Straubinger retained the firm
first, while Gregoire followed shortly thereafter. Straubinger
signed a contingent fee agreement on March 17, 1998. In September
1998, Brady filed a complaint on behalf of both Straubinger and
Gregoire in Superior Court, Hudson County, naming as defendants
Margaret Krell Schmitt as driver and Charles Schmitt as owner of
the car which collided with Straubinger. On July 22, 1999, the
case proceeded to arbitration, resulting in awards of $175,000 for
Straubinger and $125,000 for Gregoire. The arbitrator determined
that Schmitt was 100 percent liable. A trial de novo notice was
promptly filed by Straubinger and Gregoire.
Dissatisfied with Brady's services, on January 4, 2000,
Straubinger discharged the firm and retained Wallerstein to handle
her case. Straubinger certified that she felt she was not being
given proper representation. More specifically, she was upset by
the fact that the arbitration occurred before her August 1999 neck
surgery; she felt unprepared for both the arbitration hearing and
her deposition; she claimed that Brady did not keep her informed of
the status of her case; and, her telephone calls were not returned.
At a settlement conference on June 13, 2000, in front of Judge
Gallipoli, Straubinger, now represented by Wallerstein, settled for
$196,342.15 while Gregoire, still represented by Brady, received
$98,000. A fee dispute arose between the two law firms. On July
26, 2000, Judge Gallipoli entered a consent order with regard to
the lien for counsel fees. He ordered that $68,225.99 of the
settlement proceeds which constituted the contingent fee and
litigation costs attributable to Straubinger's recovery be placed
in escrow pending further order of the court. The order also set
a date for a plenary hearing before another judge.
After hearing on August 28, 2000, the judge rendered his
decision by letter opinion on September 21, 2000. The judge
awarded two-thirds of the counsel fees to Brady and one-third to
Wallerstein. Wallerstein filed its Notice of Appeal of that
decision on October 11, 2000. Brady timely cross-appealed.
During the course of the hearing on August 28, 2000, Brady
testified that he had discussed with Gregoire a potential conflict
of interest in representing both her and Straubinger, as passenger
and driver of the vehicle. Gregoire told him that she did not wish
to sue her friend Straubinger. The evidence showed that Schmitt
was intoxicated, and the question of liability was very clear to
Brady. However, Brady never discussed the issue of any conflicts
with Straubinger. There was also no discussion with either client
of the potential for conflict arising out of the fact that their
combined injury claims could exceed the single accident limit of
$300,000 provided by Schmitt's automobile insurance policy. No
conflict waiver forms were signed.
The judge found the conflicts of interest were
"inconsequential," and applied the factors for allocating a
contingent fee between two law firms discussed in LaMantia v.
Durst,
234 N.J. Super. 534 (App. Div.), cert. denied,
118 N.J. 181
(1989). The judge concluded Brady had done the bulk of the work on
the case and thus awarded Brady two-thirds of the Straubinger fee
and Wallerstein one-third.
We agree in part and disagree in part with the judge's ruling
and remand for a further hearing. It is fairly well established
that an attorney's violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct
(RPC) in connection with the representation of a client may
jeopardize that attorney's right to collect fees for services
rendered. In Cohen v. Radio-Electronics Officers Union,
146 N.J. 140, 155-56 (1996), the Supreme Court stated:
[A]n attorney's freedom to contract with a
client is subject to the constraints of
ethical
considerations and [the Supreme
Court's] supervision....
Agreements between attorneys and clients
concerning the client-lawyer relationship
generally are enforceable, provided that the
agreements satisfy both the general
requirements for contracts and the special
requirements of professional ethics. An
otherwise enforceable agreement between an
attorney and client would be invalid if it
runs afoul of ethical rules governing that
relationship.
[citations omitted].
At issue in Cohen was whether a one-year renewable retainer
agreement between an attorney and client was enforceable. Supra,
146 N.J. at 144-45. The retainer agreement provided that the
client had to give the attorney six-months notice before
termination. While the Court determined the agreement burdened the
right of the client to discharge the attorney, the Court held that
the attorney was entitled to recover in quantum meruit for the
reasonable value of the services provided. Id. at 164.
One panel of this court has, however, denied the right to
recover fees under quantum meruit because the law firm violated RPC
1.5(c), which requires the attorney to obtain a written retainer
agreement in contingent fee cases. Estate of Pinter v. McGee,
293 N.J. Super. 119, 126-28 (App. Div. 1996). Other decided cases have
permitted the recovery of fees on the basis of quantum meruit
notwithstanding the failure to obtain a written contingent fee
agreement. Starkey, Kelly, Blaney & White v. Estate of Nicolaysen,
340 N.J. Super. 104, 121-25 (App. Div.) certif. granted
169 N.J. 608 (2001); Glick v. Barclays De Zoete Wedd, Inc.,
300 N.J. Super. 299, 309-13 (App. Div. 1997); In re Estate of Travarelli,
283 N.J.
Super. 431, 440 (App. Div. 1995). We cite the above by way of
example only because in this case it is clear that Brady secured
written contingent fee agreements from both Straubinger and
Gregoire.
In this case the issue is the proper apportionment of a
contingent fee between two firms which succeeded one another during
the course of a client's case, the first of which firms had
potential conflicts of interest arising out of its representation
of another client in the same case. RPC 1.7(a) prohibits a
conflicting representation absent the consent of both clients when
the representation of one client would be directly adverse to the
other. RPC 1.7(b) prohibits a lawyer from representing a client if
that representation may be materially limited by the lawyer's
responsibility to another client, absent consent of the client.
Accordingly, in our view, the court faces a three part task in
this matter. The judge is required to determine, first, whether
there is a violation of any RPC; second, if found, the judge should
determine what the nature, extent and degree of the violation is;
and three, the judge must conclude what impact the violation has on
the award of counsel fees guided by the considerations emerging out
of the second task. In performing these tasks, it must be kept in
mind that the Superior Court does not exercise any power to
discipline attorneys. That jurisdiction lies exclusively in the
Supreme Court under R. 1:20-1 to -23. The Superior Court's role in
these matters is not regulatory or punitive. Its role is to
resolve the counsel fee dispute and to consider and weigh any
violations of the RPCs which may impact on the award of counsel
fees. When this analysis is complete, the judge must then
determine whether an award is warranted and, if so, how much is
reasonable under all of the circumstances.
In this case, it appears that the judge found conflicts of
interest but determined that they were "inconsequential". He thus,
in effect, found that any violation of the RPCs had no impact on
the allocation to Brady of a portion of the agreed contingent fee.
We initially agree with the judge that one source of potential
conflict arising out of the representation of both driver and
passenger was not, in this instance, of serious moment even though
Brady should have discussed the conflict with both clients and
obtained their written consent. RPC 1:7(a). One attorney may
represent both the driver and a passenger as plaintiffs in a motor
vehicle case provided it is clear that the other driver was
completely responsible for the accident and the attorney complies
with all of the disclosure and consent requirements. Whitman v.
Estate of Whitman,
259 N.J. Super. 256 (Law Div. 1992); DeBolt v.
Parker,
234 N.J. Super. 471, 479 (Law Div. 1988); Michels, New
Jersey Attorney Ethics, §19:2-1(e)(3) (2002).
In the present case, the record supports Brady's judgment that
liability rested solely with Schmitt. In addition, Gregoire was
advised of the potential conflict, consented to it and indicated no
wish to sue Straubinger. Finally, the judge pointed out that Brady
had consulted defense counsel and discovered that he, "an
experienced defense lawyer representing Ms. Schmitt analyzed the
liability issue the same way as did Mr. Brady, that is, that the
responsibility for the happening of the accident rested solely with
defendant, Schmitt." The fact that the arbitrator determined that
Schmitt was 100 percent liable while fixing plaintiffs' liability
at zero percent also supports the conclusion. Accordingly, we
conclude the judge was correct in determining the potential
conflict arising from representing driver and passenger was not a
factor in apportioning the contingent fee in this case.
However, we cannot subscribe to the judge's view that the
conflict arising out of the claims of Brady's clients, Straubinger
and Gregoire, in Schmitt's single limits insurance coverage was
"inconsequential." The judge mistakenly failed to consider RPC
1.8(g). It provides:
[a] lawyer who represents two or more clients
shall not participate in making an aggregate
settlement of the claims of or against the
clients, . . . unless each client consents
after consultation, including disclosure of
the existence and nature of all the claims or
pleas involved and of the participation of
each person in the settlement.
An "aggregate settlement" includes any attempt to allocate the
recovery of damages among two or more persons out of single limits
insurance coverage. The N.J. Advisory Committee on Professional
Ethics, Comm. Op. 248 (January 25, 1973), has written:
However, if it appears that there is
insufficient or inadequate insurance coverage
by the negligent driver to permit full payment
to both plaintiffs, an attorney should
reconsider his representation of both.
Otherwise, he may be compromising the
interests of one of the plaintiffs to the
advantage of the other, while endeavoring to
settle both claims at once.
Illustrative of the conflict in this case is an event which
occurred after Straubinger engaged Wallerstein. Wallerstein went
to the settlement conference before Judge Gallipolli at which the
case was settled. In attendance, as well, was an attorney from
Brady's office representing Gregoire. Wallerstein described what
happened in his testimony at the plenary hearing on the fee
dispute:
But in any event, [the attorney] was at the
conference and we were talking to Judge
Gallipoli about getting it resolved and then
[the attorney] said well, I -- and I said this
is very strange, I have never tried a case
where the defendants weren't really the
opposition, but another plaintiff was. And
you well, you know, we can try this case and
we can show that your client's injuries
weren't all from the accident and maybe
they're not as bad as they should have been,
at which point the conflict became very, very
apparent.
We hold that as soon as Brady discovered or reasonably should
have discovered that Schmitt had a single limit policy and the
claims of his two clients could, taken together, exceed the
$300,000 policy limit, a conflict arose which required Brady to
disclose the situation to his clients and obtain their consent to
continue his representation of both parties. RPC 1.7(a)(2). He
did neither.
Brady's conflict was clearly more than "inconsequential." The
judge should have determined the nature and extent of the
violation and its impact upon the proper allocation of the fee to
be apportioned between the firms. The initial question is whether
under the circumstances any of the fee should be allocated to
Brady. In the case of violations of the RPCs which materially
affect the value of the services to the client, there should be no
hesitancy to deny fees. The determination is a fact sensitive one
requiring weighing the nature and extent of the violation against
the value of the services rendered and reflecting those
considerations in the award.
If the judge decides that some allocation may be made to
Brady, then the award should reflect that the firms services were
performed under a continuing cloud of conflict that inherently
reduced their value. Brady was, for instance, duty bound to
advocate a recovery for Gregoire which may well have depleted the
balance of the coverage below that required to fairly compensate
Straubinger. We, therefore, fail to see how Brady's conflict could
not have affected the interest of Straubinger at the presentation
of her case at the arbitration. Indeed, once free of the conflict,
Straubinger achieved, through Wallerstein, a higher recovery from
the available coverage than determined by the arbitrator. Since,
addition to work performed, the result achieved is a factor in
considering an award of fees, RPC 1.5(a)(4), we conclude that the
nature and length of Brady's conflict should be a significant
determinant of the amount to which Brady is entitled.
We conclude that in other respects the judge properly applied
the LaMantia criteria and, therefore, find no merit in the cross
appeal. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). We reverse the award of fees as
apportioned by the trial judge. We remand for a rehearing to
determine the proper allocation of the fee in dispute here in light
of this opinion. Matters such as when the conflict arose and what
impact it had on the services performed should be determined.
Those considerations should then be reflected in the ultimate
allocation. We do not retain jurisdiction.