Buckley Towers Condominium, Inc. v. Katzman Garfinkel Rosenbaum, LLP , 519 F. App'x 657 ( 2013 )


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  •            Case: 12-12039    Date Filed: 05/20/2013   Page: 1 of 19
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 12-12039
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:07-cv-22988-RWG
    BUCKLEY TOWERS CONDOMINIUM, INC.,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    ROSENBAUM MOLLENGARDEN JANSSEN & SIRACUSA PLLC,
    Interested Party - Appellee,
    versus
    KATZMAN GARFINKEL ROSENBAUM, LLP,
    Interested Party - Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Florida
    ________________________
    (May 20, 2013)
    Before DUBINA, Chief Judge, BARKETT and FAY, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Case: 12-12039        Date Filed: 05/20/2013        Page: 2 of 19
    This case involves the distribution of a contingency fee among law firms
    when an equity-holding attorney changes law firms multiple times during the
    course of litigating a single matter and the client follows the exiting attorney to
    each new firm. Appellant Katzman Garfinkel Rosenbaum, LLP (“KGR”), appeals
    the district court’s adoption of the magistrate’s Report and Recommendation
    granting in part and denying in part KGR’s motion to enforce a charging lien for
    professional services rendered, limiting the value of KGR’s lien to $894,897. 1
    KGR presents several arguments on appeal for how the court erred in undervaluing
    its lien, including that the district court failed to properly apply Florida case law—
    specifically Frates v. Nichols, 
    167 So. 2d 77
     (Fla. 3d DCA 1964). After reviewing
    the briefs and with the benefit of oral argument, we agree that Frates governs this
    matter, but disagree with KGR’s suggested application of Frates.
    I.      Background
    The underlying claim began when Buckley Towers Condominium, Inc.
    (“Buckley”), suffered significant damage during Hurricane Wilma in October
    2005. Buckley’s insurer, QBE Insurance Corp. (“QBE”), refused payments on the
    claim and, for assistance, Buckley turned to its longtime counsel, Becker &
    Poliakoff, P.A. (“B&P”). In October 2007, Buckley retained B&P on an hourly
    fee basis, and B&P filed the underlying complaint in November 2007. On April
    1
    We note that Becker & Poliakoff, P.A. (“B&P”), also appealed its recovery of $681,063 under
    the charging lien it filed in the present matter, but B&P settled its claim and withdrew its appeal.
    2
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    17, 2008, B&P and Buckley changed their fee arrangement and B&P agreed to
    represent Buckley on a contingency fee basis. Attorney Daniel Rosenbaum—an
    equity shareholder at B&P— led the litigation team that handled the Buckley
    litigation.
    On August 4, 2008, Rosenbaum left B&P to form the new firm Katzman,
    Garfinkel & Rosenbaum, LLP (“KGR”). Buckley followed Rosenbaum, signing a
    contingency fee agreement with KGR on August 26, 2008, and B&P then filed a
    notice of a charging lien with the district court. KGR completed the remaining
    pre-trial proceedings and represented Buckley through a 10-day jury trial. On May
    14, 2009, the district court entered a final judgment of over $24 million in
    Buckley’s favor. QBE appealed the final judgment and KGR remained counsel
    through briefing on the appeal.
    In March 2010, Rosenbaum again switched firms, leaving KGR to form
    Rosenbaum, Mollengarden, Janssen & Siracusa, PLLC (“RMJS”). Again, Buckley
    followed Rosenbaum to the new firm, signing a contingency fee agreement with
    RMJS on April 12, 2010. RMJS represented Buckley at oral argument. On
    December 12, 2010, this Court affirmed in part and vacated in part the final
    judgment, affirming the actual cost value damages of over $11 million.
    3
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    On Buckley’s motion, the district court entered a partial amended final
    judgment 2 in the amount of $12,035,449 on March 28, 2011. Thereafter, KGR
    filed its notice of a charging lien, and the court ordered the disputed funds be
    deposited in the court’s registry. QBE issued two checks, one to Buckley and the
    other to the court’s registry to cover the amount contested by the attorneys’
    charging liens. Prior to Buckley endorsing QBE’s check, Buckley terminated its
    relationship with RMJS and RMJS filed its notice of a charging lien.
    More relevant to the issues before this Court, B&P, KGR, and RMJS all
    moved to enforce their charging liens. After reviewing the law firms’ motions,
    responses, replies, supplemental filings, and exhibits on the record, as well as
    holding a hearing on the matter, the magistrate issued a Report and
    Recommendation (“R&R”). The magistrate recommended that the court exercise
    its ancillary jurisdiction and found that RMJS should receive its 38.5%
    contingency fee from the partial final judgment, less the quantum meruit of B&P
    and KGR. 3 In determining the quantum meruit award for B&P and KGR, the
    magistrate first looked to the fees awarded in Buckley’s previously granted motion
    for attorneys’ fees. The magistrate found those fees adequately compensated the
    law firms for the actual value of their services and recommended KGR receive
    2
    A portion of the appeal remained pending until the Florida Supreme Court resolved two
    certified questions.
    3
    The parties do not contest the application of Florida law or the total fee award, only the
    allocation of that total fee among the law firms.
    4
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    $894,897.00 and B&P receive $681,063.00 in fees. The magistrate valued the total
    fee award at $4,633,646.86; thus, RMJS was awarded $3,057,687.88. The district
    court affirmed and adopted the R&R in its entirety.
    Both KGR and B&P appealed the fee award; however, B&P dismissed its
    appeal after settling its dispute for $1.3 million.4 On appeal, KGR argues the
    district court failed to properly apply Florida law and erred in its distribution of the
    fees.
    II.   Standard of Review
    “The charging lien is an equitable right to have costs and fees due an
    attorney for services in the suit secured to him in the judgment or recovery in that
    particular suit.” Sinclair, Louis, Siegel, Heath, Nussbaum & Zavertnik, P.A. v.
    Baucom, 
    428 So. 2d 1383
    , 1384 (Fla. 1983). However, a charging lien is
    contractual in nature and in order for a charging lien to be imposed, there must be a
    contract between the attorney and client. See, e.g., 
    id. at 1385
    . This Court
    “reviews a trial court’s award of attorneys’ fees for abuse of discretion. However,
    a trial court’s interpretation of a contract is a matter of law subject to a de novo
    standard of review.” US Acquisition, LLC v. Tabas, Freedman, Soloff, Miller &
    4
    B&P and RMJS’s settlement agreement was approved by the district court and comprised of
    the $681,063 awarded in the R&R, and an additional $618,937 of the fees awarded to RMJS.
    Buckley Towers Condo, Inc. v. QBE Ins. Corp., No. 07-22988-civ (S.D. Fla. Aug. 16, 2012)
    (order to partially release funds held in court registry).
    5
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    Brown, P.A., 
    87 So. 3d 1229
    , 1234 (Fla. 4th DCA 2012) (internal quotation and
    citations omitted).
    III.   Analysis
    When a party substitutes counsel of record in the midst of litigation, the
    initial counsel of record is generally entitled to the fees earned during its period of
    representation. When the initial counsel of record agrees to take the case on a
    contingency fee basis, the determination of the fees earned becomes more
    complicated. Calculating the fees earned becomes even more complex when the
    new counsel of record has broken away from the initial counsel of record and the
    client chooses to follow the exiting attorney to the new firm. In the instant matter,
    we are presented with the unique situation of the client choosing to follow an
    attorney that twice exited the firm representing the client in the midst of litigation.
    To still further complicate the matter, the exiting attorney held an equity share in
    both of the firms that he exited.
    A.
    The law in Florida relating to a firm’s right to contingency fees earned after
    the attorney-client contract is terminated varies depending on the relationship
    between the initial firm and the subsequent firm representing the client. When
    there is no connection between the two firms, the initial firm is entitled to a
    quantum meruit award, limited by any agreement to a maximum fee award. See,
    6
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    e.g., Rosenberg v. Levin, 
    409 So. 2d 1016
    , 1021 (Fla. 1982) (holding “an attorney
    employed under a valid contract who is discharged without cause before the
    contingency has occurred . . . can recover only the reasonable value of his services
    rendered prior to discharge, limited by the maximum contract fee.”). When an
    associate attorney at the initial firm exits the firm and the client follows the
    associate to a new firm, the initial firm is also entitled to this limited quantum
    meruit award. See, e.g., Searcy, Denney, Scarola, Barnhart & Shipley, P.A. v.
    Poletz, 
    652 So. 2d 366
    , 368-69 (Fla. 1995) (relying on Rosenberg to determine that
    a simple lodestar calculation is insufficient in determining the initial firm’s
    quantum meruit award). However, when a partner exits the initial firm and the
    client follows, the initial firm is entitled to the entire contingency fee, less the
    former partner’s partnership share. Frates, 
    167 So. 2d at 82
     (holding fees were
    assets of the initial firm and the former partner is only “entitled to receive his
    partnership share . . . of the net fee in each such case.”).
    RMJS questions the present applicability of Frates, referring to the case as
    an outdated ruling. Yet, RMJS fails to cite to any case law in support of this
    proposition, relying instead on the Revised Uniform Partnership Act (“RUPA”)
    and Florida Rules of Professional Responsibility. This Court finds no case law
    overturning the Frates decision, and does not find that Florida’s adoption of RUPA
    significantly affects the precedent set forth in Frates.
    7
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    In Frates, the court was faced with a situation where a partner in a law firm
    exited the firm and took with him ten ongoing negligence cases of clients of the
    former firm, eight of which resulted in fees. 
    Id. at 79
    . Finding that the partnership
    agreement failed to provide for the situation of a withdrawing partner completing
    some of the pending cases, the court looked to common law and partnership law
    principles to determine the matter. 
    Id. at 81-82
    . One of the tenets of partnership
    law relied on by the court is that “a law partner in dissolution owes a duty to his
    old firm to wind up the old firm’s pending business, and that he is not entitled to
    any extra compensation therefor.” 
    Id. at 80
     (footnote omitted). The court held that
    the “cases were assets of the old firm being wound up by [the withdrawing partner]
    for them . . . .” 
    Id. at 82
     (footnote omitted). Thus, the withdrawing partner was
    entitled to his partnership share of the fees and the remaining fees were owed to the
    firm. 
    Id.
    Effective in 1996, Florida’s legislature amended the state’s partnership law
    to adopt a substantial portion of RUPA. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 620.81001
    , et seq.;
    Larmoyeux v. Montgomery, 
    963 So. 2d 813
    , 819 (Fla. 4th DCA 2007). A key
    change introduced by RUPA is that partnerships are not automatically dissolved
    when a partner withdraws. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 620.8601
    (1); Unif. P’Ship Act § 601,
    8
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    cmt. 1 (1997); 5 Larmoyeux, 
    963 So. 2d at 819
    . Further, under RUPA, partners are
    “not entitled to remuneration for services performed for the partnership, except for
    reasonable compensation for services rendered in winding up the business of the
    partnership.” 
    Fla. Stat. § 620.8401
    (8) (emphasis added). Importantly, the uniform
    comments state “[t]he exception is not intended to apply in the hypothetical
    winding up that takes place if there is a buyout under Article 7.” Unif. P’Ship Act
    § 401, cmt. 9 (1997). Finally, under RUPA, upon a partner’s dissociation, the
    partner’s duties of loyalty and care “continue only with regard to matters arising
    and events occurring before the partner’s dissociation . . . .” 
    Fla. Stat. § 620.8603
    (2)(c). 6
    While the adoption of RUPA made significant changes to the partnership
    law of Florida, we do not see that these changes detract from the premises of
    Frates. The commentary to RUPA makes clear that its enactment did not change
    the existing law as it relates to the fiduciary duties of a withdrawing partner.
    Moreover, RUPA still supports the premise that partners are not entitled to
    5
    Sections in Florida’s RUPA are consistently numbered with RUPA, so that Florida Statutes
    section 620.8601 corresponds with the Uniform Partnership Act section 601. However,
    subsections under Florida’s RUPA begin with numerals while RUPA begins subsections with
    letters, so that Florida Statutes section 620.8401(8) corresponds with Uniform Partnership Act
    section 401(h).
    6
    The uniform comments clarify a partner’s fiduciary duties upon dissociation and that “[n]o
    change from the current law is intended.” Unif. P’Ship Act § 603, cmt. 2 (1997). The
    commentary goes on to provide an example of a partner leaving a brokerage firm, confirming
    that the withdrawing partner “may immediately compete with the firm for new clients, but must
    exercise care in completing on-going client transactions and must account to the firm for any fees
    received from the old clients on account of those transactions.” Id. (emphasis added).
    9
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    additional remuneration during a partner’s dissociation. In fact, the example
    provided in the uniform commentary clearly supports the continuation of the
    Frates rule by stating that dissociated partners must account to the partnership for
    any fees from ongoing client transactions that are received after dissociation.
    While it is clear that nothing in RUPA overturns the ruling in Frates, we must still
    determine if Frates is applicable or controlling in the present matter.
    B.
    To resolve whether Frates applies to the present matter, we must determine
    if Frates applies equally to law firms that choose a professional corporation, as
    opposed to a partnership, as their business entity. This is because the initial law
    firm representing Buckley was B&P, a professional corporation. We do not
    believe Florida courts would allow attorneys to shirk fiduciary duties simply by
    choosing an alternate business entity for their law firm.
    When determining a lawyer’s fiduciary duties, Florida law generally does
    not distinguish between lawyers in partnerships and those in professional
    corporations. The Florida Rules of Professional Conduct do not distinguish
    between these business entities as to the applicability of responsibilities of partners
    as supervisory lawyers, Fla. R. Prof. Conduct 4-5.1, cmt., or the applicability of
    duties owed to clients and procedures for lawyers to exit law firms. Fla. R. Prof.
    Conduct 4-5.8. Moreover, the Florida Supreme Court has stated
    10
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    we approved the practice of law in a corporate form subject to the
    express recognition that under the common law, a lawyer who renders
    professional services owes a duty of care regardless of the fact that the
    lawyer is an associate or partner in a business entity that contracts to
    provide professional services to the injured party.
    Moransais v. Heathman, 
    744 So. 2d 973
    , 978 (Fla. 1999), receded from on other
    grounds, Tiara Condo Ass’n, Inc. v. Marsch & McLennan Cos., Inc., 
    2013 WL 828003
    , -- So. 3d -- (Fla. Mar. 7, 2013).
    Further, the Second Circuit, applying a New York law similar to Frates,
    found the fiduciary duties owed by a partner withdrawing from a partnership
    applied equally to a shareholder withdrawing from a professional corporation.
    Santalucia v. Sebright Transp. Inc., 
    232 F.3d 293
    , 299 (2d Cir. 2000). The Second
    Circuit determined that “the majority of states to confront this issue have extended
    the familiar fiduciary duty principles of partnerships to professional corporations.”
    
    Id.
     (collecting cases). As Florida courts do not differentiate between business
    entities as to fiduciary duties owed to clients and subordinates, we believe Florida
    courts would follow the majority of states and require the same fiduciary duties be
    owed to other attorneys and former law firms, whether the firm was a partnership
    or professional corporation. Thus, we will apply Frates equally to law firms
    formed as partnerships and those formed as professional corporations.
    C.
    11
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    The Frates court applied the common law, but clearly indicated that law
    firms can change the fee award a withdrawing attorney is entitled to by agreement.
    
    167 So. 2d at 82
    . B&P’s stockholder agreement, which was signed by Rosenbaum,
    contains a section that purports to address the distribution of fees when a
    shareholder withdraws from the firm. This section is embedded in the agreement’s
    covenant not to compete. The agreement states that in the event that a shareholder
    breaches the covenant not to compete and continues an ongoing matter, the
    shareholder would compensate B&P the greater of 50% of the fee received or the
    firm’s quantum meruit.
    The Florida Supreme Court disapproves of lawyers entering covenants not to
    compete and other agreements that restrict lawyers’ right to practice. “A lawyer
    shall not participate in offering or making: (a) a . . . shareholders . . . agreement
    that restricts the rights of a lawyer to practice after termination of the relationship,
    except an agreement concerning benefits upon retirement . . . .” Fla. R. Prof.
    Conduct 4-5.6. Moreover, the comments make clear the public policy behind this
    rule, as “[a]n agreement restricting the right of lawyers to practice after leaving a
    firm not only limits their professional autonomy, but also limits the freedom of
    clients to choose a lawyer.” Fla. R. Prof. Conduct 4-5.6, cmt. However, “[a]
    contract is not void, as against public policy, unless it is injurious to the interests of
    12
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    the public, or contravenes some established interest of society.” Neiman v.
    Galloway, 
    704 So. 2d 1131
    , 1132 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998) (citations omitted).
    Florida courts have not used Rule 4-5.6 to invalidate contracts between
    private parties as a matter of law. See Lee v. Fla. Dep’t of Ins. & Treasurer, 
    586 So. 2d 1185
    , 1188 (Fla. 1st DCA 1991). Yet, Lee involved a settlement agreement
    between non-attorneys wherein the counsel for the plaintiff agreed not to represent
    a government agency in future proceedings against Mr. Lee. 
    Id. at 1187
    . The
    court specifically found that Rule 4-5.6
    is intended to prevent lawyers from entering into agreements that
    operate to restrict a lawyer’s right to practice generally . . . that Rule
    does not reach agreements with or by the client to preclude the
    lawyer’s representation of other persons with respect to cases that
    involve the same facts, transactions, and events as does the case
    settled for the client. Failure to give effect to this distinction would
    defeat the protections of confidential information provided in rules 4-
    1.6 and 4-1.9.
    
    Id. at 1190
    . Thus, Lee is clearly distinct from the instant case, as the agreement
    between B&P and Rosenberg was between attorneys and operated as a general
    restriction against Rosenberg’s right to practice. Moreover, Florida courts have
    previously relied solely on professional responsibility rules to invalidate
    agreements between attorneys relating to fees. See, e.g., Robert A. Shupack, P.A.
    v. Marcus, 
    606 So. 2d 466
    , 467 (Fla. 3d DCA 1992) (invalidating a fee sharing
    agreement because it violated a disciplinary rule found in the predecessor to the
    Florida Rules of Professional Conduct).
    13
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    The public policy behind prohibiting covenants not to compete is clearly
    stated in the Rules and has been affirmed in disciplinary actions. See, e.g., The
    Fla. Bar v. St. Louis, 
    967 So. 2d 108
    , 121 (Fla. 2007) (finding Rule 4-5.6 promotes
    public welfare and is constitutionally valid). In an independent matter,
    Rosenbaum, himself, alleged that the covenant not to compete in B&P’s
    stockholder agreement is void as against public policy. Rosenbaum v. Becker &
    Poliakoff, P.A., 08-81004-civ, 
    2010 WL 376309
    , at *7 (S.D. Fla. Jan. 26, 2010).
    At least for the purpose of the charging liens at issue, we find that the covenant not
    to compete and embedded fee distribution are not controlling and will apply the
    common law in distributing the total fee award. 7 Therefore, the proper distribution
    of the contingency fees in this case is determined by Frates.
    D.
    While Frates applies to both partnerships and professional corporations, we
    are currently presented a situation where a partner exits the initial firm, but
    thereafter exits from the second firm during the same ongoing matter. Applying a
    “Frates within Frates” analysis, the common law solution seems to indicate that
    the second and third firms would share the exiting partner’s share, with the third
    firm’s fee being determined by the second firm’s partnership agreement. However,
    7
    As the issue before the Court is the validity and value of the charging liens of KGR and RMJS,
    nothing in this opinion prevents the attorneys from seeking alternative contractual remedies in
    state court, as between themselves.
    14
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    it is the exiting attorney and not the subsequent firm that owes the fiduciary duties
    to wind up the initial partnership’s business, and it is these fiduciary duties that are
    at the heart of Frates. When a firm with no fiduciary duties to wind up another
    firm’s affairs works on a matter for a contingency fee, and the contingency occurs
    during another firm’s representation, the amount of the firm’s fee in the matter is
    determined by quantum meruit. See Rosenberg, 
    409 So. 2d at 1021
    ; Poletz, 
    652 So. 2d at 368
    .
    In the present matter, Rosenberg, not the other attorneys at KGR, had the
    pre-existing duty to represent Buckley. The remaining attorneys at KGR did not
    owe fiduciary duties to wind up B&P’s affairs, but worked on Buckley’s case on a
    contingency fee basis. Since that contingency occurred while RMJS was counsel
    of record for Buckley, KGR is entitled to a quantum meruit award of fees.
    E.
    While the district court did not apply a proper Frates analysis, the court did
    determine a quantum meruit award for KGR. We find that the district court abused
    its discretion by awarding KGR a quantum meruit award of $894,897. “An abuse
    of discretion occurs if the judge fails to apply the proper legal standard or to follow
    proper procedures in making the determination, or bases an award upon findings of
    fact that are clearly erroneous.” Johnson v. Breeden, 
    280 F.3d 1308
    , 1326 (11th
    Cir. 2002) (quotation omitted).
    15
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    In determining the reasonable value of an attorney’s services, the court
    should consider the totality of the circumstances surrounding the professional
    relationship, including time spent on the matter, the recovery sought, the skill
    demanded, the results obtained and the attorney-client contract. Rosenberg, 
    409 So. 2d at 1022
    . While the trial court may consider a lodestar calculation in
    determining a firm’s quantum meruit, the court errs as a matter of law if it fails to
    consider “other factors surrounding the professional relationship that would assist
    the court in fashioning an award that is fair to both the attorney and client,” such as
    the reason the firm was discharged, actions taken by the firm or client before or
    after discharge, and the benefit actually conferred on the client. Poletz, 
    652 So. 2d at 369
    . Moreover, “[u]nlike an award of attorney’s fees to a prevailing party, a
    quantum meruit award must take into account the actual value of the services to the
    client.”8 
    Id.
    The magistrate based the amount of KGR’s fee award on Buckley’s
    successful motion seeking attorney’s fees from QBE. While a lodestar calculation
    is not an improper starting point, the magistrate failed to properly consider the
    totality of the circumstances, particularly the benefit conferred on the client. On
    March 26, 2009—after the jury trial but prior to the first appeal to this Court—
    8
    The Poletz court also found that the lodestar calculation was intended to apply to fees imposed
    ancillary to the primary action against a non-client and is ill-suited for the task of assessing
    attorney’s fees due by a client under a quantum meruit analysis. 
    652 So. 2d at 368-69
    .
    16
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    Buckley filed its initial motion for entitlement to attorney’s fees, arguing it was
    entitled to recover attorney’s fees from QBE based on a Florida Statute permitting
    fee shifting in claims enforcing an insured’s rights under an insurance contract.
    For KGR’s portion of the fees, Buckley sought an award of $2,695,436.87.9 After
    the court ordered the parties to meet and confer, Buckley filed an amended motion
    for attorney’s fees (again prior to the first appeal to this Court), stating that the
    parties had reached an agreement as to a lodestar amount for KGR’s work at
    $894,897, but disagreed as to the application of a risk multiplier in the case.
    Thereafter, the magistrate denied the application of a risk multiplier and the court
    ordered QBE to pay Buckley $894,897 for KGR’s work on the matter.
    In calculating KGR’s quantum meruit, the magistrate used the previously
    determined lodestar amount as a starting point. The magistrate concluded that this
    award sufficiently accounted for the length of the attorney-client relationship, the
    risk of non-recovery, and the skills required in the case. However, the magistrate
    failed to properly account for the totality of the circumstances and apply the
    remaining Poletz factors, including the benefit actually conferred on the client.
    Specifically, in addition to Buckley’s motion for fees against QBE, this Court
    granted Buckley’s application for appellate attorney’s fees and remanded to the
    district court for its consideration as to a reasonable amount of fees. Buckley
    9
    Buckley argued that KGR was entitled to a lodestar calculation of $1,026,717 and a
    contingency multiplier of 2.25.
    17
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    sought fees in the amount of $75,232.50 for the appellate work of KGR. 10 The
    district court abused its discretion by not accounting for the benefit conferred on
    the client by KGR while it worked on post-trial matters and briefed the first appeal
    before this Court.
    While we appreciate the magistrate’s focus on judicial efficiency and ruling
    in equity, it was improper to value KGR’s charging lien without considering the
    significant work KGR did on the appeal. Thus, we must remand the matter back to
    the district court to properly consider the Rosenberg and Poletz factors, including
    the benefit conferred on Buckley by KGR’s representation throughout the trial and
    the preliminary appellate work.
    F.
    In the end, while the magistrate applied an incorrect legal standard and did
    not fashion an award that fairly compensated KGR, there is only one issue to be
    decided on remand—KGR’s proper quantum meruit award. 11 Under a proper
    10
    For reasons not obvious from the record, Buckley withdrew its motion for appellate attorney’s
    fees, despite the fact that QBE did not challenge Buckley’s entitlement to the appellate attorney’s
    fees. However, Buckley’s withdrawal of the motion is irrelevant for our analysis because an
    attorney’s quantum meruit award does not hinge on whether an opposing party is liable for fees.
    See Poletz, 
    652 So. 2d at 368
     (“fair value attorney fee recoverable in quantum meruit is not
    measured by the standards applied when fees are awarded opposing party under fee-shifting
    statute or doctrine” (citing Restatement (Third) of The Law Governing Lawyers, Tentative Draft
    No. 4 § 51 (Apr. 10, 1991)).
    11
    We do not intend to significantly burden the district court with this decision, and think it
    within the district court’s discretion to simply reconsider the amount of KGR’s quantum meruit
    award based on the arguments and evidence previously submitted to the court, or, if the district
    court deems it more appropriate, to allow the parties to re-argue the issue.
    18
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    application of Frates and Poletz, the value of KGR’s charging lien should be the
    firm’s quantum meruit. Once the amount of KGR’s charging lien is determined,
    the value of RMJS’s charging lien can be determined based on Rosenbaum’s
    equity share as set forth in B&P’s controlling stockholder agreement, which
    provides that Rosenberg owned 20 of the 855 outstanding shares. Therefore,
    RMJS is entitled to 20/855—or approximately 2.34%— of the fee award
    remaining after KGR is compensated.12
    IV.     Conclusion
    Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s order on KGR’s and RMJS’s
    motions to enforce their charging liens, and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    REVERSED and REMANDED.
    12
    We note that because B&P settled its claim for $1.3 million, it is entitled to no greater award
    than that amount to which it agreed. See Rosenberg, 
    409 So. 2d at 1022
     (limiting an attorney’s
    fee recovery to the contract fee agreed to by the attorney). Consequently, any award that B&P
    would be entitled to above the $1.3 million agreed-upon amount should be returned to Buckley.
    For example, if the magistrate determines KGR’s quantum meruit award to equal the $894,897
    awarded plus the $75,232.50 sought in appellate fees, for a total of $970,129.50, then (a) RMJS
    would be entitled to $85,696.31 (approximately 2.34% of the remaining $3,663,517.36); (b)
    B&P would be entitled to its $1.3 million; and (c) the remaining $2,277,821.05 set aside in the
    court registry for the charging liens would be returned to Buckley. This example is used entirely
    for demonstrative purposes and is not intended to dissuade the district court from using its sound
    discretion to determine a proper value for KGR’s charging lien.
    19