Richard D. Tucker er al. v. Daniel G. LIlley Troubh Heisler, P.A. v. Daniel G. Lilley Law Offices, P.A. , 2015 ME 36 ( 2015 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                       Reporter of Decisions
    Decision: 
    2015 ME 36
    Docket:   Cum-13-584; Cum-13-594
    Argued:   September 4, 2014
    Decided:  March 24, 2015
    Panel:        SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HJELM, JJ.*
    RICHARD D. TUCKER et al.
    v.
    DANIEL G. LILLEY et al.
    *****
    TROUBH HEISLER, P.A.
    v.
    DANIEL G. LILLEY LAW OFFICES, P.A. et al.
    MEAD, J.
    [¶1] In these related cases, all parties are practicing Maine attorneys or
    Maine law firms. In both matters, (1) complaints, cross-claims, and counterclaims
    were filed in the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Wheeler, J.) asserting
    various theories of entitlement to all or part of a $1.24 million attorney fee
    generated in a civil judgment in another matter; (2) the court denied the motion of
    Daniel G. Lilley and Daniel G. Lilley Law Offices, P.A., to consolidate the matters
    for trial; and (3) the court proceeded to dispose of the cases through summary
    *
    Silver, J., sat at oral argument and participated in the initial conference but retired before this
    opinion was adopted.
    2
    judgment on some claims, and dismissal or severance of others. Because we
    conclude that, with one exception, the court erred in denying the motion to
    consolidate the claims, we vacate the judgments except for that single claim and
    remand for further proceedings.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.    Tucker v. Lilley et al.
    [¶2] The summary judgment record in Tucker v. Lilley et al. supports the
    following facts. Richard D. Tucker, John P. Flynn III, and Daniel G. Lilley are
    practicing Maine attorneys. In 2005, Paula Braley (now DeKeyser) met with
    Tucker to discuss a potential lawsuit following the death of her husband at Eastern
    Maine Medical Center. Tucker obtained medical records and investigated the
    claim. In 2006 he consulted with Flynn, then a member of the law firm of Troubh
    Heisler, P.A. (Troubh), concerning the possibility of Flynn becoming lead counsel
    in the case, which Flynn ultimately agreed to do.
    [¶3]   Tucker and Flynn stated by affidavit or in deposition that at a
    September 27, 2006, meeting with Braley and her brother at Tucker’s office,
    Braley agreed to a fee-sharing arrangement between Tucker and Flynn that would
    keep both attorneys involved in her case for the same total fee. The attorneys
    stated that their agreement was for Tucker to receive 25% of any contingent fee
    earned in return for his referral and continued involvement in the case. Braley
    3
    executed an affidavit that does not reference the 25% figure, but states that she
    consented to the fee-sharing arrangement and that she signed a contingent fee
    agreement with Flynn.       Lilley disputes the existence of the contingent fee
    agreement because neither an original nor a copy bearing the parties’ signatures
    has been produced in this litigation.
    [¶4] In 2009, Flynn left Troubh to join Daniel G. Lilley Law Offices, P.A.
    (LLO). Braley elected to have Flynn continue as her attorney following the move
    and signed a contingent fee agreement with LLO. In June 2011, while Flynn was
    working for LLO, Braley’s case went to trial with Flynn acting as her sole trial
    counsel, resulting in a large jury verdict for Braley.
    [¶5] Flynn left LLO in July 2011 to open his own practice. Braley again
    followed Flynn and signed a new contingent fee agreement with him that provided
    for a 40% contingent fee. In April 2012, the Superior Court granted a petition
    brought by Braley and Flynn for approval of the agreed-upon 40% attorney fee.
    See 24 M.R.S. § 2961(3) (2014). Through an agreement among Tucker, Flynn,
    Lilley, and Troubh, $1,240,000 in attorney fees was deposited in an escrow
    account pending the outcome of this and related cases. Relevant to this case,
    Tucker asserts that he is entitled to 25% of the escrowed amount, or $310,000, and
    Flynn concurs. Lilley asserts that his firm is entitled to the entire $1.24 million.
    4
    [¶6] In February 2012, Tucker filed a complaint against Lilley, LLO, and
    Flynn, seeking either a declaration that he is owed 25% of any contingent fee
    received in the Braley matter or a judgment for that amount. Lilley moved to
    consolidate the complaint with several other cases involving disputes over the
    division of attorney fees resulting from Flynn’s representation of Braley and other
    clients; the court denied the motion after a hearing.       Lilley then moved for
    summary judgment, as did Tucker. In July 2013, the court entered a decision
    denying Lilley’s motion and granting Tucker summary judgment against Flynn,
    Lilley, and LLO in the amount of $310,000 plus interest. Following Flynn’s
    voluntary dismissal of his cross-claims against Lilley, the court entered a final
    judgment pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 54(b)(1).
    B.    Troubh Heisler, P.A. v. Lilley Law Offices, P.A. et al.
    [¶7]    Troubh’s complaint against LLO also arises from Flynn’s
    representation of Braley, and it concerns the same $1.24 million in attorney fees
    held in escrow. When Flynn left Troubh to join LLO, he negotiated a separation
    agreement (SA) with Troubh containing terms concerning the return of his share of
    the firm’s capital. The SA was signed by Flynn and Troubh. Separately, Troubh,
    Flynn, and LLO negotiated a memorandum of agreement (MOA), signed by those
    three parties, concerning referral fees due Troubh in Flynn’s cases that moved with
    5
    him to LLO. The MOA lists a 20% fee in the Braley case. The SA explicitly
    incorporates the MOA; the MOA, however, is silent as to the SA.
    [¶8] Following the Braley judgment, Troubh asserts that, pursuant to the
    MOA, it is entitled to 20% of the total attorney fees in escrow; LLO asserts that it
    is entitled to the entire amount; and Flynn, contending that Troubh breached the
    SA by failing to return his full capital share and thereby nullified the MOA, asserts
    that Troubh is owed nothing, or, alternatively, is owed 20% of the escrowed fees
    remaining after Tucker takes 25%.
    [¶9] In March 2012, Troubh filed a complaint against LLO and Flynn
    alleging breach of contract and seeking a judgment against them jointly and
    severally for 20% of $1.24 million ($248,000).          LLO’s answer included a
    cross-claim against Flynn, asserting that Flynn was obligated to pay any fee due
    Troubh. Flynn’s answer included a similar cross-claim against LLO, and also
    included a counterclaim against Troubh, asserting in part that Troubh had
    fraudulently induced Flynn to agree to the MOA by promising him that he would
    be paid his full capital share upon leaving the firm.        LLO again moved to
    consolidate the complaint with several other cases involving the division of
    attorney fees awarded in Flynn’s cases, including Tucker’s claim to 25% of the
    Braley fee; Flynn agreed to consolidation and Troubh objected to it. Following a
    hearing, the motion was denied.
    6
    [¶10]    Troubh moved for summary judgment and to sever Flynn’s
    counterclaim. LLO cross-moved for summary judgment. After hearing, the court
    entered an order (1) granting Troubh summary judgment for $248,000 against LLO
    and Flynn, jointly and severally, together with interest and costs; (2) denying LLO
    summary judgment; (3) dismissing Flynn’s cross-claim against Lilley; and
    (4) severing and setting for trial Flynn’s counterclaim against Troubh.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A.    Tucker’s Claim Against Flynn
    [¶11] The standard of review on a grant of summary judgment is well
    established:
    Summary judgment is properly granted if the record reflects
    that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. We review de novo
    whether, on a motion for summary judgment, a dispute of material
    facts exists and whether the entry of a summary judgment was proper
    as a matter of law. For purposes of this review, we consider the
    evidence in the light most favorable to . . . the party against whom
    judgment has been entered.
    A fact is material if it has the potential to affect the outcome of
    the suit, and a genuine issue of material fact exists when a fact-finder
    must choose between competing versions of the truth, even if one
    party’s version appears more credible or persuasive. The nonmoving
    party is given the full benefit of all favorable inferences that may be
    drawn from the facts presented.
    Angell v. Hallee, 
    2014 ME 72
    , ¶¶ 16-17, 
    92 A.3d 1154
    (citations and quotation
    marks omitted).
    7
    [¶12] Here, Flynn answered Tucker’s complaint by admitting that several
    years before Flynn joined LLO, “Tucker had an enforceable contractual
    relationship with Flynn . . . under which Tucker was to receive 25% of any
    contingent fee earned in the Braley matter.” This aspect of Flynn’s answer to the
    complaint by itself establishes these facts as to Flynn. See M.R. Civ. P. 8(d).
    Additionally, Flynn later averred that he “agreed to a 25% fee share of the fees
    recovered to attorney Tucker because, in part, [Tucker] would remain involved in
    the litigation.” Braley’s affidavit confirmed her understanding that Flynn and
    Tucker would divide any contingent fee earned. The Superior Court correctly
    found that as to Flynn there was no material dispute of fact concerning the
    existence and provisions of the agreement because there is no dispute as to its
    evolution or terms among the three parties who created it. Lilley had no personal
    knowledge from which to deny that the agreement existed, and in fact he did not,
    instead denying that he was “aware” of any agreement. See M.R. Civ. P. 56(e)
    (requiring that “affidavits shall be made on personal knowledge”).
    [¶13] The 2006 fee-splitting agreement was a fully established contract
    among Braley, Tucker, and Flynn well before Flynn went to LLO. The fact that
    Flynn brought his client with him when he joined LLO does not extinguish that
    contract as it pertains to Tucker, nor is its validity determined by whether Lilley or
    any other third party was aware of it. Lilley’s lack of awareness might well be an
    8
    issue in separate litigation between Lilley and Flynn in determining who ultimately
    pays Tucker’s fee, but it is irrelevant to the question of whether the agreement that
    Tucker was due a fee existed and, if so, its terms. For these reasons, we affirm the
    court’s entry of summary judgment on Tucker’s claim against Flynn.
    B.    Tucker’s Claim Against Lilley and LLO
    [¶14] The same result does not follow concerning Tucker’s separate claim
    against Lilley and LLO, however, because, notwithstanding the established
    fee-sharing agreement between Tucker and Flynn, a genuine dispute of material
    fact remains concerning (1) whether, when Flynn joined LLO, Lilley also agreed to
    pay Tucker a fee, and (2) if he did agree, whether he agreed to a 25% fee or a
    lesser amount. The unresolved factual disputes are illustrated by a letter that
    Flynn, after beginning work at LLO, sent Tucker, confirming that Tucker would be
    entitled to 25% of any fee Flynn received in the Braley matter, and a contrasting
    email that Flynn sent Lilley, which discussed the preexisting fee-division
    arrangements in Flynn’s cases and advised Lilley that “in a couple of instances
    there is also a referral fee to an outside attorney who referred the case to me in the
    beginning. In other words, an additional 20% fee . . . [in] Braley . . . .” Although
    Tucker was entitled to his judgment against Flynn, the contrasting letter to Tucker
    and email to Lilley that Flynn sent generates a genuine issue of material fact that
    precludes entry of summary judgment against Lilley.
    9
    [¶15] Because resolving these disputes will require a fact-finder “to choose
    between competing versions of the truth at trial,” McClare v. Rocha, 
    2014 ME 4
    ,
    ¶ 10, 
    86 A.3d 22
    (quotation marks omitted), the court erred in entering summary
    judgment on Tucker’s claim against Lilley and LLO.
    C.    Consolidation
    [¶16] By rule, “[w]hen actions involving a common question of law or fact
    are pending before the court . . . it may order all the actions consolidated . . . .”
    M.R. Civ. P. 42(a). “[T]he power to order consolidation is within the [c]ourt’s
    discretion.”    Maietta v. Int’l Harvester Co., 
    496 A.2d 286
    , 291 (Me. 1985).
    Although this standard of review is deferential, it does not give a trial court
    unfettered discretion to separate cases, or parts of cases, when closely-related
    claims, counterclaims, and cross-claims among the parties directly affect what any
    particular party may eventually be awarded and which party will be required to pay
    those awards.
    [¶17] Here, in its summary judgment order, the court adjudicated several of
    the interrelated contract claims, yet several important claims and issues in the two
    cases remain unresolved. They include (1) whether Lilley (as opposed to Flynn)
    owes Tucker no fee, as Lilley claims; 25%, as Tucker and Flynn claim; or 20%, as
    Flynn’s email to Lilley states; (2) whether Flynn’s claim that Troubh breached the
    SA and thereby nullified its entitlement to a fee under the MOA will be successful,
    10
    with the potential result that Troubh is owed nothing; and (3) whatever the fees due
    Tucker and Troubh may prove to be, which party has to pay them as between
    Flynn and LLO.1 We conclude that, with the exception of Tucker’s claim against
    Flynn, these disputes must be resolved in one consolidated action before a single
    fact-finder, and therefore it was an abuse of discretion for the court to decide some
    claims, but not others, in piecemeal fashion.2                  See Bank of Me. v. Peterson,
    
    2014 ME 155
    , ¶ 8, 
    107 A.3d 1122
    (stating that review of an exercise of discretion
    includes an assessment of “whether the court’s weighing of the applicable facts
    and choices was within the bounds of reasonableness”).                        Lilley’s motions to
    consolidate should have been granted. To that end, we vacate the remaining
    judgments and dispositions in these two cases.
    [¶18] Finally, to the extent that the court’s judgment against Flynn may
    suggest that Tucker is entitled to immediate payment from the attorney fees held in
    escrow, we make clear that these actions are not in rem proceedings against the
    money held in escrow. Rather, they are disputes arising from a series of contracts
    that may—or may not—be related to each other. The escrowed proceeds may—or
    may not—be sufficient to satisfy any liabilities created by the judgments to be
    1
    Although not directly related to these appeals, we note that separate litigation between Flynn and
    Lilley is currently on appeal to this Court as Daniel G. Lilley Law Office, P.A. v. Flynn, Cum-14-333.
    2
    Because they are not before us, we do not decide whether other cases cited in Lilley’s motion not
    involving the Braley matter should also be consolidated.
    11
    entered in these actions. Accordingly, our opinion should not be construed to
    suggest that the aggregation of judgments that may result from these actions is
    limited to the amount of attorney fees now held in escrow. Similarly, whatever
    other avenues Tucker may have to collect on the judgment against Flynn, any
    distribution of the escrowed funds, which may or may not prove to include the
    amount that Flynn owes Tucker, must await resolution of the consolidated cases.
    The entry is:
    Summary judgment on Tucker’s complaint against
    Flynn affirmed.         All other judgments and
    dispositions of claims vacated. Remanded with
    instructions to grant the motions to consolidate and
    for further proceedings.
    On the briefs:
    Walter F. McKee, Esq., and Matthew D. Morgan, Esq., McKee
    Billings, LLC, P.A., Augusta, for appellants Daniel G. Lilley
    and Daniel G. Lilley Law Offices, P.A.
    Mark V. Franco, Esq., and Jason P. Donovan, Esq., Thompson
    & Bowie, LLP, Portland, for appellant John P. Flynn III
    Julian L. Sweet, Esq., Berman & Simmons, P.A., Lewiston, for
    appellee Richard D. Tucker
    Gerald F. Petruccelli, Esq., Petruccelli, Martin & Haddow,
    LLP, Portland, for appellee Troubh Heisler, P.A.
    12
    At oral argument:
    Walter F. McKee, Esq., for appellants Daniel G. Lilley and
    Daniel G. Lilley Law Offices, P.A.
    Mark V. Franco, Esq., for appellant John P. Flynn III
    Julian L. Sweet, Esq., for appellee Richard Tucker
    Gerald F. Petruccelli, Esq., for appellee Troubh Heisler, P.A.
    Cumberland County Superior Court docket numbers CV-2012-75 and 103
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY