Tomasko & Koranda, P.C. v. Ira H. Weinstock, P.C. ( 2019 )


Menu:
  • J-A11035-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    TOMASKO & KORANDA, P.C., RONALD T.            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
    TOMASKO, AND MICHAEL KORANDA                     OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellants
    v.
    IRA H. WEINSTOCK, P.C.
    Appellee                No. 116 MDA 2018
    Appeal from the Order Entered December 27, 2017
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County
    Civil Division at No: 1997 EQ 5402
    BEFORE: BOWES, OLSON, and STABILE, JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.:                     FILED: NOVEMBER 5, 2019
    Appellants, Tomasko & Koranda, P.C., and Ronald T. Tomasko1 appeal
    from the December 27, 2017 accounting order directing Appellants to
    distribute $3,900.00 to Appellee, Ira H. Weinstock, P.C. We affirm.
    The record reflects that Tomasko and Koranda were employees of
    Appellee, a law firm, prior to January 3, 1997, on which date they formed their
    own law firm. On January 16, 1997, Appellants commenced this equity action
    (the “Equity Action”) with an emergency petition to compel transfer of files of
    clients who chose to have Appellants continue to represent them. On January
    21, 1997, the trial court ordered Appellee to transfer several files, and on
    February 2, 1997, the trial court ordered Appellants to escrow 40% of the
    ____________________________________________
    1    Michael Koranda is deceased.
    J-A11035-19
    “settlement resolution” of each transferred case. On January 6, 1998, the
    trial court entered an order directing that Appellee receive 75 percent and
    Appellant receive 25 percent of the funds in escrow.2          The trial court also
    ordered cessation of payments into escrow and directed that for “all
    settlements occurring on or after October 21, 1997, on files which were
    transferred pursuant to the February 6, 1997 order, [Appellants] shall pay
    30% of the fees directly to [Appellee]. [Appellants] will retain 70% of the fees
    for its own use.”      Order, 1/6/98.      “The distribution of fees subsequent to
    October 21, 1997, shall be without prejudice to either party to subsequently
    litigate the actual interest of either side in the fees.” 
    Id. As we
    will discuss
    in more detail below, the parties have disputed the extent to which Appellants
    complied with their post-October 21, 1997 payment obligations.                See
    Appellee’s Motion for Contempt, 1/19/99; Appellants’ Answer to Motion for
    Contempt, 2/4/99.
    This action     has    proceeded alongside     Appellee’s lawsuit against
    Appellants (the “Action at Law”), in which Appellee alleged causes of action
    against Appellants for interference with contractual relationships, unjust
    enrichment, and quantum meruit, among others.               One such contractual
    relationship was with Cathy Wamsley, a client of Appellee who chose to have
    Appellants represent her after their departure. In August of 1997, a worker’s
    ____________________________________________
    2   This disbursement created a 70/30 split between Appellants and Appellee.
    -2-
    J-A11035-19
    compensation judge approved a payment to Wamsley of $65,000 in
    settlement of a wage loss claim.3              The worker’s compensation judge also
    approved a $13,000 attorney’s fee to Appellants (the “Wamsley Fee”).
    Appellee claimed it was entitled to the entire Wamsley Fee in light of the hours
    and expenses incurred in that case prior to Appellants’ departure. The trial
    court ordered that the entire Wamsley Fee be placed into escrow, where it
    remains, pending final resolution of this appeal. The Action at Law languished
    for years without activity, and the trial court ultimately entered a judgment of
    non pros on April 4, 2014.               This Court affirmed in an unpublished
    memorandum filed on July 26, 2016.
    On January 13, 2017, after the final resolution of the Action at Law,
    Appellants filed a motion for accounting and return of escrowed funds in this
    Equity Action. Appellants seek the return of all money paid to Appellee in
    connection with the February 2, 1997 and January 6, 1998 orders. They also
    seek the entirety of the Wamsley Fee, which is the only fee remaining in
    escrow. In the order on appeal, the trial court directed that Appellee receive
    30% ($3,900.00) of the Wamsley Fee. The trial court did not order that any
    other funds change hands, concluding that fee and settlement disputes related
    to the transferred files had long since been resolved, and no funds other than
    the Wamsley Fee remained in escrow. This timely appeal followed.
    ____________________________________________
    3 Appellants represent that the medical expense portion of Wamsley’s claim
    remains pending. Appellants’ Brief at 19.
    -3-
    J-A11035-19
    Appellants present two questions:
    A. Did the trial court err, as both a matter of law and fact, in not
    ordering [Appellee] to account for all monies received pursuant
    to the trial court’s various escrow orders after [the Superior
    Court’s] order filed July 26, 2016 in the matter of [Ira H.
    Weinstock, P.C. v. Tomasko, 
    2016 WL 4919464
    (Pa. Super.
    July 26, 2016) (unpublished memorandum)]?
    B. Alternatively, did the trial court err, as both a matter of law
    and fact, in awarding [Appellee] an ‘origination’ fee in a
    worker’s compensation matter that had been settled in part by
    [Appellants] back in 1997 when a worker’s compensation judge
    had actually heard testimony and reviewed documentary
    evidence on the matter and circulated a decision, dated
    November 10, 1999, that concluded that [Appellee] had been
    overpaid for any and all legal representation in the matter?
    Appellants’ Brief, at 2-3 (underscoring in original).
    We conduct our review as follows:
    In equity matters, appellate review is based on a
    determination by the appellate court of such questions as whether
    (1) sufficient evidence supports the findings of the judge; (2) the
    factual inferences and legal conclusions based on those findings
    are correct; [and] (3) there has been an abuse of discretion or an
    error of law. Generally, in an appeal from a trial court sitting in
    equity, the standard of review is rigorous. The function of this
    Court on an appeal from an adjudication in equity is not to
    substitute its view for that of the lower tribunal; our task is rather
    to determine whether a judicial mind, on due consideration of all
    the evidence, as a whole, could reasonably have reached the
    conclusion of that tribunal.
    Omicron Sys., Inc. v. Weiner, 
    860 A.2d 554
    , 557–58 (Pa. Super. 2004).
    First, Appellants argue that the trial court should have forced Appellee
    to return the money Appellee received pursuant to the trial court’s orders of
    February 2, 1997 and January 6, 1998 in light of the non pros in the Action at
    Law. We begin with a look at the text of the order on appeal:
    -4-
    J-A11035-19
    AND NOW, this 25th day, December, 2017,[4] upon consideration
    of [Appellants’] Motion for Accounting and Return of Escrow Funds
    […] and an attempt by this court to put to rest the long extended
    contention between the parties, HEREBY orders the distribution
    which arises from this court’s initial segregation of amounts
    awarded as attorney fees from [the Equity Action] to reflect the
    court’s then intended financial resolution to begin at a point of the
    acknowledged origination basis of 30% be assessed to be directed
    to [Appellee], and that any additional amounts to be determined
    and/or resolved by the then litigation or settlement. Given the
    non pros being entered, any amounts more have been resolved.
    Accordingly, this Court directs $3,900.00 (30% of $13,000) be
    distributed to [Appellee] and the remaining balance to
    [Appellants].
    Order, 12/27/17.
    We glean several important points from the trial court’s order. First, the
    trial court’s January 6, 1998 order—in which the court directed disbursement
    of escrowed money and directed that, thereafter, Appellants would pay
    Appellee 30% of the attorney’s fees from the transferred files—represented
    the court’s “then intended financial resolution” based on “the acknowledged
    origination basis of 30%.” 
    Id. Second, the
    Action at Law (i.e., “the then
    litigation”) would resolve any dispute regarding the fairness of the 30%
    origination credit in a specific case. Third, one such disputed amount was the
    Wamsley Fee, to which both parties presently claim a 100-percent interest.
    Fourth, given the non pros in the Action at Law, Appellee could not recover
    more than its 30% origination credit from the Wamsley Fee. Finally, given
    the foregoing, the trial court divided the Wamsley Fee according to the
    ____________________________________________
    4   The order was docketed on December 27, 2017.
    -5-
    J-A11035-19
    previously established 70/30 formula and declared the matter at an end. To
    obtain relief under the rigorous standard of review applicable to the decision
    of an equity court, Appellants must establish that the court, upon due
    consideration of all available evidence, could not reasonably have reached this
    conclusion. In our view, Appellants have failed.
    Legally, Appellants’ challenge to the trial court’s order rests entirely on
    the proposition that an equity award cannot stand if there is no evidence in
    the record to support it. Appellant’s Brief at 13, 16 (citing Lilly v. Markvan,
    
    763 A.2d 370
    (Pa. 2000)).        In Lilly, an adverse possession case, the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court partially vacated a finding of adverse possession
    where there was no evidence the claimants ever occupied a half-acre portion
    of the real estate in dispute. Here, in contrast, the trial court found that the
    parties acknowledged a 30% origination credit payable to Appellee for
    transferred files, and the fact that Appellants acted in accord with that
    arrangement—without objection, appeal, or any apparent insistence that all
    disputed amounts remain in escrow until a full and final resolution of all
    pending litigation—supports the trial court’s finding. We glean from the order
    on appeal and the parties’ course of conduct that the adequacy of the 30%
    -6-
    J-A11035-19
    credit, as to certain cases, was in dispute in the Action at Law, particularly in
    Appellee’s quantum meruit and unjust enrichment claims.5
    A review of the parties’ competing contempt and sanction motions, filed
    in early 1999, illustrates the parties’ dispute.       Appellee filed a motion for
    contempt on January 19, 1999, alleging that Appellants were failing to forward
    30% of all incoming fees from transferred cases in accord with the trial court’s
    January 6, 1998 order.           Appellants, in their February 4, 1999 answer,
    documented their pre- and post-October 21, 1997 compliance with the trial
    court’s fee distribution scheme. Appellants’ Answer to Motion for Contempt,
    2/4/99, at Exhibits A-F.         Specifically, Appellants categorized clients into
    contingent fee clients, hourly clients, worker’s compensation clients, and
    clients allegedly not subject to the trial court’s orders. 
    Id. Appellants claimed
    they paid Appellee in full for settled contingent fee cases. 
    Id. at 3.
    For hourly
    clients, Appellants alleged Appellee had billed the clients for services rendered
    prior to the transfer of the case to Appellants, and therefore had been
    compensated in full.       
    Id. at 3-4.
        In a cross petition for contempt and/or
    sanctions filed on February 5, 1999, Appellants claimed Appellee failed to
    provide itemized statements (time spent and money received from certain
    clients) in support of its claims of compensation due and owing from
    ____________________________________________
    5  See Hiscott and Robinson v. King, 
    626 A.2d 1235
    (Pa. Super. 1993)
    (holding that an attorney hired on a contingent fee basis and dismissed prior
    to settlement may recover in quantum meruit for the time and expenses
    devoted to the case), appeal denied, 
    644 A.2d 163
    (Pa. 1994).
    -7-
    J-A11035-19
    Appellants. Appellants’ Cross-Petition for Contempt, 2/5/99. The parties also
    disputed the appropriate division of proceeds in cases that settled shortly after
    Appellants’ departure from Appellee.           The trial court ultimately denied all
    petitions and cross petitions for sanctions in an order dated April 8, 2000.6
    Regardless of the relative merit of either party’s position in these 20-
    year-old motions, they illustrate that Appellants paid Appellee what they
    believed they owed, and declined to pay what they believed they did not owe.
    To the extent Appellants argue that the trial court’s January 6, 1998 order
    permitted them to make payment subject to a reservation of rights,7
    Appellants never have established any right to recoup prior payments.
    Appellants would have us conclude that Appellee’s failure in the Action at Law,
    in and of itself, required them to remit all monies received pursuant to the
    orders in this Equity Action. The record does not support this claim. While
    Appellee failed to establish, through the Action at Law, that it was entitled to
    more than 30%, Appellants never established that Appellee was entitled to
    less.   Appellants filed a counterclaim in the Action at Law, but the record
    before us does not divulge its particulars. Appellants obtained a non pros in
    the Action at Law rather than litigate the merits. Given the state of the record
    ____________________________________________
    6 On October 30, 2001, this Court affirmed, concluding that an order that
    made no finding of contempt and imposed no sanctions was not appealable.
    7  We observe that there is nothing in the record to support a conclusion that
    the pre-October 21, 1997 payments were made subject to a reservation of
    rights.
    -8-
    J-A11035-19
    and the parties’ course of conduct during this extensive litigation, we conclude
    the trial court acted reasonably in leaving the parties as it found them with
    respect to all prior disbursements.
    In hope of avoiding this conclusion, Appellants reference an order, time
    stamped April 21, 2000, providing that “after an extended period of time has
    passed for completion of discovery on the underlying main action, this court’s
    orders directing distribution/escrow of contested file claims are hereby
    rescinded.   All monies heretofore escrowed are to remain escrowed until
    further order of this court.” Order, 4/21/00. We do not believe this order
    supports Appellants’ argument for        repayment of amounts previously
    disbursed. Rather, it simply required that all amounts in escrow remain there
    pending the resolution of the “underlying main action,” i.e., the Action at Law.
    The Action at Law ended with neither party prevailing on any claim against
    the other. At the time of the April 21, 2000 order (and at present), the only
    money in escrow was the Wamsley Fee. The April 21, 2000 order therefore
    has no bearing on Appellants’ claimed entitlement to remittance of prior
    disbursements.
    Regarding the Wamsley Fee, Appellants claim in their second argument
    that the trial court erred in awarding Appellee a 30% share because a worker’s
    compensation judge concluded that Appellee had been overpaid in connection
    with the Wamsley matter. By letter dated May 15, 1997, Appellants’ counsel
    offered to place 40% of the Wamsley fee in escrow, in accord with the
    -9-
    J-A11035-19
    governing trial court order as of that date.       Appellants’ Brief in Support of
    Release of All Escrowed Attorneys’ Fees, 3/15/17, at Exhibit B. By letter dated
    May 29, 1997, Appellee declined and demanded that the full Wamsley Fee be
    placed in escrow. 
    Id. at Exhibit
    C. The parties disputed the issue before the
    Bureau of Worker’s Compensation, which found, in a decision issued on
    November 10, 1999, that Appellee was not entitled to any portion of the
    Wamsley Fee. 
    Id. at Exhibit
    D. The Bureau noted that Appellee, primarily by
    and through Appellant Koranda, represented Wamsley in her worker’s
    compensation matter from October 21, 1991 through December 30, 1996.
    
    Id. at Exhibit
    D, page 2-4. On July 2, 1997, Wamsley agreed to a settlement,
    negotiated by Appellant Koranda, of her compensation claim. 
    Id. at Exhibit
    D, page 5. The Bureau found that Appellee played no role in the settlement
    negotiation.    
    Id. The Bureau
    also found that Appellee had received over
    $10,000.00 in fees in the Wamsley matter and was not entitled to further
    compensation.8 
    Id. at Exhibit
    D, page 5-9.
    The record, therefore, fully supports Appellants’ claim that they
    prevailed in this fee dispute in the worker’s compensation matter.            But
    Appellants do not explain why the decision from the Worker’s Compensation
    Bureau binds the trial court in this Equity Action. Notably, the trial court, at
    ____________________________________________
    8 Appellee was further ordered to remit a payment of $519.84 that it received
    after Wamsley terminated Appellee’s representation. 
    Id. at Exhibit
    D, page
    4, 9.
    - 10 -
    J-A11035-19
    the hearing on the parties’ competing sanctions motions, told the parties it did
    not believe it would be bound by the Bureau’s decision. N.T. Hearing, 9/28/99,
    at 21. Moreover, the issue of origination credit was not before the Worker’s
    Compensation Bureau. Appellants have failed to establish that the outcome
    of the fee dispute before the Bureau has any bearing on the outcome here.
    For reasons we have already explained, Appellee’s failure in the Action
    at Law did not preclude application of the trial court’s 70/30 fee division.
    Presumably, Appellants could have relied on the worker’s compensation
    decision in support of a counterclaim in the Action at Law, had they chosen to
    litigate that action on the merits. Instead, the parties proceeded in accord
    with the trial court’s 70/30 formula with neither side successfully establishing
    another appropriate fee division.     Thus, Appellants have failed to establish
    that the trial court erred in applying the 70/30 formula to the Wamsley Fee.
    For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court acted
    reasonably in light of all of the available evidence. Appellants criticize the trial
    court for lacking any evidentiary basis for its decision, but in our view it is
    Appellants who have failed to put forth any evidentiary or legal basis for the
    relief they seek. Nothing in the record supports a conclusion that Appellee’s
    ability to retain all prior disbursements was dependent upon its success in the
    Action at Law. Were that the case, Appellants should have exhausted all legal
    avenues in an attempt to ensure that any disputed funds remained in escrow
    until the conclusion of the Action at Law.       They did not.     In this appeal,
    - 11 -
    J-A11035-19
    Appellants have failed to articulate any legal or factual basis sufficient to
    overcome the rigorous standard of review applicable to the decision of an
    equity court. We therefore affirm the trial court’s order.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 11/5/2019
    - 12 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 116 MDA 2018

Filed Date: 11/5/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/13/2024