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PARKER WAICHMAN LLP v. R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, 18-3239 (2019)

Court: District Court of Appeal of Florida Number: 18-3239 Visitors: 13
Filed: Oct. 02, 2019
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA FOURTH DISTRICT PARKER WAICHMAN LLP, Appellant, v. R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY and LINDA PURDO, individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of THOMAS PURDO, Appellees. No. 4D18-3239 [October 2, 2019] Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County; Cymonie S. Rowe, Judge; L.T. Case No. 502007CA024173. Alan J. Kluger and Michael T. Landen of Kluger, Kaplan, Silverman, Katzen & Levine, P.L., Miami
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           DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
                                  FOURTH DISTRICT

                            PARKER WAICHMAN LLP,
                                  Appellant,

                                          v.

R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY and LINDA PURDO, individually
   and as Personal Representative of the Estate of THOMAS PURDO,
                             Appellees.

                                   No. 4D18-3239

                                  [October 2, 2019]

  Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
Beach County; Cymonie S. Rowe, Judge; L.T. Case No. 502007CA024173.

   Alan J. Kluger and Michael T. Landen of Kluger, Kaplan, Silverman,
Katzen & Levine, P.L., Miami and Bruce S. Rogow and Tara A. Campion of
Bruce S. Rogow, P.A., Ft. Lauderdale, for appellant.

    J. Chris Bristow of Critton, Luttier & Coleman, LLP, West Palm Beach,
for appellee Linda Purdo.

KLINGENSMITH, J.

    Parker Waichman LLP, a New York-based law firm organized as a
limited liability partnership, appeals a final order discharging its charging
lien in a tobacco litigation case. Rather than awarding the full amount of
the contingency fee sought by the firm at the end of the case, the trial court
ordered the firm receive attorneys’ fees based on quantum meruit. For the
reasons set forth below, we affirm the trial court’s order.

    In November 2007, Parker Waichman hired Jordan Chaikin, a lawyer
licensed and based in Florida, as an associate attorney to assist in
screening Florida Engle 1 cases. At the time, Chaikin was the firm’s only
Florida attorney. Shortly after joining Parker Waichman, Chaikin filed suit
on behalf of the estate of Thomas Purdo along with other Engle lawsuits.
These cases remained mostly inactive until 2010, upon agreement of the


1   Engle v. Liggett Group, Inc., 
945 So. 2d 1246
(Fla. 2006).
attorneys, due to pending rulings from the appellate courts on various
Engle-related issues.

    In 2010, the firm’s managing partner Jerrold Parker received a letter
from the Florida Bar concluding that Parker Waichman was engaging in
the unlicensed practice of law by operating a Florida office without having
a licensed partner in the state. The Florida Bar determined that Mr. Parker
was holding himself out as a licensed attorney in marketing materials
disseminated in Florida without the required limiting jurisdictional
language indicating he was not a member of the Florida Bar.
Subsequently, both Mr. Parker and the firm agreed that they would change
their business operations to comply with the Bar’s requirements.

    Parker Waichman subsequently named Chaikin as a partner in its
Florida office. In fact, Chaikin remained the only lawyer in the firm’s
Florida office. Although Chaikin’s agreement with the firm described him
as both a “profit partner” and “supervisory partner,” Chaikin was not
allowed access to the financial information or capital of the partnership,
and could not vote in partnership matters. Despite being described as a
“profit partner,” his salary was determined by the managing partners, he
did not share in the firm’s profits, and continued to receive compensation
as a salaried W-2 employee entitled only to discretionary bonuses. Chaikin
stipulated that he was a partner and referred to himself as such, but the
evidence showed that Chaikin was never an equity partner of Parker
Waichman and his role within the firm did not materially change with the
new designation.
   In 2011, Chaikin invited attorney Alex Alvarez to his office to review
Parker Waichman’s pending tobacco cases. Alvarez agreed to serve as co-
counsel with Parker Waichman on a few of these cases, including Purdo’s
case. Accordingly, Linda Purdo executed a new contingency fee agreement
on behalf of the estate with the Alvarez Law Firm, Parker Waichman, and
an appellate lawyer using Alvarez’s form agreement.

    Towards the end of 2015, Chaikin resigned from Parker Waichman to
start his own firm. Parker Waichman sent Ms. Purdo a client departure
letter advising her that she had the right to do one of three things: 1) have
Parker Waichman and The Alvarez Law Firm continue to represent her; 2)
have Chaikin represent her; or 3) elect to retain new counsel. Unhappy
with the letter’s limited and rigid options, Ms. Purdo indicated she wished
to retain Chaikin but added “and the Alex Alvarez Law Firm,” clearly
choosing Chaikin and Alvarez and terminating her relationship with
Parker Waichman. The trial court then issued an order substituting
Chaikin as counsel for Ms. Purdo and relieving Parker Waichman. In


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March 2016, once Parker Waichman was terminated, the firm filed the
charging lien at issue in this case.

    The Purdo case went to trial in April 2016. According to evidence
provided to the court, most of the trial preparation took place from
January 2016 up until the day of trial with Chaikin involved in many
aspects of it. Chaikin was also significantly involved in several matters
during trial even though Alvarez admittedly handled the bulk of the trial
work. The trial, which lasted almost a month, resulted in a verdict in favor
of the Purdo estate for $33.5 million. As a result, Chaikin was entitled to
a contingency fee of $4,223,700.
    After the verdict was upheld on appeal, Parker Waichman began
litigating its charging lien and asked the trial court to award it the full
contingency fee to be paid to Chaikin. At the three-day evidentiary
hearing, Parker Waichman submitted that the firm worked a total of 116
hours on the Purdo case with cost disbursements totaling $17,803.88.
Consistent with Parker Waichman’s time records, Chaikin agreed that he
spent between 100 and 120 hours on the Purdo case while employed by
Parker Waichman, and that his hourly rate while employed at the firm was
between $500 and $650 per hour.
    After the hearing, the trial court awarded Parker Waichman attorney’s
fees of $75,400.00 based on quantum meruit (116 hours at a rate of $650
per hour) and costs of $17,803.88 for a total of $93,203.88 which the
parties agreed would be paid from Chaikin’s fee. The trial court also
dismissed Parker Waichman’s charging lien with prejudice. This appeal
follows.

   When fashioning an attorney’s fee award for a discharged firm “[t]he
determination as to which factors are relevant in a given case, the weight
to be given each factor and the ultimate determination as to the amount
to be awarded are matters within the sound discretion of the trial court.”
Searcy, Denney, Scarola, Barnhart & Shipley, P.A. v. Poletz, 
652 So. 2d 366
,
369 (Fla. 1995). However, when dealing with a claim that the trial court
used an incorrect legal standard or failed to properly apply the correct legal
standard, the standard of review is de novo. See Wiener v. The Country
Club at Woodfield, Inc., 
254 So. 3d 488
, 491 (Fla. 4th DCA 2018).

   Here, Parker Waichman argues the trial court failed to apply the correct
standard for the fee award as provided in Buckley Towers Condo., Inc. v.
Katzman Garfinkel Rosenbaum, LLP, 519 Fed. Appx. 657, 661 (11th Cir.
2013) and Frates v. Nichols, 
167 So. 2d 77
, 82 (Fla. 3d DCA 1964). We
disagree.


                                      3
   In Buckley, the court summarized the law regarding fee awards for firms
who have been discharged by a client prior to completing their
representation:

      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. 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. 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.

Id. (Emphases added
and citations omitted).

    Buckley cited to Frates for the proposition that “the initial firm is
entitled to the entire contingent fee, less the former partner’s partnership
share” when a partner exits the firm. See Buckley, 519 Fed. Appx. at 661.
In Frates, the Third District referred to the common law of partnerships to
hold 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.” 167 So. 2d at 80
. Because the clients already
had retainer agreements with Frates’ old firm, the appeals court opined
that the cases were assets of the old firm which Frates had a duty to wind
up once he joined his new firm—without receiving any extra compensation
for doing so. 
Id. at 81.
As such, the Third District held that the old firm
was entitled to keep the entire fee award minus Frates’ partnership share
under the old partnership agreement. 
Id. at 82.
    After Frates was decided, Florida made significant changes to its
partnership law. See Buckley, 519 Fed. Appx. at 662. In 2005, Florida
adopted the Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act. See § 620.1101,
Fla. Stat. (2018), et seq. The Act states that limited liability partnerships
are composed of members who are either general partners or limited
partners. See §§ 620.1402, 620.1305, Fla. Stat. (2018). General partners
manage the operations and activities of a limited liability partnership. See
§§ 620.1402, 620.1406, Fla. Stat. (2018). General partners can also bind
the partnership by any actions that they take on behalf and in furtherance
of the partnership. See § 620.1402. Because their actions can cause the

                                       4
partnership great potential liability, general partners must abide by
stringent standards of conduct. See § 620.1408, Fla. Stat. (2018). For
instance, a general partner has a duty of loyalty to the partnership which
it must follow even during the process of winding up the partnership’s
activities. See § 620.1408(3). Though a partnership agreement may
specify the duties and responsibilities of a general partner, no agreement
may eliminate a general partner’s duty of loyalty, obligation of good faith
and fair dealing, or duty of care. See § 620.1110, Fla. Stat. (2018).

   In contrast, “[a] limited partner does not have any fiduciary duty to the
limited [liability] partnership” but must discharge its duties “consistently
with the obligation of good faith and fair dealing.” § 620.1305, Fla. Stat.
(2018). A limited partner is not prohibited from taking an action merely
because that action “furthers the limited partner’s own interest.” §
620.1305(3). Additionally, to withdraw from a limited partnership, a
limited partner need only give notice of its “express will to withdraw as a
limited partner.” § 620.1601(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2018).

    In Buckley, the court considered whether an equity-holding attorney
was entitled to fees after leaving his firm—a professional corporation—to
join another, taking several clients with him. 
Id. at 659-60.
Although the
Eleventh Circuit acknowledged that Frates dealt with partnership law and
not the law of corporations, it did not “believe Florida courts would allow
attorneys to shirk fiduciary duties simply by choosing an alternate
business entity for their law firm.” 
Id. at 662-63.
The court further noted
that “Florida law generally does not distinguish between lawyers in
partnerships and those in professional corporations.” 
Id. at 663.
As such,
the court in Buckley applied Frates and held that the corporation was
entitled to the fees obtained by the equity attorney because he owed his
professional corporation the duty to wind up its affairs without receiving
extra compensation for doing so. 
Id. at 665.
    Here, the evidence shows Parker Waichman LLP was created and
organized in New York, thus it is a foreign limited liability partnership
under Florida law. See § 620.1901, Fla. Stat. (2018). There was no
evidence that Chaikin was ever a general partner or had equity ownership
in the firm. The evidence before the trial court was that Parker Waichman
initially hired Chaikin as an associate attorney, but in the wake of the
Florida Bar investigation, later named him a partner. 2 While Chaikin’s

2 We rely on Chaikin’s stipulation that he was a partner and not Parker
Waichman’s joinder agreement, which details the addition of Chaikin as a “new
profit partner.” While this joinder agreement, which also states that New York
law controls, is in the record, the trial court declined to consider it. Further, the

                                         5
title may have changed, his duties, responsibilities, and compensation did
not. Chaikin did not enjoy the benefits of general partnership status,
namely access to the firm’s financial information, the ability to withdraw
from capital accounts, or a right to vote on the firm’s affairs. See §§
620.1402, 620.1406(1), Fla. Stat.         Parker Waichman crafted this
arrangement to obtain the benefit of getting clients in Florida without the
obligations commensurate with making Chaikin a general partner or
providing him equity ownership. Calling Chaikin a “partner” may have
satisfied the firm’s obligations under Florida Bar rules, but mere labels do
not control the outcome here. Although Buckley did not expressly define
what a partner is for the purposes of fee sharing, we find that the
relationship requires more than simply a change of title.

    For all practical purposes, Chaikin’s position never changed vis-à-vis
the firm. Assuming Chaikin was a partner of Parker Waichman, he would
be more aptly characterized as a limited partner and not a general partner.
See § 620.1305. As a limited partner, Chaikin would have had no duty to
wind up Parker Waichman’s affairs relating to the Purdo case after he left
the firm and breached no duties to Parker Waichman by signing her as a
client with his new firm. See 
id. Since Chaikin
owed no fiduciary duty to
the firm, Parker Waichman was not entitled to the full proceeds of
Chaikin’s share of the Purdo contingency fee. Cf. Buckley, 519 Fed. Appx.
at 663; 
Frates, 167 So. 2d at 80
. As such, the division of fees resulting
from Chaikin’s disassociation from the firm should be treated like that
involving the departure of an associate. See Buckley, 519 Fed. Appx. at
661; 
Frates, 167 So. 2d at 80
.

   In sum, for the purposes of dividing the contingency fee in a case
involving the departure of a limited partner from a firm, the framework
should mirror the one used when an associate attorney leaves a firm rather
than when a general partner, equity holding attorney, or shareholder
departs. See Buckley, 519 Fed. Appx. at 661; 
Poletz, 652 So. 2d at 369
.
Therefore, Parker Waichman was only entitled to a quantum meruit award
for work completed on the Purdo case when Chaikin was with the firm.
See 
Poletz, 652 So. 2d at 369
. The court’s $93,203.88 award of fees and
costs to Parker Waichman was supported by the evidence and within the
proper exercise of the trial court’s discretion. See 
id. Affirmed. CONNER
and KUNTZ, JJ., concur.

parties expressly relied on Florida law to support their positions before the trial
court and on appeal.

                                        6
                      *        *        *

Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.




                               7

Source:  CourtListener

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