Opinion
The principal question presented in these consolidated petitions for writ of mandate is whether a client, defrauded when her attorney settled a lawsuit without authorization and absconded with the funds, may seek and obtain reimbursement of the settlement proceeds from the State Bar’s client security fund (CSF), and at the same time pursue the original lawsuit against the defendant who paid the proceeds to the fraudulent lawyer. We conclude that such a client cannot both accept the benefits of her lawyer’s negotiated settlement and continue to sue the settling defendant. The client’s acceptance of money from CSF operates as a ratification of the settlement and in the absence of any allegations of bad faith, discharges the defendant from any further liability. We also decide that because of the circumstances of this case our holding should be prospective only.
Factual and Procedural Background
Veronica Pegg (Pegg) jointly with her husband (who died in Nov. 1980) filed a wrongful death action on April 23, 1980, on account of the death of the Peggs’ son, against Alvarado Community Hospital and another defendant who is not a party to this writ proceeding. Pegg’s attorney, Bambic, without Pegg’s knowledge or consent, agreed with Alvarado in October 1981 to settle the case for $15,000. Bambic forged Pegg’s signature both on a general release of the claim against Alvarado, dated October 13, 1981, and on Alvarado’s settlement draft for $15,000 dated November 4, 1981. Bambic obtained the court’s dismissal with prejudice of the action as to Alvarado, entered November 9, 1981.
In February 1983, Pegg received a letter from Bambic saying he was no longer in practice and had transferred the file to another attorney. After hearing nothing further she, in June 1983, consulted Attorney Roseman, who had originally referred her to Bambic. She retained Roseman’s law firm in August 1983. An associate in that firm, Friedberg, began to investigate the circumstances of Bambic’s disappearance and by December 1983 located him incarcerated at Boron Federal Penitentiary in Riverside County,
Pegg’s new law firm did not receive a copy of the settlement draft from Alvarado until July 1984, and contend it was not until that time that they could definitely establish that Pegg’s signature had been forged on the check. At that point they began actively participating in the attempt to secure recovery from the State Bar CSF. They say the State Bar then obtained the court file and held it throughout their investigation of the matter, until January 1985. At some point in January 1985 the bar concluded Bambic had defrauded Pegg, causing her to sustain a “reimburseable loss” of $9,000, a sum representing her share (60 percent) of the settlement amount. The bar paid Pegg the sum of $9,000 on January 30, 1985.
On May 1, 1985, Pegg moved to set aside the unauthorized dismissal of the lawsuit. The court granted the motion, providing that Alvarado should have credit for the sum of $15,000 against any judgment which might be recovered against it.
Discussion
. I
The parties agree on the basic proposition that an attorney must be specifically authorized to settle and compromise a claim. An attorney “has no implied or ostensible authority to bind his client to a compromise settlement of pending litigation and that clearly he has no authority pursuant to an unauthorized settlement to enter a dismissal with prejudice.”
(Navrides
v.
Zurich Ins. Co.
(1971)
Where an attorney purports to accept a settlement offer without his client’s consent, the client has two options. First, the client may decide the unauthorized settlement was nonetheless a beneficial bargain and seek to ratify his attorney’s acceptance. Alternatively, the client may determine the settlement was not beneficial, seek to disavow it and proceed with a lawsuit.
In Navrides v. Zurich Ins. Co., supra, 5 Cal.3d 698, an attorney purported to settle a personal injury claim with defendant insurance company for $9,000 and then absconded with the settlement funds. When plaintiff discovered what had happened, she sued the insurance company for $9,000. The Supreme Court reversed a judgment in favor of plaintiff holding that by bringing suit on the settlement agreement plaintiff necessarily ratified it; hence, ratified also the attorney’s authority to accept the check from Zurich Insurance Company. Further, the court held that when the drawee bank paid that check, Zurich was discharged from all liability to the plaintiff, by analogy to the rule that when a debtor delivers his check to the creditor, or to the creditor’s agent authorized to receive it, the debtor’s liability ends when the check is paid; the risk of loss for the agent’s dereliction falls then on the creditor.
Whittier Union High Sch. Dist.
v.
Superior Court
(1977)
This case falls somewhere between Navrides and Whittier. Unlike Navrides, Pegg did not sue Alvarado to enforce the settlement agreement. Unlike Whittier, Pegg did more than merely seek to have the unauthorized dismissal set aside. Instead, she first sought to and in fact did successfully obtain the benefits of the settlement from the CSF. Only then did she seek to have the dismissal set aside.
Alvarado relies on the well-settled rule of agency that a principal will be held to have ratified the agent’s actions where he voluntarily accepts the benefits of the unauthorized transaction. (Rest.2d Agency, § 98, p. 252; see 1 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (8th ed. 1973) Agency and Employment, § 129, p. 736.) The theory of this rule is that where the principal knows he would not be entitled to the benefits unless he affirmed the transaction, it would be unfair to allow him both to have his cake and eat it too; that is, allow him both to accept the benefits and also repudiate the trans
Here, of course, Pegg could have followed the procedure utilized by the plaintiff in Whittier and simply moved to set aside the dismissal. In such case, she would have still possessed her cause of action against Alvarado but she would not have been entitled to the $9,000. Instead, however, she obtained the $9,000 from the CSF “to which [she] would not be entitled unless the [settlement] were [affirmed] . . . .” (Rest.2d Agency, § 98, p. 252.)
The situation is somewhat analogous to that in which the principal, by bringing suit to enforce the unauthorized contract and thereby seeking the benefits of the transaction, is held to have ratified the agent’s acts in entering into the transaction. (See Rest.2d Agency, § 97, p. 250;
Navrides
v.
Zurich Ins. Co., supra,
5 Cal.3d at pp. 703-704;
Price
v.
McConnell
(1960)
“The fraud and embezzlement that occurred here may be a reimbursable loss caused by the dishonest conduct of an active member of the State Bar acting as fiduciary on behalf of his clients.” (Id. at pp. 510-511.)
We read this statement in the context of Whittier's concern with the defendant’s loss to quite clearly suggest the defendant might have recourse to the CSF which, since the defendant was not the attorney’s client, must necessarily be derivative of plaintiffs’ primary rights. We cannot believe Whittier meant to propose that the plaintiff could recover from the CSF while at the same time pursuing the lawsuit against the defendant. While it is true in the present case the trial court allowed Alvarado a credit of $15,000 against any judgment Pegg later recovered, such a procedure still works an injustice if Pegg recovers less than $15,000. Moreover by Pegg’s actions Alvarado is put in the unenviable position of financing the lawsuit against itself to the tune of $9,000.
Based on the foregoing we would ordinarily issue a peremptory writ of mandate dismissing Pegg’s action. We say “ordinarily” because we have concerns about the fairness of doing so in this case. To deprive a client of her day in court because of her attorney’s conduct is indeed a harsh result. Moreover the issue presented is one of first impression in the context of CSF. Pegg was never told by the State Bar or her present counsel that she would lose her rights if she were to seek reimbursement from CSF. It would indeed be anomalous to permit Pegg to allegedly have redress from the very
We have decided the best method of spreading the economic loss caused by Bambic’s dishonesty is to allow Pegg the opportunity to refund $9,000 to CSF as a condition of her pursuing her action against Alvarado. Thus, to the extent possible the parties will be placed in the position they would have been had Bambic never been involved. Now, if Pegg refunds the $9,000 and successfully pursues her action against Alvarado, Alvarado will be entitled to $15,000 plus interest as a setoff against the judgment. If Pegg is unsuccessful Alvarado is derivatively entitled to recoup its $15,000 from CSF. For these reasons our holding in this case shall be prospective only.
II
Alvarado also asserts the court erred in denying its motion to dismiss the action for failure to bring it to trial within five years in violation of Code of Civil Procedure section 583, subdivision (b).
As we know, that section although literally mandatory has been judicially qualified. The California Supreme Court has set “reality above artificiality.”
(Christin
v.
Superior Court
(1937)
In these matters, as in motions for default relief, the discretion to be exercised in determining applicability of the exception is “that of the trial court, not that of the appellate court and will be disturbed only in cases of manifest abuse.”
(Feingersh
v.
Lutheran Hosp. Society
(1977)
Alvarado argues that Pegg’s reliance on the absence of the file during the State Bar proceeding is specious, because despite lack of the file,
Also, Alvarado argues inapplicability of a case cited by Pegg,
Maguire
v.
Collier
(1975)
We highlight the following facts: the five-year rule here would normally require bringing the action to trial by April 23, 1985. The trial court, in extending the period to December 1, 1985, gave the plaintiff an extension of slightly more than seven months. We can concede, as Alvarado contends, that after Pegg learned of the fraudulent settlement in December 1983 all her delay from that point was unreasonable and counts against her. Nevertheless, she remains entitled to have excluded from the five-year period the span of time from the date of the fraudulent settlement—November 9, 1981—until the date she learned of it—December 1983—a period of nearly two years. During this period of time it was clearly impossible, impractical and futile for Pegg to have prosecuted the lawsuit against a defendant who without her knowledge had been dismissed from the suit. The realistic approach to these matters mandated in
Moran, supra,
Disposition
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue requiring the trial court to modify its orders in this proceeding by imposing as a condition of reinstatement of
Staniforth, Acting P. J., and Work, J., concurred.
Notes
Pegg’s declaration itself provides the factual support for application of this principle. In describing the letter she received from the State Bar informing her that her claim had been approved, she states: “Enclosed with the letter was a check from the State Bar in the amount of $9,000.00, representing my portion of the settlement proceeds (less attorney’s fees and costs) which I would have been entitled to had the case actually settled at the $15,000.00 figure.”
The CSF hearing did not consider the nature of the underlying action and whether the $15,000 settlement amount was in any sense reasonable under the circumstances. We have no basis in the present record to determine what might be the reasonable settlement value of the case.
We also note the converse, however; there was no evidence suggesting that the amount paid by Alvarado was other than in good faith. (See generally
Tech-Bilt, Inc.
v.
Woodward-Clyde & Associates
(1985)
