This appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of New York concerns the enforceability of an attorney substitution agreement (Agreement). Defendant-appellant Gary Logan, Esq., seeks to rescind an agreement with Ballow Brasted O’Brien & Ru-sin, P.C. (BBOR), obligating Logan to pay BBOR 20% of the attorney’s fees Logan recovered from his representation of Mr. Eric Roll, who formerly had been BBOR’s client. Logan seeks rescission on the grounds that (1) BBOR fraudulently induced him to enter into the Agreement, and (2) the Agreement runs afoul of Disciplinary Rule 2-107(a)(2) of New York’s Lawyer’s Code of Professional Responsibility (DR 2-107) and Nevada Supreme Court Rule 155(5). We hold that, due to Logan’s four-year delay in challenging the contract, he has waived his right to assert rescission. We also hold that because BBOR unquestionably contributed to Roll’s case and nothing in the record suggests that BBOR refused to contribute more substantially to Roll’s legal services, the Agreement is enforceable pursuant to New York contract law. Although the district court’s decision relied on alternative reasoning, 2 we nevertheless affirm the district court’s order compelling Logan to pay $168,000 plus interest as calculated under 28 U.S.C. § 1961(a).
I.
On November 16, 1994, Mr. Eric Roll (Roll) sustained injuries while serving in
When Roll informed John Ballow, a partner at BBOR, that he wanted Logan to assume his representation, Ballow and Logan negotiated terms that were memorialized in the Agreement. The Agreement substituted Logan for BBOR as Roll’s counsel and provided that Logan would pay BBOR 20% of the gross legal fees obtained “in the event [Roll] recovers monetary damages in this action, whether by settlement or judgment.” The Agreement also noted that BBOR had already spent $23,000 for expenses and disbursements litigating Roll’s case, but provided that these expenditures would be “included in the 20% paid from the gross attorney’s fees.” Finally, the Agreement provided that BBOR would immediately transfer Roll’s file to Logan’s office. All parties involved signed the Agreement and submitted it to the presiding judge, Judge Curtin, who “so-ordered” the Agreement and entered it as an order of the court on April 4, 1998.
After assuming representation of Roll, Logan filed a motion to transfer the case to the United States District Court for the District of Nevada. The transfer motion was granted and the case was tried in February 2002. The jury deadlocked. The case thereafter was settled for $2,100,000 in July 2002. Logan received attorney’s fees in the amount of $840,000.
When BBOR demanded 20% of the $840,000 in accordance with the Agreement, Logan refused to make the payment and BBOR commenced this suit in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York. Logan answered and asserted various affirmative defenses, including two relating to the enforceability vel non of the Agreement.
First, Logan claimed that the Agreement was induced by fraudulent misrepresentations. Specifically, Logan contended that, contrary to BBOR’s assertions, BBOR had not (1) conducted extensive discovery, (2) retained an expert, (3) conferred with the expert to formulate a viable defense to the opposition’s then-pending motion for summary judgment, or (4) incurred approximately $23,000 in expenses.
Second, Logan argued that the Agreement violated DR 2-107, which provides that
[a] lawyer shall not divide a fee for legal services with another lawyer who is not a partner in or associate of the lawyer’s law firm, unless ... [t]he division is in proportion to the services performed by each lawyer or, by a writing given to the client, each lawyer assumes joint responsibility for the representation.
22 N.Y.C.R.R. § 1200.12(a)(2) (McKinney 2005). 3
At the conclusion of discovery, BBOR moved for summary judgment. In opposition, Logan argued that there existed a dispute as to whether BBOR had made material misrepresentations that induced Logan to sign the Agreement. The district court denied BBOR’s motion, holding that BBOR had violated United States District Court for the Western District of New York Local Rule of Civil Procedure (Local Rule) 7.1(e) (requiring the filing of a memorandum of law with a motion for summary judgment), both parties had violated Local Rule 56.1(d) (mandating the specification of particular admissible evidence following each material fact), and BBOR “failed to demonstrate that it ‘is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law within the meaning of Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.” It is unclear, however, whether the final ground for denial was based on substantive or procedural grounds.
BBOR then filed a motion for reconsideration of the court’s order. In an order signed on August 10, 2004, the court reconsidered its prior order and granted plaintiffs motion for summary judgment. This order declared that the stipulation substituting counsel was a court order, not a contract, and therefore was not subject to Logan’s asserted contract defense. Alternatively, even if the stipulation had been deemed a contract, the court rejected Logan’s fraudulent inducement claim. The court also found that DR 2-107 was inapplicable because the Agreement concerned an attorney substitution, not a fee-sharing agreement governing joint representation by multiple attorneys. As a result of these findings, the court granted BBOR’s motion for reconsideration and ordered Logan to pay $168,000 plus interest as calculated according to 28 U.S.C. § 1961(a). Because we agree that Logan is required to pay BBOR the amount memorialized in the Agreement, albeit for different reasons than those given by the district court, we affirm.
II.
After granting BBOR’s motion for reconsideration, the district court granted BBOR’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that there were no genuine issues of material fact, and that BBOR was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We review a district court’s granting of summary judgment
de novo. Rubens v. Mason,
A.
Logan contends that he is not required to fulfill his obligation under the Agreement because BBOR fraudulently induced him to enter into the Agreement. The law is clear that a party induced to enter a contract by fraud or misrepresentations must make a choice; the party may either “elect to accept the situation created by the fraud and seek to recover his damages or he may elect to repudiate the transaction and seek to be placed in status quo. As a general rule, however, the defrauded party cannot both rescind and maintain an action for deceit.” 27 Richard A. Lord,
Williston on Contracts
§ 69:47, at 102 (4th ed.2003) (quoting
Ringsby Truck Lines v. Beardsley,
Where a party opts for rescission due to misrepresentation or fraud
[i]t is well settled by repeated decisions of [the Supreme] [C]ourt that ... he must upon the discovery of the fraud announce his purpose and adhere to it. If he continues to treat the property as his own the right of rescission is gone, and the party will be held bound by the contract.
Shappirio v. Goldberg,
Although the timely notification obligation is a “fairly stringent requirement,”
Banque Arabe,
Case law from this Court has categorically stated that “[a]n action for rescission must be initiated without unreasonable delay.”
Allen,
In this case, Logan waited at least four years to assert his rescission claim. Logan conceded at oral argument that during. his delay BBOR would have no reason to believe that Logan planned to refuse to pay, even though, all along, Logan harbored an intention not to live up to his end of the bargain. Logan’s sole explanation for his failure to apprise BBOR of his rescission claim was that his obligation under the Agreement did not ripen until the Roll action was resolved. This explanation is insufficient because Logan knew for four years that he would contest his obligation under the Agreement if and when he received payment — and nothing prevented him from informing BBOR. Equity does not favor affording Logan relief after he deliberately allowed BBOR to maintain its unrealistic expectation that Logan would adhere to the Agreement.
See Grymes v. Sanders,
B.
Logan argues, in the alternative, that 20% of his fee is not proportional to BBOR’s legal services; thus the Agreement runs afoul of DR 2-107. 5 The district court rejected this argument, noting that the “arrangement” in this case was not a fee-sharing agreement, but rather an agreement concerning the substitution of counsel. We disagree with the district court’s conclusion that DR 2-107 is inapplicable to this Agreement. We conclude, however, that the Agreement is valid and enforceable as a matter of New York contract law.
It is axiomatic that a client may discharge his attorney with or without cause.
Universal Acupuncture Pain Servs., P.C. v. Quadrino & Schwartz, P.C.,
In
Ford
an individual sought representation from an attorney for a possible medical malpractice action.
Id. at
843-44,
The only distinguishing characteristics of the current case are the length of time that BBOR was retained and the fact that BBOR had initiated the lawsuit. These facts, however, do not render Ford inappo-site. Rather, the amount and type of work completed by the discharged attorney simply affect whether the former attorney’s recovery is proportional to the work he performed,
i.e.,
the reasonableness of the former attorney’s fee.
Ford
stands for the
According to these cases, BBOR could have either requested, in quantum meruit, the fair and reasonable amount of the services rendered, to be paid at the time of the substitution, or a contingent portion of Roll’s ultimate recovery, which is more properly determined at the conclusion of the litigation. BBOR chose neither of these options. Rather, BBOR attempted to claim a definite percentage of the potential recovery at the time of substitution. Fixing the percentage paid to each attorney at the time of substitution is likely to run afoul of DR 2-107 because the predetermined relative percentages may not be representative of the amount of work rendered by each attorney. While we cannot say with certainty that the 80/20 split in this case was disproportionate to the services rendered by Logan and BBOR, it is more likely than not, after further inquiry into the attorneys’ records, that a different apportionment would be more representative. Nevertheless, the possible violation of DR 2-107 in this case does not compel the conclusion that we should refuse to enforce the Agreement as a matter of New York contract law.
While
Ford
did refuse to enforce a fee-sharing agreement that violated DR 2-107, a related line of New York cases has enunciated the principle that “[i]t has long been understood that in disputes among attorneys over the enforcement of fee-sharing agreements the courts will not inquire into the precise worth of the services performed by the parties as long as each party actually contributed to the legal work and there is no claim that either refused to contribute more substantially.”
Benjamin v. Koeppel,
We also note our agreement with Benjamin ’s recognition that “it ill becomes [the parties seeking to avoid paying the fee], who are also bound by the Code of Professional Responsibility, to seek to avoid on ‘ethical’ grounds the obligations of an agreement to which they freely assented and from which they reaped the benefits.” Id. (citing ABA Comm, on Profl Ethics, Informal Op. 870 (1965)). This principle is directly on point in this case. Logan is bound by the same rules of professional responsibility that he now seeks to use as a sword to avoid his obligations under an Agreement to which he freely consented. Logan’s inequitable conduct is yet another reason why we will enforce the Agreement.
III.
Claims for rescission based on alleged fraudulent misrepresentations must be asserted in a timely manner. Having waited approximately four years to assert this very claim, Logan has failed to meet this requirement and the equities do not favor permitting the claim to proceed. As a result, he cannot be absolved from his obligations under the Agreement with BBOR, which is enforceable pursuant to New York contract law. Therefore, albeit on different grounds, the ruling of the district court granting summary judgment in favor of BBOR is affirmed.
Notes
. The district court rested its decision on numerous alternative grounds. One of these grounds was its conclusion that because the Agreement is a court order, it is not subject to Logan’s rescission claim. Because we con-elude that Logan's delay precludes him from asserting rescission of the Agreement and that the Agreement is enforceable as a matter of New York contract law, we do not reach the question of whether a contract becomes insulated from common law contract defenses when entered as an order of the court.
. In his Answer and again on appeal, Logan also maintains that the Agreement violates Nevada Supreme Court Rule 155(5), which provides that
[a] division of fee between lawyers who are not in the same firm may be made only if: (a) The division is in proportion to the services performed by each lawyer or, by written agreement with the client, each lawyer assumes joint responsibility for the representation; (b) The client is advised in writing of and does not object to the participation of all the lawyers involved; and (c) The total fee is reasonable.
. In Logan’s sworn affidavit in opposition to plaintiffs motion for summary judgment he stated that he "did not learn until long after April 2, 1998 that [BBOR] had made material misrepresentations of fact to [him] which induced [him] to enter into the Stipulation.” However, his affidavit also includes the statement that "[h]ad [he] known in March, 1998, what [he] learned in the months following [BBOR’s] termination as counsel of record for Eric Roll, [he] would have advised Mr. Roll to terminate [BBOR] as his counsel of record for gross misconduct and incompetence and to reject any claims for compensation for services rendered made by [BBOR].” If Logan was able to conclude, “in the months following” March 1998, that BBOR was grossly incompetent, then it follows that he was likewise familiar enough with Roll’s file to be able to conclude that BBOR had misrepresented the extent of its legal work. Construing the statement — “in the months following” the end of March 1998 — very generously, we will assume that it represents twelve months. Thus, he should have been aware of BBOR's misrepresentations at least by the end of March 1999.
. DR 2-107(A)(2) prohibits the division of fees among lawyers who are not in the same firm unless "[t]he division is in proportion to the services performed by each lawyer or, by a writing given the client, each lawyer assumes joint responsibility for the representation.”
. We note that BBOR cites to
Lai Ling Cheng
v.
Modansky Leasing Co.,
. To the extent
Ford
and
Benjamin
can be read to conflict, we follow the decision of the Court of Appeals in
Benjamin. See Daynard v. Ness, Motley, Loadholt, Richardson & Poole, P.A.,
. To the extent Logan's fraud argument could be construed as a contention that BBOR ''refused” to provide the services it purported to provide, we held above that Logan is precluded from asserting it.
