OPINION
This case involves Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 1.5(e), which governs the splitting of fees between attorneys of different firms. We hold that public policy is clearly set forth by Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 1.5(e), and that fee-splitting agreements between attorneys of different firms must comply with all of the requirements of the rule to be deemed enforceable and consistent with public policy.
Fred Hollender is the deceased husband of the respondent, Christine Hollender Christensen. Prior to his death, Hollender was an attorney and sole shareholder of his firm, Fred Hollender, Attorney-at-Law, P.A. James Koch knew Hollender and had previously used Hollender’s legal services for business purposes. James and Kathy Koch consulted with Hollender regarding a potential medical malpractice claim on behalf of their son, Jeffrey Koch. Hollender then referred the potential malpractice claim to Brad Eggen, a solo practitioner, whom Hol-lender believed to be a more experienced personal injury attorney than himself. Initially, they planned to share responsibility on the Koch case, with Hollender acting as a consulting attorney during the potential litigation. They agreed that Hollender would receive a third of the total fees that Eggen received from the case. Eggen admits that Hollender had “referred” at least two other cases to Eggen in the past, in which Hollen-der remained active throughout the cases and they shared fees. 1
In April 1995, Hollender’s widow, Christensen, filed an attorney’s, lien in Anoka County in an attempt to recover a third of Eggen’s fees from the Koch ease pursuant to Eggen and Hollender’s agreement. A third of Eggen’s total fee was $132,120.85. On February 22,1996, after the court of appeals affirmed the judgment for Koch, Christensen filed a declaratory judgment action in Anoka County to enforce the fee-splitting agreement between Hollender and Eggen. Eg-gen’s motion for a change of venue to Henne-pin County was granted. The attorney’s lien was dismissed on April 11, 1996, pursuant to a stipulation by the parties in which Christensen discharged and released all parties from any liability for the attorney’s hen.
Eggen moved for summary judgment in the declaratory judgment action. In granting summary judgment for Eggen, the district court held that Christensen either could have intervened in the Koch matter by filing the attorney’s hen or instituted an independent action to seek her remedy, but that the doctrine of election of remedies prevented her from attempting to do both. The district court determined that Christensen had elected her remedy by filing the attorney’s hen and that she waived her claim by agreeing to the stipulation, which resulted in the dismissal of the attorney’s hen. The district court further held that the fee-sphtting arrangement was contrary to pubhc pohcy, because it did not conform to the requirements of the Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct, and that whatever contract Hollender may have had with Eggen necessarily terminated upon Hollender’s death, because it was a contract to perform personal services.
It was from this judgment that Christensen appealed to the court of appeals, which reversed and remanded the case. First, the court of appeals held that Christensen’s attorney’s hen action did not implicate the election of remedies doctrine and that “the trial court erred in concluding that the doctrine of election of remedies barred Christensen’s declaratory judgment action on the fee-sharing contract.” Second, the court held that a balancing test should be employed in determining whether the agreement violated pubhc pohcy, and while the Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct may evidence pubhc pohcy, there was no violation of pubhc pohcy because there was no issue of great pubhc importance implicated in this case which outweighed the pohcy favoring freedom in negotiating contracts. More simply stated, “failure * * * to comply precisely with the professional rules on splitting fees did not render [Hollender and Eg-gen’s] agreement unenforceable as a matter of law.”
Christensen v. Eggen,
I.
The election of remedies issue can be easily disposed of, because it is clear that this particular case does not fall within the bounds of the doctrine:
The doctrine of election of remedies requires a party to adopt one of two or more coexisting and inconsistent remedies which the law affords the same set of facts. The purpose of the doctrine is not to prevent recourse to any particular remedy but to prevent double redress for a single wrong.
However, if inconsistent remedies are sought and it is doubtful which one will bring relief, a party may claim either or both alternatively until one remedy is pursued to a determinative conclusion. Therefore, a party should not be bound by an election unless he has pursued the chosen course to a determinative conclusion or has procured advantage therefrom, or has thereby subjected his adversary to injury.
Vesta State Bank v. Independent State Bank,
The attorney’s lien action filed by Christensen was not pursued to a determinative conclusion. It was dismissed and considered waived by the stipulation in which Christensen agreed she would not pursue the attorney’s lien. However, that stipulation did not waive any other claim of redress. In fact the district court, in dismissing the attorney’s lien, clearly contemplated that no final judgment had been reached on the substantive issue, stating: “The issue of whether there is a contract between Hollender and Eggen and all related issues including the validity of any purported assignment thereof is not decided here. Those issues shall be litigated and decided in the declaratory judgment contract action which is now pending.” There is also no indication that Christensen received any advantage from bringing both actions or that Eggen has suffered any injury. Under these facts, we affirm the court of appeals’ ruling that the election of remedies doctrine does not prevent Christensen from pursuing the declaratory judgment action to a determinative conclusion.
II.
The second issue we must decide is whether the fee-splitting agreement is enforceable. Rule 1.5(e) of Professional Conduct provides:
A division of fee between lawyers who are not in the same firm may be made only if:
(1) 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;
(2) the client is advised of the share that each lawyer is to receive and does not object to the participation of all the lawyers involved; and
(3) the total fee is reasonable.
Because there is no issue as to the reasonableness of the total fee, we will focus on the requirements in (1) and (2) of the rule, which require that the client agree to the representation and the fee split in writing and that the client be advised of the share that each lawyer is to receive.
4
In this ease,
The purpose of these rules governing fee-sphtting agreements is to protect the Ghent’s best interests throughout his/her representation. Each chent has a right to choose the attorney that he/she prefers and to be knowledgeable about the specifics of his/her ease, especially those terms regarding the payment of fees. To allow attorneys to proceed with fee-sphtting arrangements without the Ghent’s written agreement or knowledge would put the chent at a severe disadvantage in the lawyer-client relationship.
Prior to the adoption of the Minnesota Rules of Professional Conduct, this court held that “[a] legitimate basis for division of fees between attorneys should be either a division of labor or responsibility.”
Anderson v. Grimes,
An agreement to pay a referral fee is often viewed as unenforceable as against pubhc pohcy. It is thought likely to increase the overall fee charged, to ignore the rights of the chent to choose his own lawyer, and to encourage neglect and unethical conduct in the referring attorney, besides being unfair to the one who has done all of the work.
Caroh J. Miller, Annotation,
Validity and Enforceability of Referral Fee Agreement Between Attorneys,
This court has stated that “pubhc pohcy requires that freedom of contract remain inviolate except only in eases when the particular contract violates some principle which is of even greater importance to the general pubhc.”
Rossman v. 740 River Drive,
In this case, while the attorneys may initially have intended to divide the labor and responsibility, Hollender performed no work on the case and did not maintain joint responsibility for the case because of his untimely death. Koch was neither told of the share that each attorney would receive, nor did he consent to the fee spht and joint representation in writing. The fee-sphtting agreement did not comply with two of the three requirements of Rule 1.5(e).
The fee-sphtting agreement between Hol-lender and Eggen violates pubhc pohcy because it does not comply with Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 1.5(e) and is therefore unenforceable.
Reversed.
Notes
. Eggen asserts that “[i]n both cases, Hollender was to earn fees by a significant substantive ongoing involvement in the representation of the client to the cases' conclusion.” Eggen states
. James and Jeffrey Koch both filed affidavits declaring that neither of them regarded Hollen-der as Jeffrey’s attorney nor did they agree to his sharing in the attorney’s fees. Donna Blazevic, the primary attorney of record for the Koch defendants, also filed an affidavit declaring that Eggen was the only attorney that she was aware of representing Jeffrey Koch, and that she had neither heard of Hollender nor had any contact with him during the time she represented the Koch defendants.
. Attorney fees were awarded to Eggen by the district court for the costs incurred while defending the declaratory judgment action. However, the court of appeals reversed the award of attorney fees, and neither party appealed that determination to this court. Therefore, we will not address the propriety of attorney fees.
. A fee split is permitted when the division is in proportion to the services performed by each lawyer, as set forth by Minn. R. Prof. Conduct 1.5(e)(1) and the other requirements of the rule are satisfied. However, in this case, Hollender performed no work on the case so that aspect of the rule need not be discussed.
