The question here is whether an attorney may prosecute a cause of action on his own behalf to secure a contingent fee
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after his client, the original plaintiff, has been properly dismissed from the case. The trial court held that he could not. The Court of Civil Appeals disagreed and held that he could.
Roy W. Champion filed suit for damages for personal injuries against Dow Chemical Company. He was represented by the Respondent law firm composed of Mr. Fox Benton and others. More than two years later, Dow took the necessary steps to secure Champion’s oral deposition. A subpoena was properly served on Champion, but he failed to appear and has never attempted to show cause for this failure. Champion was urged by his counsel to appear for his deposition, but he refused. Invoking Rule 215a of the Rules of Civil Procedure, Dow moved to dismiss the lawsuit because of plaintiff’s refusal to appear for his deposition. Thereupon, Benton filed a petition in intervention, based on the contingent interest of the law firm in the plaintiff’s cause of action. Dow moved to strike the intervention.
At the ensuing hearing, no justification was given for Champion’s continued refusal to appear. The only witness testifying was the attorney, Benton, who stated:
“I don’t think at this time I would strongly oppose the Plaintiff’s case being dismissed, but I do want to strongly urge my right to intervene * *
The trial court granted Dow’s motion and ordered the entire cause dismissed. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed and remanded, holding that Champion’s cause could be dismissed but that his attorneys could continue to prosecute the same claim to secure their contingent fee. That is, that although Champion’s actions clearly warranted the sanctions imposed by Rule 215a, the dismissal of his suit, there was no showing that his attorneys personally violated any rules which would authorize dismissal of their case.
The contingent fee contract involved here is the usual one. Champion agreed to “sell, transfer, assign and convey to my said attorneys the respective undivided interests in and to my said claim as set out above against the aforesaid parties and to any judgment or judgments that I may obtain or that may be rendered to me or my heirs and assigns”. If the case were settled prior to the filing of suit, the attorneys were to receive one-third of whatever was recovered for Champion. If suit was filed, the attorneys were to get 40% of the recovery. If the *480 case were appealed, the percentage for the attorneys increased to 45%. The attorneys seek 40% of the amount which might be awarded to Roy Champion. The attorneys’ position is that this contract created in them an immediate, vested, unrestricted, separate and distinct interest in the plaintiff’s cause of action. They argue that the rules applicable here are those governing the rights of any ordinary assignee of a cause of action.
The situation then is this: a plaintiff contends that he is injured and desires to sue. He employs counsel. He agrees to pay the attorneys a percentage of whatever they recover for him, and to assign him a like percentage of the cause of action. Conversely, the attorneys agree to take for their compensation a percentage of whatever they recover for the plaintiff. The plaintiff assigns to the attorneys the agreed percentage of whatever is recovered plus a corresponding percentage of the cause of action of the plaintiff. Then the plaintiff goes out of the case entirely. The suit as to him is properly dismissed. The question is, then, may the attorneys press the plaintiff’s suit (in which they have a contractual interest) in order that the attorneys may recover their percentage of whatever the plaintiff would have recovered. We think not.
It should be stated that there is no question of the personal ethics of the attorneys here in question. They have proceeded with candor and in good faith toward the courts and their client. The problem is a broad one and of some importance to the entire legal profession in Texas.
In the first place, the fact that the attorney-client relationship is involved here means that we cannot regard this case as one involving an ordinary assignment, devoid of any potential public policy considerations. Attorneys are officers of the Court. They are members of an ancient profession whose members have the unique privilege, and corresponding responsibility, of being essentially the sole judges of the propriety of fellow members’ conduct. As a result, the Courts must always carefully examine every situation involving members of their profession.
The pertinent provision of Rule 215a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, authorizing dismissal of a cause upon failure to give a deposition, was added by amendment to the Rules in 1957. It was promulgated to remedy deficiencies in the existing Rules. See I Franki, Vernon’s Ann. Texas Rules, 1961 Supp., 209-213; Thode, “Some Reflections on the 1957 Amendments to the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure”, 37 Texas L. Rev. 33. Respondents’ *481 position, if upheld here, would go a long way toward nullifying the effectiveness of Rule 215a.
The basic fallacy of respondent’s position, in our opinion, is that it ignores the fact that the lawyer’s rights, based on the contingent fee contract, are wholly derivative from those of his client. The attorney-client relationship is one of principal and agent.
Texas Employers Ins. Assn. v. Wermske,
To illustrate, let us take a closer look at Rule 215a. In addition to giving the trial court the power to dismiss a cause of action for failure of a party to give a deposition, this rule provides alternative sanctions including any orders “as may be just”. One of the sanctions specifically permitted is the striking of any part of the pleadings of the defaulting party. Suppose that the trial court had invoked the latter sanction in this case, rather than dismissing the cause entirely. Could it be said that these pleadings would be stricken only as to the plaintiff, but that they could still be used in the same lawsuit to support the introduction of evidence and submission of issues on behalf of the plaintiff’s lawyer? Conversely, most of the actual details of any lawsuit are necessarily handled by the lawyer on behalf of his client. Suppose that in a particular lawsuit the lawyer fails to make proper objections, drafts defective special issues, or is late in filing a particular document. Could we allow the client to argue on appeal that all these defects related only to the attorney’s case and not to his? Rule 215a is based on Rule 37d of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The case of
Hammond Packing Co. v. Arkansas,
*482 In our opinion, all of these suggested situations are analogous to the present case, and all of the questions posed above must be answered in the negative. The reason is that as long as the attorney-client relationship endures, with its corresponding legal effect of principal and agent, the acts of one must necessarily bind the other as a general rule.
For legal authority in this case, respondents rely primarily upon those decisions holding that when a client purports to settle a case with the opposite party, the settlement will not bind his attorney who had no notice of the negotiations. One of the attorney’s remedies in such a situation is to continue the litigation on his own account to realize his contingent fee. See, e.g.,
Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Vaughan,
Texas Civ. App.,
We do not reject the rationale that a properly worded contingent fee contract may effect an assignment of part of the recovery and a part of a cause of action to the attorney. However, the attorney who has received such an assignment invariably elects to litigate his interest simultaneously with his client’s interest, in his client’s name, and elects implicitly to be bound by any judgment properly rendered in the case. We hold that so long as the existing agency relationship is not terminated, as by the opposite party’s buying out the client’s interest, the attorney must be bound by that election.
Since the case of
Winston v. Masterson,
Our holding in this case, of course, does not necessarily apply to the case where a plaintiff has assigned a portion of his cause of action to an independent third party. Nor do we have the case where an insurance company is litigating its subrogation rights in the name of the insured. Suffice to say that in neither of these situations does there exist the crucial attorney-client, principal-agent relationship between assignor and assignee as that present here.
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed. The judgment of the trial court, dismissing the cause of action and respondents’ petition in intervention, is affirmed.
Opinion delivered May 30, 1962.
