97 Conn. App. 253 | Conn. App. Ct. | 2006
Opinion
The plaintiff Sharyn N. D’Urso
The following facts and procedural history are undisputed. In 1995, the defendant Deborah Lyons,
Attorney John J. Resnik represented Robert D’Urso until 1999, when a conflict of interest arose. At that time, the defendant David A. Shaw began representing Robert D’Urso pursuant to a written fee agreement that was executed by Lyons. The fee agreement provided for an hourly billing rate of $200 per hour. Payment was not contingent on the outcome of litigation, and the agreement was silent as to whether the fee would be paid from the proceeds of any recovery.
The Probate Court concluded that Shaw had a common-law charging lien against the proceeds of the litigation that he had handled for Robert D’Urso and ordered payment of Shaw’s claim in full. The trial court affirmed the Probate Court’s order. The plaintiff now appeals from the judgment of the trial court.
The plaintiff claims that the court improperly concluded that Shaw had a valid charging lien against the proceeds that were recovered as a result of his representation of Robert D’Urso. She argues that because the applicable fee agreement provided for an hourly rate rather than a contingency fee, there was no basis for a charging lien. In the absence of such a lien, the plaintiff argues that Shaw merely is a general creditor pursuant to General Statutes § 45a-365.
We begin by setting forth our standard of review. Whether Shaw has a common-law charging lien against the proceeds of litigation is a question of law. “When . . . the trial court draws conclusions of law, our
Although not often litigated in the courts of Connecticut, the common-law charging lien has been recognized since 1836, when our Supreme Court noted that “[a]n attorney, as against his client, has a lien upon all papers in his possession, for his fees and services performed in his professional capacity, as well as upon judgments received by him.” Gager v. Watson, 11 Conn. 168, 173 (1836). In Gager, the court acknowledged the existence of an attorney’s retaining lien, which is a possessory lien on a Ghent’s papers and files that the attorney holds until his fee has been paid, as well as a charging hen, which is a hen placed on any money recovered or fund due the chent at the conclusion of the lawsuit. Marsh, Day & Calhoun v. Solomon, 204 Conn. 639, 644, 529 A.2d 702 (1987). The Supreme Court further discussed the existence of charging hens in Cooke v. Thresher, 51 Conn. 105 (1883), in which the court stated: “If an attorney has rendered services and expended money in instituting and conducting a suit and the [chent] orally agrees that he may retain so much of the avails thereof as will pay him for his services and expenses therein and for previous services in other matters, and he thereafter conducts the suit to a favorable conclusion, he has, as against such [chent], an equitable hen upon the avails for the services and expenses in the suit, and for the previous services embraced in the agreement . . . .” Id., 107.
More recently, this court considered the propriety of an attorney enforcing an equitable hen against a judgment recovered on behalf of a chent in Perlmutter v. Johnson, 6 Conn. App. 292, 505 A.2d 13, cert. denied, 200 Conn. 801, 509 A.2d 517 (1986), cert. denied, 479
In the present case, Shaw represented Robert D’Urso in the foreclosure action against his sisters. As a result of that litigation, Shaw obtained a judgment in the amount of $40,000. After Robert D’Urso died, Shaw received the funds pursuant to that judgment. Because he had not been paid for his services at that time, Shaw retained the funds and presented a claim to the Probate Court for attorney’s fees. As in Perlmutter, Shaw obtained the funds on Robert D’Urso’s behalf as a result of the foreclosure action that he undertook as Robert D’Urso’s attorney. Shaw, therefore, had a valid charging lien on the proceeds of the foreclosure action in the amount of the attorney’s fees to which he was owed pursuant to the fee agreement signed by Lyons.
The plaintiffs claim that an hourly fee agreement may not be the basis for a charging lien is without merit. In Perlmutter, the attorney agreed to represent the client pursuant to a fee agreement that provided for an hourly rate of $65 per hour. Id., 297. Consequently, this court’s conclusion that a valid charging lien existed in
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Richard A. D’Urso also was a plaintiff at trial. Because only Sharyn D’Urso has appealed, we refer to her as the plaintiff in this opinion.
The named defendant is referred to as both Deborah Lyons and Deborah Lyon in the record and the parties’ briefs. We refer to her as Deborah Lyons because that is the name under which the case was filed. She is not a party to this appeal.
General Statutes § 45a-365 provides: “'Claims, expenses and taxes in the settlement of a decedent’s estate shall be entitled to preference and payment in the following order of priority: (1) Funeral expenses; (2) expenses of settling the estate; (3) claims due for the last, sickness of the decedent; (4) all lawful taxes and all claims due the state of Connecticut and the United States; (5) all claims due any laborer or mechanic for personal wages for labor performed by such laborer or mechanic for the decedent within three months immediately before the decease of such person; (6) other preferred claims; and (7) all other claims allowed in proportion to their respective amounts.”