George C. PAPAGEORGE, Appellant, v. Matt BANKS, et al., Appellees.
No. 13-CV-333.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Argued Nov. 20, 2013. Decided Dec. 19, 2013.
81 A.3d 311
C. Probation
Mr. Ortberg‘s second argument on appeal—that the trial court abused its discretion in denying him a hearing on his request to extend his probationary period—is moot. Mr. Ortberg‘s period of probation expired on May 18, 2012. He filed two motions, one prior to the end of the probationary period, on May 15, 2012, and one after, June 2, 2012, seeking to extend his probationary period to allow him to complete the requisite community service. However, the government never moved to revoke probation nor did the court set a show cause hearing based on Mr. Ortberg‘s failure to complete community service. Indeed, the government did not reply to either of his motions and the period of probation ended uneventfully. Thus, Mr. Ortberg was not harmed by the trial court‘s failure to hold a hearing, nor has he suffered any collateral consequences. As the trial court correctly noted, it had no jurisdiction to consider Mr. Ortberg‘s motions once the probationary term expired. See
For the reasons set forth above, Mr. Ortberg‘s conviction for unlawful entry is Affirmed.
Jonathan Zucker filed a brief for appellees.
Before THOMPSON and EASTERLY, Associate Judges, and FARRELL, Senior Judge.
THOMPSON, Associate Judge:
In February 2012, appellant George Papageorge filed a one-paragraph complaint against appellees Matt and Diane Banks, alleging that they had “absconded with settlement monies and cashed a check knowing that most of the funds were liened and intended to go to the plaintiff.” Thereafter, Papageorge sought and obtained a prejudgment writ of attachment against the Bankses, having advised the court that the Bankses had been paid funds from a settlement agreement with Eastern Savings Bank (“ESB“), and that Papageorge was entitled to those funds under a separate agreement (the “December 9, 2010 Agreement” or the “Agreement“) with Matt Banks, under which Papageorge had “agreed to finance Mr. Banks’ efforts to protect his rights as a tenant of certain real property.” The Bankses filed a motion to dismiss the complaint or alternatively for summary judgment, arguing that the Agreement was “void as champertous.”1 Considering materials outside the complaint, the trial court treated the motion as one for summary judgment and entered judgment in favor of the Bankses, agreeing that the Agreement was champertous and therefore void in its entirety. Papageorge appeals from the trial court‘s grant of summary judgment in favor of appellees and from the court‘s denial of his motion for reconsideration of that ruling. We reverse and remand.
I. Background
This appeal is the latest development in a spate of litigation that erupted after deed-of-trust holder ESB purchased the property at 2507 33rd Street, S.E. (the “property“), at an April 2001 foreclosure sale.2 The factual background set out below is largely drawn from Papageorge‘s opposition to the Bankses’ motion to dismiss or for summary judgment.
For valuable consideration I, Matt W. Banks, hereby assign[ ] my tenant rights to purchase under D.C. Law in the lease of 2507 33rd Street S.E.[,] Washington, D.C. 20020 to George C. Papageorge.
Subsequently, on December 9, 2010, Banks and Papageorge executed a “Memorandum Regarding Banks Lease” that affirmed this agreement, providing that “[i]t is understood and agreed that[,] with regard to the lease of 2507 33rd Street S.E.[,] Matt Banks assigned his TOPA rights . . . to George C. Papageorge under an earlier agreement which shall remain in full force and effect.” As thаt memorandum reflects, the reference to “tenant rights to purchase under D.C. Law” in the October 2001 agreement was a reference to the opportunity to purchase the property that the parties expected that Matt Banks qua tenant would have under the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (“TOPA“),
Eventually, ESB sued Matt Banks for possession of his rental unit, asserting that he had violated a term of his pre-foreclosure lease. The Superior Court granted ESB a judgment of possession, but, upon Banks‘s appeal, this court, in a December 2, 2010, opinion, reversed the judgment, holding that, because a new at-will tenancy commenced by operation of law at the time of the April 2001 foreclosure and Banks‘s pre-existing lease was “effectively extinguished at that juncture,” Banks‘s putative violation of the pre-foreclosure lease could not form the basis for a judgment of possession. Banks v. ESB, 8 A.3d at 1243.
A week after this court issued that opinion, Matt Banks, Earl Mitchell (another former tenant and a holdover occupant of one of the property‘s rental units5), and Papageorge entered into the December 9, 2010, Agreement that is in issue in this appeal. That Agreement, a copy of which Papageorge attached to his opposition to the motion to dismiss or for summary judgment, provided in pertinent part as follows:
Whereas, Papageorge has financed extensive litigation to enforce, maintain and protect [Banks‘s and Mitchell‘s] Valentine rights since 2001.
Whereas, ESB . . . conducted a wrongful eviction on February 9, 2009 removing Banks [and] Mitchell. . . .
Whereаs, the parties would like to file a wrongful eviction action against ESB.
Now therefore, the parties agree as follows: Any and all monies obtained from a suit for wrongful eviction and/or the relinquishment of tenant rights and/or any other sources shall be distributed as follows:
First, Papageorge shall be reimbursed for all legal costs expended since 2001 involving ESB and the subject property.
Second, the remaining sum shall be distributed as follows:
Papageorge—seventy five percent (75%)
Banks—twelve and one/half percent (12.5%)
Mitchell—twelve and one/half percent (12.5%)
It is further understood and agreed that Papageorge has financed all rent monies and will be reimbursed at the rate of 100%.
Papageorge‘s suit against the Bankses was premised on a claim that they had received a $75,000 payment from ESB “to settle certain tenant claims,” but had failed to pay Papageorge according to the terms of the December 9, 2010, Agreement. The Bankses filed their motion to dismiss or for summary judgment on February 27, 2012, and subsequently argued that thе Agreement was champertous and void in that it gave Papageorge “a share of Banks’ wrongful eviction and L & T litigation to which he did not have an independent interest,” and in that the Agreement constituted “‘a bargain to divide the proceeds of litigation between the owner of the litigated claim and the party supporting or enforcing the litigation.‘” Defendants’ Reply to Plaintiff‘s Opposition to Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss or Alternatively for Summary Judgment at 2, 4 (quoting Design Bus. Interiors, Inc. v. Herson‘s, Inc., 659 F.Supp. 1103, 1107 (D.D.C. 1986) (quoting 14 W. Jaeger, WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 1711 at 857 (3d ed. 1972)6)). The Bankses asserted that the Agreement also “implicitly contemplated the maintenance of Banks’ landlord and tenant case in order to obtain a recovery for the relinquishment of tenant rights[,]” and pointed out that after the mandate issued in Banks v. ESB, a motion to “Reinstate [Banks] Into Possession” had been filed, making it “abundantly clear that [one] purpose оf the Agreement . . . was to maintain Banks’ right to possession in the landlord and tenant case.” Id. at 3 (internal quotations omitted).
In opposing the Bankses’ motion, Papageorge argued inter alia that the Agreement was not champertous because he had an independent interest in the property (as to which he sought “[o]wnership“) because of the assignment to him of Matt Banks‘s TOPA rights and because what Papageorge sought through the Agreement was to recover prior expenditures he had incurred to protect that interest and to “preserve his own TOPA rights.” The Bankses countered that even assuming that Matt Banks had made a valid assignment to Papageorge of his mere expectant opportunity to purchase the property pursuant to TOPA, “whether Banks was injured as a result of being wrongfully evict[ed] or whether he was reinstated into possession, had no [e]ffect on the assignment.” Id. at 5. Thus, the Bankses argued, Papageorge “had no legitimate interest in the Agreement‘s contemplated litigation between Banks and ESB except to receive proceeds from it.” Id.
The trial court further reasoned that under this court‘s opinion in Allman v. Snyder, 888 A.2d 1161 (D.C. 2005), “the tenancy status of [a] tenant-assignor ha[s] no effect on the assigned TOPA right[.]” Order Granting Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss or Alternatively for Summary Judgment at 8, citing Allman, 888 A.2d at 1170 (stating that the TOPA statute “says nothing about a tenant having to remain a tenant in order to sustain the validity of the assignment“). The court reasoned that Papageorge‘s assigned TOPA rights would not have been “cut off by the assignor ceasing to be an actual tenant” and thus “did not depend on the continuation of Matt Banks’ tenancy.” “Most importantly,” the court reasoned, this court‘s decision in Banks v. ESB had already “established Matt Banks’ tenancy.” Finally, the court ruled, because the Agreement was champertous, Papageorge was not entitled to recover anything under it—not pre-Agreement litigation expenses, not rents, and not any expense of further litigation as contemplated in the Agreement.
Papageorge sought reconsideration. He told the court that, contrary to the court‘s assumption in its summary judgment ruling, no wrongful eviction suit had been filed, and that the settlement funds retained by the Bankses had come not from a “successful recovery from a lawsuit,” but from a “global settlement of several lawsuits” [involving the Bankses and ESB] and the Bankses’ agreement to relinquish their tenant rights, including any and all rights they might have with respect to the property under TOPA. Papageorge attached to his motion for reconsideration a copy of an unsigned draft of a global settlement, and noted that it recited that the Bankses and ESB had “threatened to file additional actions to determine their respective rights concerning” the property (showing, Papageorge argued, that Banks‘s TOPA rights had been in jeopardy despite the ruling in Banks v. ESB). Papageorge further noted that the settlement disposed of an action that ESB had actually filed against the Bankses in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (Case No. 1:11-CV-01879 (BH)), in which ESB аsserted that the federal laws governing federal savings banks superseded any District rental housing law that might otherwise have afforded the Bankses continuing rights in the property as tenants. Papageorge attached a copy of
The trial court declined to reconsider its ruling that Papageorge “agreed to finance litigation at his оwn expense predicated on a wrongful eviction claim as set forth in the Agreement[.]” The court reasoned that even if the settlement funds were not the fruit of the wrongful eviction litigation contemplated in the Agreement, that did not alter the champertous purpose of the Agreement. The court also declined to consider any additional documents that Papageorge had submitted for the first time after the summary judgment ruling and ruled that the draft documents he had submitted were not “competent evidence admissible at trial.” Finally, the court cited additional reasons why it rejected Papageorge‘s argument (which the court characterized as “circular” and self-contradictory) that the Agreement was premised on his effort to protect his TOPA rights. The court reasoned that if, as Papageorge claimed, Mаtt Banks had assigned his TOPA rights to Papageorge in 2001, Banks “no longer had any TOPA rights” to be defended or “for ESB to . . . extinguish,” and Papageorge therefore “could not further his own interest by supporting Matt Banks’ litigation” and had “no valid reason” to agree to fund a suit by Banks. If, on the other hand, the court reasoned, Matt Banks “actually maintained his TOPA rights and could relinquish them in return for a settlement from ESB,” the result was still that Papageorge “had no independent interest in further litigation between Matt Banks and ESB.” In addition, the court found it “questionable” whether Papageorge “was properly assigned Matt Banks’ TOPA rights” in 2001.
This appeal followed.
II. Applicable Law
As the Supreme Court observed long ago, “cases of maintenance and champerty are founded on the principle that no encouragement should be given to litigation by the introduction of parties to enforce those rights which others are not dispоsed to enforce.”7 Graham v. R.R. Co., 102 U.S. 148, 156, 26 L.Ed. 106 (1880). The common law doctrine of champerty developed “to prevent an attorney from speculating in lawsuits and gambling in litigation at his or her own expense,” Marshall, 445 A.2d at 608; thus, “[h]istorically, the prohibition against champerty was largely aimed at preventing attorneys from filing lawsuits for the purpose of obtaining fees.” Columbia Hosp. for Women Med. Ctr., Inc. v. NCRIC, Inc. (In re Columbia Hosp. for Women Med. Ctr., Inc.), 461 B.R. 648, 677 (Bankr.D.D.C. 2011). Nevertheless, and “[n]otwithstanding the limited purpose of the original doctrine, champerty is not only applicable to client-attorney assignments[.]” Id. at 678 (acknowledging, however, that “cases involving at-
This court has recognized “three essential elements of common law champerty: (1) the . . . fee [of the person who would seek to enforce the allegedly champertous agreement] must come from the recovery in a successful lawsuit; (2) [that person] must have no independent claim to the recovery fund; and (3) the costs and expenses must be borne by [that person] with no expectation of reimbursement from the [other party to the allegedly champertous agreement].” Marshall, 445 A.2d at 609. Nevertheless, as Professor Williston explains, “a person who is financially interested in the enforcement of a right of action belonging wholly or partly to another may lawfully undertake to pay the expenses of litigation and to share in the recovery.” WILLISTON & LORD, supra, § 15:4 (citing RESTATEMENT (FIRST) OF CONTRACTS, § 543 (1932)).
Thus, for example, “a person having an interest in a leаse may maintain or finance litigation relating to the property, even when it appeared that the suit was being financed by one to whom the plaintiff had bargained to convey an interest in the leased premises in consideration of his instigating, maintaining and financing the litigation[.]” Id. Courts have held that the interest that is required to prevent an agreement to finance litigation from being champertous is a party‘s honest and reasonable belief that he has a legal interest in the subject matter of the litigation, even if he actually has no such interest. In Smith v. Hartsell, 150 N.C. 71, 63 S.E. 172 (1908), for example, the court considered the validity of an agreement under which plaintiff, who claimed that a decedent owed him $750 at the time of his death, agreed with putative heirs that he would “aid them in every way to recover [under the] estate” in exchange for their agrеement to pay him the $750 out of any recovery. Id. at 173. The court held that it was error to dismiss plaintiff‘s suit to enforce the agreement on the ground that it was champertous. The court relied on authorities establishing that:
[T]he gist of the offense of maintenance is that the interference is officious; where, therefore, a party either has, or honestly believes he has, an interest, either in the subject-matter of the litigation or in the question to be determined, he may assist in the prosecution or defense of the suit, either by furnishing
counsel or contributing to the expenses, and may, in order to strengthen his position, purchase the interest of another party in addition to his own. The interest may be either small or great, certain or uncertain, vested or contingent; but it is essential that it be distinct from what he may acquire from the party maintained.
. . .
If the pecuniary interest of a person, even though he own no part of the immediate subject-matter of the suit, be so connected with it collaterally in any way as to be diminished or increased in value by the result of such suit, we can perceive no principle of public policy that ought to forbid such person from taking proper care that such interest shall be properly protected in the courts.
Id. at 175 (quoting 3 AMER. AND ENG. ENCYC. LAW at 76; Gilman v. Jones, 87 Ala. 691, 5 So. 785, 789 (1889)). In Thallhimer v. Brinckerhoff, 3 Cow. 623 (N.Y. 1824), an individual who claimed land as an heir of his father, and who was about to sue recover the possession of it, entered into an agreement with the plaintiff, who had married his sister, by which he agreed to give plaintiff one-quarter of any property recovered, and the plaintiff agreed to bear half of the expenses of prosecuting the intended suit. The court held that the agreement was not champertous because the sister “might become the owner of these lands, as the heir of [the brother,] . . . [a] potential interest [that] was a sufficient reason[ ] that her husband should join in measures to recover the lands.” Id. at 647, 649. The court reasoned that it was “immaterial . . . whether the contingencies which must occur before [the] sister could inherit, were such as to render that event probable or not.” Id. at 648-49. The court applied the principle that:
[A]ny interest whatever in the subject of the suit, is sufficient to exempt him who gives aid to the suitor from the charge of illegal maintenance. Whether this interest is great or small, vested or contingent, certain or uncertain, it affords a just reason to him who has such an interest to participate in the suit of another, who also has or claims some right to the same subject.
Id. at 647; accord, Lewis v. Broun, 36 W.Va. 1, 14 S.E. 444, 445 (1892) (“The doctrine of the common law as to champerty . . . cannot be aрplied to a person having an interest, or believing that he has an interest, in the subject in dispute, and bona fide acting in the suit[.]“) (quoting 2 STORY, EQ. JUR. § 1048); Gilman, Son & Co. v. Jones, 87 Ala. 691, 5 So. 785, 787 (1889) (“[Especially is an interference in a law suit excusable, when it is by one who has, or honestly believes he has, a valuable interest in its prosecution.“); Gibson v. Gillespie, 152 A. 589, 593 (Del.Super.Ct. 1928) (“Necessity and justice have . . . forced the establishment of recognized exceptions to the doctrine of [champerty],” including an exception providing that “interference in a lawsuit [is] excusable when it is by one who has, or honestly believes he has, a valuable interest in its prosecution“).
III. Discussion
We review de novo Papageorge‘s claim that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Matt Banks.9 Onyeoziri v. Spivok, 44 A.3d 279, 283 (D.C. 2012). We review the trial court‘s denial of Papageorge‘s motion for reconsideration for abuse of discretion. Perry v. Sera, 623 A.2d 1210, 1217 (D.C. 1993).
Papageorge‘s first argument is unavailing, but we agree with his second contention: that the court should not have granted summary judgment since Papageorge claims to have had at the time of the Agreement an interest in Banks‘s claim against ESB, and in protecting Matt Banks‘s possessory interest in the property, that rendered the agreement non-
cordingly, we affirm the trial court‘s entry of judgment in her favor.
First, we reject the trial court‘s conclusion that Papageorge‘s “past expenses alone” for rent and litigation relating to the property сould not provide him an interest in Matt Banks‘s potential wrongful eviction claim against ESB. We think the better rule is as stated in Smith v. Hartsell, Thallhimer v. Brinckerhoff, and other cases cited above: that a party who has an interest in a plaintiff‘s claim as basis for repayment of an existing indebtedness or for protecting a contingent interest is not an officious intermeddler, but instead may agree to support the plaintiff‘s litigation and share in any recovery without committing champerty.12 We need not pause over whether Papageorge made an adequate showing that he had an interest because of rent and/or litigation expenses, because the trial court did not grant summary judgment on the ground (and the Bankses did not argue) that Papageorge failed adequately to document those putative bases for his interest in Matt Banks‘s claims.13
But even if Papageоrge did not document that interest in a way adequate to avoid summary judgment, he also claimed an interest based on the assignment to him of Matt Banks‘s TOPA rights, and he did provide evidence of the assignment and subsequent memorandum affirming it. That is the backdrop of our second point: We do not agree with the trial court that it was clear that Papageorge‘s “TOPA rights could not have been affected by the outcome of any of the litigation financed by” Papageorge. As described above, the court reasoned that under Allman v. Snyder, “the tenancy status of [a] tenant-assignor ha[s] no effect on the assigned TOPA right“—i.e., that whether Matt Banks remained a tenant or not was irrelevant to the existence of Papageorge‘s TOPA rights. However, Allman decided only that a tenant who still had that status at the time the owner sent a TOPA offer of sale did not lose his TOPA rights merеly because he vacated his rental unit before the TOPA process had concluded. We did not consider in Allman the quite different issue of whether, where no offer of sale has yet been made, a tenant must remain in possession (or retain a possessory interest) in order to accede to TOPA rights when an offer of sale ultimately is made. We need not decide that issue here; for present purposes, it suffices to conclude, as we do, that it would not have been unreasonable for Papageorge to believe that Banks needed to be restored to possession of the property in order to have his TOPA rights triggered at the time of an offer of sale by ESB, and further to believe—even if mistakenly—that without that restoration Papageorge‘s assigned
Third, contrary to the trial court‘s reasoning, this court‘s opinion in Banks v. ESB did not conclusively establish Matt Banks‘s possessory interest in the property such that no further litigation on that issue could have been necessary. For one thing, while this court‘s opinion set the stage for Banks to seek restitution of pos-session,15 this court did not order restitution of possession, and thus further litigation was necessary to achieve that result.16 In addition, the record shows that even after Banks was restored to possession, ESB filed, on October 26, 2011, a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia seeking to eject him from the property on grounds other than those this court rejected in Banks v. ESB.17 ESB presumably would have relied on the same grounds in opposing the wrongful eviction suit contemplated in the Agreement. Thus, if Matt Banks‘s continued occupancy of the property was necessary to protect his expectant TOPA rights (and to protect the benefit Papageorge sought through an assignment of those rights), the necessity of further litigation was not erased upon issuance of this court‘s opinion in Banks v. ESB.18
Although the trial court correctly noted the language of
The additional rationales the court cited in concluding that Papageorge did not have an independent interest in the litiga-
In sum, on the present record, it appears that Papageorge could reasonably have believed that he had an independent interest in the property, in Matt Banks‘s prospective claim for wrongful eviction, and in protecting Banks‘s expectant TOPA rights, such that Papageorge‘s agreement to finance litigation to protect these interests was not champertous. Whether Papageorge honestly believed he had such an interest, if that be disputed, was not resolvable on summary judgment. Accordingly, Matt Banks was not entitled to summary judgment.
Reversed and remanded.
In re Rosemary FOSTER, Respondent.
No. 13-BG-981.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
Filed Dec. 19, 2013.
ORDER
PER CURIAM
On consideration of the certified order of the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon that suspended respondent from the practice of law for a period of thirty days with reinstatement conditioned on respondent taking the Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam (MPRE) and earning a scaled score of 85 or greater; this court‘s September 18, 2013, order suspending respondent pending further action of the court and directing her to show cause why reciprocal discipline should not bе imposed; the statement of Bar Counsel regarding reciprocal discipline; and it appearing that respondent failed to respond to this court‘s order, but did file a D.C. Bar R. XI, § 14(g) affidavit on October 5, 2013, it is
Notes
Many things, it is true, that were once regarded as champertous or savoring of maintenance, are no longer so characterized with us. . . . It is now lawful to stipulate for contingent fees. And it may be even meritorious to aid the poor with money in their effort to recover just legal rights by means of legal proceedings. But from the fact that some of the things which were once reprobated on some peculiar ground of existing public policy are now regarded as perfectly legitimate in view of the altered conditions of society, it does not follow that the law regarding champerty and maintenance has therefore been abolished.Peck v. Heurich, 6 App.D.C. 273, 282 (D.C.Cir. 1895).
