In the MATTER OF Juliet Carol GILBERT
Supreme Court Case No. 13SA254
Supreme Court of Colorado.
April 6, 2015
Rehearing Denied April 27, 2015
2015 CO 22 | 346 P.3d 1018
Attorney for Respondent-Appellee: MiletichCohen PC, Nancy L. Cohen, Denver, Colorado
JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶ 1 In this attorney discipline proceeding, the respondent, Juliet Carol Gilbert, agreed to provide certain immigration-related legal services to Christopher Henderson and Victoria Peters for a flat fee. The written fee agreement did not include milestones or otherwise describe what payment, if any, the clients would owe Gilbert if the representation ended before she completed all of the specific tasks identified in the agreement. When her clients terminated the representation early, Gilbert retained a portion of the fees advanced by the clients as compensation for the approximately four-and-a-half hours of work she had performed on the case to that point.
¶ 2 The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel brought a disciplinary action against Gilbert alleging, among other things, that she violated
¶ 3 The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel seeks review of the Hearing Board‘s determination. We conclude that the Hearing Board did not err when it determined that Gilbert did not violate
I. Facts and Procedural History
¶ 4 Gilbert was a sole practitioner specializing in immigration law. In May 2011, she agreed to represent Victoria Peters in removal proceedings before the immigration court.
¶ 5 Peters, a Trinidad and Tobago native, married Christopher Henderson in 2004. Henderson, however, had previously married Carmen Sanchez, a native of the Dominican Republic, and had never terminated or annulled that marriage. When Henderson filed а Form I-130 “Petition for Alien Relative” to classify Peters as his spouse, Henderson did not disclose his first marriage or the fact that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS“) had determined that his marriage to Sanchez was a sham. USCIS representatives met with Henderson and Peters and determined that the couple had married only to obtain lawful immigration status for Peters. The USCIS therefore denied the I-130 Petition, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security initiated removal proceedings against Peters.
¶ 6 Henderson and Peters met with Gilbert a week before Peters’ first appearance in immigration court for a master calendar
¶ 7 Gilbert followed up their meeting by mailing an engagеment letter to Henderson and Peters defining the scope of her representation, which the couple signed and returned. The agreement provided that, for a flat fee of $3,550, Gilbert would perform three tasks: represent Peters at the master calendar hearing, assist the couple with the second I-130 Petition, and accompany them to their interview with USCIS. Notably, the fee agreement did not include benchmarks or milestones to indicate when Gilbert would earn portions of the advance fee, nor did it explain what payment, if any, the clients would owe Gilbert if the representation ended before she completed all three tasks.
¶ 8 Between May and August 2011, the couple paid installments totaling $2,950 toward Gilbert‘s $3,550 flat fee. Gilbert represented Peters at the master calendar hearing at the end of May, and the immigration court granted a continuance so that Henderson could seek an annulment of his first marriage. During the summer, Gilbert conducted legal research on the case and corresponded with the clients. By November, however, communication between Gilbert and the couple had broken down, and they discharged Gilbert. In an email to Gilbert terminating her representation, Peters and Henderson acknowledged that Gilbert was entitled to payment for one hour for her appearance at the May hearing. They requested that Gilbert refund their payments, minus her hourly fee for the master calendar appearance. They also asked what her hourly charge was, noting that the fee agreement did not contain an hourly rate.
¶ 9 Once the immigration court granted her motion to withdraw, Gilbert mailed Henderson and Peters a letter and a partial refund of the advance fee payment. Gilbert‘s letter explained that she had spent 4.41 hours on legal work at $250 an hour—including the court appearance, travel time, research, correspondence, and the motion to withdraw—and that she had incurred $11.64 in costs. She therefore retained $1,114.14 as compensation for the work performed and refunded the remaining $1,835.86 of the advance fee payment. Henderson and Peters disputed the amount that Gilbert retained as earned fees.2
¶ 10 Henderson and Peters contacted the Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel and requested an investigation. The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel filed a complaint against Gilbert, alleging several violations of the Colorado Rules of Professional Conduct in her dealings with Henderson and Peters. The Hearing Board ultimately held that Gilbert violated
¶ 11 Relevant here, the Hearing Board dismissed the claim that Gilbert failed to refund unearned fees in violation of
¶ 12 Specifically, the Hearing Board concluded that the elements of quantum meruit were present here because: Gilbert “unquestionably provided legal services“; Peters received a benefit from Gilbert‘s services; and it would be unjust in light of the parties’ intentions and expectations for Peters to retain the benefit of Gilbert‘s services without paying for them. The Hearing Board observed, for example, that Peters acknowledged in her email terminating Gilbert that Gilbert was entitled to a fee for her appearance at the hearing. The Board found that although Peters and Henderson may not have realized that Gilbert had also performed legal research on the case, it was “entirely reasonable” for Gilbert to have done so and to have billed her clients for the time she spent communicating with them.5 Finally, the Hearing Board found that Gilbert‘s misconduct in this case did not bar her from quantum meruit recovery because “although she violated
¶ 13 Pursuant to
II. Standard of Review
¶ 14 Under
III. Analysis
¶ 15
Upon termination of representation, a lawyer shall take steps to the extent reasonably practicable to protect a client‘s
interests, such as giving reasonable notice to the client, allowing time for employment of other counsel, surrendering papers and property to which the client is entitled and refunding any advance payment of fee or expense that has not been earned or incurred....
(Emphasis added.) A discharged attorney violates this rule if she fails to refund unearned fees in a timely fashion. In re Sather, 3 P.3d 403, 415 (Colo.2000). Thus, whether Gilbert violated
¶ 16 The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel argues that Gilbert violated
¶ 17
¶ 18 Relying on these comments to
¶ 19 Gilbert counters that the Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel‘s reliance on
¶ 20 To determine whether Gilbert violated
A. Quantum Meruit in Fee Dispute Cases
¶ 21 Quantum meruit is an equitable doctrine that invokes an implied contract where the parties either have no express contract or have abrogated it. See Dudding v. Norton Frickey & Assocs., 11 P.3d 441, 444 (Colo.2000). The doctrine does not depend on the existence of a contract, either express or implied in fact, but rather applies where a need arises to avoid unjust enrichment to a party in the absence of an actual agreement to pay for the services rendered. See id. That is, the equitable doctrine of quantum meruit “seeks to restore fairness when a contract fails” by “ensuring that the party receiving the benefit of the bargain pays a reasonable sum for that benefit.” Id. at 445. To recover in quantum meruit, a plaintiff must demonstrate that: (1) the defendant received a benefit, (2) at the plaintiff‘s expense, and (3) it would be unjust for the defendant to retain that benefit without paying for it. Melat, Pressman & Higbie, L.L.P. v. Hannon Law Firm, L.L.C., 2012 CO 61, ¶ 19, 287 P.3d 842, 847; Dudding, 11 P.3d at 445.
¶ 22 In the legal servicеs context, courts applying the doctrine of quantum meruit have recognized that when a client discharges his or her attorney, the client remains obligated to pay the reasonable value of the services rendered, barring conduct by the attorney that would forfeit the attorney‘s right to receive a fee. Dudding, 11 P.3d at 445; see also Olsen & Brown v. City of Englewood, 889 P.2d 673, 675 (Colo.1995) (“There is no question that an attorney who withdraws for a justifiable reason or is terminated by a client without cause is entitled to compensation for services rendered.“). At the same time, we have recognized that the trust and confidence that underlies the attorney-client relationship distinguishes this relationship from other business relationships. Dudding, 11 P.3d at 445. By allowing an attorney to recover the reasonable value of services provided, the doctrine of quantum meruit operates to preserve the client‘s right to discharge an attorney while preventing clients from unfairly benefiting at their attorney‘s expense where the parties have no express contract or have abrogated it. See LaFond v. Sweeney, 2015 CO 3, ¶ 27, 343 P.3d 939, 947; Melat, ¶ 19, 287 P.3d at 847; Dudding, 11 P.3d at 447; see also
¶ 23 In cases involving fee disputes, we have recognized that quantum meruit is an appropriate measure of recovery for the reasonable value of work performed by an attorney who is discharged without cause. In Olsen & Brown, for example, we held that an attorney who was discharged without cause could not recover damages for services not performed before his discharge based on the client‘s breach of the parties’ noncontingent attorney-client contract. 889 P.2d at 677. Rather, we held that the discharged attorney‘s remedy was to recover the reasonable value of services actually performed on the basis of quantum meruit. Id.7
¶ 24 We have applied the doctrine of quantum meruit differently to contingent fee arrangements. Given the unique nature of contingent fee agreements, we have held that an attorney who is discharged or withdraws may seek quantum meruit recovery for the reasonable value of the work performed before discharge or withdrawal, but only where the written contingent fee agreement contemplates the availability of such recovery. See Dudding, 11 P.3d at 446; Elliott v. Joyce, 889 P.2d 43, 46 (Colo.1994). In Elliott, we observed that contingent fee agree-
¶ 25 Six years later, in Dudding—another contingent fee case—we acknowledged that the doctrine of quantum meruit has arisen “precisely to address the absence of a written agreement.” 11 P.3d at 448. Nevertheless, we felt compelled to honor both our prior case law and our rules governing contingent fee agreements by reaffirming that, to seek quantum meruit recovery, the attorney must provide some notice to the client in the fee agreement of the possibility that the аttorney may seek equitable recovery in quantum meruit if the contract fails. Id. at 448, 449.8 Importantly, Dudding concerned a contingent fee agreement, and nothing in our discussion in that case expressly extended its holding to other types of fee agreements.
¶ 26 Soon thereafter, we made clear in Mullens v. Hansel-Henderson, 65 P.3d 992, 998 (Colo.2002), that our holding in Dudding does not apply to situations where the attorney has successfully completed the agreed-upon legal services in a contingent fee agreement. In reaching that conclusion, we reasoned that Rule 5(b) requires a contingent fee agreement to give a client notice of the possibility of quantum meruit recovery because, absent such notice, a contingent fee client has “no expectation to pay” if the attorney withdraws prematurely. Id. at 997. However, where the attorney has successfully completed the agreed-upon legal services, the very nature of the contingent fee agreement gives rise to the client‘s expectation that she must pay the attorney from the funds the attorney has recovered for the client. Id. at 998-99. Because the attorney in Mullens had completed the legal services for which he was retained under the contingent fee arrangement and had obtained a substantial settlement for the client, we held that he properly retained fees in quantum meruit for the reasonable value of the legal services hе provided, even though the parties’ contingent fee agreement was unenforceable because it was not in writing. Id. at 999.
B. Quantum Meruit in Attorney Discipline Cases
¶ 27 We have carried principles of quantum meruit recovery into our attorney discipline cases. Relevant here, our prior rulings indicate that, where the parties have a flat fee agreement, a discharged attorney does not violate the ethical obligation to refund unearned fees where the attorney is entitled to a portion of the fee in quantum
¶ 28 In People v. Johnson, 199 Colo. 248, 612 P.2d 1097, 1098 (1980), private defense counsel received an advance payment of $1,500 toward an orally agreed-upon total fee of $5,000 to handle a murder case. The client discharged him soon thereafter, and the attorney failed to refund any of the money despite the client‘s requests for a refund of the unearned portion of the $1,500 payment. Id. We held that because there was no definitive agreement regarding the amount that the attorney would be paid if his services were terminated, the oral fee agreement necessarily “was upon a quantum meruit basis.” Id. at 1099. The grievance committee found that the attorney was entitled to $500 on a quantum meruit basis for work performеd, and we agreed with this determination. However, the grievance committee also determined that by retaining the additional $1,000 that was unearned, the attorney violated DR-2-110(A)(3), the disciplinary rule then in effect requiring prompt refund of unearned parts of a fee. Id. We affirmed the committee‘s determination that the attorney violated DR-2-110(A)(3) by “failing to return that portion of the $1500 payment which was unearned.” Id. We ordered the attorney to return $1,000 in unearned fees to his client, but in so doing, we implicitly allowed him to retain the $500 to which he was entitled under quantum meruit. Id.
¶ 29 Our more recent decision in In re Sather likewise took no issue with an attorney‘s retention of a portion of a flat fee as compensation for services provided before discharge. 3 P.3d at 415. In that case, we disciplined an attorney under current Rule 1.16(d) for failing to return the unearned portion of a $20,000 advance fee after his client discharged him. Id. at 405. The written agreement between the attorney and client described the arrangement as a “non-refundable” flat fee contract and stated that the client acknowledged that the “minimum flat fee” of $20,000 would not be returned to him regardless of the amount of time that
¶ 30 Significantly, we held that the attorney violated Rule 1.16(d) by failing to return the unearned $13,076.36—not by failing to return the entire $20,000 advance payment. See id. at 415 (“Upon discharge, [the attorney] acknowledged his obligation to return the unearned portion of the $20,000 to [the client], and [the attorney] eventually returned the entire unearned amount of $13,076.36. . . . Because [the attorney] only partially returned the unearned fees three months after being discharged and did not return the remainder of the unearned fees until five months after being discharged, we agree with the Board that his conduct violated
¶ 31 The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel argues that In re Sather requires an attorney who is discharged by her client to refund the entire advance fee if the agreement is silent about early termination, regardless of whether the attorney has expended time and money on the case. The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel points to an isolated statement in In re Sather to support this position: “Upon discharge, the attorney
¶ 32 The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel‘s argument fails for two reasons. First, the statement in In re Sather on which it relies forms no part of our discussion or holding regarding the attorney‘s violation of Rule 1.16(d) in that case, but rather appears in a separate part of the opinion discussing an attorney‘s obligation under Rule 1.15(f) to maintain advance fees in a separate trust account until the fees are earned. Id. The Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel therefore reads this language out of context and overlooks the facts of In re Sather. The attorney in that case violated Rule 1.16(d) by retaining funds beyond those to which he was еntitled in quantum meruit for his work. Id. at 415. Had we intended to hold in In re Sather, contrary to our approach in Johnson, that Rule 1.16(d) requires an attorney to return the entire advance fee regardless of any benefits conferred or services rendered, we would have ordered the attorney to return the entire $20,000 that the client paid him. Yet neither in In re Sather nor in Johnson did we require the attorney to refund all advance fee payments and then separately seek quantum meruit recovery from his former client. It would be a waste of resources in these circumstances to force attorneys to return money to which they are entitled and then bring suit against the client to recover it. Rather, the above-quoted statement in In re Sather, read in context, simply acknowledges that, although an attorney must return all unearned fees in a timely manner under Rule 1.16(d), such unearned fees do not include compensation to which the attorney is entitled in quantum meruit for the reasonable value of services the attorney has rendered before discharge. Id. (citing, inter alia, Olsen & Brown, 889 P.2d at 676).
¶ 33 Second, the Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel‘s argument hinges on its view that, for purposes of Rule 1.16(d), an attorney cannot “earn” a fee except as explicitly provided for in the fee agreement. This view is not grounded in Rule 1.16(d) but instead rests on comment 12 to
¶ 34 The approach that the Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel urges effectively forecloses quantum meruit recovery for the reasonable value of services the attorney actually performed if a flat fee agreement fails to contain benchmarks or milestones setting forth exactly how the attorney will earn the fee shy of completing the agreed-upon services.10 Such an approach is inconsistent with the result in both Johnson and In re Sather. It is also inconsistent with the core purpose of quantum meruit, which seeks to provide equity precisely where an agreement is lacking or has failed.
¶ 35 In advancing its argument, the Office of Attorney Regulation Counsel essentially seeks to treat flat fee agreements in the same fashion as contingent fee agreements—yet we have never suggested that the unique
¶ 36 Unlike a contingent fee arrangement, in which the attorney‘s fee is contingent upon the outcome of the case, a flat fee (sometimes called a “fixed fee“) is a fee based on an agreed amount for particular services, regardless of the time or effort involved and regardless of the result obtained. See In re Sather, 3 P.3d at 410 (noting that a “flat fee” is a type of fee paid in advance for specified legal services to be performed by the attorney). Flat or fixed fee arrangements can benefit the client by establishing in advance the maximum amount the client will have to pay for legal fees, thus permitting the client to budget based on a fixed sum rather than face potentially escalating hourly fees that may exceed the client‘s ability to pay. See id. (citing Alec Rothrock, The Forgotten Flat Fee: Whose Money Is It and Where Should It Be Deposited?, 1 Fla. Coastal L.J. 293, 354 (1999)). Whereas a client in a contingent fee arrangement generally has no expectation of payment unless the attorney obtains a successful result, a client in a flat fee arrangement expects to pay the attorney for his or hеr services regardless of the result obtained. The flat fee agreement merely establishes the maximum that the client may owe.
¶ 37 Although attorneys are certainly wise to include benchmarks or milestones in flat fee agreements, the Rules of Professional Conduct do not presently require them. Moreover, our case law barring quantum meruit recovery unless the fee agreement includes notice of this possibility arose out of the specific rules governing the content of contingent fee agreements. We have not suggested that the notice requirement pertaining to contingent fee agreements necessarily applies to other forms of fee agreements or that quantum meruit recovery under other types of fee agreements is likewise barred absent such notice.
C. Gilbert Did Not Violate Rule 1.16(d)
¶ 38 We conclude that the Hearing Board did not err when it determined that Gilbert did not violate
¶ 39 The Hearing Board ultimately determined that Gilbert did not violate Rule 1.16(d) by failing to return that portion of the fee to which she was entitled in quantum meruit. We conclude that the Hearing Board did not err in determining that Gilbert did not violate Rule 1.16(d) under the circumstances of this case.
¶ 40 Certainly, Gilbert‘s dealings with Henderson and Peters warranted disciplinary action. By commingling her clients’ advance fee with her own monies, Gilbert violated
IV. Conclusion
¶ 41 We hold that, under the circumstances of this case, Gilbert did not violate
CHIEF JUSTICE RICE dissents, and JUSTICE COATS and JUSTICE EID join in the dissent.
CHIEF JUSTICE RICE, dissenting.
¶ 42 The majority holds that “Gilbert did not violate [
¶ 43 The majority‘s holding permits attorneys to unilaterally retain as “earned,” in their own business accounts, advance fees that they had not earned by the terms of their written agreement simply because they feel that they would win a quantum meruit case. This inverts the procedural structure of quantum meruit and unjustly shifts the burden onto clients who owe nothing under the terms of the agreement to bring an action against the attorney to resolve the status of the disputed funds. Because a determination of what is “earned” in quantum meruit necessarily requires the party seeking recovery to bring an action as a plaintiff and to prove what she earned, fees cannot properly be considered “earned” in quantum meruit until they have been adjudicated as such. Here, Gilbert did not bring a claim against her clients and secure a court ruling delineating what she had earned in quantum meruit but rather unilaterally withheld funds that she had not earned by the terms of her written agreement without first obtaining a quantum meruit ruling in her favor. Therefore, I would hold that she violated
Because I fear that the majority is doing a disservice to the public by permitting Gilbert‘s unilateral re-
I. The Relevant Rules of Professional Conduct Contextualized
¶ 44
¶ 45 Under
¶ 46 Additionally, “[t]he standard principles of statutory construction apply to our interpretation of court rules,” In re Marriage of Wiggins, 2012 CO 44, ¶ 24, 279 P.3d 1, 7, and statutes must be read “as a whole, construing each provision consistently and in harmony with the overall statutory design,” Whitaker v. People, 48 P.3d 555, 558 (Colo. 2002). The overarching purpose of
II. Quantum Meruit Permits Recovery, Not Retention
¶ 47 Although an attorney may generally recover the reasonable value of work done when the agreement underlying that work fails, this must be done by filing a claim
¶ 48 Quantum meruit permits an attorney to recover through litigation fees for the reasonable value of services provided when a contract fails, either from the client or from an appropriately established trust fund in which disputed funds are kept, see Melat, ¶ 19, 287 P.3d 842, 847—not to unilaterally withhold or retain such funds in their own accounts. Black‘s Law Dictionary alternately defines “recovery” as “[t]he obtainment of a right to something (esp. damages) by a judgment or decree” and “[a]n amount awarded in or collected from a judgment or decree.” Black‘s Law Dictionary 1466 (10th ed.2014) (emphasis added). Here, however, Gilbert improperly relied on quantum meruit to justify her unilateral withholding of her clients’ advanced and unearned fees with no adjudication and no basis in her written fee agreement. This interpretation inverts the doctrine. Quantum meruit is not an affirmative defense against wrongful withholding of a client‘s funds upon termination. Rather, it provides an equitable cause of action for attorneys (and others) to seek compensation for work performed when the contract underlying that work fails. Melat, ¶ 19, 287 P.3d at 847.
¶ 49 Our recent discussion of quantum meruit in Melat highlights this distinction:
Quantum meruit is an equitable theory of recovery that arises out of the need to avoid unjust enrichment to a party in the absence of an actual agreement to pay for services rendered. Quantum meruit allows a party to recover the reasonable value of the services provided when the parties either have no express contract or have abrogated it. To recover in quantum meruit, a plaintiff must demonstrate that (1) at plaintiff‘s expense, (2) defendant received a benefit, (3) under circumstances that would make it unjust for the defendant to retain the benefit without paying. Whether retention of the benefit is unjust is a fact-intensive inquiry in which courts look to, among other things, the intentions, expectations, and behavior of the parties.
Id. at 847 (emphasis added) (citations omitted). Thus, proper application of the theory in the context of an attorney-client dispute requires that the attorney either return the unearned funds to the client or maintain the disputed funds in a neutral trust account, see
¶ 50 Crucially, the burden to prove that funds have been earned under quantum meruit falls upon the attorney. But in this case, Gilbert never pursued recovery in quantum meruit. Rather, under the guise of quantum meruit, she simply withheld—in her own business account—her clients’ аdvance fees that she had not earned upon termination under the written agreement, and she then claimed quantum meruit as a defense against charges that she failed to return unearned fees as required by
¶ 51 In fact, the concept of an attorney‘s need to actively seek recovery under quantum meruit is so ingrained in the doctrine that it explicitly underpins every case to which the majority cites except People v. Johnson, 199 Colo. 248, 612 P.2d 1097 (1980) (addressed infra Part III). See LaFond v. Sweeney, 2015 CO 3, ¶ 27, 343 P.3d 939, 947 (“[A] quantum meruit recovery action vis-a-vis the client never properly arose in this case. The underlying basis for applying this equitable doctrine regarding fee recovery is absent herе.” (emphasis added)); Melat, ¶ 20, 287 P.3d at 847 (“In the context of the attorney-client relationship, an attorney who withdraws before the close of a case may generally recover the reasonable value of his or her services under a quantum meruit theory.” (emphasis added)); Mullens v. Hansel-Henderson, 65 P.3d 992, 995 (Colo.2002) (“Generally attorneys may recover on an unenforceable contract on the basis of quantum meruit.” (emphasis added)); Dudding v. Norton Frickey & Assocs., 11 P.3d 441, 446 (Colo.2000) (“We have permitted quantum meruit recovery in the context of a noncontingent attorney-client contract when an attorney withdraws for a justifiable reason or a client terminates the attorney without cause.” (emphasis added)); Sather, 3 P.3d at 409-10 (“Upon discharge, the attorney must return all unearned fees in a timely manner, even though the attorney may be entitled to quantum meruit recovery for the services that the attorney rendered and for costs incurred on behalf of the client.” (emphasis added)); Olsen & Brown v. City of Englewood, 889 P.2d 673, 675 (Colo.1995) (“There is no question that an attorney who withdraws for a justifiable reason or is terminated by a client without cause is entitled to compensation for services rendered. Generally, courts are in agreement that quantum meruit is an appropriate measure of recovery in such circumstances.” (second emphasis added) (citation omitted)); Elliott v. Joyce, 889 P.2d 43, 44 (Colo.1994) (“After the matter was settled, Elliott filed an attorney‘s lien ... seeking recovery of attorney fees ... based on time and effort for services rendered, under the theory of quantum meruit. ... [T]he trial court accepted ‘the proceeds of the settlement . . . to be held by the court until James Elliott‘s attorney‘s lien question is resolved.‘” (first and third emphases added)). As these quotations illustrate, quantum meruit is a theory of recovery, and thus attorneys must seek and be granted recovery in a court before such fees can be properly considered “earned.”
¶ 52 Furthermore, these quotes are mere examples—the majority of these cases refer to recovery dozens of times, and none refers to withholding funds under the doctrine or to an attorney being permitted to retain funds under the flag of quantum meruit.4 Even
III. Sather and Johnson Support Returning Fees
¶ 53 In Sather, in a line that should rеsolve this case, the court holds that “[u]pon discharge, the attorney must return all unearned fees in a timely manner, even though the attorney may be entitled to quantum meruit recovery for the services that the attorney rendered and for costs incurred on behalf of the client.” 3 P.3d at 409-10 (emphasis added) (citing
¶ 54 The majority disregards this plain reading of Sather. Initially, it ignores the interrelationship between the rules at issue and dismisses this clear language prohibiting Gilbert‘s behavior as relating only to “a separate part of the opinion discussing an attorney‘s obligation under [RPC] 1.15(f) to maintain advance fees in a separate trust account until the fees are earned.” Maj. op. ¶ 32. Thus, the majority concludes, this plain language citing 1.16(d) is meaningless when considering an attorney‘s duties under 1.16(d). Instead, the majority focuses on the fact that we sanctioned the attorney in Sather for failing to return the unearned portion of his fees, as is prohibited by 1.16(d), and infers that this ruling “implicitly recognized that the attorney ‘earned’ and rightfully retained” some portion of the funds in quantum meruit “even though nothing in the opinion suggested that his ‘non-refundable’ flat fee agreement provided for quantum meruit recovery (or an hourly fee) upon early termination.” Id. at ¶ 30. To the majority, the fact that we did not “require the attorney to refund all advance fee payments and then separately seek quantum meruit recovery from his former client” means that we considered quantum meruit fees to have been earned at the moment the attorney decided he should be entitled to them. See id. at ¶ 32.
¶ 55 The majority infers too much. In Sather, the court simply took the term “unearned” from the language of 1.16(d), and since the court determined that the attorney did violate 1.16(d) because some portion of the fees retained as “nonrefundable” was clearly unrecoverable under either quantum meruit or contract, 3 P.3d at 407, 415, the court had no reason to reach the question of whether an attorney violates 1.16(d) by keeping funds in her own account as “earned” under quantum meruit before the funds were adjudicated as such. Additionally, the attorney retained these fees not under the guise of quantum meruit but rather under an unenforceable “non-refundable” fee agreement, and the Hearing Board then validated a portion of the funds as deserved under quantum meruit. See id. at 407-08. The mere fact that the court did not then perform the legal fiction of requiring the attorney to return all the advance fees and then immediately requiring the client to return the funds that the board had adjudicated as deserved in quantum meruit merely reflects judicial efficiency—it does not destroy the clear language of
¶ 56 Similarly, Johnson never actually holds that an attorney has a right to retain funds under quantum meruit simply because she feels that she earned them. In that case, an attorney entered into an oral agreement to represent a criminal defendant and received an advance payment of $1500 before the client terminated representation. Johnson, 612 P.2d at 1098. Because there was no written agreement and no agreement regarding what would happen in the event of early termination, the court determined that the “fee arrangement by necessity was upon a quantum meruit basis.” Id. The court then agreed with a grievance committee determination that the attorney “expended no more than 8 or 9 hours on the case” and that the attorney was therefore “entitled on a quantum meruit basis to $500 and that a refund of $1000” was due to his client. Id. at 1099. Notably, this case did not address the procedural requirements of quantum meruit but rather allowed the attorney to retain $500 in quantum meruit of the $1500 advance payment he had been withholding after his client terminated him. Because the attorney failed “to return that portion of the $1500 payment which was unearned,” the court found that he violated DR-2-110(A)(3), which was an older iteration of
¶ 57 The majority reads this as impliedly finding that the attorney did not violate DR 2-110(A)(3) by retaining funds that he was eventually deemed to have earned in quantum meruit by the court. See maj. op. ¶ 28, 32. Much like in Sather, however, the Johnson court never held thаt the attorney at issue was permitted to make his own determination regarding his entitlement to retain advance fees under quantum meruit; rather, it held that he did violate DR-2-110(A)(3) by not returning the portion of the funds that the court deemed unearned. Johnson, 612 P.2d at 1099. Hence, the court simply ruled that DR 2-110(A)(3) forbade retaining unearned fees, and since some of the fees were clearly unearned, the attorney violated the rule.
¶ 58 Moreover, even if this case is read to have affirmatively approved of the attorney‘s retention of fees because his unspoken agreement “by necessity was upon a quantum meruit basis,” see id. at 1098, this ruling was made before attorneys were required to reduce fee arrangements with new clients to writing under
¶ 59 In sum, neither Sather nor Johnson had any reason to reach the question of whether unilateral retention of the portion of fees that the court eventually deemed earned in quantum meruit also violated the rule. That question was not essential to the resolution of either case. Furthermore, the majority‘s contention that it “would be a waste of resources in these circumstances to force
IV. Conclusion
¶ 60 The majority‘s assertion that viewing Gilbert‘s misfeasance here as a violation of
¶ 61 This case is not about whether Gilbert was entitled to recover in quantum meruit had she followed the proper procedure. I take issue not with the Hearing Board‘s eventual determination that Gilbert proved the elements of quantum meruit, but with Gilbert retaining the fees under the guise of quantum meruit before the Board considеred her claim. Nor is it about punishment. Gilbert does not contest the punishment that she received for her other rule violations, and Regulation Counsel did not request any additional punishment had we held that Gilbert violated
¶ 62 The majority insists that, in holding that Gilbert did not violate
I am authorized to state that JUSTICE COATS and JUSTICE EID join in this dissent.
