Opinion
I. Introduction
This is аn appeal from a judgment of the San Francisco Superior Court entered after respondents’ demurrer to the appellant’s complaint was sustained without leave to amend. The case presents the issue of whether a 1993 order of the Nevada County Superior Court, entered in an minor’s personal injury action, and purporting to deny appellant’s quantum meruit lien claim for attorney fees in that action, bars a subsequent declaratory relief action with respect to entitlement to those fees. On the facts before us, we hold that it does and hence affirm the judgment.
n. Factual and Procedural Background
The history of this attorney fee dispute starts on January 24, 1992, when Korie Rekers, a minor, was injured in a head-on automobile collision in Nevada County. A guardian ad litem was appointed for her and, in March of 1992, he retained the Nevada City firm of Shine, Browne & Diamond (Shine firm), one of the respondents herein, to represent her in an action for
Also in April of 1992, the Shine firm entered into a contract with appellant here, the Law Offices of Stanley J. Bell, a Professional Corporation, of San Francisco (Bell). Bell was, by this agreement, associated in the representation of the minor and was apparently to receive two-thirds of the attorney fees with the Shine firm receiving the remaining one-third. 2 Bell never had a fee agreement directly with the guardian ad litem.
Throughout the remainder of 1992 Bell apparently performed certain services in the Rekers action; it is conceded by both parties that Bell expended slightly under $17,000 in litigation expenses during that period of time. Respondent Joseph J. Appel (Appel), one of Bell’s employees, worked on the action during this period. However, on December 31,1992, Appel left Bell’s employ and opened his own practice in San Francisco. Shortly thereafter, he was substituted in place оf Bell as associate counsel in the Rekers action, a substitution which Bell approved. Within days thereafter, however, on January 25, 1993, Bell filed a document entitled “Lien for Attorneys Fees and Costs and Request for Special Notice” in the Rekers case in the Nevada County Superior Court. By it, he claimed a “first lien for legal costs, attorneys fees quantum meruit and for any other compensation that may be claimed to be determined at the time of the settlement, other disposition, or any other appropriate time in the [Rekers] case . . . .”
After the filing of this document, the two sets of attorneys proceeded to exchange correspоndence on the subject of Bell’s purported lien claim. 3 The correspondence apparently commenced with three letters in May and June of 1993 from the Shine firm to Bell requesting various information with respect to the quantum meruit fees claimed by the latter. Bell apparently answered only the last of these letters via a letter of June 14. 4 In it Bell asserted, inter alia, that it was “premature” to discuss his claim for fees and, for that and various additional reasons, he declined to respond with the specifics requested.
True to their word, on September 17 respondents, on behalf of the guardian ad litem, filed and served upon Bell a petition under Code of Civil Procedure section 372 for a court order authorizing the compromise of the Rekers claim. Paragraph 12 of the pеtition set forth, in seven subparagraphs, the history of the fee dispute with Bell (or at least that history from respondents’ viewpoint). This portion of the petition concluded: “Based upon the failure to provide the requested information by the Law Offices of Stanley J. Bell, and further based upon Petitioner’s expressed assumption that the Law Offices of Stanley J. Bell would be waiving its asserted attorney fee quantum meruit lien claim, the asserted attorney fee quantum meruit lien claim of the Law Offices of Stanley J. Bell is respectfully requested to be denied in its entirety.” The petition recited a hearing date of October 4. 5
Clearly by way of a defensive response, on September 28 Bell filed two documents, a “Memorandum of Points and Authorities Re Petition under CCP § 372 for Order Approving Compromise of Minor’s Claim” and a supporting declaration in the Nevada County action. In the former document, after briefly outlining the basis of the dispute, Bell cited two cases 6 and then stated: “The above cases make it very clear that the Court in this action has no jurisdiction to deny the Law Offices of Stanley J. Bell its quantum meruit attorney fee as that is an issue that must be determined in a separate, independent action.” In the second document, and obviously intending to deflect the “waiver” claim in the September 17 petition, Bell recited that he had read that petition and then stated: “At no time has the Law Offiсes of Stanley J. Bell either expressly or impliedly waived its right to its quantum meruit attorney fee in this action.” To this declaration was attached yet another copy of his January 25 “lien.”
The dispute then shifted from the pleading front to the courtroom. On October 4, the Nevada County Superior Court convened a hearing on respondents’ petition to compromise the Rekers claim. Bell was represented by counsel who appeared (generally, not specially) “for the lien claimant.”
The court initially indicated that it anticipated reaching the issue of the lien claim, whereupon Bell’s counsel asserted, “as the Points and Authorities set forth. . . this court has [no] jurisdiction to make an order with respect to the attorney fees.” Counsel expanded on this argument by noting that there was nothing in the petition indicating what the division should be between the two law offices then representing the tort plaintiff and, similarly, “there should not be included within this order that the former attorney’s law offices of Stanley J. Bell should be denied their fee. That has to be decided in a separate action.”
The court expressed some concern that, if it deferred a hearing on the Bell attorney fees issue, such a defense might delay action on the entire petition to the detriment of the minor. Bell’s counsel responded that Bell understood that his “recourse is against the attorneys.” The following interchange then took place:
“The Court: So then he is not claiming that he has any recourse against the funds distributed to the trust on behalf of the minor; is that correct?
“[Bell’s Counsel]: Our recourse is against the attorneys.
“The Court: Then your lien claim is restricted to that portion of the funds that are awarded as attorney fees?
“[Bell’s Counsel]: Correct.”
After this interchange, Appel argued (as had his petition for the guardian ad litem) that there had been numerous unanswered requests of Bell with respect to the specifics of his quantum meruit attorney fees claim and that it would be “prejudicial” to the guardian to leave this issue unresolved.
Soon afterward Bell’s counsel ceased using the term “lien claim” to describe the relief her client was seeking. She argued instead: “Technically a
Two days after the October 4 hearing, the Nevada County Superior Court entered its “Order Authorizing and/or Approving Petition Under Code of Civil Procedure § 372 for Compromise of Minor’s Claim.” That order, which the court directed to be prepared by respondents, 8 included one long paragraph ([*][] 11) which essentially repeated the factual recitations contained in paragraph 12 of the September 17 petition. The order then stated: “The lien claim for quantum meruit attorney fees submitted by lien claimant be and hereby is Denied with prejudice. This court has sole jurisdiction over the issue оf attorney fees awarded in connection with the claim of a minor, such as plaintiff herein. [Citations.] The lien claimant knowingly, deliberately and voluntarily submitted to this Court a lien for quantum meruit attorney fees. The lien claimant knowingly and deliberately acknowledged in writing this Court’s jurisdiction to determine the extent of attorney fees to be awarded by this court by way of a Petition for Compromise. See, lien claimant’s letter dated June 15, 1993. Lien claimant failed on numerous occasions to inform Petitioner herein prior to settlement the amount and basis for any quantum meruit attorney fee award. Petitioner was therefore prejudiced by a lack of said informatiоn. Based upon the failure to provide the requested information by lien claimant and further based upon Petitioner’s expressed written assumption that lien claimant would be waiving its asserted attorney fee quantum meruit lien claim in the absence of information, and further based upon the lack of any competent evidence submitted by lien claimant to support this court’s award for quantum meruit attorney fees to be assessed against the proposed settlement, and further based upon principles of equity and fair play, the asserted attorney fee quantum meruit lien claim of lien claimant is denied with prejudice and is therefore, expunged from the record on file herein.”
No appeal was taken from this order.
The battle then shifted to the San Francisco Superior Court. Respondents demurred to appellant’s October 1 complaint on the basis of res judicata and
On both occasions, the San Francisco Superior Court relied upon the Nevada County Superior Court’s October 6 order and concluded that the action before it was, as a consequence of that order, barred. This appeal followed.
III. Discussion
A. The Nevada County Superior Court Acted in Excess of Its Jurisdiction.
Before considering the jurisdiction of the Nevada County court to enter the challenged order, two preliminary points need to be made: in the first place, the purported “lien” document filed by Bell on January 25 had at least two things wrong with it: (1) it was mislabeled (the proper term for such a document is “Notice of Lien”; see
Hansen
v.
Jacobsen, supra,
On the latter point, the law is clear that the only circumstance under which an attorney can claim an attorneys’ lien with respect to a future award or settlement is when he has a contract directly with the client which either expressly or impliedly provides that he is to share in that award or settlement. (See
Hansen
v.
Jacobsen, supra,
However, even if Bell had a valid lien with respect to the Rekers settlement, the Nevada County Superior Court had no jurisdiction to determine the reasonable amount of attorney fees to be awarded him. This was and is the clear holding of the two cases Bell cited to the Nevada County Superior Court (see footnote 6,
ante)
and several others. For example, in the leading case on how and in what forum an attorneys’ lien is enforced,
Bandy
v.
Mt. Diablo Unified Sch. Dist.
(1976)
In
Valenta
v.
Regents of University of California, supra,
The
Valenta
court added that neither the filing of the “Notice of Lien” in that case nor a subsequent motion to strike it created the necessary jurisdiction.
(Valenta
v.
Regents of University of California, supra,
Respondents argue that, although this may be the rule with respect to cases involving adults, because Probate Code sections 3600 and 3601 and Code of Civil Procedure section 372 vest in the probate court exclusive jurisdiction to approve attorney fee requests in actions involving minors, such as the Rekers case, the rule is somehow different in such cases. They are wrong. The cases they principally rely upon,
Ojeda
v.
Sharp Cabrillo Hospital
(1992)
This distinction was made clear in the recent case of
Goldberg
v.
Superior Court
(1994)
The Court of Appeal granted the writ of mandate and vacated the trial court’s order. In so doing, it clarified the power of a superior court under Probate Code section 3601: “Our conclusion that the court has authority to determine what expenses are paid out of the minors’ settlement and what are not does not mean the court has jurisdiction to decide what Dr. Goldberg ‘deserves.’ Section 3601 expressly permits the court to decide what reasonable expenses it will allow to be paid from the minor’s settlement. It does not permit the court to decide the reasonable value of a practitioner’s services. [H The reasonableness and propriety of the contract amount is another question entirely, a question that must be resolved by a separate action. It is not a matter to be decided under section 3601 and certainly not by the irregular mini-trial we saw in this case. In short, section 3601 is exclusively concerned with allowing expenses to be paid from the minor’s settlement. It has no effect on the claims Dr. Goldberg may have against the parents or lawyers under the contracts or otherwise.”
(Goldberg
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The rule enunciated in Goldberg applies here.
B. Notwithstanding the Nevada County Court’s Action in Excess of Its Jurisdiction, Appellant Is Barred From. Collaterally Attacking Its Order
The fact that the Nevada County Superior Court acted in excess of its jurisdiction does not end matters. Respondents assert, and we agree, that three separate and distinct principles nevertheless bar appellant from contesting both the jurisdiction of that court and the force and effect of its order of October 6. We refer to the principles of estoppel, disfavor of collateral attack, and res judicata.
Before discussing these principles and their applicability here, it is important to identify with particularity the nature of the jurisdictional defect of the Nevada County order. It is not, as appellant argues, subject matter jurisdiction. The Nevada County court was clearly competent to rule on an attorney
Our Supreme Court carefully distinguished between these types of jurisdiction in
Abelleira
v.
District Court of Appeal
(1941)
It is precisely this type of jurisdictional infirmity that is involved here. For example, in
Bandy
the court expressly stated: “Any order or judgment granting the attorney fees made in the main action is in excess of the court’s jurisdiction and is void.”
(Bandy
v.
Mt. Diablo Unified Sch. Dist., supra,
Unlike some other jurisdictional defects, a party may, by its conduct, be estopped from contesting an action in excess of jurisdiction. Moreover,
On the issue of estoppel, it is useful to recapitulate briefly just how much and how often Attorney Bell embraced the Nevada County Superior Court. In summary, he (1) filed a document in that court asserting a lien, (2) refiled that document in the same court nine months later after respondents began suggesting a “waiver” by Bell of his claim, (3) simultaneously, affirmatively represented to that court that he had never waived his claim for fees, (4) raised no objection to that part of the petition filed by respondents requesting, on his behalf, almost $17,000 by way of reimbursement for costs expended in the action, (5) caused a legal associate to appear generally, not specially, in that court, 9 and then (6) never appealed the resulting court order. We hold that these actions, considered together, estop Bell from now contesting the Nevada County court’s jurisdiction to act as it did.
A leading case on the application of the doctrine of estoppel as applied to “jurisdiction to act” is
In re Griffin
(1967)
The “estoppel” principle is particularly compelling where, as here, what is involved is a collateral attack. In this connection, it is noteworthy that Bell clearly had standing to appeal the Nevada County Superior Court order. (See
Valenta
v.
Regents of University of California, supra,
The leading case supporting this view is
Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co.
v.
McConnell
(1955)
In
Frank
v.
Frank
(1969)
Finally, the doctrine of res judicata itself precludes relitigation in the San Francisco Superior Court of the Nevada County Superior Court’s assumption of jurisdiction. Inasmuch as the Nevada County court expressly determined its jurisdiction to act with respect to Bell’s underlying claim for attorney fees—not just his “lien claim”—this principle likewise obtains. (See
Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co.
v. McConnell,
supra,
Here, the “claim” that respondents seek to foreclose in the San Francisco action is Bell’s assertion of a right to recover the reasonable value of his
On the first point, appellant is basically arguing that, becаuse there was no .
actual litigation
of his claim in the Nevada County action, there was no judgment on the merits, an essential ingredient for res judicata. But the law is clear that
actual litigation
is not necessary as long as there has been “a fair opportunity” to litigate the claim. (See
Schultz
v.
Harney
(1994)
On the second point, appellant is simply incorrect that the only issue before the Nevada County court was his “lien claim” and not his underlying right to recover some portion of the attorney fees pursuant to his contract with Shine. The breadth and scope of the October 6 order belies appellant’s position. We note in particular the following sentences from that order: “This court hаs sole jurisdiction over the issue of attorney fees awarded in connection with the claim of a minor, such as plaintiff herein. . . . The lien claimant knowingly and deliberately acknowledged in writing this Court’s jurisdiction to determine the extent of attorney fees to be awarded by this court by way of a Petition for Compromise.” This language makes it clear that the Nevada County court was convinced it had provided Bell the opportunity to litigate the basic issue of his right to attorney fees in the Rekers case and, therefore, that it had jurisdiction to determine both that issue and the issue of the validity of his lien. If Bell felt that was not the case, he had a clear and direсt remedy: an appeal. He voluntarily eschewed that remedy.
On the third point, that the parties were not the same in the two actions, the answer is equally simple. First of all, appellant became a party to the Rekers action when he filed his lien. (See
McClearen
v.
Superior Court, supra,
IV. Disposition
The order and judgment appealed from are affirmed.
Kline, P. J., and Smith, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied October 4, 1995.
Notes
Although the contract is not a matter of record in this case, the parties agree that it provided for a contingent fee of 25 percent to be paid from the gross proceeds of any settlement or verdict, and also prоvided that the Shine firm could associate any other attorney or attorneys so long as such association did not increase the total attorney fees payable. There is nothing in either the record or in the parties’ briefs as to whether the agreement expressly provided for an attorneys’ lien.
This agreement is also not included in the record in this appeal.
With one exception, the correspondence is not in the record before us. Most of the description in the text is derived from respondents’ petition to compromise the Rekers claim and from the subsequent Nevada County Superior Court order.
All dates hereafter are in 1993.
The petition includеd a request for the reimbursement of the costs of all the attorneys involved, including almost $17,000 to Bell; this request was approved.
Hansen
v.
Jacobsen
(1986)
There is nothing in the record to indicate whether this complaint had been served by the time of the October 4 hearing in Nevada City.
On October 4, the court issued a “Ruling on Submitted Matters” which, among other things, ruled that the “purported lien” by Bell “is ordered expunged” and directing respondents to prepare a formal order.
See, with respect to a general versus a special appearance in this context, 2 Witkin, Cal. Procedure, supra, Jurisdiction, sections 141, 157, pages 522-524, 541-542.
The Supreme Court recognized that, under certain circumstances, collateral attack might be allowed, but only where the judgment is contrary to a statute.
(Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co.
v.
McConnell, supra,
