Bernard LITMAN, Appellant,
v.
FINE, JACOBSON, SCHWARTZ, NASH, BLOCK & ENGLAND, P.A., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*90 Lapidus & Frankel and Richard L. Lapidus, Miami, for appellant.
Fine Jacobson Schwartz Nash Block & England and Arthur J. England, Jr. and Theodore Klein and Charles M. Auslander, Miami, for appellee.
Before DANIEL S. PEARSON, FERGUSON and JORGENSON, JJ.
DANIEL S. PEARSON, Judge.
We affirm the final judgment entered for the law firm of Fine Jacobson Schwartz Nash Block & England, P.A. (Fine Jacobson). In so doing, we reject Litman's two contentions: that the attorneys were not entitled to a charging lien for fees for services rendered in their successful representation of him in the underlying case, and that he was deprived of a jury trial when the trial court determined that the attorneys were entitled to a judgment for fees.
I.
The antecedent to the present case is an earlier lawsuit in which the law firm of Podhurst, Orseck, Parks, Josefsberg, Eaton, Meadow & Olin, P.A. (Podhurst Orseck) obtained for Bernard Litman a substantial money judgment in a breach of contract action. When Litman's brother, Seymour Litman, a lawyer, claimed $216,000 of the money judgment under a contract he allegedly had with Bernard to render legal services in the matter, Podhurst Orseck brought an interpleader action to determine the respective rights of Bernard and Seymour to the interpleaded fund. At this juncture Bernard engaged Fine Jacobson to represent him against Seymour.
The interpleader action resulted in another decision in Bernard's favor a judgment that Seymour had no right to any portion of the fund. Perhaps overcome by the sweet smell of success, Bernard then refused to pay the balance of the attorney's fees claimed by Fine Jacobson,[1] and Fine Jacobson moved for the imposition of a charging lien.[2] Litman moved to dismiss on the grounds that, first, no charging lien exists in the absence of a contingent fee contract and, second, Fine Jacobson's efforts on Litman's behalf did not, as is required, produce a positive judgment for Litman, but merely preserved that which had been recovered by Litman's former attorneys. The trial court denied Litman's motion to dismiss, struck his separate request for a jury trial, conducted an evidentiary hearing, and entered a final judgment for Fine Jacobson. Litman appeals.
II.
Virtually every jurisdiction in the United States recognizes the right of an attorney to recover fees by imposing a lien on a *91 judgment obtained by his efforts for his client. See Scott v. Kirtley,
"The law is settled in this jurisdiction that a litigant should not be permitted to walk away with his judgment and refuse to pay his attorney for securing it. It is further consistent with law that an attorney's lien in a case like this be enforced in the proceeding where it arose. The parties are before the court, the subject matter is there, and there is no reason whatsoever why they should be relegated to another forum to settle the controversy."
In re Warner's Estate,160 Fla. 160 , 464,35 So.2d 296 , 298-99 (1948) (citations omitted).
"A lawyer's compensation, like that of every man who labors, is his bread and butter. When his contract is completed he is entitled to his pay and should not be forced to a suit to collect it. Such controversies are to be avoided so far as compatible with self-respect and his right to reasonable compensation for his services. Litigation to recover a fee is very embarrassing and is never resorted to except in cases to prevent injustice, imposition or fraud. An attempt to evade payment of an attorney's fee comes in poor grace after the work is done, the results accomplished and there is no question of bona fides."
In re Barker's Estate,75 So.2d 303 , 304 (Fla. 1954) (citation omitted).
More concisely, the charging lien is "an equitable right to have costs and fees due an attorney for services in the suit secured to him in the judgment or recovery in that particular suit." Sinclair, Louis, Siegel, Heath, Nussbaum & Zavertnik, P.A. v. Baucom,
A.
As Sinclair, Louis tells us, the requirements for the imposition of a charging lien are few and simple. There must be an agreement written or oral, express or implied between the attorney and the client that the attorney will proceed with the suit and that he will be paid for his services. The fees agreed upon may be based on a percentage of any monetary recovery, In re Barker's Estate,
B.
It is not enough, however, to support the imposition of a charging lien that an attorney has provided his services; the services must, in addition, produce a positive *92 judgment or settlement[4] for the client, since the lien will attach only to the tangible fruits of the services. Sinclair, Louis,
*93 If, then, the attorney has obtained a favorable judgment or settlement for the client which results in what the law recognizes as proceeds, the attorney has merely to assert timely a claim of lien[6] in the case to become entitled to a determination by the court, sitting without a jury, of the amount of attorney's fees due.[7]Kozich v. Kozich,
III.
All of the requirements for the existence and enforcement of a charging lien having been met in the present case, the trial court correctly proceeded in equity to enter judgment on the lien for the attorneys.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Pursuant to court order, Podhurst Orseck delivered to Fine Jacobson a check for approximately $242,000, payable to both Bernard Litman and Fine Jacobson. Litman, disputing the fees, refused to endorse the check. At Litman's request, Fine Jacobson returned the check to Podhurst Orseck, which then in accordance with an agreement between Litman and Fine Jacobson disbursed the undisputed amount of approximately $195,000 to Litman and retained the remainder in its trust account, to be released upon the joint direction of Litman and Fine Jacobson or by court order.
[2] Fine Jacobson also asserted a retaining lien which Litman challenged on the ground that no retaining lien exists where the attorney is not in possession of the money. We think the law supports Litman's position.
While Fine Jacobson argues that its relinquishment of the check at Litman's request still left Fine Jacobson in constructive possession of the money, the fact that the property was no longer in Fine Jacobson's hands precludes a claim of a retaining lien. In this area, possession is not nine-tenths, but ten-tenths of the law. "The general or retaining lien is dependent upon possession, and does not attach to property which is not in the hands of the attorney. Its very name, `retaining lien,' indicates that the property must be in the attorney's possession, or else he could not `retain' it." In re Sebring,
[3] In Conroy,
"in order for an attorney to obtain a charging lien upon a judgment which involves personal property, it is unnecessary for him to prove that there was an agreement with the client for the proceeds to be paid from the recovery. Of course, the attorney must prove that he had a valid contract with the client to render services but this can be satisfied by a showing that when he undertook the representation, there was an implied understanding that the client would pay him a reasonable fee."
Conroy was cited with approval in Sinclair, Louis in support of the statement that "[t]here must also be an understanding ... that the payment is either dependent upon recovery or that payment will come from the recovery."
[4] In settlement cases, the attorney is no less entitled to have a properly asserted charging lien enforced by the court, but if the underlying proceeding has been closed, the attorney may be relegated to an independent suit in equity to enforce the lien. Where the funds sought to be impressed by lien are part of a recovery by judgment, the court retains jurisdiction to hear any motion affecting the judgment until it is fully executed, and the attorney may proceed in that suit to have his lien established. Where, however, there has been a settlement, the funds may be outside the custody of the court, making the assertion of a lien "before the close of the original proceeding," Daniel Mones, P.A. v. Smith,
But what if the lien were not enforceable in the original action? As we have said, the performance of services and a resulting favorable judgment or settlement bring the lien into existence at common law. Thus, in Nichols v. Kroelinger,
[5] This requirement that there be proceeds is much the same where real property is recovered by an attorney for his client. In such a case, the attorney's lien, as its name implies, is seen as a charge upon the real property, Nichols v. Kroelinger,
Likewise, in dissolution actions, property awarded as an equitable distribution of property rights is a "proceed" to which a lien can attach, see Conroy v. Conroy,
[6] Although there is no question of the timeliness of Fine Jacobson's claim of lien in the present case, the precise function of the "timely notice" requirement found in Sinclair, Louis,
The usual procedure by which to assert a claim of lien is to file some form of notice, or petition, for lien most logically seen, perhaps, as the vehicle by which the court's equity jurisdiction is invoked to establish the attorney's theretofore inchoate lien. Establishment of a lien not only declares the attorney's right to participate in the recovery, but also confers standing upon the attorney to intervene in the action in his own name, Miller, Attorneys' Charging Liens, 56 Fla.B.J. 737 (1982), to continue a suit in certain circumstances, Miller v. Scobie,
However, it is questionable whether the "notice" requirement is, or should be, regarded as truly jurisdictional, that is, whether absent notice to a client during the action, an attorney may not proceed in the original action to resolve his fee dispute. It may be that this notice is critical to a discharged or withdrawing attorney, who is, perforce, no longer a part of the litigation and must take affirmative steps to retain his position vis-a-vis the client and the outcome; notice in such a case both alerts a successor attorney to a potential reduction of his own fee and "reminds" a client that discharge or withdrawal of an attorney does not relieve the client of his obligation to that attorney. However, Florida cases involving claims other than by discharged or withdrawing attorneys (that is, claims by attorneys who remain throughout the proceedings) fail to exhibit a unified view of the purpose underlying the notice requirement. See, e.g., Daniel Mones, P.A.,
Jurisdictions that include a notice requirement in their statutes governing attorney's liens generally do so to protect the rights of the attorney, see, e.g., Kleager v. Schaneman,
[7] However, if an attorney has not claimed a charging lien or there are no proceeds to which a lien can attach, he nonetheless retains the right to sue the client on the contract in an action at law in which the client is entitled to a jury trial. Barranco, Darlson, Daniel & Bluestein, P.A. v. Winner,
