Capitol Bancorp Ltd. (hereafter defendant) appeals as of right from a judgment awarding plaintiff Plunkett & Cooney, P.C. (Plunkett) $36,924.33 plus costs, interest, and attorney fees as compensation for legal services rendered. This appeal concerns a dispute over whether Plunkett is entitled to legal fees for services rendered by John Sharp, a former Plunkett attorney, while he was employed by the firm. We reverse.
Sharp, while affiliated with Plunkett, first met with defendant’s president, Joseph Reid, in 1988. The meeting was engendered by a request from Reid to a senior Plunkett shareholder, soliciting interest in providing legal representation. Sharp completed a public stock offering for defendant for a fixed fee. The parties then agreed to a second stock offering (the "little deal”) for a fixed fee of $12,000, which was completed while Sharp was employed with Plunkett.
In September 1989, Reid informed Sharp that defendant wished to merge with Portage Commerce Bank via a stock-for-stock exchange and a public stock offering. Although Sharp testified he quoted a fee range of $25,000 to $30,000, Reid testified, and the trial court found, that Reid and Sharp orally agreed to a fixed fee of $28,000 for the transaction. Sharp later found out that the filing would take more time than originally contemplated, but the fee was not discussed further
On November 15, 1989, while the two filings were pending with the sec, Sharp left Plunkett for another law firm. Defendant elected to entrust Sharp with the responsibility for completing the Portage Commerce Bank transaction.
The day after Sharp left Plunkett, the sec notified Sharp of numerous defects in the S-l and S-4 filings. Members of defendant’s "working group,” including Sharp, completed the additional work required by the sec’s comment letter over the next several days. However, the sec started an investigation shortly thereafter resulting from the fact that the amended S-l did not disclose that Portage Commerce Bank’s capital-to-asset ratio was below ten. percent, the minimum percentage required as the result of a side-letter undertaking with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation by Portage.
The sec eventually conducted an extensive investigation because of the failure to disclose the capital-to-asset ratio. Ultimately, the sec took no action and the work for the S-l and S-4 finally was completed in July or August 1990.
Defendant paid Sharp over $40,000 for work related to the S-l and S-4, of which approximately $6800 related to work pertaining to the sec inves
Subsequently, Plunkett billed defendant over $16,000 for the "little deal” and over $23,000 for the Portage Commerce Bank transaction, which defendant refused to pay. Although the trial court limited Plunkett’s recovery on the "little deal” to $12,000, it ordered defendant to pay Plunkett the sums requested for the Portage Commerce Bank transaction and costs of $1,819.34. On appeal, defendant challenges only the award pertaining to the Portage Commerce Bank transaction and the award of costs.
Defendant argues that whether Plunkett is entitled to any compensation at all is an issue to be resolved between Sharp and Plunkett. 2 Defendant alternatively contends that Plunkett is entitled to only a pro-rata share of the $28,000 fixed fee it paid to Sharp on the basis of the services rendered.
An attorney-client relationship must be established by contract before an attorney is entitled to payment for services rendered.
Wylie v City Comm of Grand Rapids,
Where an attorney’s employment is prematurely terminated before completing services contracted for under a contingency fee agreement, the attor
The rationale for using a quantum meruit basis for recovery in these cases, rather than the amount provided for in the contingency fee agreement, was first announced in
Ambrose, supra.
In adopting this rule,
Ambrose
relied on
Fracasse v Brent,
6 Cal 3d 784; 100 Cal Rptr 385;
An attorney’s right to compensation under a fixed-fee agreement where the attorney is prematurely terminated is surprisingly an issue of first
It is inappropriate to calculate damages on the basis of quantum meruit where a fixed-fee agreement explicitly provides the agreed-upon value of the services. In fact, most, if not all, of the factors that may be considered in determining the reasonable value of fees on the basis of quantum meruit will have been inherently incorporated in the contract price.
In Morris, supra at 279, this Court enumerated several nonexclusive factors appropriately considered for a determination of the reasonable value of fees on the basis of quantum meruit:
(1) the professional standing and experience of the attorney; (2) the skill, time and labor involved; (3) the amount in question and the results achieved; (4) the difficulty of the case; (5) the expenses incurred; and (6) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client.
These factors appropriately may be considered in
We agree that the client should not be responsible for the entire contract price in situations of early termination. However, we similarly find it inappropriate to ignore the agreement between the parties or even to find the contract price to be a mere factor in determining the amount that the attorney is entitled to be compensated. We believe that a calculation based on quantum meruit would in many cases reach the same result as the method of calculation set forth in this opinion. See, for example, Morris, supra. Nevertheless, there may be circumstances in which a client may be forced to pay more under quantum meruit where, for example, more work or time than originally anticipated is required to complete the services under the contract. Concomitantly, there may be circumstances in which an attorney may be forced to accept less under quantum meruit where, for example, less work or time than originally anticipated is required to complete the services under the contract. We find that the approach set forth in this opinion more appropriately respects the contract agreed to and bargained for by the parties while still preserving the right of a client to discharge an attorney. 5
Defendant also contends that it is entitled to a setoff from the amount owed Plunkett because Sharp’s negligence in filing the original sec documents and amendments resulted in the sec investigation and caused defendant to incur additional legal fees of over $6,000, lost profits of $63,000, and other additional expenses. However, we find that the trial court correctly concluded that the investigation did not result from Sharp’s actions while he was employed by Plunkett. Accordingly, defendant was not entitled to a setoff against the amount due Plunkett.
Defendant further argues that the trial court erred in awarding Plunkett administrative costs charged on the account. We disagree. Plunkett submitted an itemized bill showing actual costs incurred. Defendant presented no evidence to show that the fee agreements were inclusive of these costs.
Reversed and remanded for a determination by the trial court consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction._
Notes
Under the doctrine of
Rippey v Wilson,
In light of this position, it is unclear why the defendant chose not to interplead Sharp pursuant to MCR 3.603(A)(2) or to file a cross-claim against Sharp.
The right of the client to discharge counsel is an implied term of the contractual attorney-client relationship. MRPC 1.16(a)(3). However, the client is liable to compensate the attorney for services rendered to the date of discharge.
Genrow v Flynn,
Obviously, this rule would apply only where an attorney and client have not set forth alternative contractual formulas for determining compensation. Further, attorneys remain subject to the Michigan Rules of Professional Conduct as well as applicable provisions of law. See, for example, MRPC 1.5.
We are aware of the potential inconveniences and burdens with which a client may be faced where the attorney predominantly involved in his case leaves the law firm handling the matter. Attorneys should seriously consider assisting their clients to minimize such burdens, which are no fault of the client. For instance, Plunkett could have provided notice to the defendant that it was claiming separate
