Attorney Morris Ellis 1 appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for attorney’s fees stemming from his representation of Thomas J. Lowrance in proceedings to collect on a judgment entered in favor of Lowrance against Stephen J. Hacker. Ellis also contends that the district court erred in denying him a statutory attorney’s lien on certain funds belonging to Hacker that are currently held by the court. We affirm the judgment as to the attorney’s lien but reverse in part the denial of fees.
I. FACTS
On February 1, 1984, Stephen J. Hacker opened a commodity trading account with the brokerage firm of Rosenthal & Company (Rosenthal). In connection with the opening of that account, Hacker entered into a Commodity Customer Agreement with Rosenthal (the Agreement). The Agreement included the following provision:
In the event of the closing of the accounts of the undersigned [Hacker] by you [Rosenthal] or the undersigned in whole or in part, the undersigned shall remain liable for any deficiency, together with interests and costs, expenses and reasonable attorneys’ fees should an attorney be employed to enforce collection.
From mid-June to mid-September of 1984, Thomas J. Lowrance acted as Hacker’s commodities trading adviser for Hacker’s account with Rosenthal. During that period, Hacker lost more than $500,000 in that account. At the time the account was closed, it had a debit balance of $52,309.30
for which Hacker was liable under the terms of the Agreement. Lowrance paid that balance pursuant to his relationship with Rosenthal, and Rosenthal then assigned to Lowrance all of its rights, title and interest in the account, including the right to collect the debit balance from Hacker.
On February 12, 1985, Hacker paid Low-rance $13,000, which he claimed constituted an accord and satisfaction of the debt. Lowrance brought an action against Hacker to collect the balance. On July 31, 1987, after a three-day bench trial, the district court entered judgment for Lowrance in the amount of $39,309.30 plus interest. The court reserved judgment on the question whether Hacker’s contract with Rosen-thal required Hacker to pay Lowrance’s attorney’s fees. On October 8, 1987, the district court entered a written decision holding that Rosenthal’s assignment to Lowrance included the right to attorney’s fees, and awarding Lowrance $8,273 of the $12,343 in fees he requested. Judgment in conformity with that ruling was entered on June 14, 1988. Hacker prosecuted separate appeals from the judgment on the merits and the award of attorney’s fees, and this court affirmed both judgments.
See Lowrance v. Hacker,
On October 28, 1987, Lowrance began garnishment proceedings against Stotler & Company (Stotler), a Chicago commodities brokerage firm which held funds allegedly belonging to Hacker. The garnishment affidavit served on Stotler referred only to the district court’s July 31, 1987 judgment, in which the issue of attorney’s fees had been reserved, and sought $39,309.30 in principal plus $12,116.20 in interest. Hacker challenged the validity of the garnishment on the ground that the funds in the account in question did not belong to him
On September 27, Ellis filed a petition in his own name seeking $36,450 in attorney’s fees for the postjudgment proceedings, including the prior appeals. Ellis’ petition also sought a statutory attorney’s lien on the Stotler funds for the attorney’s fees already awarded. On October 5, 1990, the magistrate judge issued a report rejecting all of Ellis’ claims and recommending that his motion be denied. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s Report and. Recommendation in full, and Ellis appeals.
II. ATTORNEY’S LIEN
Ellis claims an attorney’s lien on the garnished Stotler funds under the Illinois Attorneys Lien Act. The Act provides:
Attorneys at law shall have a lien upon all claims, demands and causes of action ... which may be placed in their hands by their clients for suit or collection, or upon which suit or action has been instituted, for the amount of any fee which may have been agreed upon ... or, in the absence of such agreement, for a reasonable fee, for the services of such suits, claims, demands or causes of action.... To enforce such lien, such attorneys shall serve notice in writing ... .upon the party against whom their clients may have such suits, claims or causes of action'_ Such lien shall attach to any verdict, judgment or order entered and to any money or property which may be recovered, on account of such suits, claims, demands or causes of action, from and after the time of service of the notice.
Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 13, ¶ 14 (1990) (emphasis supplied). Illinois courts have consistently held that no enforceable lien is created under the statute until the attorney has served the required notice.
McKee-Berger-Mansueto, Inc. v. Board of Education,
.Ellis attempts to avoid this conclusion by arguing that the set-off did not extinguish all of Lowrance’s interest in the garnished funds because attorney’s fees are exempt from set-off under section 12-178(5) of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure, Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 110. We find this argument unpersuasive. The only claim Lowrance made against the Stotler funds was for the amount of the judgment on the merits plus interest. That judgment clearly did not include an award of attorney’s fees — the district court explicitly reserved the issue of attorney’s fees for later proceedings. Although Lowrance
could
later have filed a garnishment affidavit against the Stotler funds based on the award of attorney’s fees, he did not do so. Rather, he filed a separate garnishment action against Pioneer American Savings Bank in Florida (Pioneer), seeking collection of the attorney’s fee award only.
3
Thus, we think it clear that attorney’s fees were simply not involved in the Stotler garnishment proceedings, either as an “implicit” part of the judgment on the merits or as a separate
III. POSTJUDGMENT ATTORNEY’S FEES
Ellis also appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for attorney’s fees for his services in the postjudgment proceedings. The first problem that this issue raises is the question of standing. In essence, Ellis is attempting to enforce, in his own name and for his own behalf, a contractual entitlement that belongs not to him but to his client. In the somewhat analogous circumstance of petitions for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, both the First and Second Circuits have held that only a party, and not his attorney, has standing to bring the claim.
Benitez v. Collazo-Collazo,
We have recognized, however, that this rule is not always controlling. “Technically, the award of attorney’s fees under section 1988 is to the party, not to his lawyer, but it is common to make the award directly to the lawyer where ... the lawyer’s contractual entitlement is uncontested.”
Richardson v. Penfold,
This case falls somewhere in the middle. First of all, Ellis claims that he is still acting as Lowrance’s attorney. The magistrate judge, however, concluded that the attorney-client relationship between Ellis and Lowrance had been severed sometime during the course of the garnishment proceedings. There is strong evidence in the record to support that conclusion. According to the magistrate judge, Ellis did not appear in that proceeding on Lowrance’s behalf after Hacker filed his motion, for set-off in May of 1989. As early as January of 1989, Lowrance filed
pro se
an “Affidavit of Thomas J. Lowrance in Support of Plaintiff’s Position to Deny Defendant’s Motion to Supplement Record on Pending Motions to Quash Garnishment.”
5
In March of 1989, Lowrance sent a letter to Hacker’s attorney informing him that “Morris W. Ellis is not authorized, in the absence of my signed written expressed authorization to the contrary, Mr. Ellis is not authorized to settle or receive any payment of money in behalf of Thomas J. Lowrance relative to all matters” in Low-rance’s case against Hacker. And Low-
On the other hand, there is no question that Ellis was acting on behalf of Lowrance in defending Lowrance’s judgments against Hacker’s appeals to this court. There was no suggestion that Lowrance objected to Ellis’ representation in those appeals. Had Ellis brought a motion for attorney’s fees for those appeals immediately following this court’s rulings in Lowrance’s favor, Ellis’ “contractual entitlement” to fees would have been uncóritested, and the improper denomination of the petition a mere technicality that the court would have overlooked. Indeed, Ellis claims that the original petition for fees in this case, which the district court granted, was brought in his own name, and Hacker does not dispute this. In our view, Ellis’ entitlement to fees for his services in protecting Lowrance’s judgment on appeal did not become “com tested” simply because he and Lowrance apparently came to a parting of the ways in the garnishment proceedings. Therefore, we conclude that Ellis has standing to petition for his reasonable fees for those services. Given the strong evidence of his estrangement from Lowrance during the garnishment proceedings, however, we find that he may not petition Hacker directly for fees incurred during those proceedings.
Hacker also contends that, whether or not Ellis has standing to bring a claim for attorney’s fees, any claim for such fees is barred because it must be based on the contract between Hacker and Rosenthal which was merged in the judgments in favor of Lowrance. The Illinois Supreme Court has stated the doctrine of merger as follows:
The general rule is, that by a judgment at law or a decree in chancery, the contract or instrument upon which the proceeding is based becomes entirely merged in the judgment. By the judgment of the court it loses all of its vitality and ceases to bind the parties to its execution.... Oncé becoming merged in the judgment, no further action at law or suit in equity can be maintained.
Doerr v. Schmitt,
The doctrine of merger is applied to causes of action to bar relitigation of the same cause. In the case presented, plaintiff did not seek to relitigate any of defendant’s liability regarding the breach of the lease but rather sought attorney fees which are ancillary to the primary cause of action. Further, as plaintiff points out, no judgment regarding attorney fees incurred on appeal was rendered in the trial court before the first appeal was filed or raised and considered by this court in the first appeal.
Id.
We conclude that Ellis is entitled to a reasonable attorney’s fee for his services in the appeals in spite of his failure to establish the terms of the contract between himself and Lowrance. Whatever the nature of that agreement, Ellis has the right to be compensated in quantum meruit for the services he rendered:
If an attorney renders professional services, he has the right to be compensated for such services_ Where an express contract [between the attorney and client] is not entered into, there is generally an implied promise to pay a reasonable compensation for the services rendered by the attorney pursuant to the theory of quantum meruit. In Illinois a plaintiff may recover under quantum meruit on a claim made pursuant to an express contract without amendment of the pleadings, where plaintiff fails to establish the express contract but does show in fact that services were rendered.
Greenbaum & Browne, Ltd. v. Braun,
Finally, Hacker argues that even if Ellis would otherwise have the right to recover postjudgment fees from Hacker, the district court’s order denying Ellis’ petition should be affirmed because the fees claimed are “unreasonable, unwarranted and excessive.” Hacker then offers several pages of “examples” of Ellis’ allegedly unreasonable, unwarranted and excessive claims. The determination of a reasonable attorney’s fee, however, is a factual question for the district court on remand. Therefore, we decline to address Hacker’s contentions in this area.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed in part, Reversed in part and Remanded in part for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Although Lowrance is still the named plaintiff in this case, it is clear that the real party in interest here is Ellis, not Lowrance. Therefore, we will treat this appeal as one brought by Ellis rather than Lowrance.
. Lowrance appealed this judgment pro se, and this court affirmed without oral argument in an unpublished order.
. We also note that on'May 30, 1991, Ellis filed a new garnishment affidavit against the Stotler funds with the Clerk of the District Court, seeking to enforce the award of attorney’s fees. The propriety of that garnishment is still under consideration by the district court.
. Ellis
is
entitled to an attorney’s lien on the fee award itself
if
he fulfills the notice requirements. It is not entirely clear that he has done so here, given that he served Hacker’s counsel rather than Hacker.
In re Del Grosso,
. The magistrate judge construed this document as a pleading in response to Hacker’s motion to supplement the record. Report and Recommendation at 8 (Sept. 15, 1989).
