This case presents an appeal from the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Travelers Insurance Co., and its insureds — GMAC Leasing Corp., Register Moody General Contractors, and Charles Galloway — against Joseph Weigel in Weigel's action for attorney fees. See sec. 802.08, Stats. Weigel claims the defendants willfully ignored his attorney's lien against monies they paid out in settlement of a matter in which Weigel claims to have represented the *266 plaintiffs. In granting summary judgment, the trial court concluded that Weigel held no such lien. We affirm.
I.
The facts are undisputed. In June of 1985, Jean Kops was fatally injured in an automobile accident in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Weigel had performed legal services for the Kops family in the past, and was apparently retained to pursue the Kops family's claims regarding Jean Kops' accident. He has not produced a written retention agreement, and alleges alternatively: (1) that the agreement document was misplaced, or, (2) that it never existed, but that he had an oral retention agreement with the Kops. In any event, Weigel wrote to each of the defendants, informing them that he was representing the Kops. After two years, during which time Weigel engaged in settlement negotiations and other legal activities on behalf of the Kops without resolution of the matter, the Kops retained local counsel in Florida.
Weigel assisted Florida counsel, who in 1989 successfully negotiated a settlement agreement in which the Kops waived all claims against the defendants regarding Jean Kops' accident in consideration for $500,000. One third of that amount, or $166,665, was paid by the defendants to Florida counsel. Weigel brought suit, claiming an attorney's lien on one third of that amount, or $55,555, and alleges that the defendants knew of that lien. 1 The trial court granted summary judgment to the defendants.
*267 II.
We review summary-judgment decisions
de novo. Green Spring Farms v. Kersten,
Weigel purports to state claims against the defendants on both common-law and statutory grounds.
A. Weigel's Common-Law Claim.
Common-law equitable liens in favor of attorneys working on a contingency basis developed in order to secure the expectation of payment for matters upon which those attorneys labored.
See Howard v. Town of Osceola,
Here, the underlying cause of action, the Kops' case, was in tort; it did not turn on a writing in Weigel's possession. The case settled and, therefore, never came to judgment. Reading Weigel's complaint in a light most favorable to him, as we must,
see Voss v. City of Middleton,
B. Weigel's Statutory Lien Claim.
Section 757.36, Stats., provides in relevant part:
Any person having or claiming a right of action, sounding in tort or for unliquidated damages on contract, may contract with any attorney to prosecute the action and give the attorney a lien upon the cause of action and upon the proceeds or damages derived in any action brought for enforcement of the cause of action, as security for fees in the conduct of the litigation; when such agreement is made and notice thereof given to the opposite party or his or her attor *269 ney, no settlement . . . may be valid as against the lien so created.
Enforcement of such a statutory lien against a settlement requires proof of: (1) the agreement creating the lien, (2) notice to the other party, or the other party's counsel, and (3) the amount of the settlement. Section 757.37, Stats. 2
Liberally construing Weigel's complaint, as we must in this context,
see Brooks,
*270
A defendant makes a
prima facie
case for summary judgment by "showing] a defense that would defeat the plaintiff."
Grams,
Although Weigel argues that it is not necessary that the attorney-client agreement be in the form of a written contract, the law is to the contrary. Thus, in
Wurtz-inger,
the supreme court held that an attorney failed to prove up his lien where "the only evidence of an agreement [was] in an uncontroverted affidavit" asserting the agreement's existence.
*271
Weigel's affidavit in opposition to summary judgment sets out his involvement in the Kops matter, and suggests that he was retained by the Kops throughout. The affidavit, however, does not allege an agreement between Weigel and the Kops under which Weigel agreed to represent the Kops in consideration for a lien against any judgment; nor does Weigel produce such an agreement. "An allegation of retainer is not sufficient to imply an agreement for a lien."
Goldman v. Home Mut. Ins. Co.,
*272 By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Weigel has also brought suit against the Florida counsel, in which he alleges breach of a fee-sharing agreement. This appeal does not concern Weigel's claims against the Florida firm.
Section 757.37, Stats., provides:
When action settled by parties, what proof to enforce lien. If any such cause of action is settled by the parties thereto after judgment has been procured without notice to the attorney claiming the lien, the lien may be enforced and it shall only be required to prove the facts of the agreement by which the lien was given, notice to the opposite party or his or her attorney and the rendition of the judgment, and if any such settlement of the cause of action is had or effected before judgment therein, then it shall only be necessary to enforce the lien to prove the agreement creating the same, notice to the opposite party or his or her attorney and the amount for which the case was settled, which shall be the basis for the lien and it shall not be necessary to prove up the original cause of action in order to enforce the lien and suit.
Wurtzinger interprets sections 256.36-37, Stats., which were subsequently renumbered sections 757.36-37, Stats. See Laws of 1977, ch. 187, sec. 96. The language of these prior sections was substantially identical to the current law.
Weigel's affidavit in opposition to the defendants' motion for summary judgment does state that "the defendants and all of them totally ignored the statutory and common law lien rights of Attorney Weigel." "Affidavits in support [or opposition] of a motion for summary judgment must contain evidentiary facts ...."
Hopper v. City of Madison,
Defendants also raise Weigel's failure to prove notice to them of the alleged lien. We do not reach this question because we conclude no lien existed. We do note, however, that Weigel's 1985 correspondence to defendants, referred to by Weigel in his brief,
*272
gave notice of retention, but did not mention an attorney's lien.
Compare Goldman,
