Summary
denying a motion for intervention while noting that the contingency fee contract may be mooted by the verdict in the case
Summary of this case from Everett v. City of St. PetersburgOpinion
Attorney sought permissive intervention in action by client against third party. The District Court, Cobb, J., held that attorney was not entitled to permissive intervention in client's action against third party, on basis of contract between attorney's law firm and client providing for contingency fee for any settlement arising from client's alleged accident, in that any cause of action based upon contract between firm and client was solely governed by state law, contract had no relevance to current subject matter of action before federal district court, and issue arising from contract could be entirely mooted by verdict in action.
Motion denied.
Michael E. Shelton, Houston, Tex., for Budro.
Hubert Oxford III, Benckenstein, Oxford, Radford & Johnson, Beaumont, Tex., for Brown & Root, Inc.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
COBB, District Judge.
On January 8, 1986, Robert Grossman, an attorney for the firm of Waldman, Smallwood and Grossman, filed a Motion for Leave to File Intervention on the basis of a contract between that firm and Robert Lee Budro. The apparent subject matter of that contract was to provide for a contingency fee for any settlement arising from Robert Budro's alleged accident of April 13, 1985.
The subject matter of the intervention applicant's motion is a contract between two residents of Texas which was entered into in Texas and which is solely governed by Texas law. As such, any cause of action based upon this contract should be tried by the courts of the State of Texas.
It is further noted that the contract has no relevance to the current subject matter of the case before the court and therefore would serve to complicate the issues herein. Further, it is possible that the issue arising from the contract will be entirely mooted by the verdict in this case.
The intervention applicants have not pleaded that they have an interest creating an intervention of right. The holding of this court is that there be no intervention permitted as this would only serve to complicate and delay the adjudication of the right of the original parties for the mere possibility of a benefit to the intervention applicants. The proper recourse is adjudication by the courts of Texas if and when the issue is ripe.