STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
ESTATE OF ZAKI JAMEEL TAMS, by UNPUBLISHED
DARREN FINDLING, Personal Representative, January 9, 2018
Plaintiff-Appellee,
and
COCHRAN, FOLEY & ASSOCIATES, PC,
Appellee,
v No. 332558
Wayne Circuit Court
AUTO CLUB INSURANCE ASSOCIATION, LC No. 14-015065-NF
doing business as AAA MICHIGAN,
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: MURRAY, P.J., and FORT HOOD and GLEICHER, JJ.
MURRAY, P.J., (concurring).
The majority correctly decides to reverse the trial court’s judgment in favor of appellee
Cochran, Foley & Associates, PC, and to remand for entry of a judgment in favor of defendant
Auto Club Insurance Association. I write separately to address an alternative basis to reverse
raised by Auto Club, which addresses a fundamental flaw in Cochran’s position. That is, can an
attorney (Cochran) representing an injured party recover attorney fees from a separate party
(Auto Club) for monies owned to a separate nonparty (HAP) with whom the attorney has no
contract or attorney-client relationship? The answer is no, and thus my concurrence in the
reversal of the trial court’s order.
Before any discussion of an attorney’s right to recover fees for her services through a
charging lien, it is important to recall several general principles about attorney services, attorney
fees, and attorney charging liens. First, when it comes to awarding attorney fees, Michigan
follows the common-law “American rule,” meaning that a court generally cannot award attorney
fees to be paid by one party to the other without the statutory or court rule authority to do so.
See Haliw v Sterling Heights, 471 Mich 700, 706-707; 691 NW2d 753 (2005), and MCL
600.2405(6). Consequently, “[c]onsistent with the common-law American rule, the no-fault act
generally requires each party to pay its own attorney fees.” Miller v Citizens Ins Co, 490 Mich
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904, 904 (2011). The award of attorney fees to plaintiff (and ultimately to Cochran) from what
was paid by Auto Club to HAP was not permitted by any court rule or statute. Thus, the
American rule provides no legal support for plaintiff to recover fees for its counsel from what
Auto Club paid to HAP, a separately represented entity.
The usual source for payment of attorney fees comes from the client. And the obligation
to pay (or receive) fees for attorney services comes from contract. As we have said in another
context, “[a]n attorney-client relationship must be established by contract before an attorney is
entitled to payment for services rendered.” Plunkett & Cooney, PC v Capitol Bancorp Ltd, 212
Mich App 325, 329; 536 NW2d 886 (1995). Particular to contingency fee agreements, both the
court rules and the rules of ethics require such agreements between attorney and client to be in
writing. See MCR 8.121(F); MRPC 1.5(c).
Once a written contractual agreement exists between attorney and client, as there was in
this case between Cochran and Tams, there may come a point at the conclusion of a case where
the client refuses to pay the attorney for services performed. To remedy this situation, the
common law recognizes charging liens, which protect an attorney’s ability to collect an unpaid
fee from the amount recovered for the client. See, e.g., Dreiband v Candler, 166 Mich 49, 51;
131 NW 129 (1911) (“The theory upon which a lien follows a lawful agreement entered into
between attorney and client with respect to compensation is that the agreement amounts to an
assignment of a portion of the judgment sought to be recovered or expected as the fruit of the
litigation.”). Thus, when there is a fee dispute between an attorney and her client, the law
imposes a lien on any recovery so that the attorney can ultimately be paid a reasonable fee. See
Fannon v Le Beau, 245 Mich 162, 165; 222 NW 115 (1928); Kysor Indus Corp v DM
Liquidating Co, 11 Mich App 438, 445; 161 NW2d 452 (1968) (“ ‘The lien exists as part of the
court’s inherent power to oversee the relationship of attorneys, as officers of the court, with their
clients. It does provide a means of securing the legitimate interest of the attorney in payment for
his services and expenses on behalf of the client, but it is subject to the control of the court for
the protection of the client and third parties as well . . . .’ ”) (citation omitted); Souden v Souden,
303 Mich App 406, 411; 844 NW2d 151 (2013). Thus, for instance, if Tams refused to comply
with the contingency fee agreement with Cochran, a charging lien would be imposed on the
funds Cochran recovered for Tams so that Cochran could receive the agreed upon compensation.
As the foregoing decisions and others1 show, to recover under a charging lien it is
generally required that an attorney-client relationship exists that allows the attorney to perform
services on behalf of the client for a specified fee. If the attorney obtains a successful outcome
for her client, the law imposes a charging lien on the recovered funds to ensure the attorney
receives her agreed upon fee for services rendered to the client. This is somewhat of a universal
1
See also Miles v Krainik, 16 Mich App 7, 8-9; 167 NW2d 479 (1969); Munro v Munro, 168
Mich App 138, 139-141; 424 NW2d 16 (1988); Doxtader v Sivertsen, 183 Mich App 812, 813-
815; 455 NW2d 437 (1990); George v Sandor M Gelman, PC, 201 Mich App 474, 475-476; 506
NW2d 583 (1993); Reynolds v Polen, 222 Mich App 20, 21-23; 564 NW2d 467 (1997).
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proposition except, it appears, in certain cases decided under the no-fault act. Two cases are put
forth by Cochran as support for the notion that it can recover a fee from a nonclient party.
The first is Aetna Cas & Surety Co v Starkey, 116 Mich App 640; 323 NW2d 325 (1982).
Starkey was a declaratory judgment action between the insurer and its client over conflicting
claims to the benefits owed to the defendant (the client) and the medical providers who wanted
full payment for their services. The defendant argued that her attorney should receive his fees
from what was owed to the medical providers. Starkey, 116 Mich App at 642-643. The trial
court ruled that by statute, an attorney fee could only be “charged against the insurer and not
against the benefits.” Id. at 643. This Court disagreed, holding that “defendant’s attorney had a
valid attorney’s lien against the fund recovered and that the trial court erred in ordering payment
of the entire amount of PIP benefits to the medical providers.” Id. at 643-644. The Court’s
rationale was that,
defendant and her attorney entered into a contingent fee arrangement whereby the
attorney would receive his fee from any settlement or judgment recovered. On
the basis of the general principles of law concerning attorneys’ charging liens,
defendant's attorney had the right to receive his fee from any fund, including the
PIP fund, recovered as a result of his services in connection with the auto-accident
injuries suffered by defendant’s son. [Id. at 644.]
It is unclear from the opinion whether the medical providers were involved in, or represented in,
the underlying proceedings. The medical providers are not listed in the caption in the declaratory
judgment action, but it does appear they were involved in the litigation. Id. at 643.
Starkey’s rationale has been met with mixed views. Garcia v Butterworth Hosp, 226
Mich App 254; 573 NW2d 627 (1997), involved a trial court order requiring Farmers Insurance
Exchange to pay to plaintiff’s counsel a contingent fee from the amount paid from Farmers to
Butterworth Hospital for outstanding medical bills. In reversing that order, the Garcia Court
rejected the Starkey Court’s reliance on equity and the “common fund” exception to the
American rule2 regarding attorney fees. Garcia, 226 Mich App at 256-257. Instead, the Garcia
Court focused on the rule, rather than the exception, and concluded that no statute or court rule
allowed for the award. Additionally, the Court reasoned that because plaintiff’s counsel had
done little to accomplish the recovery of benefits, if equity applied, it did not help the case. Id.
Miller v Citizens Ins Co, 288 Mich App 424; 794 NW2d 622 (2010), rev’d in part 490
Mich 904 (2011), preferred the Starkey rationale. Miller involved a claim against Citizens
2
An exception to the American rule is the “common-fund exception, which . . . applies when a
prevailing party creates or protects a common fund that benefits himself and others.” Nemeth v
Abonmarche Dev, Inc, 457 Mich 16, 38 n 11; 576 NW2d 641 (1998). “Courts of equity hold it
unfair to allow others to benefit at the expense of the prevailing party without contribution to the
costs incurred in securing the common fund.” Id. The common-fund exception is generally
applicable in class action suits and shareholder derivative actions. See In re Attorney Fees of
Kelman, Loria, Downing, Schneider & Simpson, 406 Mich 497, 503-504; 280 NW2d 457 (1979).
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Insurance Co for outstanding no-fault benefits that ultimately was resolved through a settlement.
Miller, 288 Mich App at 428. After the settlement was reached, plaintiff’s counsel sought a
contingency fee from the monies recovered for medical providers, including the Detroit Medical
Center. The DMC objected, arguing it had no agreement with plaintiff’s counsel, nor did it have
notice of plaintiff’s counsel’s attempts to represent its interests. Id. at 429. The trial court
rejected these arguments and ordered the contingent fee to be taken out of the monies paid to
DMC.
On appeal, the Miller Court held, relying on Starkey, that plaintiff’s counsel “had a right
to be paid for their services from the amount recovered from Citizens pursuant to their
contingency fee agreement with plaintiff.” Id. at 436. The Court further held that the “common
fund” exception to the American rule provided a basis upon which to award attorney fees to
plaintiff’s counsel from the monies held by the insurer. Id. at 437-438. Finally, the Miller Court
distinguished Garcia on its facts, and in doing so, stated that its decision was “principally” based
on the contingency contract plaintiff had with his client, as opposed to equitable principles. Id.
at 439.
As noted, Miller was reversed in part. The reversal, it seems, was as to the attorney fee
award. The Supreme Court said this as to the attorney fee portion of the panel’s opinion:
As the Court of Appeals implicitly recognized, the Detroit Medical Center (DMC)
is not liable for plaintiff’s attorney’s fees under the no-fault act. We agree that
plaintiff is responsible for payment of her attorney fees consistent with the
contingency fee agreement. Consistent with the common-law American rule, the
no-fault act generally requires each party to pay its own attorney fees. Plaintiff’s
reliance on MCL 500.3112 is unavailing because that provision, which permits
equitable apportionment of personal protection insurance benefits among payees,
does not encompass an award of attorney fees to an insured’s counsel. However,
the Court of Appeals’ reliance on the common-fund exception to the American
rule was erroneous because no common fund was created. [Miller, 490 Mich at
904.]
This order, it seems to me, provides that (1) the common fund exception to the American rule
relied on in part by both the Starkey and Miller panels does not apply to these no-fault
circumstances; (2) plaintiff was solely responsible for payment of the contingent fees for her own
counsel’s work; and (3) under the no-fault act, each party is responsible for their own attorney
fees. In light of this order, there seems to be little left to the Miller panel’s discussion regarding
attorney fees.3
3
Though citation to unpublished opinions of this Court is to be done sparingly, MCR
7.215(C)(1), it is worth pointing out that a panel of our Court recently held, in part, that in the
absence of a contractual right to do so, a plaintiff’s attorney was not entitled to recover a
contingency fee for no-fault benefits recovered by a medical provider. Toma v St Peter Med Ctr,
unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued April 20, 2017 (Docket No.
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It is also true, as Auto Club recognizes, that a charging lien can be enforced against third
parties when the third party has notice of the lien. See, e.g., Miller v Detroit Auto Inter-Ins Exch,
139 Mich App 565, 569; 362 NW2d 837 (1984). But that principle merely states a fundamental
principle of charging liens, that when a party holds monies owing to a plaintiff, and has notice of
the attorney’s lien, it must recognize that lien prior to making a payment to the plaintiff. That
principle does not address when an attorney can enforce a lien, which is the issue here.
The best that I can glean from these varied decisions is the following. First, if a medical
provider is a party to a no-fault case and is represented by counsel, the plaintiff’s attorney has no
right to collect any fee from whatever is recovered by the medical provider absent, of course, any
court rule, statute, or contract to the opposite. Miller, 490 Mich at 905; Garcia, 226 Mich App at
256-257. Second, when a medical provider is not a party to the case, and is put on notice that
plaintiff’s counsel is pursuing all outstanding no-fault benefits on behalf of the injured party,
plaintiff’s counsel is still not entitled to a fee from what that nonparty provider recovers if that
nonparty rejects plaintiff’s counsel’s services and/or retains separate counsel, as was done here
by HAP. Miller, 490 Mich at 905; Garcia, 226 Mich App at 256-257. Third, and finally, if a
medical provider (a) has notice of plaintiff’s counsel’s intentions, (b) does not object to those
intentions, and/or (c) does not hire its own counsel, then plaintiff’s counsel may be entitled to a
fee from any outstanding benefits that counsel obtained for that medical provider. Garcia, 226
Mich App at 257; Miller, 288 Mich App at 438 (discussing equitable principles). Because HAP,
a nonparty, was represented by counsel when it recovered the amounts from Auto Club (a fact
plaintiff’s counsel was aware of), plaintiff’s counsel was not entitled to a fee from those monies
paid. But even considering the equities, as does the lead opinion, Cochran is not entitled to a fee
as it did nothing to spur Auto Club to pay HAP for benefits it had already paid to the medical
providers.
/s/ Christopher M. Murray
330585). In so holding, the Court recognized that “Miller did not abolish the need to establish an
attorney-client relationship with a medical provider in order to obtain attorney fees when that
medical provider intervenes in the no-fault case.” Id. at 3.
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