Court Opinion

ID: 2651062
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-01-25 01:06:00.386613+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:56:38.230057
License: Public Domain

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA

                            SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Troy J. Green,
Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff Below, Petitioner                                   FILED
                                                                                  January 24, 2014
                                                                               RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK
vs) No. 13-0243 (Berkeley County 01-C-399)                                   SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                 OF WEST VIRGINIA

Ford Motor Credit Company, Plaintiff Below;
Fast Action Recovery, Third-Party Defendant
Below, Respondents

                               MEMORANDUM DECISION

        Petitioner Troy J. Green, appearing pro se, appeals the order of the Circuit Court of
Berkeley County, entered February 5, 2013, that denied his motion to vacate a settlement approved
by the court on August 1, 2005. Respondent Ford Motor Credit Company, by counsel Christopher
A. Dawson, filed a response.1

        The Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal
arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided
by oral argument. This case satisfies the “limited circumstances” requirement of Rule 21(d) of the
Rules of Appellate Procedure and is appropriate for a memorandum decision rather than an
opinion. For the reasons expressed below, the decision is reversed and this case is remanded with
directions to hold a new hearing to determine whether petitioner moved to vacate the settlement
within a reasonable time after his release from incarceration under Rule 60(b) of the West Virginia
Rules of Civil Procedure.

         On July 19, 2001, respondent sued petitioner for the amount still due under the parties’
retail installment sales contract following respondent’s sale of petitioner’s repossessed vehicle.
Petitioner filed an answer pro se and filed, through counsel Brian J. McAuliffe, an amended
answer, a counterclaim, and a third-party complaint against Fast Action Recovery, the recovery
company that repossessed his automobile.

        Attorney McAuliffe negotiated a settlement offer where all claims would be dismissed and
petitioner would receive $7,500. Petitioner rejected the settlement offer. Consequently, attorney
McAuliffe moved to withdraw as petitioner’s counsel. Attorney McAuliffe’s motion was never
acted upon by the circuit court.

        At or about that time, petitioner was also sentenced to federal prison on charges unrelated
to the instant case. As a result of petitioner’s incarceration, the circuit court eventually appointed

       1
           The other respondent, Fast Action Recovery, did not file a response.

                                                  1
Attorney Margaret Gordon as his guardian ad litem.2 According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons
(“BOP”), from March of 2003 to February of 2006, petitioner was housed at the low security
facility at Federal Correctional Institution Allenwood in White Deer, Pennsylvania. On April 14,
2005, Attorney Gordon wrote petitioner and told him that respondent was still willing to settle the
civil action if he would accept a payment of $1,000. Attorney Gordon further explained as follows:

                         My job as your guardian ad litem is to say whether the offer
                is fair, and I think that it is under the facts of the case as I know
                them. If you feel differently, or if there is some other reason that you
                don’t want to have this money, please write to me immediately and
                let me know your feelings. If I don’t hear from you, my position will
                be to say that the offer is fair, but to make a technical objection for
                the record to the settlement. I think the Judge might settle it anyway,
                unless I have something from you.

Attorney Gordon mailed her letter to Troy Green, #04253-087, Low Security Correctional
Institution Allenwood, P.O. Box 1000, White Deer, Pennsylvania, 17887, which was petitioner’s
correct address.3

         A settlement hearing occurred on July 1, 2005. Attorney Gordon provided the circuit court
with the following chronology of the settlement negotiations: (1) respondent first made its offer of
$1,000 in September of 2003 and then re-extended the offer in April of 2004; (2) petitioner
informed Attorney Gordon by phone message that “he didn’t feel that he wanted to accept
$1,000”; (3) Attorney Gordon wrote her April 14, 2005 letter that if petitioner did not want to settle
the case for $1,000, he should reply immediately; and (4) petitioner did not reply to Attorney
Gordon’s April 14, 2005 letter. In addition, Attorney Gordon opined that based on her
investigation of the facts, “I don’t think [petitioner] would even get $1,000 if this actually went to
trial” and that “I don’t think he would get a lawyer to do the case for him[, which] is why I would
recommend [the settlement] to the Court.” Counsel for respondent told the circuit court the
original settlement offer of $7,500 was based on a “misunderstanding of the facts” on the part of
the attorney who initially handled the case for petitioner, but that petitioner desired to depose of
the case for its “nuisance value of $1,000.” Based on the representations of the attorneys, the
circuit court approved the settlement.

       Counsel for respondent prepared the order that approved the settlement and dismissed all
claims including petitioner’s third-party complaint. The order noted petitioner’s objection to the
settlement, but found that the settlement was in his best interests because, in the opinion of
Attorney Gordon, petitioner would “not prevail in either his counter-claim or his proposed third
party complaint.” The order directed respondent to remit $1,000 to petitioner’s guardian ad litem

       2
          Attorney Gordon was the second lawyer appointed by the circuit court to serve as
petitioner’s guardian ad litem.
       3
           The record contains several of Attorney Gordon’s letters to petitioner.
                                                   2
to be held in trust in an interest-bearing account until he was released from incarceration. The
circuit court entered the order approving settlement on August 1, 2005, but did not direct that a
copy of the order be mailed to petitioner.

        Attorney Gordon prepared a second order that authorized her to invest the $1,000
settlement proceeds in an interest-bearing account on petitioner’s behalf. The investment order
recited the pertinent facts as follows:

               [(1)] that [petitioner] had not been in touch with Mrs. Gordon in a
               meaningful way about his desires regarding settlement of this
               matter; [and (2)] that the Court had the right to order settlement of
               the case, upon Mrs. Gordon’s representations that the proposed
               settlement was fair to [petitioner], even if he may object to the same.

The investment order further indicated that additional findings were set forth in the order
approving settlement prepared by counsel for respondent. The investment order was entered on
August 1, 2005, with a direction that a copy be mailed to petitioner at Low Security Correctional
Institution Allenwood, P.O. Box 1000, White Deer, Pennsylvania, 17887.

        Petitioner was released from federal prison on March 19, 2012. In May of 2012, petitioner
told Attorney Gordon that he was unhappy with “the amount of the settlement.” Consequently, on
May 9, 2012, Attorney Gordon moved to (1) reopen the case; (2) withdraw as petitioner’s guardian
ad litem; and (3) to obtain direction as to how she was to pay out the settlement proceeds. On July
9, 2012, the circuit court held a hearing that was then adjourned because of a potential conflict of
interest on the part of Judge Yoder. However, before the hearing’s adjournment, petitioner stated
on the record that “I didn’t know in 2005 that they did a settlement” and that the settlement was a
“surprise” to him.

        Judge Yoder gave petitioner leave to file a motion for the judge’s disqualification that
petitioner subsequently filed on August 1, 2012. The motion was transmitted to the Chief Justice
of this Court, who declined to disqualify Judge Yoder from presiding in the case.

        The circuit court held a second hearing on Attorney Gordon’s motions on September 10,
2012. Petitioner appeared in person and was once again represented by Attorney McAuliffe.
Attorney McAuliffe stated that he would like to have the opportunity to brief the issue of whether
petitioner was entitled to have the settlement vacated. The circuit court asked Attorney McAuliffe
whether he could supply any case law that supported petitioner’s position. Attorney McAuliffe
answered, “I don’t know if I can[.]” The circuit court indicated that it was almost certain that the
court would rule against petitioner, but granted Attorney McAuliffe’s request to brief the issue.
The circuit court allowed Attorney Gordon to withdraw as petitioner’s guardian ad litem and
ordered that the settlement proceeds be paid to Attorney McAuliffe to hold for petitioner pending
final disposition of the case.

                                                 3
        On September 28, 2012, Attorney McAuliffe filed a motion to vacate the settlement on
petitioner’s behalf. The circuit court thereafter ordered respondent to respond to the motion.4
Respondent filed a response opposing the motion to vacate on October 11, 2012. On February 5,
2013, the circuit court entered a brief two-page order that denied petitioner’s motion to vacate the
settlement. The circuit court noted that respondent had opposed the motion and that the court had
been “sufficiently advised” of the pertinent issue between the parties. Petitioner now appeals pro
se the circuit court’s February 5, 2013 order.

         We review a circuit court’s denial of a motion to vacate a settlement for an abuse
discretion. See Syl. 5, Toler v. Shelton, 157 W.Va. 778, 204 S.E.2d 85 (1974).5 On appeal, both
parties address whether petitioner moved to vacate the 2005 settlement within a reasonable time
under Rule 60(b). Petitioner alleges that the last document he received regarding this case was a
December 4, 2003, order that removed the case from the active docket because of his incarcerated
status6 and that once he was released from incarceration in 2012, he promptly communicated with
his guardian ad litem. Respondent notes that Attorney McAuliffe, did not formally move to vacate
the settlement on petitioner’s behalf until September 28, 2012, an interval of over seven years from
the date the settlement was approved. However, this Court determines that the issue of whether
petitioner moved to vacate the settlement within a reasonable time is clouded by the fact that both
the circuit court and all the attorneys, even Attorney McAuliffe, assumed that as long as
petitioner’s guardian ad litem found that the settlement was in his best interests, the court could
approve it over petitioner’s objection.

       4
        Respondent states that it did not receive notice of either the July 9, 2012 hearing or the
September 10, 2012 hearing.
       5
         Neither petitioner’s September 28, 2012 motion to vacate the settlement nor the circuit
court’s February 5, 2013 order addressed under which rule the motion was filed. However, this
Court finds that respondent’s suggestion that the motion should be considered under Rule 60(b) of
the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure is correct. See Toler v. Shelton, 157 W.Va. 778, 204
S.E.2d 85 (1974) (motions to vacate a judgment are considered under Rule 60(b)).
       6
          The record is equivocal as to whether petitioner is correct in his assertion that he received
no document regarding this case after December of 2003. The record reflects that Attorney Gordon
mailed her April 14, 2005 letter to the address she used to mail petitioner a copy of a December 8,
2003 order. The December 8, 2003 order is the same order petitioner states was the last document
he received even though Attorney Gordon’s letter was subsequently sent to the same address. In
fact, Attorney Gordon used the same address for petitioner for every letter she wrote to him from
2003 through 2005, consistent with the information this Court received from the BOP that
petitioner was housed at the low security facility at Allenwood from March of 2003 to February of
2006. It is possible that the copy of the December 4, 2003 order petitioner received was sent to him
by the circuit clerk. But, even if that is so, Attorney Gordon used the same address for petitioner as
had the circuit clerk. Therefore, if petitioner was able to receive a document from the circuit clerk
at that address, there should not have been any reason for petitioner not to have received Attorney
Gordon’s letters to the same address.
                                                  4
        This Court finds that such an assumption is legally unsupportable. First, an attorney-client
relationship exists between an incarcerated person and a lawyer appointed to serve as the
prisoner’s guardian ad litem. See State ex rel. Ash v. Swope, __ W.Va. __, __ S.E.2d __, 2013 WL
5976106, Slip Op. at 7-8 (November 6, 2013). Second, while an attorney is often clothed with
authority to settle a case on her client’s behalf, that presumption can be overcome. See Messer v.
Huntington Anesthesia Grp., Inc., 222 W.Va. 410, 418-19, 664 S.E.2d 751, 759-60 (2008). The
Court in Messer found that the attorney in that case had apparent authority to settle a case for his
clients. However, in the case at bar, the record clearly reflects that petitioner’s guardian ad litem
had neither actual or apparent authority to settle. At the July 1, 2005 settlement hearing, Attorney
Gordon told the circuit court that she wrote petitioner in April of 2005 because petitioner had
informed her in a phone message that he did not want to settle the case for $1,000. Therefore, the
last communication before the settlement that Attorney Gordon received from her client directed
her not to settle the case.7 Accordingly, this Court concludes that the circuit court’s August 1,
2005, approval of the settlement was erroneous as a matter of law.

        This Court now remands the case to the circuit court. The Court directs that a new hearing
be held to determine whether petitioner moved to vacate the settlement within a reasonable time
after his release from incarceration under Rule 60(b).

      For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the circuit court’s February 5, 2013 order and
remand this case with directions.

                                                         Reversed and Remanded with Directions.

ISSUED: January 24, 2014

CONCURRED IN BY:

Chief Justice Robin Jean Davis
Justice Brent D. Benjamin
Justice Margaret L. Workman
Justice Menis E. Ketchum
Justice Allen H. Loughry II

       7
         In his September 28, 2012 motion to vacate the settlement, petitioner disavowed making
any suggestion of improper motive or conduct on part of Attorney Gordon; rather, petitioner based
his motion on a denial of due process and “[a] lack of authority.”
                                                 5