Filing a Motion to Dismiss a Motion to Be Relieved
I hired an atty at the end of 07 to handle a child support matter. I believe his fee (90% of the child support award I was given) meets the California Bar standard of unconscionable and I'm disputing roughly half of it.
He has now filed a Motion to Be Relieved. I want to have the motion dismissed on the following grounds:
1. He has not been my attorney for over three years. We've had no professional or personal contact since early 08.
2. On page 1 of MC-052 item 3 he states that he's had a phone conversation with me within 30 days prior to filing the motion. Again, we haven't talked in over two years.
3. Item 2 of the same page is in flagrant violation of Rule 3.1362. It reads
“There has been a breakdown in the attorney/client relationship such that attorney is no longer able to represent client in this matter. There Is outstanding and unpaid balance due to attorney, in the amount of $8.082.95 as of April 15, 2011.”
I think the second sentence:
1. Violates client confidentiality.
2. Violates the requirement that the reason for motion be stated “in general terms”
3. Prejudices—both by its appearance at all and its specific language—my efforts at potentially obtaining future counsel.
My questions:
1. Is this reasonable grounds to dismiss this?
2. Is there a way I can stop this guy from doing it again (e.g. send him an email formally relieving him).
3. What is the process I follow (forms?)
The motion orders me to produce all the FL 140 forms. I want to avoid the hassle and I want to make sure his Reasons for Motion are removed from the record—thus the reason for my wanting it dismissed instead of just going to court and agreeing to it.
Thank you
Comment on JudyKayTee's post
Judy.. . He is not suing me for unpaid fees. He's simply entering a motion to be relieved as counsel. This is a hearing in Family Court--guidance is CA Rule 3.1362 for filing the motion. It states clearly that the Reason for Motion must be general and not a violation of confidentiality. It implies that it cannot contain anything that would prejudice my obtaining counsel in the future. At the time of the hearing in August I will have filed my complaint for unconscionable fee (his fee is roughly 100% of the child suport award he got me which I believe meets the CA standard). With the CA bar. My concern is that I don't want information about a fee dispute--especially specifics about a specific amount--in the public record. This is, it seems to me, a violation of confidentiality which the rule specifically prohibits.
Thanks again for all your responses.
Comment on this8384's post
Many thanks
My primary concern is that the information he put in his motion might prejudice my efforts to hire another attorney in the future to handle this matter. As far as "general" (the language from the rule), something like "unresolved fee dispute" rather than "There Is outstanding and unpaid balance due to attorney, in the amount of $8.082.95 as of April 15, 2011: which is both misleading (since it presents only one side of that story) and very specific.
Very grateful for your response.
Comment on JudyKayTee's post
Thank you once again--I appreciate the responsiveness and the good advice.
Comment on JudyKayTee's post
One last thing.. . No response requested. Just to put the polish on it.
The attorney handled a child support matter for me. The opposing party didn't object--it was just a question of amount (ex hired a lawyer so I had to). All she had was a paycheck. No assets. No investigation or research required. I had one meeting with the atty. Together we had one meeting with the other side. Court date was a 15 min negotiation in the hall, based on simply a reasonable fraction of California's guidance system. I agreed to the first offer they made. That was the whole magilla. His fee is 90% of the value of the child support award. I've paid half--some in retainer and some after. Ninety cents of every dollar seems to me slightly out of whack for a vanilla case.
Thanks again.
Comment on ScottGem's post
Apologies for the breach.. . I've not been here before
He asked for a 5K retainer and indicated it might run over that if there are unforeseen complications. As I say, this one seems filled with foreseen simplicity. (He's also of course already billed me for filing the motion to dismiss and I expect he'll charge for the court appearance and the bottle of Evian)