        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

                                NO. 2015-CA-01412-COA

BAR-TIL, INC.                                                      APPELLANT/CROSS-
                                                                          APPELLEE

v.

SUPERIOR ASPHALT, INC. AND PULL-A-PART                             APPELLEES/CROSS-
OF JACKSON, LLC, MMC MATERIALS, INC.,                                   APPELLANTS
AND H & E EQUIPMENT SERVICES, INC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           09/17/2015
TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. J. DEWAYNE THOMAS
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT,
                                            FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                    CHUCK MCRAE
                                            SETH CLAYTON LITTLE
                                            CHRISTOPHER ANTHONY BAMBACH
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                    JOSEPH LEE ADAMS
                                            LINDSAY THOMAS DOWDLE
                                            DONALD ALAN WINDHAM
                                            CRANE D. KIPP
                                            PATRICK VANCE DALY
                                            CORY LOUIS RADICIONI
NATURE OF THE CASE:                         CIVIL - CONTRACT
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:                    ENTERED ORDER DISTRIBUTING
                                            INTERPLED FUNDS
DISPOSITION:                                REVERSED AND REMANDED - 05/09/2017
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:

       BEFORE GRIFFIS, P.J., ISHEE AND GREENLEE, JJ.

       GREENLEE, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    This case requires this Court to decide whether a plaintiff attorney’s charging lien has

attached and has priority over third-party garnishors when the monies satisfying a final

judgment obtained by the attorney’s efforts are interpled by the garnishee into the registry
of the court rather than delivered to the attorney’s actual possession. With no statutory

directive here, we apply common-law principles to hold that the charging lien has attached

and does have priority.

                          FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

¶2.     In 2007, Bar-Til Inc. entered into a contract with Superior Asphalt Inc. to perform

work related to clearing acreage and stripping topsoil. Superior Asphalt failed to pay Bar-Til

for all of the work completed. Represented by the McRae Law Firm on a contingency-fee

basis, Bar-Til sued Superior Asphalt for breach of contract in 2009.

¶3.     As a result of Superior Asphalt’s failure to pay Bar-Til, Bar-Til failed to pay H&E

Equipment Services Inc. H&E Equipment obtained a default judgment against Bar-Til in

2009, and in 2010 was granted permission to intervene in Bar-Til’s suit against Superior

Asphalt. H&E Equipment properly served a writ of garnishment against Superior Asphalt in

2012.

¶4.     In 2012, after McRae Law Firm expended more than $16,000 in expenses, Bar-Til

won a judgment against Superior Asphalt (including interest) in the amount of $205,839.65.

Superior Asphalt did not appeal the judgment, but instead filed a motion to interplead

$205,839.65 into the registry of the court under that same cause number. Bar-Til appealed

the chancellor’s denial of punitive damages. While the appeal was pending in this Court, the

chancellor granted Superior Asphalt’s renewed motion to interplead the funds, and issued an

order declaring the judgment satisfied in full.

¶5.     In 2014, this Court issued an opinion affirming the chancellor’s denial of Bar-Til’s



                                              2
request for punitive damages. Counsel for another Bar-Til creditor, MMC Materials Inc.,

noticed our opinion while browsing this Court’s weekly hand-down list. MMC Materials had

obtained a judgment against Bar-Til in 2008 unrelated to the contract dispute between Bar-

Til and Superior Asphalt. Newly aware that Bar-Til had funds available to pay its creditors,

MMC Materials filed a motion to intervene and claim a portion of the interpled funds. Also

around this time, MMC Materials properly served Superior Asphalt with a writ of

garnishment, which Superior Asphalt answered acknowledging its debt to Bar-Til and

referencing the interpled funds.

¶6.    The McRae Law Firm also filed a motion asserting priority over the interpled funds

and requesting permission to withdraw an amount representing its forty-percent contingency

fee and reimbursement for expenses.

¶7.    The interpled funds were insufficient to cover the claims of all parties. Rather than

determine the respective priority of the parties, the chancery court doled out a portion of the

funds to each party—including to the law firm, H&E Equipment, MMC Materials, and

another individual creditor who had a judgment against Bar-Til but who had not obtained a

writ of garnishment. The court awarded H&E Equipment $74,230, MMC Materials

$23,626.08, the law firm $72,348.20, and the other nongarnishor creditor $35,634.81.1 The

court cited its desire for an equitable solution.

¶8.    Bar-Til appeals, and both H&E Equipment and MMC Materials cross-appeal.



       1
        The rights of this creditor are not discussed in this opinion because he does not have
a writ of garnishment attached to this judgment. This creditor did not participate in this
appeal.

                                               3
                                         DISCUSSION

       I.      Whether the attorney’s charging lien has priority.

¶9.    A chancellor’s findings will be overturned on appellate review if we find that the

chancellor was manifestly wrong or clearly erroneous, or applied an incorrect legal standard.

Miller v. Pannell, 815 So. 2d 1117, 1119 (¶9) (Miss. 2002). All of the parties agree that the

chancellor erred as a matter of law in granting each party involved a portion of the money

rather than determining the order of descending priority.

¶10.   Mississippi has long recognized an attorney’s right to have a lien on judgments and

decrees procured through an attorney’s efforts on behalf of his client. An attorney has a

“paramount lien on the money decree which he [has] obtained.” Collins v. Schneider, 187

Miss. 1, 192 So. 20, 23 (1939). “[A]n attorney’s lien on judgments and decrees obtained by

[him] for fees on account of services rendered, belongs to the family of implied common law

liens, and is firmly engrafted on the common law.” Id. A charging lien attaches when the

attorney does “successfully pursue the [lawsuit] to conclusion and obtain a final judgment

from which there [is] no appeal.” Tyson v. Moore, 613 So. 2d 817, 826 (Miss. 1992). At that

point, “[the attorney’s] entitlement to a fee is vested.” In Collins, the Mississippi Supreme

Court held that the attorney had a priority lien on funds held in the lower court’s register

where “[t]he evidence conclusively show[ed] that nothing would have been recovered on the

original cause of action . . . had it not been for [the attorney’s] labor, zeal[,] and skill in the

investigation and vigorous prosecution of that suit to a successful conclusion.” Collins, 192

So. at 22.



                                                4
¶11.   In Indianola Tractor Co. v. Tankesley, 337 So. 2d 705, 706 (Miss. 1976), the

Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed a trial court’s acknowledgment of a plaintiff’s attorney’s

lien on the proceeds of a successful garnishment action. In ordering disbursement of the

judgment, the law firm was listed first in priority. Id. The court cited to Chattanooga Sewer

Pipe Works v. Dumler, 153 Miss. 276, 120 So. 2d 450, 453 (1929), in which the Supreme

Court reiterated that “[i]t has been uniformly held by this [C]ourt that an attorney has a lien

on the funds of his client for the services rendered in the proceeding by which the money was

collected.”

¶12.   Our appellate courts have noted since 1939 the absence in Mississippi of a “statute

fixing or regulating the lien of an attorney, or the enforcement thereof.” Collins, 192 So. at

22. Consistent with common-law principles, multiple states statutorily mandate the priority

of attorney’s fees, including Oregon, New York, California, Arkansas, Massachusetts,

Alabama, and Georgia. For example, Alabama’s statute provides:

       Upon actions and judgments for money, [attorneys] shall have a lien superior
       to all liens but tax liens, and no person shall be at liberty to satisfy the action
       or judgment, until the lien or claim of the attorney for his or her fees is fully
       satisfied; and attorneys-at-law shall have the same right and power over action
       or judgment to enforce their liens as their clients had or may have for the
       amount due thereon to them.

Ala. Code § 34-3-61(b). These statutes codify the equitable principle long recognized at

common law that attorneys deserve payment for their successful services. The United States

Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, applying Mississippi law, held in American Fidelity

that one of the rationales for not granting a law firm priority to retainage funds was that the

law firm’s services had not been the cause of the release of the funds, therefore resulting in

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no injustice in not giving the law firm priority. We have the opposite situation at hand. Here,

the services of the law firm—including seven years’ representation and over $16,000 in

expenses—directly resulted in the judgment against Superior Asphalt.

¶13.   Garnishees have the statutory right to compel interpleader. Miss. Code Ann. § 11-35-

41 (Rev. 2004). This right protects the garnishee from double liability on the same judgment.

The charging lien, protecting the attorney’s right to the fruits of his labor, and the right to

interplead, protecting the garnishee from double liability, should not intersect with each other

in such a way that frustrates one or the other right. If we were to adopt the approach that the

contingency is not triggered in this circumstance, then practically—or rather,

impractically—a plaintiff’s attorney working for a contingency fee would need to research

standing garnishment claims in all eighty-two Mississippi counties prior to determining

whether to accept a case. Any case that may result in an interpleader may be too risky to

pursue. As the Mississippi Supreme Court explained in 1939, “it would be most inequitable

and unjust for [the other claimants to the judgment] to be allowed to ‘ride free’ on the facts

of this case.” Collins, 192 So. at 23.

¶14.   We also note that the third-party creditors can continue to pursue collection of any

remaining funds owed them pursuant to their respective judgments against Bar-Til. But as

to the law firm, if the charging lien has not attached and does not have priority, the law firm

will only receive for its successful services what—if anything—is left after all of the

garnishors have taken the first bite at the interpled funds.

¶15.   Here, the monies would not be available for distribution to the garnishors had not



                                               6
Bar-Til’s right to the judgment first vested. Superior Asphalt surrendered the money in

satisfaction of the judgment against it, with no further right of appeal. We find that Superior

Asphalt’s deposit of the funds into the registry of the court, consistent with its right to protect

itself from double liability, did not prevent the law firm’s charging lien from attaching to the

interpled funds. The law firm is first in priority.

¶16.     As to priority between H&E Equipment and MMC Materials, MMC Materials

properly concedes that H&E Equipment has priority. Even though MMC Materials’ judgment

against Bar-Til was obtained first in 2008, priority here is governed by our garnishment

statutes. Mississippi Code Annotated section 11-35-24(1) (Rev. 2004) provides in part that

“[w]here more than one garnishment has been issued against an employee of a garnishee,

such garnishee shall comply with the garnishment with which he was first served.” H&E

Equipment was first to serve Superior Asphalt with a writ of garnishment related to any funds

owed by Superior Asphalt to Bar-Til.

         II.   The chancery court had jurisdiction to accept the interpled funds,
               and Bar-Til’s attorney’s fees and expenses were reasonable.

¶17.     Bar-Til argues that the chancery court did not have the jurisdiction to accept the

interpled funds because at the time the funds were interpled, Bar-Til’s appeal on the issue

of punitive damages was still pending. When an appeal is taken, the lower court loses

“authority to amend, modify, or reconsider its judgment.” Corp. Mgnt. Inc. v. Greene Cty.,

23 So. 3d 454, 460 (¶13) (Miss. 2009); see also M.R.A.P. 8. However, “[w]hen an appeal has

no supersedeas bond, a party may execute on the judgment.” Corp. Mgnt, 23 So. 3d at 460

(¶13).


                                                7
¶18.   Superior Asphalt’s repeated motions to interplead the funds were not requests to

“amend, modify, or reconsider” the court’s judgment. Rather, it merely sought to escrow a

judgment that had not been stayed by supersedeas. In Mississippi, a party is not liable for

post-judgment interest after impleading payments into the registry of the court. Gayden v.

Kirk, 208 Miss. 283, 44 So. 2d 410, 411-12 (1950) (holding that a “judgment will be

corrected so as to exclude therefrom any interest upon [an] impleaded fund”). We therefore

find that the chancery court had authority to accept the interpled funds, and that Bar-Til was

not entitled to additional post-judgment interest once the funds were interpled. In fact, it

would be inappropriate to permit a victorious plaintiff to deliberately dodge tender of a

judgment for the sake of increasing post-judgment interest.

¶19.   H&E Equipment argues that the law firm’s expenses and forty-percent contingency

fee are unreasonable. Attorney’s fees must be reasonable, whether contracted for or arising

out of a common-law charging lien. As the Mississippi Supreme Court stated when

determining distribution of judgment funds in Chattanooga Sewer Pipe Works, 120 So. at

453, “The [plaintiff] had a right to make this contract for a contingent fee, and there is

nothing in the record to show . . . that it was unreasonable or unconscionable, and we are

therefore of the opinion that these attorneys have a paramount lien on the funds for [the

amount contracted for]. ” Id.

¶20.   On the facts of this case, we do not find grounds in the record to support that the fee

or expenses are unreasonable. A forty-percent contingency fee is not inherently unreasonable,

and similar fees have been affirmed. See Koehring Co. v. Hyde Constr. Co., 236 So. 2d 377,



                                              8
387 (Miss. 1970). This case took seven years to litigate, and the record contains an itemized

breakdown of the $16,254.57 expenses incurred over the seven years. Bar-Til has not

challenged the reasonableness of the fee it contracted for, and the law firm did not charge an

additional fee for the appeal it made to this Court. This issue is without merit.

                                       CONCLUSION

¶21.   On this set of facts, we determine that the contingency was triggered, and that the law

firm’s charging lien has priority over the third-party garnishors. The monies were interpled

as the direct result of the law firm’s services, and the judgment was declared satisfied in full.

The law firm has first priority and is entitled to withdraw from the interpled funds

$98,590.51, which represents $16,254.57 in expenses and forty percent of the judgment.

Then, H&E Equipment, second in priority, is entitled to withdraw from the remaining

interpled funds up to the amount on the face of its writ of garnishment. MMC Materials, as

third in priority after H&E Equipment, is then entitled to withdraw from the remaining

portion of the interpled funds up to the amount on the face of its writ of garnishment.2 We

therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

¶22. THE JUDGMENT OF THE HINDS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT, FIRST
JUDICIAL DISTRICT, IS REVERSED, AND THIS CASE IS REMANDED FOR
FURTHER PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION. ALL COSTS OF
THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED ONE-HALF TO THE APPELLANT/CROSS-
APPELLEE AND ONE-HALF TO THE APPELLEES/CROSS-APPELLANTS.

     LEE, C.J., IRVING AND GRIFFIS, P.JJ., BARNES, ISHEE, CARLTON, FAIR
AND WESTBROOKS, JJ., CONCUR. WILSON, J., CONCURS IN PART AND IN
THE RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.

       2
        As discussed at oral argument in this case, this Court and the parties are unaware
whether the interpled funds have been kept by Hinds County in an interest-bearing account.

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