Belzer v. Bollea

Belzer v. Bollea 150 Misc. 2d 925 (N.Y. Misc. 1990) is a 1990 New York Supreme Court case between TV presenter Richard Belzer and professional wrestler Hulk Hogan (whose real name is Terry Bollea). The case involved Belzer suing Hogan for personal injury after Hogan had put a sleeper hold on him. The case was eventually settled financially out of court; however, the case continued to be heard for the purposes of additional attorney's compensation requested by Belzer's lawyers, which was denied by the court.[1]

Belzer v. Bollea
CourtNew York Supreme Court, New York County
Citation(s)150 Misc. 2d 925 (N.Y. Misc. 1990)
Keywords
contingent fees

Background

Richard Belzer is a comedian who was the host of Hot Properties on television in 1985. During one episode, he was interviewing Hulk Hogan and Mr. T live for their upcoming World Wrestling Federation WrestleMania I tag team match. Belzer persistently asked Hogan to put him in a wrestling hold, which Hogan initially resisted doing, but later acquiesced to the request, after comments from Mr. T and the audience.[2][3] Hogan put Belzer in a front chin lock and applied it, which led to Belzer passing out. As he did so, Belzer slipped from Hogan's grasp and hit his head on the floor.[4] Belzer later awoke to cut to a commercial break, and went to the hospital to have nine stitches in the back of his head where he hit the floor.[5] Following the commercial break, Hogan, keeping kayfabe, apologized for injuring Belzer, and cited the dangers of using professional wrestling moves on people who were untrained.[2][3] Belzer appeared on Hot Properties a week later, and showed the stitches that resulted from the incident. He sued Hogan for $5 million in damages for personal injury.[5]

Trial

The case was due to be heard at the New York Supreme Court. However, Belzer and Hogan reached an out-of-court settlement for an undisclosed amount. Belzer's lawyers said they were entitled to 50% of the settlement instead of the regular 1/3 contingent fee, due to the "angst, aggravation and life's blood" they had spent on the case; the case continued in order to decide this.[1] Despite providing a letter from Belzer praising them for their work and appearing supportive of the application, Belzer stated that he only agreed to that under duress, as he felt emotionally drained by the case and feared if he refused, then it could jeopardize the settlement with Hogan if he hired new lawyers. Belzer stated he did not personally agree with the additional fees, which caused the lawyers to call him "a paradigm of ingratitude".[1]

The judge ruled that under New York Codes, Rules and Regulations, lawyers' compensation could either be based upon a sliding scale of permissible recovery, or on an agreed-upon contingent fee. Belzer had agreed a retainer agreement for the 1/3 contingent fee prior to the case. The lawyers argued that, as they had spent over 50 hours preparing the case, then their services were worth more than the contingent fee. The judge denied this request, stating that that was a risk that the lawyers had voluntarily taken when they signed the initial agreement. The Court issued a judgment in favor of Belzer, and declared that any section of the signed agreement for compensation greater than the 1/3 contingent fee was null and void, "no matter how sterling the representation may have been".[1]

Aftermath

Following the case, Belzer used the money to buy a farmhouse in Nice, France, which he "ironically" named "Chez Hogan".[2] Hogan would go on to become one of the most popular professional wrestlers, because of his status as WWF Champion at the forefront of the 1980s professional wrestling boom.[6] The case would be cited as legal precedent in New York State law relating to attorney's contingent fees.[7]

gollark: The TV remote has not, as far as I can tell, made me superintelligent, unfortunately.
gollark: BRB, going to become superintelligent if I can find my TV remote.
gollark: ... those just use IR LEDs.
gollark: What's *legal* and what's *ethical* doesn't always actually match.
gollark: Lasers and brains are both confusing and complicated and therefore equivalent.

References

  1. "Belzer v. Bollea". Casetext. Retrieved 2019-02-21.
  2. Hogan, Hulk (2002). Hollywood Hulk Hogan. Simon & Schuster. pp. 152–156. ISBN 0743475569.
  3. "Hulk Hogan vs Richard Belzer". Grantland. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  4. "Hulk Hogan's 25 Most Interesting Facts – Richard Belzer filed a five million dollar lawsuit against him". Complex. Retrieved 2019-02-21.
  5. Margolick, David (1990-01-05). "Lawyers go to the Mat in a Battle Between Hulk Hogan and a 98-Pound Comedian". New York Times. Retrieved 2019-02-21.
  6. "Top 50 Wrestlers of All Time". IGN. 2012-11-02. p. 5. Retrieved 2019-02-21.
  7. "Citing Belzer v. Bollea". Casetext. Retrieved 2019-02-21.
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