Settle and Sue, Michigan Style

Laethem Equipment Co. v. Currie Kendall, P.L.C., Court of Appeals of Michigan, January 13, 2011. 

Facts: Plaintiffs settled an underlying family dispute and then sued Currie Kendall for legal malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty.  Defendant moved for dismissal claiming the lawsuit was barred by the settlement agreement and release that resolved the underlying litigation.

The trial court agreed with Currie Kendall and Plaintiffs appealed.

Issue: Did a settlement in the underlying action bar Plaintiffs from bringing a suit for legal malpractice?

Ruling: No - at least, the terms of this settlement/release did not.

The Michigan Court of Appeals analyzed the issue solely from the perspective of contract law: 

The 'parties' to the settlement agreement and release are clearly set forth in the opening paragraph and defendant, Currie Kendall, P.L.C., is not a named party. Defendant represented parties in the settled litigation, but was not itself a party in that underlying litigation.  Defendant was not included by name in the excluded release and did not itself execute the release.  Nevertheless, defendant claims a right to benefit from and enforce the terms of the release.

The Court went on to explain that the release's reference to "claims by or against any persons in their individual or representative capacities " did not refer to a law firm that represented various parties in the settled litigation.  This language, the court held, had to be read in the context of the remainder of the agreement.  In other words, it was merely further describing the types of claims being released by the individuals named therein.  It was not adding a different category of individuals being released, i.e. the attorneys involved in negotiating and drafting the settlement.

The Court distinguished this language from a release in a different matter wherein the language might bar subsequent suits against attorneys: "[that release] specifically included as being released [a police officer], [a municipal organization], [an insurer], together with all other persons, firms and corporations, from any and all claims...".

Lesson:  In Michigan, an attorney should not have an expectation that he cannot be sued for malpractice after a settlement in the underlying litigation, unless the release specifically mentions third-parties, including attorneys, involved in a representative capacity.

NJ: Settle and Sue Continued, Puder Rejected

Gorjuice Wrap, Inc. v. Okin, Hollander & De Luca, LLP, N.J. App. Div., January 12, 2011 (Unpub.)

Facts:  Kang retained Attorney Watkins to assist her in negotiating a commercial lease with the Talmos.  Unbeknownst to Kang, Watkins had been a longtime attorney for the Talmos.  In fact, he had represented them in their purchase of the property Kang now wanted to lease.  Kang relied on Watkins' advice that the property was suitable for her business purposes.  Further, Kang asked Watkins to petition the Planning Board to allow Plaintiff to commence its business operations. Watkins, however, failed to take action and Kang retained another attorney. 

Several months later, the Talmos, with the assistance of Watkins, sold a contiguous parking lot to another business.  As a result of this sale, the Planning Board determined that the available parking was insufficient to support Plaintiff's business.  

Moreover, Plaintiff learned of leaks and structural issues which the Talmos never fixed.  Apparently, Watkins had been aware of these concerns but never brought them to Kang's attention.  

After serious flooding damaged Plaintiff's property, Kang filed a claim with the insurance carrier for loss of business revenue and property damage.  Indeed, Kang later testified that the day of the flood was the last day Plaintiff was in business.  

In the meantime, Plaintiff had defaulted on its rent obligation and was locked out of the premises. Kang alleged that she was never provided the opportunity to remove valuable computer equipment, disks, books, and records.  At that point, Kang retained De Luca to secure the return of the personal property, and another firm to commence a malpractice action against Watkins.

According to De Luca, the Talmos notified him that they would allow Kang to enter the premises and gather her belongings in or around June 13, 2001.  Kang disputes that De Luca ever forwarded the message to her.  According to Kang, the new owners of the building allowed her to enter in or around November, 2001.  By that time, however, all of her property had allegedly been removed.  

In the meantime, Kang settled with the insurance carrier for $152,000 for "the whole loss and damage" caused by the flood.  She acknowledged that a portion of the payment was for "business loss."  

Plaintiff's action against Watkins alleged conflict of interest, failure to file an appropriate and timely site plan approval, failure to advise Plaintiff of its right and remedies against the Talmos, and other violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct.  Watkins' carrier settled the matter for $250,000.

Plaintiff then filed suit against De Luca for his failure to secure the removal of its property after the lockout.  In this regard, Plaintiff served damage reports claiming lost profits of approximately $8,000,000.

The trial court granted De Luca's motion for summary judgment and Plaintiff appealed.

Issue:  Did De Luca violate the applicable standard of care.  If so, could Plaintiff establish proximate cause and damages? 

Ruling:  De Luca violated the standard of care, but Plaintiff could not establish proximate cause and damages for lost profits.

In granting De Luca's motion for summary judgment, the trial court relied on Puder v. Buechel for the proposition that Plaintiff could not settle its case and then sue its attorney for an additional recovery. The Appellate Division held that the trial court's application of Puder was erroneous.  First, the Appellate Division noted that Plaintiff had not indicated that the settlements in the underlying matters were "fair" or "acceptable."  Moreover, De Luca was not involved in the underlying settlements.  The Appellate Division noted that "[n]othing in Puder prevents [Plaintiff] from asserting a malpractice action against De Luca that does not arise out of legal services provided in connection with the settlement of those prior matters."

The trial court also relied on "judicial estoppel" in granting De Luca's motion for summary judgment. The Appellate Division held that to be erroneous as well:

[T]he doctrine of judicial estoppel only applies when a court has accepted a party's position, a party ordinarily is not barred from taking an inconsistent position in successive litigation if the first action was concluded by a settlement.

Nevertheless, the Appellate Division granted De Luca's motion in part because Plaintiff could not establish proximate cause and damages.  The Appellate Division found that De Luca's failure to secure the return of the property had nothing to do with Plaintiffs' lost profits, since the business had been shut down even before the lockout.  Moreover, lost profits were not available as "damages" under the new business rule:

[A]lleged lost profits that are dependent on entry into unknown markets, or the success of a new and unproved enterprise, cannot be recovered because the business venture is so risky as to preclude recovery of lost profits in retrospect.

The Appellate Division reversed the trial court in part to allow a jury to determine when De Luca advised Kang that she could reenter the premises to retrieve any property left behind, and if he did not timely advise her, for a determination as to the value of the property lost.

Lesson: Puder's holding is not applicable to a malpractice suit commenced against an attorney where the attorney did not provide legal advise in related underlying settlements.  Further, showing a violation of the standard of care is not enough to win in a legal malpractice action.  Establishing proximate cause and damages are essential to recovery.  

NJ: Settle and Sue - Without an Affidavit of Merit

Chen v. LaRocca, Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, April 28, 2010

Facts:  Plaintiff was represented by the Defendant attorney in her underlying divorce action.  Prior to trial, Plaintiff and her husband entered into a settlement agreement that was incorporated in their dual final judgment of divorce.

After entering into the settlement, Plaintiff filed suit against her former attorney alleging that he failed to uncover her ex-husband income and pension resulting in a less than favorable settlement. 

The Defendant attorney moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim.  He later supplemented his motion with a letter advising the Court that Plaintiff had failed to submit the required affidavit of merit against him. 

The trial court dismissed Plaintiff's complaint for failure to state a claim and on the additional ground that Plaintiff had not complied with New Jersey's Affidavit of Merit Statute.  Plaintiff appealed. 

Issue:  Can Plaintiff agree to settle her claims and subsequently file suit against her attorney claiming that her settlement was inadequate?  Is her failure to timely submit an affidavit of merit excusable? 

Ruling:  Yes.

The appellate division held that the trial court erred by dismissing this complaint with prejudice for failure to comply with the affidavit of merit statute:

Because LaRocca did not seek dismissal on that ground in his moving papers and raised the issue only by way of letter to the judge submitted after plaintiff filed her opposition to the motion, plaintiff had insufficient notice and no reasonable opportunity to demonstrate either substantial compliance or other circumstances excusing non-compliance. In this circumstance, a dismissal with prejudice for failure to comply with the statute effectively deprived plaintiff of the process due under our Rules of Court.

With regard to whether or not Plaintiff's complaint stated a cause of action against her former attorney, the court noted that Plaintiff's allegation that LaRocca had information about her former husband's income that he did not share with her prior to her acceptance of the settlement agreement, suggests a breach of the attorney's duty.  Surprisingly, the Court's opinion did not address whether Plaintiff had represented, either in the settlement itself or in Court, that she was entering into the settlement knowingly and voluntarily. 

Lesson:  In instances where an attorney does not timely bring critical information to his client's attention, the client may be able to sue for professional negligence even after entering into a settlement of the underlying matter.  The attorney may not be able to dismiss the action for failure to file an affidavit of merit within the statutory time frame without formal motion practice.

'Settle and Sue' New York Style

 Ambra v. Awad, 2010 NY Slip Op, Supreme Court of New York, Nassau County, April 13, 2010.

Facts:  Plaintiff filed suit against the defendant attorneys after entering into a settlement in the underlying personal injury action.  In the course of discovery in the underlying matter, defendant disclosed that it had liability insurance of $1 million, but did not disclose its' excess policy limit of $5 million.  The jury awarded damages in the sum of of $2,020,000.  Defendant's excess carrier, however, disclaimed coverage on the basis of late notice.  Plaintiff eventually agreed to settle for $1,000,000 and then brought the instant action against his former attorneys.

Specifically, plaintiff argued that his attorneys committed malpractice by (1) incorrectly advising that the defendant's resources were insufficient to cover the jury verdict in the underlying matter; and (2) coercing him into accepting an inadequate settlement.

The defendant attorneys argued that (1) plaintiff was barred from pursuing his suit because he implicitly ratified the underlying settlement by waiting over two years to challenge it; (2) was not coerced to accept the settlement; (3) was provided with correct information with regard to defendant's ability to pay in the underlying action; and (4) the recommendation to settle represented one of several reasonable courses of action.  

The defendant attorneys filed a motion for summary judgment, and plaintiff argued that it must be denied because the attorneys' contentions were not supported by expert opinion. 

Issue:   Can plaintiff enter into a settlement in the underlying action and then sue his former attorneys for malpractice? 

Ruling:  Yes.  Initially, the Court noted that the absence of expert opinion does not preclude summary judgment for the defendant attorneys.  With respect to the issue of whether plaintiffs' decision to settle the underlying matter bars the present action, the Court reasoned: 

To the extent that [plaintiff's] implicit ratification of the settlement, if any, is inconsistent with his present position that the settlement was detrimental to him, that inconsistency is not a bar to the present action, but rather a factor to be considered in connection with the other evidence. Insofar as this action was timely commenced in accordance with the applicable statute of limitations...any purported delay in seeking relief on the part of plaintiff is not a basis for dismissal.

The Court then noted that the defendant attorneys' advice could only be considered to be "reasonable" if it was based on sufficient and accurate information, and if plaintiff was afforded the opportunity to choose among fairly presented alternatives.  In that regard, the Court took into account one of the attorney's affidavits to the effect that plaintiff was advised of all potential options including post-trial motions, excess coverage litigation, and collection of the judgment.

In rendering its decision, the Court further noted that plaintiff had been under no time pressure to accept the settlement in the underlying litigation, and that plaintiff's prior refusal of a $750,000 settlement offer recommended by his attorneys suggested generally that he was not unduly influenced by counsel.  

Nevertheless, the Court allowed the action to proceed and ordered an evidentiary hearing to determine exactly what information was known or communicated to plaintiff to warrant settlement on the basis that the defendant in the underlying action was a collection risk.  The Court specifically noted plaintiff's right to recover from his former attorneys in the event their failure to investigate or communicate material information with regard to collecting on the underlying judgment influenced plaintiff's decision to enter into the settlement.

Lesson:  A settlement in the underlying action is not necessarily a bar to a subsequent professional negligence suit in New York. 

NJ: "Equitable Exceptions" to Settle and Sue

Heathcote v. Gidding, Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, August 11, 2010 

Facts:  After the conclusion of the underlying matrimonial action, Plaintiff asserted a variety of instances in which his former attorney deviated from the standards of professional representation.

The trial judge, relying on Puder, granted the attorney's motion for summary judgment based on Plaintiffs' representations in the underlying action that he understood the terms of his settlement, had entered into it freely and voluntarily, and believed it to be fair.  The judge further noted that certain of the negligence claims advanced by Plaintiff were not supported by expert opinion. 

Issue: Can a plaintiff voluntarily settle his claims and sue his former attorney without expert opinion to support his professional negligence action? 

Ruling: No.  Once a client asserts that he entered into an agreement without the benefit of competent advice, he must support it with specific facts and, unless the issue is one of common knowledge, with expert opinion.  Here, the Plaintiff provided no expert opinion to identify his attorney's obligations, the manner in which he departed from those obligations, and the consequences to plaintiff.  After a detailed review of the factual circumstances, the Court further concluded that it would not be equitable to allow Plaintiff to pursue his claims against his former attorney: 

Summary judgment requires more than a statement that plaintiff was not aware of the ramifications of his status as the parent of alternative residence.

Related to the child support calculation claims is a claim that plaintiff did not know of a "secret" account into which his former wife placed child care reimbursements from her employer. The record demonstrates, however, that plaintiff's wife agreed to provide a credit to plaintiff from this reimbursement for any child care costs owed by him to her. Assuming plaintiff did not know that his former wife had established a separate account into which she deposited the reimbursement funds, he does not offer any evidence to establish that any omission by defendant caused him any damage.
Plaintiff also argues that defendant never ascertained that his former wife received a $7000 bonus that should have been available for equitable distribution. This record clearly demonstrates that plaintiff knew that his wife received an annual bonus and that it was usually payable in March of the following year. This is a far cry from Ziegelheim in which the wife entered a matrimonial settlement without the benefit of full and complete disclosure of marital assets because her attorney may not have conducted a diligent investigation. Here, the record reveals that plaintiff was well informed of the parties' assets and all sources of income.

Under these circumstances, the Court affirmed dismissal of Plaintiff's malpractice claim as an "equitable exception" under Puder.

Lesson:  Although Ziegelheim and Guido allow an allegedly wronged client to settle his claims and then sue his former attorney for negotiating a less than favorable settlement, the Court appears to have retained the discretion to examine the factual circumstances surrounding the settlement and dismiss Plaintiff's negligence action as "inequitable."

NJ: The "Limited Exception" to Settle and Sue

Gere v. Louis, Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, August 25, 2010 (Unpublished)

Facts:  Plaintiff alleged that her former attorney, Louis, wrote a letter to the adversary, without her authorization, that she was waiving her right to a one-half interest in a marina in the underlying matrimonial proceeding.

Plaintiff retained a new attorney, DeBartolo, to represent her in a post-judgment plenary hearing concerning the issue.  After Plaintiff's cross-motion seeking to maintain equal ownership of the marina was denied, she retained yet another attorney, Soranno.  During the pendency of the post-judgment matrimonial litigation, Soranno negotiated a new settlement with Plaintiff's ex-husband, prior to obtaining a ruling on whether Plaintiff had in fact waived her interest in the marina by way of her former attorney's representations to the adversary.

The new settlement provided that Plaintiff would share equally with her former husband in the net proceeds of the sale of the marina's real estate, and she would be entitled to 40% of all monies arising out of the marina's business operations. 

When questioned about the new settlement in open court, Plaintiff represented that given all the facts and circumstances, she thought the agreement was fair, reasonable, and the "best [she] could do."  She further represented that by signing the agreement, she was waiving her right to later argue that the agreement was unfair.  Plaintiff's attorney did qualify the foregoing representations, however, by indicating that Plaintiff reserved her right to bring malpractice actions against Louis and DeBartolo.

Plaintiff did eventually bring malpractice actions against Louis and DeBartolo.  The trial court held that, under Puder, Plaintiff could not settle and sue.  Plaintiff appealed. 

Issue:  Can Plaintiff pursue malpractice actions against her former attorneys after entering into a purportedly "fair and reasonable" settlement in the underlying litigation? 

Ruling:  No.  If a Plaintiff has a first agreement and is involved in litigation to enforce that first agreement, but decides to enter into a new settlement while the litigation is still pending, Plaintiff is bound by that new settlement, even where she only agrees to enter into the new settlement with a carve-out for a malpractice action.

The Appellate Division based its ruling on the fact that Plaintiff may have been successful in establishing that her former attorney acted without her permission at the plenary hearing, and might even have been able to recoup fees.  As in Puder, however, she chose a different remedy -- to negotiate and settle the matter before the conclusion of the plenary hearing.  The Court distinguished the case from Ziegelheim and Guido

[T]he Court in Ziegelheim...recognized that after denial by the Family Court of the plaintiff's application to set aside the challenged settlement agreement, the plaintiff was left with only one remedy -- the legal malpractice action...That is not the case here.

The Court recently decided Guido...and explained that Ziegelheim represented the standard to be applied in legal malpractice cases, while Puder represented a 'limited exception' to Ziegelheim, applying equitable principles...In Guido, unlike here, the plaintiffs did not represent that they were satisfied with the settlement.  Here, Plaintiff made that affirmative representation.

We do not conclude that Plaintiff was required to await the motion judge's decision [in the plenary hearing]; however, we do acknowledge the rule established by Ziegelheim recognizing the sole remedy of a malpractice action as a critical factor in that decision.  That was not the case here.

***

Plaintiff, here, only had to decide whether she would accept a settlement or await the judge's decision on the issue of her waiver.  She was not in a situation where, choosing the latter, she would be left without a claim.  This was not an 'all-or-nothing' decision for Plaintiff; it was a decision with options and she chose to accept the [new] settlement.

***

Litigated cases are settled everyday where plaintiffs and defendants have to weigh the costs and benefits of settling or allowing a judge or jury to decide their fate.

Lesson:  If a plaintiff chooses to negotiate and voluntarily enter into a settlement of her claims before giving the court an opportunity to pass on the former allegedly inadequate settlement negotiated by a purportedly negligent attorney, she will waive her right to bring a malpractice action and will be bound by the terms of the new settlement.

Ziegelheim v. Puder: NJ District Court On "Settle and Sue"

Hubert v. Bartels, United States District Court, District of New Jersey, February 4, 2010

Facts:  This legal malpractice action arose from an underlying products liability action by the Huberts for defective breast implants.  At the mediation of the underlying matter, Plaintiffs agreed to settle.  During further negotiations, however, Plaintiffs became dissatisfied with the final form of the agreement and filed a motion to be released from the settlement.  The court held that the settlement was enforceable and the parties had agreed to a form of release.  Plaintiffs assented to the terms of the settlement as modified by the court.

Plaintiffs subsequently brought this action for malpractice alleging that they did not receive an adequate settlement for their claims in the underlying action.

Issue:  Can a Plaintiff bring a malpractice suit against his attorney after entering into a settlement in the underlying matter? 

Ruling:  Yes. 

Decision:  In making its decision, the Court analyzed the New Jersey Supreme Court's two seemingly contradictory opinions on the issue:  Ziegelheim and Puder

[In Puder], the original attorney had obtained a divorce settlement to which the client originally agreed...The client then consulted another attorney who expressed the opinion that the settlement was "ridiculously inadequate."...The client fired the original attorney and filed a malpractice lawsuit against the original attorney which was stayed pending the outcome of a hearing on the enforceability of the settlement worked out by the original attorney...After six days of testimony in the hearing to enforce the settlement, but prior to any ruling on the enforceability of the settlement, the parties informed the motion judge that a new settlement had been reached...The new settlement was substantially similar to the disputed settlement, and the new settlement was found by the motion judge to be entered into knowingly and voluntarily.

The client in Puder then sought to litigate the stayed malpractice action against the original attorney...Holding that the public policy of New Jersey encouraging settlements was the determinative factor, the Supreme Court of New Jersey held that the second settlement barred the client's claim against her original attorney.

In doing so, the New Jersey Supreme Court distinguished an earlier case concerning matrimonial legal malpractice...In Ziegelheim, a client entered into a settlement agreement in a divorce action allocating about fourteen percent of the marital assets to the client after the client's lawyer advised her that she could expect no more than ten to twenty percent of the marital property after a trial...One year later, the client sought to set aside the property settlement and recover from her original attorney in a malpractice case...After the property settlement was found to be enforceable, the malpractice case went forward...The Supreme Court of New Jersey held that the malpractice action against the attorney should have been allowed to go to trial, because there was a genuine dispute concerning the competence of the original attorney, including the attorney's advice on the likelihood of the client receiving no more than twenty percent of the marital assets after trial.

The Court found that the facts of this case were more in line with Ziegelheim, since Plaintiffs did not enter into a second settlement after obtaining advice from new counsel.  Rather, "a settlement was reached and was found enforceable after the Plaintiffs sought release from the deal they had struck...Having received information about the enforceability hearing in 2000 that there may have been a defect in the professional advice they received from Defendants...they filed the instant suit."  Recognizing the possibility that Plaintiffs may have received a more favorable settlement with different legal representation, the Court allowed Plaintiffs to pursue their malpractice action, despite the settlement in the products liability matter.

Lesson:  The fact that a party entered into a settlement in the underlying matter, does not mean that the party had competent representation.  Accordingly, an underlying settlement will not always bar a subsequent malpractice action.

NY: Change of Heart Is Not Enough To Settle and Sue

Boone v. Bender, Supreme Court of New York, Appellate Division, June 22, 2010

Facts:  Defendant attorneys represented the plaintiff in a matrimonial action which ended in a settlement.  Subsequently, the plaintiff commenced this malpractice action alleging that defendants compromised their level of advocacy and coerced her into entering into the settlement.  The defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, and the Supreme Court denied the motion.  Defendants appealed.

Issue:  Can Plaintiff pursue a malpractice action after consenting to a settlement in the underlying matter? 

Ruling:  No. 

A claim for legal malpractice is viable, despite settlement of the underlying action, if it is alleged that settlement of the action was effectively compelled by the mistakes of counsel. 

Applying that standard to the instant case, however, the Court found that:

[T]he plaintiff was satisfied with the defendants' representation of her, that she had discussed the terms of the settlement with the defendants, that she understood that she would have the right to a trial if she did not wish to enter into the stipulation, that she had not been threatened or forced into entering into the stipulation, that she was entering into the stipulation voluntarily and of her own free will, that she had not taken any medications that would hamper her ability to understand the court proceedings, and that she had no additional questions for the defendants.

Accordingly, the Court concluded that plaintiff's subsequent "unhappiness" with the settlement did not rise to the level of legal malpractice.  Further, the Court found that the attorneys' reasonable exercise of judgment in pursuing settlement did not constitute malpractice, and the plaintiff's allegation that defendants did not pursue her claims "zealously" was mere speculation.

Lesson:  Conjecture, conclusory allegations of malpractice, and mere dissatisfaction concerning a settlement that was entered into voluntarily, do not constitute the necessary factual or legal basis upon which to pursue a subsequent action for professional negligence.

MI: Appellate Division Rejects Attempt to Settle and Sue

Hall v. Cohen, Michigan Court of Appeals, February 18, 2010

Facts:  The defendant attorney represented plaintiff in a matrimonial matter, and after settlement of the matrimonial action, plaintiff brought suit against her attorney for malpractice.  The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant attorney, and granted the attorney's counterclaim for unpaid legal fees.  Plaintiff appeals.

Issue:  Can Plaintiff sue for malpractice after consenting to a settlement in the underlying matrimonial action? 

Ruling:  No.  The Court first set forth the standard for pursuing a malpractice action after settlement in the underlying matter:

When a settlement is compelled by the mistakes of the plaintiff's attorney, the attorney may be held liable for causing the client to settle for less than a properly represented client would have accepted...Additionally, a cause of action for legal malpractice may be raised when it can be shown that the client's consent to the settlement was compelled because prior misfeasance or nonfeasance by the attorney left no other recourse.

In applying that standard to the facts of this case, the Court noted that Plaintiff's statements under oath at the settlement hearing indicate that she "knowingly and voluntarily" entered into the agreement.  Further, Plaintiff was unable to demonstrate that her attorney's alleged failure to enforce prejudgment orders, or her alleged threat to withdraw from the action, caused her to settle.  Accordingly, the Appellate Division affirmed the trial court's decision to dismiss Plaintiff's complaint and award payment of outstanding legal fees.

Lesson:  Where Plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily settles her action, and cannot present any factual basis upon which the Court can conclude that her decision to settle was the result of her attorney's professional negligence, Plaintiff may not "settle and sue."

NY Proximate Cause; Faulty Assessment of Chance of Winning at Trial: Should I have Settled Instead?

Leder v. Spiegel  31 AD3d 266, aff'd 9 N.Y.3d 836, 872 N.E.2d 1194 N.Y., 2007

NY Underlying probate

Student Contributor: Ryan O'Donnell

Facts: Defendant represented plaintiff in an underlying probate matter. Rather than accept a settlement offer, plaintiff decided to continue at trial, where they were unsuccessful in challenging the will. The plaintiff bases his malpractice claim on defendant’s advice on the prospect of success in the underlying case, and that he would have accepted the settlement were it not for his attorney’s advice. There was no documentary evidence that shows that plaintiff refused to settle strictly based on defendant’s advice.

Issue: Is an attorney liable for legal malpractice if he was not the proximate cause of the client’s damages, even if he negligently represented his client?

Ruling: No.


"In order to sustain a claim for legal malpractice, a plaintiff must establish both that the defendant attorney failed to exercise the ordinary reasonable skill and knowledge commonly possessed by a member of the legal profession which results in actual damages to a plaintiff, and that the plaintiff would have succeeded on the merits of the underlying action 'but for' the attorney's negligence"

The failure to demonstrate proximate cause mandates the dismissal of a legal malpractice action regardless of whether the attorney was negligent. Since there was no evidence that the defendant’s advice was the sole basis for refusing the settlement, the defendant was not the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s loss, the defendant attorney was not liable for malpractice.

The Lesson: Even an attorney who negligently represents his client will not be liable for malpractice if he is not the “but for” cause of the client’s damages. To establish liability based on the loss of a settlement opportunity, the plaintiff must prove that but for the attorney’s negligence he would have accepted the settlement offer. A court will not rely on bare allegations of fact by a plaintiff without documentary evidence to prove proximate cause.

Settle and Sue Is OKAY! The Latest from New Jersey Supreme Court

Joseph M. Guido, et al. v. Duane Morris, LLP, et al. (A-31-09)
Argued January 20, 2010 -- Decided June 3, 2010

RIVERA-SOTO, J., writing for a unanimous Court.

(Adapted From the Syllabus accompanying the Court's decision)

In this appeal the Court revisits the effect the settlement of an underlying lawsuit may have on a subsequent legal malpractice action arising out of that settled lawsuit.

FACTS: Plaintiff Joseph Guido was the majority shareholder and chairman of the board of directors of Allstates Worldcargo, Inc. (Allstates). In October 2004, plaintiff sued Allstates and several of its officers and directors, alleging certain corporate governance concerns. On October 27, 2004, the day before the return date on plaintiff’s order to show cause, James J. Ferreli, Esq., a lawyer with and a partner in defendant Duane Morris, LLP (the Law Firm), wrote to plaintiff advising, in part, “against any agreement…that includes as a term any limitation on [his] rights as majority shareholder of Allstates [.]” Ferrelli’s letter concluded by advising that should plaintiff settle, he
should “do so without undermining [his] ability and right as majority shareholder to change the board of directors, amend the By-Laws, or take other appropriate action, and that [he] take all steps to protect, to the greatest extent  possible, the value of [his] stock.”

The next day, the trial court denied plaintiff’s request for temporary restraints and referred the matter to mediation; the parties entered into a voluntary dismissal without prejudice, as provided in Rule 4:37-1(a); and entered into a settlement that was placed on the record. The parties, however, were unable to reduce the settlement terms to writing and, ultimately, Allstates “withdr[e]w [its] settlement proposal and elect[ed] to proceed with the litigation of this matter.” As a result, in February 2005, plaintiff filed a second suit against Allstates, again seeking injunctive relief. The trial court also referred that action to mediation, which ultimately resulted in the settlement plaintiff now claims was inadequate due to defendant’s failure to represent plaintiff in a competent manner. That settlement incorporates all of the items that caused concern to, and were counseled against by, Ferrelli in his letter to plaintiff. At a hearing held on April 5, 2005 where plaintiff was represented by Frank A. Luchak and Patricia Kane Williams, both of whom were lawyers from the Law Firm, the terms of the settlement were placed on the record.  Moreover, the trial court questioned the parties and was satisfied that there was “nothing that would impact [their] ability to understand the terms and accept responsibility for the terms.”   Almost two years later, on February 15, 2007, plaintiffs (Joseph Guido and his wife Teresa) filed their legal malpractice complaint against the Law Firm, Luchak and Williams, claiming that defendants “failed to exercise the knowledge, skill and ability ordinarily possessed and exercised by members of the legal profession similarly situated, and failed to employ reasonable care and prudence in connection with their representation of” plaintiffs. Defendants moved for summary judgment, pursuant to Rules 4:46-1 and -2. By a letter opinion and order dated June 11, 2008, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of defendants and dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint with prejudice. Acknowledging that “there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether or not the defendants adequately advised plaintiffs of the impact the voting agreement would have on the value of their shares, and whether or not the failure to do so constitutes legal malpractice[,]” the trial court, relying in part on Puder v. Buechel, 183 N.J. 428 (2005), nevertheless concluded that “a [p]laintiff must take reasonable steps to avoid the consequences of a former attorney’s tortious conduct before suing the attorney for malpractice.”

The trial court noted that plaintiffs “never sought to vacate or set aside the underlying settlement, nor did they take any reasonable steps to remedy the purported negligence of their attorneys.” Believing that efforts to vacate a prior settlement are an indispensable condition precedent to an action which alleges that the prior settlement was the result of legal malpractice, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint “in its entirety with prejudice[.]”

Plaintiffs moved for reconsideration. Based on Hernandez v. Baugh, 401 N.J. Super. 539 (App. Div. 2008), the trial court granted reconsideration, and vacated its earlier order. The trial court noted that it “had previously determined that because [p]laintiffs failed to vacate the settlement in the Chancery Division, this would prohibit the malpractice action against [d]efendants.” It defined the “issue [a]s whether or not the actions taken by [p]laintiff to avoid the malpractice action w[ere] reasonable and [p]laintiff rightly argues to the Court that an application to the Chancery Division to vacate the Order because the attorney was negligent would be without merit.” The trial court  agreed, declaring that,“[i]n fact, it would be an exercise in futility to do so.”

THE APPELLATE DIVISION

Defendants sought leave to appeal that interlocutory order, which was granted. In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed the trial court’s denial of summary judgment. As a threshold matter, the panel concluded that it was proper for the trial court to have considered and granted plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration, in part because Hernandez v. Baugh was decided after the motion was filed. Addressing the substance of defendants’ summary judgment motion, the Appellate Division agreed with the trial court that there existed “a genuine issue of material fact as to whether or not the defendants adequately explained the long-term implications of the settlement to” plaintiffs. The Appellate Division distinguished Puder and determined that this case was more like  Ziegelheim v. Apollo, 128 N.J. 250 (1992), “at least with respect to the matters not clear from the terms of the settlement agreement.”  On the issue of whether plaintiffs’ failure to seek to vacate the settlement barred them from pursuing a malpractice action, the appellate panel concluded “plaintiffs had no reasonable expectation of success on a motion to set aside the General Equity settlement, and consequently had no obligation to make such an application.”

THE SUPREME COURT

The Supreme Court granted defendants’ motion for leave to appeal. In addition, the Court granted amicus curiae status to the Trial Attorneys of New Jersey (TANJ) and to the New Jersey State Bar Association (NJSBA).


HELD: When a client alleges that he entered into a settlement based on negligent advice from his lawyers, he need not first seek to vacate the settlement, but may proceed directly against those lawyers the plaintiff asserts provided the negligent advice that culminated in the settlement.


1. The standards for determining whether a client can maintain a legal malpractice action against a lawyer who counseled a settlement are set forth clearly in Ziegelheim v. Apollo, 128 N.J. 250 (1992). The court in Ziegelheim concluded that

“[t]he fact that a party received a settlement that was ‘fair and equitable’ does not mean necessarily that the party’s attorney was competent or that the party would not have received a more favorable settlement had the party’s incompetent attorney been competent.” Id. at 265.

When viewed in its proper context – that Puder, supra, represents not a new rule, but an equity-based exception to Ziegelheim’s general rule – the rule of decision  applicable here is clear: unless the malpractice plaintiff is to be equitably estopped from prosecuting his or her malpractice claim, the existence of a prior settlement is not a bar to the prosecution of a legal malpractice claim  arising from such settlement. Here, unlike in Puder, plaintiffs did not represent to the court that they were satisfied with the settlement, or that the settlement was fair and adequate. In addition, and provided that they are supported by sufficient credible evidence in the record, the Court is bound by the trial court’s finding of a genuine issue of material fact, a finding concurred in by the Appellate Division. In light of that finding, the Court perceives no principled basis to bar plaintiffs’ malpractice claim. In addition, although whether a malpractice plaintiff in fact has sought to vacate a prior settlement may be a relevant factor, the failure to do so cannot be, in and of itself, dispositive. No doubt, there may be circumstances in which a malpractice plaintiff’s failure to mitigate his or her damages by seeking to vacate the settlement that gives rise to the malpractice claim may be relevant. However, because that action logically cannot be a prerequisite for all malpractice claims based on a settlement, it also cannot rise to the level of a condition precedent to a malpractice suit. Because the equitable considerations that animated the Court’s decision in Puder are absent here, the Court applies Ziegelheim’s rule without exception and concludes – without intimating any view as to the merits of plaintiffs’ substantive claim – that the trial court and the Appellate Division correctly held that plaintiffs’ malpractice claim is not barred as a matter of law. 

The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED, and the case is REMANDED to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with the principles to which the Court has adverted.

CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LONG, ALBIN, WALLACE, and HOENS join in
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO’s opinion. JUSTICE LaVECCHIA did not participate.
 

Repudiating a Settlement

Piluso v. Cohen, 2000 P.A. Super. 335, (2000).

PA underlying medical malpractice action.

Student Contributor: Colleen Gaedcke

Facts: Appellant sued two doctors and the hospital for medical malpractice. Attorney for the appellant, the appellee, entered into a settlement agreement for $100,000 with doctor A and the hospital. Appellant was not present for the settlement negotiations. Appellant argues on appeal that the appellee settled the case without her consent or knowledge. Appellant stated that she did first learned of the settlement at trial when asked the appellee why the other defendants were not present at the trial. However, the appellant did not repudiate the settlement, but rather proceeded to trial against doctor B. The jury entered a 1.5 million dollar verdict in favor of the appellant, holding the hospital and doctor A liable. After the verdict was entered, the appellant tried to repudiate her attorney’s authority to enter into the settlement for the first time. Appellant brought a malpractice claim against the appellee. The lower court grated summary judgment in favor of the attorney and the woman appealed.

Issue: Whether a client can repudiate a settlement that was entered into by his or her attorney without his or her expressed authority?

Ruling: In affirming the lower courts grant of summary judgment in favor of the appellees, the Superior Court held:
1) “A client ratifies his attorney’s act if he does not repudiate it promptly upon receiving knowledge that the attorney has exceeded his authority.”
2) As a matter policy, settlements are favored by the law and must be sustained in the absence of fraud and mistake.

“We foreclose the ability of dissatisfied litigants to agree to a settlement and then file suit against their attorneys in the hope that they will recover additional monies…[because] to permit otherwise…places an unnecessarily arduous burden on an overly taxed court system.”

Lesson: If an attorney makes a decision to settle their client’s case without their clients authority or knowledge and the client does not attempt to immediately repudiate the authority of his counsel to enter into a settlement, but rather accepts the benefits flowing from the settlement, the client has ratified the act of the attorney and will be prevented to bring a malpractice claim against his or her attorney.

Settle and Sue: Pennsylvania Style

Martos v. Concilio, 427 Pa. Super. 612; 629 A.2d 1037 (1993)

Student Contributor: Christopher Henn

PA Underlying divorce- property settlement agreements

Facts: The plaintiff retained defendant to represent him in his divorce. Plaintiff and his former spouse agreed to a property settlement. The parties then executed a new property settlement agreement that modified the first. The second settlement resolved property distribution and custody of their children. Alimony, debt repayment and other obligations were submitted for judicial determination. The trial court appointed a master to make recommendations after the property settlement agreement was incorporated by court order. Following the master’s recommendations, plaintiffs financial burden exceeded $250,000. Dissatisfied, the Plaintiff brought a malpractice suit against defendant attorney alleging inadequate representation. The Plaintiff was especially displeased that the terms reached by the first settlement agreement had been renegotiated in the second settlement agreement.

Issue: Whether the plaintiff was required to allege fraud in the inducement of the property settlement agreement.

Ruling: The court distinguished its prior holding in Collas v. Garnick, 425 Pa. Super. 8 (1993) by noting that there were two separate and distinct actions in that case; “[t]he prior action in which they signed the release had been completely settled; the action which they planned to bring against the seatbelt manufacturer was a separate and distinct action.” Id. at 615.

After recognizing the judicial preference for settlement, the court recited its holding in Miller v. Berschler, 423 Pa. Super. 405 (1993) as dispositive of the issue;

a party dissatisfied with the settlement agreement can only seek redress if it can establish that it was fraudulently induced into agreeing to settle, and it is incumbent on the client to plead with specificity fraud in the inducement.

The Lesson: Once a client expressly agrees to settle a dispute he will not be permitted to recover against his attorney on a malpractice claim absent fraudulent conduct by the attorney. However, if the settlement of one dispute serves to prevent subsequent actions against third parties, without the client’s knowledge, the client may be permitted to recover on a malpractice theory.

Settle and Sue: Where it all Began in New Jersey

Ziegelheim v. Apollo, 607 A.2d 1298, 128 N.J. 250 (N.J. 1992)

NJ Underlying Divorce Action Settlement

Student Contributor: John Anzalone

Facts: Plaintiff discussed her concern with Defendant Attorney that her husband was concealing substantial assets and asked Attorney to make a thorough inquiry into her husband's assets that attorney failed to undertake before negotiating the property settlement agreement. This resulted in the marital estate being undervalued. Plaintiff received 14 percent of the estate's value in the settlement. Plaintiff signed the agreement after Attorney advised that she would receive no more than 10-20 percent of the estate's value at trial. Plaintiff later filed a malpractice suit against Attorney and a suit to get the settlement set-aside that was rejected.

Issue: Did the lower court err in holding that there was only one factual dispute that Attorney had committed malpractice and that Plaintiff's claims were estopped because the settlement was deemed fair?

Ruling: In partially reversing the lower court, the New Jersey Supreme Court held Plaintiff's  malpractice case could go forward, based on the following considerations:

1) A dissatisfied litigant does not have to prove that their attorney committed fraud in the settlement before they can sue the attorney for malpractice in settlement negotiations.

2) Litigants rely on attorney's advice on whether to accept settlements and the law insists that their recommendation be made with the skill, diligence, and knowledge of a reasonably competent attorney. Attorneys are expected to know the reasonable probability of their case's success and the range of potential outcomes. A lawyer must exercise reasonable care in negotiating a settlement for a client, just as he must exercise such care in all other aspects of the representation. 

3) The doctrine of estoppel should not be applied here because the fact the court hearing  on setting aside the settlement  called the award "fair and equitable" does not mean that Plaintiff could not have secured a better award had Attorney not been negligent.

4) The prior ruling also did not touch on whether or not Plaintiff's husband hid assets. Consequently, the ruling does not bar a claim that Attorney negligently failed to discover hidden marital assets.

5) Given the evidence, Plaintiff's further claims that Attorney negligently failed to put agreed upon terms into writing and delayed in making the final settlement resulting in financial losses,  should not have been disposed of with summary judgment.

Lesson: Rulings regarding the fairness of a settlement do not preclude suits against attorneys for malpractice in reaching that settlement. To avoid malpractice claims in settlement situations attorneys should explain the settlements as written to the consenting parties and their legitimate basis for believing that the client should accept the proposed agreement. 

Editor's Note:  This case highlights the "settle and sue" syndrome  in legal malpractice actions. At this posting, the NJ Supreme Court has heard oral argument in Guido v. Duane Morris, LLP  and is taking a fresh look at the issue. Stand by for a decision in the near future. 

Cop a Plea. Then Sue Your Lawyer: A New Spin on "Settle and Sue"

Alampi v. Russo, 345 N.J. Super. 360 (App. Div. 2001)

Student Contributor:  Melissa Goldberg

NJ Underlying Criminal Defense

Facts: Plaintiff, a public accountant, sued his attorney for legal malpractice alleging his professional negligence caused him to plead guilty to a federal misdemeanor charge for refusing to give information to the IRS in a tax investigation. Plaintiff contended that his attorney failed to keep him properly informed about the potential of a criminal investigation and failed to arrange a meeting with the IRS where the government could have been persuaded to either grant him immunity or decide not to prosecute.

Issue: Does an unimpeached guilty plea in a criminal proceeding bar recovery in a legal malpractice action?

Ruling: Yes, Plaintiff cannot seek in a civil action to renounce his federal conviction, or seek money damages for a wrongful conviction based on his guilty plea which he never otherwise attacked, since:
1) He unconditionally pled guilty to a criminal offense committed before representation was commenced; and
2) It would undermine the guilty plea if a defendant were allowed to argue that no prosecution would have occurred if his attorney had used different tactics.

Lesson: Public policy does not permit defendants who have been convicted of a criminal offense from profiting from their illegal conduct by shifting blame to their defense attorneys.

PA: Settle & Sue? No Way! (Take 1)

Muhammed v. Strassburger, McKenna, Messer, Shilobod and Gutnik
526 Pa. 541, 587 A.2d 1346 (Pa. 1991)

PA Underlying Medical Malpractice Litigation

Student Contributor: Justin B. Lieberman

Facts: Former client sued attorney for legal malpractice after the client was unhappy with the settlement received in the underlying medial malpractice action. In the underlying action clients accepted a settlement offer at a pre-trial conference, and then recanted the acceptance after their lawyer informed the opposing side of acceptance. The opposing side sought enforcement of the settlement and the trial court, at an evidentiary hearing, upheld the settlement, as did the Superior Court on appeal. The clients filed suit against the attorneys. The law firm defended on the following grounds: that the action should be dismissed as the claims were too speculative and settling clients were seeking to relitigate the settlement. The case was brought to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.

Issue: Can a settling defendant sue his/her lawyer for malpractice although they agreed to settle the underlying claim?

Ruling: A client cannot bring a malpractice claim against a former attorney because of their later dissatisfaction of a settlement to which they agreed,  unless they can show some fraudulent conduct by the attorney  in advising the client on accepting the settlement. Here, the clients, were dissatisfied not able to renegotiate their settlement after they had already voluntrarily accepted an offer. They were thus, not fraudulently induced to settle by their attorney.

We foreclose the ability of dissatisfied litigants to agree to settlement and then file suit against their attorneys in the hope that they will recover additional monies.

Lesson: An attorney may not be held liable when a client later decides they are unsatisfied with a settlement they willingly agreed to at a prior time, unless the attorney fraudulently induced or intentionally misadvised the client to accept the settlement.

Editor's note: This was the law in PA for many years. The stringent rule in this case, of barring a malpractice suit against the lawyer who represented the settling party-- has  since  been substantially limited  and liberalized.

See, e.g., McMahon v. Shea, 441 Pa. Super. 304, 657 A.2d 938 (1995).

The holding in Muhammad has been rejected in New Jersey (Ziegelheim v. Apollo, 128 N.J.250, 607 A.2d 1298 (1992) and Connecticut (Grayson v. Wofsey, Rose, Kweskin & Kuriansky, 231 Conn. 168, 646 A.2d 1994).

NJ Supreme Court: Settle and Sue Round 2.

The New Jersey Supreme Court is about to  take another look at the "settle and sue" syndrome: When a client settles a case and then sues  his or her lawyer over it. The case is Guido v. Duane Morris.


The Appellate Division had decided to permit  the Guidos' malpractice lawsuit against their former attorneys who had represented them in an underlying shareholder dispute that was settled.

Duane Morris has filed an interlocutory appeal and brief (PDF) arguing that the suit should not be permitted.


Plaintiffs oppose (PDF) and say that their malpractice claim should be allowed.


Trial Attorneys of New Jersey,  representing the interests of the trial bar, wants  permission to file an amicus brief.(PDF).


Pennsylvania had faced the same problem and has resolved it in a way that seems to have pleased all the contending parties. How should New Jersey’s High Court proceed? For one suggestion, see, "Holding Lawyers Accountable for Bad Settlements" in the New Jersey Law Journal.  (PDF) Should New Jersey follow Pennsylvania's lead or should it chart a different course to calm the unrest in the Appellate Divisions resulting from its 2005 decision in Puder v. Buechel?

Stay tuned. More to come on this hot topic.