We have commented about the Collateral Estoppel trap in legal malpractice with regard to fee arbitrations and hearings. in short, when a court grants an attorney fee application, it implicitly determines that there can have been no malpractice, as the court may not award fees in the face of malpractice. Fee arbitrations and hearings in state court happen, but not that often. Bankruptcy fee hearings happen in every case, and in every case where fees are awarded to counsel, the question of res judicata comes up.
In re D.A. ELIA CONSTRUCTION CORP., Plaintiff, v. DAMON & MOREY, LLP, Defendant.;07-CV-143A ; UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK; 389 B.R. 314; 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25496 has been the leading case on this issue. There, attorneys who had been granted fees were able to fend off legal malpractice claims based upon res judicata.
Now, in PENTHOUSE MEDIA GROUP, INC., , – against – PACHULSKI STANG ZIEHL & JONES LLP, ;UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK; 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 46617 we see a slightly different result. Judge Scheindlin sitting in appeal of a US Bankruptcy decision by Judge Bernstein, finds that the legal malpractice plaintiffs did not have a full and fair opportunity to be heard, and that res judicata does not control the issue of legal malpractice.
"Although Pachulski’s fee application was approved by the bankruptcy court in the prior proceeding, I cannot conclude as a matter of law that PMG had a full and fair opportunity to litigate allegations of Pachulski’s malpractice during that hearing. Many of the factors used to consider whether a party had a full and fair opportunity to litigate an issue favor PMG, particularly given PMG’s continued retention of Pachulski as its counsel. For instance, one of the factors courts have considered is "the importance of the claim in the prior litigation." 45 PMG had just undergone a reorganization with the help of Pachulski as its counsel. The possibility that Pachulski may have committed malpractice while representing PMG during that reorganization may not have been at the forefront of PMG’s concerns. In addition, PMG [*16] had no "incentive [or] initiative to litigate" the malpractice issue, 46 considering that it expected Pachulski to continue to advise PMG in the winding down of its bankruptcy proceeding.
Of particular importance to this Court is the bankruptcy court’s reliance on D.A. Elia Construction Corp. 50 Judge Bernstein concluded that D.A. Elia was directly on point, 51 but D.A. Elia is perhaps even more clearly distinguishable from the instant case than other cases cited by Pachulski, as in that case the malpractice claim was actually litigated during the fee application proceeding. D.A. Elia emphasized that
many of the same allegations made by Elia in its [malpractice] complaint were previously made by Elia in its objections to Damon & Morey’s final fee application. Specifically, Elia argued to the bankruptcy court that the firm had labored under a conflict of interest, had committed legal malpractice and had failed to turn over money owed to the estate. The bankruptcy court provided Elia with ample opportunity [to] raise those claims, but ultimately rejected them as meritless. 52
The district court concluded that "it cannot be said that Elia was denied the opportunity to raise these [malpractice] claims in the prior action." 53 In the instant case, PMG raised no such objections [*19] at the fee hearing."