Clients often intuit the departure from good practice in their cases. Referring attorneys generally pinpoint the mistake. Few consider how and whether they can prove that “but for “the mistake or departure, there would have been a better result. Katsoris v Bodnar & Milone, LLP
2020 NY Slip Op 05040 Decided on September 23, 2020
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Strategic Judgments and Legal Malpractice
One might engage in a plethora of unacceptable acts, yet not be responsible for legal malpractice. How can this be? Might one delay a case for two years and still be safe from a law suit? Can one arrange for a client to take a 23% interest rate litigation loan, yet still avoid a claim? …
A Mistake? Yes. Proximate Cause? No
Most people as well as a lot of lawyers stop their legal malpractice analysis at the first element: departure from good practice. The battle in real legal malpractice cases almost always takes place in the third element: “but for” proximate causation. Lindenwood Vil., Section C Coop. Corp. v Denenberg ,2020 NY Slip Op 32572(U)…
Is There A Pervasive Prejudice In Favor of Attorneys?
There are scholarly works (in the form of law review articles) which argue that the courts tilt towards attorneys in legal malpractice cases. It is logical that such a prejudice might exist. Legal malpractice (and ethical) rules are written by attorneys, apply to attorneys, are reviewed by attorneys and are acted upon by judge-attorneys. Any…
Maria Carey, Legal Malpractice and Betrayal
Legal malpractice issues arise in all kinds of settings. in Wikked Entertainment, Inc. v Burbacki 2020 NY Slip Op 32375(U) July 20, 2020 Supreme Court, New York County Docket Number: 652352/2018 Judge: Andrew Borrok the setting is a claimed hiring of a niece as an attorney to a talent management agency, and the claimed attempted…
The Extraordinarily Rare Plaintiff’s Summary Judgment in a Legal Malpractice Case
Almost unheard of, Plaintiff was granted summary judgment on liability in this legal malpractice case.
Reem Contr. v Altschul & Altschul 2020 NY Slip Op 32301(U) July 13, 2020 Supreme Court, New York County Docket Number: 104202/2011 Judge: Kelly A. O’Neill Levy is the one-in-a-million where Plaintiff obtains a summary judgment order in a legal…
Legal Malpractice and Real Estate; Real Estate and Legal Malpractice
The continuous intertwining of legal malpractice and real estate in NYC cases is not merely coincidence. It is a marriage of money and dispute resolution. Community Assn. of the E. Harlem Triangle, Inc. v Butts 2020 NY Slip Op 32163(U) June 29, 2020 Supreme Court, New York County Docket Number: 656028/2018 Judge: Andrea Masley puts…
When the Statute of Limitations Looms
The situation is not unusual. Attorneys represent client in a transnational setting, and the transaction is compromised, but not yet finished. Three years are about to pass. What is the plaintiff to do? If you do not sue, the statute will pass. if you do sue, defendant will say that it is too early. Economic …
A Simple Notice Would Have Sufficed
Spoliation of evidence is a certain basis for dismissal. Negligently, or even worse, intentionally allowing key evidence to be lost or destroyed deprives the opponent of discoverable exculpatory evidence. Such loss is rarely countenanced.
Manno v Hayes Law Practice, PLLC 2020 NY Slip Op 31228(U) May 6, 2020 Supreme Court, Kings County Docket Number: Index…
Standing? Yes Timely? Yes “But For” Causation? No
In a recurring theme, the “but for” element of legal malpractice is the place where battles are lost. Rag & Bone Holdings LLC v Hand Baldachin & Assoc. LLP 2020 NY Slip Op 31149(U) May 2, 2020 Supreme Court, New York County Docket Number: Index No. 156994/2019 Judge: Andrea Masley is a fine example. The…