Here is a blog blurb from an Indiana Case:

"In Norman R. Carlson, Jr., et al v. Sweeney, Dabagia, Donoghue, Thorne, James & Pagos, et al, a 28-page opinion dealing with questions of alleged attorney malpractice in will drafting, Judge Robb writes:

Norman R. Carlson, Jr., individually, and as executor of the estates of Norman R. Carlson and Hilda D. Carlson, and as Trustee of the Trust established under the last wills and testaments of Norman Sr. and Hilda, Margaret Ann Carlson, Beth Carlson Montigue, and David R. Carlson, (when referred to collectively, the “Carlsons”), filed a complaint against the law firm of Sweeney, Dabagia, Donoghue, Thorne, Janes and Pagos, and lawyer John H. Sweeney (the “Lawyers”), alleging legal malpractice that resulted in adverse tax consequences. The Lawyers filed a motion for summary judgment, raising two issues. The trial court denied the Lawyers’ motion as to one issue, but granted it as to the other. The Carlsons now appeal, raising a single issue, which we restate as whether the trial court properly granted summary judgment based on its determination that reformations to the Wills drafted by the Lawyers effectively eliminated any malpractice that occurred relating to the drafting of the original Wills. On cross-appeal, the Lawyers raise a single issue, which we restate as whether the trial court properly denied its motion for summary judgment on the grounds that the original Wills would result in adverse tax consequences. The Lawyers also raise the following issues: 1) whether the “substantial adverse interest exception” protects the Carlsons from adverse tax consequences; 2) whether the Carlsons have brought this suit too early, as the IRS has not yet assigned a tax penalty; and 3) whether the trial court improperly considered the opinion of an attorney hired by the Carlsons. We conclude the adverse interest exception does not protect the Carlsons, the Carlsons are not precluded from bringing their suit at this time, and that the Lawyers waived their argument relating to the opinion of the expert witness by not raising it before the trial court. We further conclude that the trial court properly found that the original Wills would result in adverse tax consequences, and affirm the trial court’s denial of the Lawyers’ motion for summary judgment on that issue. However, we conclude that the reformations did not effectively avoid potential adverse tax consequences, reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on that issue, and remand for further proceedings. * * *

Conclusion We conclude that the trial court properly determined that the original Wills did not establish an ascertainable standard regarding a Trustee’s ability to invade the trust corpus; that the “adverse interest” clause does not protect the Trust from tax liability; and that the Carlsons did not bring this suit prematurely. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the summary judgment motion on these grounds. We also conclude that the reformations did not comport with Indiana law, and that the trial court therefore improperly granted summary judgment. We therefore reverse the trial courts grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings."

AVVO a new lawyer search web site is up and  running. "a online legal services startup led by Expedia veteran Mark Britton, is unveiling its website after more than a year of development.

Avvo.com allows consumers to search for lawyers by name, practice area, or location and get ratings and profiles for them. The website is free to consumers and supported by online advertising.

Each lawyer’s profile includes license status, disciplinary sanctions, practice areas, education, a list of awards and publications, as well as client ratings and peer endorsements. The site gives lawyers an overall rating based on their experience and record.

Avvo collects its information from public sources including courts, state bar associations and law firm websites. Client ratings and peer endorsements are submitted by visitors to the site.

Avvo is the brainchild of Britton, who previously served as general counsel at Bellevue online travel site Expedia Inc. (NASDAQ: EXPE). "

Yes, it is still good in Legal Malpractice, and Yes it is still good in Medical Malpractice, but the Court of Appeals took a big, big step yesterday, and ruled that it was not applicable to accountants filing yearly tax returns, or yearly accountings.  PriceWaterhouse won the case, and  Judge Theodore Jones wrote the decision.Law.Com reports on the decision:

"The doctrine of continuous representation cannot be invoked in situations where accountants are providing "separate and discrete" annual audits to clients and not more extensive accounting services, the State of New York Court of Appeals ruled unanimously Thursday.

The decision in Williamson v. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP , 64, had been anxiously awaited in the accounting industry since the Appellate Division, 1st Department, ruled last year that PricewaterhouseCoopers had a continuous relationship with two failed hedge funds it audited annually.

This was the first time the court weighed in on the continuous representation doctrine in an accounting context. The opinion was written by Judge Theodore T. Jones. "
In deciding that PricewaterhouseCoopers did not have a continuous representation relationship with the hedge funds, Lipper Convertible and the Lipper Fixed Income Fund, the court relieved PricewaterhouseCoopers of malpractice liability for the five years, from 1995 to 1999, it audited the funds’ year-end financial statements and declared them a reasonable indication of the funds’ financial positions.

Missing Documents can be a lawyer’s nightmare.  Here is a follow up on the Qualcom story from American lawyer:

"A week after the public learned of Qualcomm Inc.’s bombshell admission that it withheld potentially thousands of important documents in a high-stakes patent trial against Broadcom Corp., many in the intellectual property community are still buzzing about the gaffe.

The case is even more striking because the attorney who has publicly apologized for Qualcomm’s error has a strong reputation in his field, as does his firm. Yet several attorneys say it’s still too early to assign blame for the error.

"Whenever there are accusations of concealment of evidence and they prove to be true, there definitely is going to be harm to the lawyers and the parties," said Anup Tikku, an IP associate with Kirkpatrick & Lockhart Preston Gates Ellis, who has followed the case closely. "What I find difficult to understand is how Qualcomm interviewed witnesses, put them on the stand and did not realize these documents existed."

Ross Todd at the American Lawyerwrites:

"San Diego City Attorney Michael Aguirre, who has already led the city’s charge to sue two Am Law 100 firms, has a third in his sights. In an April report, Aguirre recommended that the city take legal action against Willkie Farr & Gallagher because of what Aguirre called a "failed" investigation into the city’s $1.4 billion understatement of its pension debt. Aguirre says that Willkie Farr overbilled the city and produced a report that was "a mile wide and an inch deep."

Willkie Farr partner Michael Young, responding to requests for comment on behalf of himself and partner Benito Romano, said, "We are not going to express our views on the matter."

The San Diego pension scandal has given rise to multiple lawsuits. In late 2005 the city sued long-time bond counsel Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, among other advisers, claiming that the firm knowingly approved inaccurate financial disclosures. Then, in July 2006, the city sued Vinson & Elkins, alleging that V&E ran up a $6 million bill while conducting a flawed investigation of the pension fiasco. Both cases are moving toward discovery, according to Dan Stanford of San Diego’s Stanford and Associates, the city’s outside counsel in each case. "

Bad faith litigation is usually a situation where the case could be settled within the policy limits, but that chance is lost and the verdict exceeds the policy limits.  Here is the inverse.  The carrier settles a case within the policy limits but the insured [in this case a doctor] did not want to settle, and sues the carrier for settling in bad faith.

"A Florida appellate court has recognized a new statutory bad faith cause of action in medical malpractice claims. In Rogers v. Chicago Ins. Co.,1 the fourth district court of appeal held that an insured has a private cause of action under section 627.4147, Florida Statutes, which requires that settlement offers be made in good faith and in the best interests of the insured.

In Rogers, a medical doctor sued his professional liability insurer for failing to properly investigate the malpractice claim filed against him, as required by section 766.106,2 Florida Statutes. He alleged that the insurer had acted in bad faith under section 627.4147 by settling a completely defensible claim, causing him damages such as his inability to obtain medical malpractice insurance, which limited his practice.

In 1985, the Florida Legislature enacted section 627.4147, titled “Medical malpractice insurance contracts.” Subsection 627.4147(1)(b) provides that it is against public policy for any insurance policy to contain a clause giving the insured the exclusive right to veto a settlement offer within the policy limits. It also provides that “any offer of admission of liability, settlement offer, or offer of judgment made by an insurer or self-insurer shall be made in good faith and in the best interests of the insured.”

Will this principal spread to legal malpractice?

 

Its bad enough when an attorney makes mistakes which cost the client.  Here, its not even an attorney!  The NY TImes Story:

"A Long Island man who worked as a lawyer at a major New York law firm for four years — even though, prosecutors said, he had never gone to law school — pleaded not guilty yesterday in State Supreme Court to charges of impersonating a lawyer and stealing at least $284,350 in salary from his firm."

This report from Hinshaw discusses a Georgia case in which an attorney did not file a verification in an anti-SLAPP suit.  It was a mistake, but the question of whether he had to file a verification was "unsettled."  So far, [summary judgment denied], the client’s legal malpractice case remains viable.  Moral ?  Advise the client of unsettled law .

"Chatham Orthopaedic Surgery Center, LLC., et al. v. White, 640 S.E.2d 633 (Ga. Ct. App. 2006)

Brief Summary
The court upheld summary judgment in favor of an attorney on the issue of negligence in failing to file a necessary verification under an anti-SLAPP statute because prior case law was unclear at the time. Nonetheless, the court reversed summary judgment in the attorney’s favor on a separate claim to the effect that the attorney was negligent in not advising his client of the risk of not filing a verification in light of the unsettled state of the law. "

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<img src="http://www.blawg.com/claimscript.aspx?userid=bluestonelawfirm&LinksID=1907">

General Obligation Law Sec. 15-108 has long been a trap and a well known trap at that.  Settle with one defendant, and the rest of them get to try their case against an empty seat, and get the greater of the settlement amount or the equitable share of the settling defendant.

But, as of Today new legislation changes all of that!

CHAPTER TEXT:
LAWS OF NEW YORK, 2007

CHAPTER 70

AN ACT to amend the general obligations law, in relation to the impact
of litigation settlements upon the remaining parties to the action

Became a law June 4, 2007, with the approval of the Governor.
Passed by a majority vote, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
bly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Section 15-108 of the general obligations law is amended by
adding a new subdivision (d) to read as follows:
(d) Releases and covenants within the scope of this section. A release
or a covenant not to sue between a plaintiff or claimant and a person
who is liable or claimed to be liable in tort shall be deemed a release
or covenant for the purposes of this section only if:
(1) the plaintiff or claimant receives, as part of the agreement,
monetary consideration greater than one dollar;
(2) the release or covenant completely or substantially terminates the
dispute between the plaintiff or claimant and the person who was claimed
to be liable; and
(3) such release or covenant is provided prior to entry of judgment.
§ 2. This act shall take effect on the thirtieth day after it shall
have become a law and shall apply to all releases or covenants not to
sue effective on or after such effective date.

Here is the sponsor’s memo:

"SPONSORS MEMO:NEW YORK STATE SENATEINTRODUCER’S MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORTsubmitted in accordance with Senate Rule VI. Sec 1
BILL NUMBER: S3739

SPONSOR: DEFRANCISCO

TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the general obligations law, in
relation to the impact of litigation settlements upon the remaining
parties to the action

This measure, a predecessor of which the Legislature passed in 2006, is
one in a series of measures being introduced at the request of the Chief
Administrative Judge on the recommendation of his Advisory Committee on
Civil Practice. The 2006 measure contained a technical defect that
required its disapproval (see Veto #259-2006). This current draft
corrects that technical defect.

This measure would amend section 15-108 of the General Obligations Law
("G.O.L.") to exclude certain releases from its scope, most importantly
including those instances in which the plaintiff voluntarily discontin-
ues his or her suit against a particular defendant without receiving any
monetary consideration for that release. This would encourage plaintiffs
to voluntarily release those defendants who appear not to bear any
liability, which would in turn reduce the litigation costs of those
ostensibly blameless defendants. The amendment would also make many
summary judgment motions unnecessary, and would thus reduce the burden
on the court system.

Section 15-108 of the G.O.L prescribes the consequences which ensue when
a tort plaintiff releases from liability one or more, but fewer than
all, of the alleged tortfeasors. In broad strokes, current G.O.L.
§15-108 applies when a plaintiff settles with a "tortfeasor" (usually,
but not invariably, a defendant). In such event, current subdivisions
(b) and (c) provide that the settling tortfeasor can neither seek
contribution from the other tortfeasors nor be held liable for contrib-
utions to the others, the underlying theory being that the settlor has
brought his or her peace. The settling tortfeasor can, however, seek
indemnification from the other tortfeasors, and may also be sued there-
for.

A significant issue arises when, during the course of discovery, it
appears that a defendant whom plaintiff initially thought might bear
some liability was, in fact, blameless. Because the plaintiff and
plaintiff’s counsel generally do not want superfluous parties that must
be served with every single document and consulted about court dates and
deadlines, the plaintiff would generally like to give such a defendant
his or her "walking papers." Of course, that is also what the ostensibly
blameless defendant would like – – to be released immediately and with-
out incurring any further attorney’s fees. It is also what the court
system would prefer to happen.

There is, however, a problem. If the plaintiff were to release the
apparently blameless defendant, and if one of the remaining defendants
were to prove at trial that the released defendant was indeed partially
at fault for the plaintiff’s damages, then the defendants still left in
the case would be entitled to a reduction of their liability. See

KILLEEN V. REINHARDT, 71 A.D.2d 851,419 N.Y.S.2d 175 (2nd Dept. 1979).
In that case, the plaintiff’s magnanimous discontinuance would result in
a reduction of the plaintiff’s damages, and in under compensation. Such
a reduction, which in theory could amount to a significant percentage of
plaintiff’s economic and non-economic loss, could occur even though the
plaintiff did not receive any consideration for the discontinuance, and
it could occur even if none of the facts or claims establishing the
culpability of the released defendant had been asserted, or known, when
plaintiff discontinued.

This feature of G.O.L. §15-108 may be a trap to those unfamiliar with
the statute, but it is well known to experienced plaintiff’s counsel.
Their reaction is precisely what one would expect. Knowing that a volun-
tary discontinuance can cost the plaintiff thousands or even millions of
dollars if new facts and new theories point the finger of blame at the
released defendant, and also knowing that there is no risk of any such
penalty if the ostensibly blameless defendant instead moves for and
receives summary judgment from the court, the plaintiff’s attorney will
typically answer a request for a discontinuance by saying, to extricate
yourself, you must make a summary judgment motion.

In this situation in which an ostensibly blameless defendant seeks to
drop out of the lawsuit, the other defendants might not mind if that
occurs. . . provided that they, the other defendants, can commence their
own third-party claims if and when it seems wise to do so, for they too
are concerned that a defendant who now appears blameless may later
appear to bear some responsibility. The problem, from their perspective,
is that they will not be allowed that choice. If plaintiff discontinues
against the ostensibly blameless defendant, then, per the current stat-
ute, that defendant cannot be sued for contribution. And if the osten-
sibly blameless defendant moves for and receives summary judgment, then
that defendant is forever free from liability. . . no matter what turns
up later on. For these reasons, the remaining defendants are virtually
forced to oppose the summary judgment motion, even if they would have
preferred to provisionally allow the movant to leave, so long as there
is any arguable basis for opposition.

Thus, what might have been a consensual discontinuance instead becomes a
contested motion, and, perhaps, after the motion is resolved, a
contested appeal.

The proposed amendment would eliminate three kinds of releases from the
statute’s scope, but only two of the exclusions constitute changes as
compared to current law.

First and foremost, discontinuances given without monetary consideration
would be removed from the statute’s scope, meaning that a plaintiff
could discontinue without risk of being penalized for doing so. This
would help the ostensibly blameless defendants to get out of the case as
quickly and as inexpensively as possible. It should be noted that, in
an instance in which the plaintiff initially sued and thereafter
released an individual or corporate entity without monetary consider-
ation for the release, the remaining defendants’ rights against that
released individual would be exactly the same as if the individual had
never been sued in the first place. More specifically, the remaining
defendants would have the same rights that they would have initially had
to implead the individual and thereby seek contribution or indemnity or
to instead seek a CPLR Article 16 set-off by reason of the individual’s
culpability. Of course, under the terms of Article 16, the Article 16
set-off would apply only to the plaintiff’s non-economic loss, and then
only if the party seeking the set-off was assigned 50% or less of the
culpability.

Second, by limiting the statute to those releases that "completely or
substantially" terminate the dispute against the released defendant, the
new subdivision would effectively exclude "high- low" agreements in
which the parties agree to confine the damages to an agreed range. The
subdivision would also effectively exclude agreements in which the
parties merely narrow the issues (perhaps, by conceding liability, or
jurisdiction) without fully resolving the action.

The exclusion of high-low agreements constitutes a change, although the
current rule is not well-settled. The exclusion of other issue narrowing
agreements may or may not constitute a change; the current rule is not
clear enough to say. In any event, the "completely or substantially
terminates" limitation is not the main point of the amendment, and is
not likely to have as pronounced an impact as the "greater than one
dollar" limitation. However, the Committee advocates the "completely or
substantially terminates" provision because there is no policy reason
why issue-narrowing agreements should be deterred or why such agreements
should engender windfall consequences for the other parties.

The exclusion of post-judgment settlements would be a codification of
current law. The Court of Appeals long ago ruled that the statute does
not apply to post-judgment settlements, and that rule has never been
seriously questioned since then. The proposal codifies that rule because
(1) the rule sensibly allows the plaintiff to accept a partial payment
from one defendant who may have no other assets except for his or her
personal possessions, and to do so without unintentionally releasing the
other defendants, and (2) adoption of a new, statutory exclusion that
did not expressly recognize the existent, common-law exclusion could
conceivably be construed as a rejection of it.

This measure, which would have no fiscal impact on the State, would take
effect 30 days after such time as it shall have become law, and it shall
apply to all releases or covenants not to sue effected on or after such
effective date. "