Lead Opinion
¶1 We are asked to determine whether plaintiffs in a malpractice action against their former criminal defense attorneys were properly required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that they were actually innocent of the underlying criminal charges. The Court of Appeals concluded that, as an element of their negligence claim, plaintiffs were required “to prove innocence in fact and not merely to present evidence of the government’s inability to prove guilt.” Ang v. Martin,
FACTS
¶2 Psychiatrist Jessy Ang and his wife Editha jointly owned Evergreen Medical Panel, Inc., a company that provided the Washington State Department of Labor and Industries with independent medical examinations of injured workers. As a result of Dr. Aug’s contact with a target of a governmental task force investigating social security fraud, Dr. Ang himself became a person of interest. In February 1994, the task force executed a search warrant on Dr. Aug’s office and seized copies of two sets of signed tax returns that reported conflicting amounts of income. The Angs were arrested in April 1996, following the execution of a search warrant at their residence. A year later, the Angs were indicted on 18 criminal counts, including conspiracy to defraud the United States, bank and tax fraud, and filing false statements.
¶3 The Angs retained defendants Richard Hansen and Michael G. Martin for flat fees of $225,000 and $100,000, respectively. Attorneys Hansen and Martin engaged in a
¶4 The Angs then engaged attorney Monte Hester to review the plea discussions and provide a second opinion. Hester concluded that the government had not met its burden of proof and that the plea agreement provided the Angs with no material benefit. Retaining Hester and Keith A. MacFie to represent them, the Angs successfully moved to withdraw the pleas, which Judge Tanner had never formally accepted. In September 1999, the matter again proceeded to trial before Judge Tanner, with the Angs waiving their right to a jury. Although the government offered another plea bargain prior to trial, one requiring no plea on Dr. Ang’s part, a misdemeanor or felony for Mrs. Ang, and a $500,000 fine, the Angs rejected the plea and were acquitted on all 18 counts.
¶5 The Angs, along with Evergreen Medical, filed the present legal malpractice action against Hansen and Martin in May 2000 in Pierce County Superior Court. The complaint stated claims for legal malpractice and for violations of the Washington Consumer Protection Act, chapter 19.86 RCW. The trial court denied the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, and a jury trial began in November 2001. The trial court instructed the jury that the Angs had to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that they were innocent of the underlying criminal charges. On January 11,2002, responding to the initial two questions on a special verdict form, the jury found that the Angs had not “proven by a preponderance of the evidence [they were] innocent of all the criminal charges against [them].” Clerk’s Papers at
|6 The plaintiffs appealed, but the Court of Appeals affirmed. This court granted the plaintiffs’ petition for review.
ISSUES
¶7 (1) Where a legal malpractice suit stems from the representation of clients in a criminal prosecution, must plaintiffs who were acquitted of the criminal charges prove their actual innocence of the crimes, or does their acquittal satisfy the innocence element of their malpractice action?
18 (2) Did the Angs properly request review of jury instruction 13, which directed the jury to determine the Angs’ innocence of the criminal charges but provided no legal definitions of the named crimes, relying instead on the jury’s access to the proposed instructions from the criminal trial?
ANALYSIS
¶9 Standard of Review. The Angs contend that the trial court erred in requiring them to prove, in their malpractice suit against former defense counsel, their actual innocence of the underlying criminal charges. They also assert that the court inadequately instructed the jury on the definitions of those charges. As with all questions of law, the issues presented here are reviewed de novo. Kommavongsa v. Haskell,
¶10 Essential Elements of Legal Malpractice Claims against Criminal Defense Counsel. A plaintiff claiming negligent representation by an attorney in a civil matter bears the burden of proving four elements by a preponderance of the evidence:
*482 (1) The existence of an attorney-client relationship which gives rise to a duty of care on the part of the attorney to the client; (2) an act or omission by the attorney in breach of the duty of care; (3) damage to the client; and (4) proximate causation between the attorney’s breach of the duty and the damage incurred.
Hizey v. Carpenter,
¶11 The trial court in the present case thus instructed the jury as follows on the elements of the Angs’ criminal malpractice claims:
To prove their legal malpractice claims, the plaintiffs bear the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence each of the following:
First, that there is an attorney-client relationship giving rise to a duty owed by a defendant to a plaintiff;
Second, that plaintiffs have obtained a successful challenge to their convictions based on their attorney’s failure to adequately defend them;
Third, that plaintiff was innocent of the crimes charged; Fourth, that there is an act of omission by a defendant that breached the duty of care of an attorney;
Fifth, that a plaintiff was damaged; and
Sixth, that a breach of duty by a defendant is a proximate cause of a plaintiff’s damages . . . .[2 ]
The Angs assigned error to this instruction, contending that their undisputed acquittal of the criminal charges met not only the additional element of postconviction relief but also the innocence requirement.
¶12 By successfully withdrawing their guilty pleas and receiving an acquittal on all charges, the Angs unquestionably received the equivalent of postconviction relief,
¶13 Moreover, proving actual innocence, not simply legal innocence, is essential to proving proximate causation, both cause in fact and legal causation. Falkner,
¶14 In the alternative, the Angs argue that, if a plaintiff’s actual guilt or innocence has any place in a criminal malpractice suit, the issue should be raised as an affirmative defense, not as an element of the plaintiff’s cause of action. The Angs find support in Shaw II, the only decision adopting the actual innocence requirement and shifting to the criminal malpractice defendant “the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence as to the actual guilt of the plaintiff.”
¶15 In sum, we conclude that the Angs were properly required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that they were actually innocent of the underlying criminal charges. We therefore affirm the Court of Appeals.
¶16 Plaintiffs’ Challenge to Adequacy of Jury Instructions on Underlying Criminal Charges. Instructing the jury that the Angs were required to prove their innocence of the criminal charges, the court identified those charges as “Tax Fraud, Bank Fraud, False Statement, and Conspiracy.” Jury Instruction 13, Br. of Appellants, App. 3. When the jury interrupted its deliberations to ask the court for the legal definitions of the charges, the court, in concert with counsel, advised the jury to “review carefully this Court’s instructions and the evidence (testimony and exhibits) admitted into evidence.” 27 Verbatim Report of Proceedings at 3822-30. (Among the exhibits admitted into evidence were the government’s and plaintiffs’ proposed jury instructions in the underlying criminal case.) Although the Angs’ counsel “readily agree [d]” to the court’s response to the jurors’ question, the Angs now contend that the trial court should have instructed the jury on the elements of each of the charged crimes. Id. at 3823.
¶17 This issue was not adequately raised. In their opening brief below, none of the Angs’ six assignments of error mentioned this alleged deficiency in the jury instructions, nor did any of their seven “issues pertaining to the assignments of error” address the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on the elements of the underlying criminal charges. RAP 10.3(a)(3). While the Angs’ fifth issue was whether it was “error in the legal malpractice trial to give
CONCLUSION
¶18 We conclude that, as plaintiffs in a criminal malpractice action, the Angs were properly required to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that they were actually innocent of the underlying criminal charges. We find no persuasive reasons for this court to follow the minority position and shift the burden to the defendant attorneys to prove that their former clients were actually guilty of the charged crimes. Finally, in light of RAP 10.3(a)(3) and prior precedent, which require an appellant to make “separate concise” assignments of error, tie those errors to legal issues, and argue those issues with some citation to authority, we decline to review the Angs’ challenge to jury instruction 13. We affirm the Court of Appeals.
Notes
The phrase “criminal malpractice” has been widely adopted to denote ‘legal malpractice in the course of defending a client accused of crime.” Otto M. Kaus & Ronald E. Mallen, The Misguiding Hand of Counsel — Reflections on “Criminal Malpractice,” 21 UCLA L. Rev. 1191, 1191 n.2 (1974).
Jury Instruction 12, Br. of Appellants, App. 3 (emphasis added). The jury instructions were not included among the clerk’s papers.
A number of jurisdictions “have imposed appellate, post conviction, or habeas relief, dependent upon attorney error, as a predicate to recovery in a criminal malpractice action, when the claim is based on an alleged deficiency for which appellate, post conviction, or habeas relief would be available.” Berringer v. Steele,
Falkner,
Concurrence Opinion
¶19 (concurring in dissent) — I agree with Justice Sanders that the trial court erred in instruct
Dissenting Opinion
¶22 We have clearly stated the standard for legal malpractice:
To establish a claim for legal malpractice, a plaintiff must prove the following elements: (1) The existence of an attorney-client relationship which gives rise to a duty of care on the part of the attorney to the client; (2) an act or omission by the attorney in breach of the duty of care; (3) damage to the client; and (4) proximate causation between the attorney’s breach of the duty and the damage incurred.
Hizey v. Carpenter,
¶23 The majority cites a Court of Appeals case, Falkner v. Foshaug,
¶24 Citing a “public policy” present in the minds of the individuals in the majority, the majority argues the defen
¶25 The issue is causation. Under our precedent, cause in fact is determined by the jury as a question of fact. Hartley v. State,
¶ 26 Legal causation is a subsequent inquiry, asking as a matter of law whether liability should attach. Hartley,
¶27 Here the Angs’s defense attorneys, Michael Martin and Richard Hansen, recommended a particular plea agreement. The Angs initially agreed but later withdrew the plea on recommendation from new counsel and were acquitted on all charges at a subsequent trial. They sued their former defense attorneys and a jury found that Martin alone was negligent, even though it found the Angs had not proved
¶28 I dissent.
Other jurisdictions have not added new elements to claims of criminal malpractice. See, e.g., Mylar v. Wilkinson,
Concurrence Opinion
¶29 (concurring in dissent) — I concur in Justice Sanders’ dissent but write separately to express my indignation that this court, based upon the policy of protecting lawyers, would carve out a special protection for criminal defense attorneys whose acts of professional negligence are harmful to their clients. Under this logic, it is not enough for the injured client to prove actual harm from the attorney’s failure to meet professional standards; the injured client must also prove that her hands were always clean. Under this logic, why not give immunity to accountants for professional negligence unless the accountant’s client can prove he or she never understated income or requested an unavailable deduction, even when the accountants’ bad acts caused actual harm to their clients or society? Surely tax dodgers should not profit from their misdeeds. Under this logic, why not give immunity to health care providers who harm their patients unless the patient can prove perfect good health but for the negligence of the provider? Surely the unhealthy should not profit from their illness.
¶30 But this logic ignores the fact that professionals owe a duty to the sick as well as the healthy; to the scrupulously honest business woman as well as the one looking for the angle; to the guilty as well as the innocent. Those of us caught in the grip of the law are always entitled to competent legal representation whether or not we are totally innocent. The heart of the criminal defense lawyer’s job is often not to prove absolute innocence; the irreducible core of the job is to make the state prove its case and make the best case for the defendant possible. Often the sole issue is the level of culpability and the sanction to be imposed upon the client. The government may seek multiple counts where a single count is appropriate, seek charges of a higher degree
¶31 The most troubling aspect of the actual innocence requirement announced by the majority lies with its origin. It is based upon a policy to protect lawyers from lawsuits. Tort actions are maintained for a variety of reasons, including the deterrence of wrongful conduct. Ford v. Trendwest Resorts, Inc.,
¶32 Second, while it may be true that a majority of courts that have reached the issue require the plaintiff to establish actual innocence, the numbers do not appear to be great. Only Missouri, New York, Massachusetts, Alaska, Pennsylvania, California, New Hampshire, Nebraska, Illinois, Florida, and Wisconsin require either proof of actual innocence or that the conviction was set aside on postconviction relief. See majority at 484 n.4. This is hardly a national consensus.
¶33 This court should protect the public from lawyers’ misdeeds, not the other way around. A plaintiff who is not categorically innocent seeking compensation under ordinary principles of tort law faces no light burden. Such a guilty plaintiff must prove a duty, a breach of that duty, injuries proximately caused by the breach, and the amount of his damages. I see no reason to provide additional protections for lawyers.
¶34 I would reverse.
