The district court dismissed for failure to state a claim a diversity suit that charges breach of contract, legal malpractice, and breach of fiduciary duty, all in violation of Illinois law. The plaintiffs are Hilary Winniczek and his wife, Danuta; the defendant is a lawyer, Sheldon Nagel-berg. The complaint, our only source of facts, alleges the following. Winniczek was charged with a variety of federal criminal offenses arising from his participation in a scheme to help people obtain commercial drivers’ licenses fraudulently. He hired a lawyer named Petro to represent him. Nagelberg got wind of the matter and advised the Winniczeks that Petro was inexperienced in federal criminal matters and they should fire Petro and hire him; and they did so. Nagelberg then told them that Winniczek had a good defense to
Winniczek does not claim to be innocent of the crimes for which he was convicted, and this dooms his claim for legal malpractice. (His wife, not having been represented by Nagelberg, obviously has no malpractice claim.) Under Illinois law, as that of other states, a criminal defendant cannot bring a suit for malpractice against his attorney merely upon proof that the attorney failed to meet minimum standards of professional competence and that had he done so the defendant would have been acquitted on some technicality; the defendant (that is, the malpractice plaintiff) must also prove that he was actually innocent of the crime,
Kramer v. Dirksen,
The “actual innocence” rule differs from the rule applicable to malpractice arising out of civil matters. There the only requirement is, as in all tort cases, that the plaintiff prove he was injured by the defendánt’s negligence. If the malpractice involved the handling of a lawsuit, all he has to prove is that he would have won had it not been for the lawyer’s negligence.
Cedeno v. Gumbiner,
The reason for the difference is not that criminals are disfavored litigants, though there are hints of such a rationale in some cases.
Kramer v. Dirksen, supra,
This analysis shows that the logic of the “actual innocence” rule does not extend to a case in which the complaint is not that the plaintiff lost his case because of his lawyer’s negligence, but that he was overcharged. The fact that one of the plaintiffs, namely Mrs. Winniczek, wasn’t even charged with a crime merely underscores the district court’s error. She is seeking restitution of money obtained from her by false pretenses or breach of an implied contract.
Wood v. Wabash County,
To see why count one is not about malpractice, imagine that Nagelberg had promised to represent Winniczek for a fee of $50,000, plus $25,000 in prepaid expenses of which any amount not expended was to be returned to Winniczek. Suppose further that Nagelberg had done a superb though ultimately unsuccessful job in representing Winniczek but had incurred expenses of only $5,000 and refused to refund the balance of the $25,000 in prepaid expenses. There would be no malpractice, in the sense of incompetent representation — and there would be nothing in the thinking behind the actual-innocence rule to suggest that Winniczek should not be allowed to enforce his contract just because he had been convicted. So we are not surprised that the courts that have confronted this type of case- — no Illinois court has — have held that the actual-innocence rule is not a bar.
Bird, Marella, Boxer & Wolpert v. Superior Court,
We expect that if and when such a case is presented to an Illinois court, it will decide it the same way. Nagelberg argues, however, that the Winniezeks’ complaint alleges only malpractice (which the actual-innocence rule bars). But that is not correct. The complaint has two counts, remember, and only the second is captioned “professional negligence” (i.e., malpractice); the first is captioned “breach of contract/fiduciary duty.” It is true that the narrative portion of count one accuses Nagelberg not only of overcharging and of charging for services not rendered but also of being careless, for example in failing to read the statements by Winniczek to the authorities that showed he had no defense. But the fact that a breach of contract is negligent rather than willful does not change the character of the breach. Sometimes a contract is broken willfully, sometimes unavoidably (circumstances beyond the promisor’s control, but not rising to the level at which he would have a defense of impossibility or
force majeure,
might have prevented him from fulfilling his promise), and sometimes carelessly (the promisor should have realized he couldn’t fulfill his promise — that he had bitten off more than he could chew). Since liability for breach of contract is, in general, strict liability,
Zapata Hermanos Sucesores, S.A. v. Hearthside Baking Co.,
The point is that in count one — -unlike count two — the Winniezeks are not trying to blame Nagelberg for the fact that Win-niczek was convicted; that would be a malpractice claim and, if it could be maintained (it could not, because of the actual-innocence rule), the measure of damages would be the cost to Winniczek of being convicted, imprisoned, .and fined.
Levine v. Kling, supra,
Nagelberg argues that, even so, the Winniezeks’ exclusive remedy is to com
Nor is there a basis for supposing that only the court in which, as it were, the breach of the lawyer’s contract with his client occurred has exclusive jurisdiction over the contract suit. That is not the rule in ordinary civil malpractice, see
McKnight v. Dean, supra,
The dismissal of count two is affirmed, but the dismissal of count one is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Remanded.
