Lead Opinion
OPINION
1 1 Julie Iacono appeals the district court's determination that Bret B. Hicken did not commit attorney malpractice, despite breaching the requisite duty of care while representing Iacono in another matter, because his breach was not the actual or proximate cause of the damages Iacono suffered. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
12 Iacono's father (Father) and mother (Mother) created a family trust (the trust), naming themselves as the trustees and beneficiaries and leaving the residuary estate to their four children in equal shares. The original trust terms provided that the trust was revocable but became irrevocable upon the death of either Father or Mother.
183 The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Siblings, ruling that Siblings were entitled to a judgment as a matter of law regarding the validity of the trust amendment. In its memorandum decision, the district court concluded that
Utah case law does not specify whether irrevocable means that the trust may not be amended or altered. ... In addition, the drafter of the trust, [an attorney], believed the Family Trust could not be amended or changed. The Court is persuaded that the provision in the Family Trust making the Family Trust irrevocable upon the death of either of the Grantors means that the Family Trust could not be modified or amended. Accordingly, the Court con*120 cludes that the Trust Amendment is invalid and unenforceable.
Iacono settled the remaining trustee claims out of court "to minimize damages," and as a result, "Iacono received nothing from her parents' estate."
4 4 Iacono then brought a legal malpractice action (the Malpractice Case) against Hicken, arguing that Hicken's representation of Iaco-no in the Trust Case was negligent.
15 Iacono presented testimony from two witnesses at the Malpractice Case bench trial. First, an attorney practicing primarily in trusts and estates since 1977 testified as an expert, stating that the trust "had notable ambiguities, which caused confusion in determining whether the Trust was totally irrevocable or whether it could be amended." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) He additionally testified that Hicken's representation fell below the requisite standard of care and gave examples of arguments and Utah cases that Hicken could and should have used in defending against summary judgment. The expert identified three cases as especially helpful: West v. West (In re Estate of West),
T 6 The district court ruled that Hicken did breach the duty of care owed to Iacono but that the breach did not cause Iacono's damages. In reaching this decision, the court reviewed and analyzed the three cases relied on by Iacono's expert witness and stated that "it is impossible to predict what [the Trust Case judge] or any other objective trial court or even the Utah Supreme Court would or should have ruled in the [Trust] case, in light of the holdings in Clayton, Kline, and West."
T7 The district court's ruling considered only Iacono's negligence cause of action because it determined that the other causes of action were not "actively pursued and argued by the plaintiff and defended and argued by the defendants at trial." The district court also noted that punitive damages are not a cause of action in Utah, despite Iacono's framing of the matter as such, and that Iacono did not argue for punitive damages during closing arguments despite several direct questions from the court during closing arguments about damages.
18 Following the court's ruling, Iacono submitted a Motion to Amend Judgment or, in the Alternative Motion For a New Trial (Iacono's Motion for a New Trial), which the district court denied. Iacono now appeals, arguing that (1) the district court erred in determining that Iacono waived all but her negligence claim; (2) the district court's consideration of nonrecord evidence-the three cases referenced by the expert witness-constituted reversible error; (8) the district court erred in discounting the expert witness's testimony; (4) the district court's determination that there was no causal link between Hicken's breach and Iacono's damages was an abuse of discretion and its findings were clearly erroneous because the court based its ruling on insufficient record evidence and an erroncous view of the law; and (5) the district court erred in determining that the trust was not amendable as a matter of law.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
T9 Iacono's arguments on appeal present questions of fact and law. The district court's determination that Iacono waived certain claims, its ruling that the trust was not amendable as a matter of law, and its consideration of the three cases referenced by the expert witness are legal questions, which we, review for correctness. See generally State v. Pena,
T10 The district court's determinations that the expert witness's testimony was "unhelpful" and that causation was not established in light of the unsettled law regarding the Trust Case issues are factual determinations that "shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous," Utah R. Civ. P. 52(a). See Harline v. Barker,
ANALYSIS
I. Waiver of All But Iacono's Negligence Claim
11 Iacono argues that the district court erred in dismissing her request for punitive damages and dismissing her claims of legal malpractice alleging breach of fiduciary duty,
112 Generally, in a bench trial, closing arguments are not necessary. See, e.g., Fuentes v. Fuentes,
113 While we agree with Iacono on that point of law, the only claim that could be construed as dismissed due to Iacono's failure to address it in closing arguments is her request for punitive damages. With respect to that argument, the district court pointed out that a request for punitive damages "is not really a cause of action ... [and] was not argued by [Iacono] during closing arguments." Cf. Behrens v. Raleigh Hills Hosp., Inc.,
[ 14 As to Iacono's other causes of action, we do not believe that the district court dismissed these claims because of Iacono's failure to address them in her closing arguments. Rather, in its ruling on Iacono's Motion for a New Trial, the district court explained that Iacono "failed to present any facts at trial to persuade the court that [Hicken]" breached his fiduciary duties, breached his contract with Iacono, or breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
115 To allow the district court to consider Iacono's other substantive malpractice claims, Iacono had to present evidence of the elements of those claims. The elements of a legal malpractice cause of action based on breach of fiduciary duty are "(1) an attorney-client relationship; (2) breach of the attorney's fiduciary duty to the client; (8) causation, both actual and proximate; and (4) damages suffered by the client." Kilpatrick v. Wiley, Rein & Fielding,
{$16 The district court explained that Iacono "failed to present any facts at trial to persuade the court that [Hicken] failed to have undivided loyalty and failed to be confi
117 Iacono also argued that Hick-en's inadequate representation amounted to a breach of contract. A legal malpractice " 'action for breach of a promise is governed by rules of contract rather than rules of legal malpractice, " Bennett v. Jones, Waldo, Holbrook & McDonough,
118 Flowing from Iacono's breach of contract claim is her final cause of action that alleged that Hicken breached their attorney-client contract's implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. See generally Eggett v. Wasatch Energy Corp.,
{ 19 In sum, the district court did not err in dismissing Iacono's claims for breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing after finding that Iacono did not provide evidence to support these claims. Iacono's argument that these causes of action were dismissed because they were not addressed in her closing argument is simply not supported by the record.
II. Consideration of the West, Kline, and Clayton Cases
120 Iacono argues that the district court "committed reversible error by
21 Here, the district court informed the parties at the close of the trial that it would review the cases presented by the expert, and neither party objected at that time. In justifying its review of these three cases, the district court explained, "[AJs the legal decision maker in this matter, [the court] had to do its own analysis of the cases that [the expert] relied upon in making his decision...."
T22 Iacono compares the district court's actions to those of the court in Kunzler v. Kunzler,
123 Here, the review of the West, Kline, and Clayton cases does not fall within the same category of outside materials as in Kunszler. Indeed, the cases represent relevant law that the expert witness relied on extensively and that the court expressly informed the parties it was going to review. It is not typical trial practice for parties to submit into evidence printed copies of the law on which they rely, and generally, when printed copies are provided to the court, it is as a courtesy to save the court the time in having to find the cases itself-a search it likely would conduct on its own otherwise. To adopt Iacono's argument-that all law relied on by experts or parties to a proceeding must be formally admitted into evidence-would set an absurd precedent. A trial court is always free to consider prece-dential legal authority relied upon by the parties in evaluating the merits of a legal claim. To suggest that a court should instead have to rely on an expert's assessment of that authority is, frankly, inappropriate.
IIL. Expert Testimony
T24 Iacono next seeks a determination from this court "definitively statfing]l that expert testimony is required to establish causation" in all legal malpractice cases. Iacono argues that such a determination would render Hicken's failure to offer rebuttal expert testimony fatal to his case.
125 Iacono argues that such a determination could flow from Fox v. Brigham Young University,
126 Additionally, Iacono argues that other jurisdictions require expert testimony to prove causation in legal malpractice cases. However, the cases Iacono cites stand only for the principle that expert testimony may be required to prove causation. See, e.g., Hoover v. Larkin,
T27 In professional malpractice cases in general, "Utah courts have held that expert testimony may be helpful, and in some cases necessary, in establishing the standard of care required in cases dealing with the duties owed by a particular profession."
1 28 If we did decide to amend the law as such, Iacono argues that the district court, as fact finder in this case, would not have had the discretion to reject her expert's testimony. Even if expert testimony were required in this case, however, the burden of establishing causation was on Iacono, and the district court was not precluded from determining that her expert's testimony failed to establish causation even in the absence of expert testimony refuting causation. Consequently, the district court did not err in rejecting the legal conclusions of Iacono's expert witness. In general, "[the matter of witness credibility ... falls within the province of the fact-finder." Lamkin v. Lynch,
129 Here, the district court found the expert's testimony to be unconvincing. Specifically, the district court was concerned that the expert was not an experienced litigator and that this inexperience necessarily rendered his testimony less credible as to what arguments and cases Hicken ought to have discussed. Additionally, the district court interpreted the expert's testimony regarding various key issues as too vague to be helpful. For instance, "[oln cross examination by Hicken, [the expert] admitted that there was no way to know whether the Court would have decided differently had [the expert!'s arguments [regarding the West, Kline, and Clayton cases] been presented." As the trier of fact in this case, the district court's decision to discount the expert's testimony is consistent with the "evidence and reasonable inferences." See Child v. Gonda,
IV. The District Court's Causation Determination
1 30 Iacono argues that the district court's determination that there was no causal link between Hicken's breach and Iacono's damages was an abuse of discretion and clearly erroneous because the district court based its findings on insufficient record evidence and an erroneous view of the law. We disagree.
131 Causation is "the connection between fault and damages in legal malpractice actions [and] cannot properly be based on speculation or conjecture." Kilpatrick v. Wiley, Rein & Fielding,
A. Sufficiency of the Causation Evidence
132 First, Iacono reiterates two of the arguments addressed above-those regarding her expert's testimony and the court's decision in the Malpractice Case to independently read West, Kline, and Clayton, which were relied on by the expert. As previously discussed, the district court did not err by considering the case law relied on by the expert or by finding the expert's testimony unpersuasive. 'The district court interpreted the cases relied on by the expert differently than the expert in several ways and made its causation determination after carefully weighing the expert's testimony-which it concluded was unhelpful-and after analyzing the West, Kline, and Clayton cases. In its review of these cases, the district court determined that Clayton probably would have been construed against Iacono, see generally Clayton v. Behle,
11 33 Additionally, the district court was not convineed by the expert's often equivocal statements regarding causation and considered the expert's lack of litigation experience as a factor weighing against his testimony as to what Hicken should have done to successfully litigate the Trust Case. Based on this analysis, the district court stated that "it is impossible to predict what the [court in the Trust Case] or any other objective trial court or even the Utah Supreme Court would or should have ruled in the [Trust Clase." The district court then ruled that Iacono "failed to establish that there was a causal connection between the breach of duty owed by Hicken to [Iacono] and her loss of the home or its value in the [Trust Clase." As previously determined, the district court did not err by reviewing the three cases at issue, and its credibility determination with regard to the expert also was not clearly erroneous. Therefore, its reliance on its own interpretations of the cases and its discounting of the expert's testimony supported its ruling that Iacono had not demonstrated a causal connection between Hicken's breach and her loss.
134 Iacono further argues that irrespective of the trust language, the Trust Case court would have ruled that Father retained the power to revoke or amend the trust had Hicken brought the Clayton case to its attention. Specifically, Iacono focuses on Clayton for the proposition that "where the settlor is the sole beneficiary, by the weight of authority he can terminate the trust at any time and compel the trustee to reconvey the property to him."
135 In Clayton, the settlor created an irrevocable trust, and after being granted a divorcee a few months thereafter, he treated the trust assets as though they belonged to him. See id. at 1182-88. Four years later, the settlor "attempted to transfer those assets to various other trusts." Id. at 1183. The issue came down to whether the first trust was irrevocable. See id. The record indicated that the settlor intended that the original trust be irrevocable and was informed it was irrevocable by the attorney who drafted the trust. See id. The Clayton court speculated that in situations in which the settlor of an inter vivos trust does not carve out the right to revoke the trust, the trust may nonetheless terminate "where its continuance is not necessary to carry out a material purpose of the trust where all the beneficiaries thereof consent" and that "where the settlor is the sole beneficiary, ... he can terminate the trust at any time and compel the trustee to reconvey the property to him." Id. Notwithstanding that observation, the Clayton court affirmed the trial court's determination that the original trust was irrevocable on the grounds that "the settlor was not mistaken about the law of trusts and did not inadvertently fail to include a power of revocation in the trust instrument." Id. at 1134. In other words, the proposition now relied upon by Iacono-that "where the settlor is the sole beneficiary ... he can terminate the trust at any time and compel the trustee to reconvey the property to him," id. -was not determinative in Clayton; it was dictum. See generally Jones v. Barlow,
B. The District Court's Application of the Legal Standard
1386 Iacono contends the district court erred when applying a "more likely than not" standard to determine causation rather than a "reasonable likelihood" standard. Additionally, Iacono argues that the district court improperly applied a subjective rather than an objective standard of review by analyzing what the Trust Case court itself would have done had it been presented with the evidence suggested by Iacono's two witnesses.
1, Reasonable Likelihood Versus Likely than Not More
T37 Iacono argues that the proper standard to determine causation in a legal malpractice action is whether a "reasonable likelihood exists that [the plaintiff] would have ultimately benefited," Kilpatrick v. Wiley, Rein & Fielding,
138 Assuming without deciding that the district court applied the wrong standard here, Iacono's argument that the result would have been any different for her is unavailing. Most notably, the Trust Case court, in ruling on Siblings' motion for summary judgment, was aware that there was no Utah case law that clearly answered the amendability question and acknowledged that other states have held that trusts similar to the one in this case are not amendable. Thus, even under an arguably less onerous "reasonable likelihood" standard, it is not clear that the outcome would have changed had West, Kline, and Clayton been presented in the manner the expert espoused in light of the district court's determinations that these cases were only marginally helpful and that the expert's testimony was unpersuasive. In other words, had Hicken done everything the expert in trusts law would have done, it is still not reasonably likely that Iacono "would have ultimately benefited," see id. At best,
2. Objective Versus Subjective Standard
39 A legal malpractice action necessarily presents a "case within a case," and requires the reviewing court "'to establish what the result [of the underlying litigation] should have been (an objective standard), not what a particular judge or jury would have decided (a subjective standard)"" Glencore, Ltd. v. Ince,
140 In support of her argument, Iacono points to the district court's Order, which stated, "This was an expert witness that provided with no assurance that [the Trust Case court], in the underlying case, would have decided differently on the summary judgment motion, and that's what this was all about...." Iacono also directs our attention to statements made by the district court during the Malpractice Case bench trial that indicate that the court misunderstood its role in thinking it must "take [the expert's] research and make a decision as to what [it] think[s the Trust Case court] would have done had [it] had this information."
141 However, to put these quotations in context, the expert responded to the latter statement during the proceedings and clarified that the applicable standard of review involves an analysis of "[what [the Trust Case court] or, on appeal, what the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court would have ultimately ruled.... Basically, would a proper job have made a difference in this case?" In its Order, the district court then borrowed the expert's language almost word-for-word in rendering its causation conclusion, agreeing with Iacono that the causation determination is governed by an objective standard, and citing Glencore Ltd. v. Ince, 972 P.2d
V. Amendability of the Trust
1 42 Lastly, Iacono argues that the district court "erred in its determination that, as a matter of law, the trust was not amendable." In support of this contention, Iacono refers to the section of the Order in which causation is analyzed. Iacono appears to argue that because the Malpractice Case court, after analyzing the West, Kline, and Clayton cases, determined that causation was not proven, it necessarily also determined that the trust was not amendable.
T 43 This interpretation of the Order, however, misreads the district court's findings. The district court simply disagreed with the expert by finding West, Kline, and Clayton less helpful than the expert opined. In justifying that conclusion, the district court explained that the expert's lack of litigation experience detracted from his testimony as to how Iacono's Trust Case could have been more effectively litigated. Thus, the conclusion the district court reached was not that the trust was or was not amendable, but that the case law and arguments at the crux of Iacono's Malpractice Case did not do enough to clarify the Trust Case ambiguity for the Malpractice Case court to then conclude that Hicken's poor representation caused Iacono's loss in the Trust Case. Accordingly, there is no support in the record for Iacono's argument that the district court improperly determined that the trust was not amendable.
CONCLUSION
€ 44 The district court properly dismissed Iacono's breach of fiduciary duty, breach of contract, and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing legal malpractice claims after finding that Iacono did not provide evidence to support those claims. The West, Kline, and Clayton cases did not need to be formally admitted into evidence to permit the district court to review those cases. Therefore, the district court's decision to evaluate those cases was correct. Additionally, neither the district court's credibility determination of the expert's testimony nor its causation determination on Iaco-no's legal malpractice negligence claim are clearly erroneous. Any error the district court may have made in applying a "more likely than not" standard to determine causation rather than a "reasonable likelihood" standard was harmless and the district court correctly applied an objective rather than subjective standard to determine the same. Lastly, the district court did not err in ruling that the amendability of the trust remained unclear even in light of the evidence and arguments presented during the Malpractice Case.
1 45 Accordingly, we affirm.
Notes
. Specifically, the trust instrument stated, "This Trust shall be revocable, and may be altered, amended or modified, by the Grantors, by delivering to the Trustee a written document setting forth the changes or revocation. However, this Trust shall become irrevocable upon the death of either of the Grantors."
. Siblings alleged that Iacono wasted trust assets, and they brought causes of action based in accounting, fraudulent transfer of real property, and breach of fiduciary duties.
. The record is unclear as to whether Iacono at least received a vehicle upon Father's death. There appears to have been some debate as to whether the vehicle was actually part of Father's estate at all. Nonetheless, Iacono did not receive any proceeds from the sale of Father's Ogden home.
. Tacono also brought malpractice claims against Weaver, who is both a licensed attorney and a social worker, for his role in drafting the trust amendment, and respondeat superior claims against Vista Hospice Care, the medical facility where Weaver was employed as a social worker. The claims against Vista Hospice Care were settled and dismissed prior to the Malpractice Case bench trial, and the claims against Weaver were settled and dismissed prior to appeal.
. The district court noted that it "was appalled to learn from [Siblings' Trust Case attorney] that he and his firm had racked up attorney's fees of $60,000.00 for an estate that he valued at $200,000 to $300,000 in value-with the home included." With that in mind, the district court noted in its assessment of Hicken's representation that it did not fault Hicken "for failing to respond in kind" when Siblings' Trust Case attorney's " 'full-court press' was, indeed, intended to make [Iacono] cower and give up."
. As a preliminary matter, we believe Iacono satisfied the marshaling burden. See generally Chen v. Stewart,
. Parts I and II in the lead opinion represent the majority opinion. However, various aspects of sections III, IV, and V do not. See infra ¶¶ 46, 53.
. Iacono contends that "[elxpert testimony is generally required in Utah to establish the standard of care in an attorney malpractice case," (emphasis added), and cites Preston & Chambers, PC v. Koller,
. Primarily, Clayton v. Behle,
. Iacono quotes several other statements to support this notion. However, some of these statements were made by Hicken and the expert and are therefore not illustrative of the district court's alleged error. For instance, Iacono alleges that the district court asked the expert, in regard to the import of West, whether he "[felt] more likely than not, ... but no way to know with certainty [that West would have been followed]." However, this line of questioning was conducted by Hicken on cross-examination of the expert. It was not a question interjected by the court that could then be construed as demonstrative of the court's misunderstanding of the standard of review.
. We do not make any determination as to the amendability of the trust. We have merely determined that the Malpractice Case court did not err in ruling that the law regarding the amendability issues in the Trust Case was far from clear at the time of the Trust Case.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part and concurring in the result in part):
4 46 I concur in parts I and II of the lead opinion, but I concur only in result as to parts III, IV, and V of that opinion. Because Judge Orme concurs in part A of this opinion, it-not the lead opinion-expresses the rationale of the court as to the matters it addresses.
A.
147 On appeal, Iacono contends that but for Hicken's negligence, it was reason
$48 Second, because the only question of causation properly before us is whether, but for Hicken's negligence, Iacono would have prevailed on summary judgment, causation here presents a question of law. "[P Jroximate cause issues can be decided as a matter of law when a determination of the facts falls on either of two opposite ends of a factual continuum." Harline v. Barker,
149 In this respect, determining legal malpractice in the context of a summary judgment motion is akin to determining legal malpractice in the context of an appeal. And "the vast majority of courts that have addressed this issue have concluded that the issue of proximate cause in an appellate legal malpractice action presents a question of law for the court and not a question of fact for a jury." Governmental Interinsurance Exch. v. Judge,
" 50 Third, because causation is a question of law, expert testimony is superfluous. Deciding questions of law is the role of the judge, not a witness, even-as in this case-a highly qualified legal specialist, To determine what the law requires when applied to an uncontested set of facts, the parties need only brief and argue the matter to the court. Accordingly, we reject out of hand Iacono's contention that the district court erred in declining to adopt the opinions of her expert witness or in examining for itself the judicial opinions on which that expert relied. Cf. Watkiss & Saperstein v. Williams,
B.
51 Finally, the lead opinion affirms the court's finding that causation cannot be established because the state of the law was uncertain. It also declines to determine whether the trust was amendable. I do not believe the question of causation can be resolved without determining "what a reasonable judge should have done in the underlying case," see Harline,
{ 52 If the plaintiff in a legal malpractice case "successfully shows that his attorney erred under applicable law, it is well recognized that the attorney may still avoid liability by showing that his error was the result of an uncertain, unsettled, or debatable state of the applicable law." Watkiss & Saperstein,
. Our supreme court has stated that "[to qualify for immunity from liability for the consequences of an erroneous legal interpretation of unsettled and uncertain law, most courts demand that lawyers perform the research and investigation necessary to make an informed judgment." Watkiss & Saperstein v. Williams,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part and concurring in the result in part):
53 I concur in part A of the concurring opinion authored by Judge Voros. I concur in parts I and II of the lead opinion authored by Judge Davis and in the balance of the lead opinion to the extent it is not inconsistent with part A of Judge Voros's opinion.
