IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
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No.04-0681
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Kristin Terk Belt and Kimberly Terk Murphy, Joint Independent Executrixes of The Estate of David B. Terk, Deceased, Petitioners
v.
Oppenheimer, Blend, Harrison & Tate, Inc., Glen A. Yale, J. David Oppenheimer and Kenneth M. Gindy, Respondents
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On Petition for Review from the
Court of Appeals for the Fourth District of Texas
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Argued September 29, 2005
Chief Justice Jefferson delivered the opinion of the Court.
Justice Green did not participate in the decision.
Kristin Terk Belt and Kimberly Terk Murphy (the Terks)—the joint, independent executors of their father David Terk’s estate—sued several attorneys and their law firm, Oppenheimer, Blend, Harrison, & Tate, Inc. (collectively, the Attorneys) for legal malpractice. The Attorneys moved for summary judgment on the ground that estate planners owe no duty to the personal representatives of a deceased client’s estate. The trial court granted the motion, and the court of appeals affirmed the judgment. We hold, to the contrary, that there is no legal bar preventing an estate’s personal representative from maintaining a legal malpractice claim on behalf of the estate against the decedent’s estate planners. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand to the trial court for further proceedings.
I
Background
David Terk hired the Attorneys to prepare his will. After his death, the Terks became the joint, independent executors of their father’s estate. As executors, the Terks sued the Attorneys for legal malpractice, alleging that the Attorneys were negligent in drafting their father’s will and in advising him on asset management. They claim the estate incurred over $1,500,000 in tax liability that could have been avoided by competent estate planning.
In affirming
the trial court’s judgment for the Attorneys, the court of appeals cited
Barcelo v. Elliott, in which we held that beneficiaries cannot maintain a
malpractice cause of action against a decedent’s estate-planning attorney
because the attorney lacks privity with non-client beneficiaries and therefore
owes them no duty.
II
Discussion
Legal
malpractice claims sound in tort. See Cosgrove v. Grimes,
While an
attorney always owes a duty of care to a client, no such duty is owed to
non-client beneficiaries, even if they are damaged by the attorney’s
malpractice. See Barcelo,
Several policy considerations supported our Barcelo holding. First, the threat of suits by disappointed heirs after a client’s death could create conflicts during the estate-planning process and divide the attorney’s loyalty between the client and potential beneficiaries, generally compromising the quality of the attorney’s representation. Id. at 578. We also noted that suits brought by bickering beneficiaries would necessarily require extrinsic evidence to prove how a decedent intended to distribute the estate, creating a “host of difficulties.” Id. We therefore held that barring a cause of action for estate-planning malpractice by beneficiaries would help ensure that estate planners “zealously represent[ed]” their clients. Id. at 578-79.
Thus, in
Texas, a legal malpractice claim in the estate-planning context may be
maintained only by the estate planner’s client. This is the minority rule in the
United States—only eight other states require strict privity in estate-planning
malpractice suits.[1] In the majority of states, a
beneficiary harmed by a lawyer’s negligence in drafting a will or trust may
bring a malpractice claim against the attorney, even though the beneficiary was
not the attorney’s client. See, e.g., Lucas v. Hamm,
The question
in this case, however, is whether the Barcelo rule bars suits brought
on behalf of the decedent client by his estate’s personal
representatives. Because most states allow beneficiaries to maintain
estate-planning malpractice claims, only a handful of jurisdictions have
considered this specific issue. See, e.g., Beastall v. Madson, 600
N.E.2d 1323, 1327 (Ill. App. Ct. 1992); Hosfelt v. Miller, No. 97-JE-50,
Generally,
in Texas an estate’s personal representative[2] has the capacity to bring a survival
action on behalf of a decedent’s estate. See Austin Nursing Ctr., Inc. v.
Lovato,
A
When no
statute addresses the survivability of a cause of action, we apply common law
rules. Thomes v. Porter,
We have never
specifically considered whether a legal malpractice claim in the estate-planning
context survives a deceased client. A claim that an estate planner’s negligence
resulted in the improper depletion of a client’s estate involves injury to the
decedent’s property. See Tex.
Prob. Code § 3(z) (defining the “personal property” of an estate to
include interests in goods, money, and choses in action); see also Williams
v. Adams,
Thus,
estate-planning malpractice claims seeking recovery for pure economic loss are
limited to recovery for property damage. See id. Therefore, in accordance
with the long-standing, common-law principle that actions for damage to property
survive the death of the injured party, we hold that legal malpractice claims
alleging pure economic loss survive in favor of a deceased client’s estate,
because such claims are necessarily limited to recovery for property damage.[3] See G. H. & S. A. R. R. v.
Freeman,
The court of
appeals found for the Attorneys after holding that its prior decision in
Estate of Arlitt v. Paterson controlled.
We disapprove
Estate of Arlitt’s holding that no legal malpractice claim accrues before
death when an estate-planning attorney’s negligent drafting results in increased
estate tax consequences. Even though an estate may suffer significant damages
after a client’s death, this does not preclude survival of an estate-planning
malpractice claim. While the primary damages at issue here—increased tax
liability—did not occur until after the decedent’s death, the lawyer’s alleged
negligence occurred while the decedent was alive. Apex Towing Co. v.
Tolin,
B
Because legal
malpractice claims survive in favor of the decedent’s estate, the estate has a
justiciable interest in the controversy sufficient to confer standing. See
Austin Nursing Ctr., Inc. v. Lovato,
In this case,
it is undisputed that the Terks are the independent executors of their father’s
estate. Thus, they may bring a claim on behalf of the estate in their capacity
as personal representatives. Lovato,
C
In holding
for the Attorneys, the court of appeals noted that the policy concerns expressed
in Barcelo concerning suits against estate planners by intended
beneficiaries should also bar suits brought by personal representatives of an
estate.
While this concern applies when disappointed heirs seek to dispute the size of their bequest or their omission from an estate plan, it does not apply when an estate’s personal representative seeks to recover damages incurred by the estate itself. Cases brought by quarreling beneficiaries would require a court to decide how the decedent intended to apportion the estate, a near-impossible task given the limited, and often conflicting, evidence available to prove such intent. See id. at 578 (noting the problems associated with allowing extrinsic evidence to prove testator intent). In cases involving depletion of the decedent’s estate due to negligent tax planning, however, the personal representative need not prove how the decedent intended to distribute the estate; rather, the representative need only demonstrate that the decedent intended to minimize tax liability for the estate as a whole.[7]
Additionally,
while the interests of the decedent and a potential beneficiary may conflict, a
decedent’s interests should mirror those of his estate. Thus, the conflicts that
concerned us in Barcelo are not present in malpractice suits brought on
behalf of the estate. See Nevin v. Union Trust Co.,
We note,
however, that beneficiaries often act as the estate’s personal representative,
and our holding today arguably presents an opportunity for some disappointed
beneficiaries to recast a malpractice claim for their own “lost” inheritance,
which would be barred by Barcelo, as a claim brought on behalf of the
estate.[8] The temptation to bring such claims
will likely be tempered, however, by the fact that a personal representative who
mismanages the performance of his or her duties may be removed from the
position. See Tex. Prob.
Code § 222(b)(4). Additionally, even assuming that a beneficiary
serving as personal representative could prove, for example, that the deceased
client intended to maximize the size of the entire estate by leaving a larger
inheritance to the personal representative, he or she would not necessarily
recover the lost inheritance should the malpractice claim succeed. Because the
claim allowed under our holding today is for injuries suffered by the
client’s estate, any damages recovered would be paid to the estate
and, only then, distributed in accordance with the decedent’s existing estate
plan. See Russell,
Since our decision in Barcelo, we have allowed non-clients to maintain negligent misrepresentation suits against attorneys despite a lack of privity. McCamish, Martin, Brown & Loeffler v. F.E. Appling Interests, 991 S.W.2d 787, 791 (Tex. 1999) (party who entered into settlement agreement with lender, which could not be enforced after lender was declared insolvent, could bring suit against lender’s attorneys for representing that agreement would be enforceable). In doing so, we noted that the policy concerns expressed in Barcelo did not apply in the negligent misrepresentation context. Id. at 793. Such suits arise only in situations where an attorney has determined that communication with the third party is compatible with the attorney-client relationship and the attorney receives consent from the client to communicate with the non-client. Id. Thus, we held that allowing the third party to bring a negligent misrepresentation claim would not cause the client to “lose control over the attorney-client relationship,” a concern we expressed in Barcelo. Id. Additionally, we found that allowing negligent misrepresentation claims by non-clients would not subject attorneys to “almost unlimited liability,” because liability was limited to those situations in which the attorney provided information to a third party with the knowledge that the third party intended to rely on it. Id. at 794.
These principles apply here. Limiting estate-planning malpractice suits to those brought on behalf of a client’s estate by a personal representative will prevent the client from “losing control of the attorney-client relationship,” because the interests of the estate—which merely “stands in the shoes” of the client after death—are compatible with the client’s interests. Additionally, limiting the class of potential estate-planning malpractice claimants to the personal representatives of a client’s estate will ensure that estate-planning attorneys are not subject to “almost unlimited liability.”
Finally, we
note that precluding both beneficiaries and personal representatives from
bringing suit for estate-planning malpractice would essentially immunize
estate-planning attorneys from liability for breaching their duty to their
clients. As the Barcelo dissent noted, however, allowing estate-planning
malpractice suits may help “provide accountability and thus an incentive for
lawyers to use greater care in estate planning.”
III
Conclusion
The Terks—in their capacity as personal representatives of their father’s estate—may maintain an estate-planning malpractice claim against the Attorneys. We therefore reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Tex. R. App. P. 60.2(d).
______________________________
Wallace B. Jefferson
Chief Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: May 5, 2006
Notes
[1] See Robinson v. Benton,
[2] The definition of “personal representative” includes an "executor, independent executor, administrator, independent administrator, [or] temporary administrator, together with their successors." Tex. Prob. Code § 3(aa).
[3] A number of other jurisdictions have allowed legal
malpractice claims to survive a decedent. See, e.g., Loveman v. Hamilton,
[4] Some states have used similar reasoning in determining
that estate planning malpractice claims do not survive, and a few of those
courts have held that language in their state’s survival statute necessitated
such a result. See McDonald v. Pettus,
[5] We note that, while an injury occurred during the
decedent’s lifetime for purposes of determining survival, the statute of
limitations for such a malpractice action does not begin to run until the
claimant “discovers or should have discovered through the exercise of reasonable
care and diligence the facts establishing the elements of [the] cause of
action.” Apex Towing Co. v. Tolin,
[6] See Stanley L. & Carolyn M. Watkins Trust v.
Lacosta,
[7] A testator may intentionally structure the estate in a way that does not minimize tax liability. Thus, courts should not presume that the testator intended to minimize tax liability; rather, it is the complaining party’s burden to present evidence of this intent.
[8] For example, a spouse that is both a beneficiary and personal representative may argue that, if the estate-planning attorney had not committed malpractice, the spouse would have received a larger inheritance and the decedent’s estate would have suffered a lower tax burden, because the estate could have taken better advantage of the unlimited marital tax deduction. Under our holding today, a personal representative could maintain such a claim only if the representative established that the estate-planning attorney negligently failed to structure the estate in accordance with the testator’s wishes, and the estate incurred damages as a result.
