Lead Opinion
Christоpher Kuehne appeals the trial court’s judgment dismissing his legal malpractice action. On appeal, Kuehne contends that the trial court erred in dismissing his petition because it stated a claim for malpractice against his post-conviction attorney. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Factual and Procedural Background
In 1998, Christopher Kuehne was charged with the first degree statutory rape and first degree statutory sodomy of his daughter (“Daughter”). At trial, Connie Guerrero, Kuehne’s ex-girlfriend and Daughter’s mother (“Mother”), testified that Daughter had told her that Kuehne had been sexually abusing her. Daughter, who was ten years old at the time of the trial, testified regarding the abuse that had occurred when she was six or seven years old.
Kuehne’s defense at trial was that Mother and Daughter’s allegations were false. He sought to convince the jury that Mother had a history of making false allegations of sexual abuse and that Mother had fabricated the current allegations and influenced Daughter to falsely accuse Kuehne. In support of this theory, Kuehne’s trial counsel elicited testimony from Mother in which she admitted that she had made previous allegations of sexual abuse against Kuehne and that the Division of Family Services had found her allegations to be unsubstantiated.
The jury convicted Kuehne of the charges. This court affirmed Kuehne’s convictions on direct appeal. See State v. Kuehne,
On appeal, this court reversed and remanded Kuehne’s Rule 29.15 motion for a hearing on the issue of whether his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to call the four witnesses. See Kuehne v. State,
Kuehne also alleged that his trial counsel should have called Dаughter’s guardian ad litem to testify because she would have testified regarding Mother and Daughter’s failure to attend a meeting in which a therapist was to observe Kuehne’s interactions with Daughter. Finally, Kuehne alleged that his trial counsel should have called Kuehne’s former criminal attorney to testify. His former attorney would have testified that Mother provided police officers with a videotape that allegedly contained evidence of Kuehne abusing Daughter but that, after viewing the video, the police ceased their investigation of Kuehne.
This court found that, if these four witnesses testified as Kuehne said they would, their testimony would impeach Mother’s credibility and support Kuehne’s defense
After the denial of his Rule 29.15 motion was affirmed,
Hogan filed a motion to dismiss Kuehne’s petition, arguing that Kuehne failed to state a claim for legal malpractice and that she was protected by the doctrine of official immunity. The trial court granted the motion and dismissed the case with prejudice. This appeal by Kuehne followed.
Standard of Review
“The standard of review for a trial court’s grant of a motion to dismiss is de novo.” Lynch v. Lynch,
A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim “‘is solely a test of the adequacy of the plaintiffs petition.’ ” Le-Blanc v. Research Belton Hosp.,
Discussion
In his sole point on appeal, Kuehne contends that the trial court erred in dismiss
In order to survive a motion to dismiss, a plaintiff must allege facts sufficient to support the following four elements of a legal malpractice claim: (1) the existence of an attorney-client relationship; (2) negligence or a breach of contract by the attorney; (3) proximate causation of the plaintiffs damages; and (4) damages to the plaintiff. See Fox v. White,
Although there are no Missouri cases addressing whether a plaintiff may maintain a malpractice cause of action against his post-conviction attorney, there are several Missouri cases which address the elements a plaintiff must prove in a malpractice action against his trial counsel. See, e.g., State ex rel. O’Blennis v. Adolf,
While Missouri cases rejecting malpractice claims against á criminal defendant’s trial counsel have been decided, in part, based on the principles of collateral estop-pel, those cases also emphasize public policy concerns associated with such claims. For instance, in O’Blennis, the court concluded that to permit the continuation of the malpractice claim without requiring a showing of innocence would allow the convicted criminal ‘“to profit by his own fraud, or to take advantage of his own wrong, or to found a claim upon his iniquity, or to acquire property by his own crime.’” O’Blennis,
In light of the aforementioned cases, Hogan argues that, because Kuehne’s claim is premised on a challenge to the factual basis of his conviction, Kuehne must allege that he is actually innocent of the charges in order to prove causation and damages. Kuеhne contends that cases such as O’Blennis and Johnson do not apply to his claim in that he is attempting to maintain a malpractice claim against his post-conviction counsel, rather
Although there are no Missouri cases dealing with the specific issues raised in this appeal, we find the reasoning of a recent Wisconsin case addressing a similar issue to be persuasive. See Tallmadge v. Boyle,
After the defendant was convicted of fifteen counts of sexual assault and the convictions were affirmed on appeal, he retained an attorney to file a writ of habe-as corpus to secure post-conviction relief. Id. at 514-16. When the attorney failed to file a federal or state writ, the defendant filed an action against the attorney alleging legal malpractice. Id. at 517-18. The defendant argued that, because the attorney failed to file a writ of habeas corpus, the defendant lost his opportunity to file a writ, which prevented him from prevailing on the writ and obtaining a new trial. Id. at 523. The defendant also argued that he did not have to prove actual innocence because he was suing his post-conviction attorney rather than his trial counsel. Id. at 525.
The Wisconsin Court of Appeals nevertheless held that the defendant had to prove that he was actually innocent of the underlying criminal charges, noting that the actual innocence requirement is not limited to only criminal defendants who sue their former trial attorneys for malpractice. Id. The court listed several public policy considerations in support of its finding, including the concerns that permitting a convicted criminal to pursue a legal malpractice claim without requiring proof of innocence would allow the criminal to be indirectly rewarded for his crimes and would shock the public- conscience. Id.
We similarly find that the public policy concеrns underlying the actual innocence requirement in the context of a malpractice suit against a criminal trial attorney apply equally to cases involving a criminal defendant’s post-conviction counsel. Therefore, Kuehne’s innocence of the criminal charges for which he was convicted is essential to satisfy the causation element of his claim. Although Kuehne asserted in his petition that he is an innocent man, his allegation is merely a bare conclusion without factual support. The fact of his guilt was previously determined when he was convicted of the criminal charges, and Kuehne is therefore barred from asserting a collateral civil claim where actual innocence is an essential element.
Kuehne argues that to prеvail in his cause of action he need only prove that, absent his attorney’s negligence, he would have won his Rule 29.15 motion and received a new trial. That is a proposition that is hard to swallow since it could lead to a quite unhandy and repugnant scenario where a convicted inmate wins a damage award from the confines of his jail cell without ever establishing his innocence. In a case where a criminal defendant sues his post-conviction attorney for malprac
For these reasons, Kuehne has failed to state a legal malprаctice claim against his post-conviction attorney. Because we find that Kuehne failed to state a claim for malpractice, we do not reach the issue of official immunity. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judge WELSH concurs.
Notes
. Prior to his malpractice action, Kuehne also filed a federal habeas petition, which was denied.
. Although Hogan makes arguments regarding a purported breach of fiduciary duty claim, it appears from Kuehne's petition and brief on appeal that his only claim is one of legal malpractice based on Hogan’s alleged negligence. Therefore, we do not address Hogan’s arguments regarding a breach of fiduciary duty claim.
. This court reached the same conclusion in a case with similar facts which is handed down contemporaneously with this case. See Costa v. Allen,
. The court in Tallmadge similarly held that the criminal defendant had presented insufficient evidence of causation where he could not show that, but for his post-conviction attorney's conduct, he would have been successful not only in obtaining a new trial, but in obtaining an acquittal at a new trial. See Tallmadge,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I concur in the result reached by the majority, namely, affirming the trial court’s dismissal of Kuehne’s petition with prejudice. I am troubled, however, by the majority’s adoption of an actual innocence standard for malpractice cases brought by criminal defendants.
While the issue of whether public defenders are protected from malpractice claims by official immunity has been touched on in at least two prior Missouri cases, the question remains a matter of first impression in this State. In Johnson v. Schmidt,
Nevertheless, I would be remiss if I did not mention that the opinion issued by this Court in that first Costa case held that the doctrine of official immunity did not extend to public defenders. That opinion suggests that the result it reached was consistent with the majority of foreign jurisdictions. However, a careful review of case law frоm around the country leads me to the conclusion that the vast majority of jurisdictions extend immunity to public defenders in one form or another, whether it be judicial immunity, statutory immunity, official immunity, or some variation thereof. Moreover, some of the case law relied on in our prior opinion is mischaracterized. For instance, the opinion quotes a Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision, Reese v. Danforth,
The United States Supreme Court has left the question of immunity to the states, noting that “when state law creates a cause of action, the State is free to define the defenses to that claim, including the defense of immunity, unless, of course, the state rule is in conflict with federal law.” Fern v. Ackerman,
Immunities in this country have regularly been borrowed from the English precedents, and the public defender has a reasonably close ‘cousin’ in the English barrister. Like public defenders, barristers are not free to pick and choose their clients. They are thought to have no formal contractual relationship with their clients, and they are incapable of suing their clients for a fee. It is therefore noteworthy that English barristers enjoyed in the 19th century, as they still do today, a broad immunity from liability for negligent misconduct.
“The public duty doctrine shields public officers, and the governmental bodies that employ them, from liability for injuries or damages resulting from the officers’ breach of a duty owed to the general public and does not shield public officials from liability resulting from the breach of a duty owed to particular individuals.” Id. “ ‘By the public duty doctrine, a public employee is not civilly liable — even for breach of a ministerial duty — if that duty is owed to the general public rather than to a particular individual.’ ” Id. at 882 (quoting Jungerman v. City of Raytown,
Hogan relies instead on the defense of official immunity.
“Whether an act can be characterized as discretionary depends on the degree of reason and judgment required.” Southers,
On the other hand, “[a] ministerial function is one ‘of a clerical nature which a public officer is required to perform upon a given state of facts, in a prescribed manner, in obedience to the mandate of legal authority, without regard to his own judgment or opinion concerning the propriety of the act to be performed.’ ” Boever,
Kuehne contends that, beyond the discretionary/ministerial distinction, official immunity, like the public duty doctrine and sovereign immunity, requires that the actions of the state employee be “of the essence of governing.” An almost identical argument was recently addressed and rejected in Richardson v. City of St. Louis,
[T]o the extent [Appellant] argues that official immunity applies only to discretionary actions that are purely governmental in nature, this is not the law in Missouri. Missouri courts have routinely extended official immunity to discretionary acts even when the public official’s actions were not governmental in nature. See, e.g. State ex rel. St. Louis State Hosp. v. Dowd,908 S.W.2d 738 , 741 (Mo.App. E.D.1995) (supervisor at publiс hospital’s decision to turn on paper shredder was discretionary), abrogated on other grounds by Cain v. Mo. Highways and Transp. Comm’n,239 S.W.3d 590 (Mo. banc 2007); Warren v. State,939 S.W.2d 950 , 954 (Mo.App. W.D.1997) (prison officials’ decision regarding the absence of a safety guard on a table saw was discretionary). Recently, our Supreme Court thoroughly discussed the scope of official immunity and did not restrict immunity only to those actions which “go to the essence of governing,” See Southers,263 S.W.3d at 610-11 . Moreover, in looking closely at the source of the “essence of governing” language quoted in Eli Lilly,6 we find that the phrase was originally used by the Supreme Court in its Jones decision when discussing the contours of sovereign immunity rather than official immunity and therefore is of limited utility as we consider the reach of official immunity under the circumstances presented here.
In light of Richardson, any argument that public defenders shоuld not benefit from official immunity based on analogy to state employed physicians being subject to medical malpractice claims in reliance on State ex rel. Eli Lilly & Co. v. Gaertner,
Public defender Hogan raised official immunity as an affirmative defense to Kuehne’s claims. Accordingly, the question is whether Hogan was entitled to official immunity from the claims asserted in Kuehne’s petition. In order for this to be established and dismissal to be appropriate, Hogan’s entitlement to immunity must be apparent when the allegations in the petition are viewed in the light most favorable to Kuehne. Reynolds v. Diamond Foods & Poultry, Inc.,
Kuehne acknowledges in his petition that Hogan, who was appointed to represent him, was employed by the Missouri Public Defender System. Public defenders in the Missouri Public Defender System are undeniably “public employees.” The Office of the State Public Defender is a department within Missouri’s judicial branch. § 600.019.1.
Accordingly, we must next consider whether Hogan’s allegedly negligent acts were discretionary or ministerial in nature. In his petition, Kuehne claimed that Hogan was negligent in failing to secure the attendance of witnesses, necessary to support his claim for post-conviction relief despite Kuehne’s express instructions to do so.
“Whether an act can be characterized as discretionary depends on the degree of reason and judgment required.” Southers,
Thus, the only potential issue remaining is whether some compelling policy reason mandates that an exception be carved out of official immunity to render it inapplicable to public defenders. Having reviewed extensive case law on the subject and eon-sidered the policy concerns related to allowing publiс defenders to retain official immunity, I can only conclude that the reasons in favor of allowing public defenders to avail themselves of such immunity are far more compelling than those policy concerns that would favor excepting them from such immunity.
In Dziubak v. Mott,
Immunity from suit for public defenders best serves the indigent population in preserving the resources of the defender’s office for the defense of the criminally accused. Immunity also aids in the recruitment of qualified attorneys to represent indigent clients in criminal proceedings. Immunity preserves the criminal justice system which relies upon the judge, prosecutor and public defender as essential participants. This serves the best interests of indigent defendants and of society as a whole.... Since justice demands that a defense be provided to criminal defendants who are not able to afford privately retained counsel, it is essential that a sufficient number of qualified attorneys be willing and able to provide this defense. Immunity will aid in the continued recruitment of attorneys to perform this service in our criminal justice system; such service is eagerly sought by most attorneys. The accused defendant is not the sole beneficiary. Society as a whole depends on the role of defense counsel to secure an ordered system of liberty and justice, as ordained by our Constitution. The extension of immunity to public defenders will ensure that the resources*348 available to the public defender will be used for the defense of the accused, rather than diminished through the defense of public defenders against civil suits for malpractice. Immunity will conserve these resources to provide an effective defense to the greatest number of indigent defendants.
While obviously addressing judicial immunity, rather than official immunity, and whether to extend that doctrine, these policy reasons are equally applicable to deciding whether to except public defenders from our established official immunity doctrine. This opinion was shared by the Supreme Court of Vermont which found the policy arguments set forth in Dziubalc persuasive in its holding that public defenders were state employees entitled to statutory immunity for negligence while acting in within the scope of their employment just like any other state employee. Bradshaw v. Joseph,
The apparent paradox of having the government support and pay for a constitutionally adequate system of legal representation for those charged by the government with criminal offenses was inherent in the public defender system from the outset. It is a variant of numerous interbranch conflicts that inhere in our system of separation of powers, including the clear paradox of having the judicial branch decide constitutional challenges to legislative enactments whereas the Legislature appropriates the funds that sustain the judicial branch. The Legislature acknowledged the potential problem by providing in 13 V.S.A. § 5253(a) that “no other official оr agency of the state may supervise the defender general or assign [the defender general] duties in addition to those prescribed by this chapter.”
Categorizing public defenders as state employees for the purposes of § 5602 is not likely to exacerbate potential conflicts, and given the generally scarce resources with which defenders’ offices operate, may actually promote a vigorous and independent defense. As one court stated, quoting the public defender’s brief in that case:
The most probable result of ... a decision [not to grant immunity] would be the exact opposite of what the courts want. Both the Court and the Public Defender’s Office [seek] adequate representation of defendants in criminal procеedings .... however, if a civil rights suit from unsatisfied clients is a constant threat to the Attorney involved, then there would be a chilling effect upon Defense Counsel’s tactics. Defense Counsel would be caught in an intrinsic conflict of protecting himself and representing his client.
Brown v. Joseph,463 F.2d 1046 , 1049 (3d Cir.1972) cert. denied,412 U.S. 950 ,93 S.Ct. 3015 ,37 L.Ed.2d 1003 (1973). As the Dziubalc court pointed out in a related context, “Immunity also aids in the recruitment of qualified attorneys to represent indigent clients in criminal proceedings. Immunity preserves the criminal justice system which relies upon the judge, prosecutor and public defender as essential participants. This serves the best interests of indigent defendants and of society as a whole.”503 N.W.2d at 777 .
Id. (internal quotation omitted).
I find the rationale of the Dziubalc and Bradshaw courts compelling. In addition, the majority of jurisdictions addressing the issue, either judicially or legislatively, have extended immunity of some type to public defenders. See Bradshaw,
The few cases I have found from other jurisdictions denying immunity to public defenders address the application of judicial immunity or a form of common law immunity that was specifically limited to governmental policy-making officials. Florida, for example, has refused to extend its judicial immunity doctrine to public defenders because:
Considerations which require that a judge and prosecutor be immune from liability for the exercise of duties еssential to the administration of justice, do not require that the same immunity be extended to the public defender. While the prosecutor is an officer of the state whose duty it is to see that impartial*350 justice is done, the public defender is an advocate, who once appointed owes a duty only to his client, the indigent defendant. His role does not differ from that of privately retained counsel.
Schreiber v. Rowe,
New Jersey has also determined that absolute judicial immunity should not be extended to public defenders because, unlike judges and prosecutors, public defenders were not serving the interests of society as а whole and that public defenders are, therefore, subject to liability for malpractice. P.T. v. Richard Hall Cmty. Mental Health Care Ctr.,
I have previously noted that Pennsylvania has denied immunity to public defenders because that state’s official immunity doctrine established by common law only applies to policy-making officials and does not extend to “mere public employees.” Reese v. Danforth,
None of these cases are relevant to Missouri’s common law doctrine of official immunity and offer no compelling policy reason for exempting public defenders from official immunity as it exists in this State.
For the foregoing reason, it is my view that public defenders are clearly immune from malpractice claims under the official immunity doctrine in that they are state employees utilizing discretion in the course of their employment. Since Hogan is a public defender employed by the Missouri Public Defender System and the errors and omissions about which Kuehne complains in his petition were discretionary in nature, I would affirm the dismissal of Kuehne’s petition on the basis of official immunity. Accordingly, I concur in the result reached by the majority but do not join in the majority’s rationale for that result.
. My concern is equally applicable to the majority opinion in Costa v. Allen, No. WD 71055, (Mo.App.W.D.[date]), a case with similar facts being handed down contemporaneously with this case.
. The question was also raised in a federal case involving application of Missouri law but was not decided as the court held that the underlying action was barred by the statute of limitations. Underwood v. Woods,
. It is noteworthy that our Supreme Court's opinion after transfer decided the case solely on the bаsis that Costa's petition did not state a claim upon which relief could be granted in that it asserted “no claim for breach of fiduciary duty, constructive fraud, or otherwise.” Costa v. Allen,
. Official immunity was first recognized in 1854 and has been accepted policy in this State ever since. Southers v. City of Farmington,
. Official immunity is restricted to claims of negligence and does "not apply to conduct that is willfully wrong or done with malice or corruption.” Southers,
. Referring to State ex rel. Eli Lilly & Co. v. Gaertner,
. All statutory references are to RSMo 2000 unless otherwise noted.
. As a practical matter, virtually any decision or action taken by an attorney during trial involves the exercise of professional judgment and is clearly discretionary in nature.
Concurrence Opinion
concurs in separate concurring opinion.
