147 Wash. 2d 536 | Wash. | 2002
Lead Opinion
— At issue in this case is whether the Court of Appeals properly affirmed summary dismissal of a title company’s negligent misrepresentation claim against a law firm representing an estate. The Court of Appeals concluded as a matter of law that the title company could not have justifiably relied upon a letter from the law firm informing the title company that, based upon the firm’s tax preparation, no estate taxes were due. Because we conclude that the reasonableness of the title company’s reliance remains an issue for the trier of fact, we reverse the Court of Appeals and remand this matter for trial.
Jae Kon Baik, a citizen of South Korea who had arrived in the United States in June 1991 on a tourist visa, died in Oregon on October 4, 1991. At the time of his death, Baik owned substantial residential and commercial property in Washington and had been preparing to apply for permanent residency in the United States. His widow, Soon Baik, retained Anderson, Burrows & Galbraith (the Law Firm) to probate his intestate estate (the Estate), which had assets of nearly $2 million. As attorney for the Estate, Grant B. Anderson delegated work to Sang I. Chae, who was fluent in both Korean and English and whom Anderson was then supervising as a Rule 9 intern.
In late October 1991, Anderson initiated probate proceedings and petitioned to have Soon Baik appointed the Estate’s personal representative. Soon Baik moved to Canada a short time later. By letter of November 11,1991, Anderson informed Soon Baik of her duties as personal representative and summarized such steps as identifying the Estate’s assets, appraising them, and determining any state and federal taxes owing from the Estate.
In late April 1992, Chae, while still a Rule 9 intern, selected Hyun Park, a certified public accountant who had seven years of experience but had never done an estate tax
The deadline for submission of the Estate’s federal tax return was July 5, 1992, nine months after Jae Kon Baik’s death. Although Park had completed his work and signed the return on May 22, 1992, the Law Firm continued to work on the tax matters through mid-July 1992. Two questions central to the Estate’s tax consequences were whether the decedent was classifiable as a resident and whether certain property was community property or separate. By according the decedent resident status, the Estate would qualify for a unified tax credit of approximately $192,000, instead of the credit of $13,000 applicable to nonresidents. Similarly, the property’s classification as community property would reduce the size of the taxable estate. In a letter dated May 29, 1992, Chae advised Jae Kon Baik’s immigration attorney, Bart Klein, that the Law Firm was “currently involved with the resolution of the estate’s tax liability issue” and needed information that would support the Law Firm’s claim that the decedent should be classified as a resident. CP at 754. Chae repeated the request on July 1, 1992, describing the information as necessary “in the event the IRS [Internal Revenue Service] disagrees with our tax return.” CP at 755. Klein responded with an affidavit dated July 14, 1992.
Before Chae received Klein’s affidavit, and four days before the Law Firm filed the federal estate tax return for the Estate, Chae wrote the opinion letter to Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation (Lawyers Title) that is central to this litigation. The request for the opinion letter arose from the transfer of the Estate’s residential property. In response to litigation brought against the Estate by the decedent’s brother, Jae Ok Baik, Anderson negotiated a settlement in late December 1991 whereby the Estate quitclaimed the residential property to Jae Ok Baik and his wife “free and clear of any liens or encumbrances.” CP at 568, 714, 1026. In June 1992, the couple sought to sell the residential property to their two sons and their sons’ wives for $190,000. The children applied to a mortgage lender for a loan of $152,000, and the mortgage lender required the borrower to obtain title insurance. According to Roberta Robbins, a senior title officer at Lawyers Title, because Lawyers Title’s initial review showed that the property had been formerly owned by the Estate, the preliminary commitment for the policy included an exception for estate taxes. Robbins stated that it was Lawyers Title’s customary practice to remove an exception for estate taxes “upon receiving a written statement from the attorney for the estate that no estate taxes were due.”
Written on the Law Firm’s stationery and signed by Chae, the opinion letter reads as follows:
This office represents the estate of Jae K. Baik and its personal representative Mrs. Baik.
By this letter I am informing you that, based on our tax preparation, no estate taxes are due and owing to the state or federal government. Likewise, to my knowledge, no other taxes are outstanding against the estate.
If you have any further questions, please give me a call. Please bill Mr. Baik $50.00 for my time. Thank you.
CP at 224. Chae later “surmise [d]” that, given his request that Lawyers Title “bill Mr. Baik $50.00 for [Chae’s] time,” Lawyers Title’s request was related to “Baik’s refinancing or sale.” CP at 161; see also CP at 173. Chae also agreed that it “[w]ould ... be a fair statement” that “informing the title company on July 13th, 1992 that no taxes were due . . . would benefit the estate,” since the Estate’s settlement agreement had “transfer [red] that house free and clear of all liens.” CP at 162. In sum, the opinion letter satisfied the lender (who wanted a policy that included no exceptions), Lawyers Title (who wanted to accommodate its insured), and Jae Ok Baik (who could have reasonably expected the Estate’s attorney to substantiate the terms of the agreement that had transferred the property to him and his wife in the first place).
In November 1992, Chae contacted Lawyers Title to obtain title insurance for the purchaser of the Estate’s commercial property. Robbins surmised that Chae had apparently had the previous transaction in mind since he chose Lawyers Title, contacted her unit in particular, and closed his letter with the remark, “I am looking forward to
On July 21, 1995, having concluded its investigation, the IRS assessed taxes against the Estate of $392,733, including a penalty of $18,702 for failing to file a timely return. In 1997, the IRS levied on the real property transferred by the Estate. Covering its insureds, Lawyers Title paid the IRS $618,195.53, the total amount that the Estate owed in taxes, penalties, and interest.
Lawyers Title filed suit against the Law Firm, Anderson, and Chae.
ISSUES
(1) Should this court conclude as a matter of law that the respondents did not supply “false information” to Lawyers Title?
(2) Should this court conclude as a matter of law that the respondents owed Lawyers Title no duty of care?
(3) Did the Court of Appeals properly conclude as a matter of law that Lawyers Title could not have justifiably relied on the respondents’ letter?
ANALYSIS
Standard of Review. The trial court dismissed on summary judgment Lawyers Title’s negligent misrepresentation claims against the respondents. An appellate court reviews a trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, engaging in the same inquiry as the trial court and viewing the facts and the reasonable inferences from those facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Wilson v. Steinbach, 98 Wn.2d 434, 437, 656 P.2d 1030 (1982). Summary judgment is appropriate where “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” CR 56(c).
“One who, in the course of his business, profession or employment, or in any other transaction in which he has a pecuniary interest, supplies false information for the guidance of others in their business transactions, is subject to liability for pecuniary loss caused to them by their justifiable reliance upon the information, if he fails to exercise reasonable care or competence in obtaining or communicating the information.”
Id. (quoting Restatement (Second) op Torts § 552(1) (1977)). Thus, to prevail on a claim of negligent misrepresentation, a plaintiff must prove by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence that he or she justifiably relied on the information that the defendant negligently supplied. Id. The ESCA court approved the trial court’s jury instruction, which required the plaintiffs to prove six elements:
“(1) That [the defendant] supplied information for the guidance of others in their business transactions that was false; and
“(2) That [the defendant] knew or should have known that the information was supplied to guide [the plaintiff] in business transactions; and
“(3) That [the defendant] was negligent in obtaining or communicating false information; and
“(4) That [the plaintiff] relied on the false information supplied by [the defendant]; and
“(5) That [the plaintiff’s] reliance on the false information supplied by [the defendant] was justified (that is, that reliance was reasonable under the surrounding circumstances)', and
“(6) That the false information was the proximate cause of damages to [the plaintiff].”
Id. at 827-28 (emphasis added) (quoting CP at 1359 (Jury Instruction 17)).
In the present case, the respondents attacked elements (1), (2), and (5) above in their summary judgment motions.
Whether Respondents Supplied False Information. The respondents argue that Lawyers Title’s negligent misrepresentation claim fails because, “[a]s a matter of law, Mr. Chae made no false representations” in his opinion letter to Lawyers Title. Suppl. Br. of Resp’t at 3; see Resp’t Anderson’s Mem. in Opp’n to Pet. for Review at 13. Claiming that “[t]here is nothing inaccurate about these statements,” CP at 1006, the respondents quote the second paragraph of Chae’s letter:
“By this letter I am informing you that, based on our tax preparation, no estate taxes are due and owing to the state or federal government. Likewise, to my knowledge, no other taxes are outstanding against the estate.”
CP at 224, 1006. In the respondents’ view, Chae was doing nothing more than accurately reporting the conclusion that Park had reached regarding the Estate’s tax liability: “According to the estate tax return completed by Mr. Park nearly two months earlier, [Chae] was absolutely correct: no estate taxes were due and owing.” CP at 1006-07; see Resp’t
The respondents’ approach to the “false information” element of a negligent misrepresentation claim would immunize all communications that were explicitly (or even arguably) presented as opinions. Every defendant would claim that he or she had accurately and truthfully stated his or her opinion, and the content of even the most negligently obtained opinion would go unexamined: whether the opinion had been derived by tossing a coin or consulting an astrologer would be of no consequence, so long as the letter accurately stated the opinions that those methods had yielded.
Whether Respondents Breached a Duty of Care. The respondents maintain that when Chae sent the opinion letter to Lawyers Title, they owed the title company no duty of care. Under section 552(1) of the Restatement, to be liable for negligent misrepresentation, a defendant must have “supplie[d] false information” while “in the course of his business, profession or employment, or in any other transaction in which he has a pecuniary interest.”
But the respondents stopped reading too soon. Comment d has greater applicability here:
*549 The fact that the information is given in the course of the defendant’s business, profession or employment is a sufficient indication that he has a pecuniary interest in it, even though he receives no consideration for it at the time. It is not, however, conclusive. But when one who is engaged in a business or profession steps entirely outside of it, as when an attorney gives a casual and offhand opinion on a point of law to a Mend whom he meets on the street, or what is commonly called a “curbstone opinion,” it is not to be regarded as given in the course of his business or profession; and since he has no other interest in it, it is considered purely gratuitous.
(Emphasis added.) That Chae rendered the opinion in the course of his profession, sent it out on the Law Firm’s letterhead, and assessed a $50 fee for the task all provide “a sufficient indication” that the respondents had “a pecuniary interest” in sending the letter to Lawyers Title. Moreover, Chae had certainly not “stepfped] entirely outside of’ his profession to render “a ‘curbstone opinion,’ ” nor did nonpayment of the requested fee transform the letter into a “purely gratuitous” act. At the very least, the respondents acquired an indirect benefit from the letter, for as Chae acknowledged, the letter’s assurance that no estate taxes were due served to reaffirm the Law Firm’s prior representation to the decedent’s brother that the Estate had transferred the residential property to him “free and clear of all liens.” CP at 162.
In addition to contending that they had no duty to Lawyers Title because they lacked a pecuniary interest in the transaction, the respondents have also suggested that they had no duty because they lacked the necessary knowledge. In the jury instruction accepted in ESC A, the plaintiff was required to prove that the defendant “ ‘knew or should have known that the information was supplied to guide [the plaintiff] in business transactions.’ ” 135 Wn.2d at 827 (quoting CP at 1359 (Jury Instruction 17)); see also Haberman v. Wash. Pub. Power Supply Sys., 109 Wn.2d 107, 162, 744 P.2d 1032, 750 P.2d 254 (1987) (observing that the duty element is met “where . . . the defendant has knowledge of the specific injured party’s reliance”). Here,
In sum, we decline to hold as a matter of law that, for purposes of a negligent misrepresentation claim, the respondents owed no duty of care to Lawyers Title.
Whether Lawyers Title’s Reliance on the Letter Was Justifiable. The respondents ask this court to affirm the conclusion of the Court of Appeals that, as a matter of law, Lawyers Title was not justified in relying on the Law Firm’s representations. A threshold question concerning “justifiable reliance,” as that term is used in section 552(1) of the Restatement, is whether this state has also embraced section 552A, which bars recovery for negligent misrepresentation if the plaintiff has been contributorily negligent.
We reject the applicability of section 552A to negligent misrepresentation claims in Washington. In ESCA, we held that RCW 4.22.005, the uniform comparative fault
The respondents’ position, adopted by the Court of Appeals, eliminates the jury’s role in assessing whether Lawyers Title’s reliance on the letter was reasonable under the circumstances. Urging this court to hold as a matter of law that Lawyers Title’s reliance was unjustifiable, the respondents look to inapposite prior case law. For example, they turn to Puget Sound National Bank v. McMahon, 53 Wn.2d
Plainly, McMahon, Williams, and Skagit State Bank do not address the “justifiable reliance” element of the tort of negligent misrepresentation and shed no light on Washington’s adoption or rejection of the contributory negligence bar of section 552A. In any case, that Lawyers Title was not in the same position as the representees in those three opinions distinguishes those cases on their facts. In Williams and Skagit State Bank, the representees had before them, respectively, deposit slips and loan documents that unequivocally showed the falsity of the representations at issue, while in McMahon the plaintiff’s physical inspection of the apartment building, in tandem with her vast experience in the rental business, gave her the opportunity to see the falsity of the seller’s income projection for the apartments. In contrast, Lawyers Title had nothing before it that would have contradicted the written assurances of the Estate’s tax attorneys. And we reject the respondents’ position that, as a matter of law, Lawyers Title should have replicated the work of the Estate’s tax attorneys and thereby created for itself something with which to contradict the Law Firm’s representation regarding taxes; the jury may weigh the soundness of that position as it considers whether Lawyers Title’s reliance on the Law Firm’s letter was reasonable under the surrounding circumstances.
CONCLUSION
We decline to conclude as a matter of law that Lawyers Title’s reliance was unreasonable under the circumstances, that the Law Firm made no misrepresentations, or that the Law Firm owed Lawyers Title no duty of care. The Court of
Alexander, C.J., and Smith, Ireland, Bridge, and Chambers, JJ., concur.
Anderson maintains that, after Chae passed the Washington State Bar exam in May 1992 and became an associate with the Law Firm, Chae was given sole responsibility for the Estate file, but Chae contends to the contrary that all of his work for the Estate was done under Anderson’s supervision.
Under the heading “FEDERAL ESTATE TAX RETURN,” the letter provides as follows: “The federal estate tax laws require that the Personal Representative for an estate file the IRS [Internal Revenue Service] Form 706, Federal Estate Tax Return, if a federal estate tax is due and payable for the estate. However, in computation of the federal estate tax, only those assets of the decedent’s estate exceeding the federal estate tax exemption, which is presently the sum of $600,000.00, are subject to the federal estate tax. This federal estate tax must be paid within nine months from the decedent’s date of death. If it is determined that the IRS Form 706 is required for this estate, this office will assist you in the preparation and filing of the Federal Estate Tax Return.” CP at 707-08 (emphasis added).
As Klein’s affidavit shows, at the time of Baik’s death, Klein had received Baik’s medical clearance and the documentation of his mother’s support for his permanent residency application, but he had not filed Baik’s application for permanent residency.
CP at 633. Lawyers Title’s Policy Writing and Exception Manual includes the following directions: “If it is determined that a return is required, but because of
Robbins pointed out that the preliminary commitment for the policy on the commercial property showed that the property was not in fact owned by Chae’s client, the Estate, but instead was owned by Jae Ok Baik and his wife. Chae responded that the quitclaim deed from the Estate to Jae Ok Baik had erroneously included a description of the commercial property; Chae proceeded to correct the error by having Jae Ok Baik quitclaim the commercial property back to the Estate. Lawyers Title’s file on the commercial property included a copy of the new quitclaim deed, dated December 7, 1992. See CP at 634, 675.
Also named as defendants were Soon Baik and three of the estate beneficiaries, Jong Baik, Nam Baik, and Ae Kim. After Soon Baik and Jong Baik were served in Canada but failed to appear, a default judgment was entered against
The respondents cannot reasonably claim that their letter is merely reporting Park’s results; the letter, written on the Law Firm’s letterhead, acknowledged that the Law Firm represented the Estate and that the Law Firm prepared the tax return—“based on our tax preparation.” CP at 224 (emphasis added).
Embracing this myopic interpretation of the “false information” element, the dissent looks no further than Chae’s “true statements” that the Law Firm completed the Estate’s tax return and found no taxes owing. Dissent at 556-57.
In a number of the illustrative examples in the Restatement, the information at issue is an opinion: for example, in illustration 10, an accountant is hired “to
Nothing in Washington case law supports the contention that attorneys are exempt from liability to nonclients for negligent misrepresentation. In Hines v. Data Line Sys., 114 Wn.2d 127, 150, 787 P.2d 8 (1990), this court considered whether the plaintiffs had established against Perkins Coie the elements of negligent misrepresentation set forth in section 552(1). The Restatement does not exempt attorneys from those liable for supplying false information and uses an attorney in at least one of its accompanying comments. See Restatement § 552 cmt. d.
“The recipient of a negligent misrepresentation is barred from recovery for pecuniary loss suffered in reliance upon it if he is negligent in so relying.” Restatement § 552A. Paraphrasing the rule, comment a simply states that “the contributory negligence of the plaintiff in relying upon the misrepresentation will bar his recovery.” Id. at cmt. a.
The dissent’s approach to the “justifiable reliance” element suffers from the same limitation found in the Court of Appeals decision. Sidestepping the applicability of section 552A to negligent misrepresentation claims in Washington, the dissent never establishes whether Lawyers Title must be a fault-free plaintiff or may maintain its claim despite having been to some degree contributorily negligent. See dissent at 557.
That applying comparative fault principles to damages necessarily means that comparative fault principles will govern the “justifiable reliance” element as well is evident in the following general comments about comparative fault and negligent misrepresentation: “The prevailing view is that comparative negligence principles are applicable to negligent misrepresentations.... The rationale for this view rests on the notion that there is no reason to differentiate negligent misrepresentations from any other forms of negligence, and therefore, the ordinary rules as to comparative or contributory negligence should apply. Where the recipient of a negligent misrepresentation is negligent in relying upon the misrepresentation, this view would decrease the plaintiff’s recovery to the extent of the plaintiff’s own negligence in so relying.” Sonja Larsen, Annotation, Applicability of Comparative Negligence Doctrine to Actions Based on Negligent Misrepresentation, 22 A.L.R.5th 464, 471 (1994) (emphasis added).
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting) — The majority rejects the Court of Appeals conclusion that Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation’s reliance on the Anderson, Burrows & Galbraith’s (the law firm) alleged misrepresentation was unjustified as a matter of law. Majority at 552. But I find no misrepresentation.
Lawyers Title has no cause of action for negligent misrepresentation because the law firm made no false statements. In a claim for negligent misrepresentation the plaintiff must prove the defendant made a false statement by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence. Trimble v. Wash. State Univ., 140 Wn.2d 88, 97, 993 P.2d 259 (2000). Here Lawyers Title bases its claim on a letter dated July 13, 1992, from defendant Chae to Lawyers Title responding to an inquiry from Lawyers Title, asking whether the Baik estate owed any outstanding taxes on the property in question. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 631 (Decl. of Sang Chae); CP at 633 (Deck of Roberta Robbins). That reply states in relevant part:
By this letter I am informing you that, based on our tax preparation, no estate taxes are due and owing to the state or federal government. Likewise, to my knowledge, no other taxes are outstanding against the estate.
CP at 224.
Without dispute these representations are literally true. Lawyers Title does not claim Chae failed to prepare his client’s taxes or that according to that tax preparation, taxes were due. Instead, it claims Chae was negligent in the preparation of his client’s taxes with the result that the Baik estate subsequently owed money to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for underpayment of taxes. However, this assertion has no basis in a claim of negligent misrep
In Trimble we upheld a summary judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s negligent misrepresentation claim where he alleged the defendant university had failed to inform him that its offer of tenure consideration after three years, instead of the usual six, would present a serious handicap to obtaining tenure. Id. at 97-98. The court held:
The record shows no representation to Trimble about how tenure review after three years, as opposed to six, would play out and there is no evidence that WSU [Washington State University] misled Trimble on this matter. Thus, there was no “false information” supplied to Trimble. Merely not discussing the downsides of various terms of employment in employment negotiations will not create a cause of action for negligent misrepresentation.
Id. (emphasis added). This is precisely the situation here. Chae made no representation about the tax return prepared, beyond the fact the return indicated no taxes were due. This was precisely the information sought by Lawyers Title and precisely the information it received.
The majority overlooks this issue, concluding, “We decline to hold as a matter of law that, contrary to the Restatement [(Second) of Torts], a negligently obtained and ultimately inaccurate opinion could not satisfy the ‘false information’ element of a negligent misrepresentation claim.” Majority at 548. It makes no sense to say the information contained in the letter was “obtained negligently” or was “inaccurate.” Chae spoke from personal experience that the law firm had completed the tax return for the Baik estate and he had found no taxes due—both true statements. The majority concerns itself not with the
By conflating the truth of the statements which form the basis of Lawyers Title’s claim for negligent misrepresentation with the latter’s allegations of incompetency, the majority allows Lawyers Title to bring a contribution claim in the guise of a negligent misrepresentation claim. Because such considerations have no place in a claim for negligent misrepresentation, I would affirm the trial court’s order granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
Additionally, even if Chae’s letter could be construed as a misrepresentation of the law firm’s competency in the preparation of its client’s tax return, the Court of Appeals correctly concluded Lawyers Title was not justified to rely on it for that purpose. Lawyers Title, 2001 WL 704374, at **2-4. Discussing this prong of the negligent misrepresentation claim, the majority makes much of its rejection of section 552A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, a provision which is not even discussed by the Court of Appeals, while summarily dismissing the authorities upon which the Court of Appeals actually relied because it makes “no reference to section 552A.” Majority at 554.
The majority claims it must address the applicability of section 552A because “we are reviewing the propriety of the trial court’s summary dismissal of a negligent misrepresentation claim.” Majority at 550. However, section 552A has no application here because Lawyers Title is not entitled to rely on Chae’s alleged misrepresentation as a matter of law.
As the Court of Appeals held, even if there were a misrepresentation Lawyers Title’s claim must fail by reason of
Inexplicably, the majority holds Lawyers Title may be entitled to rely on Chae’s letter because Lawyers Title’s own internal procedures allow title officers to remove an exception for estate taxes when they are in possession of a letter from an estate’s personal representative or attorney stating that no taxes are due. Majority at 552. Lawyers Title may properly view such a letter as indicative of a reduced risk, but not as a guaranty. The fact that its guidelines authorize such reliance does not alter the law. Cf. Boeing Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 113 Wn.2d 869, 911, 784 P.2d 507 (1990) (“[W]here an insured took a calculated business risk that pollution from a sewage plant would contaminate nearby property, we have held that the insured could not look to its insurer to indemnify it for its liability resulting from its failure to prevent the event.”).
Second, the “ ‘right to rely on representations is inseparably connected with the correlative problem of the duty of a representee to use diligence in respect of representations made to him.’ ” Skagit State Bank v. Rasmussen, 109 Wn.2d 377, 384, 745 P.2d 37 (1987) (quoting Williams v. Joslin, 65 Wn.2d 696, 698, 399 P.2d 308 (1965)). As a title insurance company, Lawyers Title has an independent duty “ ‘to make a thorough and competent search of the record title.’ ”
Lawyers Title’s own guidelines warn of the potential risk attached to properties conveyed as part of an estate:
Any estate tax that is due constitutes a lien at the date of the decedent’s death. Except to the extent that the title insurer is aware of the death, the tax is essentially a hidden lien, there being (in most instances) no recording requirement.
CP at 825 (Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation Underwriting Manual). In the event the company is to insure a title to a property that had been conveyed pursuant to an estate distribution, the agent is first required to determine the approximate size of the estate to determine whether a tax return is required. Id. Nothing in the record indicates Lawyers Title complied with its own requirement. Further, the guidelines suggest various precautions an agent should take including, but not limited to, obtaining a written statement from the personal representative or the attorney for the estate:
In any doubtful case, you should except to the potential estate tax lien or require a bond from a corporate surety or a sum to be held in escrow for an amount sufficient to employ an attorney to file the return and satisfy any potential estate tax liability.
Id. Lawyers Title knew or ought to have known that federal estate tax constituted a lien on the decedent’s property
Relying on clearly established Washington precedent, the Court of Appeals properly concluded that Lawyers Title’s reliance on Chae’s letter as a guaranty of no ultimate tax liability was not justified because it “failed to comply with its own guidelines by either excepting liability for estate taxes or procuring an indemnification bond, and failed to fulfill its independent duty to investigate.” Lawyers Title, 2001 WL 704374, at *3. This decision is consistent with the principle that a party taking a calculated business risk must accept the cost associated with such risks. Boeing, 113 Wn.2d at 911.
Finally, the majority rejects the approach adopted by the Court of Appeals because it “eliminates the jury’s role in assessing whether Lawyers Title’s reliance on the letter was reasonable under the circumstances.” Majority at 552. However, summary judgment is proper if after the motion is made the nonmoving party fails to establish any facts which would support an essential element of its claim. Young v. Key Pharms., Inc., 112 Wn.2d 216, 225, 770 P.2d 182 (1989).
Where a plaintiff fails to use diligence to interpret representations made to it, the plaintiff’s fraud claim fails as a matter of law. For example, in McMahon, we affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of the plaintiff’s action for contract rescission based on fraud, holding as a matter of law that because of the plaintiff’s business experience, she “was not
Since the evidence of the actual receipts was before the respondent, he had no right to rely upon any oral representation that contradicted it.
65 Wn.2d at 698. Finally, in Skagit State Bank, we reversed a trial court judgment, voiding the plaintiff’s mortgage and loan agreement on the basis of an innocent misrepresentation, when the plaintiff had not read documents he signed:
“a party whose rights rest upon a written instrument which is plain and unambiguous, and who has read or had the opportunity to read the instrument, cannot claim to have been misled concerning its contents or to be ignorant of what is provided therein.”
109 Wn.2d at 381 (quoting Johnston v. Spokane & I.E.R.R., 104 Wash. 562, 569-70, 177 P. 810 (1919)).
The majority “reject[s] the respondents’ position that, as a matter of law, Lawyers Title should have replicated the work of the Estate’s tax attorneys and thereby created for itself something with which to contradict the Law Firm’s representation regarding taxes.” Majority at 554. However, that is precisely what our law requires. Because the majority’s opinion represents a radical departure from established legal principles, not justified on the facts of the case, I would affirm the Court of Appeals opinion as an alternative ground to uphold the trial court’s decision.
Johnson and Madsen, JJ., concur with Sanders, J.