delivered the opinion of the court:
Defendants Pedersen & Houpt, Arthur M. Holtzman and Donald J. Moran appeal from the denial of their summary judgment motion in this legal malpractice suit filed against them by plaintiff Daniel F. McCarthy. The circuit court certified for appeal the issue of “whether the settlement of a lawsuit by a plaintiff, in the undisputed facts and circumstances of this case, precludes a subsequent complaint against his trial counsel for attorney malpractice.”
The relevant facts are as follows. In 1985, defendants filed McCarthy v. PaineWebber, Inc., 85 — C—3328, asserting commercial litigation claims on plaintiff’s behalf in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The case went to trial in 1989, and after the close of evidence, but before the jury returned its verdict, plaintiff agreed to settle the case. After plaintiff had an independent attorney, not associated with the defendant law firm, review the settlement agreement, the settlement agreement and mutual gеneral release were executed.
Plaintiff then brought suit in the circuit court of Cook County asserting attorney malpractice against the defendants, the attorneys who represented plaintiff in the underlying lawsuit. The complaint alleged that the attorneys failed to file a timely claim under the Commodities Exchange Act and negligently selected an unqualified expert. Defendants filed a summary judgment motion asserting that plaintiff’s voluntary decision to settle the underlying case, particularly in light of the intervention of independent counsel, precluded the instant attorney malpractice claim. The circuit сourt denied the motion, stating that it could not determine as a matter of law that plaintiff’s suit was barred. However, due to the fact that there was no Illinois case law addressing the issue of whether a plaintiff who settles an underlying claim may then sue the attorney who represented him in that claim for malpractice, the circuit court certified the question for appeal under Supreme Court Rule 308(a) (134 Ill. 2d R. 308(a)).
As the circuit court correctly noted, the issue that has been certified is one of first impression in Illinois. We therefore look for guidance outside of Illinois. As defendants point out, several other jurisdictions have held that the settlement of the underlying suit bars a plaintiff’s malpractice action against the attorney who handled the underlying claim.
In Mitchell v. Transamerica Insurance Co. (Ky. Ct. App. 1977),
“The [plaintiffs] argue that they could have received more damages if the case had been tried in Kentucky. However, the evidence, in our opinion, on this point is a matter of conjecture and speculation. It may have been a different case if the [plaintiffs] had tried their case in Indiana and had come away with patently inadequate damages. The fact is that they settled their case for $60,000. *** It seems to us that the [plaintiffs’] argument as to damages is an exercise in the pyramiding of an inference upon an inference. Trying to predict what a jury might do at any given time or place is hazardous and is one of the vagaries of life.” Mitchell,551 S.W.2d at 588 .
See also Douglas v. Parks (N.C. Ct. App. 1984),
In Schlomer v. Perina (1991),
The plaintiff here, in turn, claims that the Illinois Supreme Court decision in McLane v. Russell (1989),
Several New York cases addressing this issue have found that where a plaintiff alleges that he was forced to settle the underlying case due to his attorney’s mishandling of that case, plaintiff may sue his attorney for malpractice. In Becker v. Julien, Blitz & Schlesinger, P C (1977),
“In many, if not most instances involving an alleged malpractice by attorneys, the underlying litigation has been terminated — by allowing the Statute of Limitations to lapse, by suffering a default or dismissal and the like. Often it is the very fact of termination of the action which gives rise to the claim for malpractice. Where the termination is by settlement rather than by a dismissal or adverse judgment, malpractice by the attorney is more difficult to establish, but a causе of action can be made out if it is shown that assent by the client to the settlement was compelled because prior misfeasance or nonfeasance by the attorneys left no other recourse. *** [T]he cause of action for legal malpractice must stand or fall on its own merits, with nо automatic waiver of a plaintiffs right to sue for malpractice merely because plaintiff had voluntarily agreed to enter into a stipulation of settlement." (Emphasis added.) (Becker, 95 Misc. 2d at_,406 N.Y.S.2d at 413-14 .)
However, based on the particular facts in that case, the court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant attorneys since plaintiff did not show that he settled only because his attorney’s misconduct left him no other alternative. Furthermore, the court noted that plaintiff failed to provide any evidence that the value of his underlying claim exceeded that which he settled for.
The courts in Wolstencroft v. Sassower (1986),
Jurisdictions other than New York have also refused to state that, as a mаtter of law, a plaintiff who has settled his underlying case is barred from suing his attorney for malpractice. In Lowman v. Karp (1991),
In Braud v. New England Insurance Co. (La. Ct. App. 1988),
“It begs the question to argue that the settlement rather than the attorney’s negligence caused the loss when the same negligence is allegedly the only reason that the [plaintiffs] were put in the position of having to consider settlement.” (534 So. 2d at 15 .)
The court, therefore, reversed the summary judgment motion that had been granted in defendant’s favor, stating that only a trial on the merits could fully and fairly resolve this issue.
Furthermore, in Bill Branch Chevrolet, Inc. v. Burnett (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1990),
Likewise, in Fishman v. Brooks (1986),
Other courts allow such suits to survive the summary judgment stage only when the plaintiffs can show that they would have recovered more had the case gone to trial. See Carlson v. Fredrikson & Byron (Minn. Ct. App. 1991),
At least one court allows plaintiffs to sue their attorneys for malpractice even after settling the underlying suit only when the complaint alleges that the attorneys acted fraudulently. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Muhammad v. Strassburger, McKenna, Messer, Shilobod & Gutnick (Pa. 1991),
The supreme court of New Jersey in Ziegelheim v. Apollo (1992),
We are faced with the limited question of whether, under the undisputed facts and circumstances of this case, plaintiff’s legal malpractice case is barred due to the fact that plaintiff settled the underlying action. The undisputed facts in the instant case are that the underlying suit was settled and independent counsel reviewed the settlement agreement before it was signed by plaintiff. What remains disputed, however, is whether defendants were negligent in their handling of the underlying case and whether plaintiff was damaged by such negligence. Furthermore, the parties dispute the extent of independent counsel’s involvement in the settlement. Certainly plaintiff should be permitted to develop these facts at trial. Although there is no Illinois case law on this issue, we are persuaded by those cases from outside this jurisdiction holding that only a trial on the merits can fully and fairly resolve the issue of whether an attorney is liable for malpractice despite the fact that the underlying case was settled. To hold otherwise could create ethical problems where an аttorney, knowing that he mishandled a case, encourages his client to settle in order to shelter himself from a malpractice claim. The rule espoused here will avoid such conflicts of interest and allow a malpractice claim to succeed or fail on its merits. Accordingly, we conclude that based on the facts and circumstances presented here, the trial court properly refused to grant summary judgment in favor of defendants.
Affirmed.
GORDON, RJ., and MURRAY, J., concur.
