ORDER
This case is before the court on Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff James C. Orr (Orr) is the Chapter 11 Trustee of Timothy S. Brumlik’s (Brumlik) and Patricia Brumlik’s estate in the related bankruptcy case, No. 91-03720-6C1. Orr brought this ease against Defendants Black & Furci, P.A. and Roy Black (Black), alleging that Black was negligent in his representation of Brumlik in a federal criminal matter in 1990. Orr seeks damages for professional malpractice and for breach of contract, an accounting of Roy Black’s expenses in reрresenting Brumlik, and rescission of the Fee Agreement between Black and Brumlik. Upon review of the case file and the applicable law, the court concludes that Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on all counts.
I. Facts
Timothy S.-. Brumlik was arrested on September 15, 1989, pursuant to an undercover operation conducted by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). This arrest ultimately led to a six count federal indictment for money laundеring, forfeiture, wire fraud, and attempting to import cocaine. Brumlik’s potential exposure under this indictment included life imprisonment. Brum-lik retained Black & Furci, P.A. to represent him in the criminal proceeding in the United States District Court, Middle District of Florida in Orlando. On October 18, 1989, Roy Black and Brumlik signed a Fee Agreement wherein Black agreed to represent Brumlik in the specific criminal proceedings then against him in exchange for $250,000 plus expenses. The fee was to include representation “up to the filing and arguing of a motion for a new trial; it includes interlocutory appeals, but not an appeal from a final judgment of guilt....” (Fee Agreement). The Fee Agreement also provided that “should the case be settled in any other manner than by contested trial, no part of the fee is to be returned.” The Brumliks ultimately paid $301,435 in fees and costs to Black & Furci. The Brumliks also retained James Russ (Russ) to serve as co-counsel in the case.
The lead FDLE agent in the investigation аgainst Brumlik, Juan (Tony) Iturrey (Itur-rey), also was arrested in late October 1989. Iturrey was charged with violating federal bribery laws, because he forced the confidential informant in the Brumlik case to pay a portion of the informant’s reward to him. Conversations between Iturrey and the informant were recorded. Black filed a motion to require the government to provide copies of these tapes. The information contained on these tapes, including a statement by Iturrey that Brumlik was not a money launderer, was such that the government acknowledged that it might have to provide them to Brum-lik’s attorneys as exculpatory information under
Brady v. Maryland,
Black and Russ began to investigate the facts and law of the ease and to prepare for trial. Before translating all of the Iturrey-informant tapes (from Spanish), Black and Russ recommended that Brumlik plead guilty to a reduced charge. On January 12, 1990, Brumlik’s attorneys met with Assistant United States Attorney Ronald Hayward and two IRS agents for a lengthy settlement conference. Out of this conference emerged a Plea Agreement, to which Brumlik agreed on January 19. On January 22, Brumlik pled guilty to a superseding information charging him with one count of money laundering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(3)(B) (1988). At the arraignment, Brumlik admitted that he had committed the crime charged. Brumlik explained to the court that a man had approached him seeking to purchase real estate *1273 with money obtained from illegal drug sales. Despite this fact, Brumlik agreed to sеll a piece of real estate to the individual. With this explanation, the court accepted Brum-lik’s guilty plea.
The Plea Agreement specified that Brum-lik would “cooperate fully with the government and ... testify ... in connection with the charges in this case in other matters.... and mak[e] himself available for interviews by law enforcement officials.” In turn, the government agreed to consider whether such cooperation qualified as “substantial assistance,” thus qualifying Brumlik for a reduced sentence. In addition, the- government agreed not to charge Brumlik with any additional crimes to which he admitted during any interviews with the law enforcement personnel. The Plea Agreement did not provide for a shield protecting Brumlik from jeopardy assessments or immediate levies to be issued by the IRS based on information gained from the interviews.
In accordance with the Plea Agreement, Brumlik submitted to extensive debriefings by government agents. The government agents debriefed Brumlik for 16 or 17 full days; Black did nоt attend any of these sessions, while Russ attended the sessions for four days. While the plea negotiations were ongoing, Black and Russ consulted attorneys in Washington, D.C. who advised Brumlik with regard to communications matters. Black and Russ were concerned about the indirect impact of a guilty plea on Brum-lik’s television station licenses. The affidavit of Plaintiffs expert, John P. Hume, asserts that Black should have been aware that Brumlik also was exposing himself to potentially severe civil tax liability. Black did not advise Brumlik, however, of the potential civil tax consequences of Brumlik’s debriefings.
Brumlik was sentenced on April 22, 1990. During the proceedings, Brumlik announced, “There’s no question in my mind ... that I take responsibility for what I did.” The court reduced Brumlik’s sentence level by two units for Brumlik’s acceptance of responsibility, ending with a Total Offense Level of 22, and a jail term of 48 months; The Eleventh Circuit affirmed the judgment of the court on appeal.
United States v. Brumlik,
In conjunction with Brumlik’s arrest the IRS had executed searсh. warrants and seized a large amount of Brumlik’s business records. The IRS was able to learn information previously unknown to it through the debriefings. On April 30, the IRS issued two jeopardy assessments, one to Brumlik and one to Brumlik and his wife, immediately executing on the Brumliks’ remaining assets. On May 1, Brumlik sent a letter to Black terminating Black & Furci’s representation.
Brumlik collaterally attacked his sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (1988), claiming that he' received ineffective assistance of counsel; Brumlik claimed that his counsel had failed to object to the government’s failure to file a downward departure motion or to recommend the lower end of the sentencing guidelines range, based on Brumlik’s cooperation with law enforcement officials. Also, Brumlik asserted that his counsel had failed to object to the use of sting money to enhance his offense level. Both of these claims were denied by the court, holding that “Defendant has not met his burden of demonstrating that counsel’s conduct fell below an objective standard of reasonableness.... [and] has not shown prejudice with regard to this matter, as it- was within the Government’s discretion to file a substantial assistance motion, and the Court was not required to accept the Government’s recommendations.”
II. Legal Discussion
Orr has filed suit as Chapter 11 Trustee of the Brumlik estate against Black & Furci, P.A. and Black, on four state law counts. Count I calls for an accounting of the funds Brumlik gave to Black for legal representation. Count II alleges breach of the Fee Agreement between Black and Brumlik, and requests damages on the agreement. Count III alternatively seeks rescission of the Fee Agreement. Finally, Count IV asserts that Defendants are liable for professional malpractice for Black’s representation of Brum-lik. Defendants have filed a motion seeking summary judgment on all counts pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. The court will address the professional malprac *1274 tice claim first, followed by the contract claims and the request for an accounting.
A. Summary Judgment Standards
Summary judgment is authorized if “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 66(c);
accord Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The moving party bears the burden of proving that no genuine issue of material fact exists.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317, 323,
“[A]ll that is required [to proceed to trial] is that sufficient evidence supporting the claimed factual dispute be shown to require a jury or judge to resolve the parties’ differing versions of the truth at trial.”
Anderson,
B. Professional Malpractice
Orr has claimed that Black was negligent in representing Brumlik, because he failed to take proper account of the Iturrey tapes, and because he failed to properly protect Brumlik from the civil tax consequences of his guilty plea. In his motion for summary judgment, Black asserts that an attorney should not be liable for malpractice in a criminal case unless the prospective plaintiff is innoсent of the crime for which he was tried. Black also claims that Orr is collaterally estopped from raising the issue of malpractice with regard to Black’s representation of Brumlik in the criminal case, because Brumlik’s motion for habeas corpus based on ineffective assistance of counsel was denied. Finally, Black asserts that he should not be held liable for any tax problems indirectly caused by Brumlik’s debriefing because those issues were outside the scopе of Black’s responsibility, which was strictly limited to the criminal proceeding.
Generally, in a claim for legal malpractice plaintiffs- must plead and prove (1) the attorney’s employment; (2) the attorney’s neglect of a reásonable duty; and (3) the attorney’s negligence resulted in and was the proximate cause of loss to the client/plaintiff.
See Mayo v. Engel,
*1275
Most of the states considering the issue have determined that a plaintiff in a malpractice action must establish his innocence in order to establish the attornеy’s liability. Some state courts have fashioned requirements that malpractice plaintiffs obtain post-conviction relief from their , criminal trials, including an exoneration of their criminal charge, before any “harm” can be established for a malpractice action.
See, e.g., Stevens v. Bispham,
Rather than declare that criminal defendants/malpractice plaintiffs have suffered no harm until their conviction has been overturned, other courts have held that plaintiffs who cannot prove their innocence have proximately caused whatever injury they suffer as a result of their conviction.
See, e.g., Streeter v. Young,
However, in
Krahn v. Kinney,
Although no Florida court has ruled on this specific issue, the Florida • Supreme Court has decided that collateral estoppel should apply to criminal defеndants who raise unsuccessful ineffective assistance of counsel claims and then seek damages for attorney malpractice.
Zeidwig v. Ward,
548 - So.2d 209 (Fla.1989). As the court stated, “If we were to allow a claim in this instance, we would be approving a policy that would approve the imprisonment of a defendant for a criminal offense ... but which would allow the same defendant to collect from his counsel damages in a civil suit for ineffective representation becаuse he was improperly imprisoned. To fail to allow the use of collateral estoppel in these circumstances is neither logical nor reasonable.”
Zeidwig,
In Florida, “proximate causation ... is concerned with whether and to what ex
*1276
tent the defendant’s conduct foreseeably and substantially caused the specific injury that occurred.”
McCain v. Florida Power Corp.,
The appropriateness of this rule is particularly evident in this situation, where Brumlik pled to a superseding information that represented a significant reduction in his exposure to criminal liability. Presumably, this reduction was the result of negotiation by Brumlik’s attornеys. Accordingly, the court holds that when criminal defendants plead guilty to a crime, as malpractice plaintiffs they must prove their innocence in order to maintain a cause of action against their attorney. The court limits its holding to situations in which the malpractice plaintiff pleads guilty, and does not speak to the somewhat different situation where a criminal defendant maintains his innocence throughout a criminal trial. Therefore, the court grants the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the professional malpractice claim. The court finds it unnecessary to evaluate Defendants’ arguments as to collateral estoppel and the scope of Black’s representation.
C. Breach of Contract
Orr also asserts that Defendants breached the Fee Agreement into which they entered with Brumlik. Orr’s claim focuses on an allegedly implied provision that Defendants “would represent Mr. Brumlik with professional due care in a manner normally exercised by similar (sic) situated attorneys.” (Amended Complaint at 4). Because the Defendants allegedly failed to do so, Orr claims the fee that Defendants charged was unconscionable. Orr has both sought damages for breach of the contract and, alternatively, sought rescission of the contract.
This claim for breach of contract in essence restates the claim based on professional malpractice. Rather than assert that Defendants completеly failed to fulfill any of their obligations under the Fee Agreement, Orr’s claim rests on the allegation that Black was negligent in performing his duties. Since the court has held that criminal malpractice claims .may not be maintained by plaintiffs who do not assert their innocence, it would be illogical to permit malpractice plaintiffs to circumvent this rule by alleging the same facts under a claim for breach of contract. Accordingly, the court holds that breach of contract claims that allege only an attorney’s negligence in fulfilling his duties must contain an allegation of innocence by the plaintiff.
Orr may be understood to argue that Black failed to adhere to the contract by not appearing with Brumlik during the debriefing sessions. The contract makes clear, however, that Black was only retained to defend Brumlik in the criminal proceedings then pending. Under Florida law, “it is not sufficient merely to assert an attorney-client relationship existed betweеn the parties; it is essential to allege the relationship existed with regard to the acts or omissions upon which the malpractice claim is based.”
Maillard v. Dowdell,
Orr has not asserted that the Fee Agreement was unconscionable at the time the parties entered into it; rather he claims that the fee charged should be deemed excessive now when one considers the amount of work done by Black to earn it. As Plaintiff’s expert claims, “[F]rom the date of the fee agreement, looking forward, the fee was not excessive; however, looking back today, it is obvious that due to Mr. Black’s negligence, the fee was excessive.” (Affidavit of John P. Hume at 3). Generally, however, the reasonableness of attorney’s fee agreements and other contracts is evaluated “as it appeared to the parties at the time the contract was entered into.”
Setzer v. Robinson,
D. Accounting ■
Orr has also requested an accounting, on the ground that the attorney’s fee was grossly excessive and unreаsonable, since the criminal proceeding ended in the entry of a guilty plea and because Brumlik retained another attorney who performed a substantial amount of the work. The Fee Agreement specifically provided that Black would represent Brumlik for a flat fee of $250,000 plus costs, and “should the case be settled in any other mariner than by contested trial, no part of the - fee is to be returned.” (Fee Agreement). Brumlik also freely chose to retain' Russ as Blaсk’s co-counsel. Neither of these factors suggest that an accounting is appropriate in this case.
Orr asserts that he is entitled to an accounting because Black was terminated as counsel prior to providing full representation. The money paid to Defendants for their representation of Brumlik was not a retainer to be earned through an hourly fee; the fee agreement established a flat fee for Brumlik’s representation, payable regardless of the number of hours spent working on the case. Orr cites
The Florida Bar v. Grus-mark,
Though there are some similarities, Grus-mark does not control this case. Here, Black represented.Brumlik through plea negotiations, the entry of Brumlik’s guilty plea, and sentencing. He fulfilled every obligation. for which he was responsible under the Fee Agreement between the parties. The only recourse from the criminal proceedings that remained for Brumlik when Black was termi *1278 nated was an appeal from the judgment, for which Black explicitly was not responsible. Accordingly, the court holds that an accounting is not justified in this case, and grants Defendants’ motion for summary judgment with regard to Count I.
III. Conclusion
The court GRANTS Defendants’ motion for summary judgment (Doc. 127) on all four counts of Orr’s complaint. Because Orr cannot allege Brumlik’s innocence as to the underlying money laundering charge, Orr’s profеssional malpractice claim cannot be maintained. Also, the court concludes as a matter of law that Black fulfilled the requirements of the Fee Agreement, and that the Fee Agreement was not unconscionable. Therefore, Orr’s breach of contract claim and request for rescission must fail. Finally, the court finds that Orr is not entitled to an accounting of the funds paid to Defendants pursuant to the Fee Agreement. The court instructs the clerk of the court to enter judgment accordingly.
It is SO ORDERED.
