Lead Opinion
¶1 — This сase asks us to decide whether the “actual innocence” element of a criminal malpractice
¶2 Rape of a child in the first degree is a class A felony, carrying a maximum term of confinement of life imprisonment. Christopher Piris was charged with three counts of first degree rape of a child, which occurred between September 27, 1990, and September 27, 1993. Piris pleaded guilty to two of those counts. The rape charges arose out of two separate incidents that occurred when Piris (who was between 11 and 13 years old at the time) had sexual intercourse with his stepbrother (who was then between 9 and 11 years old). Although the rapes occurred between 1990 and 1993 when Piris was a minor, he was charged in 1997 when he was 19 years old and in 1998 pleaded guilty to two counts of first degree rape of a child.
¶3 On May 14, 1999, Judge Charles Mertel of the King County Superior Court sentenced Piris to 159 months of imprisonment—the bottom of the standard sentencing range of 159 to 211 months—which was calculated using an offender score of seven. At the sentencing hearing, Judge Mertel stated that although he did not find the facts justified an exceptional sentence downward, he was “going tо sentence [Piris] at the bottom of the standard range [,] which is .. . 159 months.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 69. Alfred Kitching, an attorney with Society of Counsel Representing Accused Persons (SCRAP) (collectively Kitching), represented Piris at the trial court.
¶4 On appeal, Eric Nielsen, of the law firm Nielsen, Broman & Koch PLLC, represented Piris and argued that the trial court incorrectly calculated Piris’s offender score. Division One of the Court of Appeals agreed in an unpublished opinion, finding that Piris should have been sentenced with an offender score of six, rather than seven. This score would have resulted in a standard range sentence of 146 to 194 months, rather than 159 to 211 months. The court vacated Piris’s sentence and remanded for resentenc-ing. That order was filed on February 14, 2000, and the mandate issued on April 7, 2000.
¶5 The Court of Appeals sent a copy of the opinion to both Nielsen and Piris. Nielsen asserted that upon receipt of the opinion, “based on his invariable habit, custom and practice, he [would have] sent a copy of the opinion to Mr. Piris with a cover letter explaining the decision.” CP at 98. Nielsen also claimed that upon receipt of the mandate, he wrote to Piris, enclosing the mandate and informing Piris that he was closing Piris’s file. In addition, Nielsen “wrote to King County Office of Public Defense to inform that office of the decision,... that a resentencing hearing should be scheduled,” and that Piris would need representation. CP at 99. Nielsen “may also have sent a copy of the decision to SCRAP and to Mr. Kitching or informed them of the decision.” CP at 99. Piris denies that he heard from Nielsen regarding the reversal of his sentence.
¶6 Piris was not resentenced for another 12 years. On May 7, 2012, Piris appeared before Judge Timothy Bradshaw (Judge Mertel had since retired) on an alleged violation of his supervised release terms. Realizing that Piris had never been resentenced, Judge Bradshaw imposed a sentence of 146 months for the two counts of rape of a child in the first degree. While this sentence was at thе bottom of the corrected standard sentencing range, the record does not indicate the judge’s reasoning for choosing this term of confinement. By the time Piris was resen-tenced, he alleged he had served all 159 months of his original term of imprisonment.
¶7 In March 2013, Piris filed this legal malpractice action against Kitching and Nielsen. He later amended his complaint to include King County. Piris alleged that due to his attorneys’ negligence, he was incarcerated for 13 months longer than his sentence allowed. The defendants all moved for summary judgment, which the superior court granted, stating, “The basis for the dismissal is the ‘actual innocence’ requirement аs set out in Ang v. Martin, 154 Wn.2d 477[,
¶8 In a published opinion, Division One of the Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that Piris had to prove he was actually innocent of the underlying criminal charges. The court held that he could not make such a showing “because he pleaded guilty to two charges
Analysis
¶9 The Court of Appeals affirmed summary judgment for the defendants. We review an order granting summary judgment de novo, “ ‘taking all facts and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.’” Jackowski v. Borchelt,
(1) [t]he existence of an attorney-client relationship which gives rise to a duty of care on the part of the attorney to the client; (2) an act or omission by the attorney in breach of the duty of care; (3) damage to the client; and (4) proximate causation between the attorney’s breach of the duty and the damage incurred.
Hizey v. Carpenter,
¶10 A plaintiff also bears the burden of proving two additional elements concerning proximate cause when аlleging criminal malpractice. First, as a prerequisite, the plaintiff must have obtained postconviction relief. Second, the plaintiff must prove actual innocence of the underlying criminal charge by a preponderance of the evidence. At issue here is the actual innocence requirement.
¶11 We addressed this requirement in the context of a criminal malpractice case in Ang. In that case, the Angs were a married couple indicted on 18 criminal counts related to Social Security fraud. They hired two defense attorneys for trial. Before trial, the attorneys negotiated a plea bargain, which the Angs rejected, and the case proceeded to a jury trial. Five days into trial, the Angs’ attorneys recommended a second plea deal. The Angs viewed this plea agreement as the least desirable. Mr. Ang “was allegedly told that Mrs. Ang could face sexual assault in prison,” which convinced the couple to take the agreement offered during trial and plead guilty to 2 of the 18 counts. Ang,
¶12 We held that for a plaintiff to bring a malpractice action against a criminal defense attorney, he or she must establish actual innocence of the underlying charge by a preponderance of the evidence. We reasoned that for legal causation to satisfy proximate cause, the actual innocence requirement was rooted in public policy: “To determine whether the cause in fact . . . should also be deemed the legal cause of [plaintiff’s] harm, a court may consider, among other things, the public policy implications of holding the defendant liable.” Ang,
¶13 Piris does not ask us to overrule Ang, but asks us instead to recognize and apply an exception to the actual innocence requirement that was crafted in Powell v. Associated Counsel for the Accused,
¶14 Powell sued his criminal defense attorney for legal malpractice and claimed damages for the time he served beyond an allowable 12-month gross misdemeanor conviction sentence. The court’s decision centered on the fact that “Powell . . . served substantially more time than the trial court was authorized to impose for a gross misdemeanor.” Powell I,
¶15 Here, Piris urges that his case is indistinguishable from Powell. He argues that the Powell exception dispenses the actual innocence requirement when a criminal malpractice plaintiff alleges malpractice only in sentencing. Piris emphasizes that the public policy considerations underpinning our decision in Ang do not apply to malpractice in sentencing, and that there are no other sound policy reasons for requiring a malpractice plaintiff to show actual innocence when alleging sentencing errors.
¶16 Nielsen and Kitching counter that Ang controls and requires dismissal. They describe Piris’s case as an example of a criminal defendant bringing a malpractice claim against his former attorneys because he “could have gotten a better deal.” Resp’t Nielsen’s Suppl. Br. at 7, 12; Suppl. Br. of Resp’ts SCRAP & Kitching at 14. This claim is the very type of case the actual innocence requirement seeks to avoid. Nielsen argues that the exception in Powell is limited to malpractice resulting in an illegal sentence and that extending Powell’s narrow exception to other sentencing errors would undermine the public policies supporting the actual innocence requirement. Kitching, on the other hand, urges this court to go so far as to overrule Powell. He argues that it contradicts Ang, creates uncertainty, and could quickly become an exception that swallows the rule, thereby undermining the policies supported by the actual innocence requirement.
¶17 In the alternative, both Nielsen and Kitching argue that even if we embrace the reasoning in Powell, we should affirm the lower courts because Piris’s case is distinguishable. Nielsen and Kitching point to the fact that Piris’s original 159-month sentence
¶18 As the Court of Appeals accurately noted, “The sentencing error in this case is qualitatively dissimilar to the error in Powell.” Piris,
¶19 Here, if we allowed the civil case to proceed, we would need to arguably overrule Ang and allow Piris to benefit based essentially on his own criminal conduct. While a certain рortion of the blame may understandably be aimed at his defense counsel for failing to follow through on scheduling resentencing, both of Piris’s sentences were the natural result of the crime to which he pleaded guilty. The maximum term for first degree rape of a child is life in prison. Piris pleaded guilty to two counts of this crime. Despite being given two different standard ranges for his crime (with the latter resulting in a slightly shorter sentence), his criminal acts naturally produced both sentences.
¶20 We find that the public policy concerns recognized in Ang require a plaintiff to prove actual innocence of an alleged crime when pursuing a criminal malpractice claim. Because any term of confinement Piris served was within the broad authority of the trial court, the argument for a Powell exception is inapplicable here. We need not overrule Powell but note it involved a unique and narrow set of circumstances where defense counsel and the court were evidently unaware of the class or level of crime to which Powell was pleading guilty. We expect defense counsel to know the level of crime for which a client is being sentenced. That circumstance in Powell is not present in Piris’s case before us. We affirm the Court of Appeals.
Notes
“Criminal malpractice’’ is a phrase that has been widely used “to denote ‘legal malpractice in the course of defending a [person] accused of crimе.’" Ang v. Martin,
Dissenting Opinion
¶21 (dissenting) Christopher Piris successfully obtained postconviction relief from a miscalculated sentence. But due to alleged attorney negligence, he was not timely resentenced and he spent more time imprisoned than his corrected sentence authorized. The majority holds that Piris cannot pursue malpractice claims against his defense attorneys unless he proves he is actually innocent of the underlying charges. I disagree. When a client wins postconviction relief for resentencing and attorney negligence results in the client’s excessive imprisоnment because the client did not timely receive the benefit of resentencing, it is no excuse to say that the client was subject to some imprisonment. Extending the “actual innocence rule” to the unique circumstances of this case serves only to perpetuate an injustice. I respectfully dissent.
The Policies Underlying the Actual Innocence Rule Are Not Implicated in This Case
¶22 The majority holds that “the public policy concerns recognized in Ang [v.
¶23 This court in Ang reasoned that proving actual innocence “is essential to proving proximate causation, both cause in fact and legal causation.”
Unless criminal malpractice plaintiffs can prove by a preponderance of the evidence their actual innocence of the charges, their own bad acts, not the alleged negligence of defense counsel, should be regarded as the cause in fact of their harm. Likewise, if criminal malpractice plaintiffs cannot prove their actual innocence under the civil standard, they will be unable to establish, in light of significant public policy considerations, that the alleged negligence of their defense counsel was the legal cause of their harm. Summarizing the policy concerns, the Falkner court observed that, “[requiring a defendant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he is innocent of the charges аgainst him will prohibit criminals from benefiting from their own bad acts, maintain respect for our criminal justice system’s procedural protections, remove the harmful chilling effect on the defense bar, prevent suits from criminals who may be guilty, [but] could have gotten a better deal, and prevent a flood of nuisance litigation.”
Id. at 485 (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Falkner v. Foshaug,
¶24 Piris’s case does not implicate these policy concerns. First, Piris will not benefit from his own bad acts if he is allowed to proceed with his criminal malpractice action without proving actual innocence. See id. By pleading guilty, Piris accepted responsibility for his crimes. He served his time. He is not seeking damages for the 146 months he spent imprisoned under his lawful sentence. See Clerk’s Papers at 24. When a person has served his full authorized sentence, “[h]is unlawful restraint beyond that period was not a consequence of his own actions.” Powell v. Associated Counsel for the Accused,
¶25 Second, refusing to apply the actual innocence requirement in these circumstances will not undermine respect for the criminal justice system. See Ang,
¶26 Allowing Piris to proceed with his malpractice case without respect to whether he is innocent of the underlying charges in fact enhances respect for the justice system by underscoring that courts recognize the very real injury that occurs when a person is deprived of his liberty for longer than his sentence allows. Cf., e.g., MacFarlane v. Walter,
¶27 Third, dispensing of the actual innocence requirement in these circumstances will not have a harmful chilling effect on the defense bar or result in a flood of nuisance litigation. See Ang,
¶28 Nor am I convinced that the criminal defense bar benefits from the de facto immunity from malpractice liability that applying the actual innocence rule provides in this circumstance. See Barker,
¶29 Considering the burdens Piris undertakes as a legal malpractice plaintiff, there is no justification to extend the actual innocence rule to the unique circumstances of this case. Contrary to the majority’s insistence that we would need to overrule Ang in order to allow Piris’s case to proceed, we need recognize only that Ang is premised on policy concerns that are not implicated in these unique circumstances.
¶30 Finally, it is important to recognize that Piris is not arguing he “could have gottеn a better deal.” See Ang,
Proof of Actual Innocence Is Not Necessary to Proof of Causation for Piris’s Criminal Malpractice Claim
¶31 The majority states, “[I]f we allowed the civil case to proceed, we would need to arguably overrule Ang and allow Piris to benefit based essentially on his own criminal conduct. . . . [B]oth of Piris’s sentences were the natural result of the crime to which he pleaded guilty.” Majority at 866. I disagree for two reasons. First, as noted, we do not need to overrule Ang to allow Piris to proceed with his criminal malpractice clаim. We were concerned in Ang with plaintiffs alleging harm stemming from their attorneys’ conduct during the guilt/innocence stage of the trial. In this case, Piris is alleging harm not at the guilt/innocence phase, or even at the sentencing phase, but at the phase of proceedings when he was entitled to receive
¶32 Second, by asserting that Piris’s sentences were the “natural result” of his conduct, the majority seems to hold that the underlying criminal сonduct was the sole cause in fact of Piris serving 13 months more time than his corrected sentence allowed. This makes little sense under ordinary notions of tort causation. The harm Piris alleges is the time he spent in prison beyond his lawful sentence; this harm is not the direct result of his criminal acts, but of the alleged malpractice. See Powell,
¶33 Undoubtedly, Piris’s criminal conduct was the “natural cause” of his 146-month sentence. But the additional 13 months he served on top of his lawful sentence was proximately caused by his attorneys’ alleged negligence in not ensuring that he was timely resentenced. Piris should not have to prove his actual innocence as a precondition to seeking damages for these 13 months. From a practical standpoint, he is in the same position as the plaintiff in Powell; regardless of whether his excess sentence exceeded a statutory maximum or the confinement term the court imposed, it was unlawful. He should be entitled to proceed with his claim and attempt to prove that his harm resulted from his attorneys’ negligence.
¶34 I would hold that a criminal malpractice plaintiff whose sentence is vacated and remanded but who does not timely receive the benefit of resentencing due to alleged attorney negligence need not prove he is actually innocent of the underlying criminal conduct to proceed with his criminal malpractice claim. Because the majority extends the actual innocence rule beyond its justifications in policy or causation principles, I respectfully dissent.
The Kansas Supreme Court extended Mashaney & holding to criminal malpractice cases predicated on an illegal sentence, finding “Mashaney's reasoning is equally applicable” under those circumstances. Garcia v. Ball,
For this reason, I disagree with the majority that the Court of Appeals’ decision in Powell is distinguishable. See majority at 865. While a 159-month sentence remained within the range of possible sentences Piris faced upon resentencing, we know the sentence he in fact received. His actual 146-month sentence confirms that he suffered the harm of serving more time than his lawful sentence allowed, just as in Powell.
