Res judicata is a judicially created doctrine designed to promote efficiency and finality by giving a litigant only one full and fair opportunity to litigate a claim and by precluding any later claim that could have, and should have, been brought as part of the earlier proceeding. In this case, we examine the preclusive effect of a fee proceeding in bankruptcy court on a later lawsuit for legal malpractice allegedly committed in the course of the bankruptcy. We hold that the
I. BACKGROUND
One month prior to filing for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy on May 19, 2005, Petitioner Jeffery Potter sold his interest in a limited partnership known as Monte Mac. Petitioner was represented in the bankruptcy proceedings by Respondents. During these proceedings, Petitioner, through Respondents as counsel, filed his schedules and his statement of financial affairs (SOFA). The SOFA requires that the debtor list all property transferred within the year immediately preceding the bankruptcy petition, other than property transferred in the ordinary course of business or financial affairs. See Official and Procedural Bankruptcy Forms, Form 7, 11 U.S.C. (2003). Petitioner testified under oath that he had reviewed the schedules and the SOFA and that they were true and correct. Neither the schedules nor the SOFA listed Petitioner’s sale of the Monte Mac interest.
Referring to “a fundamental disagreement,” Respondents filed a motion to withdraw as counsel for Petitioner, which the bankruptcy court granted one year after Petitioner’s Chapter 11 filing. After moving for withdrawal, Respondents also filed an application for fees, to which Petitioner filed an objection on May 22, 2006. The objection from Petitioner did not specifically mention the undisclosed Monte Mac transfer but alleged, among other things, that Respondents had threatened Petitioner with their withdrawal, had caused Petitioner to file inaccurate financial disclosures, and had obtained his signature on these disclosures by fraud. The bankruptcy court held a fee hearing on April 10, 2007. After hearing objections, the bankruptcy court analyzed billing records and disallowed some fees as excessive, duplicative, clerical, or administrative in nature. The bankruptcy court approved the rest in a final fee award entered on June 4, 2007, addressing the services performed, rates charged, and time billed but not specifically mentioning the allegations made in the objections. Petitioner did not appeal or move the bankruptcy court to reconsider its judgment.
Following Respondents’ withdrawal, the bankruptcy court converted Petitioner’s bankruptcy from Chapter 11 to Chapter 7. When questioned about the Monte Mac sale on the day after the fee hearing and prior to the entry of the final fee judgment, Petitioner testified to his creditors that he had owned an interest in Monte Mac but had sold it for $72,000 and could not recall when he sold it.
On March 21, 2008, Petitioner filed a motion in bankruptcy court alleging damages from malpractice that included over one million dollars for his exposure to a denial of his discharge.
Petitioner never filed an amended schedule or SOFA to include the sale of his interest in the Monte Mac partnership. Finding this to be a knowing and fraudulent omission, the bankruptcy court denied the discharge of Petitioner’s debts on June 23, 2009.
Petitioner then brought a separate action for legal malpractice, breach of fiduciary duty, and misrepresentation in the Second Judicial District Court. In his complaint, Petitioner made broad allegations of malpractice against Respondents. Respondents moved to dismiss Petitioner’s complaint as barred by the res judicata effect of the bankruptcy court fee award. Petitioner responded that his malpractice claim had not accrued until he had been denied a discharge, because until then he had not suffered injury, and so approval of the fee award did not bar his claim. The district court found that this argument “fails on the facts” because Petitioner alleged both malpractice and damages sustained from that malpractice in the bankruptcy fee proceedings and in subsequent pleadings prior to the denial of his discharge. The district court granted summary judgment for Respondents on grounds of res judicata. Petitioner appealed, the Court of
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Zamora v. St. Vincent Hosp.,
III. DISCUSSION
Petitioner argues that New Mexico precedent does not allow a nonadversarial fee proceeding to preclude a later claim for legal malpractice; and he reasons that because he did not suffer any injury until the denial of his discharge, his malpractice claim could not have been brought earlier.
“[R]es judicata is designed to relieve parties of the cost and vexation of multiple lawsuits, conserve -judicial resources, . . . prevent [] inconsistent decisions, [and] encourage reliance on adjudication.” Computer One, Inc. v. Grisham & Lawless, P.A.,
A. The Legal Malpractice Claim Involves the Same Cause of Action for Res Judicata Purposes as the Fee Claim Because Both Were Based on the Nature and Quality of Respondents’ Legal Services During the Bankruptcy Representation
Both the Tenth Circuit and New Mexico have adopted the transactional approach in analyzing the single-cause-of-action element of res judicata. See Petromanagement Corp. v. Acme-Thomas Joint Venture,
Although not in the bankruptcy context, New Mexico cases have also concluded that a claim for attorney fees can have a res judicata effect on a later claim for malpractice. In Brunacini v. Kavanagh, the Court of Appeals determined that a suit for legal fees and a later suit for malpractice had a common origin and subject matter. See
We hold here that this reasoning extends to claims of malpractice after a bankruptcy fee proceeding concerning the same legal services. Petitioner’s two claims are rooted in a common nucleus of operative facts. The claim for legal malpractice concerns the same service period and alleged deficiencies in the same legal services that were the subject of the bankruptcy fee proceeding. Petitioner’s claims would have formed a convenient trial unit because the bankruptcy court is already required to consider the quality of these services in determining the appropriate fees and has procedures available to hear objections and institute an adversarial proceeding if necessary. See 11 U.S.C. § 330(a)(1), (3)-(4) (requiring the bankruptcy court to determine that legal services were necessary and reasonable before approving fees); Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9014(a), (c) (2004) (requiring notice and the opportunity for a hearing in a contested matter and outlining the procedural rules that will apply). Treatment as a single unit would also conform to the parties’ expectations because objections to services rendered
B. Res Judicata Precludes Petitioner’s Malpractice Claim Because He Had a Full and Fair Opportunity to Litigate It in the Bankruptcy Fee Proceeding
Even if two actions are the same under the transactional test and all other elements are met, res judicata does not bar a subsequent action unless the plaintiff could and should have brought the claim in the form.er proceeding. In re Intelogic Trace, Inc.,
After a bankruptcy fee hearing and after determining cause-of-action identity under the transactional test, federal courts have considered additional factors in determining whether res judicata bars a subsequent malpractice claim. These factors “include whether the fee hearing was an adversary proceeding or contested matter, the nexus between the order awarding [professional] fees and the claims now being asserted, and ‘the amount of time that has elapsed since the case commenced.’” In re Intelogic Trace, Inc.,
Petitioner asserts, relying on this Court’s opinion in Computer One, that litigation on the issue of attorney fees based on a motion or lien can have no preclusive effect on a later claim for malpractice. Computer One reversed a grant of summary judgment that had precluded a legal malpractice claim because of the earlier approval of an attorney’s charging lien in a suit between the client and a tortfeasor to which the attorney was not a party.
In the Rule 1-013 analysis in Bennett that Computer One relied on, the Bennett majority did suggest a possible distinction between the res judicata effect of a motion for fees and that of a separate fee lawsuit, but Bennett cited no authority for this distinction beyond the “opposing party” wording of our compulsory counterclaim rule and did not address long-established principles of res judicata beyond the requirements of Rule 1-013. Bennett,
Petitioner does not argue that his earlier bankruptcy fee proceeding did not allow him to bring a malpraotice claim, and it is clear that under federal law bankruptcy court procedures would have allowed such a claim. See, e.g., Capitol Hill Group,
Petitioner contends that because his bankruptcy discharge was not denied until more than two years after the proceeding to determine Respondents’ fees, he was unable during the fee hearing to bring the particular malpractice claim he alleges here, the failure to list the transfer of the Monte Mac asset in his bankruptcy schedules, because he had not yet suffered injury from that omission. In New Mexico, a malpractice claim accrues when the plaintiff suffers actual injury and discovers, or through the exercise of reasonable diligence should* discover, the facts essential to the claim. Sharts v. Natelson,
The record shows that Petitioner was aware of the sale of his interest in Monte Mac because that sale occurred only one month prior to his filing for bankruptcy. He was or should have been aware that this sale was not listed in his bankruptcy schedules because he reviewed those schedules and testified to their accuracy. He was also aware that those schedules were not accurate because he stated in his objection to Respondents’ fee application, filed May 22, 2006, that he had instructed Respondents to withdraw his disclosure statement because it did not accurately depict his financial affairs. Finally, he was aware that the failure to disclose this transfer exposed him to a denial of discharge because he was questioned by creditors regarding the sale and because he alleged this denial of discharge as damages attributable to malpractice in a motion to the bankruptcy court filed before the actual denial of his discharge.
We agree with the courts below that Petitioner was aware of his claim and could and should have brought that claim in the bankruptcy proceeding. Petitioner alleged malpractice based on inaccuracies in his financial disclosures a year before the bankruptcy fee hearing. While the questioning regarding Monte Mac did take place after the fee hearing, it was only one day later and was before the entry of the final fee judgment. Even after the entry of that judgment, Petitioner had the opportunity to move for a new trial, to move to alter or amend the judgment, or to appeal. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9023 (1983) (applying Fed. R. Civ. P. 59 (1995) (allowing a motion for a new trial, Subsection (b), or the alteration or amendment of a judgment within 10 days of the entry of judgment, Subsection (e))); Fed. R. Bankr. P. 8002(a) (1997) (allowing a notice of appeal to be filed within 10 days after the entry of judgment). Petitioner’s motion alleging the potential for a denial of discharge as damages from malpractice was filed over a year before the actual denial of his discharge and less than a year after the fee judgment, at which point he could still have requested postjudgment relief. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 9024 (1991) (applying Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) (1987) (allowing relief from final judgment due to newly discovered evidence within one year of the entry of judgment)). We therefore conclude that Petitioner had a full and fair opportunity to litigate his malpractice claim in the bankruptcy court and that res judicata applies to preclude it in this second proceeding.
IV. CONCLUSION
We affirm the grant of summary judgment to Respondents.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
