SUMMARY ORDER
ON CONSIDERATION WHEREOF, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that the order of said District Court be and it hereby is AFFIRMED.
PPX Enterprises, Inc. and Edward Chalpin appeal from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Wood, J.) granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment and dismissing the amended complaint. Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the district court erred in finding plaintiffs failed to show a breach of fiduciary duty and there were material fact questions precluding summary judgment. For the reasons given below, we affirm.
PPX and Chaplin’s amended complaint sets forth seven causes of action against Fredericks, alleging a variety of legal malpractice and contract claims arising from a number of legal matters Fredericks handled for plaintiffs. The only claims at issue on appeal involve Fredericks’s legal representation when Sandor Frankel and Richard Dienst, both attorneys, sued Chaplin and Skoler over unpaid legal fees. Fredericks was retained in the Frankel and Dienst matter by a written retainer agreement. Fredericks was to “act on behalf of Ron Skoler, Esq. regarding a fee dispute with Frankel and Dienst.” Fredericks was retained by PPX because PPX agreed to indemnify Skoler, a former employee, against any claims by Frankel and Dienst for legal fees owed to them. PPX and Chaplin allege Fredericks’s representation was a litigation tactic designed to give Fredericks complete control over not only Skoler’s case, but Chaplin’s as well. Chaplin was represented by his own attorney, Norman Flitt.
The Frankel and Dienst matter arose out of their legal representation of Chaplin and Skoler in the dissolution of a corporation, Rhythm Method. Chaplin and Skoler discharged Frankel and Dienst after eleven months, alleging the relationship had deteriorated to the point where Chaplin and Skoler no longer trusted Frankel and Dienst to represent them fairly. Frankel and Dienst subsequently brought suit in Supreme Court, New York County, seeking a hearing to determine the amount of their charging lien.
PPX and Chaplin contend Fredericks was the lead counsel in the charging lien proceeding, and controlled all trial strategy for both Chaplin and Skoler, even
In their suit, PPX and Chaplin argued that if Fredericks had permitted calling Chaplin as a witness, then the charging lien proceeding would have gone in them favor as Chaplin would have testified as to the causes for firing Frankel and Dienst. In deciding Fredericks’ motion for summary judgment, Magistrate Douglas Eaton found that as a matter of law, Chaplin could not sue Fredericks for legal malpractice because Fredericks did not represent Chaplin in the Frankel and Dienst matter. Further, the Magistrate recommended granting summary judgment on the breach of contract claims brought under the retainer agreement because the trial exceeded the one day provided for in the retainer agreement.
In reviewing de novo those parts of the order that PPX and Chaplin timely objected to, Judge Kimba M. Wood adopted the Magistrate’s Report and Recommendations, and made further findings of her own. The district court held PPX and Chaplin failed to raise any material issues of fact regarding the “but for” element of the legal malpractice claim. Absent that element, the district court held summary judgment was correctly entered for the defendant. Further, the district court held the breach of contract claim was correctly dismissed as duplicative of the malpractice claim, and because Fredericks did not promise a particular result in his retainer agreement.
On appeal, PPX and Chaplin argue Fredericks breached a fiduciary duty he owed to Chaplin when he agreed to represent Skoler in the Frankel and Dienst matter. Further, appellants argue material issues of fact prevented a grant of summary judgment on both the legal malpractice and breach of contract claims. Fredericks argues that as appellants did not pursue the breach of fiduciary duty claim below, it cannot be pressed on appeal. Further, he argues the record supports the district court’s ordering summary judgment in his favor.
We turn next to the issue of legal malpractice. The district court correctly found appellants failed to raise an issue of material fact with regards to whether Fredericks’ actions were the proximate cause of appellants’ damages. See Senise v. Mackasek,
As for the breach of contract claim, the district court properly held it duplicative of the malpractice claim and granted summary judgment. Under New York law, wdien the alleged breach of a retainer agreement is a “breach of general professional standards” and not a breach of a particular action or promised result, then the breach of contract claim is duplicative of the legal malpractice claim and viewed as a redundant pleading. See Senise,
We have considered appellants’ remaining arguments and find them without merit.
Notes
. A charging lien is the right of an attorney to have the costs and payment due for a lawsuit secured by the judgment won for the client.
