Richard E. BANKER,
Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellant-Cross-Appellee,
v.
NIGHSWANDER, MARTIN & MITCHELL,
Defendant-Counter-Claimant-Appellee-Cross-Appellant.
Nos. 1777, 1888, Dockets 93-9292, 93-9338.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued June 13, 1994.
Decided Oct. 11, 1994.
W.E. Whittingtоn IV, Norwich, VT (Douglas S. Moore, Brooks McNally Whittington Platto & Vitt, of counsel), for plaintiff-appellant-cross-appellee Richard E. Banker.
Charles J. Dunn, Manchester, NH (Wadleigh, Starr, Peters, Dunn & Chiesa, of counsel), for defendant-appellee-cross-appellant Nighswander, Martin & Mitchell.
Before: McLAUGHLIN, JACOBS, Circuit Judges, and WEINSTEIN, Senior District Judge.*
JACOBS, Circuit Judge:
This case of legal malpractice arises from the retention of the New Hampshire law firm of Nighswander, Martin & Mitchell ("Nighswander") to advise and rеpresent Richard E. Banker in his effort to collect a debt evidenced by a promissory note. In the underlying collection case, the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire granted summary judgment to the debtors, leaving Banker unable to collect on the note. Banker subsequently brought this lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Vermont, alleging that Nighswander's advice concerning collection on the note amounted to legal malpractice, and demanding $350,000 in damages. After a four-day bench trial, the Vermont district court (Billings, J.) found that Nighswander had committed malpractice. The district court further found, however, that Banker failed to mitigate his damages by not prosecuting an appeal of the adverse judgment in the underlying collection suit. The district court therefore declined to award as damages the full amount due on the note, and instead entered judgment for $50,000.
Banker appeals the district court's judgment fixing the damage award at $50,000, a figure that apparently reflects the court's finding that Banker failed to mitigate damages; and the court's refusal to award Banker attorney's fees incurred by him in the malpractice action. Nighswander cross-appeals the district court's liability finding.
We find no error in the district court's finding of legal malpractice or the refusal to award attorney's fees. We vacate the judgment, however, and remand for findings concerning causation and for rеcalculation of damages in a manner consistent with this opinion.
Background
Banker sold his 100 percent ownership of Quality Mechanical, Inc. to Upper Valley Refrigeration Co., Inc. ("Upper Valley"), in two stock sale transactions: 50 percent in July 1986, and the remaining 50 percent in December 1987. Upper Valley was a New Hampshire corporation solely owned by Carol and Wilton Buskey. At the closing of the second stock transaction, Banker acceрted a promissory note in the principal amount of $260,000, executed by Upper Valley and Quality Mechanical, as well as by the Buskeys individually. This promissory note was secured by the stock of Upper Valley and Quality Mechanical, the shares of which were placed in escrow with Banker's attorney, Albert J. Cirone.
When payments on the note ceased after April 1989, the principal amount due on default was $229,264.38. Banker's lawyer, Mr. Cirone, was then of counsel to thе Nighswander firm. Banker retained the firm in May 1989, and Mr. Cirone sent a letter in June demanding payment from the makers of the note. That same month, Banker filed suit in New Hampshire state court to collect on the note and (more immediately) to attach the property of the Buskeys and the two corporations. In July 1989, the Buskeys removed the suit to federal court in New Hampshire.
Banker soon began to hear news suggesting that the debtors might be in financial straits: the corporations wеre not paying their suppliers, and the Buskeys were in the midst of an embittered divorce. Acting on the advice of his attorneys at Nighswander, an alarmed Banker repossessed the stock of Upper Valley and Quality Mechanical on October 19, 1989. For several months thereafter, the parties conducted settlement negotiations that resulted in an undertaking by the Buskeys to pay a sum certain on January 2, 1990. That date came and went without payment. On January 15, 1990, Banker vоted himself president and sole director of both corporations. According to the Nighswander brief, the entire purpose of these steps was to secure accurate financial information about the debtors.
Later that month, Upper Valley's bank swept the accounts of Upper Valley, seizing $81,000, and prompting Banker to file a petition for reorganization of Upper Valley under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. In March 1990, thе corporation was forced into liquidation under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code.
In July 1990, Wilton Buskey filed a supplemental affirmative defense in the note collection case, alleging that the exercise of Banker's right to take possession of the escrowed stock and his exercise of control over the two corporations constituted an involuntary strict foreclosure under Article 9, Section 505(2) of the Uniform Commercial Code. See N.H.Rev.St.Ann. Sec. 382-A:9-505(2). The Buskeys then filed a motion for summary judgment on that issue, arguing that Banker thereby relinquished any remedy against them or their personal assets. Summary judgment in favor of the Buskeys was granted on January 10, 1991. Banker v. Upper Valley Refrigeration,
Educated by the summary judgment opinion, Banker retained new counsel to pursue a claim that Nighswander committed malpractice in failing to advise Banker about the risks of repossessing the stock. Banker's new counsel, the firm of Teachout, Brooks & McNally (now Brooks McNally Whittington Platto & Vitt), notified the Nighswander firm of this malpractice claim on January 20, 1992, and at the same time conveyed Banker's direction that Nighswander pursue an appeal of the New Hampshire decision on Banker's behalf. Nighswander, however, decided to cut its ties with its unhappy client, and filed a motion in the New Hampshire federal court to withdraw as counsel. At the hearing on the motion, Banker opposed Nighswander's withdrawal. In granting the motion, the New Hampshire сourt expressed its view that Banker's new counsel could represent Banker in an appeal to the First Circuit.
On June 22, 1992, Banker filed his complaint in this lawsuit in Vermont federal court. On November 15, 1993, Judge Billings entered his decision and order, finding that Nighswander committed malpractice by negligently rendering advice. Specifically, the court found that Nighswander was negligent in researching collection alternatives, and in failing to learn--and tell its client--the risks of involuntary strict foreclosure. However, the court also held that Banker failed to mitigate his damages by failing to appeal the New Hampshire decision. Apparently for that reason, the court awarded Banker $50,000 in damages rather than the considerably larger sum due on the note. This appeal followed.
Discussion
Standard of Review
Following a bench trial, an appellate court may only set aside those findings of fact that are clearly erroneous, with due regard given to the district court's credibility determinations. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a); Anderson v. City of Bessemer,
Malpractice Liability
We first consider the potentially dispositive issue presented in the cross-appeal. Nighswander argues that the district court's finding of liability for legal malpractice is without support in the evidence. We disagree.
In October 1989, Banker took possession of the stock certificates that had been stored in Cirone's safe and recorded his name on them, thereby becoming the sole shareholder of the corporations. On January 15, 1990, after an unsuccessful attempt to settle the dispute, Banker removed the Buskeys as directors and appointed himself director, president, and treasurer. He then assumed day-to-day control of the corporations, eventually taking Upper Valley (the "parent" corporation) into a liquidation proceeding under chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code. 11 U.S.C. Secs. 701-766. In doing all this, Banker acted on the advice of Nighswander.
The New Hampshire district court held that Banker's conduct in taking possession of the stock and exercising control of the corporations constituted an "involuntary strict foreclosure" under section 9-505 of the U.C.C. Banker v. Upper Valley Refrigeration Co.,
A claim for attorney malpractice, being either in the nature of a tort or a contract action, is a matter of state substantive law. See Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
Under New Hampshire law, a "malpractice plaintiff's burden in proving liability is ... essentially the same as any negligence plaintiff's burden to prove facts upon which the law imposes a duty of care, breach of that duty, and so-called proximate causation of harm." North Bay Council, Inc., Boy Scouts of America v. Bruckner,
In the present litigation, the Vermont district court found that the Nighswander lawyer assigned to research Banker's rights under Article 9 of the U.C.C. produced a three-page memorandum that failed to consider any risk associated with taking possession of the securities. Nobody advised Banker that he might be able to avoid the strict foreclosure problem through a reasonable commercial sale of the collateral, pursuant tо Sec. 9-504 of the U.C.C. No other attorney at the firm looked into this matter at all until the Buskeys raised the issue as an affirmative defense in the collection action, at which time one Nighswander lawyer confided in a letter to Banker that this defense was "a mystery" to him.
Nighswander argues that Banker's expert on malpractice lacked the necessary background or foundation to testify that the firm's conduct subjected its client to a substantial risk and fell below professiоnal standards prevailing in the jurisdiction. Moreover, Nighswander contends that its own experts testified that the risk presented by the firm's advice was "so slight as to be negligible," because (at the time the advice was given) no New Hampshire decision had indicated that repossession of stock would be deemed strict foreclosure, and the First Circuit had not issued its opinion in Lamp Fair. The Lamp Fair court noted, however, that (a) a majority of the courts had held that such cоnduct constituted an involuntary strict foreclosure, and (b) even under the minority view, taking possession of the collateral without attempting to dispose of it bars a subsequent default judgment for the balance due.
We are unable to affirm liability, however, because there is no finding or conclusion as to one of the elements of a lawyer malpractice claim: proximate cause. North Bay Council,
On remand, therefore, we direct the district court to enter findings and conclusions as to proximate cause.
Damages
The findings of fact disclose no basis for fixing damages at $50,000. When pressed on this issue at oral argument, counsel for Nighswander explained that Banker had at some point agreed to settle the collection matter with the Buskeys for $45,000. The idea that the $50,000 award represents the $45,000 settlement, plus some unspecified adjustment, insufficiently accounts for the judgment. In any event, there cannot be any reliance on the $45,000 settlement (unless the settlement formed a new contract, which no one apparently contends) by virtue of Rule 408 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, which bars the introduction of a settlement offer for the purpose of proving the amount of a liability. No other explanation for the $50,000 award is appаrent from the record, and therefore we lack the findings necessary to affirm the damage award. On remand, we direct the district court to set forth the findings and conclusions necessary to assure both the parties and a reviewing court that the damage award has been calculated with a reasonable degree of certainty. See Sir Speedy, Inc. v. L & P Graphics, Inc.,
Mitigation of Damages
The district court's opinion recites that Banker's failure to appeal the New Hampshire decision constituted a failure to mitigate his damages. Since that factor potentially influenced the damage award, we address this conclusion, with which we disagree.
"The law requires reasonable efforts by a plaintiff to curtail his losses." Emery v. Caledonia Sand & Gravel Co.,
Did the duty to mitigate damages require Banker to appeal thе decision of the New Hampshire district court? New Hampshire courts are silent on this question; the facts presented, however, do not require us to surmise any general principle of New Hampshire law.
Courts cannot require a litigant to press an appeal from a decision that the litigant believes to be correct. By the same token, a lawyer cannot be expected to stipulate to malpractice in the wake of a trial court dеcision that embarrasses the lawyer's advice. Whatever complications might ensue from this impasse, and however the Supreme Court of New Hampshire might resolve it, the circumstances here offer a simple resolution, because Banker and his new counsel pursued a ruthless policy of good faith: Banker gave Nighswander notice of the malpractice claim, and at the same time agreed to pursue an appeal of the collection suit if Nighswander would prosecute it under the existing contingency fee arrangement; when Nighswander declined that opportunity, Banker looked (unsuccessfully) for appellate counsel willing to accept a contingency fee. Nighswander is therefore compelled to argue that Banker's duty to mitigate damages required Banker to either (a) pay hourly rates to yet another lawyer to pursue an appeal that Banker deemed fruitless; or (b) enlist his malpractice counsel to argue the appeal. Neither of these choices falls within the duty to mitigate damages.
As to the first choice, it is unreasonable to require a plaintiff to expend funds to pay an hourly rate to an attorney to take an appeal that the plaintiff believes to be without merit. That option cannot be described as an effort free of "undue risk, expense, or humiliation." Emery,
As to the second choice, both the New Hampshire and Vermont district courts expressed the view that Banker's new lawyer could prosecute the appeal. Notwithstanding these findings, Banker's lawyer in the malpractice claim would have risked an issue conflict if he had pursued the New Hampshire appeal. He had already been retained to pursue a malpractice action against Nighswander--a claim that could succeed only if the New Hampshire decision was either correct or predictable. The district court in New Hampshire suggested that Banker's new counsel could have taken the appeal first, and then (if he lost in the First Circuit) pursued the malpractice action in Vermont. That course, however, would call upon a lawyer to champion Nighswander's advice in one jurisdiction before arguing (across the state line) that Nighswander's advice was erroneous and negligent. That course would also render the lawyer vulnerable to the charge that the appeal was half-hearted, particularly if by the time of the appeal, Nighswander had deeper pockets than the Buskeys. In any event, Nighswander, which contends that the appeal was meritorious, declined to pursue it; under that circumstance, Nighswander cannot condemn the decision by Banker and his nеw counsel to forgo an appeal they deemed meritless.
Attorney's Fees
Banker appeals the district court's refusal to grant him attorney's fees, arguing that malpractice cases are "an established exception" to the American rule that leaves each party to pay its own legal fees. We disagree.
"State law creates the substantive right to attorney's fees...." Riordan v. Nationwide Mutual Fire Ins. Co.,
Banker concedes in his brief that there is no New Hampshire statute or court decision creating a right to attorney's fees in a legal malpractice case. We decline his invitation to import an exception from other jurisdictions. Nor do we find his contractual argument persuasive. He contends that, because the promissory note contained an attorney's fee clause, he cannot be made whole if his recovery in the malpractice action is net of his attorney's fees. That argument rests on a policy decision that should be considered (if at all) by the state's legislature or courts. Absent bad faith on the part of the adverse party, we see no basis under New Hampshire law for an award of attorney's fees to the successful litigant in a legal malpractice action. See Adams v. Bradshaw,
We find all other arguments raised by the parties to be without merit.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the judgment, and remand for findings and conclusions in respect of the issues of proximate cause and the amount of damages (if any) suffered by Banker. In so doing, we affirm the district court's conclusion of legal malpractice and its refusal to award Banker attorney's fees.
Notes
The Honorable Jack B. Weinstein, of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation
