Lead Opinion
Aрpellant Percy William Smith appeals the trial court’s grant of appellees’, Public Defender Service’s and Avis E. Buchanan’s, motions to dismiss his civil action against them with prejudice. In an amended complaint Smith claims Buchanan, then a member of the Public Defender Service, committed legal malpractice in her representation of him in a criminal case. He asserts that Buchanan’s errоrs are actionable under theories of breach of contract, negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and deprivation of rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We affirm.
I.
On August 16, 1988, Smith was convicted of carnal knowledge and sodоmy of a four-year-old girl. United States v. Percy Smith, Crim. No. F-5736-88. Following his conviction, Smith alleged ineffective assistance of counsel contending that Buchanan was negligent in investigating his claim that he was on blood pressure medicаtion that rendered him impotent and thus unable to commit the crime charged.
Judge Gladys Kessler held an evidentiary hearing in response to Smith’s ineffective assistance of counsel motion under D.C.Code § 23-110 (1989). Smith tеstified that Buchanan failed to investigate his claims of impotency and failed to present an available and meritorious defense at trial. Smith did not call his doctor or any other expert witness to testify at the hearing. Buchanan testified that she had contacted Smith’s doctor, who indicated that Smith had not been taking the medication long enough nor in a large enough quantity to produce impotеnce. Buchanan also testified that she told Smith that his doctor indicated that he (the doctor) could not testify favorably about the medicine causing impotence. Judge Kessler ruled against Smith and found thаt Buchanan’s level of representation met the constitutional standards and the court’s high standards for adequacy of representation.
Smith subsequently appealed both his conviction and Judge Kessler’s denial of relief under § 23-110. We affirmed both the conviction and the ruling. (Percy W.) Smith v. United States, Nos. 88-1518 & 89-264 (D.C. Oct. 29,1990). On December 20, 1993, Judge Kessler denied another § 23-110 motion and, a year and a half later, denied Smith’s request for a writ of coram nobis whiсh alleged his attorney failed to investigate his impotence from medication. Smith then filed his amended complaint alleging malpractice. The trial court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss.
II.
The doctrine of collateral estoppel bars “relitigation of issues of fact or law determined in a prior proceeding which were essential to that judgment.” Oubre v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Employment Servs.,
Smith is barred from relitigating his claims because all of the issues of fact were litigated and determined before Judge Kes-sler in the § 23-110 hearing. After Smith presented all his evidence and Buchanan testified, Judge Kessler found Buchanan had investigated Smith’s claim аnd determined that Smith’s doctor’s testimony would not have helped Smith’s case in part because Smith had not been taking the medicine for a
II. (A)
Our holding today is not inconsistent with our decision in Brown v. Jonz,
Broum’s holding is limited to the proposition that legal malpractice claims are not automatically barred whеnever a plaintiff has pursued unsuccessfully a claim for ineffective assistance of counsel. Different legal standards of care apply to each of these. Our decision was a rejection of the approach taken by some courts which have concluded that the standards for ineffective assistance of counsel and legal malpractice are essentially equivalent. These courts have held that the denial of an ineffectiveness claim by necessity bars a malpractice action, or alternatively, have barred malpractice relief unless and until the underlying criminal conviction is successfully attacked. Peeler v. Hughes & Luce,
III.
In filing her motion to dismiss, Buchanan attached a number of opinions and orders, as well as a brief and a transcript. We hold that these materials do not constitute “matters outside the pleading” requiring consideration of the motion as a motion for summary judgment under Super. Ct. R. of Civ. P. 56. See Henson v. CSC Credit Servs.,
Affirmed.
POSTSCRIPT
In deciding Brown v. Jonz,
In reaching the holding in what is now becoming this noteworthy footnote 7, the court was aware that, in the District of Columbia, there is only one standard of care by which the defendant’s conduct is measured. It “is often stated as ‘that degree of care which a reasonably prudent person would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances.’ ” Morrison v. MacNamara,
In deciding that the Sixth Amendment determination was not preclusive of Brown’s legal malpractice (negligence) claim, the court was aware of the Sixth Amеndment standard set forth in Strickland v. Washington, supra,
A convicted defendant’s claim that counsel’s assistance was so defective as to require reversal of a conviction or death sentence has two components. First, the defendant must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the “counsel” guaranteed the defеndant by the Sixth Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the deficient performance prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that counsel’s errors were so serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is unreliable. Unless a defendant makes both showings, it cannot be said that the conviction or death sentence resulted from a breakdown in the adversary process that renders the result unreliable.
Id. at 687,
Simply stated, the division in Brown held that what constitutes “due care” in representing a client in a criminal case is more than the constitutional minimum set by Strickland.
I could not then, nor can I now, foresee of any circumstance where what constitutes due care, will be so low as to be only that which is the constitutional minimum. Apparently, neither could the division. The flat, unambiguous holding of footnote 7 in Brown: “due care” in legal malpractice cases requires more than the constitutional minimum. The holding is not the standards “are not always essentially the same.” Concurring opinion of Judge Steadman аt p. 213. Rather the holding is the standards are not the same. I agree that there are issues, other than the standard of care, which Brown v. Jonz does not address. Whether due care can ever be coextеnsive with Strickland v. Washington is not one of them.
In my view, the position taken on this point by my concurring Brethren is in violation if M.A.P. v. Ryan,
Concurrence Opinion
with whom SCHWELB, Associate Judge, joins, concurring:
I am in complete agreement with Judge Newman’s opinion, with a single caveat relating to the holding in footnote 7 of Brown v. Jonz,
Notes
. Jonz was a civil action “based primarily on Brown's allegations of Jonz’s breach of contract.” Id. Brown had hired Jonz as his defense attorney to represent him in the criminal proceeding.
