Court Opinion

ID: 2777366
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-02-06 01:06:29.991423+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:45:52.807819
License: Public Domain

J-A26012-14

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

HEIDI M. REYNOLDS,                           IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                   PENNSYLVANIA
                        Appellant

                   v.

STEVEN D. STAMBAUGH AND
STAMBAUGH LAW, PC,

                        Appellees                No. 1889 MDA 2013

              Appeal from the Order Entered October 16, 2013
               In the Court of Common Pleas of York County
                Civil Division at No(s): 2010-SU-006752-81

HEIDI M. REYNOLDS,                           IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
                                                   PENNSYLVANIA
                        Appellant

                   v.

STEVEN D. STAMBAUGH AND
STAMBAUGH LAW, PC,

                        Appellees                No. 1890 MDA 2013

                     Appeal from the Order April 8, 2013
               In the Court of Common Pleas of York County
                  Civil Division at No(s): 2010 SU 6752 81

BEFORE: BOWES, MUNDY, and JENKINS, JJ.
J-A26012-14

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                             FILED FEBRUARY 05, 2015

        Heidi Reynolds (“Plaintiff”) appeals from the October 16, 2013 order

granting preliminary objections and dismissing this legal malpractice action.1

After careful review, we reverse and remand.

        On December 22, 2010, Plaintiff instituted this lawsuit against

Appellees Steven D. Stambaugh and Stambaugh Law, PC (collectively

“Stambaugh”). Preliminary objections were filed to the first complaint, the

first amended complaint, and the second amended complaint. 2          In each

instance, the preliminary objections were granted, but Plaintiff was also

accorded leave to amend. After Plaintiff filed her third amended complaint,

which she incorrectly refers to as a second amended complaint, Stambaugh

again filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer. He averred

____________________________________________
1
   Although Plaintiff also appealed from an April 8, 2013 order sustaining
preliminary objections to an amended complaint, that order expressly stated
that the dismissal was granted without prejudice. In that order, Plaintiff also
was afforded twenty days to amend the complaint, which action she
undertook. Subject to exceptions that are inapplicable herein, this Court has
jurisdiction only over final orders. Pa.R.A.P. 341(a) (“an appeal may be
taken as of right from any final order of an administrative agency or lower
court”). A final order is an order that disposes of all claims and of all
parties, or is expressly defined as a final order by statute or the ordering
court. Pa.R.A.P. 341(b). Since the April 8, 2013 order did not dispose of this
case and allowed Plaintiff to proceed by amending her complaint, it is not
final and appealable. Hence, we quash the appeal filed from that order. We
consider the merits of the dismissal of this case in the appeal from the final
order entered herein on October 16, 2013, which dismissed this action with
prejudice.
2
    Each complaint had a certificate of merit affixed to it.

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that Plaintiff had failed to plead a viable cause of action since she settled the

underlying lawsuit and had no ascertainable damages due to his purported

malpractice.    On October 16, 2013, those preliminary objections were

granted without leave to amend, and the action was dismissed.                 The

propriety of this final order is the subject of our review.

      We now recite the relevant facts as set forth in the final complaint as

well as its accompanying exhibits.         On June 11, 2008, Plaintiff hired

Stambaugh to represent her in connection with a slip-and-fall accident that

occurred on October 29, 2006. Plaintiff tripped on steps leading to premises

located at 139 N. Market Street, Mount Joy, Pennsylvania. As a result of the

fall, Plaintiff sustained three fractures to her right foot, required surgery, and

developed a Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (“MRSA”) infection

from that surgery.      Plaintiff underwent another surgery and additional

medical procedures due to the MRSA infection.

      The owners of 139 N. Market Street were Michael and Kelly Groff.

They had hired Doug Lamb Construction Inc. (“Lamb”) to replace a front

retaining wall and brick sidewalk with concrete.       Lamb completed the job

just prior to Plaintiff’s accident.     Lamb allegedly created a dangerous

condition that caused Plaintiff’s fall in that Lamb changed the rise of the

Groffs’ stairs in the following manner. The rise of the bottom step was four

inches whereas the rise of the remaining steps was ten inches. Plaintiff fell

after she tripped on the bottom step.

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      Plaintiff alleged in her complaint filed herein that when Plaintiff hired

Stambaugh on June 11, 2008, Stambaugh agreed to prepare and prosecute

a premises liability action against the Groffs, “their general contractor

Doug Lamb Construction, Inc.,” as well as any other party responsible for

Plaintiff’s injuries secondary to the fall.   Complaint, 4/29/13, at ¶ 8; see

also id. at 16. Stambaugh represented that he would contact an engineer

to provide a professional opinion as to whether the construction that was

completed by Lamb just before the fall was dangerous.

       On June 13, 2008, Stambaugh sent pictures of the accident scene to

an expert witness, Lawrence C. Dinoff, A.I.A, NCARB, of Robeson Forensic,

Inc. In a cover letter, Stambaugh indicated a desire to discuss the matter

with that expert as to “whether we would be able to bring a claim against

the contractor [, i.e., Lamb] regarding the slope of the sidewalk.” Id. at ¶

18.   Stambaugh failed to retain Mr. Dinoff or any other expert witness to

evaluate the merits of Plaintiff’s case against Lamb. Id. at ¶ 19.

       Stambaugh did not institute an action on Plaintiff’s behalf until the last

day of the applicable statute of limitations, October 29, 2008. He did not

name Lamb as a defendant, and he never served the writ of summons on

the Groffs, who were the only named defendants.              While the writ of

summons was reissued, it was never delivered to the sheriff’s office. From

June 2008 through March 2010, Plaintiff diligently requested information

about the status of her case. Stambaugh’s paralegal in charge of the matter

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repeatedly gave Plaintiff inaccurate accounts of the events and progress of

the underlying action.

      On March 17, 2010, Plaintiff hired another lawyer, John D. Zervanos of

Solff & Zervanos (“Zervanos”).     It took nearly sixty days for Zervanos to

obtain the file from Stambaugh.      On June 1, 2010, Zervanos entered his

appearance on Plaintiff’s behalf in the lawsuit, he achieved service of the writ

of summons on the Groffs on June 21, 2010, and he filed a complaint on

July 28, 2010.    Zervanos deposed Stambaugh and discovered that the

paralegal in question “had been fired for mishandling and even fabricating

case related documents to disguise the actual conduct” of Stambaugh’s

cases, including that of Plaintiff. Id. at ¶ 32(a). Additionally, the paralegal

“repeatedly made false and misleading statements to Plaintiff, to conceal

omissions by [Stambaugh] in competently and diligently prosecuting

Plaintiff’s claim in the Underlying Action.” Id. at ¶ 34.

      The Groffs filed preliminary objections alleging that Plaintiff failed to

timely effectuate service of process and seeking dismissal of the lawsuit.

While the trial court overruled those objections, it recognized that there was

a substantial ground for a difference of opinion on that matter and certified

the order for interlocutory review. The Groffs appealed. Zervanos informed

Plaintiff that it would take approximately eighteen months to litigate the

appeal and that the Superior Court could determine that the writ was not

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timely served, which would mean that the underlying case would be

dismissed.

      On December 30, 2011, Zervanos called Plaintiff to report that

settlement discussions were progressing and that “strangely, an attorney for

Stambaugh” also was participating in settlement negotiations. Id. at ¶ 38.

At that time, neither Zervanos nor Plaintiff was aware that the Superior

Court had entered an order dismissing the interlocutory appeal.

      On January 10, 2012, Zervanos conveyed that the Groffs had offered

$17,000 to settle the case and a verbal accord was reached. On January 30,

2012, Zervanos became aware of the dismissal of the appeal, and Plaintiff

refused to execute a written agreement. On January 31, 2012, “Stambaugh,

through counsel immediately threatened to enforce the settlement” as to

Plaintiff. Id. at ¶ 41. Stambaugh then attempted to be included within the

parties released by Plaintiff by offering an additional $1,000.        Plaintiff

refused to release him based on her belief that his malpractice had forced

her to settle her case for less than it was worth, and the release in question

expressly excludes Stambaugh from its parameters.

      In the present lawsuit, Plaintiff averred that Stambaugh was negligent

in two respects: for failing to name Lamb as a defendant in the underlying

action and due to his failure to attempt service of the writ of summons on

the Groffs. She claimed that, as a result of Stambaugh’s misfeasance in the

handling of her lawsuit, “Plaintiff sustained a significant diminution in [the]

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value of her claims.”     Id. at ¶ 44.       Plaintiff’s complaint had two counts:

“Count I—Professional Negligence/Malpractice,” and “Count II—Breach of

Fiduciary Duty.” Id. at (unnumbered pages) 7, 8.

      In granting Stambaugh’s preliminary objections, the trial court

concluded   that   Plaintiff   did   not    suffer   any   loss    from   Stambaugh’s

malpractice.   It reasoned that Plaintiff “voluntarily chose to settle and

dismiss her underlying action in exchange for a general release of any and

all claims in the sum of $17,000.00. As such, Plaintiff has not pled, nor can

she plead, the requisite element of damages.”                     Trial Court Opinion,

10/17/13, at 5. It noted that Plaintiff set forth that she settled for less than

her case was worth due to a reasonable belief that the Superior Court would

eventually reverse the trial court’s conclusion that her case could proceed

despite the significant delay in service of process.              The court ruled, “A

settlement based on the possibility of a later adverse appellate decision

cannot support a malpractice action.             Such reasoning would require the

Court to speculate far beyond normal boundaries.”            Id. at 5-6. The court

also concluded that Plaintiff failed to aver that she had a viable cause of

action against the contractor.

On appeal, Plaintiff raises these contentions:

      [1.] Whether Reynolds set forth a cognizable claim for damages
      when she settled the underlying action for diminished value
      secondary to Appellees’ legal errors?

      [2.] Whether Reynolds pleaded a cognizable "case-within-the-
      case" for Appellees' failure to timely serve the underlying

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      action's Defendant and join an indispensable party in the
      underlying action?

      [3.] Whether Reynolds pleaded a cognizable breach of fiduciary
      duty?

Appellant’s brief at 9.

      Initially, we outline our standard of review.

      As a trial court's decision to grant or deny a demurrer involves a
      matter of law, our standard for reviewing that decision is
      plenary. Preliminary objections in the nature of demurrers are
      proper when the law is clear that a plaintiff is not entitled to
      recovery based on the facts alleged in the complaint. Moreover,
      when considering a motion for a demurrer, the trial court must
      accept as true all well-pleaded material facts set forth in the
      complaint and all inferences fairly deducible from those facts.

Little Mountain Community Ass'n, Inc. v. Southern Columbia Corp.,

92 A.3d 1191, 1195 (Pa.Super. 2014) (citation omitted). A demurrer can be

granted “only in cases in which it is clear and free from doubt that the

pleader will be unable to prove facts legally sufficient to establish the right to

relief. If any doubt exists as to whether a demurrer should be sustained, it

should be resolved in favor of overruling the preliminary objections.”        Id.

(citation omitted).

      In order to pursue a legal malpractice action, the plaintiff initially must

prove that he had a cause of action in the underlying lawsuit and that the

defendant in the legal malpractice case was negligent in prosecuting that

proceeding. Sokolsky v. Eidelman, 93 A.3d 858 (Pa.Super. 2014). Thus,

we look at the prior action litigated by the attorney to determine whether

the plaintiff has a present lawsuit against the attorney. The plaintiff in the

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legal malpractice action also must prove that he would have recovered a

judgment in the underlying action. Id. To summarize, the plaintiff in the

legal malpractice case must establish that the lawyer negligently handled the

underlying lawsuit and that the negligence was the proximate cause of loss

to the plaintiff. Id. The legal malpractice cause of action is articulated as

having three elements: the plaintiff hired the attorney or some other

grounds for a duty inuring to plaintiff’s benefit; the lawyer’s failure to

exercise ordinary skill and knowledge; and that such failure proximately

caused damages to the plaintiff. Id. These damages must be actual rather

than speculative. Id.

      In this case, it is uncontested that Plaintiff hired Stambaugh to

represent her in the underlying lawsuit. She averred that Stambaugh failed

to exercise ordinary skill and knowledge in two respects. First, he failed to

sue Lamb, which allegedly created the hazardous condition that caused her

fall. Second, he did not make any effort to serve the writ against the Groffs,

thereby creating the possibility that her case would be dismissed even if she

recovered a verdict against them. We first address whether her allegations

supported the second element of her cause of action, which pertains to the

establishment of the case within this case.     While this analysis involves

Plaintiff’s second contention on appeal, we address it first since it impacts

upon our discussion of the damages aspect of her cause of action and

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whether she can recover herein after she settled the personal injury lawsuit

against the Groffs.

        We agree with Plaintiff that she did have a cause of action against

Lamb.       See Appellant’s brief at 21-22.3            As noted by Plaintiff, Lamb was

responsible for creating the condition that caused her to fall, and she

specifically set forth in her complaint that Stambaugh agreed to sue both the

contractor Lamb and the owners of the premises.                       In Longwell v.

Giordano, 57 A.3d 163, 170-71 (Pa.Super. 2012), we noted that

                 One who on behalf of the possessor of land erects a
                 structure or creates any other condition thereon is
                 subject to liability to others upon or outside of the
                 land for physical harm caused to them by the
                 dangerous character of the structure or condition
                 after his work has been accepted by the possessor,
                 under the same rules as those determining the
                 liability of one who as manufacturer or independent
                 contractor makes a chattel for the use of others.

        Gresik v. PA Partners, L.P., 989 A.2d 344, 348 (Pa.Super.
        2009), affirmed on other grounds, Gresik v. PA Partners, L.P.,
        33 A.3d 594 (Pa. 2011) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts
        § 385).

                 As the liability of a servant or an independent
                 contractor who erects a structure upon land or
                 otherwise changes its physical condition is
____________________________________________
3
   In her brief, Plaintiff refers to Lamb as an indispensable party. However,
the proper inquiry is whether Lamb was subject to liability and should have
been a named defendant. Given the facts as pled, there was a sufficient
basis to conclude that Lamb was a potential defendant and that Stambaugh
should have pursued the inquiry as to Lamb’s liability. Plaintiff, at trial, will
be required to produce sufficient evidence that Lamb was subject to liability
for the condition leading to her fall.

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            determined by the same rules as those which
            determine the liability of a manufacturer of a chattel,
            it follows that such a servant or contractor who turns
            over the land with knowledge that his work has
            made it dangerous in a manner unlikely to be
            discovered by the possessor is subject to liability
            both to the possessor, and to those who come upon
            the land with the consent of the possessor or who
            are likely to be in its vicinity.

      Id. at 350 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 385 cmt. c.)
      (emphasis added).

      We emphasize that we are reviewing the grant of a demurrer. At this

juncture, the allegations in the complaint must be accepted as true. There

were sufficient facts pled in the final complaint to conclude that Lamb did

create a dangerous condition due to the difference in the rise of the steps.

Lamb was subject to liability under the above theory since, according to the

complaint filed herein, it created the condition just prior to Plaintiff’s fall and

the Groffs would have been unlikely to discover the defect. Moreover, in her

complaint, Plaintiff specifically averred that Stambaugh agreed to prepare

and prosecute a premises liability action against the Groffs as well as “their

general contractor Doug Lamb Construction, Inc.” Complaint, 4/29/13, at ¶

8; see also id. at 16. Thus, Stambaugh expressly agreed to sue Lamb.

      That Stambaugh agreed to sue Lamb also is evidenced by the letter he

sent to secure the services of an expert witness on the defect question.

Stambaugh, by that action, admitted that Lamb was a potential defendant

herein.   According to the complaint, Stambaugh simply abandoned the

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matter and failed to secure the services of the expert to explore whether the

lawsuit could be pursued against Lamb. Simply put, if accepted as true, the

allegations in the complaint set forth a sufficient basis for concluding that

Stambaugh was negligent for not securing an expert witness to ascertain

whether were grounds for naming Lamb as a defendant in the underlying

lawsuit. Plaintiff must be accorded an opportunity to prove this allegation by

presenting proof as to this aspect of her case. It was not incumbent upon

her, at this point in the proceedings, to procure an expert witness on the

subject matter.

      Stambaugh claims that, in her amended complaint filed on October 22,

2012, Plaintiff admitted that Lamb built the stairs in accordance with the

local code.    Stambaugh asserts that this averment constituted a judicial

admission that Lamb was not subject to liability in the underlying action.

First, we note that at no point in her pleadings did Plaintiff concede that she

did not have a viable claim against Lamb.              In her second amended

complaint, Plaintiff alleged “D. Lamb Construction was the construction

contractor hired by the Groff’s [sic] to replace the Groff’s front retaining wall

and existing brick sidewalk with the poured concrete, the walkway to which

the specifications were provided by the [Mount Joy] Borough.”             Second

Amended Complaint, 10/22/12, at ¶ 10.

      This    averment   could   be   construed   to   suggest,   as   argued   by

Stambaugh, that Lamb constructed the sidewalk in accordance with the local

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building code. On the other hand, as noted by Plaintiff in her reply brief, the

averment can be read as outlining that Lamb was hired to perform the

construction in accordance with code supplied by the borough. However, the

averment does not admit that Lamb actually fulfilled that aspect of the

contract work and built the stairs to borough code. Appellant’s reply brief at

4 (“The mere fact that the Mount Joy Borough provided the specifications

does not connote that D. Lamb complied therewith as Appellees argue.”).

        Additionally, merely because a structure complies with a local building

code does not mean that it is not dangerous and that the entity that

constructed the compliant structure is not subject to liability for creating a

dangerous condition. Therefore, any purported admission that the sidewalk

met borough code was not a concession that Lamb was not subject to

liability for creating a dangerous condition by building stairs with differing

rises. While a court may utilize a defendant’s breach of local building code

to create a duty, Restatement (Second of Torts) § 286,4 a contractor who

____________________________________________
4
    That section states:

        The court may adopt as the standard of conduct of a reasonable
        man the requirements of a legislative enactment or an
        administrative regulation whose purpose is found to be
        exclusively or in part

                 (a) to protect a class of persons which includes the
                 one whose interest is invaded, and

(Footnote Continued Next Page)

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creates a dangerous condition is not absolved of liability due to his

compliance with local building codes.

        Restatement (Second) of Torts § 288C provides: “Compliance with a

legislative enactment or an administrative regulation does not prevent a

finding of negligence where a reasonable man would take additional

precautions.” See also id. at comment a (“Where . . . [an] ordinance . . . is

found to define a standard of conduct for the purposes of negligence actions,

as stated in §§ 285 and 286, the standard defined is normally a minimum

standard. . . . This . . . administrative minimum does not prevent a finding

that a reasonable man would have taken additional precautions[.]”).

Pennsylvania law is in accord with these precepts. Berkebile v. Brantly

Helicopter Corp., 281 A.2d 707, 710 (Pa.Super. 1971) (en banc) (holding

“[c]ompliance with a law or administrative regulation relieves the actor of

negligence per se, but it does not establish as a matter of law that due care

was exercised.”); McKenzie v. Cost Brothers, Inc. v. Dickerson

Structural Concrete Corp., 409 A.2d 362 (Pa. 1979) (industry standards
                       _______________________
(Footnote Continued)
                (b) to protect the               particular   interest which   is
                invaded, and

                (c) to protect that interest against the kind of harm
                which            has           resulted,          and

                (d) to protect that interest against the particular
                hazard from which the harm results.

Restatement (Second of Torts) § 286.

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are not conclusive factors in determining negligence, but merely provide

some evidence of the appropriate standard of care).

      Additionally, we agree with Plaintiff that she sufficiently pled a

negligence claim against Stambaugh with respect to his failure to achieve

service of the writ on the Groffs. He filed the writ on October 29, 2008, and

never obtained service upon the Groffs for a period of eighteen months.

Zervanos was able to serve the writ twenty-one days after entering his

appearance in the case, on June 21, 2010. By that time, twenty months had

lapsed since the filing of the writ and the expiration of the statute of

limitations.   In light of this delay, the Groffs unquestionably had valid

grounds for seeking dismissal of the lawsuit filed against them.

      As we noted in Englert v. Fazio Mechanical Services, Inc., 932
A.2d 122, 124 (Pa.Super. 2007) (emphasis added), “It is well settled in this

Commonwealth . . . that service of original process completes the

progression of events by which an action is commenced.”        See Lamp v.

Heyman, 366 A.2d 882 (Pa. 1976).        Even when a lawsuit is commenced

within the statutory limits, “the statute of limitations is tolled only if the

plaintiff then makes a good faith effort to effectuate service.”     Englert,

supra at 124. A plaintiff must make reasonable efforts to obtain service in

order to avoid dismissal based upon the applicable statute of limitations. Id.

Where a party does nothing to ensure that service is effectuated, the statute

of limitations is not tolled. Id.

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      Herein, the allegations in the complaint establish wholesale inaction by

Stambaugh. He simply did nothing to seek service of the writ, which was

filed on the last day of the applicable statute of limitations, even though

Stambaugh was hired months before the statute expired. While the writ was

re-issued numerous times, no steps were taken to serve it; it was not even

taken to the sheriff’s office. The Groffs unquestionably had a strong case for

dismissal of the underlying suit based upon the statute of limitations. While

the trial court in that lawsuit exercised remarkable lenity by allowing the

case to proceed against the Groffs, it also recognized its ruling was legally

tenuous since it permitted interlocutory review of that order.      Hence, we

concur that the Plaintiff set forth a valid legal malpractice claim that

Stambaugh’s neglect to perform any action to effectuate service of the writ

on the Groffs created a legal basis for dismissal of the underlying lawsuit.

      We now address the question of whether Plaintiff’s settlement of the

other action precludes her from establishing in this matter that she suffered

damages due to Stambaugh’s negligence.        As noted, Plaintiff averred that

she settled the action for substantially less than it was worth both based

upon the risk she faced that her claim against the Groffs would ultimately be

dismissed, even if she prevailed against them at a jury trial, and upon the

fact that she could not proceed against Lamb.       Stambaugh’s position was

and is that, when she settled, Plaintiff still could have proceeded to trial

against the Groffs since their preliminary objections had been overruled by

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the trial court in the other action. Stambaugh averred and now claims on

appeal that the question of whether Plaintiff sustained damages was too

speculative to submit to the jury.

      While the trial court agreed with Stambaugh’s contention, we do not.

Given the articulated law regarding service of process and Stambaugh’s

utter failure to undertake any action to achieve such service, there was a

virtually inevitable likelihood that, after final judgment, this Court would

have reversed the trial court’s refusal to dismiss this case against the Groffs

based upon lack of service before the expiration of the statute of limitations.

      While Stambaugh insists that, given the trial court’s refusal to dismiss

the case against the Groffs, the Plaintiff could have proceeded against the

Groffs and obtained a damages award, we note the following. Lamb had not

been joined as a defendant. Thus, the fact that Plaintiff could have gone to

trial against the Groffs does not obviate the fact that the Groffs could have

assigned blame to Lamb for the defect in the steps.         Thus, Plaintiff was

confronted with a risk of not recovering against the Groffs, aside from the

statute-of-limitations question.

      Accepting as true Plaintiff’s articulated facts in the complaint about her

broken foot, contraction of MRSA, and subsequent surgeries, as well as

exhibits regarding her medical costs, the settlement sum is far less than the

amount of her damages from the fall.          We do not agree that it was

speculative that the Plaintiff could have recovered significantly in excess of

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$17,000 had she not faced a risk of dismissal as to the Groffs and an

inability to recover against Lamb. Therefore, we do not view her damages

claim as speculative merely because she could have gone to trial against the

Groffs.   We concur that the facts as set forth in the complaint present a

viable claim that Plaintiff settled her case for a diminished value due to

Stambaugh’s malpractice.

      We now address whether the Plaintiff was precluded from recovering in

this lawsuit due to her settlement of the underlying action.    This question

pertains to application of the Supreme Court’s decision in Muhammad v.

Strassburger, McKenna, Messer, Shilobod and Gutnick, 587 A.2d 1346

(Pa. 1991).   Therein, the defendant law firm in a legal malpractice case

represented the plaintiffs in a medical malpractice lawsuit following the

death of the plaintiffs’ child. The defendant law firm negotiated a settlement

of the medical malpractice case, and the settlement offer was verbally

accepted by the plaintiffs. The wife changed her mind about the settlement

before signing a written accord, but the agreement was subsequently

enforced by the trial court in the medical malpractice case.    The plaintiffs

filed a legal malpractice case against the law firm that negotiated the

medical-malpractice settlement. The legal malpractice case was dismissed,

and our Supreme Court affirmed that dismissal.

      The Muhammad Court concluded that the plaintiffs had failed to state

of cause of action against the law firm. The Court ruled that it would “not

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permit a suit to be filed by a dissatisfied plaintiff against his attorney

following a settlement to which that plaintiff agreed, unless that plaintiff can

show he was fraudulently induced to settle the original action.” Id. at 1348.

It held that a legal malpractice action is not viable against an attorney

“based on negligence and/or contract principles when that client has agreed

to a settlement. Rather, only cases of fraud should be actionable.” Id.

      The court premised its ruling on its “strong and historical public policy

of encouraging settlements[.]” Id. at 1349. It noted that to allow a client

to proceed to file a legal malpractice case after agreeing to settle the

underlying lawsuit would “create chaos in our civil litigation system.

Lawyers would be reluctant to settle a case for fear some enterprising

attorney representing a disgruntled client will find a way to sue them for

something that ‘could have been done, but was not.’” Id. It observed that

permitting a legal malpractice case to proceed when the underlying action

was settled would both “discourage settlements and increase substantially

the number of legal malpractice cases.        A long-standing principle of our

courts has been to encourage settlements; we will not now act so as to

discourage them.” Id. Our High Court concluded that a flood of litigation

would flow from permitting the settling client to pursue a case against his

former attorney. This result, it continued, would create massive delays in

the process of justice by discouraging settlements and creating lawsuits

when cases do settle. It therefore foreclosed

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      the ability of dissatisfied litigants to agree to a settlement and
      then file suit against their attorneys in the hope that they will
      recover additional monies.        To permit otherwise results in
      unfairness to the attorneys who relied on their client's assent
      and unfairness to the litigants whose cases have not yet been
      tried. Additionally, it places an unnecessarily arduous burden on
      an overly taxed court system.

Id. at 1351.

      The Muhammad Court also noted that it would be speculative to

assume that a jury would have returned a verdict that was more than the

settlement amount agreed to by the parties in the underlying lawsuit.      In

this respect it opined:

      It becomes obvious that by allowing suits such as this, which
      merely “second guess” the original attorney's strategy, we would
      permit a venture into the realm of the chthonic unknown. It is
      impossible to state whether a jury would have awarded more
      damages if a suit had been filed against another potential party
      or under another theory of liability. It is indeed possible that a
      smaller verdict would have been reached or a defense verdict
      ultimately would have been rendered. Thus, sanctioning these
      “Monday-morning quarterback” suits would be to permit lawsuits
      based on speculative harm; something with which we cannot
      agree.

Id. at 587 A.2d at 1352 n.13.

      Muhammad carved out an exception to this rule and concluded that

there would be recourse for a plaintiff who was fraudulently induced into

agreeing to settle.   Of crucial importance herein, the Court stated that, if

“the lawyer knowingly commits malpractice, but does not disclose the error

and convinces the client to settle so as to avoid the discovery of such error,

then the client's agreement was fraudulently obtained.”         Id. at 1351

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(emphasis omitted).      It continued that, while the settlement with the

defendant in the underlying action would be upheld, “the plaintiff who has

been defrauded may have redress” in that the Court would “permit him to

proceed under a theory of fraud against the attorney who represented him in

the original action.”

      As our High Court clarified in McMahon v. Shea, 688 A.2d 1179 (Pa.

1997), the Muhammad decision does not absolutely bar a legal malpractice

lawsuit when the underlying action was settled.        Therein, the defendant-

lawyer negotiated a settlement for the plaintiff-client in a divorce case. The

settlement agreement was structured so that it failed to terminate alimony

upon remarriage of the other spouse. The client sued the lawyer when his

spouse remarried and his alimony obligation continued. Our Supreme Court

allowed the case to proceed despite the Muhammad decision.            The Court

concluded that the considerations underlying that case were not implicated

in   McMahon     since   the   malpractice    case   was   not   premised   upon

dissatisfaction with the amount the attorney obtained in the settlement, but

on the lawyer’s failure to properly advise the client about the legal

consequences of the agreement.       It expressly limited Muhammad to the

facts of that case and noted that the purpose of reducing litigation would not

be served by precluding the malpractice action in question.

      In this case, we first conclude that the exception created in

Muhammad itself is implicated. Plaintiff alleged that Stambaugh committed

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malpractice on two accounts.               He did not sue Lamb and did nothing to

achieve service of process against the Groffs.              Thereafter, his paralegal

made various fraudulent representations to the Plaintiff about the status of

her lawsuit.      Plaintiff did uncover the malpractice when she secured the

services of another lawyer.                However, by then, the malpractice had

significantly diminished her ability to recover damages in the underlying suit.

      Particularly significant is the following.        Stambaugh, in derogation of

his duty to his former client, inserted himself into the settlement

negotiations between Plaintiff and the Groffs. Plaintiff agreed to settle the

case for $18,000. She was not aware at that time that the Groffs offered

$17,000 and that Stambaugh was to contribute $1,000 also be included in

the   release.          When   Plaintiff    changed   her   mind   about   settlement,

Stambaugh threatened to file a petition against his former client to force

her to sign the written accord with the Groffs so that he could avoid the legal

malpractice      suit    through   operation     of   Muhammad.       When    Plaintiff

discovered that she would be releasing Stambaugh for $1,000, she refused

to sign the document. She did sign an accord with the Groffs for $17,000

but Stambaugh was expressly excluded from coverage in the release.

      Plaintiff settled her case for less than it was worth based after

egregious malpractice committed by the lawyer who was uninvolved in the

settlement, and based upon a substantial risk that she would recover

nothing in the other case due solely to the first attorney’s negligence. This

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scenario is not ethically or theoretically different from the exception created

in Muhammad for a negligent attorney who obtains a settlement himself to

hide and avoid liability for his misfeasance in the underlying lawsuit.    Our

belief that Stambaugh is subject to liability despite the settlement of the

personal lawsuit is reinforced by his threat to enforce the settlement

agreement reached by the Groffs and Plaintiff, which he had no standing to

pursue, as well as by the fact that he tried to obtain a release from liability

for $1,000.

      Allowing recovery will not create concerns of a flood of litigation since

the first lawyer committed the malpractice, and a second one obtained the

settlement that reflected the reduced value of the case caused by the first

lawyer’s mistakes.   The case herein does not involve second-guessing a

settlement since the attorney who obtained the settlement accord is not the

one being sued. The Plaintiff is not engaging in speculation about whether

she could have obtained more money from a jury. Her ability to recover her

damages in the underlying action was unquestionably impacted by the legal

malpractice alleged in the complaint.

      A damages award would not be speculative. After it decides whether

malpractice occurred, a jury in this case can readily assess the value of the

Plaintiff’s damages from the fall.   Indeed, a jury assessing damages is no

different from a jury in the underlying slip-and-fall determining the amount

of damages that Plaintiff sustained. As our Supreme Court noted, in a legal

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malpractice action, “The test of whether damages are remote or speculative

has nothing to do with the difficulty in calculating the amount, but deals with

the more basic question of whether there are identifiable damages. Thus,

damages are speculative only if the uncertainty concerns the fact of

damages rather than the amount.” Rizzo v. Haines, 555 A.2d 58, 68 (Pa.

1989) (citation omitted; emphasis in original).        Given the nature of the

malpractice in question, the fact of damages is not speculative.               We

therefore conclude that the trial court erred in granting preliminary

objections as to the Plaintiff’s cause of action sounding professional

negligence/malpractice.

      Plaintiff’s final position is that she set forth a viable claim for breach of

fiduciary duty.   “At common law, an attorney owes a fiduciary duty to his

client; such duty demands undivided loyalty and prohibits the attorney from

engaging in conflicts of interest, and breach of such duty is actionable.”

Maritrans GP Inc. v. Pepper, Hamilton & Scheetz, 602 A.2d 1277,

1283 (Pa. 1992).        On appeal, Plaintiff avers that the “failure to perfect

service and sue the general contractor as a necessary party are themselves

breaches of fiduciary duties.”       We do not view these actions either as

breaches of Stambaugh’s duty of undivided loyalty to the Plaintiff or as a

conflict of interest.    These lapses involve ordinary negligence/malpractice

rather than actions taken in derogation of a duty of loyalty to Plaintiff.

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       However, Plaintiff also notes that Stambaugh participated in the

settlement negotiations, threatened to force Plaintiff to sign the accord with

the Groffs, which accord concerned a matter wherein he had represented

Plaintiff, and then he tried to insert himself in the settlement agreement for

a rather paltry sum. These activities can be viewed as a breach of loyalty to

the Plaintiff. Even though they occurred after his representation ceased, he

was engaging in self-interested efforts in an action where he had

represented Plaintiff and his actions were in direct conflict of his duty of

loyalty to his client.

       The appeal at 1890 MDA 2013 is quashed.        The October 16, 2013

order is reversed. Case remanded. Jurisdiction relinquished.

       Judge Mundy Concurs in the Result.

       Judge Jenkins Concurs in the Result.

Judgment Entered.

Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 2/5/2015

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