Court Opinion

ID: 7798961
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-08-08 23:00:44.031649+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:28:53.008477
License: Public Domain

Appellate Case: 21-3118     Document: 010110721553      Date Filed: 08/08/2022      Page: 1
                                                                                 FILED
                                                                     United States Court of Appeals
                       UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                        Tenth Circuit

                              FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                         August 8, 2022
                          _________________________________
                                                                        Christopher M. Wolpert
                                                                            Clerk of Court
  WENDY HILLS,

        Plaintiff - Appellant,

  and

  BRENT HILLS,

        Plaintiff,

  v.                                                         No. 21-3118
                                                 (D.C. No. 5:20-CV-04037-TC-JPO &
  GERARD ARENSDORF,                                   5:20-CV-04074-TC-JPO)
                                                              (D. Kan.)
        Defendant - Appellee.
                       _________________________________

                              ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
                          _________________________________

 Before HOLMES, MORITZ, and CARSON, Circuit Judges.
                  _________________________________

        Wendy Hills brought state-law claims against Gerard Arensdorf, an accountant

 who allegedly performed unauthorized legal services for her father in the days before

 his death. The district court dismissed those claims under Federal Rule of Civil

 Procedure 12(b)(6), and Wendy 1 appeals. For the reasons below, we affirm.

        *
          This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines
 of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. But it may be cited for its
 persuasive value. See Fed. R. App. P. 32.1(a); 10th Cir. R. 32.1(A).
        1
          To avoid confusion, we refer to Wendy and other members of the Hills
 family by their first names.
Appellate Case: 21-3118    Document: 010110721553         Date Filed: 08/08/2022    Page: 2

                                       Background

       We begin by setting out the events that gave rise to Wendy’s lawsuit,

 described in the light most favorable to Wendy based on the well-pleaded factual

 allegations in her operative complaint. 2 See Renfro v. Champion Petfoods USA, Inc,

 25 F.4th 1293, 1300 (10th Cir. 2022). The dispute centers on assets owned by

 Wendy’s father, Douglas Hills, who died intestate (without a will) in July 2018.

 Twelve days before his death, Douglas signed a one-page document assigning his

 interest in a farming business—valued at about $10 million—to his wife Junelle

 Hills, in her capacity as a trustee of a previously unfunded trust that he created in

 1986. Junelle is also a beneficiary of the trust, as are Wendy and Brent Hills,

 Douglas’s two children from a prior marriage.

       Wendy asserts that Junelle unduly influenced Douglas into assigning the farm

 assets to the trust. The assignment was drafted by Arensdorf, Douglas’s longtime

 accountant who is not an attorney, while Douglas was recovering from a heart attack

 and shortly after he had received a terminal cancer diagnosis. According to the

 complaint, Douglas never asked Arensdorf to draft the assignment; Arensdorf did so

 at Junelle’s request and “relied on [her] representations about what [Douglas]

 wanted.” App. vol. 1, 113–14. Nor did Douglas understand, the complaint alleges,

       2
         In describing the facts, we also rely (as the district court did) on information
 in key documents referenced in the complaint because they are central to the
 complaint and neither party disputes their authenticity. See Goodwill Indus. of Cent.
 Okla., Inc. v. Phila. Indem. Ins. Co., 21 F.4th 704, 709 (10th Cir. 2021), cert. denied,
 142 S. Ct. 2779 (2022).

                                             2
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 that the assignment would effectively “reverse [his] longstanding estate plan[]” by

 allowing Junelle to receive trust distributions from a farm business that he had

 “intentionally kept separate from her throughout their marriage.” Id. at 115. The

 complaint also alleges that had Douglas not executed the assignment, a prenuptial

 agreement would have prevented Junelle from receiving the farm assets. Instead,

 those assets would have passed to Wendy and Brent alone (as Douglas allegedly

 intended) through intestate succession.

        After Douglas died, Wendy filed lawsuits in state and federal court

 challenging the assignment’s validity. 3 She named Junelle as a defendant in those

 cases, but not Arensdorf. The lawsuits eventually settled, and the parties agreed that

 (1) the assignment was “void ab initio, unenforceable, and transferred none of the

 [f]arming [i]nterest[] to the [t]rust”; (2) Wendy and Brent would receive sole control

 of Douglas’s interest in the farming business; and (3) in exchange for a release of

 claims, Junelle would receive payments totaling $1.35 million from Douglas’s estate.

 Id. at 235.

        Around the same time as the settlement, Wendy filed this lawsuit against

 Arensdorf in federal court. 4 She alleged that by preparing the assignment and

 presenting it to Douglas, Arensdorf committed legal malpractice and engaged in the

 unauthorized practice of law under the Kansas Consumer Protection Act (KCPA),

        3
          In the state-court lawsuit, Wendy also sued on behalf of Douglas’s estate.
        4
          Brent also sued Arensdorf, and the district court consolidated his case with
 Wendy’s. Only Wendy’s appeal is before us, however, because Brent did not appeal
 the district court’s decision.

                                            3
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 Kan. Stat. Ann. § 50-6,142. The district court determined that Wendy did not

 adequately plead either claim and dismissed the complaint. See Fed. R. Civ. P.

 12(b)(6). Wendy appeals.

                                          Analysis

        Our review is de novo when, as here, a plaintiff appeals an order dismissing a

 complaint under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Renfro, 25 F.4th at 1300.

 To avoid a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal, the complaint must allege sufficient facts to

 “state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” Id. (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v.

 Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007)). Here, Wendy argues that the district court

 improperly dismissed her complaint against Arensdorf because she stated facially

 plausible claims under Kansas law for legal malpractice and unauthorized practice of

 law. See id. at 1301 (explaining that forum state’s law applies in diversity-

 jurisdiction case). We address those claims in turn below.

 I.     Legal Malpractice

        Wendy first argues that the district court improperly dismissed her legal-

 malpractice claim. To state such a claim, Wendy must allege that (1) Arensdorf owed

 her “the duty of the attorney to exercise ordinary skill and knowledge”; (2) he

 breached that duty; (3) she suffered “actual loss or damage”; and (4) his breach was

 the cause of that injury. Canaan v. Bartee, 72 P.3d 911, 914 (Kan. 2003) (quoting

 Bergstrom v. Noah, 974 P.2d 531, 553 (Kan. 1999)). The district court concluded that

 Wendy inadequately pleaded the first element because Arensdorf owed no duty to

                                              4
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 Wendy, who was not his client. 5

       As Arensdorf points out, Kansas follows the general rule, rooted in privity of

 contract, that an attorney only owes a duty to—and thus may only be sued for

 malpractice by—his or her client. See Pizel v. Zuspann, 795 P.2d 42, 48

 (Kan.), modified on denial of reh’g, 803 P.2d 205 (Kan. 1990). Under a

 straightforward application of this rule, Wendy’s claim would fail because the

 complaint alleges that Douglas, not Wendy, was Arensdorf’s client. Nevertheless, to

 avoid dismissal, Wendy invokes a line of cases recognizing malpractice liability

 “when an attorney renders services that the attorney should have recognized as

 involving a foreseeable injury to a third-party beneficiary of the [attorney-client]

 contract.” Id. In other words, Wendy contends that Arensdorf owed her a duty of

 care, even though she was not his client, because she was a third-party beneficiary of

 the legal services he performed for Douglas.

       The district court assessed Wendy’s third-party-beneficiary theory under the

 framework set out in Johnson v. Wiegers, 46 P.3d 563, 568 (Kan. Ct. App. 2002). As

 relevant here, Johnson reiterated a principle derived from several Kansas appellate

 cases that an attorney owes no duty to a third-party nonclient, and thus cannot be

 liable for malpractice, “if the attorney and client never intended for the attorney’s

       5
          In reaching this conclusion, the district court assumed without deciding that
 Kansas recognizes a cause of action for legal malpractice against a nonlawyer like
 Arensdorf. We resolve this appeal under the same assumption because, although the
 issue is not mentioned in the briefs, the parties confirmed at oral argument that they
 also assumed such a claim exists under Kansas law.

                                             5
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 work to benefit the third party.” 46 P.3d at 568. Applying that principle, the district

 court concluded that Wendy could not show that Arensdorf’s work (drafting the

 assignment and submitting it to Douglas) was intended to benefit her. She could not

 do so, the district court explained, because “[t]he assignment transferred Douglas’s

 property in a way that diluted, if not entirely eliminated, [her] potential interest in the

 property.” App. vol. 2, 306.

        In response, Wendy argues that the district court overlooked material evidence

 when rejecting her claim under Johnson. Specifically, she says that it erroneously

 treated the assignment as the sole evidence of Douglas’s intent, ignoring extrinsic

 evidence about Douglas’s long-held desire and oral promises to pass the farm assets

 solely to his children. According to Wendy, the district court was free to consider

 such evidence because the complaint plausibly alleges that Junelle unduly influenced

 Douglas into signing the assignment. See Cresto v. Cresto, 358 P.3d 831, 834–35

 (Kan. 2015) (allowing party “contesting a testamentary document” on undue-

 influence grounds to offer evidence of “‘suspicious circumstances surrounding the

 making of the [testamentary document]’” (alteration in original) (quoting In re Est. of

 Farr, 49 P.3d 415, 430 (Kan. 2002))). And if considered, Wendy says, the extrinsic

 evidence shows that “Douglas intended to benefit her . . . with the farming interests.”

 Aplt. Br. 20.

        Wendy’s extrinsic-evidence argument falls short. At best, the extrinsic

 evidence referenced in the complaint suggests that before executing the assignment,

 Douglas intended to pass the farm assets to his children rather than Junelle. But

                                              6
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 Douglas’s pre-assignment intent says nothing about the dispositive issue on which

 Arensdorf’s liability turns—whether Douglas “intended for [Arensdorf’s] work to

 benefit [Wendy].” Johnson, 46 P.3d at 568 (emphasis added). And on that score,

 Wendy points to no evidence, extrinsic or otherwise, suggesting that she was an

 intended beneficiary of Arensdorf’s work. To the contrary, her complaint alleges just

 the opposite: that Arensdorf’s work harmed her because the assignment he prepared

 transferred the farm assets to a trust controlled by Junelle, meaning she and Brent

 would no longer receive and control those assets outright. So even assuming Douglas

 previously wanted to benefit Wendy by passing his interest in the farming business to

 her, she does not allege (as she must) that Douglas intended to benefit her through

 Arensdorf’s legal work.

       Wendy’s assertion that Junelle unduly influenced Douglas into executing the

 assignment only reinforces our conclusion that Wendy fails to establish her intended-

 beneficiary status as to Arensdorf’s work. The premise behind Wendy’s undue-

 influence allegation, as the complaint reveals, is that Douglas “never instructed

 [Arensdorf] to prepare the assignment”; Arensdorf prepared it at Junelle’s request,

 and Junelle persuaded Douglas to sign it “under highly suspicious circumstances.”

 App. vol. 1, 113. This argument is self-defeating. Simply put, if Douglas did not want

 Arensdorf’s work performed in the first place, he hardly could have intended Wendy

 to benefit from that work. Thus, Wendy’s undue-influence allegation does not save

 her malpractice claim.

       Because Wendy fails to allege that Douglas and Arensdorf “intended for

                                            7
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 [Arensdorf’s] work to benefit [her],” Arensdorf owed her no duty as a third-party

 nonclient. 6 Johnson, 46 P.3d at 568. Wendy therefore cannot establish the first

 element of her legal-malpractice claim, and the district court properly dismissed it.

 II.   Unauthorized Practice of Law

       Next, Wendy challenges the dismissal of her claim that Arensdorf violated the

 KCPA by engaging in the unauthorized practice of law. See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 50-

 6,142. In particular, she disputes the district court’s view that she could not bring

 such a claim because she was not “aggrieved” by Arensdorf’s purported violation of

 the statute. Kan. Stat. Ann. § 50-6,142(c)(3); see also Kan. Stat. Ann. § 50-634(b). A

 person is aggrieved for KCPA purposes only if (1) the defendant’s violation

 “adversely affected the [person’s] legal rights”; and (2) there is “a causal connection

 between the [violation] and the claimed injury.” Schneider v. Liberty Asset Mgmt.,

 251 P.3d 666, 671 (Kan. Ct. App. 2011). Although the district court found both

 requirements lacking here, we need only discuss the former to dispose of Wendy’s

 appeal.

       As to the adverse-effect requirement, the district court determined that Wendy

 “had no enforceable rights in the property that the [a]ssignment [could have]

       6
           Based on this conclusion, we need not reach the district court’s determination
 that Wendy’s malpractice claim also fails because she and Douglas were adversaries
 and because Arensdorf owed her no duty under a multi-factor balancing test. See
 Johnson, 46 P.3d at 568. Wendy’s failure to show that Douglas intended Arensdorf’s
 legal work to benefit her is sufficient, by itself, to affirm the district court’s ruling.
 See Wilson-Cunningham v. Meyer, 820 P.2d 725, 730 (Kan. Ct. App. 1991) (“[I]t
 would be appropriate to deny liability solely on the basis that the legal representation
 . . . was not intended to benefit [the nonclients].”).

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 harmed.” App. vol. 2, 308; see also Finstad v. Washburn Univ. of Topeka, 845 P.2d

 685, 691 (Kan. 1993) (clarifying that aggrievement refers “only to those who have

 rights which may be enforced at law and whose pecuniary interest may be affected”

 (quoting Fairfax Drainage Dist. v. Kansas City, 374 P.2d 35, 41 (Kan. 1962))). The

 district court based its conclusion on the fact that Douglas had no will or other

 document granting Wendy “any enforceable rights in or title to” his interest in the

 farming business. App. vol. 2, 304. Even so, Wendy responds that she had “legal

 inheritance rights” to Douglas’s interest under Kansas’s intestate-succession laws.

 Aplt. Br. 23. That is, she says Arensdorf’s unauthorized legal practice adversely

 affected her right to “inherit[] property she would have [otherwise] inherited.” Id.

       But no such right exists under Kansas law. In Kansas, an heir who expects to

 inherit property from a parent has no legally enforceable rights in such property until

 the parent’s death. See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 59-502 (establishing that intestate

 decedent’s property passes “at the time of death”); McKay’s Est. v. Davis, 491 P.2d

 932, 934 (Kan. 1971) (“[T]here were no heirs of or vested rights in the estate . . .

 until [the decedent’s] death.”). So Wendy’s expectations about how Douglas would

 distribute the farm assets did not give her any “legal rights” that Arensdorf’s

 purported KCPA violation could have adversely affected. 7 Schneider, 251 P.3d at

       7
           For this reason, it makes no difference whether, as Wendy contends, “a
 plaintiff may bring a KCPA claim even though the defendant’s misconduct does not
 produce injury immediately at the time of the conduct.” Aplt. Br. 25–26. Even if that
 is true, the plaintiff must nevertheless possess some enforceable right that can be
 injured by the defendant’s violation. See Finstad, 845 P.2d at 691. And as explained

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  671; see also Finstad, 845 P.2d at 691 (noting that aggrievement “does not refer to

  persons who may happen to entertain desires on the subject, but only to those who

  have rights which may be enforced at law and whose pecuniary interest may be

  affected” (quoting Fairfax, 374 P.2d at 41)).

        Wendy’s argument fares no better if, as Wendy suggests, we reframe her

  asserted right as the “right to be free from undue-influence-caused injury.” Rep. Br.

  15. To state the obvious, the complaint nowhere alleges that Wendy herself

  experienced undue influence. Rather, it alleges that Junelle unduly influenced

  Douglas into executing the assignment. Wendy supplies no authority recognizing her

  right not to have her father’s intestate estate plans altered through undue influence. 8

  No matter how those plans changed—whether voluntarily or through undue

  influence—Wendy had no enforceable rights to Douglas’s intestate property.

        In short, Wendy is not aggrieved under the KCPA because she lacked

  enforceable legal rights in the farm assets that Arensdorf’s allegedly unauthorized

  legal work could have adversely affected. As a result, the district court did not err in

  dismissing her KCPA claim.

                                        Conclusion

        Wendy inadequately pleaded material elements of her legal-malpractice and

  above, Wendy never had a right to inherit the farm assets; she merely expected to
  receive them when Douglas died.
         8
           The closest Wendy gets to providing such authority is Cresto, 358 P.3d 831.
  But Cresto is distinguishable—there, the plaintiffs intervened in probate proceedings
  to challenge a will that replaced an earlier, written estate plan benefiting them. See id.
  at 835, 838.

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  KCPA claims. Accordingly, the district court properly dismissed her complaint for

  failure to state a claim. 9

                                               Entered for the Court

                                               Nancy L. Moritz
                                               Circuit Judge

         9
          Because we affirm based on Wendy’s failure to state prima facie elements of
  her claims, we do not reach Arensdorf’s alternative arguments asking us to affirm
  based on affirmative defenses raised below but not considered by the district court.

                                              11