Court Opinion

ID: 1074220
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:05:03.274199+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:19:08.907161
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE                FILED
                    MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE
                                                                    March 29, 2000

JOHNIE N. GIBSON,                     )                           Cecil Crowson, Jr.
                                      )                          Appellate Court Clerk
     Plaintiff/Appellant,             )      Appeal No.
                                      )      M1999-00390-COA-R3-CV
v.                                    )
                                      )      Knox County Circuit Court
DOUGLAS TRANT and                     )      Civil Action No. 3-399-93
JERRY CUNNINGHAM,                     )
                                      )
     Defendants/Appellees.            )

                     APPEAL FROM THE KNOX CIRCUIT COURT
                          AT KNOXVILLE, TENNESSEE

                  HONORABLE WHEELER A. ROSENBALM, JUDGE

BRUCE E. PASHLEY
436 Cove Drive
Marietta, GA 30067

GERALD CHARLES RUSSELL
338 High Street
Hightower Professional Office
Maryville, Tennessee 37804
       ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

JEFFREY ALLEN WOODS
550 West Main Avenue
Post Office, Box 2467
Knoxville, Tennessee 37901-2467
       ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES

                                AFFIRMED
                                                                INMAN, Sr. J.
Concur:
CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S
LILLARD, J.
                                                   I

          This is a legal malpractice action, arising from an underlying criminal conviction. The

plaintiff pleaded guilty in the U. S. District Court at Knoxville in 1989 to one count of a 103-count

indictment charging a violation of federal drug laws. He alleged: (1) that “Judge James Jarvis gave

the plaintiff the minimum of twenty (20) years under the sentencing law prohibiting probation or

parole”; (2) that the defendant lawyers represented him and six other indictees, all of whom pleaded

guilty; (3) that the indictments charged criminal activity by interactions between the plaintiff and

the six other indictees; (4) that in undertaking to represent all the federal court defendants the

defendants herein had an obvious conflict of interest; (5) that he was fraudulently induced to plead

guilty by the defendants herein who assured him that “if he would plead guilty all he would get

would be a sentence of 8 to 10 years”; (6) that if he did not plead guilty, his father would be indicted

on drug charges; and (7) that in reliance upon these misrepresentations he pleaded guilty, later

learning that the United States never threatened to prosecute his father and unaware that the

minimum sentence was 20 years.

          He charges the defendants with gross negligence, willful fraud, willful misrepresentation,

willful deceit, outrageous conduct, and malpractice, resulting in, as he alleges, financial losses,

mental anguish, loss of freedom and enjoyment of life, physical illness, and loss of constitutional

rights.

          The defendants filed a Rule 12.02(b) motion to dismiss, upon the hearing of which the parties

                                                   -2-
stipulated:1

                                            Stipulation

               In the United State District For The Eastern District of Tennessee, the
               plaintiff entered a plea of guilty to a single count of engaging in a
               continuing criminal enterprise in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 848. After
               the trial the trial Court’s acceptance of the plaintiff’s plea and the
               imposition of sentence, a “Motion under 28 U.S.C. §2555 to Vacate,
               Set Aside, or correct [a] Sentence by a person in Federal Custody”
               was filed. The Federal Court placed that file under “SEAL” and it
               remains sealed to this day.

               The § 2255 motion allegedly breach of the plaintiff’s Plea Agreement
               by the United States, that his plea of guilty was involuntary, that the
               defendants encountered an actual conflict of interest in representing
               Mr. Gibson but nevertheless contained multiple representation of him
               and his six (6) codefendants and that the defendants, Cunningham and
               Trant, were ineffective in representing the defendant in connection
               with the foregoing. The trial court denied the plaintiff’s request for
               relief and dismissed his action. The case was appealed to the United
               States Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals which affirmed the trial court.
               No application for a Writ of Certiorari to the Supreme Court was filed
               and the time limitation for doing so has long expired.

The trial judge determined “that in light of the Federal Courts’ holding that Mr. Gibson’s plea of

guilty was, in fact, voluntary, and there exists no right or recovery in this action in this Court,

mandating dismissal of this case.”

                                                 II

        The procedure employed by the parties is somewhat hybrid, but we assume the motion was

treated as one for summary judgment since matters outside the pleading were presented to and

        1
        The post-conviction file was sealed by order of the U. S. District Court and thus was
unavailable in the case at Bar, since the prosecution involved testimony by confidential
informants. The stipulation resulted.

                                                -3-
considered by the court. Rule 12.02. Tenn. R. Civ. P. It is apparent that the decision was based

solely upon the plaintiff’s voluntary plea of guilty, which the trial judge found foreclosed any issue

of malpractice.

                                                 III

       The appellant, to some extent, argues that since a Rule 12 motion requires the court to

assume the allegations of the complaint to be true, Wolcotts Financial Services Inc. v. McReynolds,

807 S.W.2d 708 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1990), the court was clearly in error in sustaining the motion to

dismiss; but in the same breath the appellant concedes the aforesaid stipulation which leads us to the

conclusion that the trial Judge treated the motion as one for summary judgment.

                                                 IV

       The thrust of the appellant’s argument assumes that his case was dismissed under Rule 56,

which necessarily involved the application of collateral estoppel or res judicata contrary to the

requirements of the rule. He argues that collateral estoppel applies only in those instances where a

dispositive fact has once been determined by a valid judgment and cannot again be litigated by the

same parties, citing Blue Diamond Coal Company v. Holland-America Insurance Company, 671

S.W.2d 829 (Tenn. 1984) as authority for the well-known principle. His argument continues that

since the parties in the federal case were the United States of America and the plaintiff herein, a

necessary element - mutuality of parties - was not present and the doctrine is therefore inapplicable.2

       2
        The appellant says that “he stands willing and able to prove that he is not guilty of the
crime to which he entered a guilty plea.” Whatever the portent of this assertion may be, hortatory
or otherwise, the inherent issue is - or was - addressable to the Federal Court. In Claudio .v
Heller, 463 N.Y. S2d 155 (1983), a confessed murderer claimed that his lawyer erroneously
advised him to admit guilt. The Court avoided questions of morality and held that because

                                                 -4-
       We are not content to resolve this case on a ground so metaphysical as to lead us to an

anomalous, even absurd, result, that being the spectacle of a state court awarding damages to an

incarcerated federal felon whose conviction and sentence withstood an attack on the voluntariness

of his guilty plea. Our review is de novo on the record. The issue being one of law, no presumption

attaches to the action of the trial court. Warren v. Estate of Kirk, 954 S.W.2d 722 (Tenn. 1997).

                                                  V

       In Tennessee, the elements of a cause of action for legal malpractice are: (1) duty owed by

the attorney(s) to plaintiff; (2) breach of that duty; (3) damages, and (4) the breach of the duty must

be the proximate cause of the damage. See Lazy Seven Coal Sales v. Stone & Hines, 813 S.W.2d

400, 403 (Tenn. 1991). Thus, causation is a necessary element for a legal malpractice claim. We

agree with the appellees that, in order to maintain a claim for legal malpractice arising out of a

criminal conviction, the plaintiff must first obtain post-conviction relief from the underlying criminal

conviction to establish the necessary element of causation.3

                                                  VI

        The majority of jurisdictions that have addressed the specific issue concluded that the

plaintiff in a legal malpractice case must first obtain post-conviction relief from the underlying

innocence was central to the issue of proximate cause, innocence had to be alleged before the suit
could be maintained. This rationale is difficult since by necessary inference a civil jury might sit
in appellate judgment on the action of a criminal court.
       3
         The appellant seemingly argues that his ‘malpractice’ action is disparate, and that the
dismissal did not take into consideration his allegations of fraud, deprivation of constitutional
rights, etc. We have concluded, however, that the gravamen of the complaint alleges malpractice
which encompasses all allegations.

                                                  -5-
criminal conviction as a prerequisite to bringing the suit.

        The Texas Supreme Court in Peeler v. Hughes & Luce, 909 S.W.2d 494 (Texas 1995), held

that the state’s public policy dictates that the plaintiff’s conduct was the sole reason for her

conviction, and that she could not sue her attorney without first obtaining post-conviction relief. The

plaintiff entered into a plea agreement admitting her guilt to the offense of aiding and assisting in

the filing of a false partnership tax return. She appeared before the federal court, admitted her guilt

and testified that “her admission was freely and voluntarily given.” She complained that before she

pleaded guilty, her attorney failed to tell her that the U. S. Attorney had offered her absolute

immunity. The prosecuting attorney confirmed by affidavit that he had made the immunity offer to

the plaintiff’s defense counsel. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant.

The Texas Supreme Court reasoned that because the criminal conduct was the only reason for the

conviction, the plaintiff could not show that the conduct of her attorney was the proximate cause of

her injury.

        The Florida Court of Appeals in Rowe v. Schreiber, 725 So.2d 1245 (Fla. App. 4 Dist. 1999),

held that requiring a plaintiff in a malpractice suit to first obtain post-conviction relief “screens the

case through time sensitive and established pathways for the rules of criminal procedure; the

complexity of ongoing actions in civil and criminal court is avoided.” The court also stated that this

approach fits within the framework of the existing elements of an action for legal malpractice. One

of those elements is that the attorney’s negligence was the proximate cause of loss to the client.

Causation of loss, in the context of this kind of action, means something more than the fact that the

plaintiff was convicted when he should not have been; the determination of a “loss” involves a policy

decision as to what collection of facts the law is prepared to recognize as constituting that element

                                                  -6-
of a claim for legal malpractice. Recognizing exoneration as part of that collection of facts is

consistent with the state’s public policy of treating a conviction as a final determination of guilt

unless and until the conviction has been overturned, the court said. The court also pointed out that

in Florida the standard for legal malpractice is the same as the standard for ineffective assistance of

counsel in criminal proceedings. And, in view of this principle, it is not appropriate to treat victims

of the alleged negligence as having suffered a loss caused by their attorney unless they have

demonstrated that their counsel failed to meet the established constitutional standards in a way that

would justify a post-conviction relief.

       Other jurisdictions follow the rule that a civil action for legal malpractice cannot be

maintained without proof of proximate causation between the acts of malpractice and the damages

alleged. Weiner v. Mitchell, Silberbeg & Knupp, 170 Cal. Rptr. 533 (1981); State ex rel. O’Blennis

v. Adolf, 691 S.W.2d 498 (Mo. Ct. App. 1985); [“it is against public policy for the suit to continue

in that it would indeed shock the public conscience, engender disrespect for the courts and generally

discredit the administration of justice”]. In Shaw v. State, Dept. of Admin. PDA, 816 P.2d 1358

(Alaska 1991), the Supreme Court of Alaska held that a convicted criminal defendant must obtain

post-conviction relief as a precondition to maintaining a legal malpractice claim against his attorney.

In Bailey v. Tucker, 621 A.2d 108 (Penn. 1993) the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that a suit for

legal malpractice cannot be maintained unless post-conviction relief is first obtained. In Glenn v.

Aiken, 569 N.E.2d 784 (Mass. 1991), the plaintiff’s conviction of arson was reversed because of an

error in the charge which the plaintiff’s counsel failed to preserve for appellate review. The

Commonwealth elected not to retry the plaintiff, who had already served fourteen months in jail after

being found guilty. On appeal from the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in the subsequent

                                                 -7-
malpractice action, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts adopted the majority position and

held that the plaintiff had the burden of proving his innocence in the underlying arson charge,

holding:

               There is a good reason to place a greater burden on a guilty criminal
               defendant maintaining a claim of malpractice of the type involved in
               this case than is placed on a wronged civil defendant. The
               underpinnings of common law tort liability, compensation and
               deterrence, do not support a rule that allows recovery to one who is
               guilty of the underlying criminal charge. A person who is guilty need
               not be compensated for what happened to him as a result of his
               former attorney’s negligence. There is no reason to compensate such
               a person, rewarding him indirectly for his crime. The possibility that
               a criminal defendant may not be guilty provides a sufficient, general
               deterrent against negligent conduct of defense counsel, without the
               need for providing tort remedy for guilty former criminal Defendants.
               Thus, in order to justify a right to recover, a Plaintiff asserting an
               error of the type Glenn assets in this case must prove by a
               preponderance of the evidence, not only that the negligence of the
               attorney defendant caused him harm, but also that he is innocent of
               the crime charged.

       Nevada has adopted the majority rule. Morgano v. Smith, 879 P.2d 745 (Nev. 1994). In

Morgano, the plaintiff had hired an attorney to represent him in a case in which he pleaded guilty

to attempting to obtain money by false pretenses. He subsequently sued his attorney for malpractice.

The Supreme Court of Nevada held that the Plaintiff must show that his conviction was caused by

something other than the plaintiff’s own conduct. This would require that the plaintiff prove “actual

innocence of the underlying charge” in order to prevail at trial, holding:

               We have not previously enunciated the standard governing legal
               malpractice actions filed by criminal Defendants against privately
               hired defense attorneys. We now hold that, to state a claim for legal
               malpractice against private criminal defense counsel, the Plaintiff
               must assert a basis for claiming that the Plaintiff’s conviction or
               sentence was caused by something other than the Plaintiff’s own
               conduct. See generally, Gregory G. Sarno, Annotation, Legal

                                                 -8-
               Malpractice in Defense of Criminal Prosecution, 4 A.L.R.5th 273-402
               (1992). Specifically, the Plaintiff must plead that he or she has
               obtained appellate or post-conviction relief in order to overcome a
               motion for summary judgment or a motion to dismiss.

       The Oregon Supreme Court has held that there are three reasons for the rule that a plaintiff

must obtain post-conviction relief before maintaining a legal malpractice claim. Stephens v. Bisham,

851 P.2d 556 (Ore. 1993). First, the Court states that the Constitutional standards which have been

set by the Supreme Courts of Oregon and of the United States in the area of criminal law are of great

importance. It would be “inappropriate to treat victims of alleged negligence by defense counsel as

having been ‘harmed’” unless they show that their attorney’s negligence precluded them from

obtaining post-conviction relief. Second, the Court points to the difficulty of obtaining a criminal

conviction. It would be imprudent to allow a party who has been adjudged guilty by law to recover

for malpractice without first having his or her conviction overturned. Third, whether a person has

been found guilty through plea bargain, a plea to the charge, or through a trial, the person is “equally

guilty.” A person who has exchanged a guilty plea for a “better deal” has nonetheless admitted guilt,

and should therefore prove his or her innocence through post-conviction relief.

        In Hockett v. Breunig, 526 N.E.2d 995 (Ind. App. 1988), the plaintiff, who had pleaded guilty

to a criminal offense, sued his defense attorney for malpractice alleging the attorney misrepresented

the results of blood tests which purportedly connected the criminal defendant to the crime.

Affirming summary judgment for the attorney, the Indiana Court of Appeals stated:

                Hockett admitted at the guilty plea hearing that all facts contained in
                the information were true. Hockett acknowledged on the record that
                his plea was knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily entered.
                (Citations omitted). He is therefore precluded from asserting a
                contrary position in this malpractice case. Hockett could not
                demonstrate that negligence on the part of his attorney was the

                                                  -9-
               proximate cause of his incarceration and alleged damages.

       The Kentucky Court of Appeals adopted the majority decision in 1997 in Ray v. Stone, 952

S.W.2d 220 (Kent. Ct. App. 1997). In Ray, the plaintiff pled guilty to cocaine trafficking in the

underlying criminal case and was sentenced to nine years in jail. In the civil suit, the plaintiff did

not aver that he was innocent of the criminal charges. He alleged that defense counsel failed to: (1)

present exculpatory evidence in his behalf; (2) adequately prepare for his defense; (3) call witnesses

on his behalf; and (4) represent him to the best of his ability. The record in the criminal case

indicated that the plaintiff signed an acknowledgment of his guilt in open court. The Court of

Appeals held that “public policy prohibits financial gain resulting, directly or indirectly, from

criminal acts.” The court also cited the rationale of the Texas Supreme Court in Peeler, stating that

the plaintiff must establish his innocence by post-conviction relief before showing that the attorney’s

alleged misrepresentation was the proximate cause of the conviction.

       In Gomez v. Peters, 470 S.E.2d 692 (Ga. App. 1996), the Georgia Court of Appeals found

that in order to establish legal malpractice, a plaintiff must show that he would have prevailed in the

underlying litigation if the defendant had not been negligent and where the underlying action is a

criminal trial, the plaintiff is precluded from doing this if he had pleaded guilty.

       Two states, Ohio and Michigan, have taken a somewhat different view of the precise issue.

In Krahn v. Kinney, 538 N.E.2d 1058 (Ohio 1989), the Supreme Court of Ohio held that it would

be unfair to require a plaintiff in a legal malpractice case to obtain post-conviction relief as a

precondition to filing suit. The plaintiff was convicted in the underlying criminal case of three

misdemeanor gambling offenses. Two other individuals were implicated in the matter, and during

pretrial negotiations between Krahn’s attorney and the prosecutor, the prosecutor offered to drop all

                                                 -10-
charges against Krahn in exchange for her willingness to testify against one of the others. Krahn’s

attorney did not communicate that offer to her. On the day of the trial, Krahn’s attorney

recommended that she withdraw her plea of not guilty and enter a guilty plea on a “minor

misdemeanor.” Krahn later found that she had not pleaded guilty to a minor misdemeanor, but rather

to a first-degree misdemeanor.

        The Ohio Court held that a plaintiff in a legal malpractice case is not relieved from showing

that the injury was caused by the defendant’s negligence, but indicated that “[t}he analysis should

focus on the facts of the particular case.” Moreover, the Court recognized that collateral estoppel

can preclude a civil action where the same issue was raised in a prior criminal action alleging

ineffective assistance of counsel. However, applying the case-by-case analysis, the Court concluded

that the facts presented in Krahn prevented the invocation of collateral estoppel as a bar to a civil

cause of action.

        In Gebhardt v. O’Rourke, 510 N.W.2d 900 (Mich. 1994), the plaintiff was convicted of

aiding and abetting her then-fiancé in the alleged rape of his ten-year-old daughter. The trial judge

set aside the jury’s conviction of the plaintiff, holding that there was insufficient evidence that she

aided or abetted in the crime. Later, the plaintiff filed an action against her defense counsel for legal

malpractice. The trial court concluded that the malpractice suit was barred by the statute of

limitations and granted the defendant attorney’s motion for summary judgment. The Supreme Court

of Michigan addressed the issue of whether final post-conviction relief was necessary only in the

context of applying the statute of limitations. Significantly, it was the plaintiff, who, in an effort to

toll the running of the statute of limitations, asserted that final post-conviction relief was a necessary

requirement for a legal malpractice claim arising out of a criminal conviction. According to the

                                                  -11-
theory urged by the Gebhardt plaintiff, her statute of limitations would not begin to run until a final

decision had been rendered in the post-conviction proceeding. Under the circumstances of that case,

the Michigan Supreme Court concluded that successful post-conviction relief was not a pre-requisite

to the maintenance of a claim for legal malpractice arising out of negligent misrepresentation in the

criminal matter and that the applicable statute of limitations had expired. The Court recognized that

issue preclusion and collateral estoppel should be utilized in the appropriate case, but expressly

declined to address the questions of when issue preclusion and collateral estoppel may be

appropriately applied.

                                                 VII

       As we have said, the anomaly of allowing this suit to go forward is obvious. The voluntary

plea of guilty to a criminal charge was the proximate cause of any injury or loss suffered as a result

of the conviction, and the appellant must obtain post-conviction relief as a condition precedent to

the maintenance of this action. The majority rule is clear: a guilty person is not entitled to civil

damages for being found guilty notwithstanding his/her lawyers’ negligence. We agree with the

argument of the appellees that the allowance of this action would shock the public conscience,

engender disrespect for the judicial system and generally discredit the concept of justice.

       The judgment is affirmed at the cost of the appellant.

                                                        _____________________________________
                                                        INMAN, Sr. J.

                                                 -12-
CONCUR:

____________________________________
CRAWFORD, P.J., W.S.

____________________________________
LILLARD, J.

                                       -13-