Spencer v. Paul Barber, Barber & Borg, L.L.C. , 3 N.M. 718 ( 2013 )


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  •                                                   I attest to the accuracy and
    integrity of this document
    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 16:50:09 2013.04.29
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2013-NMSC-010
    Filing Date: February 28, 2013
    Docket No. 33,133
    HERMAN SPENCER,
    Plaintiff-Petitioner,
    v.
    PAUL BARBER, BARBER & BORG, L.L.C.,
    and ELLEN SAM, as personal representative of
    the ESTATE of HERMANDA SPENCER (deceased),
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI
    Grant L. Foutz, District Judge
    Luebben, Johnson & Barnhouse, L.L.P.
    Dolph Barnhouse
    Kelli J. Keegan
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Petitioner
    Madison & Mroz, P.A.
    M. Eliza Stewart
    Jacqueline A. Olexy
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Respondents
    Montgomery & Andrews, P.A.
    Sean E. Garrett
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Amicus Curiae New Mexico Defense Lawyers Association
    Law Office of Carpenter & Stout, Ltd.
    1
    David J. Stout
    Albuquerque, NM
    Michael B. Browde
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Amicus Curiae New Mexico Trial Lawyers Association
    OPINION
    CHÁVEZ, Justice.
    {1}     Paul Barber and his law firm, Barber & Borg, L.L.C. (Barber), were the attorneys for
    Ellen Sam. Barber filed a lawsuit against numerous defendants for injuries Sam sustained
    when her car was struck from behind on Interstate 40 (I-40). Barber also represented Sam
    in her capacity as the personal representative of the estates of her daughter and
    granddaughter, both of whom died from injuries they sustained in the collision. At the time
    of the collision, Sam had stopped her car on I-40 to trade places with one of her passengers,
    Daniel Begay. At some time during his representation of Sam, Barber learned that Sam had
    been drinking alcohol before the collision and that she had “parked at night with the lights
    off in a lane of traffic on [I-40], following which the car was struck by a truck.”
    {2}     Barber also learned at some time during the litigation that Sam, who was a statutory
    beneficiary of her daughter’s estate, took the position that the other statutory beneficiary, her
    ex-husband, Herman Spencer, was not entitled to share in any wrongful death proceeds
    because he had abandoned their daughter. Based on Sam’s position, Barber approached
    Spencer in person with a settlement agreement, which Spencer ultimately signed, that
    reduced Spencer’s entitlement to proceeds from the wrongful death litigation. Spencer later
    hired an attorney, who wrote to Barber and challenged the validity of the agreement. Barber
    filed a lawsuit against Spencer on Sam’s behalf to enforce the settlement agreement.
    Spencer then counterclaimed against Sam and filed a third-party complaint against Barber
    for malpractice, fraud, collusion, and misrepresentation. The district court granted Barber
    summary judgment on the grounds that under Leyba v. Whitley, 
    120 N.M. 768
    , 776, 778, 
    907 P.2d 172
    , 180, 182 (1995), Barber did not owe a duty to Spencer as a statutory beneficiary
    because Spencer and Sam were adverse parties, and Barber represented Sam.
    {3}    Spencer appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part.
    Spencer v. Barber, 2011-NMCA-090, ¶ 2, 
    150 N.M. 519
    , 
    263 P.3d 296
    . The Court of
    Appeals agreed that Spencer could not sue Barber for malpractice because Spencer became
    Sam’s adverse party, thereby negating any duty that Barber owed Spencer as a statutory
    beneficiary. 
    Id. In so holding,
    the Court of Appeals rejected, as “an unjustified extension”
    of Leyba, Spencer’s argument that Barber violated numerous rules under the New Mexico
    Rules of Professional Responsibility, and therefore he was required to withdraw from
    representing the personal representative. 2011-NMCA-090, ¶¶ 23-24. However, the Court
    of Appeals reversed the summary judgment to the extent it enforced the settlement
    2
    agreement because it found genuine issues of material fact regarding the allegations that
    Barber made material misrepresentations which induced Spencer to sign the agreement. 
    Id. ¶¶ 38, 42-43.
    Barber did not ask us to review this portion of the Court of Appeals’ opinion.
    {4}     We granted certiorari to consider the following two questions: (1) “[w]hether the
    duties a lawyer owes wrongful death statutory beneficiaries are governed, in whole or in
    part, by the Rules of Professional Conduct”; and (2) “[w]hether an adversarial relationship
    precludes only contract based malpractice claims and not independent tort claims.” We
    answer the first question by reaffirming our holding in Sanders, Bruin, Coll & Worley, P.A.
    v. McKay Oil Corp., 1997-NMSC-030, ¶ 16, 
    123 N.M. 457
    , 
    943 P.2d 104
    , that the Rules of
    Professional Conduct provide guidance in determining lawyers’ obligations to their clients.
    A statutory beneficiary under the Wrongful Death Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 41-2-1 to -4 (1882,
    as amended through 2001), is an intended beneficiary of the agreement between the attorney
    and the personal representative. 
    Leyba, 120 N.M. at 776
    , 907 P.2d at 180. Therefore, the
    statutory beneficiary may sue the personal representative’s attorney when the attorney harms
    the statutory beneficiary by failing to exercise reasonable skill and care during the attorney’s
    representation of the personal representative. See 
    id. at 771, 907
    P.2d at 175 (stating that an
    intended third-party beneficiary of an attorney-client contract has a remedy against the
    attorney). The Rules of Professional Responsibility thus become relevant when ascertaining
    the scope of the duty owed by the attorney to the personal representative and how a breach
    of that duty may have harmed the statutory beneficiary.
    {5}     With respect to the second question, the adversarial exception we announced as dicta
    in Leyba may preclude a malpractice action, whether it is in tort or in contract. However,
    the adversarial exception does not preclude “traditional tort claims against an attorney for
    misrepresentation, fraud, and collusion, none of which depend upon a duty arising out of
    [the] contract” between the attorney and the personal representative. 
    Id. at 773 n.3,
    907 P.2d
    at 177 n.3. Therefore, in this case, Spencer’s non-malpractice tort claims are not barred by
    Leyba. In addition, we conclude that the adversarial exception does not preclude Spencer’s
    malpractice claim against Barber because there exist genuine issues of material fact
    regarding whether Barber failed to exercise reasonable skill and care in his representation
    of Sam as the personal representative, and if so, whether such failure harmed Spencer.
    DISCUSSION
    {6}     “Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues of material fact
    and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Self v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
    1998-NMSC-046, ¶ 6, 
    126 N.M. 396
    , 
    970 P.2d 582
    . Because this is a question of law, we
    review de novo. 
    Id. A. The Rules
    of Professional Conduct Establish the Appropriate Standard of
    Conduct for Attorneys in New Mexico
    {7}    The first issue requires this Court to determine to what extent the Rules of
    3
    Professional Conduct govern the duty owed by an attorney to wrongful death statutory
    beneficiaries. To put this discussion in context, we first discuss the procedure for wrongful
    death litigation and examine our opinion in Leyba.
    {8}      Wrongful death lawsuits must be brought in the name of the personal representative
    of an estate. Section 41-2-3; Kilkenny v. Kenney, 
    68 N.M. 266
    , 268, 
    361 P.2d 149
    , 150-51
    (1961), superseded by statute on other grounds as stated in 1961 N.M. Laws, ch. 202, § 1,
    as recognized in Lujan v. Regents of the Univ. of Cal., 
    69 F.3d 1511
    , 1519-20 (10th Cir.
    1995), and State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Luebbers, 2005-NMCA-112, ¶ 42, 
    138 N.M. 289
    , 
    119 P.3d 169
    . The Wrongful Death Act identifies the beneficiaries of the lawsuit in
    Section 41-2-3. Statutory beneficiaries are generally not permitted to join as parties in a
    wrongful death lawsuit because the personal representative is the beneficiary’s trustee, Stang
    v. Hertz Corp., 
    81 N.M. 348
    , 350, 
    467 P.2d 14
    , 16 (1970), and because the personal
    representative and any beneficiaries should have the same interest—to recover as large an
    award as possible from the tortfeasors who caused the decedent’s death. See Dominguez v.
    Rogers, 
    100 N.M. 605
    , 608, 
    673 P.2d 1338
    , 1341 (Ct. App. 1983) (noting that would-be
    intervenor had “identical” interest to personal representative). The personal representative
    has a duty to act with reasonable care regarding the interests of the statutory beneficiaries
    and must distribute proceeds from a wrongful death lawsuit to the statutory beneficiaries in
    strict accordance with the Wrongful Death Act. 
    Leyba, 120 N.M. at 774
    , 
    778, 907 P.2d at 178
    , 182.
    {9}     Although the personal representative may be, and often is, a statutory beneficiary,
    for purposes of the attorney-client relationship, the client is the personal representative. See
    McTaggart v. Lindsey, 
    509 N.W.2d 881
    , 884 (Mich. Ct. App. 1993) (“[T]he personal
    representative can be considered the lawyer’s client for the purposes of ethical duties of
    loyalty, confidentiality, and conflicts.”). In addition, the attorney owes a duty to provide
    services to the personal representative with reasonable skill and care. 
    Leyba, 120 N.M. at 772
    , 907 P.2d at 176 (“[T]he common law of torts . . . recognizes an attorney’s duty to
    provide professional services with the skill, prudence, and diligence of attorneys of ordinary
    skill and capacity.”); see also George v. Caton, 
    93 N.M. 370
    , 376, 
    600 P.2d 822
    , 828 (Ct.
    App. 1979) (describing an attorney’s implied representations and duties when he takes a
    case). What happens if the attorney breaches his duty to the personal representative and, in
    so doing, harms the statutory beneficiaries? We attempted to provide a comprehensive
    answer to this question in Leyba.
    {10} In Leyba, the mother of a deceased adult son hired two attorneys to represent her as
    the personal representative of her son’s estate in a wrongful death lawsuit against medical
    
    providers. 120 N.M. at 770
    , 907 P.2d at 174. The attorneys ultimately settled the litigation
    and disbursed the settlement funds to the personal representative. 
    Id. At the time
    they
    disbursed the funds, the attorneys knew that the sole statutory beneficiary of the decedent’s
    estate under the Wrongful Death Act was the decedent’s infant son. 
    Id. The personal representative
    misappropriated the proceeds, leaving only a small fraction of the proceeds
    for the decedent’s son. 
    Id. The minor child’s
    conservator sued the attorneys for legal
    4
    malpractice. 
    Id. at 769, 907
    P.2d at 173. We upheld the right of the statutory beneficiary
    to sue the attorneys. 
    Id. at 770, 776,
    907 P.2d at 174, 180. In so doing, we concluded that
    the attorneys owed a duty to the statutory beneficiary as an intended beneficiary of the
    agreement between the attorneys and the personal representative. 
    Id. We assumed that
    the
    statutory beneficiary’s contractual remedy was based on the “duty running from the attorney
    to the client [the personal representative,] rather than from the attorney to the third party [the
    statutory beneficiary].” Id. at 
    771, 907 P.2d at 175
    . We explained the duty as follows: “As
    with any service contract, an implied term of an attorney’s contract to provide professional
    services for the benefit of a third party is the promise to render services with reasonable skill
    and care.” 
    Id. {11} At issue
    in Leyba was whether the attorneys exercised reasonable skill and care in
    advising the personal representative regarding her fiduciary duty to disburse the funds to the
    statutory beneficiary. 
    Id. The personal representative
    and the attorneys presented
    conflicting evidence regarding whether the attorneys told the personal representative about
    her fiduciary responsibilities. 
    Id. However, it was
    undisputed that the attorneys did not
    provide written instructions to the personal representative regarding her responsibilities in
    connection with the settlement proceeds. 
    Id. {12} The personal
    representative’s duty was to distribute the wrongful death proceeds to
    the sole statutory beneficiary. 
    Id. at 774, 907
    P.2d at 178. The attorneys’ duty was “to
    exercise reasonable care to ensure that the statutory beneficiaries actually receive[d] the
    proceeds of any wrongful death claim.” 
    Id. at 778, 907
    P.2d at 182. In Leyba, the
    conservator invited us to hold that “in the event of a minor statutory beneficiary, attorneys
    pursuing wrongful death claims have a duty to distribute the proceeds to a conservator.” 
    Id. We declined her
    invitation and simply held that “what is reasonable is a question of fact to
    be determined in light of all [of] the surrounding circumstances.” 
    Id. {13} Complicating this
    case, however, was the dicta in our opinion discussing the
    adversarial exception. After holding that an attorney in a wrongful death action owes a duty
    to act with due care regarding the interests of the intended beneficiaries, we engaged in a
    discussion of when and under what circumstances such a duty may be negated. 
    Id. at 776- 78,
    907 P.2d at 180-82. This was described as the “adversarial exception,” which arises
    when the attorney is presented with a conflict of interest. Id. at 
    776, 907 P.2d at 180
    (internal quotation marks omitted). We agreed with the court in Jenkins v. Wheeler, 
    316 S.E.2d 354
    , 358 (N.C. Ct. App. 1984), that the adversarial exception does not operate to
    negate the attorney’s duty of reasonable care to the intended beneficiary; instead, a breach
    of that duty occurs when the attorney continues to represent conflicting interests. 
    Leyba, 120 N.M. at 777
    , 907 P.2d at 181. We suggested that “any such conflict should be resolved by
    notice to the nonclient that the latter cannot rely on the attorney to act for his or her benefit.”
    
    Id. {14} In this
    case, Spencer argues that the Rules of Professional Conduct should define the
    duty owed by the attorney to the statutory beneficiaries and that duty should be the same as
    5
    the duty owed to a client. Barber argues that the Rules of Professional Conduct do not apply,
    and that as long as the statutory beneficiary knows or has reason to know that he or she
    cannot rely on the attorney to act for his or her benefit, the attorney does not owe a duty to
    the statutory beneficiary. Although we agree with Spencer that the Rules of Professional
    Conduct are relevant in a malpractice case, we do not agree that the duties owed to a client
    are the same duties owed to an intended beneficiary. As we will discuss, the Rules of
    Professional Conduct are relevant in determining the professional responsibilities that an
    attorney has to his or her client. These responsibilities are relevant when an intended
    beneficiary pursues a malpractice case against an attorney on the basis that the attorney’s
    breach of duty to the client harmed him or her as the intended beneficiary of the attorney-
    client agreement.
    {15} The New Mexico Rules of Professional Conduct state that “[v]iolation of a rule
    should not itself give rise to a cause of action against a lawyer nor should it create any
    presumption in such a case that a legal duty has been breached.” 
    Id., Scope (2008) (emphasis
    added); see also Garcia v. Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A., 
    106 N.M. 757
    , 762, 
    750 P.2d 118
    , 123 (1988) (holding that violations of the rules do not give rise to
    a private cause of action). However, this does not mean that the rules are irrelevant in a legal
    malpractice lawsuit. While “the Rules of Professional Conduct . . . cannot be used to launch
    a malpractice claim[,] . . . [they] still provide guidance in ascertaining the extent of lawyers’
    professional obligations to their clients.” Sanders, 1997-NMSC-030, ¶ 16.
    {16} The annotations to the American Bar Association’s Model Rules of Professional
    Conduct support this approach. While the annotations are not legally binding in New
    Mexico, these annotations inform our understanding of the intent behind our rules because
    the relevant section of the New Mexico Rules of Professional Conduct is identical to its
    equivalent in the ABA Model Rules. Compare N.M. Rules of Prof’l Conduct, Scope, with
    ABA Ann. Model Rules of Prof’l Conduct, Preamble & Scope ¶ 20 (7th ed. 2011). The
    annotation to the ABA Scope notes that “most courts do look to the ethics rules as evidence
    of standards of conduct and care, particularly in actions for legal malpractice or breach of
    fiduciary duty.” Model Rules of Prof’l Conduct, annotation to Preamble & Scope (“Ethics
    Rules as Evidence of Standards of Conduct and Care”).
    {17} Proof of the standard of conduct is necessary to maintain an action for malpractice.
    One element of a legal malpractice claim is “breach of [a] fiduciary relationship by the
    defendant attorney.” Richter v. Van Amberg, 
    97 F. Supp. 2d 1255
    , 1261 (D.N.M. 2000). To
    prove this breach, a plaintiff must establish that the defendant attorney violated the required
    standard of conduct. See 
    id. (“[L]egal malpractice based
    upon breach of duty concerns
    violations of a standard of conduct.” (quoting Kilpatrick v. Wiley, Rein & Fielding, 
    909 P.2d 1283
    , 1290 (Utah Ct. App. 1996))). The New Mexico Rules of Professional Conduct
    illustrate that standard, and plaintiffs may cite them to establish the appropriate standard of
    conduct for attorneys to follow. See, e.g., CenTra, Inc. v. Estrin, 
    538 F.3d 402
    , 410 (6th Cir.
    2008) (“[A] violation of the rules may be probative in establishing an independent cause of
    action.”); Sealed Party v. Sealed Party, No. Civ. A. H-04-2229, 
    2006 WL 1207732
    (S.D.
    6
    Tex. May 4, 2006) at *8 (noting that while violation of Texas rules does not give rise to a
    private cause of action or create a presumption that a legal duty has been breached, “Texas
    and Federal courts regularly have referred to the Texas Rules to help define standards of
    attorney conduct in tort cases”).
    {18} In Leyba we implied that the Rules of Professional Conduct were relevant and
    referenced the rules in our discussion of how an attorney may avoid a conflict of interest.
    We stated:
    We agree that when recognition of a duty running from an attorney to the
    third party would burden the attorney’s duty to the client in a wrongful death
    action—as when an adversarial relationship develops between the client and
    the third party—as a matter of public policy the attorney’s duty to the third
    party should end. The fact that an attorney identifies a conflict, actual or
    potential, should not, however, in itself negate the duty owed to the statutory
    beneficiaries. Should a conflict arise, the adversarial exception negates duty
    only if the third party knows or should know that he or she cannot rely on the
    attorney to act for his or her benefit. See, e.g., [Rules] 16-107(A),
    -116(A)(1), -116(D) [NMRA] (prohibiting lawyer from undertaking
    representation adverse to client, detailing instances in which disqualification
    is mandatory, and specifying procedures for terminating representation when
    there is a conflict of interest).
    120 N.M. at 
    778, 907 P.2d at 182
    . We cited the Rules of Professional Conduct to illustrate
    the standard conduct expected of a lawyer when confronted with a conflict of interest. 
    Id. {19} In Sanders
    we further emphasized that the Rules of Professional Conduct are relevant
    to a legal malpractice case. There we recognized that the termination of an attorney-client
    relationship, when carried out negligently, can serve as the basis for a legal malpractice
    claim. 1997-NMSC-030, ¶¶ 14, 15. The defendant attorneys in Sanders argued that the
    Rules of Professional Conduct governing withdrawal from the representation of a client
    could not be used to bring a malpractice case. 
    Id. ¶ 16. We
    agreed that these rules could not
    be used as a basis for civil liability, but we emphasized that “such professional rules still
    provide guidance in ascertaining the extent of lawyers’ professional obligations to their
    clients.” 
    Id. (citing Wood v.
    Parker, 
    901 S.W.2d 374
    , 379 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995) (holding
    that Rules of Professional Conduct are relevant in a legal malpractice claim based on alleged
    negligent withdrawal)). Therefore, in this case, although the Rules of Professional Conduct
    cannot be used as a basis for civil liability, the rules may be used to explain Barber’s
    professional obligations to Sam as the personal representative, and by extension to the
    intended beneficiaries. The determination of whether or not Barber conformed to the
    standard of conduct required by the Rules of Professional Conduct will depend on the
    evidence introduced at trial.
    B.     A Conflict of Interest Arose When Sam, as the Personal Representative, Sought
    7
    to Challenge Spencer’s Entitlement to a Full Share of the Wrongful Death
    Proceeds in Favor of Sam’s Receiving a Larger Share
    {20} In this case, as in Leyba, the contract at issue is the agreement between the attorney
    in a wrongful death lawsuit and his client, the personal representative, who is responsible for
    suing on behalf of the statutory beneficiaries under Section 41-2-3. On May 5, 2006, Sam
    filed suit for her own injuries and as personal representative of Hermanda’s and Lydia’s
    estates against seven defendants: the truck driver who struck Sam’s car, the trucking
    company who employed the truck driver, the company’s owner, three insurance providers,
    and Sam’s passenger, Daniel Begay. Sam v. Kalenik, No. CV 2006-242-2 (N.M. 11th
    Judicial Dist. Court Apr. 26, 2006) (the Kalenik litigation). Barber represented Sam both in
    her individual capacity for her personal injuries and as personal representative in the Kalenik
    litigation.
    {21} Because Hermanda died as an unmarried adult with no surviving children, her parents
    would ordinarily share equally in any recovery for her wrongful death. Section 41-2-3(F)
    (providing that if specific subsections do not apply, wrongful death proceeds “shall be
    disposed of in the manner authorized by law for the disposition of the personal property of
    deceased persons”); NMSA 1978, § 45-2-103(A)(2) (1993) (amended 2012) (providing that
    intestate estate of decedent without surviving spouse or descendants is distributed equally
    to decedent’s parents). In addition, under the facts of this case, Hermanda, who briefly
    survived her daughter, was a statutory beneficiary of the wrongful death proceeds of Lydia’s
    estate. Because Hermanda died before the proceeds were paid, Hermanda’s share of the
    proceeds belongs to her estate, and would ordinarily also be distributed to her surviving
    parents, Sam and Spencer. Sections 41-2-3(F), 45-2-103(A)(2).
    {22} As we previously stated, the personal representative has a nondiscretionary duty to
    distribute the wrongful death proceeds in the ratio prescribed by the Wrongful Death Act.
    
    Leyba, 120 N.M. at 776
    , 907 P.2d at 180. Therefore, any agreement to pursue a wrongful
    death lawsuit will, by definition, be for the benefit of the statutory beneficiaries. We made
    this rule explicit in Leyba:
    [T]here can be no other purpose of an attorney-client agreement to pursue
    claims for wrongful death than to benefit those persons specifically
    designated by the Act as statutory beneficiaries. We conclude therefore that
    . . . the very nature of a wrongful death action is such that we will imply in
    law a term in every agreement between an attorney and personal
    representative that the agreement is formed with the intent to benefit the
    statutory beneficiaries of the action.
    
    Id. It is unnecessary
    to analyze in each wrongful death case whether the attorney for the
    personal representative actually intended to benefit the statutory beneficiary. Under the rule
    laid out in Leyba, the statutory beneficiary is always the intended beneficiary of the
    agreement between the personal representative and her attorney. 
    Id. As a result,
    Barber,
    8
    acting as Sam’s attorney in her capacity as personal representative, had “a duty to exercise
    reasonable care to ensure that the statutory beneficiaries actually receive[d] the proceeds of
    any wrongful death claim.” 
    Id. at 778, 907
    P.2d at 182.
    {23} However, according to Barber, Sam had taken the position that her ex-husband,
    Spencer, had abandoned Hermanda and their other children, and therefore Spencer was not
    entitled to share in any wrongful death proceeds. See NMSA 1978, § 45-2-114(C) (2004)
    (amended 2012) (precluding a parent from inheriting from a child through intestate
    succession unless he “has openly treated the child as his and has not refused to support the
    child”); see also Perry v. Williams, 2003-NMCA-084, ¶¶ 20-22, 
    133 N.M. 844
    , 
    70 P.3d 1283
    (applying the policy of Section 45-2-114(C) to bar recovery under the Wrongful Death Act
    by a father who had abandoned his child).
    {24} It is not clear from the record when Barber learned that Sam disputed Spencer’s
    entitlement to his share of any wrongful death proceeds. However, upon learning that there
    was a dispute regarding Spencer’s entitlement to a portion of the proceeds, Barber could not
    simply distribute such proceeds from the wrongful death lawsuit to either Spencer or Sam.
    See Rule 16-115(E) NMRA (“When in the course of representation a lawyer is in possession
    of property in which two or more persons . . . claim interests, the property shall be kept
    separate by the lawyer until the dispute is resolved.”). As we have made clear in the
    commentary to Rule 16-115(E):
    Paragraph E also recognizes that third parties may have lawful claims against
    specific funds or other property in a lawyer’s custody, such as a client’s
    creditor who has a lien on funds recovered in a personal injury action. A
    lawyer may have a duty under applicable law to protect such third-party
    claims against wrongful interference by the client. In such cases, when the
    third-party claim is not frivolous under applicable law, the lawyer must
    refuse to surrender the property to the client until the claims are resolved. A
    lawyer should not unilaterally assume to arbitrate a dispute between the
    client and the third party, but, when there are substantial grounds for dispute
    as to the person entitled to the funds, the lawyer may file an action to have
    a court resolve the dispute.
    
    Id. cmt. 4. {25}
    This procedure was followed by the attorneys in Perry, where the mother prosecuted
    a wrongful death lawsuit to its conclusion and subsequently sued the child’s father, seeking
    a declaration that he was not entitled to share in the wrongful death proceeds because he had
    abandoned their child. See 2003-NMCA-084, ¶¶ 2-3 (describing procedural history). In this
    case, Barber learned that Sam intended to contest Spencer’s right to share in the wrongful
    death proceeds before he concluded his representation of Sam in the case. This knowledge
    created a conflict of interest for Barber because Sam wanted to oppose the distribution
    mandated by statute. See 
    McTaggart, 509 N.W.2d at 884
    (finding a conflict of interest in
    9
    attorney’s representation of decedent’s mother both as personal representative and as
    claimant against other beneficiaries); Home Ins. Co. v. Wynn, 
    493 S.E.2d 622
    , 624, 626 (Ga.
    Ct. App. 1997) (upholding verdict against attorney for representing decedent’s widow both
    as fiduciary and on her own behalf, where the two roles created conflicting incentives).
    {26} Even if Barber was not aware of this particular conflict at the outset of his
    representation of Sam, in Leyba we acknowledged the possibility that a conflict might
    develop as a case progresses. 120 N.M. at 
    777, 907 P.2d at 181
    . We recognized that when
    the interests of the personal representative and the beneficiaries are adverse, or become
    adverse, there is an adversarial exception to the attorney’s ordinary duty of care toward the
    beneficiaries. 
    Id. at 777-78, 907
    P.2d at 181-82.
    {27} However, in Leyba we made it clear that just because the attorney has identified a
    conflict does not mean that he does not have a duty to the beneficiaries or that these duties
    are automatically discharged. 
    Id. at 778, 907
    P.2d at 182. We noted that if an attorney finds
    himself or herself in a conflicted situation and takes no action to resolve the conflict, “rather
    than applying the adversarial exception to deny the existence of a duty to the nonclient,” a
    court should find that a duty exists and “a breach of that duty . . . arise[s] out of continuing
    representation of conflicting interests.” Id. at 
    777, 907 P.2d at 181
    . “The fact that an
    attorney identifies a conflict, actual or potential, should not . . . in itself negate the duty owed
    to the statutory beneficiaries.” 
    Id. at 778, 907
    P.2d at 182. Instead, when such a conflict
    becomes apparent, the attorney can resolve the conflict by giving “notice to the nonclient
    that the latter cannot rely on the attorney to act for his or her benefit.” Id. at 
    777, 907 P.2d at 181
    .
    {28} Insofar as the wrongful death litigation is concerned, Barber’s client was Sam as the
    estates’ personal representative, who had a duty to distribute wrongful death proceeds in
    accordance with the Wrongful Death Act. As statutory beneficiaries, Sam and Spencer were
    identically situated—they both were intended beneficiaries of the agreement between Sam,
    as personal representative, and Barber. When Sam, as statutory beneficiary, announced that
    she wanted all of the proceeds from the wrongful death lawsuit because she alleged that
    Spencer had abandoned Hermanda, this position conflicted with her fiduciary duty as
    personal representative.
    {29} The Georgia Court of Appeals addressed a similar situation in Home Insurance 
    Co., 493 S.E.2d at 624
    , in which it upheld a jury verdict against a widow who had brought and
    settled claims both on her own behalf and as a fiduciary for her husband’s estate, of which
    she was one of several beneficiaries. When she settled the lawsuit, she had an improper
    incentive to allocate the settlement to claims for which she was the only beneficiary. 
    Id. at 626. The
    court wrote:
    An agent cannot place herself in a position in which her duty and interests
    conflict with those of her principal. . . . The trustee must avoid being placed
    in such a position, and if she cannot avoid it, she may resign, may fully
    10
    inform the beneficiaries of the conflict, or may request the court to appoint
    a guardian ad litem to protect the unprotected interests. If she fails to do any
    of these things, she proceeds at her own peril.
    
    Id. The court also
    upheld the verdict against the woman’s lawyer. 
    Id. at 624; see
    also
    
    McTaggart, 509 N.W.2d at 884
    (“[D]ual representation [of one person as claimant and
    personal representative] is improper if representation of the claimant would adversely affect
    representation of the fiduciary.”); In re Birnbaum, 
    460 N.Y.S.2d 706
    , 707 (Sur. Ct. 1983)
    (“[W]here the attorney represents his client in both capacities [as a beneficiary and a
    fiduciary], he may not act to advance the personal interests of a fiduciary in such a way as
    to harm . . . the estate.”).
    {30} Spencer asserts that if Barber wished to continue representing Sam in her individual
    capacity, he was obligated to withdraw from his representation of Sam as the personal
    representative. Barber contends that he no longer owed Spencer a duty as an intended
    beneficiary once he told Spencer that he was Sam’s attorney and not Spencer’s. We do not
    agree that the only way Barber could avoid the conflict of interest was to withdraw from his
    representation of Sam as the personal representative, nor do we agree that Barber negated
    his duty to Spencer by choosing to protect Sam’s interest as a statutory beneficiary over
    Spencer’s interest by giving notice to Spencer that he was Sam’s lawyer and not Spencer’s.
    {31} Barber could have declined to represent Sam in her claim that Spencer was not
    entitled to his statutory share of the wrongful death proceeds, or he could have deferred the
    legal battle until after the wrongful death case was concluded, similar to the situation in
    Perry. However, Barber did not choose either of these approaches. When Barber
    approached Spencer with the settlement agreement, the wrongful death litigation had not
    been settled. In addition, the agreement listed Sam as a party to the agreement both in her
    individual capacity (as a statutory beneficiary) and as the personal representative (as
    fiduciary to the intended beneficiaries). Striking an agreement between Sam as the fiduciary
    and Spencer as the beneficiary was not prohibited provided that Barber, acting on behalf of
    Sam as the personal representative, complied with Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    Section 173 (1981), which provides:
    If a fiduciary makes a contract with his beneficiary relating to matters
    within the scope of the fiduciary relation, the contract is voidable by the
    beneficiary, unless
    (a) it is on fair terms, and
    (b) all parties beneficially interested manifest assent with full
    understanding of their legal rights and of all relevant facts that the
    fiduciary knows or should know.
    See also Moody v. Stribling, 1999-NMCA-094, ¶ 33, 
    127 N.M. 630
    , 
    985 P.2d 1210
    (citing
    11
    Section 173 for proposition that “contracts entered into between a fiduciary and beneficiary
    are suspect”). We also believe that Comment a to Restatement Section 173 informs the duty
    in this case. Comment a provides:
    The rule stated in this Section applies to any fiduciary, including a trustee,
    an agent, a guardian, or an executor or administrator. . . . When a fiduciary
    makes a contract with the person beneficially interested, it is not enough that
    he make a complete disclosure of the facts known to him. The person
    beneficially interested must be put on an equal footing, with full
    understanding of his legal rights and of all relevant facts that the fiduciary
    knows or should know. If that person is not of competent age and
    understanding, this may be difficult if not impossible to achieve. If it is
    impossible, the fiduciary is precluded from making a contract with him
    within the scope of the fiduciary relation.
    Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 173 cmt. a.
    {32} This is consistent with the New Mexico rule on dealing with an unrepresented
    person. Rule 16-403 NMRA states that an attorney should not give legal advice to an
    unrepresented person, but the commentary goes on to explain:
    Whether a lawyer is giving impermissible advice may depend on the
    experience and sophistication of the unrepresented person, as well as the
    setting in which the behavior and comments occur. This rule does not
    prohibit a lawyer from negotiating the terms of a transaction or settling a
    dispute with an unrepresented person. So long as the lawyer has explained
    that the lawyer represents an adverse party and is not representing the person,
    the lawyer may inform the person of the terms on which the lawyer’s client
    will enter into an agreement or settle a matter, prepare documents that require
    the person’s signature and explain the lawyer’s own view of the meaning of
    the document or the lawyer’s view of the underlying legal obligations.
    Rule 16-403 cmt. 2. Therefore, under Rule 16-403, an attorney may meet with a beneficiary,
    explain whom he represents, and negotiate a settlement, provided that the attorney and the
    personal representative first put the beneficiary on an “equal footing” as required by
    Restatement Section 173 comment a.
    {33} It is not sufficient for the attorney to simply tell the intended beneficiary that he or
    she needs his or her own counsel. The attorney must provide any intended beneficiaries with
    disclosure that is sufficient for them to understand why they need independent representation.
    This Section 173 disclosure is analogous to the one that an attorney must provide to a client
    to obtain the client’s informed consent to a conflicted representation. See, e.g., Rules 16-
    107(B)(4); -108(A)(3), (B), (F)(1), & (G) NMRA (requiring informed consent of clients to
    potential conflicts). Whether the disclosure is to a client or an intended beneficiary, the
    12
    purpose of the disclosure is to allow the person to make an informed decision about whether
    he or she in fact needs independent representation.
    {34} Comment 7 to Rule of Professional Conduct 16-100 NMRA states that for the
    purpose of obtaining informed consent, adequate communication will ordinarily include
    “disclosure of the facts and circumstances giving rise to the situation, any explanation
    reasonably necessary to inform the client or other person of the material advantages and
    disadvantages of the proposed course of conduct and a discussion of the client’s or other
    person’s options and alternatives.” When the attorney for the personal representative gives
    notice to a statutory beneficiary as required by Leyba, adequate disclosures will normally
    include, at a minimum: (1) the fact that the person is a beneficiary in a wrongful death
    lawsuit, as well as the identities of the parties to the lawsuit; (2) the amount of any settlement
    or verdict reached, or any settlement offers under consideration; (3) the percentage of the
    settlement or verdict to which the beneficiary is entitled under the statute; (4) the basic
    position of the adverse party, e.g., “she does not believe that you are entitled to any money
    because you abandoned your child”; and (5) the fact that the attorney now represents the
    adverse party against the beneficiary and is not looking out for the beneficiary’s interests.
    {35} In this case, there exist genuine issues of material fact about whether Barber satisfied
    his obligation to safeguard Spencer’s possible share of the Kalenik settlement and whether
    Barber’s disclosures to Spencer were adequate. By March 13, 2007, several of the Kalenik
    defendants had offered to settle the claims of both estates for a total of $900,000. March 13,
    2007 was the date that Barber contacted Spencer for the first time. Barber contends that he
    mailed a letter to Spencer on May 4, 2006, presumably to notify Spencer about the pending
    wrongful death action. Because this letter is not in the record, we do not know what notice
    Barber intended to give Spencer. Nevertheless, Barber states that the letter was returned
    marked “insufficient address,” making it clear that whatever notice Barber sent did not reach
    Spencer.
    {36} In any event, on March 13, 2007, Barber went to Spencer’s place of employment
    without first contacting or scheduling an appointment with Spencer and waited until Spencer
    arrived. Once Spencer arrived, Barber met with him in a public location, where Barber
    presented a five-page written “Settlement Agreement and Release” to Spencer. The
    agreement sought to resolve “any questions about distribution of the proceeds of the
    wrongful death claims.” The agreement does not describe the issues that existed with respect
    to the distribution of the proceeds. In addition, the agreement sought Spencer’s release of
    the Kalenik defendants and his release of Sam and her attorneys for all potential claims and
    causes of action, including wrongful death claims.
    {37} Barber told Spencer that he was Sam’s attorney and that he wished to settle any
    claims that Spencer had to Hermanda’s wrongful death settlement. Spencer inquired about
    the amount of the settlement, which Barber said would be “‘a large or very large amount,’”
    but Barber did not tell Spencer the amount of the offer. Spencer, 2011-NMCA-090, ¶ 5.
    Spencer signed the agreement that day for the payment of $20,000, plus Sam’s release of
    13
    Spencer’s outstanding child support payments. 
    Id. ¶ 6. {38}
    That evening Barber sent an e-mail message to the defense attorneys in the Kalenik
    litigation, accepting their offers to settle the case for $900,000. 
    Id. ¶ 9. Each
    estate was paid
    $450,000 as wrongful death damages. In addition, Hermanda’s estate received a present
    value1 of $143,776.72 from Lydia’s estate, representing the wrongful death proceeds that
    would have been due to Hermanda as Lydia’s mother. As such, Hermanda’s estate received
    a total of $593,776.72. Sam paid $162,446.55 from that amount in fees, costs, and taxes,
    owed Spencer $20,000, and kept $411,330.17.
    {39} Barber contends that he satisfied his obligations under Leyba because he claims that
    he told Spencer he represented Sam and not Spencer, and Spencer was entitled to meet with
    a lawyer and have a judge decide the portion of the settlement to which Spencer was entitled.
    Barber also stated that he told Spencer that “he would normally be entitled to a share of the
    wrongful death recovery. . . . [H]owever, that it was Ellen Sam’s position that he was not
    entitled to any recovery under either estate because he had abandoned the children.”
    Spencer denies that Barber told him about Sam’s allegations that Spencer had abandoned
    Hermanda. However, the parties agree that Barber did not tell Spencer the size of the
    anticipated settlement. There is no indication that Barber said that he represented Sam
    against Spencer, or that Spencer was entitled to either 50% of Hermanda’s wrongful death
    estate under the relevant statute or to 50% of the proceeds received by Hermanda’s estate
    for Lydia’s wrongful death. The disputed and missing statements go directly to the adequacy
    of Barber’s notice to Spencer, which is at the heart of this case. Therefore, on this record,
    we cannot conclude that Barber was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    C.      A Conflict May Arise When the Personal Representative May Be Liable for the
    Death of the Decedent
    {40} Spencer also contends that Barber breached his duty to Spencer when Barber
    continued to represent Sam after learning that she may have contributed to the wrongful
    deaths of Hermanda and Lydia. Barber does not contest the allegation that the collision
    occurred when Sam stopped the car at night in a traffic lane on I-40 with the car lights off.
    However, Barber contends that “[t]he issue of Sam’s alleged negligence, in regard to the
    issues in Kalenik, was for determination in that suit, through comparative fault defenses to
    be presented by defendants, who nevertheless chose to pay full value in settling the claims.”
    {41} Whether the settlement reached with the Kalenik defendants represented the full
    value of the defendants’ exposure is not at issue in this case, but we conclude that Sam’s
    potential liability created a potential conflict of interest in this case. Any liability of the
    Kalenik defendants would be reduced by Sam’s percentage of liability, if any. In addition,
    to the extent that Sam contributed to the cause of the deaths of Hermanda and Lydia, she too
    1
    Some of the proceeds were structured in an annuity for future payments to Sam.
    14
    would be liable for fair and just damages to the remaining statutory beneficiaries. A conflict
    of interest may exist if “representation of one or more clients will be materially limited by
    the lawyer’s responsibilities to another client, a former client or a third person.” Rule 16-
    107(A)(2) (emphasis added); see also Pa. Ethics Op. 00-75, Pa. Bar Ass’n Comm. on Legal
    Ethics & Prof’l Responsibility, 
    2000 WL 33678415
    at *3 (Nov. 1, 2000) (applying
    equivalent Pennsylvania rule to attorney who represented client both as individual and as
    personal representative of an estate, where attorney’s representation of personal
    representative might have created responsibilities to third parties).
    {42} The relevant third party in a wrongful death lawsuit is the statutory beneficiary,
    whom we have defined as an intended beneficiary of the relationship between the attorney
    and the personal representative. If there are statutory beneficiaries other than the personal
    representative, and there is a good-faith basis to believe that the personal representative
    contributed to the death of the decedent, this constitutes a conflict of interest that may give
    rise to a malpractice cause of action. The North Carolina case of Jenkins, upon which we
    relied in Leyba, provides a good example of this kind of conflict. In that case, an attorney
    represented a client who was the executor of two separate estates 
    simultaneously. 316 S.E.2d at 358
    . One estate had a viable cause of action against the other for wrongful death,
    and the executor stood to inherit from the tortious estate, but not from the injured estate. 
    Id. at 357-58. The
    executor chose not to sue the tortfeasor’s estate, and an heir of the injured
    estate sued the executor and her attorney for breach of their duties. 
    Id. at 356. The
    court
    found that the complaint stated a malpractice cause of action against the attorney. 
    Id. at 358. {43}
    In this case, there are genuine issues of material fact regarding whether Barber had
    a conflict of interest in his representation of Sam and, if so, whether he handled the conflict
    of interest with due care and skill without harming the statutory beneficiaries. Sam was
    driving the car immediately prior to the accident that caused Hermanda’s and Lydia’s deaths.
    Barber admits, on information and belief, that there is evidence that Sam had been drinking
    alcohol before the collision and that she may have stopped the car in an unsafe location and
    manner. Barber, however, denies that Sam’s conduct proximately caused the death of
    Hermanda and Lydia. Therefore, based on the record before us, summary judgment in favor
    of Barber was inappropriate.
    D.     If a Tort Does Not Depend on the Existence of a Fiduciary Duty, the Leyba
    Analysis Is Inapplicable
    {44} The parties agree that Spencer’s complaint raises non-malpractice causes of action
    against Barber, including fraud, collusion, and misrepresentation. The Court of Appeals
    affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment for Barber on these claims,
    appearing to treat them not as independent claims, but as an alternative basis for the
    malpractice claim. See Spencer, 2011-NMCA-090, ¶¶ 32-34 (addressing tort claims). The
    Court of Appeals appeared to find that the adversarial relationship between Barber and
    Spencer barred the claim. 
    Id. ¶¶ 30-31. The
    Court also emphasized that Leyba does not
    distinguish “between a contract-based claim of malpractice and a tort-based claim of
    15
    malpractice.” Spencer, 2011-NMCA-090, ¶ 32.
    {45} This statement is accurate, but the Court of Appeals’ analysis misreads our opinion
    in Leyba. In general, a non-client cannot maintain an action for malpractice against an
    attorney. 
    Garcia, 106 N.M. at 761
    , 750 P.2d at 122. There is an exception when the non-
    client is the intended beneficiary of the attorney’s work. 
    Leyba, 120 N.M. at 771-72
    , 907
    P.2d at 175-76. We determined that an intent to benefit non-client beneficiaries can be
    inferred in wrongful death cases, and therefore beneficiaries in these cases can sue the
    personal representative’s attorney for malpractice. 
    Id. at 776, 771,
    907 P.2d at 180, 175. We
    left an exception for cases in which the parties were in an adversarial position, where no
    such intent could be inferred. 
    Id. at 778, 907
    P.2d at 182.
    {46} However, none of this analysis, including the adversarial exception, is necessary if
    the plaintiff brings a cause of action in which he or she can prevail, even if he or she was not
    the intended beneficiary of the attorney’s work. For example, under New Mexico law, a
    fiduciary relationship is not an element of fraudulent misrepresentation. See Williams v.
    Stewart, 2005-NMCA-061, ¶ 34, 
    137 N.M. 420
    , 
    112 P.3d 281
    (listing elements of fraud as
    including “(1) a misrepresentation of fact, (2) either knowledge of the falsity of the
    representation or recklessness on the part of the party making the misrepresentation, (3)
    intent to deceive and to induce reliance on the misrepresentation, and (4) detrimental reliance
    on the misrepresentation”). We see no reason that this situation should be any different if
    the defendant is an attorney.
    {47} Because the plaintiff does not have to establish a relationship of trust to bring the
    claim, the adversarial exception is irrelevant—the plaintiff can sue whether or not the
    lawyer’s client is his or her adversary. We acknowledged the difference between
    malpractice and other tort actions in Leyba, writing that even if a non-client’s malpractice
    claims were barred, “a third party has traditional tort claims against an attorney for
    misrepresentation, fraud, and collusion, none of which depend upon a duty arising out of
    
    contract.” 120 N.M. at 773
    n.3, 907 P.2d at 177 
    n.3. These are precisely the claims that
    Spencer has put forth in this case.
    {48} Spencer’s independent tort claims were not fully briefed, and we express no opinion
    on them except that they are in no way subject to Leyba’s adversarial exception. However,
    we note that the Court of Appeals, in considering the issue of the enforceability of Spencer
    and Barber’s agreement, found genuine issues of material fact concerning possible
    misrepresentations by Barber. Spencer, 2011-NMCA-090, ¶ 38. These issues would
    presumably also be at play in Spencer’s tort claims.
    CONCLUSION
    {49} Based on our review of the record in this case, we conclude that there exist genuine
    issues of material fact regarding whether Barber is liable for malpractice to Spencer. We
    further conclude that Spencer’s independent tort claims are not barred by Leyba. Therefore,
    16
    we reverse the opinion of the Court of Appeals and remand to the district court for
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    {50}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
    WE CONCUR:
    ___________________________________
    PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Chief Justice
    ___________________________________
    RICHARD C. BOSSON, Justice
    ___________________________________
    CHARLES W. DANIELS, Justice
    ___________________________________
    BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
    Topic Index for Spencer v. Barber, No. 33,133
    ATTORNEYS
    Conflict of Interest
    Professional Responsibility
    CIVIL PROCEDURE
    Settlement Agreement
    Summary Judgment
    CONTRACTS
    Fraud, Duress, or Mistake
    Third Party Beneficiary
    DOMESTIC RELATIONS
    Abandonment
    TORTS
    Misrepresentation
    Release
    Wrongful Death
    17
    WILLS, TRUSTS, AND PROBATE
    Personal Representative
    18
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Docket 33,133

Citation Numbers: 2013 NMSC 10, 3 N.M. 718, 2013 NMSC 010

Judges: Barbara, Bosson, Charles, Chavez, Daniels, Edward, Jimenez, Maes, Petra, Richard, Vigil

Filed Date: 2/28/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/6/2023

Authorities (19)

Sonja Lujan, as Personal Representative of the Estate of ... , 69 F.3d 1511 ( 1995 )

CenTra, Inc. v. Estrin , 538 F.3d 402 ( 2008 )

Sanders, Bruin, Coll & Worley, P.A. v. McKay Oil Corp. , 123 N.M. 457 ( 1997 )

Jenkins v. Wheeler , 69 N.C. App. 140 ( 1984 )

Home Ins. Co. v. Wynn , 229 Ga. App. 220 ( 1997 )

McTaggart v. Lindsey , 202 Mich. App. 612 ( 1993 )

Perry v. Williams , 133 N.M. 844 ( 2003 )

George v. Caton , 93 N.M. 370 ( 1979 )

Garcia v. RODEY, DICKASON, SLOAN , 106 N.M. 757 ( 1988 )

Dominguez Ex Rel. Dominguez v. Rogers , 100 N.M. 605 ( 1983 )

Kilkenny v. Kenney , 68 N.M. 266 ( 1961 )

Stang v. Hertz Corporation , 81 N.M. 348 ( 1970 )

Leyba v. Whitley , 120 N.M. 768 ( 1995 )

Self v. United Parcel Service, Inc. , 126 N.M. 396 ( 1998 )

State Farm Mutual Auto. Ins. Co. v. Luebbers , 119 P.3d 169 ( 2005 )

Moody v. Stribling , 127 N.M. 630 ( 1999 )

Spencer v. Barber , 263 P.3d 296 ( 2011 )

Wood v. Parker , 901 S.W.2d 374 ( 1995 )

Richter v. Van Amberg , 97 F. Supp. 2d 1255 ( 2000 )

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