Moore-Reed v. Griffin ( 2024 )


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  • 258                   April 24, 2024               No. 270
    This is a nonprecedential memorandum opinion
    pursuant to ORAP 10.30 and may not be cited
    except as provided in ORAP 10.30(1).
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
    STATE OF OREGON
    Aisling Tucker MOORE-REED,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    Anthony GRIFFIN,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    Jackson County Circuit Court
    21CV26445; A177496
    Timothy C. Gerking, Judge.
    Argued August 23, 2023.
    Larry R. Roloff argued the cause and filed the briefs for
    appellant.
    Julie A. Smith argued the cause for respondent. Also on
    the brief was Cosgrave Vergeer Kester LLP.
    Before Shorr, Presiding Judge, Mooney, Judge, and Pagán,
    Judge.
    MOONEY, J.
    Affirmed.
    Nonprecedential Memo Op: 
    332 Or App 258
     (2024)                       259
    MOONEY, J.
    This is a civil case based on a legal theory of profes-
    sional negligence. Plaintiff seeks damages from the attor-
    ney who represented her in a criminal case in which she
    was charged with first and second-degree manslaughter
    and murder.1 The trial court concluded that plaintiff’s legal
    negligence claim was foreclosed by Stevens v. Bispham, 
    316 Or 221
    , 
    851 P2d 556
     (1993), and it granted summary judg-
    ment to defendant. Plaintiff appeals the general judgment
    that was entered thereafter. We affirm.
    We review a trial court’s decision on a motion for
    summary judgment for legal error. Stedman v. Dept. of
    Forestry, 
    316 Or App 203
    , 204, 502 P3d 234 (2021). We view
    the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the nonmov-
    ing party, to determine whether there was a genuine issue
    of material fact that would preclude summary judgment
    and whether defendant was entitled to prevail as a matter
    of law. Stevens, 
    316 Or at 223
    ; ORCP 47 C.
    A full recitation of the facts underlying plaintiff’s
    claim would not benefit the parties, the bench, the bar, or
    the public. We describe only those facts that are necessary
    to explain our decision.
    Plaintiff was charged with first and second-degree
    manslaughter after she shot her uncle at her grandmother’s
    home. Just before the shooting, plaintiff used her cellphone
    to record a video of her uncle attempting to convince her
    grandmother to convey ownership of her farm to him. After
    plaintiff was arrested, police seized the cellphone and, after
    finding nothing of interest to them on it, turned the phone
    over to plaintiff’s attorney.
    After plaintiff’s criminal defense attorney—the
    defendant in this case—viewed the video on the phone, he
    sent the video to the District Attorney’s office. The prose-
    cutor in turn took the video to a grand jury and success-
    fully requested that it add a murder charge to plaintiff’s
    case. Once plaintiff was charged, her release agreement was
    revoked, and she was returned to jail and held without bail.
    1
    The underlying criminal case is Jackson County Circuit Court Case No.
    16CR46418.
    260                                     Moore-Reed v. Griffin
    Eventually, plaintiff pleaded guilty to second-degree man-
    slaughter and was convicted of that crime.
    Following her conviction, plaintiff filed this case,
    alleging that defendant “was negligent” in providing legal
    services to her in the criminal case because, among other
    things, he “provid[ed] the district attorney’s office the poten-
    tially incriminating evidence” on her phone and because he
    failed to consider the possible result of “additional and more
    serious charges” that “could arise from providing [that] evi-
    dence.” She alleged that defendant’s negligent conduct “com-
    pletely altered the dynamics of the legal situation * * *, forc-
    ing her into a highly disadvantaged position” in which she
    was more inclined “to plead to manslaughter in the second
    degree” than to go to trial and that, as a result, she suffered
    “damages to her reputation, finances, and emotional and
    mental health.”
    Defendant moved for summary judgment, arguing
    that under Stevens, no issue of material fact existed because
    plaintiff had not been exonerated of any criminal conviction
    and, therefore, had suffered no harm. Because harm is a
    necessary element of any negligence claim, the trial court
    granted defendant’s motion, and plaintiff now appeals.
    The parties focus their arguments on the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Stevens. Stevens is a legal negligence case
    that was filed “by a former criminal defendant against the
    lawyer who defended him” after another person confessed to
    the crimes for which the defendant had been convicted. 
    316 Or at 223
    . The criminal defense lawyer moved for summary
    judgment on grounds that the civil case was time-barred,
    but the trial court denied the motion, reasoning that the
    statute of limitations did not begin to run until the plaintiff
    became aware of the harm, which did not occur until the
    plaintiff had been exonerated of the crime. 
    Id. at 239
    .
    As the court explained, the “choice of what con-
    stitutes legally cognizable harm is a policy choice.” 
    Id. at 229
    . That choice, in the context of a negligence case filed
    by a former criminal defendant against his or her criminal
    defense lawyer for legal services rendered in a case where
    the negligence is alleged to have contributed to the person’s
    Nonprecedential Memo Op: 
    332 Or App 258
     (2024)                 261
    conviction, “is informed by the comprehensive legislative
    scheme that constitutes the substantive and procedural
    criminal law in Oregon.” 
    Id.
     The court emphasized (1) the
    “wide range of procedural protections” already afforded to
    criminal defendants, (2) the legal presumption that a per-
    son convicted of a criminal offense is guilty of that offense
    and should not be permitted to relitigate the matter without
    first overturning the conviction, and (3) the principle that a
    person convicted of a crime is deemed guilty of that crime
    regardless of whether the conviction resulted from a jury
    trial or a bench trial, or from the defendant’s guilty plea
    made following or pursuant to negotiations. Id. at 230-32.
    On that third point, the court explained that civil relief for
    professional negligence should not be available to offenders
    who complain that their lawyer failed to get them a “better
    deal,” because a convicted offender cannot have been legally
    harmed “by any disposition of that person’s case that was
    legally permissible.” Id. at 232. Plaintiff’s attempt to dis-
    tinguish Stevens because she is claiming harm from “the
    indictment itself” rather than from a “guilty verdict” mis-
    reads what Stevens says.
    Stevens is unequivocal:
    “We hold that, in order for one convicted of a criminal
    offense to bring an action for professional negligence against
    that person’s criminal defense counsel, the person must, in
    addition to alleging a duty, its breach, and causation, allege
    ‘harm’ in that the person has been exonerated of the crim-
    inal offense through reversal on direct appeal, through
    post-conviction relief proceedings, or otherwise.”
    Id. at 238. Here, defendant was convicted of a criminal offense
    and claims that her attorney’s negligence contributed to her
    conviction. Thus, under Stevens, she cannot allege harm for
    purposes of a professional negligence claim until she has
    “been exonerated” of the crime of which she was convicted.
    Plaintiff has not been exonerated of any crime.
    We reject plaintiff’s argument that Stevens “was
    bad law from the day it was decided.” But even if we were
    inclined to agree with her on that point, contrary to plain-
    tiff’s urging, we lack the authority to overturn Supreme
    Court precedent. State v. DeJong, 
    368 Or 640
    , 646 n 5, 497
    262                                   Moore-Reed v. Griffin
    P3d 710 (2021). We also reject plaintiff’s assertion that she
    “met her burden under Stevens” because she was “exoner-
    ated of the charged offense of murder.” That is not so. The
    murder charge was simply dismissed as part of a plea nego-
    tiation. Stevens limits legal negligence cases against crimi-
    nal defense attorneys to those in which there was a wrong-
    ful conviction followed by a later exoneration. That is not
    this case.
    Affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A177496

Judges: Mooney

Filed Date: 4/24/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/16/2024