By Denise Woods
The Daily Record Newswire
RICHMOND, Va. — Will-writing lawyers are wasting little time before they start to draft a possible legislative fix for a June 2 decision by the Supreme Court of Virginia that has sparked worries about their long-term liability exposure.
The court upheld a six-figure judgment against a Richmond lawyer whose error in will draftsmanship 13 years ago caused a charity to lose out on an intended bequest.
Collection efforts now are underway against the lawyer and his firm, according to an attorney for the charity.
The ruling stripped away a protective legal blanket that many estate practitioners believed would shield them from claims by disappointed beneficiaries. Now, members of the Virginia Bar Association Wills, Trusts & Estates Section legislative committee are discussing how to rebuild a comfort zone for their colleagues.
A retired dance instructor who thought of her three cats as “her babies” hoped to leave the felines and her estate to the Richmond Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals if her elderly mother died before her. She hired Richmond lawyer James B. Thorsen to prepare a will to that effect.
The will was executed in 2003. The mother died in 2007 and the testator died the next year.
Thorsen — as co-executor — notified the RSPCA it was the sole beneficiary of the estate and could expect to receive a bequest worth about $675,000. But a title insurance company spotted a problem: The will appeared to leave only tangible property to the charity, not the more valuable real estate.
The RSPCA would receive only $72,015.60.
Thorsen asked a Chesterfield County judge to correct what he termed a “scrivener’s error,” but the judge ruled the will’s language unambiguously excluded real property from the bequest to the Society.
The RSPCA sued Thorsen in Richmond Circuit Court for breach of contract-professional negligence asserting its status as a third-party beneficiary of Thorsen’s contract to prepare the will.
Hearing the case without a jury, retired Circuit Judge Paul M. Peatross Jr. ruled in favor of the Society and entered judgment against Thorsen and his firm for $603,409.90.
As with the trial, the appeal focused largely on the 1989 Supreme Court case of Copenhaver v. Rogers in which remaindermen under a testamentary trust were barred from pursuing a legal malpractice action.
That case offered comfort to practitioners with its suggestion that the common law requirement for privity of contract would bar exposure for most will-drafting errors.
But the language of Copenhaver was not that broad, the court said. A six-member majority of the justices ruled that the RSPCA had invoked the proper basis for a valid claim by claiming to be an intended beneficiary of the lawyer’s contract to make a will.
The decision came in Thorsen v. Richmond Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
“Because this cause of action requires that one of the primary purposes for the establishment of the attorney-client relationship is to benefit the nonclient, the scope of such claims is necessarily limited,” wrote Senior Justice LeRoy F. Millette Jr. for the majority.
The Copenhaver court had predicted it would be difficult to meet the standard.
“Indeed, it has proved so difficult that this Court has not seen another such case in the nearly three decades from Copenhaver until this day,” Millette wrote.
Nevertheless, the justices said the facts sufficiently alleged that the contract was entered into for the benefit of the testator’s mother and the RSPCA, making the charity not only the intended beneficiary of the woman’s will “but also the intended beneficiary of her contract of employment with Thorsen.”
The evidence that emerged at trial backed up those allegations, the court decided.
“Here, a single woman with an uncomplicated estate created a simple will devising her entire estate to the only relative with whom evidence suggests she had a close relationship, her elderly mother, or, if her mother predeceased her, a charity with which she had a preexisting relation, upon her death. It is a fair inference that the client entered into a contract to draft a will for the purpose of benefiting one of those parties upon her death,” the court said.
The court also rejected a statute of limitations defense, holding that no testamentary beneficiary has a cause of action prior to the death of the testator. The lone dissenter, Justice Elizabeth A. McClanahan, sounded a warning, saying the court was breaking with at least six other states by abandoning a privity requirement for legal malpractice in testamentary cases.
“The majority’s decision to recognize this new cause of action represents a radical departure from the existing law of legal malpractice in Virginia,” the justice wrote.
Lawyers could be liable to an unforeseeable and unlimited number of people, she said, citing a Texas opinion.
“In the context of estate planning services, the abandonment of the privity doctrine is particularly troublesome since, under the majority’s holding that the cause of action for legal malpractice accrues on the date of the client’s death, an attorney may be held liable for malpractice decades after the testamentary documents were drafted for the client,” McClanahan wrote.
“Such uncertain and unlimited liability will undoubtedly deter attorneys from offering estate planning services,” she said.
The majority decision also threatens the loyalty of lawyers to their clients, since lawyers will have one eye on potential claims from third-party beneficiaries as they prepare testamentary documents, McClanahan said.
The court’s decision was a “surprise” after almost 30 years of “some comfort,” said Virginia Beach estate planning attorney John T. Midgett, a member of the VBA legislative committee.
The bar panel was to discuss ideas for a possible legislative solution to the problem at a June 13 meeting, according to Midgett.
One approach might be to allow judges to rewrite the terms of a will to conform to the testator’s intention, if proved by clear and convincing evidence, Midgett said.
A similar statute now allows judicial reformation of the terms of a trust.
“It’s probably too early to determine what course” the panel might take, said another member, James P. Cox III of Charlottesville.
“There is concern among estate planners that this decision represents a sea change in the law affecting attorneys’ vulnerability to malpractice cases,” Cox said.
Given the court’s ruling on the statute of limitations, Cox said exposure is open-ended.
“This is something that could lie dormant for decades before a potential claim could raise its ugly head,” he said.
The RSPCA was represented by Michael S. Lieberman of Alexandria. He said there is no available malpractice insurance coverage and efforts are underway to determine what assets may be available to satisfy the judgment.
“That process is just beginning,” Lieberman said.
Lieberman said the Society’s legal team was well aware of the opening provided by the Copenhaver decision and was able to craft pleadings that would “thread the needle.”
“The facts actually fit. It didn’t take much to find it,” he said.
Lieberman discounted McClanahan’s concerns, saying lawyers can easily protect themselves with carefully worded retainer agreements.
“It’s really not a sea change as the dissent would have you believe,” he said. “It’s easy to protect yourself from it and easy to do a good job, as well.”
Thorsen and his firm were represented by Charles M. Allen of Richmond. He did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
- Posted June 24, 2016
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Attorney held accountable for error in will
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