Allen Decorating, Inc. v. Oxendine

483 S.E.2d 298, 225 Ga. App. 84, 97 Fulton County D. Rep. 626, 1997 Ga. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 13, 1997
DocketA97A0002
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 483 S.E.2d 298 (Allen Decorating, Inc. v. Oxendine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen Decorating, Inc. v. Oxendine, 483 S.E.2d 298, 225 Ga. App. 84, 97 Fulton County D. Rep. 626, 1997 Ga. App. LEXIS 169 (Ga. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Birdsong, Presiding Judge.

Appellant Allen Decorating, Inc. appeals from the order granting summary judgment to appellees Lee Wall Oxendine and Oxendine & Associates, P.C. Appellant brought suit against appellee attorney and her law firm averring legal malpractice and fraud; appellees filed an $8,940 counterclaim for legal services previously billed to appellant *85 plus interest on the unpaid account.

Appellant corporation is engaged primarily as a commercial painting contractor. In 1980 its corporate president, Ken Allen, became involved in a contested divorce action and sought assistance from attorney Mike Broadbear. Following the divorce, Allen was indebted to Broadbear for $10,000 in legal fees. On July 11, 1990, Allen elected to turn over all corporate accounts to Broadbear so the latter could pursue them to collection and apply any collection proceeds in satisfaction of Allen’s indebtedness. As time progressed, it appeared that Broadbear was too busy to pursue collection of appellee’s various accounts. Accordingly, approximately two years later, Allen retrieved his files, and several months later, on March 31, 1992, met with appellee Lee Oxendine and delivered to her four corporate accounts of a total amount exceeding $150,000. In April 1992, appellee Oxendine filed notices of appearance in collection cases pertaining to two of these accounts. In June 1992, appellee Oxendine filed applications for leave of absence in these two suits. The record, however, reveals that from April 1992 to December 1993, appellee Oxendine sent Allen more than 15 letters informing him of the need to sign a contract for legal services, and in several of these letters appellee expressly wrote that the contract must be signed before she could represent Allen or act in his behalf as his counsel. Allen, however, testified by deposition, that he had never received any of these letters until he ultimately retrieved his file from appellee Oxendine. In any event, Allen failed to sign the professional services contract, and in June 1994, appellee Oxendine filed a motion to withdraw as Allen’s counsel. Ultimately, appellee Oxendine withdrew as counsel regarding all of appellant’s claims.

The trial court issued a detailed order granting appellees summary judgment. In that order the trial court summarized the operative facts of this case as follows: Appellant is a corporation engaged in commercial painting; it is solely owned by Allen. Appellant corporation initiated three lawsuits to recover money allegedly owed it pursuant to painting contracts, and had asserted a counterclaim in another suit brought against it by a contractor. These suits were: Allen Decorating, Inc. v. Traylor Brothers, Inc.; T. H. Taylor v. Kenneth Allen d/b/a Allen Decorating, Inc.; Allen Decorating, Inc. v. Barge-Wagener, Inc.; and, Allen Decorating, Inc. v. Thatcher, Haynes, Kaufman (THK). After discharging Broadbear as counsel, appellant contacted attorney Oxendine regarding representing him in these suits. (For purposes of the summary judgment motion, appellees conceded before the trial court that appellant had employed appellees in regard to these claims.) Approximately two years thereafter, appellant dismissed Oxendine and hired a third attorney to represent him in the instant case.

*86 Appellant’s malpractice claims are based upon allegations of deficient representation by appellees in the above four claims cases, (a) Attorney Broadbear represented appellant in the Traylor Brothers, Inc. case until March or April 1992; attorney Oxendine entered an appearance on behalf of appellant in this case in April 1992. Attorney Oxendine withdrew from the case in June 1994. This case is still pending in Fulton County State Court as Civil Action Case No. 90VS0015963. No attorney has entered an appearance in this case since appellant Oxendine withdrew, (b) Attorney Broadbear represented appellant when T. H. Taylor, Inc. filed suit against Kenneth Allen d/b/a Allen Decorating, Inc. Appellant filed a counterclaim. Subsequently Allen filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy and the T. H. Taylor claim was automatically stayed until January 1991; the case was closed without prejudice in February 1991. Over a year later, appellant retained appellees and appellee Oxendine filed a notice of appearance in superior court (Civil Action No. 90-A-03797-4). Appellee Oxendine withdrew from the case in June 1994. (c) In June 1991, attorney Broadbear represented appellant with respect to its breach of contract claim against Barge-Wagener, Inc. However, Broadbear filed no suit in this matter. In March or April 1992, appellant sought representation from appellees regarding this claim. In April 1994, appellee Oxendine improperly filed suit on behalf of appellant in Fulton County Superior Court; in May 1994, Barge-Wagener was served properly in Cobb County. In November 1994, appellee Oxendine’s motion to withdraw from this case was granted. Although the Barge-Wagener claim remains pending, no attorney has entered an appearance in the case for appellant and no motion has been filed to transfer the case to the Cobb County Superior Court, (d) In 1989 a contract dispute arose between appellant and THK; attorney Broadbear filed a suit for damages against THK in behalf of appellant in superior court (Civil Action No. D-86029K17-415). In October 1991, THK filed a motion to dismiss the claim for failure of appellant to engage in arbitration pursuant to the terms of the contract and the order of the superior court. The case was dismissed without prejudice in December 1991. Appellee Oxendine received the case file in March 1992 but did not refile suit against THK prior to withdrawing from all of appellant’s other pending cases.

Regarding appellant’s claim of fraud against appellees, the trial court found the following: In June 1992, appellee Oxendine advised Allen that he might have a viable claim due to Broadbear’s alleged mismanagement of the THK case. Appellee Oxendine advised Allen that a malpractice claim against attorney Broadbear was appellant’s strongest case and recommended that course of action be pursued to the exclusion of the other contract claims. The trial court found that Allen “speaking for the corporation as its president, consented to that *87 strategy.” In October 1992, appellee Oxendine allegedly received a purported offer of $495,000 in settlement of the Broadbear malpractice claim; this offer reflected it was tendered on behalf of VASA North Atlantic Insurance Company (VASA) by John Brazell in his capacity as a claims adjuster. Allen testified, by way of deposition, that on October 23, 1992, he received a “page” call from appellee Oxendine and that when he returned her call she informed him of an oral $495,000 settlement offer by the insurance company. It was approximately one month after October 23, 1992, when Allen received the offer in writing. There also is entered in the record letters from Allen, dated in March 1993, requesting appellee Oxendine to accept the offer and offering to give Oxendine a fee of $95,000, and a subsequent letter, dated October 13, 1993, purporting to be from appellee Oxendine to Allen advising that the VASA offer “on its face does not appear legitimate.” Appellee Oxendine did not attempt to contact Brazell or VASA either to confirm, refute or accept the offer; rather in May 1993, Oxendine wrote attorney Broadbear a letter demanding that he settle the malpractice claim against him for $64,000, the amount claimed in the complaint filed against THK.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
483 S.E.2d 298, 225 Ga. App. 84, 97 Fulton County D. Rep. 626, 1997 Ga. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-decorating-inc-v-oxendine-gactapp-1997.