Boiko v. Kapolchok

426 P.3d 868
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2018
Docket7278 S-16482/S-16512
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 426 P.3d 868 (Boiko v. Kapolchok) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boiko v. Kapolchok, 426 P.3d 868 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A self-represented couple sued their lawyer for legal malpractice. After lengthy and contentious discovery disputes, at the end of which the couple was sanctioned, the couple retained counsel to assist them in terminating the litigation. The parties agreed to dismiss the suit with prejudice, leaving open the couple's former lawyer's right to seek an award of attorney's fees. This appeal focuses on the superior court's decisions regarding that lawyer's motion for attorney's fees.

Very early in the litigation the lawyer gave the couple a joint, unapportioned Alaska Civil Rule 68 offer of judgment. The superior court ruled the offer was invalid. Following our precedent that joint, unapportioned offers of judgment generally are invalid, we affirm the superior court's ruling as a matter of law.

The superior court applied Alaska Civil Rule 82 for its award of partial reasonable attorney's fees to the lawyer. But instead of employing Rule 82(b)(2)'s standard 20% calculation for an award without a money judgment, the court applied Rule 82(b)(3), which allows courts to vary from the standard award. The court made findings and exercised its discretion to use 15% for calculating its fee award to the lawyer, and it left the discovery sanction against the couple in place. We conclude that the superior court's findings are not clearly erroneous and that the court did not abuse its discretion or otherwise err when it applied Rule 82(b)(3) ; we also conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in levying and leaving in place the discovery sanction.

We therefore affirm the superior court's judgment.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Inna Boiko and Louis Picarella retained attorney George Kapolchok and his law firm to represent them in dental malpractice and loss of consortium claims after Boiko underwent procedures allegedly resulting in disfigurement and extreme pain. The dentist moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that the statute of limitations period had expired before the initial complaint was filed. Boiko and Picarella opposed, asserting that there were genuine issues of material fact regarding the date the statute of limitations began to run.

While the summary judgment motion was pending, the parties engaged in settlement negotiations. Months later, on December 13, 2012, the court denied the motion, holding that - based on the continuing course of treatment doctrine - the original complaint was timely filed. A certificate of distribution on the order indicates it was mailed to the parties' attorneys the day it was issued. On December 17 Boiko and Picarella signed a settlement agreement in Kapolchok's office. They stipulated to dismissal of the case, with prejudice, in return for a settlement payment. The day after the settlement agreement was signed, Kapolchok's paralegal emailed Picarella the favorable summary judgment decision.

*873 Boiko and Picarella, self-represented, subsequently filed a complaint against Kapolchok and his law firm (collectively Kapolchok unless otherwise noted). They contended that they had settled the dental malpractice lawsuit without knowledge of the favorable summary judgment ruling and that Kapolchok deliberately had withheld the decision to induce them to settle at that time. They alleged legal malpractice, intentional and negligent misrepresentation, intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress, breach of fiduciary duties, breach of contract, and unfair business practices.

Kapolchok retained a second attorney to represent his corporate law firm and assist him in defending the legal malpractice claim. One month after service of the complaint, Kapolchok made the couple a $1,500 joint, unapportioned Rule 68 offer of judgment. 1 The offer was not accepted. Following a lengthy and contentious discovery process, including Kapolchok filing several motions to compel, the superior court levied $2,000 in sanctions against Boiko and Picarella: $1,000 to be paid to the court, and $1,000 to be paid to Kapolchok.

At this point Boiko and Picarella hired an attorney, who filed a motion for complete dismissal of their claims with prejudice, conditioned on their ability to contest any attorney's fees motion by Kapolchok. The superior court dismissed the case with prejudice and gave Kapolchok a deadline to file a motion for attorney's fees.

Boiko and Picarella preemptively moved for the superior court to hold the Rule 68 offer of judgment invalid because it was an unapportioned, joint offer 2 and to instead calculate any attorney's fees award under Rule 82. 3 Kapolchok opposed, arguing that no apportionment problems existed because they were husband and wife and Picarella's loss of consortium claim was purely derivative of Boiko's claims. Kapolchok noted they had accepted a joint check for the dental malpractice settlement, undermining their purported need for apportioned offers in the legal malpractice case. Kapolchok then sought attorney's fees under Rule 68. He contended that after a year's defense work he had incurred $85,296 in fees and was entitled to an award of 75% of that amount.

Boiko and Picarella opposed; they asserted that instead of Rule 82's usual 20% award, the court should decline to award any attorney's fees at all. They enumerated several grounds for a variance under section (b)(3) of the rule, including reasonableness of their legal malpractice claims, Kapolchok's vexatious and bad faith conduct in both the dental and legal malpractice cases, and their status as self-represented plaintiffs. 4

Before Kapolchok replied, the superior court ruled without elaboration that the Rule 68 offer of judgment was invalid. Kapolchok then recomputed his prospective fee award under Rule 82, submitting billings dating back to the first day of litigation instead of the offer of judgment, totaling $123,099.50. Kapolchok also requested an enhancement from 20% to 50% under section (b)(3) of the rule, based on the unreasonableness of Boiko's and Picarella's claims and their vexatious and bad faith conduct throughout the litigation. 5

The superior court awarded Kapolchok Rule 82 attorney's fees, but reduced the calculation from 20% to 15% under section (b)(3) of the rule. The final judgment included the discovery sanction levied against Boiko and Picarella, for a total judgment of $18,902.33.

*874 Boiko and Picarella filed a motion to reconsider, arguing that the court should have considered Kapolchok's vexatious conduct in the underlying dental malpractice case and that the court overlooked Kapolchok's use of privileged information to harass the couple in the present litigation. The court denied the motion, stating that "[i]t is not appropriate for this court to consider [Boiko's and Picarella's] claims about [Kapolchok's] bad faith or vexatious conduct in the underlying action that forms the basis of this malpractice case when deciding whether to enhance or reduce attorney fees in this case."

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426 P.3d 868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boiko-v-kapolchok-alaska-2018.