Breton v. Clyde, Snow & Sessions

2013 UT App 65, 299 P.3d 13, 730 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2013 WL 1104165, 2013 Utah App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 14, 2013
Docket20110996-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2013 UT App 65 (Breton v. Clyde, Snow & Sessions) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breton v. Clyde, Snow & Sessions, 2013 UT App 65, 299 P.3d 13, 730 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2013 WL 1104165, 2013 Utah App. LEXIS 57 (Utah Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Memorandum Decision

CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:

{1 This is a legal malpractice action sounding in negligence and breach of contract arising from a law firm's representation of a cotrustee. We affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the law firm.

12 Neil Breton, a cotrustee of his father's trust, which is known as the Testamentary Grandchildren's Trust (the Trust), sought counsel from the law firm Clyde Snow & Sessions and attorney Hal Swenson (collectively, Clyde Snow) regarding longstanding "intra-family disputes" with some of the beneficiaries of the Trust as well as with one cotrustee. 1 The beneficiaries of the Trust are Breton's fifteen nieces and nephews, three of whom are referred to as "the Slater Brothers." Breton retained Clyde Snow to *15 assist him in making gifts from his personal funds to each of the beneficiaries and ultimately to "resolvle]l any outstanding issues and any potential claims of [the] beneficiaries against the cotrustees of the Trust." Upon consulting with Clyde Snow, Breton detailed the "lengthy history of bad feelings" and litigation between Breton and the Slater Brothers and their parents. Breton emphasized to Clyde Snow that he wanted them to create a plan that would be "all or nothing," meaning "either all beneficiaries would get payments and all would release the cotrustees, or none would get payments." Around December 2004, Clyde Snow drafted and mailed a release for each beneficiary to sign. In the release, each beneficiary would acknowledge "that the proposed payment of $24,000 from Neil Breton w[ould] be in full payment and satisfaction of [his or her] interest in the ... Trust" and release Breton and his cotrustees "from any and all liability in connection with [his or her} interest in the ... Trust."

18 Twelve of the fifteen beneficiaries signed the release. The three Slater Brothers did not sign but indicated that they would. Around February 2005, Breton knew that only twelve of the beneficiaries had signed the release, and he "never got any advice from [Clyde Snow] not to distribute any money until [he] had everybody's signatures." That month, Breton and three of his cotrustees distributed $24,000 to each of the twelve beneficiaries who had signed the release. In September 2005, instead of signing the release, each of the Slater Brothers demanded $66,666.66 for their signatures, and in June 2007, the Slater Brothers filed a lawsuit in California against the trustees. The California lawsuit settled in January 2009.

14 Breton filed the current action in November 2009, alleging, among other things, that Clyde Snow breached its legal services contract and committed legal malpractice, specifically, in failing to give legal advice and concerning its drafting of the release. Breton's complaint alleges that Clyde Snow's ineffective legal work created a situation wherein the Slater Brothers acquired an economic incentive to initiate litigation against Breton because the brothers became the sole beneficiaries of the Trust once the twelve other beneficiaries had signed the release.

T5 In response to Breton's allegations, Clyde Snow filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that the undisputed facts did not support Breton's economic-incentive-causation theory. Clyde Snow argued that the Slater Brothers wished to sue Breton, in the context of a long history of family conflict, because Breton breached his fiduciary duty as trustee and not because of any economic incentive. Clyde Snow also argued that Breton and his cotrustees made the decision to pay each of the twelve beneficiaries $24,000, even though they knew the Slater Brothers had not signed the release and retained their right to sue.

T 6 After oral arguments, the district court orally granted Clyde Snow's motion for summary judgment based solely on the court's determination that there was an intervening cause because Breton broke the chain of causation when he decided to pay the twelve beneficiaries without first obtaining a release from all fifteen beneficiaries. Breton did not deny that, at the time he distributed the money to the twelve beneficiaries, he was aware that the Slater Brothers had not signed the release. According to his deposition testimony, Breton knew that the Slater Brothers "would be free to sue me" if they did not sign the release. The district court concluded,

[HJow can there be causation if ... Breton already knew what he wanted to be advised by his lawyer.... [I]t really comes down to what was caused by the failure to specifically advise ... Breton that if you don't get all 15 to sign you're still at risk, and you distribute to the 12 you're still at risk for being sued by the other three. And I think that it's so clear in anybody's mind that [Breton] was still at risk to be sued by the ... three [Slater Brothers] that the failure to tell him that was not the cause of what happened.

Although the court explicitly ruled that reasonable inferences drawn from the facts would preclude summary judgment as to Clyde Snow's other arguments, it dismissed *16 the case with prejudice because it ruled that the intervening cause was determinative.

T7 On appeal, Breton argues that the district court erred when it granted summary judgment in Clyde Snow's favor because whether Breton's payment to twelve of the fifteen beneficiaries was an intervening cause that broke the chain of causation raises a genuine issue of material fact. Breton contends, as he did below, that Clyde Snow indisputably failed to create "an all or nothing" solution by drafting the release so that unless all fifteen of the beneficiaries signed it, the release would not become effective. Breton urges us to conclude that he raised a genuine issue of material fact not only as to whether Clyde Snow ineffectively drafted the release, but also as to whether Clyde Snow ineffectively failed to advise Breton not to pay the twelve beneficiaries before obtaining a release from all of the fifteen beneficiaries. Breton emphasizes that Hal Swenson testified that he did not think it was critical to have advised Breton to wait for all of the beneficiaries to sign the release before distributing the money. By ineffectively drafting the release and failing to give him appropriate advice, Breton argues, Clyde Snow provided the Slater Brothers with an economic incentive to sue him. 2

18 We "affirm [a] grant[] of summary judgment only when no genuine issues of material fact exist and when the moving party is entitled to "judgment as a matter of law."" Kilpatrick v. Wiley, Rein & Fielding, 909 P2d 1283, 1289 (Utah Ct.App.1996) (quoting Utah R. Civ. P. 56(c)). "We ... review the ... court's grant of summary judgment for correctness" and "'view the facts, including all inferences arising from those facts, in a light most favorable to the party opposing the motion and will allow the summary judgment to stand only if the mov-ant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the undisputed facts'" Id. (quoting Republic Grp., Inc. v. Won-Door Corp., 883 P.2d 285, 288-89 (Utah Ct.App.1994)). We may also affirm the district court's entry of summary judgment on alternate grounds apparent in the record. Commercial Real Estate Inv., LC v. Comcast of Utah II, Inc., 2012 UT 49, ¶ 14, 285 P.3d 1193.

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Bluebook (online)
2013 UT App 65, 299 P.3d 13, 730 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2013 WL 1104165, 2013 Utah App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breton-v-clyde-snow-sessions-utahctapp-2013.