Frank Primiani v. Steven Schneider, et ux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 17, 2022
Docket38125-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Frank Primiani v. Steven Schneider, et ux (Frank Primiani v. Steven Schneider, et ux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank Primiani v. Steven Schneider, et ux, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 17, 2022 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

FRANK PRIMIANI, ) No. 38125-1-III ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) STEVEN SCHNEIDER, individually and ) on behalf of the marital community ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION comprised of STEVEN SCHNEIDER and ) JANE DOE SCHNEIDER; and STEVEN ) SCHNEIDER ATTORNEY AT LAW, ) P.S., a Washington professional services ) corporation, ) ) Respondents. )

PENNELL, J. — This is Frank Primiani’s third appeal related to efforts to challenge

his mother’s will. The will contains a no-contest provision and Mr. Primiani’s previous

litigation resulted in his disinheritance. Mr. Primiani has now sued his probate attorney,

Steven Schneider, for malpractice. The trial court dismissed the suit on summary

judgment. We reverse.

The issue in this case is causation. Mr. Primiani is a licensed attorney and had an

association of counsel agreement with Mr. Schneider. The trial court theorized that, given

Mr. Primiani’s role, he could not establish Mr. Schneider’s deficient representation

caused the losses associated with the will contest case. We deem this issue as one that No. 38125-1-III Primiani v. Schneider

must be resolved by a fact finder. There are contested issues of material fact regarding

whether Mr. Primiani relied on Mr. Schneider. We further hold that collateral estoppel

does not bar litigation on this issue. The order of summary judgment is reversed and this

matter is remanded for further proceedings.

BACKGROUND

Facts leading up to Mr. Primiani’s probate litigation

Mr. Primiani’s mother, Maria, died testate in December 2014. Her will divided her

estate between Mr. Primiani and his sister, Anna Primiani Iliakis. The will contained a

no-contest clause, specifying that if one of Maria Primiani’s heirs unsuccessfully

contested her will, that heir’s inheritance would be reduced to one dollar. Maria

Primiani’s will was admitted to probate in January 2015 and Ms. Iliakis was appointed

personal representative pursuant to the terms of the will.

At around the time the will was admitted to probate, Mr. Primiani consulted an

attorney named Douglas Edwards about a possible will contest. Mr. Edwards advised

Mr. Primiani that a will contest would be too risky. He explained there did not appear to

be a factual basis for a will contest. He also explained Mr. Primiani had a lot to lose and

not much to gain. Even if the will contest was successful, the properly division would be

2 No. 38125-1-III Primiani v. Schneider

substantially the same. But an unsuccessful will contest would invoke the no-contest

clause and reduce Mr. Primiani’s inherence to one dollar.

Mr. Primiani was dissatisfied with Mr. Edwards’s advice. Mr. Primiani is a

licensed attorney, though he has limited experience with probate matters or litigation.

Mr. Primiani researched some of the issues regarding his mother’s estate and thought he

had a basis for a challenge based on allegations of undue influence against his sister.

Mr. Primiani wanted to get a second opinion regarding the viability of a challenge to his

mother’s will. Mr. Edwards referred Mr. Primiani to an attorney named Steven Schneider.

Mr. Primiani contacted Mr. Schneider and shared Mr. Edwards’s assessment of the

case. Mr. Schneider agreed to represent Mr. Primiani and the two men executed a retainer

agreement.

In addition to the retainer, Mr. Primiani and Mr. Schneider also entered into an

association of counsel agreement. The agreement identified Mr. Schneider as lead counsel

and Mr. Primiani as associate counsel. According to the agreement, Mr. Primiani was to

provide assistance such as legal research, correspondence, investigation, discovery,

motions, and trial support. The agreement specified that Mr. Primiani was to act “only

with prior consultation of” Mr. Schneider. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 116. According to Mr.

Primiani, he entered into the association agreement in order to offset some costs.

3 No. 38125-1-III Primiani v. Schneider

Mr. Primiani’s probate litigation

In August 2015, Mr. Schneider filed a petition in the probate proceeding on

Mr. Primiani’s behalf.1 The petition purported to make claims on behalf of the estate

against Ms. Iliakis and her husband, seeking Ms. Iliakis’s removal as personal

representative, and asking the court to order an account and partition of real property.

The petition also included allegations that Ms. Iliakis had exerted undue influence in the

making or execution of Maria Primiani’s will. The petition was signed by Mr. Schneider,

not Mr. Primiani. The estate filed an answer, raising multiple affirmative defenses,

including lack of standing and passage of the statute of limitations.

In December 2015, Mr. Schneider served a subpoena duces tecum, requesting

Maria Primiani’s medical records from Providence Visiting Nurses Association Home

Health (Providence). The estate formally objected to release of the records, but not before

they had been collected by Mr. Schneider. The estate then moved for a protective order,

requesting the records be disgorged and the subpoena quashed.

The court held a hearing on the subpoena issue. During the hearing, Mr. Schneider

acknowledged he obtained Providence’s records, reviewed them, and e-mailed them to his

1 Mr. Primiani previously obtained an extension of time for filing a claim from the estate’s attorney.

4 No. 38125-1-III Primiani v. Schneider

client. Mr. Schneider confessed error regarding the way in which he had subpoenaed the

records, noting that under the uniform statute on healthcare information, he should have

provided the estate advance notice of the subpoena and an opportunity to object. During

the subpoena hearing, Mr. Schneider explained he needed the subpoenaed records

because Mr. Primiani’s allegations regarding the estate amounted to a will contest.

The court issued a temporary protective order and found that the medical records

were irrelevant because Providence’s treatment of Maria Primiani occurred years after she

executed her will. The court further found Mr. Schneider obtained the records in violation

of CR 45, the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996

(HIPAA), Pub. L. No. 104-191, 110 Stat. 1936, and Washington’s Uniform Health Care

Information Act, chapter 70.02 RCW. The court quashed the subpoena, ordered Mr.

Primiani to return all records to Providence, and ordered Mr. Primiani to destroy any

copies he still possessed.

Following the hearing, the estate moved for a permanent protective order, and to

dismiss Mr. Primiani’s other claims. The estate argued Mr. Primiani never served the

personal representative with the petition and that he did not have standing to make claims

on behalf of the estate because he was not the personal representative. The estate also

moved to enforce the no-contest clause in the will.

5 No. 38125-1-III Primiani v. Schneider

The probate court dismissed Mr. Primiani’s will contest for failure to timely

personally serve the personal representative of his mother’s estate. The court awarded

attorney fees, including fees associated with litigating the improperly obtained medical

records. The court further enforced the will’s no-contest clause against Mr. Primiani,

meaning his inheritance was reduced to one dollar.

Mr. Schneider wrote Mr.

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