Hannie v. Wall

569 So. 2d 1044, 1990 WL 174164
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 1990
Docket89-546, 89-828
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 569 So. 2d 1044 (Hannie v. Wall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hannie v. Wall, 569 So. 2d 1044, 1990 WL 174164 (La. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

569 So.2d 1044 (1990)

Edward J. HANNIE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
E. Kenneth WALL, et al, Defendants-Appellees.

Nos. 89-546, 89-828.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

November 7, 1990.

*1045 Roy & Hattan, L. Lane Roy, Lafayette, for plaintiff-appellant.

Kantrow, Spaht, Weaver & Blitzer, Paul H. Spaht; Phelps, Dunbar, Marks, Claverie & Sims, H. Alston Johnson, III, Jennifer Zimmerman, Steven J. Levine, Baton Rouge, Juneau, Judice, Hill & Adley, Marc W. Judice and Michael J. Juneau, Lafayette, for defendants-appellees.

Before DOMENGEAUX, C.J., and STOKER and YELVERTON, JJ.

YELVERTON, Judge.

These two appeals come from final judgments rendered in the same case in the district court. The case was a legal malpractice suit against two attorneys. New England Insurance Company, the malpractice insurer of the attorneys, won judgments dismissing it on peremptory exceptions. One judgment maintained an exception of res judicata, with respect to the *1046 liability of the insurer for the actions of one of the attorneys. The other judgment maintained an exception of liberative prescription of one year, with respect to New England's liability for the malpractice of the other attorney defendant. Both attorneys, before these exceptions were maintained, had been themselves dismissed from the lawsuit, one because he settled the case, and the other because he was discharged in bankruptcy. New England, until its dismissal on these exceptions, was left in the suit in its capacity as the professional liability insurer of these two attorneys. For reasons which we will now explain, we affirm the judgments on both exceptions. We will begin our explanation by setting out in necessary detail what this suit was all about.

Edward J. Hannie, a dentist turned businessman, had for some three decades enjoyed a continuously expanding real estate investment business in the Lafayette, Louisiana, area. In 1979, he met two attorneys in Lafayette, E. Kenneth Wall and Daniel V. Hiatt, who were also counselors and participants in business investments. These three joined forces, and embarked upon an adventurous investment relationship, most of which involved limited partnerships. Between 1979 and 1982, the three participated in seven investments: (1,2,3) three Popeye's fast food franchises, one in Lafayette, one in Dallas and one in Beaumont, Texas; (4) the Ole Coach apartment hotel in San Angelo, Texas; (5) the Place One apartment houses in Lafayette, Louisiana; (6) the King Frederick apartment complex in the New Orleans area; and (7) purchase of a private airplane. All except the aircraft were limited partnership syndications.

There was an attorney-client relationship between Hannie on the one hand, and Wall and Hiatt and their law firm on the other. Their business relationship necessarily required legal services. Because all three were involved financially in the business ventures, theirs was also a business relationship.

The businesses did not do as well as Dr. Hannie wanted them to do. He felt that this was due in large part to the bad legal advice that he had received from Wall and Hiatt. So it was that on March 19, 1984, he filed a suit against Wall, later amending it to include Hiatt and the law firm, and XYZ Insurance Company, alleging legal malpractice, and seeking recovery in the amount of $5,000,000 for damages allegedly incurred as a result of the bad investments.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY OF THIS LAWSUIT

Two years after the suit was filed, and following considerable discovery, Hannie and Hiatt and others (but not Wall) settled the case and executed a mutual release of all claims. On April 27, 1987, the trial court signed a partial judgment of dismissal with reservation of rights, based on the release. The judgment dismissed with prejudice all claims against Hiatt, reserving to plaintiff rights against the other parties not specifically dismissed. Wall at this time had not been dismissed.

Hiatt was discharged in bankruptcy on October 19, 1987, and Hannie was one of his listed creditors. The debt he listed was an obligation arising from the settlement with Hannie.

In the meantime, Hannie filed a supplemental petition on October 10, 1986, naming New England Insurance Company as the professional liability insurer of Wall, and another supplemental petition on September 16, 1987, naming New England as the professional liability insurer of Wall and Hiatt.

Also in the meantime, Wall, who had sought relief in the bankruptcy court, was discharged on February 3, 1986. In November of 1988, he was dismissed from this lawsuit in his individual capacity by virtue of that 1986 discharge in bankruptcy.

New England was now the lone defendant in the lawsuit. In November 1988, New England, as Hiatt's insurer, filed an exception of res judicata based upon Hiatt's earlier dismissal with prejudice arising out of the settlement agreement with Hannie. The trial court granted this exception and dismissed New England in its capacity *1047 as Hiatt's insurer, on January 12, 1989. Hannie appealed that dismissal.

On April 12, 1989, New England, as the professional liability insurer of Wall, filed an exception of prescription. Following a lengthy hearing, and after considering a record made up of 17 volumes of pleadings, exhibits and depositions, the trial court granted this exception. Hannie appealed that judgment also.

Although the judgment maintaining the exception of res judicata came first, we will discuss the exception of prescription first. We do this because it involves Wall, the principal actor among the defendants in the events between 1979 and 1982, and the factual background for the exception of prescription will make it easier for the reader to understand the discussion of the exception of res judicata.

PRESCRIPTION

The trial court found as a fact that the attorney-client relationship between Hannie and Wall ended in June 1982, that by then Wall's wrongful acts, as well as the resultant damages, were known to Hannie, and that the one-year prescriptive period on legal malpractice at that time began to run. The trial court held that the one-year prescriptive period had run before suit was filed on March 19, 1984. In oral reasons for sustaining the exception of prescription the trial court said:

One, on the plane, I don't think there was any legal advice involved. Might have been investment advice. If it was legal, then it has prescribed because he was making payments that he had been told he would not have to make, and he sustained damages. On the other entities, he was sustaining damages right off the bat; and the Court is of the opinion that... these causes of action have prescribed. He sued too late. He was sustaining losses as early as '81. He terminated Wall's legal relationship in June '82. He didn't sue until March of '84.

On this appeal Dr. Hannie poses as the issue of first importance, the argument that the trial court erred in failing to consider the various guarantees made by Wall to Dr. Hannie, and consequently failed to apply the ten-year prescriptive period applicable when an attorney warrants a particular result. The appellant cites in support of this argument the case of Cherokee Restaurant, Inc. v. Pierson, 428 So.2d 995 (La.App. 1st Cir.1983), writ denied, 431 So.2d 773 (La.1983). This case recognizes the rule that legal malpractice actions are normally subject to a one-year prescriptive period of La.C.C. art. 3536, with two exceptions: an express warranty by the attorney, or an agreement by the attorney to do certain work followed by doing nothing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 So. 2d 1044, 1990 WL 174164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hannie-v-wall-lactapp-1990.