In re Morrissette

636 A.2d 329, 161 Vt. 576, 1993 Vt. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 16, 1993
DocketNo. 93-401
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 636 A.2d 329 (In re Morrissette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Morrissette, 636 A.2d 329, 161 Vt. 576, 1993 Vt. LEXIS 119 (Vt. 1993).

Opinions

Pursuant to the recommendation of the Professional Conduct Board filed October 8, 1993, and approval thereof, it is hereby ordered that Peter J. Morrissette, Esq., be publicly reprimanded for the reasons set forth in the Board’s Notice of Decision attached hereto for publication as part of the order of this Court. A.O. 9, Rule 8E.

NOTICE OF DECISION

This matter came before the Professional Conduct Board by way of a stipulation entered into by bar counsel and respondent. Upon consideration of that stipulation, the Board hereby makes the following findings of fact, conclusions of law, and recommended sanction.

FACTS

1. Respondent, Peter J. Morrissette, was admitted to the Vermont bar in 1968.

2. In 1982 Mr. Morrissette represented Frank and Paul Damazo, both out-of-state residents, in the sale of a parcel of land in a subdivision created by them to Mr. and Mrs. James McDonald. At the request of Mr. and Mrs. McDonald, Mr. Morrissette also represented them in connection with the transaction.

3. Before Mr. Morrissette was retained or consulted, the Damazos and the McDonalds had entered into a written purchase and sale agreement drafted by or with the help of a real estate broker. Mr. Morrissette was retained by the Damazos to draft a warranty deed and other closing documents and by the McDonalds to perform a title search.

[577]*5774. There was a great deal of time pressure surrounding the transaction. The binding purchase and sale contract was entered into under date of June 17,1982, and specified a closing date of June 18,1982.

5. Mr. Morrissette advised each party that he was also representing the other, but he did not fully explain any potential problems with dual representation.

6. At the closing, the parties themselves negotiated a right of first refusal in favor of the McDonalds on certain other lands belonging to the Damazos and bordering upon the parcel being conveyed to the McDonalds. Although Mr. Morrissette was present at the closing where these negotiations occurred, there is no evidence that he participated in the discussions.

7. The McDonalds wanted the following assurances regarding development on certain neighboring land within the subdivision:

— that the land be kept in a clean condition;

— that there be no mobile homes on the land; and

— that only one single-family dwelling would be constructed per ten acres.

The McDonalds further wanted the right of first refusal with respect to neighboring lands to protect themselves in the event that potential buyers were not willing to agree to these restrictions.

8. Mr. Morrissette denies that he knew, at the time of closing, the existence or the substance of any specific restrictions to which the Damazos and McDonalds agreed. No requirement that such restrictions be imposed was included within the Damazo-McDonald warranty deed, which incorporated the right of first refusal negotiated by the parties.

9. Mr. Morrissette was aware that the parties had negotiated a right of first refusal and that the right of first refusal was incorporated in the Damazo-McDonald warranty deed, as he drafted the deed.

10. The language which Mr. Morrissette added to the warranty deed is as follows:

There is included with the conveyance of these premises to the Grantees herein, the first option to purchase any of those premises of the Grantors herein bounded [followed by a description]. The Grantees shall have a period of 15 days from the time they are notified by the Grantors of the Grantors’ intention to sell all or a part of the premises, to notify the Grantors of their intention to purchase said premises on the same terms and conditions on which the Grantors are prepared to sell all or a part of said premises to a third party. (Emphasis added.)

11. The McDonalds were financially able at all times to assert their right of first refusal on any and all of the property included in the right.

12. On at least two occasions, the McDonalds declined to exercise their right of first refusal because the property was sold subject to the three restrictions described above. These deeds, with the rest, had been prepared by Mr. Morrissette on behalf of the Damazos.

18. In January 1983, the McDonalds were asked by a realtor to sign a quitclaim deed releasing their right of first refusal with respect to a parcel within the Damazo subdivision about to be purchased by Caroline Nicholas. Mr. McDonald was presented by the realtor with a copy of the proposed warranty deed from the Damazos to Caroline Nicholas. This warranty deed had been prepared by Mr. Morrissette. Mr. McDonald per[578]*578sonally reviewed the proposed warranty deed from Damazo to Nicholas, verified that the three restrictions outlined above appeared in the deed, and the McDonalds signed the quitclaim deed releasing their right of first refusal. The release of the right of first refusal recited that the subject land was to be conveyed by the Damazos to Caroline Nicholas.

14. Mr. Morrissette had prepared the quitclaim deed releasing the right of first refusal and was aware that the McDonalds had signed it. Mr. Morrissette had not spoken to the McDonalds about the release and was not personally aware of the McDonalds’ reasons for executing it.

15. The sale to Caroline Nicholas fell through for reasons having nothing to do with the right of first refusal.

16. Approximately eleven months later, Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Cronin expressed an interest in purchasing the same parcel.

17. Mr. Morrissette did not prepare a new release of the right of first refusal for presentation to the McDonalds. Instead, erroneously believing that the name of Nicholas on the executed release was surplusage and not material, he typed over the Nicholas name and substituted the name of Cronin, the new purchasers.

18. Mr. Morrissette should have known that once the purchaser’s name was placed by him in the release deed it became a material component of that deed, which could not be changed after execution.

19. The deed from the Damazos to Cronin differed from the proposed deed to Caroline Nicholas. Before the Cronin deed was executed, Mr. Morrissette crossed out the restriction on the number of dwellings and inserted a 15-year limitation on the requirement to keep the land in a clean condition and on the prohibition of mobile homes.

20. As a result of the alteration of the restructions by Mr. Morrissette, the McDonalds were not offered the parcel in issue on the same terms and conditions as were the Cronins, as required by the terms of the right of first refusal.

21. Mr. Morrissette should have known that the alteration of the restrictions in the warranty deed materially affected the McDonalds’ rights and interests in their land and in the land surrounding them.

22. As a result of Mr. Morrissette’s actions, the McDonalds realized a diminution in the value of their land. They also suffered aggravation and inconvenience.

23. Litigation resulted concerning the foregoing but was settled in advance of trial. Mr. Morrissette’s portion of the settlement came partially from his insurance carrier and partially from his own funds.

24. The Damazos also settled the claim against them, therefore suffering injury as well.

25. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
636 A.2d 329, 161 Vt. 576, 1993 Vt. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-morrissette-vt-1993.