Lanham v. Fleenor

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 2018
Docket45488
StatusPublished

This text of Lanham v. Fleenor (Lanham v. Fleenor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanham v. Fleenor, (Idaho 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO Docket No. 45488

THOMAS E. LANHAM, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Boise, August 2018 Term ) v. ) Filed: November 7, 2018 ) DOUGLAS E. FLEENOR, ) Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk ) Defendant/Respondent. ) ________________________________________ )

Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Ada County. Richard D. Greenwood, District Judge.

The judgment of the district court is affirmed.

Ellis Law, PLLC, Boise, for appellant, Allen B. Ellis argued.

Carey Perkins, LLP, Boise, for respondent, Richard L. Stubbs argued.

_____________________

STEGNER, Justice. Thomas Lanham (Thomas) appeals from the district court’s dismissal of his legal malpractice action against his former attorney, Douglas Fleenor (Fleenor). Fleenor represented Thomas in a will contest regarding the will of Gordon Lanham (Gordon), Thomas’s father. After the magistrate court ruled against Thomas at the summary judgment stage, Fleenor filed an untimely appeal, which was rejected on that basis. Because the appeal brought by Fleenor was untimely, Thomas brought a legal malpractice action against Fleenor in district court. Thomas alleged that the failure to timely appeal the magistrate’s ruling proximately caused him financial loss because he had a meritorious appeal that he never got to pursue due to Fleenor’s negligence. The district court dismissed Thomas’s legal malpractice claim at the summary judgment stage. The district court reasoned that a timely appeal by Fleenor would have been unsuccessful

1 on the merits; hence, Thomas did not suffer any injury as a result of Fleenor’s alleged malpractice. Thomas has appealed the district court’s adverse summary judgment ruling. The crux of this appeal is the interpretation of Gordon’s Last Will and Testament (Will), in which he attempted to disinherit Thomas. The validity of the Will was not contested. However, Thomas contends his father’s Will did not properly dispose of all of Gordon’s property because it did not contain a residuary clause. Thomas maintains these failures should have resulted in various assets passing to him through intestate succession. We affirm the district court’s dismissal of Thomas’s malpractice case. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The facts in this case are largely undisputed. On November 16, 2010, Gordon began dictating his Will via an audio recording device. Gordon recorded his Will intermittently on nine separate days, concluding on January 7, 2011. On January 19, 2011, the ten dictated paragraphs were transcribed into his written Will. On February 19, 2011, the Will was signed, witnessed, and notarized. Thomas has not contested the validity of the Will. In his Will, Gordon explicitly limited the inheritance of Thomas and Thomas’s brother Keith Lanham to one dollar and one wooden bed each. The Will mentioned two parcels of real property to which Thomas now claims an interest (collectively the subject properties). The subject properties are a ranch located at 3555 Butte Road, Emmett, Idaho (the Ranch), and a forty-seven acre parcel on Big Creek, in Valley County, Idaho (the Big Creek Property). Although Gordon stated in his Will that he planned on devising (the word Gordon used in the Will was “administering”) “1/2 [of the Big Creek Property] to one person and 1/2 to another,” the Will failed to bequeath the property to any specific devisee. The Will further failed to dispose of the Ranch. It also lacked a residuary clause to direct disposition of property not specifically devised. Gordon died on December 5, 2013. The Will was filed with the magistrate court for informal probate on December 20, 2013. Judd Lanham (Judd), Gordon’s cousin, was appointed personal representative of Gordon’s estate, as was contemplated in Gordon’s Will. On January 8, 2014, Thomas filed a pro se pleading entitled “Application to Attest [sic] Personal Representative For This Estate” by which he contested the validity of the Will and requested “an order determining intestacy . . . .”

2 Thomas later retained Fleenor to challenge certain portions of the Will. Fleenor filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that the Will failed to properly dispose of the residue of Gordon’s estate (including the subject properties); the effect of which would mean any property not specifically devised would pass to Thomas and Keith as Gordon’s intestate heirs. In response, Judd, acting on behalf of Gordon’s estate, filed a cross-motion for summary judgment arguing Thomas’s claim should be dismissed because Gordon’s intent to disinherit his sons was clear and the Will fully and properly disposed of all of Gordon’s property. On June 10, 2014, at the hearing on the cross-motions for summary judgment, the magistrate orally ruled against Thomas from the bench. On June 20, 2014, Fleenor, on behalf of Thomas, filed a motion asking the magistrate judge to reconsider his earlier oral ruling. On June 25, 2014, the magistrate issued written findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a judgment against Thomas. 1 The magistrate’s written findings did not address the previously filed motion for reconsideration. Fleenor filed a notice of appeal to the district court on August 13, 2014, forty-nine days after the magistrate’s written judgment was filed. (The time for filing an appeal is forty-two days. I.R.C.P. 83(b)(1)(A).) The district court dismissed the appeal as untimely and found that the June 20, 2014 motion to reconsider did not toll the period for appeal, because the magistrate’s written decision was filed after the motion for reconsideration was filed. Fleenor filed a timely appeal of the district court’s dismissal. However, the Court of Appeals affirmed the district court’s dismissal. In doing so, that court found that Thomas’s outstanding motion for reconsideration did not toll the time for filing an appeal and that the magistrate’s judgment presumptively denied the outstanding motion for reconsideration. Lanham v. Lanham, 160 Idaho 89, 369 P.3d 307 (Ct. App. 2016). As a result of the late filing of the appeal of the magistrate’s adverse ruling, Thomas filed this legal malpractice action against Fleenor on March 17, 2016, in district court. 2 After the filing

1 Even though the magistrate granted summary judgment to Judd, he issued findings of facts and conclusions of law, which were unnecessary. However, nothing of substance turns on the judge’s mistake. 2 There appears to be a factual dispute about who was responsible for the untimely appeal. Fleenor claimed that he advised Thomas of the limited time frame in which to file an appeal, but Thomas did not instruct him to file an appeal until August 13, 2014, which was after the deadline for filing had passed. In contrast, Thomas contends that “[u]pon the Magistrate’s ruling, [he] instructed his attorney, defendant Douglas Fleenor, to appeal the decision.” Because this case was resolved at summary judgment, the non-moving party, in this case Thomas, is entitled to all reasonable inferences. As a result, we presume, for purposes of this appeal, that Thomas instructed Fleenor to appeal the magistrate’s decision prior to the expiration of the time for bringing the appeal, and that Fleenor failed to act on Thomas’s instruction.

3 of cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court ruled that a determination of whether an underlying, unperfected appeal would have been successful, if pursued in a timely way, was a question of law for the court to decide. (An unperfected appeal giving rise to a legal malpractice suit will be referred to in this decision as a “hypothetical appeal.”) The district court also determined that the record was incomplete and denied both parties’ motions regarding the issue of whether the hypothetical appeal would have been successful.

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Lanham v. Fleenor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanham-v-fleenor-idaho-2018.