Lyons ex rel. Robin Damon Trust v. Nutt

12 Mass. L. Rptr. 158
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedAugust 15, 2000
DocketNo. 98-1459B
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Mass. L. Rptr. 158 (Lyons ex rel. Robin Damon Trust v. Nutt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyons ex rel. Robin Damon Trust v. Nutt, 12 Mass. L. Rptr. 158 (Mass. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Welch, J.

This case, filed in 1998, alleges legal malpractice which occurred a decade before. The question is whether this former client waited too long to sue these lawyers. Recognizing that it is not easy for a layperson to recognize malpractice and acknowledging that it is disruptive (to put it mildly) to allege malpractice while represented by the same counsel, the law has extended the three-year statute of limitation using various doctrines. At a certain point, however, any claim becomes untimely if not filed. The question is whether this one is barred.

Plaintiff Lyons is one of two co-trustees of the Robin Damon Trust. The primary asset of the Trust was the Salem Evening News. In 1987, a William Dean Singleton expressed interest in purchasing this asset for approximately 40 million dollars. The plaintiffs co-trustee, Cyrus Neubegin, was not interested in selling the Salem Evening News. Plaintiff Lyons, however, was interested and retained attorneys from the law firm of Ropes & Gray to advise him as co-trustee as to how to consummate this sale.

Ropes & Gray was retained by Lyons in December of 1987. Ropes & Gray always represented Lyons in his capacity as co-trustee. The law firm did not represent the Trust. In February of 1988, William Dean Singleton sweetened his offer to purchase the Salem Evening News to an amount of 42.5 million dollars. Co-trustee Neubegin continued to oppose the sale of the newspaper. Later in that year, sometime in October of 1988, Singleton lost interest in purchasing the newspaper due to Neubegin’s unwillingness.

Various members of the Spinner family are beneficiaries of this Trust. At least by 1992, these beneficiaries were extremely disappointed in the trustees’ inability to sell the Salem Evening News to a potential purchaser such as Singleton at such an attractive price. As a result, in July of 1992, the Spinner family began to seek to remove Lyons as a co-trustee and to surcharge him. The Spinner family also initiated a legal malpractice suit against Ropes & Gray claiming that the law firm had committed malpractice in failing to consummate the sale of the Salem Evening News to Singleton.

The Spinner family's lawsuit, Spinner v. Nutt, was unsuccessful. The case was dismissed due to the fact that Ropes & Gray owed no duty to the Spinner family. Ropes & Gray had been hired by, and owed a duty only to, plaintiff Damon Lyons as co-trustee of the Trust. The dismissal was afín med by the Supreme Judicial Court. As the Supreme Judicial Court reasoned: “the beneficiaries may bring an action against the trustees and the trustees, in turn, may bring an action against (their) attorneys if appropriate.” Spinner v. Nutt, 417 Mass. 549, 555 (1994).

In the interim (on July 19, 1993), plaintiff Damon Lyons filed, for completely unrelated personal reasons, a personal bankruptcy petition. Plaintiff Lyons was represented by separate bankruptcy counsel during the course of the bankruptcy. Undeterred, and taking their cue from the Supreme Judicial Court’s decision, the Spinner family hired counsel and corresponded with Lyons’ bankruptcy trustee in an attempt to urge the trustee to pursue Lyons’ malpractice claim against Ropes & Gray. In a detailed letter dated February 10,1995, counsel for the Spinner family detailed why “we think, Lyons’ malpractice claim, although not yet filed, is property of the estate under section 541(a) [of the United States Bankruptcy Code].” The trustee in bankruptcy never pursued the purported malpractice claim.

In March in 1995, the primary asset of the Trust, namely the Salem Evening News, was sold for approximately 16.5 million dollars. This, obviously, is significantly less than the Singleton offer made approximately seven years before.

In the meantime, the Spinner family was still pursuing various claims against plaintiff Lyons in the [159]*159Probate Court and attempting to remove him as the co-trustee of the Trust. In approximately “June or early July 1995,” Mr. Hannigan (one of the Ropes & Gray attorneys representing the plaintiff] told [the plaintiff] “that the firm of Ropes & Gray would have to withdraw from the Probate cases because certain lawyers from the firm may become witnesses in the Probate cases since the petition for removal of me as co-trustee turned on the handling of the Singleton offer and a failure to diversify or sell the major asset of the Trust.” Affidavit of Damon Lyons in opposition to defendant's motion for summary judgment (para. 18). Ropes & Gray suggested that the plaintiff hire Attorney William Looney understanding that “Ropes & Gray would not continue as my lawyers.” The plaintiff met with Mr. Looney and Mr. Hannigan at Ropes & Gray on July 25, 1995. Affidavit of Damon Lyons, para. 21. Mr. Lyons understood that, as of July 25, 1995, Mr. Looney was representing him. Deposition of Damon Lyons, page 102 (confirming that July 25, 1995 was “when Bill Looney took over”). The plaintiff understood that Ropes & Gray would be “assisting my case as witnesses” and that Ropes & Gray would provide materials from their files to William Looney. Ropes & Gray filed a formal notice of withdrawal in the Probate Court action, dated August 7, 1998.

On July 31, 1998, plaintiff Lyons filed this legal malpractice suit against the defendants. This malpractice suit contains, in essence, the same substantive allegations of malpractice as was contained in the Spinner v. Nutt case.

The question presented by the defendants’ latest motion for summary judgment is whether this case is barred by the applicable three-year statute of limitations. No one disputes that the three-year statute of limitations for legal malpractice cases, contained in G.L.c. 260, §4, controls. The issue is whether the statute of limitations has been equitably tolled by either the discovery or “continuing representation” doctrine: After viewing the extensive briefs, appendices, and considering the arguments of counsel, this court concludes that the statute of limitations expired prior to the July 31, 1998 filing date.

The law in this area is well settled. The three-year statute of limitations does not begin to run on a claim of legal malpractice until the plaintiff knows or reasonably should know that he or she has been harmed by the defendant’s conduct. See Williams v. Ely, 423 Mass. 467, 473 (1996); Riley v. Presnell, 409 Mass. 239, 243 (1991). This is the so-called discovery rule. Under this rule, the statute of limitations begins to run when an injury is no longer “inherently unknowable,” and a reasonably prudent person in the plaintiffs position, reacting to any suspicious circumstances of which he might be aware, should have discovered the harm and its cause. Bowen v. Ely Lilly & Company, 408 Mass. 204, 206-08 (1990). The test is an objective one. “Once a client or former client knows or reasonably should know that he or she has sustained appreciable harm as a result of the lawyer's conduct, the statute of limitations starts to run.” Williams v. Ely. 423 Mass. at 473. The plaintiff need not know “the extent of the injury or know that the defendant was negligent for the cause of action to accrue.” Id. Instead, the test focuses on when the client reasonably should have known that he or she had sustained some sort harm resulting from the lawyer’s conduct and, thus, had the responsibility of investigating whether this harm was the result of legal malpractice.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mass. L. Rptr. 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyons-ex-rel-robin-damon-trust-v-nutt-masssuperct-2000.