Mieras v. DeBona

550 N.W.2d 202, 452 Mich. 278
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1996
Docket100259, Calendar No. 4
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 550 N.W.2d 202 (Mieras v. DeBona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mieras v. DeBona, 550 N.W.2d 202, 452 Mich. 278 (Mich. 1996).

Opinion

Levin, J.

(separate opinion). Shortly before her death, 1 Nita Ledbetter Jackson signed a new will disinheriting her daughter, Juanita Neville, and dividing her estate between her other children, Ruth Ann Mieras and Elmer E. Ledbetter, the plaintiffs in this action.

The new will did not exercise a general power of appointment conferred on Jackson under the terms of a marital trust established for Jackson’s benefit by her husband, Ellsworth C. Ledbetter, the father of the three children. In default of exercise of the power, Neville was entitled to one-third of the corpus of the trust upon Jackson’s death. 2

Mieras and Ledbetter commenced this action against Ronald V. DeBona, the lawyer who prepared the will, claiming that, when he failed to include in the will a provision exercising the power of appointment to exclude Neville and to divide the corpus equally between Mieras and Ledbetter, he failed to draft the new will in accordance with Jackson’s instructions.

Mieras and Ledbetter seek to recover from DeBona the $208,722 that Neville received as her one-third share of the corpus of the marital trust and the “monetary costs,” principally legal fees, incurred by Mieras and Ledbetter, and emotional distress damages suffered by them as a result of Neville’s challenge of the *282 new will, 3 and inter vivos transfers of Jackson’s condominium and automobile to Ledbetter. 4 Mieras and Ledbetter claimed that DeBona should have taken measures to guard against an undue influence claim being asserted by Neville.

i

DeBona filed a motion for summary disposition, 5 asserting that Mieras and Ledbetter had “failed to state a claim on which relief can be granted,” MCR 2.116(C)(8), because there was no attorney-client relationship between them and DeBona, and thus that he owed them no duty of due care respecting the drafting and execution of the new will, and that, in all events, they cannot maintain an action seeking to recover the cost of the litigation or for emotional distress damages. The circuit judge granted the motion.

The Court of Appeals reversed, stating that “an examination of decisions in other jurisdictions reveals a trend toward imposing attorney liability to non-clients who are harmed by the attorney’s negligence in performing professional duties,” 6 either on a negligence, third-party beneficiary contract, or hybrid or multicriteria approach.

*283 The Court of Appeals observed that the defense of lack of privity had been eliminated by this Court in some professional negligence situations, and said that Williams v Polgar, 391 Mich 6, 15-18; 215 NW2d 149 (1974), Friedman v Dozorc, 412 Mich 1, 27-28; 312 NW2d 585 (1981), and Atlanta Int’l Ins Co v Bell, 438 Mich 512, 518-519; 475 NW2d 294 (1991), had adopted “a rule of liability to foreseeable relying third parties.”

The majority in the Court of Appeals considered DeBona’s argument that the imposition of a duty to third parties would create a conflict of interest for a lawyer involved in drafting a will, and responded that in other jurisdictions that have imposed a duty to third parties, such a duty has been recognized only where the “plaintiff is a named, intended beneficiary,” the “intent of the testator, as expressed on the face of the instrument, is frustrated due to negligent drafting,” and “no apparent conflict of interest arises because of the imposition of a duty” to such a named third party. 7

The majority observed that Mieras and Ledbetter were named, and thus foreseeable third parties, and the desire to disinherit Neville was expressly set forth in the will. The majority saw no potential conflict, and therefore imposition of a duty was appropriate. The majority rejected the claim for costs in defending against the will challenge, but would allow recovery for mental anguish.

*284 n

Jackson had scheduled an appointment with DeBona, her long-time lawyer, for August 8, 1988, but was unable to keep the appointment because of illness. On the day Jackson underwent surgery, August 10, 1988, Mieras and Ledbetter visited DeBona and conveyed Jackson’s instructions to revise her 1982 will, which had also been drafted by DeBona, 8 to exclude Neville, in the words of the complaint, “from inheriting any property” of Jackson, and to provide that all “the property” of Jackson be inherited equally by Mieras and Ledbetter. 9

DeBona prepared a new will, and documents transferring Jackson’s condominium and automobile to Ledbetter. The next day, August 11, DeBona delivered to Ledbetter the new will and the other documents on the understanding that Mieras and Ledbetter “were to see to execution of the documents” by Jackson. Later that day, the day after she was operated upon, Led-better read the new will and the other documents to Jackson, who executed them in the presence of two of her acquaintances who acted as witnesses.

The August 11, 1988, will, dividing the residue equally between Mieras and Ledbetter, and not adverting to or exercising the general power of *285 appointment, 10 stated that the testatrix made “no provision in this Will for my daughter, Juanita L. Neville, for reasons best known to me.”* 11

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The complaint asserted that DeBona understood that Neville could challenge the revisions in the will, and that he should have ascertained personally from Jackson, by telephone or in person, the revisions she wished to make “in her will and in the disposition of her property” to determine whether the documents that he was drafting “were accurate expressions” of her wishes “with respect to disposition of her property,” and that DeBona failed to exercise “reasonable care, skill and diligence” when he accepted from Mieras and Ledbetter “who were the very people who would benefit from the revisions, instructions as to the revisions in the disposition of her property requested by” Jackson through oral communication by Mieras and Ledbetter to DeBona.

While Mieras and Ledbetter may believe that Jackson’s “property” included the assets of the trust, 12 DeBona cannot be faulted — if the instructions were, as set forth in the complaint, to exclude Neville “from inheriting any property” of, and to provide that all *286 “the property”

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Bluebook (online)
550 N.W.2d 202, 452 Mich. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mieras-v-debona-mich-1996.