Petrucci v. Christina

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 31, 2023
Docket2:19-cv-12020
StatusUnknown

This text of Petrucci v. Christina (Petrucci v. Christina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petrucci v. Christina, (E.D. La. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

MICHAEL PETRUCCI CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO: 19-12020

SALVADORE CHRISTINA, ET AL. SECTION: "A" (5)

ORDER AND REASONS The following motion is before the Court: Motion for Summary Judgment (Rec. Doc. 121) filed by defendants Bradley Egenberg and Egenberg, APLC (“the Egenberg defendants” or at times collectively and singularly “Egenberg”). Plaintiff, Michael Petrucci, who is unrepresented, opposes the motion. (Rec. Doc. 126). The motion, submitted for consideration on December 1, 2022, upon receipt of the plaintiff’s opposition, is before the Court on the briefs without oral argument.1 This civil action involves legal malpractice claims against two sets of attorneys: 1) the Becnel defendants, whom Petrucci hired in November 2011 to prosecute his economic injury claims arising out of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill, and 2) the Egenberg defendants, whom Petrucci hired in May 2018 to pursue legal malpractice claims against

1 The Egenberg defendants filed their motion for summary judgment on April 11, 2022, and it was over their objection that the motion was ultimately submitted for consideration nearly eight months later in December 2022. The Court held the motion for summary judgment in abeyance and even administratively closed this case at one point in order to allow Mr. Petrucci the opportunity to obtain counsel to help him oppose the motion. Of course, having representation does not ensure a successful opposition. Earlier in this case the Becnel defendants’ motion for summary judgment was granted even though Mr. Petrucci’s former attorneys had submitted a thorough and well-argued opposition on his behalf. The Court is persuaded that Mr. Petrucci has diligently sought new representation. But the Court could not delay submission of Egenberg’s motion for summary judgment any longer. The Court is also persuaded that given the facts in this case, which the Court has taken directly from the plaintiff’s pleading, the outcome of the Egenberg defendants’ motion for summary judgment would likely be no different if Mr. Petrucci had been able to retain new counsel. the Becnel defendants for their alleged failure to properly handle his Deepwater Horizon claims. Having considered the pleadings, the evidence of record, the applicable law, and the parties’ contentions, the Court determines, for the reasons that follow, that all of Petrucci’s legal malpractice claims against his former attorneys with the Becnel Law Firm were perempted by the time that Petrucci retained the Egenberg defendants. Therefore, the Egenberg defendants’ are entitled to judgment as a matter of law and their motion for summary judgment is granted.

I. Background Procedural History The plaintiff, Michael Petrucci, initiated this action pro se against Salvadore Christina, Kevin Klibert, Daniel Becnel, Jr., Daniel Becnel, III, and the Becnel Law Firm (the Becnel defendants) alleging that his economic injury claims arising out of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill were denied due to legal malpractice committed by the firm’s attorneys, and in particular attorney Salvadore Christina. Petrucci later filed an amended complaint adding attorney Bradley Egenberg and Egenberg, APLC alleging that Egenberg caused Petrucci’s legal malpractice claims against the attorneys with the Becnel firm to become time-barred. Petrucci had hired Egenberg to pursue legal malpractice claims against the Becnel defendants after terminating their services. Petrucci contends that Egenberg misunderstood the manner in which prescription/peremption works under Louisiana law, and therefore allowed at least some if not all of his legal malpractice claims against the Becnel defendants to become time-barred. Petrucci later retained counsel to represent him in this lawsuit and through counsel he was granted leave to file a Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) (Rec. Doc. 41), which is now the governing pleading. The SAC is eighty pages long and comprises 310 paragraphs that describe in painstaking detail how the defendant attorneys, especially the Becnel attorneys, allegedly damaged Petrucci through numerous acts of alleged legal malpractice that spanned several years. As noted above, this civil action involves legal malpractice claims against two sets of attorneys: 1) the Becnel defendants, whom Petrucci hired in November 2011 to prosecute his economic injury claims arising out of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill, and 2) the Egenberg defendants, whom Petrucci hired in May 2018 to pursue legal malpractice claims against the Becnel defendants for their alleged failure to properly handle his Deepwater Horizon claims. On October 28, 2021, the Court granted a

motion to withdraw filed by Mr. Petrucci’s attorneys. (Rec. Doc. 109, Minute Entry). Petrucci has been unrepresented since that time. Prior to the motion to withdraw being granted, the Becnel defendants moved for summary judgment arguing that Petrucci’s legal malpractice claims against them were time- barred, and that they became time-barred before Petrucci filed this lawsuit on August 5, 2019. Petrucci’s former attorneys filed an opposition on his behalf before they were allowed to withdraw from the case. On November 29, 2021, the Court entered its Order and Reasons granting the Becnel defendants’ motion for summary judgment. (Rec. Doc. 111, Order and Reasons). The Court explained in the Order and Reasons why Petrucci’s legal malpractice claims against the Becnel defendants were in fact time-barred by the time that this lawsuit was filed. The Court stressed, however, that nothing in the Order and Reasons should be construed as suggesting that Egenberg had any fault in the claims against the Becnel defendants being time-barred. (Id. at 8 n.4). That determination would be for another day. A final judgment has been entered as to the Becnel defendants. (Rec. Doc. 115, Judgment). Regarding Egenberg, Petrucci’s legal malpractice claim is that Egenberg failed to timely file a malpractice claim against the Becnel defendants and failed to properly advise on the limitations period in which to file such a claim—in other words, that Egenberg allowed the legal malpractice case against the Becnel defendants to become time-barred during his time as Petrucci’s attorney. This theory only has merit if Petrucci still had a viable (not time-barred) legal malpractice claim against the Becnel defendants on May 3, 2018, which is the date that he hired Egenberg. The Egenberg Representation Petrucci was referred to Egenberg by Philip J. Starr, Esq., an attorney who is not licensed in Louisiana, but who became heavily involved in Petrucci’s efforts to pursue the

Becnel defendants. Petrucci retained Egenberg on May 3, 2018, to pursue legal malpractice claims against the Becnel defendants, whom he had terminated on February 19, 2018. (Rec. Doc. 54-4, Exhibit D; SAC ¶ 187). Even though Egenberg had been retained, the plan was for Starr to remain involved since he had intimate knowledge of both the substance of Petrucci’s Deepwater Horizon claims and what the Becnel defendants had been doing to prosecute those claims. It was even agreed that Starr would draft the pleadings for the legal malpractice claim to be filed against the Becnel defendants. Petrucci alleges that Egenberg twice told Starr that under Louisiana law there was a three-year statute of limitations for legal malpractice claims but that it did not start running until the attorney notified the client that he had committed legal malpractice. (SAC ¶¶ 208, 212). This of course is not correct. Relying on Egenberg’s explanation as to when the limitations period would start to run, and given that the Becnel defendants had never notified Petrucci that they had committed malpractice, Starr (and Petrucci) assumed that there was no rush to file a legal malpractice lawsuit against the Becnel defendants. (Id.).

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Petrucci v. Christina, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petrucci-v-christina-laed-2023.