Randall Thomsen, Petitioners/cross-resps. v. Terence Butler, Resp./cross-petitioner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 31, 2018
Docket76536-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Randall Thomsen, Petitioners/cross-resps. v. Terence Butler, Resp./cross-petitioner (Randall Thomsen, Petitioners/cross-resps. v. Terence Butler, Resp./cross-petitioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randall Thomsen, Petitioners/cross-resps. v. Terence Butler, Resp./cross-petitioner, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

TERENCE BUTLER, DIVISION ONE Respondent/Cross-Petitioner, No. 76536-1-I v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION RANDALL T. THOMSEN, individually and on behalf of the marital community comprised of RANDALL THOMSEN and JANE DOE THOMSEN, and CALFO HARRIGAN LEYH & EAKES, ) LLP, a Washington Professional Limited Liability Partnership, f/k/a/ DANIELSON HARRIGAN LEYH & TOLLEFSON, LLP, ) ) Petitioners/Cross-Respondents. ) FILED: December 31, 2018 ___________________________________________________________________________________ ) DWYER, J. — Terence Butler sued his former attorney, Randall Thomsen,

and his former attorney’s firm, Calfo Harrigan Leyh & Eakes, LLP (collectively

Thomsen), for legal malpractice. Following hearings on cross motions for

summary judgment, the trial court ruled that Thomsen breached the standard of

care as a matter of law, but declined to dismiss Thomsen’s affirmative defense of

third party fault or to rule that collateral estoppel barred certain of Butler’s alleged

theories of causation. We granted discretionary review and now reverse the trial

court’s rulings that Thomsen breached the standard of care and that collateral No. 76536-1-1/2

estoppel did not bar Butler’s alleged theories of causation arising from breach of

fiduciary duty and statutory wage claims.

In 2010, ImageSource, a document imaging company, had four equal

shareholders: Shadrach White, Victor Zvirzdys, Terry Sutherland, and Terence

Butler. Butler discovered that his co-owners had received substantially greater

personal payments from the company than he had received. In 2011, the co

owners all agreed to ‘level out” Butler by having ImageSource pay him amounts

to match the expenditures the company had made to the other owners. Butler

agreed to wait to receive the payments until the company was performing well.

Shortly thereafter, White left the company and filed a lawsuit (White)

against ImageSource and his three former co-owners. Butler, Sutherland, and

Zvirzdys retained Thomsen to jointly represent them in defense of the White

lawsuit. In mediation, the parties successfully reached an agreement to settle

the lawsuit. They memorialized their settlement in a written CR 2A agreement.

In pertinent part, this agreement stated that “Mr. White agrees to release all

defendants from any claims that he may possess against them. Defendants

agree to release Mr. White from any claims that they may possess against him.”

White’s attorney offered to draft a more detailed agreement that would “be

consistent with the CR 2A, but include the more detailed language and items we

did not include in the summary agreement.” The final release and settlement

agreement (White Release) stated:

In consideration of the promises set forth herein, the Parties agree to release one another, their spouses, their respective heirs,

-2- No. 76536-1-1/3

agents, attorneys, employees, directors, heirs, assigns and personal representatives from any and all charges, claims and actions, whether known or unknown, arising prior to the date of this Agreement and arising directly or indirectly out of the Lawsuit or their previous dealings.

Butler, Sutherland, White, and Zvirzdys all signed the White Release.

After the settlement of the White lawsuit, Butler believed that ImageSource

was performing sufficiently well to commence paying him pursuant to the ‘level

out” agreement he had reached with his co-owners. Sutherland and Zvirzdys

objected. Butler hired an attorney, Mario Bianchi, who filed a lawsuit (Butler)

against Sutherland, Zvirzdys, and ImageSource. In this suit, Butler demanded

payment pursuant to the level out agreement and advanced several other claims,

including breach of fiduciary duty and statutory wage claims.

Butler brought a motion seeking summary judgment against his co-owners

on his breach of fiduciary duty and his statutory wage claims. In response,

Sutherland and Zvirzdys argued that the trial court should grant summary

judgment against Butler on his breach of fiduciary duty and statutory wage claims

and should also dismiss all of Butler’s claims that arose prior to the White lawsuit.

According to Sutherland and Zvirzdys, Butler voluntarily released all such claims

by signing the White Release.

In reply, Butler argued that Sutherland and Zvirzdys were misinterpreting

the release and that the White Release did not release his claims against them.

Butler contended that there was no consideration for the release of claims

amongst Butler, Sutherland, Zvirzdys, and ImageSource in the White Release.

However, Butler did not assert that Washington law, as explained in Berg v.

-3- No. 76536-1-1/4

Hudesman, 115 Wn.2d 657, 801 P.2d 222 (1990), permitted him to introduce

extrinsic evidence of the intent of the signatories to the White Release.

The Butler court rejected Butler’s arguments and granted partial summary

judgment against him. The court granted summary judgment against Butler as to

his breach of fiduciary duty and statutory wage claims and also held that Butler

released any claims related to the “level out” agreement when he signed the

White Release. Butler neither sought discretionary review of the rulings nor

chose to litigate the case to final judgment and appeal the adverse rulings.

Rather, 11 months later, he settled the case.

Butler then filed suit against Thomsen, claiming that he committed

malpractice in reviewing and approving the White Release by failing to notice that

its language released Butler’s claims against Sutherland, Zvirzdys, and

lmageSource.1 In the trial court, Butler moved for summary judgment dismissal

of various affirmative defenses raised by Thomsen, including third party fault,2

and for summary judgment that Thomsen breached the standard of care as a

matter of law when reviewing the White Release. Thomsen filed his own motion

for summary judgment on the issue of causation, asserting that Butler should be

collaterally estopped from relitigating his breach of fiduciary duty and statutory

wage claims. Both parties provided declarations from experts in support of their

motions and in opposition to those of their opponents.

This is not the first time we have been asked to resolve an issue in this matter. In an unpublished opinion, Butlerv, Thomsen, No. 74258-2-I (Wash. Ct. App. Aug. 29, 2016) (unpublished), http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/742582.pdf, we held that the White Release did not compel Butler to resolve this dispute with Thomsen through arbitration. 2 Specifically, that Butler’s attorney in the Butler litigation, Mario Bianchi, committed

malpractice. -4- No. 76536-1-1/5

The trial court granted partial summary judgment, holding that Thomsen

breached the standard of care as a matter of law, but refused to strike

Thomsen’s affirmative defense of third party fault. The trial court denied

Thomsen’s motion for summary judgment based on collateral estoppel. We

granted discretionary review.

Thomsen contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion for

summary judgment on certain issues of causation. This is so, Thomsen asserts,

because collateral estoppel barred Butler from relitigating his underlying breach

of fiduciary duty and statutory wage claims from the Butler litigation. In response,

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