Ryan Contracting Company v. O'Neill & Murphy, LLP

868 N.W.2d 473, 2015 Minn. App. LEXIS 53, 2015 WL 4507937
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 27, 2015
DocketA14-1472
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 868 N.W.2d 473 (Ryan Contracting Company v. O'Neill & Murphy, LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan Contracting Company v. O'Neill & Murphy, LLP, 868 N.W.2d 473, 2015 Minn. App. LEXIS 53, 2015 WL 4507937 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

SMITH, Judge.

We reverse and remand the district court’s grant of summary judgment to respondent because appellant raised genuine issues of material fact regarding whether its 2007 lien-foreclosure action would have been successful but-for the negligence of its attorney. In the interests of judicial economy, we affirm the district court’s analysis in its alternative holding, challenged in respondents’ related appeal, that appellant raised genuine issues of material fact precluding summary judgment regarding whether its 2010 settlement agreement precluded its malpractice suit.

FACTS

In 2003 and 2004, appellant Ryan Contracting Company contracted with Farr Development Corporation and Darrel A. Farr Development Corporation (Farr) to perform utility and street improvements for the first two phases of a mixed-use development plan approved by the City of Otsego. The contracts for the work did not contain the pre-lien notice set out in Minn.Stat. § 514.011, subd. 1 (2014). The work was to be performed on previously unimproved or “raw” land.

In July 2006, Ryan terminated the contracts due to Farr’s nonpayment of amounts owed. Farr sued Ryan, alleging breach-of-contract and slander of title. Ryan retained Meagher & Geer, P.L.L.P. to record mechanic’s liens for the work it had performed, valued at $356,073.23. Ryan had not provided a pre-lien notice before retaining Meagher & Geer. Meagher & Geer advised Ryan that no pre-lien notice was required because “Ryan’s work arguably fell within the pre-lien notice exception for multiple dwellings ... allowing Ryan to record its liens within 120 days of furnishing its last item of work or materials.” Based on Ryan’s reported last day of work on the project, Meagher & Geer believed that it had “a little over two weeks to record Ryan’s mechanic[’s] liens.” Based on its conclusion that “Ryan was unable to apportion the value of the improvements to any particular lot or outlot, given the nature of the street and utility improvements” it had made, and the fact that Farr no longer owned all the lots, Meagher & Geer “adopted a conservative approach and recorded a blanket lien in the amount of $356,073.23 on the parcels that Farr still owned, and also blanket liens in the same amount ... on each *475 parcel that had been sold.” Meagher & Geer amended the lien statements on two occasions, once to separate the amounts of work performed under phase 1 and phase 2 of the project, and again to amend the last day of work performed. In April 2007, Meagher & Geer commenced a lien-foreclosure action on Ryan’s behalf in district court.

The district court consolidated Farr’s and Ryan’s actions and considered their competing motions for summary judgment. Quoting Minn.Stat. § 514.03, subd. 1(b) (2006), the district court ruled that, “with regard to properties not owned by Farr, Ryan’s lien is limited to the ‘reasonable value of the work done, and of the skill, material, and machinery furnished.’ ” Since each lien claimed the entire amount that Farr purportedly owed Ryan, the district court ruled that the liens on property not owned by Farr violated Minn.Stat. § 514.74 (2006) because, “to the extent Ryan knowingly claimed liens in the amount of the entire contract price against lots not owned by Farr ... Ryan knowingly demanded more than [was] justly due.” Accordingly, it granted summary judgment to Farr with regard to the liens on parcels no longer owned by Farr. It denied, however, Farr’s motion for summary judgment regarding lots still owned by Farr.

The district court acknowledged Ryan’s argument that it could not apportion the value of its work to each lot. It opined, however, that “Ryan could have filed one lien for the entire amount claimed and listed all properties which would share a burden of the claim.” It concluded that Minn.Stat. § 514.09 (2006) “provided Ryan a means of filing a timely lien statement while reserving decisions about apportionment for a later time.”

In December 2010, Ryan settled its remaining claims against Farr for $280,000. In the settlement agreement, Ryan released its liens and Farr released all its claims against Ryan. But Ryan reserved its claims against Meagher & Geer.

In March 2012, Ryan, represented by respondents Patrick H. O’Neill and O’Neill & Murphy, LLP (collectively O’Neill), commenced a malpractice action against Meagher & Geer. O’Neill failed to timely file an expert-disclosure affidavit as required by Minn.Stat. § 544.42, subds. 2(2), 4 (2010). Accordingly, the district court dismissed Ryan’s malpractice claim against Meagher & Geer with prejudice.

In July 2013, Ryan commenced a malpractice action against O’Neill. In July 2014, the district court granted O’Neill’s motion for summary judgment. It ruled that Ryan’s “failure to file [pre-lien] notice as required by Minn.Stat. § 514.011 ren-' dered all its liens ... void and obviate[d] any error by [O’Neill] in its attempt to assert the liens after the work was done.” It reasoned that the exception to the pre-lien requirement in Minn.Stat. § 514.011, subd. 4c did not apply because the land that Ryan worked to improve was “undeveloped/raw land not in use” and was therefore not “nonresidential in use” as the exception requires. Since Ryan’s failure to give pre-lien notice preceded any failure by Meagher & Geer, the district court explained, Ryan could not have prevailed in a malpractice action against Meagher & Geer even if O’Neill had timely filed the expert-disclosure affidavit.

The district court also based its grant of summary judgment on the alternative ground that Meagher & Geer was not at fault for Ryan’s inability to record liens against the non-Farr-owned lots on the property. It determined that Ryan’s inability to apportion the value of the improvements was caused by Ryan’s choice of when to file the liens, rather than by Meagher & Geer’s methods. In addition, *476 it ruled that a blanket lien was not possible because Ryan had failed to pursue its liens until after Farr had sold some of the lots. As such, the district court ruled that any damages Ryan suffered from its inability to record liens against the non-Farr-owned properties were caused by Ryan, not Meagher & Geer.

Although it granted summary judgment to O’Neill for lack of causation, the district court also stated that, if it had not done so, it would have ruled that Ryan’s decision to settle with Farr did not preclude Ryan from pursuing a malpractice action. The district court opined that “the reasonableness of the settlement would be a jury issue at trial if [Ryan] prevailed on the lien issues as a matter of law” because “the amount of damages suffered by [Ryan] as a result of [O’Neill’s] negligence, as well as the reasonableness of the settlement [with] Farr, are questions to be determined by the jury.” It also predicted that, “[i]f [Ryan] had prevailed in the Farr litigation, there would, in all likelihood, have been an award of reasonable costs and attorneys’ fees” and “if [Ryan’s] malpractice case [against] Meagher [&] Geer had gone forward and [Ryan] prevailed, there is a probability that costs and attorneys’ fees would have been awarded, at some level.”

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Related

Ryan Contracting Company v. O'Neill & Murphy, LLP
883 N.W.2d 236 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
868 N.W.2d 473, 2015 Minn. App. LEXIS 53, 2015 WL 4507937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-contracting-company-v-oneill-murphy-llp-minnctapp-2015.