Schwickerath v. Anderson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 7, 2022
Docket21-1465
StatusPublished

This text of Schwickerath v. Anderson (Schwickerath v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwickerath v. Anderson, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 21-1465 Filed December 7, 2022

KAREN SCHWICKERATH, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

PATRICK RYAN ANDERSON, JULIA STACEY ANDERSON, PATRICK R. ANDERSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, IOWA PROPERTY HOLDING, LLC, EQUITY-VESTORS, LLC, IOWA PROPERTY HOLDING CO-OP, INC., IOWA PROPERTY MANAGEMENT AND MAINTENANCE, LLC, Defendants-Appellants. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Lawrence P. McLellan,

Judge.

An attorney and his business entities appeal a judgment for a former client

on her claims for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and legal malpractice.

AFFIRMED.

Matthew M. Boles, Christopher Stewart, and Adam C. Witosky of Gribble,

Boles, Stewart & Witosky Law, Des Moines, for appellants.

Shayla McCormally and Sophie Wanek of McCormally & Cosgrove,

P.L.L.C., Des Moines, for appellees.

Heard by Bower, C.J., and Greer and Badding, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

“A lawyer with his briefcase can steal more than a hundred men with guns.”

Mario Puzo, The Godfather 51 (Putnam Publishing Group 1969).

Bragging that he had a “system that should be marketed because it

combines high rates of return with safety that only an attorney would think of,”

attorney Patrick Anderson swindled his client, Karen “Kara” Schwickerath, out of

$550,000.00 in a series of five contracts. When that boast proved to be false,

Schwickerath sued Anderson, his wife Julia, and his various business entities.

After a three-day bench trial, the district court entered judgment in Schwickerath’s

favor for $755,371.06 in compensatory damages and $200,000.00 in punitive

damages, plus $52,729.50 in attorney fees. Anderson and his companies appeal.1

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

Anderson and Julia moved to Iowa in 1998 from California. Anderson is

licensed to practice law in both states. He also served as a pastor of a church for

almost two decades. After being laid off as general counsel for a machine

company in 2015, Anderson opened a solo law practice. He billed himself as

experienced in “investments and estate planning” on his firm’s website.

Anderson and Schwickerath met in 2016, when he went to Schwickerath’s

house to purchase some landscape blocks from her. The pair began chatting

1 The district court dismissed all of Schwickerath’s claims against Julia and declined to enter judgment against one of Anderson’s companies—Iowa Property Management & Maintenance, LLC—because the parties agreed that company “own[ed] no assets and was never involved in any of the transactions involved in the dispute.” So the parties to this appeal are limited to Anderson, his law practice, and his companies: Iowa Property Holding, LLC; Equity-Vestors, LLC; and Iowa Property Holding Co-Op, Inc. 3

about Schwickerath’s house, which she was renovating. She told Anderson that

after “semi-retiring” from construction, “it was kind of a dream . . . to buy an old

house and renovate it.” She was able to do this because her father had passed

away the year before and left her $1,000,000.00. During this conversation,

Schwickerath learned Anderson was an attorney and knowledgeable about real

estate investments.

Armed with that knowledge, Schwickerath contacted Anderson in January

2017 for his help in closing on a rental house she had purchased. Anderson

agreed to represent her, cutting his normal fee in half. In an email to her with some

questions about the closing, Anderson wrote:

I have a business question for you though: I help arrange real estate type loans and receive very high interest rates for my private lenders. Do you know of anyone interested in participating? These are highly secured and set up so that the money is easily retrieved in the event of default.

When Schwickerath expressed interest, Anderson responded: “I can give you the

details on the loans when we meet. I have a system that probably should be

marketed because it combines high rates of return with safety that only an attorney

would think of. (Not boasting ☺).”

While coordinating that meeting, Schwickerath asked for Anderson’s advice

on her rental homes and whether she should create a new limited liability company

for them. Anderson agreed that she should and offered to help her “with the LLC

drafting and filing.” Going back to his investment proposal, Anderson said in that

same email: “Also, I can help you set things up so that you are not a target for suit

and have more liquidity for future investment opportunities when they arise.” And

in response to Schwickerath’s inquiries about his legal fees, Anderson told her: 4

“So long as we are working on investments, you are on the ‘family plan’ for legal

fees (which means I will work for lunches).” Over the next couple of months,

Anderson directed Schwickerath to blank templates she could use to set up her

new companies, drafted deeds transferring her properties into those companies,

and wrote a letter to a subcontractor she was having issues with.

In the midst of these legal services, Anderson proposed his first investment

opportunity to Schwickerath—a loan from her of $50,000.00 to his company, Iowa

Holding Property, LLC. He explained to her that the loan was to help a third party

with bad credit buy a house. The contract, dated February 4, 2017, was drafted

by Anderson on his firm’s letterhead, as were all the contracts that followed, and

recited:

Kara desires to lend Fifty Thousand ($50,000) Dollars to Iowa Property Holding LLC in order to acquire a Monroe County Iowa residence. . . . Kara shall hold an Interest in said residence and Iowa Property Holding LLC up to Fifty Thousand ($50,0000.) Dollars until such debt is paid in full. Iowa Property Holding LLC shall hold said residence for the benefit of Kara . . . .

Kara was to be paid interest at ten percent annually with monthly principal and

interest payments due from Iowa Property Holding. The bottom of the agreement

stated: “Kara understands that Patrick R. Anderson is an attorney, and that he has

an interest in Iowa Property Holding LLC.”2

Schwickerath wrote a check to Iowa Property Holding for $50,000.00, which

Anderson deposited into the company’s bank account. But Anderson later told

2All of the contracts that followed, except an addendum to the second one and the parties’ final contract, contained this same statement. 5

Schwickerath the purchase did not go through because “the person he was trying

to help out didn’t follow his rules.” Rather than returning Schwickerath’s money to

her, Anderson proposed a second investment, this time for twice as much.

The second contract was entered into on May 15, 2017, as an amendment

to the first. In it, Schwickerath agreed to lend Iowa Property Holding an additional

$110,000.00 “in order to own and operate and or renovate real property in

Waterloo, Iowa,” specifically apartment buildings on Langley Road. The contract

provided that Schwickerath would hold an interest in Iowa Property Holding up to

$160,000.00 until the debt was satisfied. She was to again receive ten percent

interest annually but with interest only payments of $1,333.34 each month and a

balloon payment due in three years. On the same day, the parties entered into an

addendum to the second contract, which provided that Schwickerath would receive

an $8100.00 “appreciation bonus.”

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