Sessions v. Espy

854 So. 2d 515, 2002 WL 31224433
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 14, 2003
Docket1010329
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 854 So. 2d 515 (Sessions v. Espy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sessions v. Espy, 854 So. 2d 515, 2002 WL 31224433 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

854 So.2d 515 (2002)

J.R. SESSIONS et al.
v.
Collier H. ESPY, Jr., and Espy & Metcalf, P.C.

1010329.

Supreme Court of Alabama.

October 4, 2002.
Order Overruling Rehearing February 14, 2003.

*516 William B. Jackson II, Mobile, for appellants.

Wade H. Baxley of Ramsey, Baxley & McDougle, Dothan, for appellees.

STUART, Justice.

J.R. Sessions and Emily Sessions, husband and wife, and their corporation, Sessions Feeds, Inc., appeal from a summary judgment entered in favor of the defendants Collier H. Espy, Jr., and Espy & Metcalf, P.C. (hereinafter sometimes collectively referred to as "Espy"), on the Sessionses and the corporation's legal-malpractice claims. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

Background

From July 1992 until January 1994, J.R. Sessions and Emily Sessions negotiated with Manuel Patrick to purchase from Patrick the assets of an existing business known as Patrick's Feeds, Inc. Neither the Sessionses nor Patrick was represented by legal counsel during those negotiations. The Sessionses obtained certain financial information from Patrick; the Sessionses then submitted this financial information to one or more accountants for review.

After an attorney drew up the necessary paperwork, the purchase was consummated on January 12, 1994. As a part of the agreement, J.R. Sessions and Emily Sessions were required to sign promissory notes in their individual capacities. During the negotiations, the Sessionses were forming a corporation, known as Sessions Feeds, Inc.; this corporation was formally incorporated on February 11, 1994, after the Sessionses had already acquired the assets of Patrick's Feeds, Inc.

During its very first year, Sessions Feeds, Inc., did not perform as well as the Sessionses had expected. The Sessionses claim that they discovered gross exaggerations in the sales figures provided to them by Manuel Patrick; the Sessionses claim that, relying upon those exaggerated figures, the accountants had erroneously concluded that the business would be a profitable one for the Sessionses at the agreedupon *517 purchase price. The Sessionses claimed that they had been fraudulently induced to purchase the assets of Patrick's Feeds, Inc., as a result of Patrick's misrepresentations.

The Sessionses assert that they retained Collier Espy in early April 1995 to represent them individually in a fraudulent-inducement action against Manuel Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc. The Sessionses claim that Espy began conducting settlement negotiations with Patrick. The record, in fact, documents that on April 12, 1995, Espy corresponded with Manuel Patrick, stating in a letter, "Please be informed I have been retained by Mr. J.R. Sessions, as President of Sessions Feeds, Inc., to represent this corporation, and if necessary Mr. and Mrs. Sessions, individually, with regard to recently discovered inaccurate information on the financial and/or income statements provided by you." The Sessionses claim that by late 1995 or early 1996, they had paid Espy $6,185 in fees, based on an hourly rate of $125.

The Sessionses also claim that in late 1995, Sessions Feeds, Inc., retained Espy to file a petition in bankruptcy pursuant to Chapter 11 but that the bankruptcy action "occurred solely incidental to a foreclosure in December 1995, which arose in part because the Sessions[es], followed the advice of Collier Espy, beginning in April of 1995, to `[abate] remittance of [any more] payments under the subject notes' that had been executed, along with the fraudulent agreement, to purchase Patrick's Feeds, Inc., on January 12, 1994."

Espy, however, disputes certain of those claims. He asserts that he never represented the Sessionses in their individual capacities but that he was retained by the Sessionses only in their representative capacities as shareholders and officers of Sessions Feeds, Inc. Espy claims that he was retained for the purpose of filing a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition for Sessions Feeds, Inc. This Chapter 11 petition was later converted to a proceeding under Chapter 7. Espy also claims that he told the Sessionses, both before and after the Chapter 11 petition was converted to a Chapter 7 petition, that any action that might exist against Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc., or against any other individual or entity "would become an asset of the Chapter 7 Trustee for administration and ultimate resolution."

The Sessionses deny that they were ever told that their claim against Manuel Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc., would become an asset of the estate or that it would be controlled by the bankruptcy trustee. They allege that they believed at all times Espy was their lawyer and that he was pursuing their claims against Manuel Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc., on their behalf.

Apparently, the grounds for the individual and the corporate malpractice claims against Espy differ. The Sessionses allege that Espy committed malpractice against the Sessionses in their individual capacities as a result of his failure to assert a fraudulent-inducement claim against Manuel Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc., before the expiration of the statute of limitations on that claim and his failure to advise the Sessionses as to the legal impact of certain acts and omissions by Espy. The malpractice claims asserted by the corporation are based upon the claim that Espy acted both as attorney for the debtor (i.e., the corporation) and as attorney for the bankruptcy trustee without advising the corporation of this conflict of interest; that Espy failed to fully investigate the claims of the corporation against Manuel Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc.; and that Espy failed to honor certain representations that he made to *518 the debtor and to the debtor's subsequent legal counsel.

The Record

The following is a time line of the events as documented in the record:

April 12, 1995—Letter from Espy to Manuel Patrick, in which Espy states, "Please be informed I have been retained by Mr. J.R. Sessions, as President of Sessions Feeds, Inc., to represent this corporation, and if necessary Mr. and Mrs. Sessions, individually, with regard to recently discovered inaccurate information on the financial and/or income statements provided by you...."
April 19, 1995—Letter from Espy to J.R. Sessions regarding Patrick's possible defenses to the Sessionses' claims; Espy's second request for a retainer for his services.
August 15, 1995—Letter from Espy to Patrick's attorney regarding settlement negotiations that occurred during months of April and May 1995.
December 8, 1995—Letter from attorney Joe C. Cassady to J.R. Sessions regarding notice of the Sessionses' default under the note and mortgage executed on January 12, 1994.
January 1, 1996—Sessions Feeds, Inc., files a petition in bankruptcy under Chapter 11.
(Undated document)—Sessions Feeds, Inc., files with the bankruptcy court an application to employ Espy as legal counsel; J.R. Sessions, as president of Sessions Feeds, Inc., represents in this document that Espy was "not connected in any way with the creditors or any parties-in-interest."
January 17, 1996—Letter from Espy to Cassady notifying Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc., that an adversary proceeding against Patrick and Patrick's Feeds, Inc., would be filed as part of Sessions Feeds, Inc.'s Chapter 11 proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
854 So. 2d 515, 2002 WL 31224433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sessions-v-espy-ala-2003.