Sherbeck v. Schaper

442 N.W.2d 364, 232 Neb. 754, 1989 Neb. LEXIS 306
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1989
Docket87-338
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 442 N.W.2d 364 (Sherbeck v. Schaper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherbeck v. Schaper, 442 N.W.2d 364, 232 Neb. 754, 1989 Neb. LEXIS 306 (Neb. 1989).

Opinion

Burkhard, D.J.

On October 25, 1985, the plaintiff, Eugene H. Sherbeck, filed a legal malpractice action against the defendant, Carlos E. Schaper, in the district court for Custer County, Nebraska. The defendant, at all times material herein, was an attorney engaged in the practice of law in Broken Bow, Nebraska.

The plaintiff, in his amended petition, alleges that the defendant performed legal services for him in connection with an installment sale of corporate stock agreement dated June 14, 1979. The plaintiff states that the defendant deviated from the standard of care applicable to attorneys under similar circumstances and failed to exercise the skill and knowledge ordinarily possessed by attorneys under similar circumstances. The thrust of the plaintiff’s claim is found in three of the plaintiff’s specifications of malpractice:

b. He failed to use reasonable care to assess and explain *756 the legal effect and ramifications of the “Installment Sale of Corporate Stock” contract subsequently dated June 14, 1979, when in the exercise of reasonable care he should have done so.
f. He failed to advise the Plaintiff that the buyers could impair or substantially encumber all of the assets of the said corporation without the seller’s consent and to his detriment when in the exercise of reasonable care he should have done so.
h. He failed to advise the plaintiff that the legal effort [sic] of the “Installment Sale of Corporate Stock” subsequently dated June 14, 1979 was nothing more than an unsecured promissory note payable in installments, when in the exercise of reasonable care he should have done so.

The plaintiff claims he was damaged as a proximate result of the defendant’s alleged professional negligence.

The defendant, in his answer, among other things denied that he was negligent in any manner and claimed that plaintiff’s cause of action was barred by the applicable statute of limitations. Defendant’s motion for summary judgment was heard on January 19, 1987, and was sustained by the district court on March 18, 1987, and plaintiff’s amended petition was dismissed. We affirm the judgment of the district court.

The plaintiff was the sole owner of all 414 shares of stock in a corporation known as Sargent Livestock Commission Company, Inc. The principal business of the corporation was the operation of a sale barn in Sargent, Nebraska. The main assets of the corporation were real estate, fixtures, and improvements on the real estate amounting to about 43 acres.

Due to health problems, plaintiff considered selling his business. Lorry Marshall approached the plaintiff about purchasing the business. The plaintiff subsequently hired Marshall as a manager and allowed him time to arrange financing. Marshall found another investor named Gary Johnson. Because of income tax consequences, the plaintiff suggested a contract for sale rather than a straight cash *757 payment. Marshall and the plaintiff worked out the payment terms of the contract.

In May of 1979, the plaintiff asked the defendant for his help in arranging the sale of the business to Marshall and Johnson. To this end, the defendant drafted an installment sale contract for the sale of the plaintiff’s 414 shares of capital stock in Sargent Livestock. Marshall conferred with his attorney, John Sennett, concerning the contract, and the defendant also conferred by phone with Sennett regarding the contract. The defendant then redrew the agreement in accordance with his conversation with Sennett as to the schedule of payments. The final draft of the agreement was,prepared by Sennett. Sennett either gave copies of the agreement to Marshall “for him to deliver” or gave Marshall a copy and took a copy to the defendant.

The contract provided that the corporation’s stock was to be held in escrow by Farmers State Bank and that after the downpayment of $30,000, payments were to be made monthly (for 9 months each year) for 10 years. The buyers were to have full voting rights in the stock. The contract did not give the plaintiff any kind of lien on the corporation’s assets.

Before signing the final draft of the agreement, the plaintiff claims he took it to the defendant to check over. This was 2 days before the contract was signed. The plaintiff states he asked the defendant if he was “protected” by the agreement if the buyers did not make their payments, and the defendant, according to the plaintiff, responded, “It looks okay to me.” The defendant, on the other hand, denies that he reviewed with the plaintiff the contract prepared by Sennett. The defendant claims he did not have an office conference or telephone conference with the plaintiff before the plaintiff signed the agreement in its final form. Plaintiff, who had a high school education, read the contract before he signed it, but apparently did not understand it. The plaintiff felt that if there was a problem, his attorney would have told him about it. On June 14, 1979, the plaintiff and the buyers, Marshall and Johnson, signed the final draft of the installment sale agreement.

In July 1984, the plaintiff, having just gone through a divorce in which he was represented by Richard Anderson, an *758 attorney in Kearney, Nebraska, asked Anderson to look into the possibility of selling plaintiff’s interest in the sale barn contract. Payments were made under the terms of the agreement until September 1984, when the buyers did not make the agreed payment. Anderson checked the real estate that the plaintiff was selling under the agreement. It was discovered that the agreement of June 14, 1979, had not been filed and that there were three mortgages on the real estate that had been given by the corporation, Sargent Livestock. The mortgages were on file with the register of deeds in Custer County, Nebraska. These were to Basil O. Marshall and Wanda E. Marshall, recorded October 24, 1983; Security State Bank, recorded April 24, 1984; and Lorry Marshall and Marlene K. Marshall, recorded April 24, 1984. The plaintiff testified that he first became aware of these mortgages between the 15th and 20th of October 1984, in a conversation with Anderson. The plaintiff testified that he was “surprised” when he learned from Anderson of the existence of these mortgages, and specifically stated as follows:

Q- What did Mr. Anderson tell you?
A- He said, “Did you know of big mortgages against Sargent Livestock Commission Company?” I said, “No.”
Q- What was your reaction to that information?
A- How they could do it.
Q- What did you do after they told you that?
A-1 said my September payment is past due. And he advised me to go to Gary Washburn.
Q- Did you believe at that point that there was a violation of the contract?
A- I never believed there was a violation until the September payment was defaulted.
Q- Well, you said that this information that Mr. Anderson gave you surprised you, didn’t you?
A-Yes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
442 N.W.2d 364, 232 Neb. 754, 1989 Neb. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherbeck-v-schaper-neb-1989.