Smith v. Morrison

47 A.3d 131, 2012 Pa. Super. 105, 2012 WL 1862730, 2012 Pa. Super. LEXIS 545
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 23, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 47 A.3d 131 (Smith v. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Morrison, 47 A.3d 131, 2012 Pa. Super. 105, 2012 WL 1862730, 2012 Pa. Super. LEXIS 545 (Pa. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[133]*133OPINION BY

PANELLA, J.

Appellant, Mabel G. Smith,1 appeals from the judgment entered on March 14, 2011, in favor of Appellees, Gerald K. Morrison, Esquire and Scott W. Morrison, Esquire, by the Honorable Edward E. Guido, Court of Common Pleas of Perry County. We affirm.

The trial court summarized the pertinent facts as follows:

Plaintiff Mabel Smith and her husband Dick had two sons, Richard and Cris, born 18 years apart. They also had two farms, the upper farm and the lower farm. The entire family, including Richard’s wife and their son, lived together on the lower farm until Cris was eleven years old. At that time Dick, Mabel, and Cris moved to the upper farm while Richard and his family remained on the lower farm.
Dick was a strong willed man. While he and Mabel owned both farms, she always deferred to his wishes when it came to business decisions. In 1985, about ten years after they moved to the upper farm, they sold the lower farm to Richard. He paid $130,000 for the 85 acre farm with livestock and equipment. About 5 years later they added Cris to the deed on the upper farm which contained almost 250 acres. Dick and Mabel owned an undivided one half interest and Cris owned the other undivided one half interest. At the same time the parents prepared codicils to their wills. The codicils required Cris to pay $80,000 to the estate of the last to die for their interest in the upper farm.
Dick died in 2003. Mabel became the sole owner of a one half interest in the upper farm by operation of law. Within a week Richard called a meeting with Mabel and Cris to question the arrangement with regard to the upper farm. He protested that $80,000 was not nearly enough to pay for a farm he felt was worth $1 million.
Mabel was upset by the conflict between her sons. While she wanted to do what was “fair”, the boys had very different ideas as to what that was. She decided to contact a lawyer. In February of 2004 she had her son Richard take her to see her niece’s husband, defendant Gerald Morrison. She told Mr. Morrison that she wanted to transfer her one half interest in the upper farm to Richard. She also wanted to change her will by revoking the codicil and dividing her estate equally between the boys.
[Attorney Morrison] attempted to discourage [Mabel] from transferring her interest in the property. He further advised that if she insisted on doing so she should at least have Richard sign a demand note for $100,000 in case she ever needed the money.
Mabel made a second appointment in May 2004 to which she brought both sons. She was convinced that transferring her interest to Richard was the fair thing to do. She was hopeful that [Attorney Morrison] could smooth things over between her boys. That was not to be. The meeting ended in a shouting match between the brothers.
Over the next 2% years Mabel had several contacts with [Attorney Morrison]. ON July 1, 2004 she instructed him to prepare the deed, will and promissory note they had previously discussed. On July 12, 2004 the documents were ready to be executed. [Mabel] [134]*134executed only the will at that time. She decided to take some additional time to think about the deed. She did, however, tell [Attorney Morrison] to forget about the demand note.
About a year later, in September 2005, Mabel had [Attorney Morrison] change her will. The revised will had her share of the upper farm go to Cris for $80,000. It also provided for Richard to receive that $80,000 payment as a specific bequest. In October 2006 she returned to [Attorney Morrison’s] office. This time she executed the deed to Richard which had been prepared more than two years earlier. She further instructed [Attorney Morrison] to change her will yet again to divide the remainder of her estate evenly between her sons.
At all times [Mabel] was living with her son Cris. She did not tell him about any of the meetings with [Attorney Morrison] except for the one he attended. Furthermore, she did not inform him that she had executed the deed in favor of Richard. He did not find out until the day before the real estate tax bills were set to arrive the following February.
The very next day Cris filed suit to have the deed rescinded. Eventually he persuaded his mother to join that action. The Honorable Edgar Bayley, specially presiding, found that Richard used undue influence to procure the deed. Therefore, he granted the request for rescission.

Trial Court Opinion, 9/2/11 at 1-4.

Several years thereafter, Mabel and Cris filed the instant professional negligence action against Appellees, Attorneys Gerald and Scott Morrison. In their Second Amended Complaint, Appellants argued, inter alia, that the Morrisons breached their fiduciary duties to Smith when, following the death of her husband, they allegedly undertook the simultaneous representation of her and her son Richard, when their interests were directly adverse. Following a jury trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the Morrisons. Thereafter, Smith filed timely motions for post-trial relief, which the trial court denied on March 8, 2011. This timely appeal followed.

On appeal, Smith raises the following issues for our review:

A. Did the trial judge commit an error of law and/or abuse his discretion when he refused to instruct the jury as to conflicts of law by giving [Smith’s] suggested jury instructions 2, 5, 6, 7, and 8 or similar conflict of law instructions pertaining to an attorney’s fiduciary duty to decline a case involving real or potential conflict of interests?
B. Did the trial judge commit an error of law and/or abuse his discretion when he permitted, over [Smith’s] counsel’s objections, the cross-examination of [Cris Smith] as to irrelevant, highly inflammatory, and prejudicial matters concerning his treatment of his mother and the transfer of her property interests; his threats to his mother, prior counsel, and Gerald Morrison; and the details of a telephone call he made to Judge Bayley’s House?

Appellant’s Brief, at 4.

In her first issue on appeal, Smith argues that the trial court erroneously refused to issue her proposed jury instructions 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8. Our standard of review is as follows:

Under Pennsylvania law, our standard of review when considering the adequacy of jury instructions in a civil case is to determine whether the trial court committed a clear abuse of discretion or [135]*135error of law controlling the outcome of the case. It is only when the charge as a whole is inadequate or not clear or has a tendency to mislead or confuse rather than clarify a material issue that error in a charge will be found to be a sufficient basis for the award of a new trial.

Patton v. Worthington Associates, Inc., 43 A.3d 479, 490 (Pa.Super.2012) (citation omitted). “Further, a trial judge has wide latitude in his or her choice of language when charging a jury, provided always that the court fully and adequately conveys the applicable law.” Id. (citation omitted).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 A.3d 131, 2012 Pa. Super. 105, 2012 WL 1862730, 2012 Pa. Super. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-morrison-pasuperct-2012.