White v. Sheridan

2022 Ohio 2418
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 2022
Docket21AP-355
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 2418 (White v. Sheridan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Sheridan, 2022 Ohio 2418 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as White v. Sheridan, 2022-Ohio-2418.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO

TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

Charlie White, Jr., Individually and as : Executor of the Estate of Harold L. Clifford, : No. 21AP-355 Plaintiff-Appellant, : (C.P.C. No. 19CV-1735)

v. : (REGULAR CALENDAR)

Philip H. Sheridan, Jr., Administrator of : the Estate of Steve J. Edwards, : Defendant-Appellee. :

D E C I S I O N

Rendered on July 14, 2022

On brief: Arenstein & Andersen Co., LPA, Eric R. McLoughlin, and Nicholas I. Andersen, for appellant. Argued: Eric R. McLoughlin.

On brief: Philip H. Sheridan, Jr., pro se. Argued: Philip H. Sheridan, Jr.

APPEAL from the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas

KLATT, J.

{¶ 1} Plaintiff-appellant, Charlie White, Jr., executor of the estate of Harold L. Clifford, appeals a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas granting summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee, Phillip H. Sheridan, Jr., administrator of the estate of Steve J. Edwards, on White's claim that Edwards engaged in legal No. 21AP-355 2

malpractice when providing estate-planning services to Clifford.1 White also appeals the denial of his motion for summary judgment on the same claim. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court's judgment in part and reverse it in part, and we remand this matter to the trial court. {¶ 2} In 2013, Edwards prepared two estate-planning documents for Clifford: a transfer on death designation ("TOD") affidavit and a will. The TOD affidavit named Clifford's daughter, Shirlene Lones, as the beneficiary who would receive title to Clifford's house upon his death pursuant to R.C. 5302.22 et seq. The will also named Lones as the sole beneficiary. Clifford executed both the TOD affidavit and the will. Edwards recorded the TOD affidavit with the Franklin County Recorder in September 2013. {¶ 3} In the spring of 2018, Clifford telephoned Edwards to schedule a meeting. Clifford explained on the telephone that he wanted "to take [his daughter] out of the will and to put his neighbor in the will." (Edwards Dep. at 42.) Edwards then met with Clifford and Clifford's neighbor, Charlie White, Jr., at Clifford's house. During that meeting, Edwards wrote in his notes, "Shirlene gets nothing[;] [n]ow wants Charlie White Jr. to inherit everything." (Ex. 1 at 47, Edwards Dep.) Later, in his deposition, Edwards testified that his notes accurately summarized what Clifford told him during the meeting. However, Edwards then backtracked, stating "[t]hat's how [he] wrote" down Clifford's words, but "what [Clifford] told" him was "Shirlene is out of the will and Charlie, his neighbor, is in the will in Shirlene's place." (Edwards Dep. at 34.) {¶ 4} After the meeting, Edwards drafted a new will for Clifford that removed Lones as the sole beneficiary and replaced her with White. Edwards did not prepare a new TOD affidavit modifying or revoking the TOD affidavit recorded in September 2013.2 Clifford executed the new will in April 2018. Edwards later corrected typographical errors in the will, and Clifford executed his final will on June 2, 2018.

1 Edwards died during the pendency of this action. In an agreed entry dated June 19, 2020, the trial court found that White's claim for legal malpractice survived Edwards' death and substituted Sheridan, the administrator of Edwards' estate, as the defendant. For the sake of clarity, we will refer to defendant as "Edwards" throughout this decision.

2 Pursuant to R.C. 5302.23(B)(5), "[t]he designation in a transfer on death designation affidavit of any transfer on death beneficiary may be revoked or changed at any time, * * * by the owner of the interest, * * * by executing and recording, prior to the death of the owner of the interest, * * * a new transfer on death designation affidavit pursuant to section 5302.22 of the Revised Code stating the revocation or change in that designation." No. 21AP-355 3

{¶ 5} Clifford died on June 26, 2018. White, who the will nominated as executor of Clifford's estate, hired Edwards to assist him in settling the estate. On July 17, 2018, Edwards filed documents to have Clifford's will admitted to probate and White appointed as executor. In the application for authority to administer Clifford's estate, Edwards listed the value of the real property owned by the estate at $104,400, which was the value of Clifford's house. Edwards included the value of Clifford's house in determining the total value of the estate because he believed that the house was an asset of the estate. Edwards also told White to pay the mortgage on Clifford's house if he did not want the lender to foreclose on the house. {¶ 6} On August 28, 2018, while visiting Edwards' office, Lones gave Edwards a copy of the TOD affidavit recorded in September 2013. Up until that moment, Edwards had not recalled the existence of the TOD affidavit. After Lones confronted Edwards with the TOD affidavit, Edwards had to tell White about it. Edwards explained to White that a transfer of property pursuant to a TOD affidavit precluded the property from becoming part of the estate, so Lones would receive Clifford's house.3 To accomplish the transfer of the house, Lones filed with the Franklin County Recorder an affidavit of confirmation and a certified copy of Clifford's death certificate as required by R.C. 5302.222. {¶ 7} On February 27, 2019, White, acting individually and as executor of Clifford's estate, sued Edwards for legal malpractice. White alleged that Edwards committed three primary acts of negligence, but this appeal concerns only one of the three. According to White, Edwards acted negligently by causing Clifford's house to pass to Lones, when Clifford intended Lones to "get[ ] nothing" and White to "inherit everything." (Ex. 1 at 47, Edwards Dep.) In short, White asserted that, when Edwards provided legal services to Clifford in 2018, Edwards negligently failed to ascertain the existence of the TOD affidavit and advise Clifford regarding what he needed to do to modify or revoke it. {¶ 8} Edwards moved for summary judgment on the ground that White could not sue him for providing allegedly negligent legal services to Clifford because, as a general matter, an attorney is not liable to a third party for services performed on behalf of a client. In an exception to this rule, a third party who is in privity with the client may assert a claim

3 R.C. 5302.23(B)(9) provides, "[a]ny transfer on death of real property * * * that results from a transfer on death designation affidavit designating a transfer on death beneficiary is not testamentary. That transfer on death shall supersede any attempted testate * * * transfer of that real property * * *." No. 21AP-355 4

for legal malpractice against the attorney. Edwards argued that, although White was a beneficiary of Clifford's will, White's beneficiary status did not render him in privity with Clifford, and thus, White could not sue for malpractice supposedly perpetrated against Clifford. {¶ 9} White responded that he was not asserting his legal malpractice action in his capacity as a beneficiary, but as executor of Clifford's estate. Because an executor stands in the shoes of the testator, White contended he could assert Clifford's legal malpractice claim on behalf of the estate. {¶ 10} White also moved for summary judgment on his legal malpractice claim. White submitted an affidavit of an expert witness, who testified that an attorney who prepares or changes a will has a duty to "[d]etermine the composition of the client's assets and the manner in which those assets are titled." (Hoover Aff.

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Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 2418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-sheridan-ohioctapp-2022.