UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
____________________________________
)
EDENS TECHNOLOGIES, LLC, )
)
Plaintiff, )
)
v. ) Civil Action No. 09-1850 (ESH)
)
KILE GOEKJIAN REED & )
MCMANUS, PLLC, )
)
Defendant. )
____________________________________)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Edens Technologies, LLC (“Edens”), a Michigan-based technology company,
filed this action for legal malpractice against defendant Kile Goekjian Reed & McManus PLLC
(“KGRM”), a law-firm based in Washington, D.C. Edens alleges that KGRM provided
negligent advice and representation to Edens in connection with a patent infringement action
brought by Golf Tech, LLC against Edens in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maine.
Before the Court is defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim on the grounds that
1) the complaint fails to plead the elements necessary to sustain an action for legal malpractice;
and 2) the action violates public policy because Edens has assigned this malpractice claim to
Golf Tech, its former litigation adversary. Because the Court finds that this assignment
contravenes public policy, defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted, and the case is dismissed
without prejudice.
BACKGROUND
Edens is a manufacturer of golf simulation technology that is used in video games.
(Compl. & 8.) In 2007, Edens sought legal advice from KGRM about whether a device Edens
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had developed infringed on a patent owned by Golf Tech, LLC (the “’211 patent”). (Compl. &&
9-10.) According to Edens, the non-lawyer brother of a KGRM associate, acting at the behest of
the associate, advised Edens that “[y]ou should be fine.” (Compl. && 10-11.) The next month,
the brother stated to Edens’ founder that “I think this means your [sic] clear of the patent you are
trying to avoid.” (Compl. & 12.) This allegedly negligent advice was conveyed by the brother in
Michigan and was received by Edens in Michigan. Relying on this advice, Edens launched its
device. (Compl. && 13, 15.) Golf Tech, represented by the Maine-based law firm Pierce
Atwood, sued Edens in federal court in Maine for patent infringement. (Compl. & 16.)
KGRM represented Edens in the infringement action. (Id.)1 Edens also retained Kurt E.
Olafsen, an attorney in Maine, to serve as local counsel in the infringement action and provide
advice regarding local rules and practices. (Declaration of Kurt E. Olafsen (“Olafsen Decl.”) at
&3 [Dkt. 14].) In defending Edens, KGRM did not assert patent invalidity as a defense (Compl.
& 18), but instead it pursued a non-infringement defense based on a claim construction
argument. (Id. & 20.) On August 1, 2008, Mr. Olafsen attended a meeting in Portland, Maine
with Edens and KGRM attorneys. (Olafsen Decl. & 5.) Mr. Olafsen avers that during the
meeting, KGRM advised Edens not to search for additional prior art which may have rendered
the ’211 patent invalid and been “case dispositive,” because KGRM believed that the one
example of prior art it had already found was enough. (Id. & 5; Compl. & 19.) The Maine court
rejected the claim construction argument made by KGRM, entered summary judgment in favor
1
Other than its involvement in the patent infringement action, KGRM has no business
contacts in Maine, no offices in Maine, no property or assets in Maine, and no KGRM attorney
has ever been admitted to practice in Maine (except for the admission of two attorneys on a pro
hac vice basis for the patent litigation). (See Def.’s Mot. to Change Venue, Ex. A (Declaration
of Bradford E. Kile) && 5-8.)
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of Golf Tech on liability, and set a trial date on damages. (Compl. & 20.) A week before trial,
KGRM notified the court that it wanted to file a motion for leave to reopen the invalidity issue
based on “newly discovered prior art.” (Id. & 21.) The court denied this motion as untimely and
said “[t]he omission here was Edens’ failure to investigate the case thoroughly in a timely
manner. . . . That is a glaring omission, causing the unnecessary expenditure of resources and
delay, and there is no satisfactory excuse.” (Id. & 22.)
Edens, believing that KGRM was unprepared for trial, substituted its local counsel in
place of KGRM. (Compl. & 23.) In light of the denial of the motion for leave to reopen the
invalidity issue, Edens believed that the evidence at a trial would support damages of at least
$370,000 with the possibility that the record would support an award of treble damages and
attorney’s fees. (Id. & 24.) In order to “save the company,” Edens entered into a Settlement
Agreement with Golf Tech on May 7, 2009, and on May 14, the parties filed a joint motion for
consent judgment in the amount of $734,246. (Id. & 25.)
The Settlement Agreement between Edens and Golf Tech provides that Golf Tech agrees
to accept as “satisfaction in full” for the $734,246 judgment “a partial assignment of the
proceeds, if any, of an action for legal malpractice to be filed by Edens against [KGRM],” with
Edens retaining any recovery in excess of the consent judgment amount. (Settlement Agreement
at 2 & 2.)2 The parties stipulated that there was sufficient evidence from which a jury could find
that Edens’ infringement was willful and, therefore, it would be liable for treble damages. (Id. at
1-2 & 1.) The malpractice action against KGRM, although filed with Edens named as the
plaintiff, is to be prosecuted by counsel selected by Golf Tech, and Edens must cooperate with
2
The Settlement Agreement has been filed with this Court. There is no evidence that
Edens has paid any money in satisfaction of the consent judgment.
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the suit. (Id. at & 3.) Further, all decisions relating to this malpractice action are “controlled” by
Golf Tech, with Golf Tech paying all litigation costs and attorneys’ fees. (Id.)3 Edens was
represented by Mr. Olafsen during the settlement negotiations. (Olafsen Decl. & 6.)
On May 14, 2009, the same day that the joint motion for consent judgment was filed,
Edens commenced this malpractice action against KGRM in the U.S. District Court for the
District of Maine. Edens is currently represented by Pierce Atwood, the same firm that
represented Golf Tech in the patent litigation and settlement negotiations. The next day, May
15, 2009, the consent judgment in the underlying patent infringement action was approved. In
this malpractice case, Edens asserts that KGRM negligently 1) advised Edens that its device
would not infringe on Golf Tech=s patent, and 2) failed to diligently search for prior art and to
raise the invalidity defense.
This case was transferred from Maine to this district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. ' 1404(a),
because the Maine court found that the alleged negligent advice was formulated in Washington,
D.C., and that this would be the most convenient forum for most of the witnesses. Edens Tech.,
LLC v. Kile, Goekjian, Reed & McManus, PLLC, No. 09-cv-1850, 2009 WL 3065211, at *4 (D.
Me. Sept. 18, 2009). Presently before the Court is defendant KGRM’s motion to dismiss Edens’
complaint on two grounds. First, KGRM argues under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)
that the complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Second, KGRM argues
that the cause of action should be dismissed as contrary to public policy because of the
assignment by Edens to Golf Tech of its legal malpractice claim. Since the Court agrees that the
3
In the Settlement Agreement, Golf Tech also granted Edens a license to manufacture,
market, and sell the golf swing analyzers under the ’211 patent in exchange for a royalty for each
unit sold. (Settlement Agreement at 2 & 4.)
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assignment is contrary to public policy, it need not address defendant’s Rule 12(b)(6) argument.
ANALYSIS
I. CONFLICT OF LAWS
In his opinion transferring venue, Judge Hornby of the Maine district court questioned
the applicability of Maine law “given the genesis of the alleged malpractice in D.C. and
Michigan.” Edens Tech., 2009 WL 3065211, at *5 n.8. This Court ordered supplemental
briefing on the choice of law issue to determine which state’s laws apply to this case and how
that affects the outcome. (See Nov. 2, 2009 Minute Order.)4 Plaintiff continues to argue that
Maine’s substantive law applies but maintains that even if D.C. or Michigan law applies, the
result is the same – legal malpractice claims are assignable. Defendant argues that D.C.
substantive law applies to bar this assignment, but that even if this case is governed by Maine
law, the assignment still cannot be enforced.
A thorough review of the briefing reveals that the choice-of-law issue is actually what is
known as a “false conflict.” Century Int=l. Arms, Ltd. v. The Federal State Unitary Enter. State
Corp. >Rosvoorouzhenie=, 172 F. Supp. 2d 79, 90 (D.D.C. 2001). Although the analysis differs in
each state, the Edens/Golf Tech assignment would be invalid as a matter of public policy no
matter which jurisdiction’s law is applied. In reaching this conclusion, the Court will first
address the problems raised by the assignment of a legal malpractice claim, and in particular, the
assignment at issue here, and it will then evaluate this assignment under the laws of each of the
4
When a case is transferred under § 1404(a) on convenience grounds, the transferee court
must apply the law of the transferor state, including the transferor state=s choice of law rules.
Ferens v. John Deere Co., 494 U.S. 516, 525 (1990). Maine follows the Restatement (Second)
of Conflicts of Laws § 145 and the “‘most significant contacts and relationships’ approach in
determining choice of law.” Walker v. Unum Life Ins. Co. of America, 530 F. Supp. 2d 351, 353
(D. Me. 2008) (citing Flaherty v. Allstate Ins. Co., 822 A. 2d 1159, 1165 (Me. 2003)).
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three jurisdictions.
II. PUBLIC POLICY IMPLICATIONS OF ASSIGNING LEGAL MALPRACTICE
CLAIMS TO A FORMER LITIGATION ADVERSARY
The issue in this case is not whether legal malpractice claims can be assigned, but rather,
whether a company can assign its legal malpractice claim to a former litigation adversary as a
part of the settlement of that litigation. The usual motivation for assignment in these cases is
“the plaintiff’s inability to collect a judgment from an insolvent, uninsured (or under-insured)
defendant,” Zuniga v. Groce, Locke & Hebdon, 878 S.W. 2d 313, 316 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994), and
the “two principle goals” served by allowing such assignments are “enabling the defendant-client
to extricate himself from liability, and funding the original plaintiff’s judgment.” Id. at 317; see
also Tate v. Goins, Underkofler, Crawford & Langdon, 24 S.W. 3d 627, 633 (Tex. App. 2000).
Despite these potentially legitimate reasons for assigning a legal malpractice claim to a former
adversary, the majority of courts have found that the costs to society outweigh the benefits and
that overriding public policy concerns render these types of assignments invalid.5 For the
reasons discussed below, this Court agrees with the reasoning of those courts which have
invalidated such assignments as contrary to public policy.
The most compelling argument against this type of assignment is that “[p]ermitting an
assignment of a legal malpractice claim to the adversary in the underlying litigation that gave
rise to the legal malpractice claim . . . creates the opportunity and incentive for collusion in
stipulating to damages in exchange for an agreement not to execute on the judgment in the
5
For detailed surveys of the case law with respect to the assignment of legal malpractice
claims and the public policy implications, see Gurski v. Rosenblum and Filan, LLC, 885 A. 2d
163 (Conn. 2005); Kommavongsa v. Haskell, 67 P. 3d 1068 (Wash. 2003); Zuniga, 878 S.W. 2d
at 316; Goodley v. Wank & Wank, Inc., 62 Cal. App. 3d 389, 397-98 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).
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underlying litigation.” Gurski, 885 A. 2d at 174. Because the “losing” party in the consent
judgment will never have to pay, nothing prevents the parties from stipulating to artificially
inflated damages that could serve as the basis for unjustly high damages in the “trial within a
trial” phase of the subsequent malpractice action.
While it is not necessary to find that the consent judgment in the underlying litigation
was the product of collusion between Edens and Golf Tech or that the stipulated damages were
unreasonable, the Court “merely observes that the opportunity and incentive for collusion were
certainly present.” Kommavongsa, 67 P. 3d at 1077. Edens had no incentive to contest the
extent of damages, because as long as it secured from Golf Tech a promise not to execute on the
judgment, Edens would never have to pay anything. It is evident from the Settlement Agreement
that there was no reason for Edens to try to minimize damages. Edens and Golf Tech stipulated
that there was sufficient evidence from which a jury could find that Edens’ infringement of the
’211 patent was willful, thereby allowing an award of treble damages. Edens’ complaint,
however, reveals that it retained KGRM in order to avoid infringing the ’211 patent, and,
therefore, any infringement would have been unintentional and solely the product of negligent
advice by KGRM. Thus, Edens’ own complaint is wholly inconsistent with the stipulation in the
Settlement Agreement that Edens willfully violated Golf Tech’s patent. This obvious
inconsistency at least raises a serious concern that the stipulation was not based on a fair
assessment of the merits, but was reached in order to increase the damages in this action.
The second persuasive policy reason for prohibiting this assignment is that it is “fraught
with illogic.” See Kracht v. Perrin, Gartland & Doyle, 219 Cal. App. 3d 1019, 1025 (Cal. App.
1990) (citation omitted). Applying the reasoning of the Texas Court of Appeals to this case, the
Court notes that:
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In each assigned malpractice case, there would be a
demeaning reversal of roles. The two litigants would have to take
positions diametrically opposed to their positions during the
underlying litigation because the legal malpractice case requires a
“suit within a suit.” To prove proximate cause, the client must
show that his . . . defense would have been successful “but for” the
attorney’s negligence. . . . In the underlying [infringement] case,
[Golf Tech’s] position was: we have a valid [patent] and we will
win the case on the merits even if [Edens’] lawyer represents it
capably. But to prove proximate cause in the legal malpractice
case, [Golf Tech, as assignee, through its Pierce Atwood attorneys]
would have to take the contrary position: we would have lost our
[patent infringement] case and [Edens] would have prevailed if its
lawyers had capably defended our suit. [Edens] would have won
the [infringement] case if only its lawyers had used due care and
competence.
For the law to countenance this abrupt and shameless shift
of positions would give prominence (and substance) to the image
that lawyers will take any position, depending upon where the
money lies, and that litigation is a mere game and not a search for
truth. It is one thing for lawyers in our adversary system to
represent clients with whom they personally disagree; it is
something quite different for lawyers (and clients) to switch
positions concerning the same incident simply because an
assignment and the law of proximate cause have given them a
financial interest in switching.
Zuniga, 878 S.W. 2d at 318 (internal citations omitted). This duplicitous shifting of positions
would be especially troublesome if this action ever reached a jury, for, as noted by the Supreme
Court of Indiana:
[T]he trial of this assigned malpractice claim would feature a
public and disreputable role reversal. The mechanics of trying this
case would magnify the least attractive aspects of the legal system.
. . . Because of the unique nature of the trial within a trial [the]
change in position would be obvious to all the jurors hearing the
evidence. . . . They would rightly leave the courtroom with less
regard for the law and the legal profession than they had when they
entered.
Picadilly, Inc. v. Raikos, 582 N.E. 2d 338, 344-45 (Ind. 1991), abrogated on other grounds by
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Liggett v. Young, 877 N.E. 2d 178 (Ind. 2007).
In the underlying infringement action, Golf Tech, represented by Pierce Atwood, argued
that Edens’ golf simulation technology infringed its valid patent and that it should prevail on the
merits. Now, however, Golf Tech, as assignee, is alleging (through the same Pierce Atwood
attorneys) that it would not have prevailed in the patent infringement action but for the
negligence of KGRM in representing Edens. This is the very type of disreputable and illogical
role reversal that has understandably troubled many courts. Furthermore, the Settlement
Agreement itself is “fraught with illogic.” Edens stipulated in the Settlement Agreement that
there was sufficient evidence that it willfully infringed the ’211 patent. In this malpractice
action, however, Edens is arguing the opposite position that it would have been successful in the
underlying litigation had KGRM timely asserted that the ’211 patent was invalid.6
In addition to collusion and role-reversal concerns, courts have identified several other
public policy problems associated with the assignment of legal malpractice claims to former
litigation adversaries. These policy concerns are more speculative than the two discussed above,
but they nonetheless lend further support to KGRM’s position that these assignments should be
barred as a matter of public policy.
One concern is that the prospect of assignment would make it too risky for lawyers to
represent under-insured or judgment-proof defendants because the only way for the client to
satisfy a losing judgment would be to assign his or her claim for malpractice. See Zuniga, 878
6
Edens’ complaint tries to avoid this irreconcilable position by not explicitly alleging
invalidity, but instead, the complaint states that the defense would have been “case dispositive.”
(Compl. & 19.) Of course, a defense is only “case dispositive” if it works and the defense would
only have worked if the patent was invalid. Edens’ current reluctance to allege that the ’211
patent is invalid is understandable, given that this litigation is under the complete control of Golf
Tech who, naturally, wants to avoid arguing that its own patent is invalid.
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S.W. 2d at 316. In turn, insolvent defendants could have difficulty finding adequate
representation because lawyers would be afraid that their clients would assign malpractice claims
against them. Id.; see also Gurski, 885 A. 2d at 170. Courts have also cited the “unique and
personal nature of the relationship between attorney and client and the need to preserve the
sanctity of that relationship as a reason for prohibiting the assignment.” Gurski, 885 A. 2d at
169 (citing cases). Courts have recognized “the incompatibility of the assignment and the
attorney’s duty of loyalty and confidentiality,” id., and “have cautioned that permitting the
assignment of legal malpractice claims would encourage the commercialization of such claims
and in turn spawn increased and unwarranted malpractice actions.” Id. at 170 (citing cases).
Additionally, courts have noted that “‘[a] party should not be permitted to transmute a claim
against a penniless adversary into a claim against the adversary’s wealthier lawyer based on the
lawyer’s supposed negligence toward the adversary.’” Kommavongsa, 67 P. 3d at 1077 (quoting
Alcman Servs. Corp. v. Samuel H. Bullock, P.C., 925 F. Supp. 252, 258 (D.N.J. 1997)).
Although the weight of authority counsels against permitting the assignment of legal
malpractice claims to former adversaries, a minority of jurisdictions have upheld these
assignments. For example, in New Hampshire Insurance Co. v. McCann, an insurance company,
acting on behalf of its client, agreed to a $220,000 settlement with a plaintiff who was alleged to
have been injured by the client’s use of lead paint in an apartment building. 707 N.E. 2d 332,
333-34 (Mass. 1999). As part of the settlement, the insurance company assigned to plaintiff all
of its rights for legal malpractice against its attorneys. Id. The basis of the malpractice claim
was the attorney’s failure to secure the client’s release from personal liability in a related
settlement eleven years earlier. Id. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts discounted the
public policy concerns described above and held that this assignment should not be barred as a
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matter of law. Id. at 336. The court thought that “providing shelter for attorneys by prohibiting
the voluntary assignment of malpractice claims . . . would actually diminish public confidence in
the profession by creating the perception that the system provides attorneys with unjustified
special protection.” Id. at 337. See also Hedlund Mfg. Co., Inc. v. Weiser, Stapler & Spivak, 539
A. 2d 357, 359 (Pa. 1988) (“We will not allow the concept of the attorney-client relationship to
be used as a shield by an attorney to protect him or her from the consequences of legal
malpractice. Where the attorney has caused harm to his or her client, there is no relationship that
remains to be protected.”); Greevy v. Becker, Isserlis, Sullivan & Kurtz, 240 A.D. 2d 539, 541
(N.Y.A.D. 1997) (permitting assignment of a malpractice claim to former adversary because the
assignment did not violate public policy).
The McCann court rejected the argument that allowing the assignment of a malpractice
claim to a former adversary would always create a “distasteful role reversal,” because the merits
of the underlying case in McCann were irrelevant to the malpractice issue. McCann, 707 N.E.
2d at 337. While that analysis was correct in McCann, where the malpractice consisted of a
lawyer’s failure to secure a release from personal liability in a previous settlement agreement and
had nothing to do with the merits of whether the client actually violated rules against the use of
lead paint, it does not apply here. In this case, the merits of the underlying action are
inextricably intertwined with the allegations of malpractice, and will require Golf Tech to take a
position inconsistent with its position in the underlying action. Thus, the disreputable and
illogical role reversal, while not a problem in McCann, is present in this case. See Gurski, 885
A. 2d at 173 (noting that many of the courts that do not have a per se rule barring assignments
have recognized the public policy concerns with these assignments, but merely did not have
occasion to apply those concerns in their specific cases). For, as persuasively argued in Gurski,
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to allow an “assignee to [control] a claim for legal malpractice when she was the very party who
benefitted from that malpractice in the underlying litigation, would engender a perversion that
would erode public confidence in the legal system.” 885 A. 2d at 174.
Having found that this assignment is contrary to public policy, this Court next evaluates
the validity of this assignment under the laws of each of the three relevant jurisdictions.
III. LEGALITY OF ASSIGNMENTS OF LEGAL MALPRACTICE ACTIONS IN
MICHIGAN, WASHINGTON, D.C., AND MAINE
A. Michigan
Michigan law prohibits the assignment of legal malpractice claims. See Joos v. Drillock,
338 N.W. 2d 736, 737 (Mich. App. 1983). In Joos, a jury found the defendants liable for an
automobile accident and awarded damages in an amount above their insurance policy limits. Id.
Because they could not pay the excess judgment, defendants assigned their rights against their
attorney for malpractice to the plaintiff. Id.7 The plaintiffs then commenced a malpractice
action against defendants’ attorney, alleging that he had failed to notify his clients of settlement
offers, failed to settle the case within policy limits, and failed to make proper discovery. Id. The
court held that this assignment was invalid as against public policy, citing the personal nature of
legal services, the potential for converting malpractice claims into a commodity, the likelihood
that assignment would increase the number of malpractice claims, and the detriment to the
attorney-client relationship caused by the looming threat of assignment. Id. at 738 (citing
7
The language of the assignment described it as a “partial assignment” whereby the
defendants retained all rights against their attorney for any amount above the jury’s verdict.
Joos, 338 N.W. 2d at 737 n.1. The Court of Appeals of Michigan ignored this label and treated
the arrangement as a complete assignment when considering the public policy implications. See
id. As discussed herein, this Court has adopted a similar approach to the Edens/Golf Tech
assignment.
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Goodley, 62 Cal. App. 3d at 397-98).
Four years later, the Court of Appeals of Michigan distinguished the complete
assignment of a malpractice claim from an agreement to assign only a portion of the recovery
from a legal malpractice action. Weston v. Dowty, 414 N.W. 2d 165, 167 (Mich. App. 1987). In
Weston, Ella Sharpe was injured in a home owned by the Weston family and brought suit against
them for negligence. Id. at 166. A default was entered against the Westons because their
attorney failed to comply with discovery orders and the parties entered into a $200,000 consent
judgment. Id. In order to satisfy the judgment, the Westons agreed to pay $9,000 up front and
pursue a malpractice action against their attorneys. Id. The agreement further provided that the
Westons agreed to “assign any and all valuable consideration and/or monies that may be
received from [the malpractice] action less their costs in attorneys fees sustained in the above
captioned case and that said funds will be assigned to [Sharpe] and her attorney.” Id. In
exchange, Sharpe signed a covenant not to sue the Westons for any amount beyond the $9,000.
Id. In the malpractice action, the defendant-attorney argued that this was an invalid assignment
of a legal malpractice claim in violation of Joos. Id.
The Weston court upheld this agreement and distinguished it from Joos on the grounds
that Weston “did not assign the claim or cause of action to Sharpe [but] merely agreed to give
Sharpe any proceeds recovered.” 414 N.W. 2d at 167. The court noted that the malpractice
action was brought by the Westons and that the Westons were the “real party in interest” because
they contracted for the attorney’s services and they suffered the loss as a result of the attorney’s
negligence. Id. Because the attorney owed a duty only to his clients, it was irrelevant that
Sharpe retained a beneficial interest in the recovery. Id.
Despite Edens’ argument to the contrary, the Court finds the assignment at issue here to
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be governed by Joos and not by Weston. Although this suit is brought in Edens’ name, Golf
Tech wields all of the decision-making power. Golf Tech “controls” this litigation, selected the
attorneys, and can compel Edens’ cooperation. In Weston, on the other hand, there is nothing to
indicate that the plaintiff in the underlying negligence action retained any decision-making
power over the malpractice action. Moreover, Weston did not implicate concerns about parties
taking inconsistent and illogical positions because the allegations of malpractice had nothing to
do with the merits of the underlying case. The assignment between Edens in Golf Tech is much
more than a mere assignment of the proceeds, and thus, this Court believes that under Michigan
law, it would be found to be invalid.8
B. Washington, D.C.
Judge Friedman of this Court considered the assignability of legal malpractice claims and
concluded that “public policy does not prohibit the assignment of a legal malpractice claim and
District of Columbia law does not prevent it.” Richter v. Analex Corp., 940 F. Supp. 353, 358
(D.D.C. 1996). In Richter, Analex Corporation bought “certain assets” from another company
named Analex D.C. Id. at 355-56. At issue in that case was whether those assets could include
legal malpractice claims that Analex D.C. had against its former lawyer Richter. Id. Judge
Friedman held that Analex Corporation, as an assignee, could assert a legal malpractice claim
8
Because Golf Tech has complete control over this litigation and would benefit from any
recovery, this case is analogous to those which “have identified the ‘meaningless distinction’
between an assignment of a cause of action and an assignment of recovery from such an action,
which distinction is made merely to circumvent the public policy barring assignments.” Gurski,
885 A. 2d at 178 (quoting Town & Country Bank of Springfield v. Country Mutual Ins. Co.,459
N.E. 2d 639, 641 (Ill. App. 1984)); see also Tate, 24 S.W. 3d at 633 (rejecting assignee’s
argument that it had merely been assigned the proceeds of a malpractice action because the
assignor gave the assignee “absolute control over the litigation, including the unfettered right to
settle the malpractice suit on terms as [the assignee] determines” and the arrangement created the
“same evils” as other invalidated assignments).
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against Richter based on his alleged malpractice while representing Analex D.C. Id. Based on
this authority, Edens argues that its assignment to Golf Tech is permissible.
Richter, however, expressly confines its holding to the narrow factual circumstances of
that case, and at no point in his opinion does Judge Friedman opine that District of Columbia law
permits the assignment of legal malpractice claims in every situation. Rather, he acknowledged
that “[t]he courts that have barred the assignment of legal malpractice claims have relied
primarily on factors not present in this case, including the fear that parties will sell off claims,
particularly to opponents or . . . unrelated third parties, and a concern about jeopardizing the
personal nature of legal services.” Id. at 357 (emphases added). Those fears were not present in
Richter because the malpractice claim was not bartered or sold to an unrelated third party and
Analex Corporation and Analex D.C. were never opponents in litigation during which the
alleged malpractice occurred. Id. at 358. It was merely a sale of a corporation’s assets. Richter,
therefore, leaves ample room for certain types of assignments to be prohibited and, given the
policy problems explained above, this Court concludes that the assignment between Edens and
Golf Tech would be invalidated as a matter of public policy under D.C. law.
C. Maine
Of the three states whose laws might apply to this action, Maine appears to have the only
relevant case which would support Edens’ position. Thurston v. Continental Casualty Co., 567
A. 2d 922 (Me. 1989). However, this Court finds the Edens/Golf Tech assignment to be
factually distinguishable from Thurston. In Thurston, a products liability action, summary
judgment was entered against defendant 3K Kamper Ko. for an amount far in excess of its
insurance policy limits. Id. at 923. 3K’s insurance carrier, Continental Casualty Co., had failed
to settle the case within the policy limits, and defendant was unable to pay the excess judgment.
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Id. The shareholders of 3K agreed to assign the company’s rights against Continental Casualty
for inadequate legal representation to the injured plaintiff because it otherwise had no assets with
which to satisfy the outstanding judgment. Id. The plaintiff, as 3K’s assignee, sued Continental
Casualty for legal malpractice and failure to settle. Id. The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine
held that “there is no reason to prohibit the assignment of a legal malpractice claim in a situation
such as this.” Thurston, 567 A. 2d at 923 (emphasis added). The court observed that the
plaintiff had “an intimate connection with the underlying lawsuit” and that allowing an
assignment in this situation would not establish a “general market” for these types of claims. Id.
It reasoned that the most efficient way to enable the plaintiff to collect her award was to allow
her to sue Continental Casualty as 3K’s assignee because she had “a clear interest in the claim,”
as well as the “time, energy, and resources to bring the suit.” Id.
While Thurston provides some support for allowing the assignment of legal malpractice
claims to former litigation adversaries, the two most problematic aspects of the assignment in
this case – the opportunity for collusion and the brazenly inconsistent positions asserted by Golf
Tech and Pierce Atwood – did not underlie the court’s rationale in Thurston. First, there was no
risk in Thurston that the parties colluded to specify unreasonable damages, because the damages
were awarded by the court on summary judgment. It was only after this judgment was awarded
that 3K realized it would be unable to pay and agreed to assign its malpractice claim to its former
adversary. Therefore, 3K had every incentive and opportunity to argue for no liability or
minimal damages. Here, on the other hand, Edens assigned its malpractice claim to Golf Tech
and actually filed the claim before the consent judgment was even approved by the district court.
Edens, as the “losing” party in the consent judgment, had, unlike Thurston, no incentive to
seriously litigate the amount of damages because Golf Tech’s covenant not to execute the
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judgment serves to shield Edens from ever having to pay this judgment.9
Second, the malpractice claim in Thurston was not “fraught with illogic.” In both the
underlying products liability action and the subsequent malpractice case, the Thurston plaintiff
consistently argued that 3K had been negligent in manufacturing and designing its products. In
pursuing Continental Casualty for malpractice, the plaintiff could always maintain that the
products were defective and that she was rightfully entitled to relief. The crux of the malpractice
claim was simply that the case should have been settled sooner, not that the products were not
defective. By contrast, Golf Tech, through Edens and Pierce Atwood, is now arguing that Edens
did not infringe Golf Tech’s patent and that Edens would not have had to pay damages but for
KGRM’s negligent representation. The same attorneys who zealously defended their client Golf
Tech’s patent in the underlying action are now in a position of implying that the patent was
invalid. This is precisely the type of “public and disreputable role reversal” that was not present
in Thurston, but has troubled many courts. See, e.g., Picadilly, 582 N.E. 2d at 344-45.
Finally, Thurston’s language is limited to its facts and does not represent a sweeping
policy decision by the courts of Maine to permit the assignment of legal malpractice claims to an
adversary in all situations. The Thurston court wrote that it would not prohibit the assignment of
a legal malpractice claim “in a situation such as this.” 567 A. 2d at 923. Therefore, it arguably
anticipated a situation where different types of assignments would be prohibited, and this could
well be the best example of just such an assignment.
9
KGRM argues that the $743,246 settlement is “absurd” and “far in excess of anything
Edens’ economic expert . . . would have testified to at trial.” (Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 7.)
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IV. DISMISSAL WITHOUT PREJUDICE IS THE PROPER REMEDY
Having found the assignment between Edens and Golf Tech to be invalid, this Court will
dismiss the malpractice claim without prejudice. Although some courts have dismissed assigned
malpractice claims outright, see, e.g., Gurski, 885 A.2d at 178, this Court finds that Edens should
still be permitted to pursue KGRM for malpractice because prohibiting the assignment of legal
malpractice claims is not intended to “protect lawyers from the consequences of their own legal
malpractice.” Kommavongsa, 67 P. 3d at 1080. However, if Edens elects to re-file a malpractice
claim against KGRM, it cannot be controlled in any way by Golf Tech or be represented by
attorneys associated with Golf Tech. If Edens ultimately obtains a judgment against KGRM,
nothing prohibits Edens from then assigning the judgment to Golf Tech as satisfaction for the
outstanding judgment in the patent infringement action. See id. The Court recognizes that this
remedy does not eliminate the risk of collusion in future cases completely, but it does provide
the client with more of an incentive to “seriously litigate the amount of damages” in the
underlying suit because now the client bears the risk of not recovering in the legal malpractice
action. Id. at 1079. Furthermore, it eliminates the public and disreputable role reversals that
have concerned many courts.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted and the case is
dismissed without prejudice.
/s/
ELLEN SEGAL HUVELLE
United States District Judge
Dated: December 22, 2009
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