IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
DEAN SHERMAN, §
§ No. 43, 2020
Plaintiff Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below: Superior Court
§ of the State of Delaware
v. §
§ C.A. No. K18C-06-009
STEPHEN P. ELLIS, ESQUIRE, §
§
Defendant Below, §
Appellee. §
Submitted: December 2, 2020
Decided: February 3, 2021
Corrected: February 11, 2021
Before SEITZ, Chief Justice; VAUGHN, TRAYNOR, and MONTGOMERY-
REEVES, Justices; and SLIGHTS, Vice Chancellor, * constituting the Court en
banc.
Upon appeal from the Superior Court. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Patrick K. Gibson, Esquire, Ippoliti Law Group, Wilmington, Delaware, for
Appellant, Dean Sherman.
Gary W. Lipkin, Esquire (Argued), and Alexandra D. Rogin, Esquire, Eckert
Seamans Cherin & Mellott, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, for Appellee, Stephen P.
Ellis, Esquire.
VAUGHN, Justice:
*
Sitting by designation under Del. Const. Art. IV, § 12.
I. INTRODUCTION
This is a legal negligence case arising from the preparation of a premarital
agreement. The Plaintiff-Appellant, Dean Sherman, appeals from the Superior
Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Defendant-Appellee, Stephen P.
Ellis, Esquire. The appeal presents two issues. One is whether the traditional “but
for” test for proximate cause applies in a “transactional” legal negligence case, or
whether it is sufficient that the alleged negligence creates an increased risk of future
damages. The other is whether the evidence satisfies the summary judgment
requirement that there be no genuine issue as to any material fact. As to the first
issue, our conclusion is that the traditional “but for” test, not a risk of future damages
test, is the appropriate test for determining proximate cause. As to the second issue,
our conclusion is that the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to Mr.
Sherman, raises a genuine issue of material fact and that summary judgment should
have been denied. This second conclusion requires that the judgment of the
Superior Court be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings.
II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 1997, Mr. Sherman and Michelle Silverman decided to marry. 2 They
planned a “secret” wedding in Las Vegas, which is to say that they did not inform
2
“Silverman” is the pseudonym that has been used for this party in previous proceedings before
this Court, discussed herein.
1
their families or friends of their plans to be married. Mr. Sherman desired to have
a premarital agreement prepared and executed before the wedding. At the time,
Ms. Silverman had essentially no assets. Mr. Sherman had assets of about
$4,000,000. About a month before the wedding, he gave Ms. Silverman a draft of
a premarital agreement prepared by his attorney, Mr. Ellis, which contained terms
favorable to Mr. Sherman. The agreement provided, in pertinent part, that each
party would “retain the title, management and control of the estates now owned by
them . . . and all increases or additions thereto.”3 The agreement also provided
“that any property that either party may singly acquire . . . shall be owned and shall
be held by the respective party as though this respective party had acquired it before
the solemnization of the said marriage.”4 In other words, any property which Mr.
Sherman might acquire in his name alone during the marriage, even if defined by
statute as marital property subject to division during divorce proceedings, would
remain his separate property, not subject to division. Each party waived any right
to alimony. The agreement provided that upon the death of one of them, the
surviving party would make “no claim by inheritance, descent, dower, curtesy, or
maintenance” against the deceased party’s estate.5 The parties waived any right to
take an elective share in the estate of the other.
3
App. to Appellant’s Op. Br. at A0013 [hereinafter A__].
4
A0014.
5
A0013.
2
Mr. Sherman suggested that Ms. Silverman consult with an attorney about the
agreement at his expense. He provided her with a list of attorneys. She selected
an attorney from the list. The attorney she selected explained the downsides to her
of signing the agreement. He attempted to negotiate substantive changes to the
agreement to benefit Ms. Silverman, but Mr. Sherman’s attorney refused all changes
except a provision relieving Ms. Silverman of any responsibility for any debts
created by Mr. Sherman before or during the marriage.6
On the day before the parties were scheduled to leave for their Las Vegas
wedding, with the agreement at that point still unsigned, Ms. Silverman again met
with her attorney. Earlier that day, before Ms. Silverman met with her attorney,
Mr. Sherman gave Ms. Silverman a summary of his assets and liabilities. Ms.
Silverman’s attorney told her that the agreement was not in her best interest and
advised her not to sign it. Anticipating that Ms. Silverman might sign the
agreement against his advice, the attorney requested that Ms. Silverman sign an
acknowledgement that his advice was that she not sign. She signed the
acknowledgement and then signed the agreement. The next day the parties
6
The record indicates that according to correspondence between Mr. Ellis and Ms. Silverman’s
attorney, Ms. Silverman’s attorney wanted to delete language from the agreement that would have
allowed Ms. Silverman to receive alimony; tried to make sure that Ms. Silverman did not waive
her rights to receive an elective share of Mr. Sherman’s estate if Mr. Sherman died; and proposed
that a retirement account be set up for Ms. Silverman. All of these proposals were rejected by
Mr. Sherman and Mr. Ellis. A0120 (Judy M. Jones, Esq. Dep. Tr. at 82:18-84:15).
3
departed for their wedding in Las Vegas.
In 2015, Ms. Silverman filed for divorce. She contested the enforceability
of the premarital agreement. She claimed that she did not sign the agreement
voluntarily, that the agreement was unconscionable, that she had not been provided
with a fair and reasonable disclosure of Mr. Sherman’s assets, and that “she did not
voluntarily and expressly waive in writing any right to that disclosure.”7
The Family Court found that Ms. Silverman signed the Agreement
voluntarily.8 Since the Family Court found that she signed voluntarily, 13 Del. C.
§ 326(a)(2) required Ms. Silverman to establish the four following statutory elements
to prevail on her claim that the agreement was unenforceable:
(2) The agreement was unconscionable when it was
executed and, before execution of the agreement, that
party:
a. Was not provided a fair and reasonable disclosure of the
property or financial obligations of the other party;
b. Did not voluntarily and expressly waive, in writing, any
right to disclosure of the property or financial obligations
of the other party beyond the disclosure provided; and
c. Did not have, or reasonably could not have had, an
adequate knowledge of the property or financial
obligations of the other party.9
7
A0033.
8
Sherman v. Sherman, No. CS15-01396 (Del. Fam. Apr. 4, 2018).
9
13 Del C. § 326(a)(2) (emphasis added).
4
The Family Court found that Ms. Silverman’s evidence established all four
elements and that the agreement was, therefore, unenforceable. It found the
agreement to be unconscionable; that Ms. Silverman was not provided with a fair
and reasonable disclosure of Mr. Sherman’s assets; and that she did not have or
reasonably could not have had an adequate knowledge of his property. It was
undisputed that Ms. Silverman did not sign a waiver of any right to disclosure of Mr.
Sherman’s assets and liabilities beyond the disclosure provided.
The Family Court certified an interlocutory appeal of its ruling to this Court,
which this Court accepted.10
While the interlocutory appeal was pending in this Court, Mr. Sherman filed
this action in the Superior Court, alleging that Mr. Ellis was negligent in the
preparation of the agreement. Specifically, Mr. Sherman alleged that Mr. Ellis
neglected to include a waiver of disclosure of assets as described in 13 Del. C. §
326(a)(2)b. He also claimed that Mr. Ellis negligently failed to make a fair and
reasonable disclosure of his assets. He further claimed that had Mr. Ellis not been
negligent, Ms. Silverman “would not have been able to file the Motion [to set aside
the agreement] and/or it would have been quickly defeated, and Mr. Sherman would
not have incurred hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal expenses,” and be subject
to the “risk that [Ms. Silverman] will be able to obtain over $5,000,000 of Plaintiff’s
10
Silverman v. Silverman, 206 A.3d 825, 827 (Del. 2019) (en banc).
5
assets via the Divorce Action.”11
In the interlocutory appeal, Silverman v. Silverman, this Court found that Mr.
Sherman did provide Ms. Silverman with a fair and reasonable disclosure of his
property and financial obligations.12 Since Mr. Sherman provided Ms. Silverman
with a fair and reasonable disclosure of his property and financial obligations, we
found that Ms. Silverman had failed to establish one of the four statutory factors
required to establish unenforceability of the agreement. 13 Accordingly, we
reversed the Family Court’s finding that the agreement was not enforceable.14
Mr. Sherman has continued to prosecute this suit in an effort to recover his
legal fees and other expenses incurred in litigating the agreement’s enforceability.
The theory of his claim is that if Mr. Ellis had included the waiver of disclosure
language described in 13 Del. C. § 326(a)(2)b in either the agreement or in a separate
document signed at the time of execution of the agreement, one of the four elements
needed to be shown to establish unenforceability of the agreement could not be
shown, and a challenge to the enforceability of the agreement would have been
unlikely.
The Superior Court described Mr. Ellis’ motion for summary judgment as
11
A0008.
12
Silverman, 206 A.3d at 833-34.
13
Id. at 834.
14
Id.
6
presenting three arguments. The first was that there was no genuine issue of
material fact regarding the standard of care. In support of this argument, Mr. Ellis
relied upon his expert’s opinion that the standard of care did not require that the
disclosure waiver language be included in the agreement. The second argument
was that Mr. Sherman’s claim must fail as a matter of law because Mr. Sherman
could not show that he would have received a better result in the divorce proceedings
if the waiver language had been included. This is so, he argued, because the
premarital agreement was ultimately determined to be enforceable. The third
argument was that Mr. Sherman’s claim was “fatally speculative.”15 This is so, Mr.
Ellis argued, because a jury would have to engage in speculation before it could find
that he had proximately caused damages to Mr. Sherman. Such speculation would
concern a number of points, he argued, such as whether Ms. Silverman would have
signed the agreement if the waiver of disclosure language had been included, or
whether she would have challenged the agreement in any event, if it had been
included.
In response, Mr. Sherman argued that issues of fact existed regarding the
standard of care and whether Mr. Ellis deviated from the standard of care. Mr.
Sherman also urged the court “to apply a relaxed approach when evaluating
proximate cause of damages,” and that damages are not speculative when such a
15
Sherman v. Ellis, 2020 WL 30393, at *4 (Del. Super. Jan. 2, 2020).
7
relaxed standard is applied.16
The Superior Court found that issues of fact remained regarding the standard
of care and whether Mr. Ellis breached the standard of care.17 Next, the Superior
Court found that the traditional “but for” test for proximate causation applies in a
legal negligence case involving alleged transactional negligence. 18 Finally, the
court decided that “applying that standard, because record evidence does not support
an inference that Mr. Sherman’s ex-wife would have likely accepted the [waiver]
term, the trier of fact would be forced to speculate regarding whether Mr. Ellis’s
alleged negligence proximately caused Mr. Sherman harm.”19 For this reason, the
court granted Mr. Ellis’ motion for summary judgment.20
Mr. Sherman raises three claims on appeal. First, he claims that the Superior
Court erred when it found that there was insufficient evidence to allow a jury to
conclude that Ms. Silverman would have signed the agreement had the waiver of
disclosure clause been included. Second, Mr. Sherman claims that the Superior
Court erred by finding that the evidence does not create a genuine issue of material
fact regarding proximate cause of damages. These two claims are related and
essentially challenge the Superior Court’s finding that there was no genuine issue as
16
Id.
17
Id. at 5-8.
18
Id. at 13.
19
Id. at 2.
20
Id.
8
to any material fact. Third, Mr. Sherman claims that the Superior Court erred by
finding that the traditional “but for” test, rather than an increased risk of harm test,
would apply to proximate causation.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court reviews a grant of summary judgment de novo “to determine
whether, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the
moving party has demonstrated that there are no material issues of fact in dispute
and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”21 “Questions
of law, including the interpretation of statutes, are also reviewed de novo.”22
IV. DISCUSSION
A.
It is settled law in Delaware that to prevail on a legal negligence claim, the
plaintiff must establish three elements: “a) the employment of the attorney; b) the
attorney's neglect of a professional obligation; and c) resulting loss.” 23 In the
context of legal negligence alleged to have occurred in the course of litigation, we
have stated that “[i]n connection with the final element, the plaintiff must
demonstrate that the underlying action would have been successful but for the
21
Homeland Ins. Co. of N.Y. v. CorVel Corp., 197 A.3d 1042, 1046 (Del. 2018) (en banc).
22
City of Wilm. v. Nationwide Ins. Co., 154 A.3d 1124, 1127 (Del. 2017).
23
Oakes v. Clark, 2013 WL 3147313, at *1 (Del. June 18, 2013) (TABLE) (citing Weaver v.
Lukoff, 1986 WL 17121, at *1 (Del. Jul. 1, 1986) (TABLE)); See also Flowers v. Ramunno, 2011
WL 3592966, at *2 (Del. Aug. 16, 2011) (TABLE).
9
attorney’s negligence.”24
Mr. Sherman argues that the traditional “but for” test for proximate causation
should not apply in a legal negligence case involving alleged transactional
negligence. He would have us adopt a more relaxed “increased risk of harm”
standard. Under the traditional “but for” causation standard, Mr. Sherman will be
required to show that he would not have suffered damages in the form of increased
litigation expenses “but for” Mr. Ellis’ alleged negligence. Under the standard he
urges us to adopt, he would establish a prima facie case by showing that Mr. Ellis’
alleged negligence created an increased risk that he would suffer such damages.
The practical difference between the two standards, as we understand it, is
that under the “but for” test, Mr. Sherman will be required to prove that Ms.
Silverman would have signed the agreement if the waiver of disclosure clause had
been included, but under the “increased risk of harm” standard, he would be required
to show merely that Mr. Ellis’ “failure to include the statutory waiver language in
the Agreement left it susceptible to challenge by Ms. [Silverman],” a challenge
which did, in fact, occur and resulted in the increased litigation expenses.25 Under
this theory, Mr. Sherman would not be required to show that Ms. Silverman would
have signed the agreement had the waiver of disclosure language been included.
24
Oakes, 2013 WL 3147313, at *1 (citing Weaver, 1986 WL 17121, at *1).
25
Appellant’s Op. Br. at 33.
10
Mr. Sherman cites one Delaware case, United States v. Anderson, as
supporting his position. 26 That case, however, involved a claim for medical
negligence, not legal negligence. The “increased risk of harm doctrine” provides
“that a person may recover damages if the person’s risk of suffering a negative
medical condition is increased because of medical malpractice.”27 Mr. Sherman’s
reliance on Anderson is misplaced. In that case, we held that “increased risk of
harm accompanied by physical injury is a compensable element of damages under
Delaware law.”28 We went on to conclude that “[c]ompensating a tort victim for
an increase in risk which results from some harm caused by a tortfeasor fits
comfortably within traditional damage calculation methods.”29 In that case we did
not redefine the traditional “but for” test for establishing proximate cause. A more
correct reading of the increased risk of harm doctrine is that an increased risk of
harm is an element of damages in medical negligence cases after it is established
that the medical professional was negligent and his negligence caused injury, i.e.,
where causation has already been established. In fact, in that case we declined to
consider whether an independent cause of action could be brought for an increased
risk of future cancer.
26
669 A.2d 73 (Del. 1995).
27
Id. at 75 (quoting U.S. v. Cumberbatch, 647 A.2d 1098, 1100, n.3 (Del. 1994)).
28
Id. at 74.
29
Id. at 78.
11
Mr. Sherman has not pointed to any case from this Court, nor are we aware of
one, where the proximate cause test he advocates has been adopted. In legal
negligence cases involving alleged litigation negligence, we have applied the “but
for” test for causation.30 We see no basis to depart from that standard when the
case involves alleged transactional legal negligence.
In rejecting Mr. Sherman’s relaxed, “increased risk of harm” standard for
proximate causation, the Superior Court, relying on a Supreme Court of Mississippi
decision,31 held that:
Proving causation in a transactional malpractice claim, as
in a litigation malpractice claim, requires proof that, but
for the attorney's negligence, the plaintiff would have
obtained a more favorable result. While ultimate success
in litigation in a case like Mr. Sherman's does not per se
bar a malpractice claim, when the claim involves alleged
negligence in not proposing or including an additional
term in a proposed agreement, the plaintiff-client must
first show that the other party would have agreed to the
omitted term.32
30
Oakes, 2013 WL 3147313, at *1 (citing Weaver, 1986 WL 17121, at *1); See also Flowers,
2011 WL 3592966, at *2.
31
Sherman, 2020 WL 30393, at *12 (citing Gulfport OB-GYN, P.A. v. Dukes, Dukes, Keating &
Faneca, P.A., 283 So.3d 676, 681 (Miss. 2019) (“Causation in a negligence-based legal-
malpractice claim for a breach of the duty of care requires proof that, but for the attorney's
negligence, a more favorable result would have been obtained. Thus, when the complaint is that
the attorney should have proposed different or additional terms to a transaction, the malpractice
plaintiff must show that such terms would have been accepted by the other party or that the client
would not have entered into the deal and would have been better off for doing so. Absent such
proof there exists no genuine issue of material fact as to causation of damages, and summary
judgment is appropriate.”)).
32
Id. at *13.
12
We agree with this ruling. In order for Mr. Sherman to prevail in his legal
negligence claim against Mr. Ellis, he must show that Ms. Silverman would have
agreed to the omitted waiver of disclosure clause.
Mr. Sherman has cited authorities from other jurisdictions which he contends
support applying the “risk of harm” standard in legal negligence cases. We find
those cases unpersuasive, and decline to follow them.
B.
We disagree, however, with the trial court’s grant of summary judgment. In
the agreement, Ms. Silverman assented to the waiver of many rights, including a
waiver of alimony, a waiver of the elective share, a waiver of any rights of any share
in Mr. Sherman’s estate, and even a waiver of her rights in marital property which
Mr. Sherman might acquire in his name alone during the marriage. Reviewing the
grant of summary judgment de novo, we think that the sweeping extent of these
waivers, together with Ms. Silverman’s acknowledgement that her attorney advised
her not to sign the agreement, her signing after almost all attempts at negotiation had
failed, and the attendant facts and circumstances, create a circumstantial, jury
question of fact as to whether she would have signed had the clause waiving the
disclosure of assets beyond the disclosure provided been included. Accordingly,
we believe that the grant of summary judgment must be reversed.
13
C.
Mr. Ellis has filed a cross-appeal in which he states the question presented as
follows: “Whether the Superior Court erred in holding that a waiver of disclosure
of assets provision in a premarital agreement bars any subsequent challenge to that
agreement on unconscionability grounds, even if the disclosure of assets has not
been fair and reasonable.”33 He argues that 13 Del C. §326(a)(2)b should not be
read in such a manner. It should be read, he argues, to mean that the parties waive
their rights to additional, supplemental or future disclosures. It should not be read,
he argues, to shield a party from making inaccurate or fraudulent disclosures.
When the agreement involved in this case was before us in Silverman v.
Silverman, we stated that “to render the premarital agreement unenforceable under
the statute, the spouse contesting enforcement must prove that the agreement was
unconscionable and prove three other grounds – lack of fair and reasonable
disclosure of the other spouse’s property or financial obligations, non-waiver, and
lack of adequate knowledge of Husband’s property and financial obligations.” 34
We reaffirm that ruling here.
In this case the waiver of disclosure clause was not included in the agreement.
Therefore, how it might be interpreted if it were included is not before us. In
33
Appellee’s Ans. Br. at 18.
34
Silverman, 206 A.3d at 832-33.
14
Silverman, we found that the disclosure in this case was, in fact, a fair and reasonable
disclosure of Mr. Sherman’s financial condition. Therefore, the effect of an unfair,
unreasonable, or fraudulent disclosure is not before us. We are not inclined to
consider questions which are beyond the scope of the facts of this case.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the Superior Court is reversed and
the matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
15