In the
Missouri Court of Appeals
Western District
WANDA L. ALBERTS, ET AL.,
Appellants, WD84235
v.
OPINION FILED:
TURNBULL CONWAY, P.C. (F/K/A January 4, 2022
TURNBULL & STARK, P.C.) AND
STEPHEN CHRISTOPHER CONWAY,
Respondents.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri
The Honorable Patricia S. Joyce, Judge
Before Special Division:
Thomas N. Chapman, P.J., Edward R. Ardini, Jr., J., and Terry A. Tschannen, Sp. J.
Wanda Alberts, Richard Alberts, Delores Shirley, Brent Shirley, Richard Griggs, Ronda
Griggs, Robin Stone, Roxanne Wilson, and Leslie O’Rourke (collectively “Plaintiffs”) appeal the
Cole County Circuit Court’s dismissal of their legal malpractice claim against Turnbull Conway,
P.C. and Stephen Conway (collectively “Defendants”) for failure to state a claim upon which
relief can be granted. In their petition, Plaintiffs alleged that Defendants negligently failed to
timely draft and secure execution of amendments to Howard L. Walz’s (“Walz”) existing trust to
provide specific distributions to Plaintiffs prior to Walz’s death. In their sole point on appeal,
Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in dismissing their petition because the facts in their
petition sufficiently stated causes of action for legal malpractice. The judgment is affirmed.
Factual and Procedural Background1
In June 2018, Walz engaged Stephen Conway, a Missouri lawyer and employee of
Turnbull Conway, P.C., to provide estate planning services to accomplish and effect changes to
Walz’s estate plan and existing estate planning documents. Specifically, Walz instructed
Defendants to draft amendments to Walz’s existing trust agreement to provide for specific
distributions to Plaintiffs, and Defendants agreed to do so.
After Walz hired Defendants, but before Defendants accomplished the amendments to
Walz’s trust agreement as instructed, Walz’s health deteriorated, and he was hospitalized on
more than one occasion. Defendants were advised of Walz’s hospitalizations and of the
importance of promptly attending to Walz’s estate planning instructions, including the drafting of
the amendments of his trust to include specific distributions to Plaintiffs.
Walz died on September 11, 2018. His trust agreement was not amended before his
death.
On January 23, 2020, Plaintiffs filed their petition against Defendants for legal
malpractice. They alleged Defendants were negligent in one or more of the following respects:
a. failing to act with reasonable diligence and promptness in performing the
services they agreed to perform on behalf of Walz;
b. failing to timely draft amendments to the Walz trust agreement;
c. failing to timely secure execution of amendments to the Walz trust;
1
The facts set forth below, taken from Plaintiffs’ petition, are treated as true and are liberally construed in favor of
the plaintiffs. Lynch v. Lynch, 260 S.W.3d 834, 836 (Mo. banc 2008).
2
d. failing to effectuate the amendments to the Walz trust providing and resulting in
specific distributions to Plaintiffs;
e. failing to timely refer Walz to other counsel to draft amendments to the Walz
trust and/or effectuate the amendments to the Walz trust.
Plaintiffs alleged that, as a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ negligence, Walz’s
trust was not amended and Plaintiffs did not receive the specific distributions from the trust
estate as intended by Walz and were damaged as a result. Plaintiffs further asserted that they
were the intended beneficiaries of the amendments to Walz’s trust agreement that Defendants
were hired and instructed to effectuate and that if Defendants failed to effectuate the trust
amendments, it was foreseeable and certain that they would be damaged. They also asserted that
they had standing to bring the claims under Donahue v. Shughart, Thomson & Kilroy, P.C., 900
S.W.2d 624 (Mo. banc 1995).
On February 26, 2020, Defendants filed a motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ petition for failure
to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. They argued that Missouri law did not
recognize a cause of action for legal malpractice by non-clients who claimed they would have
been named beneficiaries if an estate or trust document had been executed.
Following a hearing on the motion, the trial court entered its judgment dismissing
Plaintiffs’ petition for failure to state a claim on December 21, 2020. This appeal by Plaintiffs
followed.
Standard of Review
“The standard of review for a trial court’s grant of a motion to dismiss is de novo.”
Lynch v. Lynch, 260 S.W.3d 834, 836 (Mo. banc 2008). In reviewing the dismissal of a petition
for failure to state a claim, the facts contained in the petition are treated as true and are liberally
construed in favor of the plaintiffs. Id. A “petition states a cause of action if its averments
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invoke principles of substantive law that may entitle the plaintiff to relief.” Id. (internal quotes
and citation omitted). The appellate court must affirm a dismissal if it can be sustained on any
ground which is supported by the motion to dismiss, regardless of whether the trial court relied
on that ground. Meyer v. Carson and Coil, 614 S.W.3d 618, 625 (Mo. App. W.D. 2020).
Defendants moved to dismiss Plaintiffs’ petition on the sole ground that Plaintiffs were non-
clients who did not fall within the privity exception in Donahue.
Analysis
In their sole point on appeal, Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in granting
Defendants’ motion to dismiss because the facts in their petition sufficiently stated a cause of
action for legal malpractice under the principles of Donahue. Specifically, they argue that they
alleged an attorney-client relationship existed in which Defendants agreed to perform services
specifically intended by Walz to benefit Plaintiffs resulting in an actionable legal duty owed to
Plaintiffs.
The four elements of legal malpractice are: (1) an attorney-client relationship; (2)
negligence or breach of contract by the defendant; (3) proximate causation of the plaintiff’s
damages; and (4) damages to the plaintiff. Meyer, 614 S.W.3d at 625. At issue in this case is the
first element. The existence of an attorney-client relationship between the plaintiff and the
attorney is an essential element because the duty to exercise reasonable care in the attorney’s
practice of the profession arises from that relationship. Id. “The attorney, with limited
exceptions, owes no actionable duty to strangers or non-parties to the attorney-client relationship
in the way legal responsibilities are performed.” Id. (internal quotes and citation omitted).
In Donahue, the Missouri Supreme Court created an exception to the traditional rule
requiring privity in the form of the existence of an attorney-client relationship, and allowed non-
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client, intended beneficiaries of executed (but failed) testamentary transfers to sue the donor’s
attorney for legal malpractice. 900 S.W.2d 628-29; Meyer, 614 S.W.3d at 625; Johnson v.
Sandler, Balkin, Hellman, & Weinstein, P.C., 958 S.W.2d 42, 48 (Mo. App. W.D. 1997). In
Donahue, Gerald Stockton sent his attorney checks drawn on his living trust payable to Mary
Donahue and Sundy McClung, who were not beneficiaries under the trust, and directed the
attorney to ensure that Donahue and McClung received the proceeds of the checks when
Stockton died. 900 S.W.2d at 625. In addition, Stockton directed his attorney to prepare a deed,
which Stockton executed, transferring a fifty-percent interest in his home to Donahue, effective
on Stockton’s death. Id. Stockton subsequently gave his attorney another check drawn on the
trust payable to Donahue upon his death. Id. After Stockton’s death, the testamentary transfers
were challenged in a declaratory judgment action and found invalid. Id. Donahue and McClung
sued the attorney and his law firm for legal malpractice. Id. at 626.
The Missouri Supreme Court recognized that allowing a non-client to bring a legal
malpractice action against an attorney could interfere with the attorney-client relationship. Id. at
628; Johnson, 958 S.W.2d at 48. To address the concern, it fashioned a two-part analysis to
determine whether a duty could be imposed on attorneys to non-clients. First, it must be
determined whether, “as a matter of fact, …an attorney-client relationship existed in which the
attorney-defendant performed services specifically intended by the client to benefit [non-client]
plaintiffs.” Donahue, 900 S.W.2d at 628-29. Second, Donahue indicated that “as a separate
matter, the question of [whether a] legal duty of attorneys to non-clients will be determined by
weighing” the client’s specific interest in benefiting the non-client against various other factors
that might weigh against imposing a duty. Id. at 629. Donahue listed the factors considered in
imposing a duty to the non-client, as follows:
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(1) the existence of a specific intent by the client that the purpose of the attorney’s
services were [sic] to benefit the plaintiffs.
(2) the foreseeability of the harm to the plaintiffs as a result of the attorney’s negligence.
(3) the degree of certainty that the plaintiffs will suffer injury from attorney misconduct.
(4) the closeness of the connection between the attorney’s conduct and the injury.
(5) the policy of preventing future harm.
(6) the burden on the profession of recognizing liability under the circumstances.
Id.
The Donahue court applied the six factors and found, as a matter of law, that they
weighed in favor of imposing a legal duty on attorneys to the non-client beneficiaries of
Stockton’s executed (but failed) testamentary transfers. Id.; Johnson, 958 S.W.2d at 49. It
explained:
Applying these six factors here, the pleadings state that Stockton’s primary
purpose in writing the checks and preparing and signing the deed was to benefit
the plaintiffs and, aside from Stockton’s desire that his property be distributed
according to his directions after his death, no benefit to him is apparent. It is clear
that plaintiffs cannot be characterized as incidental or indirect beneficiaries.
Negligent advice or preparation of testamentary documents was almost certain to
cause plaintiffs injury. The conduct of [the attorney] and the law firm was
directly connected to the injury. Future harm may only be prevented by allowing
intended beneficiaries of failed testamentary transfers some avenue of recovery in
malpractice claims, particularly where the estate has interests inconsistent with
those of the intended beneficiaries. The legal profession will not be unduly
burdened by being required to act competently toward identifiable persons that a
client specifically intends to benefit when such persons have no other viable
remedy and where such persons are not in an adversarial relationship to the client.
The Court concludes that the facts as pleaded here are sufficient to assert a breach
of a legal duty and to state a cause of action in a lawyer malpractice action.
Donahue, 900 S.W.2d at 629.
This court decided Johnson v. Sandler, Balkin, Hellman, & Weinstein, P.C., 958 S.W.2d
42, 48 (Mo. App. W.D. 1997), two years later. In Johnson, Harry Adreme’s attorney drafted, and
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Adreme executed, trust amendments that left half of his trust to his daughters, Gail Johnson and
Sandra Butler, and his granddaughter, Lori Baca, and the other half held in a qualified terminable
interest property (“QTIP”) trust with the income payable to his (second) wife during her life, and
the remainder passing to Johnson, Butler, and Baca. Id. at 45. After Adreme’s death, his wife
elected to take her spousal share against the trust, thus depriving Johnson, Butler, and Baca of the
QTIP trust remainder and defeating Adreme’s expressed intent to benefit them as residual
beneficiaries. Id. at 45-46. Johnson, Butler, and Baca sued the attorney and his law firm for
legal malpractice. Id. at 46.
Following Donahue, in Johnson, this court reversed the trial court’s summary judgment
in favor of the attorney and law firm, finding that the evidence created a genuine issue of
material fact as to whether Adreme intended the services performed by the attorney and law firm
to benefit plaintiffs Johnson, Butler, and Baca so that the attorneys owed a duty to the non-client
plaintiffs. Id. at 52. In analyzing whether the services the attorney and the law firm performed
on Adreme’s behalf were intended by him to benefit Johnson, Butler, and Baca, the Johnson
court found that the non-client plaintiffs were specifically-named beneficiaries of the executed
trust amendments, including the QTIP trust, which the attorney and the law firm prepared. Id. at
50. It explained that to satisfy Donahue’s first requirement (that the attorney had been retained
to benefit the non-client beneficiaries) it is not necessary that the client advise the attorney
drafting the testamentary document that he or she “intends to benefit” the beneficiaries. Id. It
reasoned that because “[t]he main purpose of retaining an attorney to prepare a testamentary trust
is to ensure the future transfer of the settlor’s estate to the [named] beneficiaries designated by
the settlor[,]…an intent to benefit is inherent in designating persons as beneficiaries of a trust or
will.” Id. In short, Johnson determined that there need not be direct statements from the client
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in order to infer his intent to retain an attorney to benefit named beneficiaries, as that intent could
be inferred from their inclusion as beneficiaries in the executed documents. Id. In Johnson, the
intent to benefit the non-clients hinged upon Johnson’s execution of the testamentary instrument
that included them as beneficiaries. Id.
Donahue and Johnson allowed beneficiaries specifically identified in executed (but
failed) testamentary instruments to bring legal malpractice claims. Donahue referred to “failed
testamentary transfers” and “[n]egligent advice or preparation of testamentary documents” in
analyzing the six factors regarding legal duty of attorneys to non-clients. Donahue, 900 S.W.2d
at 629. The Donahue court noted that the decedent’s intended purpose could be discerned “in
[his] writing the checks and preparing and signing the deed.” Id. (emphasis added). Similarly, in
Johnson, our court found a legal duty owed by an attorney to non-client beneficiaries of “failed
wills or trusts” and, specifically, that the decedent’s intent to benefit the non-client beneficiaries
could be inferred from decedent’s “designation of appellants as residual beneficiaries of the
[executed] QTIP trust.” Johnson, 958 S.W.2d at 49, 52.
Under Donahue and Johnson, the intended beneficiaries, as evidenced by the executed
testamentary documents, were permitted to bring actions for legal malpractice against the
attorneys based on allegations that the attorney’s negligence caused the testamentary transfers or
instruments to fail and caused the beneficiaries to lose the intended bequest. Donahue, 900
S.W.2d at 629; Johnson, 958 S.W.2d at 52. In both cases, the decedent’s intent to benefit the
non-client plaintiffs was reflected by their execution of documents that included them as
intended beneficiaries of the testamentary documents. Donahue went on to weigh that
manifested intention against various other factors in order to determine whether the non-client
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beneficiaries named in the executed testamentary document were owed a duty of care by (and
could thus bring a malpractice claim against) the attorney that prepared the executed documents.
Both Johnson and Donahue involved allegations that a decedent executed documents that
intended to benefit plaintiffs, but, due to the negligence of decedent’s counsel, those intended
transfers failed. At issue in both of those cases was 1) whether the decedent intended to benefit
plaintiffs at the time the testamentary documents were executed and 2) did those efforts fail due
to the negligence of the attorney. The instant case, however, does not involve a failed (but
executed) testamentary instrument, in which Plaintiffs were intended beneficiaries. Rather,
Plaintiffs allege that Defendants were negligent in failing to timely draft and secure execution of
amendments to Walz’s trust to include specific distributions to Plaintiffs. Where the relevant
testamentary documents are never executed (like this case), issues related to the testator’s intent
are far more tenuous than where (as in Donahue and Johnson) the testator’s intent has been
manifested in an executed document. Indeed, the testator’s desires when engaging the services
of the attorney may well change prior to executing the testamentary document. As Donahue and
Johnson teaches us, it is testator’s intent at the time of executing the failed testamentary
documents that is relevant, not at some prior point in time.
Plaintiffs ask this court to extend the exception to the general rule requiring privity, to
impose on attorneys a duty to prospective beneficiaries of undrafted, unexecuted testamentary
documents.2 Plaintiffs, however, do not direct us to any cases imposing such a duty in this state
2
It is also worth noting that, in this matter, Walz had manifested through execution of the previous trust instruments,
a certain disposition of his assets upon his death; and that Plaintiffs allege that Defendants were engaged to prepare
documents to change that disposition in their favor. Plaintiffs propose that a duty should be imposed upon
Defendants, based upon the assumption (which is necessarily speculative) that Walz would have ultimately executed
such trust amendments in their favor—an assumption that is contrary to his manifested intention to dispose of his
assets as set forth in the existing and executed trust instruments.
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or any other jurisdiction, and we have independently found none. Because the lack of an
executed testamentary document introduces rampant speculation into the analysis, we decline
Plaintiffs’ request to extend the exception and find persuasive the reasoning of courts in several
jurisdictions that have similarly declined to impose a duty of care to prospective beneficiaries
where the alleged negligence concerns the failure to promptly draft and secure execution of
testamentary documents. See Strong v. Fitzpatrick, 169 A.3d 783 (Vt. 2017); Rydde v. Morris,
675 S.E.2d 431 (S.C. 2009); Sisson v. Jankowski, 809 A.2d 1265 (N.H. 2002); Miller v. Mooney,
725 N.E.2d 545 (Mass. 2000); Krawczyk v. Stingle, 543 A.2d 733 (Conn. 1988); Parks v. Fink,
293 P.3d 1275 (Wash. Ct. App. 2013); Babcock v. Malone, 760 So.2d 1056 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App.
2000); Radovich v. Locke-Paddon, 41 Cal.Rptr.2d 573 (Cal. Ct. App. 1995). Those courts have
reasoned that “imposing on attorneys a duty to prospective beneficiaries of undrafted,
unexecuted wills would undermine the duty of loyalty that an attorney owes to his or her client
and invite claims premised on speculation regarding the testator’s intent.” Strong, 169 A.3d at
789.
Imposing a duty to prospective beneficiaries of undrafted, unexecuted testamentary
instruments would not comport with an attorney’s duty of undivided loyalty to the client and
would create a potential conflict of interest to the testator and the prospective beneficiaries. In
Krawczyk, the Connecticut Supreme Court explained,
A central dimension of the attorney-client relationship is the attorney’s duty of
entire devotion to the interest of the client. This obligation would be undermined
were an attorney to be held liable to third parties if, due to the attorney’s delay,
the testator did not have an opportunity to execute estate planning documents
prior to death. Imposition of liability would create an incentive for an attorney to
exert pressure on a client to complete and execute estate planning documents
summarily. Fear of liability to potential third party beneficiaries would
contravene the attorney’s primary responsibility to ensure that the proposed estate
plan effectuates the client’s wishes and that the client understands the available
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options and the legal and practical implications of whatever course of action is
ultimately chosen. These potential conflicts of interest are especially significant
in the context of the final disposition of a client’s estate, where the testator’s
testamentary capacity and the absence of undue influence are often central issues.
Krawczyk, 543 A.2d at 736 (internal quotes and citations omitted).
Additionally, imposing a duty to prospective beneficiaries of undrafted, unexecuted
testamentary instruments would invite claims premised on improper speculation regarding the
testator’s intent. Strong, 169 A.3d at 789. As the Vermont Supreme Court explained in Strong,
“This risk is particularly high in the estate-planning context because the primary witness who
could speak to testamentary intent is deceased when a claim is made.” Id. In the absence of an
executed testamentary document manifesting the testator’s intent, “the risk of misinterpreting the
testator’s intent increases dramatically” and “the tendency to manufacture false evidence that
cannot be rebutted due to the unavailability of the testator” is heightened. Babcock, 760 So.2d at
1057 (internal quotes and citation omitted). “Moreover, even if a testator had made note of his or
her intent through declarations to relatives, friends, neighbors and the like…that intent may
change over time during the estate-planning process.” Strong, 169 A.3d at 789. “[C]ommon
experience teaches that potential testators may change their minds more than once after the first
meeting [with their attorney].” Radovich, 41 Cal.Rptr.2d at 582. The Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court recognized:
A client who engages an attorney to prepare a will may seem set on a particular
plan for the distribution of her estate….It is not uncommon, however, for a client
to have a change of heart after reviewing a draft will. Confronting a last will and
testament can produce complex psychological demands on a client that may
require considerable periods of reflection. An attorney frequently prepares
multiple drafts of a will before the client is reconciled to the result. The most
simple distributive provisions may be the most difficult for the client to accept.
Considerable patience and compassion can be required of attorneys drafting wills,
especially where the client seeks guidance through very private and sensitive
matters. If a duty arose as to every prospective beneficiary mentioned by the
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client, the attorney-client relationship would become unduly burdened. Attorneys
could find themselves in a quandary whenever the client had a change of mind,
and the results would hasten to absurdity.
Miller, 725 N.E.2d at 550-51.
Plaintiffs have alleged, and in reviewing the grant of the Defendants’ motion to dismiss
we therefore accept as true, that, at the time Walz engaged Defendants, he requested that they
prepare instruments that would have benefited Plaintiffs upon his death. However, as we have
previously indicated, both Donahue and Johnson addressed the intent of the testator at the time
of execution of the testamentary instrument. Because we cannot know what Walz’s specific
intent would have been upon execution of any such instruments (or whether he would have even
executed such instruments), and because such prospective intent is necessarily speculative,
Plaintiffs’ claim fails the first step of the Donahue analysis.
Even if we were to allow that “engaging” the attorney to prepare trust amendments
intended to benefit non-clients (as alleged by Plaintiffs) would, by itself, satisfy the first part of
the Donahue analysis (which we do not), in weighing that alleged intent (also the first factor
considered in the second part of the Donahue analysis) against the remaining factors enumerated
in Donahue, we do not find that a legal duty should be imposed upon attorneys (Defendants) to
prospective beneficiaries for failure to prepare testamentary instruments that might have been
executed had they been timely prepared.
The second and third factors considered in Donahue (foreseeability of harm to the
plaintiffs and the degree of certainty that the non-client will suffer injury from attorney
misconduct) weigh against imposing a duty to the non-client prospective beneficiary of
unexecuted testamentary instruments. When it is unknown whether, had the documents been
timely prepared, the client (Walz) would have executed them at all, or in the form as anticipated,
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it is far less clear whether the non-client Plaintiffs suffered any injury due to Defendants’ failure
to timely prepare the trust amendments.
The closeness of the connection between the attorney’s conduct (the delay in preparing
the trust amendments) and the injury (the fourth factor in Donahue) is likewise attenuated,
because we simply cannot know whether Walz would have actually executed the trust
instruments in the form anticipated by Plaintiffs.
Donahue’s fifth factor (the policy of preventing future harm) requires us to consider what
harms might be prevented by imposing a duty to non-client prospective beneficiaries to timely
(and correctly) prepare testamentary instruments, and conversely, to consider the future harm that
might go unchecked (generally) if we fail to impose a duty to non-client prospective
beneficiaries in these circumstances. While one would hope that reputational harm and the
enforcement of the rules of professional conduct might serve as some incentive to attorneys to
timely and diligently pursue the preparation of such instruments, imposition of liability to non-
clients for failing to do so would certainly be another powerful incentive to encourage attorneys
to timely prepare documents under such circumstances.
However, we cannot consider the fifth factor, without also addressing the sixth factor
discussed in Donahue – the burden on the profession imposed by recognizing liability under
these circumstances. Imposing a duty to prospective beneficiaries of undrafted, unexecuted
testamentary instruments would not comport with an attorney’s duty of undivided loyalty to the
client and would create a potential conflict of interest to the testator and the prospective
beneficiaries. As stated in Krawczyk, “[t]hese potential conflicts of interest are especially
significant in the context of the final disposition of a client’s estate, where the testator’s
testamentary capacity and the absence of undue influence are often central issues.” Krawczyk,
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543 A.2d at 736 (internal quotes and citations omitted). In Sisson, the New Hampshire Supreme
Court reasoned,
[T]he potential for conflict between the interests of a prospective beneficiary and
a testator militates against recognizing a duty of care….Whereas a testator and the
beneficiary of a will have a mutual interest in ensuring that an attorney drafts the
will non-negligently, a prospective beneficiary may be interested in the will’s
prompt execution, while the testator or testatrix may be interested in having
sufficient time to consider and understand his or her estate planning options.
Sisson, 809 A.2d at 1269. “The imposition of a duty on an attorney to a prospective beneficiary
of a nonexistent will would wreak havoc on the attorney’s ethical duty of undivided loyalty to
the client and force an impermissible wedge in the attorney-client relationship.” Rydde, 675
S.E.2d at 435.
In this matter, imposing a duty before execution of the instruments to non-client
prospective beneficiaries (such as Plaintiffs) to timely prepare testamentary instruments would
interfere with (or at the very least compete with) the estate planning attorney’s duty of undivided
loyalty to the client to see that the client has adequate time to reflect on what he desires,
including the opportunity to change his mind and/or execute a plan that is not what the non-client
prospective beneficiary desires. See Strong, 169 A.3d at 789. Unlike this case, Donahue and
Johnson did not involve unexecuted testamentary instruments; did not therefore address whether
to impose a duty of care, ex ante, to prospective non-client beneficiaries of unexecuted
instruments; and did not thus divide (or dilute) the estate planning attorney’s duty of undivided
loyalty to his client in the preparation and execution of the testamentary instruments.
For all of the reasons stated, we decline to extend the Donahue exception to the
traditional privity requirement to permit a malpractice claim by a non-client prospective
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beneficiary for negligent failure to draft and secure execution of a testamentary document.3 In
this case, absent an executed testamentary document, Plaintiffs were, at most, prospective
beneficiaries. Defendants did not owe a duty of care to Plaintiffs regarding the proposed
amendments to Walz’s trust. As a matter of law, Plaintiffs failed to allege facts that would
establish that Defendants owed them a duty of care, an essential element for their legal
malpractice claim. The trial court, therefore, did not err in granting Defendants’ motion to
dismiss. The point is denied.
Conclusion
The judgment is affirmed.
Thomas N. Chapman, Presiding Judge
All concur.
3
We recognize that different considerations may arise when it is alleged that an attorney negligently advised a client
that it was unnecessary to execute testamentary instruments, or that it was unnecessary to amend existing
testamentary instruments, to achieve the client’s testamentary intent.
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