[Cite as Meehan v. Smith, 2022-Ohio-2359.]
COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
MARCIA MEEHAN, TRUSTEE AND :
BENEFICIARY, ET AL., :
Plaintiffs-Appellants, :
No. 110976
v. :
N. LINDSEY SMITH, ET AL., :
Defendants-Appellees. :
JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED
RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: July 7, 2022
Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
Case No. CV-19-916154
Appearances:
Anelli Law, LLC, and Dianna M. Anelli, for appellants.
Coakley Lammert Co., LPA, and George S. Coakley, for
appellees.
CORNELIUS J. O’SULLIVAN, JR., J.:
Plaintiffs-appellants appeal from the trial court’s decision granting
summary judgment in favor of defendants-appellees N. Lindsey Smith and Todd
Bartimole. After a thorough review of the law and facts, we determine that there are
no genuine issues of material fact and appellees are entitled to judgment as a matter
of law. We therefore affirm the trial court’s judgment.
The plaintiffs-appellants in this case are as follows: (1) Marcia Meehan,
Trustee and Beneficiary under the Thomas P. Meehan Trust and the Donna M.
Meehan Trust dated December 16, 2010; (2) the Thomas P. Meehan Trust, Marcia
Meehan, Trustee; (3) the Donna M. Meehan Trust, dated December 20, 2010,
Marcia Meehan, Trustee; (4) Teepee & Petunia, LLC, Marcia Meehan, President and
Manager; and (5) “Jane Doe, Executor of the Estate of Donna M. Meehan[,] Marcia
Meehan, Plaintiff of a Will Contest.” For ease of discussion, we will use “appellant”
as a reference to Marcia Meehan, representing all of the plaintiffs-appellants.
The defendants-appellees are licensed Ohio attorneys.
Factual and Procedural Background
Appellant is the daughter of Thomas and Donna Meehan. Thomas and
Donna have three other adult children: Patrick Meehan, Timothy Meehan, and
Michael Meehan. There are several Meehan grandchildren.
Thomas and Donna owned property that they referred to as “the farm”
in Harrison County, Ohio. In 2010, the couple entered into oil and gas and mineral
rights leases on the property; the leases generated substantial income. Around the
same time that they entered into the leases, Thomas and Donna hired defendant-
appellee N. Lindsey Smith, who was an attorney with the firm Smith and Condeni,
for estate planning, asset protection, Medicaid planning, and business organization
purposes.
Smith, along with other attorneys at Smith and Condeni, prepared,
among other estate planning documents, revocable living trusts and wills for
Thomas and Donna. The attorneys also created Teepee & Petunia, an LLC, for the
purpose of owning the farm and receiving the revenues from the leases. The
documentation and invoices relative to the firm’s work identified Thomas and
Donna Meehan as the firm’s clients.
Under the trusts, Thomas and Donna were the donors and initial
trustees of their respective trusts. Donna was named the successor trustee of
Thomas’s trust and appellant was named as the second successor trustee. Appellant
was named as the successor trustee of Donna’s 2010 trust. The trusts were
reciprocal “A/B marital trusts” that distributed trust income and principal first to
each spouse for life, and then, after their deaths, to their children and grandchildren.
In regard to Teepee & Petunia, Thomas and Donna were each 50
percent members and appellant was the statutory agent, manager, and sole officer.
In 2012, Teepee & Petunia received a substantial income distribution from the oil
and gas leases. Thereafter, the corporation received substantial monthly income
from royalties received from the leases.
Thomas died in August 2012, and in 2017, Donna moved to a nursing
home. At the time Donna moved into a nursing home, the royalties on the leases
had diminished and Teepee & Petunia’s bank funds were below $100,000. Two of
Thomas and Donna’s sons, Patrick and Timothy, were concerned that Donna would
run out of money. They were upset about, and blamed appellant for, the diminishing
funds. Thus, in October 2017, the two brothers met with Smith to discuss the
dwindling assets.
At the time of the brothers’ meeting with Smith, Smith had left the
Smith and Condeni firm and was practicing at Cavitch, Familo & Durkin (“Cavitch”).
Smith introduced the brothers to defendant-appellee Todd Bartimole, who was an
attorney at the Cavitch firm. Timothy and Patrick sought to have Donna’s trust and
Teepee & Petunia’s documents revised to grant Timothy authority over the
corporation’s accounts and other trust assets. Neither Donna nor appellant was
present at the meeting.
In April 2018, Donna revised her estate plan, which included executing
a new will, a 2018 Donna Meehan Family Trust, and an amended operating plan for
Teepee & Petunia. Under the amended operating plan for Teepee & Petunia,
Timothy became a co-manager with appellant, and under Donna’s new trust,
Timothy became a co-trustee with appellant. Timothy, Donna, and appellant all
signed the necessary documents to effectuate Donna’s revised plan.
Donna died in May 2018. At the time of her mother’s death, appellant
was (1) a co-trustee with Timothy of the Donna Meehan Family Trust (2018); (2) a
co-manager with Timothy of Teepee & Petunia; and (3) an officer of Teepee &
Petunia. Under the three subject trusts — the Thomas J. Meehan Trust, the Donna
M. Meehan Trust (2010), and the Donna Meehan Family Trust (2018) — appellant
receives the same distribution she was always set to receive — 25 percent.
After Donna’s death, in August 2018, attorney Bartimole sent a
memorandum to appellant and Timothy. The subject of the memorandum was,
“Donna Meehan Estate and Trust Administration.” In the memorandum, Bartimole
provided an overview of Donna’s assets and her estate planning documents.
Bartimole also offered suggestions for administering Donna’s will and her 2018
family trust. Cavitch’s invoices for the work the firm performed indicate the services
were rendered for “Donna Meehan (Estate Plan).”
Appellant had a contentious relationship with Timothy and Patrick,
and vice versa. Timothy and Patrick were upset with appellant because they believed
she had “blown through” their parents’ money. Appellant was upset with the
brothers because she believed they were duplicitous in getting their mother to
change her estate planning documents. After Donna’s death, Timothy and Patrick
proposed a settlement agreement to appellant, but she rejected it. Instead, appellant
filed a declaratory judgment action in probate court, seeking to overturn Donna’s
2018 revised estate plan. Appellant also filed the within legal malpractice action
against appellees Smith and Bartimole.
Appellant’s Discovery Deposition Testimony
At the discovery deposition in this case, appellant testified that she
never signed an engagement letter with appellees. She also testified that she
personally never paid them any money (she only issued checks drawn from Teepee
& Petunia’s accounts at her parents’ direction). However, appellant testified that
when her parents initially sought estate planning services, and she and other family
members met with appellee attorney Smith, “it was [her] assumption that he was
representing the entire family.” Appellant testified that she had that assumption
because Smith “would always say to [her] specifically if [she] had any questions to
make sure [she] [s]hould give him a call.”
Appellant further testified that she “felt [she] was being included” in
the meetings with her parents and brothers, and Smith “represented the
documents.” Donna’s estate planning also provided for the possibility that her 2018
trust funds could be used for appellant’s own estate planning — a point appellant
relies on for her claim of the establishment of an attorney-client relationship.
Appellant did admit that Smith never told her he was representing the entire family.
She further admitted that Smith never told her he was representing her personally.
She testified that Smith never told her in “those specific words” that he was her
attorney, but she “felt like [she] was his client because [she] was included, as were
[her] brothers that were there. It was [her] understanding that [Smith] was
representing the family under the estate planning of [her] parents.” (Emphasis
added.) The record demonstrates that appellant does not have any legal training.
Appellant specifically testified that “[t]he subject matter for all the
meetings [was her] parents’ estate and trust.” She further testified that after a 2014
meeting she and other family members participated in with appellee Smith, she had
no contact with him until 2017. In 2017, Smith introduced appellee Bartimole to the
family and told them Bartimole would be helping with Donna’s estate documents
and provided Medicaid specific estate planning.
According to appellant, she became Bartimole’s client when he started
working on the estate planning affairs and felt that this could have occurred before
she even met him. Appellant acknowledged that Bartimole too never told her he was
her attorney. In fact, she testified that when she first met Bartimole at an April 2018
meeting with Donna, he was representing Donna at that meeting.
Appellant testified that at the April 2018 meeting when Donna revised
her estate plan, attorney Bartimole requested that appellant and Timothy leave the
room so that he could speak to Donna alone. After an approximate ten-minute
meeting alone with Donna, Bartimole had appellant and Timothy re-enter the room
and appellant, Timothy, and Donna all signed the respective documents.
At the close of discovery, appellees filed a motion for summary
judgment asserting that they never entered into an attorney-client relationship with
appellant. The trial court granted their motion, stating the following:
This court is unwilling to extend the attorney-client relationship to
beneficiaries and/or trustees of a trust. It is undisputed that there was
no express attorney-client relationship as evidenced by the lack of an
engagement letter or an invoice for services rendered to plaintiff, for
which plaintiff, herself, paid. Further, it is unreasonable for a
beneficiary and/or trustee to believe that an attorney-client
relationship exists simply because of their status as the trustee and/or
beneficiary. Accordingly, as no attorney-client relationship exists,
either expressly or implied, no duty is owed that gives rise to a claim for
legal malpractice.
Appellant assigns the following errors for review:
I. The trial court erred when it ruled that plaintiffs lacked an attorney-
client relationship with defendants.
II. The trial court erred when it ruled that plaintiffs’ belief that there
was an implied attorney-client relationship was unreasonable.
III. The trial court erred when it ruled that formation of an attorney-
client relationship between plaintiffs and defendants required it to
extend the attorney-client relationship to beneficiaries and trustees of
the trusts.
Law and Analysis
Standard of Review
This court reviews a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary
judgment de novo, applying the same standard applied by the trial court. Grafton
v. Ohio Edison Co., 77 Ohio St.3d 102, 105, 671 N.E.2d 241 (1996). We accord no
deference to the trial court’s decision and independently review the record to
determine whether summary judgment is appropriate.
Under Civ.R. 56, summary judgment is appropriate when no genuine
issue exists as to any material fact and, viewing the evidence most strongly in favor
of the nonmoving party, reasonable minds can reach only one conclusion that is
adverse to the nonmoving party, entitling the moving party to judgment as a matter
of law. See Civ.R. 56(C).
On a motion for summary judgment, the moving party carries an
initial burden of identifying specific facts in the record that demonstrate his or her
entitlement to summary judgment. Dresher v. Burt, 75 Ohio St.3d 280, 292-293,
662 N.E.2d 264 (1996). If the moving party fails to meet this burden, summary
judgment is not appropriate; if the moving party meets this burden, the nonmoving
party must then point to evidence of specific facts in the record demonstrating the
existence of a genuine issue of material fact for trial. Id. at 293. “[A] nonmovant
may not rest on the mere allegations or denials of his pleading but must set forth
specific facts showing there is a genuine issue for trial.” Chaney v. Clark Cty.
Agricultural Soc., 90 Ohio App.3d 421, 424, 629 N.E.2d 513 (2d Dist.1993).
Further, to survive summary judgment, a plaintiff must produce “more than a mere
scintilla of evidence” in support of his or her position. Redd v. Springfield Twp.
School Dist., 91 Ohio App.3d 88, 92, 631 N.E.2d 1076 (9th Dist.1993), citing
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-253, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d
202 (1986). If the nonmoving party fails to meet this burden, summary judgment is
appropriate. Id.
Further, we are mindful that the Supreme Court of Ohio noted in
Peters v. B. & F. Transfer Co., 7 Ohio St.2d 143, 219 N.E.2d 27 (1966), “‘[u]nder our
law it is just as pernicious to submit a case to a jury and permit the jury to speculate
with the rights of citizens when no question for the jury is involved, as to deny to a
citizen his [or her] trial by jury when he [or she] has the right.’” Id. at paragraph
eight of the syllabus, quoting J. C. Penny Co. v. Robison, 128 Ohio St. 626, 193 N.E.
401 (1934), paragraph six of the syllabus. Indeed, the Ohio Supreme Court has
indicated that granting of summary judgement “should be encouraged in proper
cases.” North v. Pennsylvania RR. Co., 9 Ohio St.2d, 169, 171, 224 N.E.2d 757
(1967).
Appellant’s three assignments of error are interrelated and for the
ease of discussion will be considered together.
Legal Malpractice
The Supreme Court of Ohio has stated the following regarding a legal
malpractice claim:
To establish a cause of action for legal malpractice, a claimant must
demonstrate the existence of an attorney-client relationship giving rise
to a duty, a breach of that duty, and damages proximately caused by
that breach. Krahn v. Kinney (1989), 43 Ohio St.3d 103, 105, 538
N.E.2d 1058. Accordingly, as we explained in Shoemaker v.
Gindlesberger, 118 Ohio St.3d 226, 2008-Ohio-2012, 887 N.E.2d
1167,“[i]f a plaintiff fails to establish a genuine issue of material fact as
to any of the elements, [the attorney] is entitled to summary judgment.”
Id. at ¶ 8.
New Destiny Treatment Ctr., Inc. v. Wheeler, 129 Ohio St.3d 39, 2011-Ohio-2266,
950 N.E.2d 157, ¶ 25.
For a malpractice claim to succeed, there must be an attorney-client
relationship. Appellees contend that they owed no duty to appellant because they
never had an attorney-client relationship with her. The important considerations
are the manifest intentions of the attorney and prospective client. Id. at ¶ 26.
A relationship of attorney and client arises when a person manifests an
intention to obtain legal services from an attorney and the attorney
either consents or fails to negate consent when the person has
reasonably assumed that the relationship has been established. [1
Hazard & Hodes, The Law of Lawyering (2005) 2-8, Section 2.5]; 1
Restatement of the Law 3rd, The Law Governing Lawyers (2000) 126-
128, Section 14. Thus, the existence of an attorney-client relationship
does not depend on an express contract but may be implied based on
the conduct of the parties and the reasonable expectations of the
putative client.
Id.
In Shoemaker, the Supreme Court of Ohio found that, generally,
potential beneficiaries to a will do not have standing to file a negligence suit against
the attorney who drafted the decedent’s will. Id. at ¶ 10. The court recognized that
“[t]he necessity for privity may be overridden if special circumstances such as ‘fraud,
bad faith, collusion or other malicious conduct’ are present.” Id. at ¶ 11, quoting
Simon v. Zipperstein, 32 Ohio St.3d 74, 76, 512 N.E.2d 636 (1987).
The Ohio Supreme Court also recognized that Ohio is among the
states that apply a strict privity requirement in the area of estate planning.
Shoemaker, 118 Ohio St.3d. 226, 2008-Ohio-2012, 887 N.E.2d 1167, at ¶ 14. The
court explained that public policy justifies adherence to the strict privity rule
because (1) the rule ensures that attorneys may represent their clients without threat
of suit from third parties, (2) without the rule, an attorney could have conflicting
duties and divided loyalties during the estate planning process, and (3) there would
be unlimited potential liability for the lawyer. Id. at ¶ 14-15.
Lack of Express Attorney-Client Relationship Between Appellees
and Appellant Individually, or in any of her Roles
Appellant admits that she never signed an engagement letter with
appellees and never paid them any money. The invoices for all services were issued
either in Thomas and Donna’s names, or just Donna’s name. There is no express
agreement between appellant individually and appellees.
There is also no express agreement between appellant, in any of her
roles, and appellees. Appellant’s reliance on documentation in the record in support
of her claim of an attorney-client relationship is misplaced. For example, appellant
contends that the “summary of estate plan” for her parents created an attorney-
client relationship between her, as trustee, and appellees. That document, along
with other documents in the record, only demonstrate that appellees represented
Thomas and Donna Meehan — Thomas and Donna are specifically named as the
“clients.” Moreover, references in the documentation to appellant and the Meehans’
other children and grandchildren did not create an express attorney-client
relationship between appellees and appellant or any other beneficiaries or potential
trustees.
Further, appellant’s contention that she has the right to sue on behalf
of Teepee & Petunia as an officer and manager of the company is misplaced. A
limited liability company, such as Teepee & Petunia, exists as an entity separate from
its members and is capable of suing and of being sued. Trickett v. Masi, 11th Dist.
Portage No. 2018-P-0006, 2018-Ohio-4270, ¶ 19, citing Disciplinary Counsel v.
Kafele, 108 Ohio St.3d 283, 2006-Ohio-904, 843 N.E.2d 169, ¶ 18; Cleveland Bar
Assn. v. Pearlman, 106 Ohio St.3d 136, 2005-Ohio-4107, 832 N.E.2d 1193, ¶ 36
(O’Donnell, J., dissenting); Ogle v. Hocking Cty., 4th Dist. Hocking No. 14CA3,
2014-Ohio-5422, ¶ 25. “Thus, members of a limited liability company, even if they
are the sole members of the company, do not have standing to sue on its behalf.”
Trickett at id., citing Ogle. Appellant’s designation as an officer and manager of
Teepee & Petunia does not provide her standing in this matter.
Lack of Implied Attorney-Client Relationship Between Appellees
and Appellant Individually, or in any of her Roles
We next consider the issue that is the crux of this case, that is, whether
appellant had an implied attorney-client relationship with appellees. The Supreme
Court of Ohio has held that “an attorney-client relationship may be created by
implication based upon the conduct of the parties and the reasonable expectations
of the person seeking representation.” Cuyahoga Cty. Bar Assn. v. Hardiman, 100
Ohio St.3d 260, 2003-Ohio-5596, 798 N.E.2d 369, ¶ 8. The focus is on the
“reasonable expectations of the person seeking representation” in determining
whether an attorney-client relationship was formed. Id. “A relationship of attorney
and client arises when a person manifests an intention to obtain legal services from
an attorney and the attorney either consents or fails to negate consent when the
person has reasonably assumed that the relationship has been established.” New
Destiny Treatment Ctr., 129 Ohio St.3d 39, 2011-Ohio-2266, 950 N.E.2d 157, at
¶ 26, citing 1 Hazard & Hodes, The Law of Lawyering, Section 2.5, at 2-8 and 1
Restatement of the Law 3rd, The Law Governing Lawyers, Section 14, at 126-128.
In determining whether a putative client’s belief was reasonable under
the circumstances, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, applying Ohio law, has set
forth the following factors to be considered:
whether (1) the client shared confidential information with the
attorney, (2) the attorney offered legal advice or services, (3) the client
relied on the advice, (4) the client sought to form an attorney-client
relationship, (5) the attorney appeared on behalf of the client in judicial
or administrative proceedings, and (6) the attorney prepared legal
instruments.
Hustler Cincinnati, Inc. v. Cambria, 625 Fed. Appx. 712, 716 (Aug. 14, 2015), citing
Sayyah v. Cutrell, 143 Ohio App.3d 102, 757 N.E.2d 779 (12th Dist.2001); see also
Bohan v. McDonald Hopkins, L.L.C., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 110060, 2021-Ohio-
4131, ¶ 24-25 (granting summary judgment in favor of law firm because evidence
failed to establish an attorney-client relationship by implication where attorneys
only represented the corporate entity rather than its corporate officers and directors
individually); Fornshell v. Roetzel & Andress, L.P.A., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga Nos. 92132
and 92161, 2009-Ohio-2728, ¶ 51, 59 (granting summary judgment in favor of law
firm because evidence failed to establish an attorney-client relationship where
attorneys only represented the limited liability companies rather than its members
individually).
The bar for proving an implied attorney-client relationship is high.
Innuendos and insinuations do not suffice to form such a bond; the
parties must point to “the manifest intentions of the attorney and the
prospective client.” New Destiny Treatment Ctr., Inc. v. Wheeler, 129
Ohio St.3d 39, 2011-Ohio-2266, 950 N.E.2d 157, 162 (Ohio 2011)
(emphasis added). In this sense, the term “implied attorney-client
relationship” is a misnomer. The relationship is implied only in the
sense that it does not emerge from a formal contract; it comes from the
parties’ less formal — yet still manifest — expectations.
(Emphasis sic.) Hustler at id.
Appellant contends that she believed appellees were representing her
personally “largely based on confidential information [appellees] solicited from her
as to how she wanted her property, including her inheritance from Tom and Donna,
distributed after she passed.”
In support of her contention that she had an attorney-client
relationship with appellees, appellant relies on two memoranda prepared by
appellees — one was to Donna and the other was to appellant and her brothers
Timothy and Patrick. The memoranda were relative to Donna’s estate planning and
referenced the possibility of using funds from the Donna Meehan Family Trust to
pay for appellant’s estate planning. Those memoranda do not evidence an implied
attorney-client relationship between appellant and appellees. There is no evidence
in the record that the proposal ever came to fruition and even if it had it would have
been a gift given by Donna to appellant.
The record demonstrates that in January 2019, an attorney sent a
letter to appellee Smith stating that she represented appellant, and more
specifically, that appellant retained her to administer the Thomas Meehan Trust, the
Donna Meehan Trust (2010), and co-administer the Donna Meehan Family Trust
(2018). Further, there is no evidence that appellees rendered any legal advice to
appellant or that she relied on same. Moreover, the appellees never appeared in any
judicial or administrative proceedings on appellant’s behalf, nor did they prepare
any legal documents on her behalf.
A review of appellant’s deposition testimony demonstrates that, by
her own admission, appellees were representing her parents. Her testimony on this
issue includes the following: (1) her brothers told her they had been in contact with
appellee Smith “to discuss my mom’s estate planning”; (2) appellees “were
presenting that some estate planning needed to de done, some Medicaid planning
for my mother”; (3) the subject matter for all the meetings [was] my parents’ estate
and trust”; and (4) appellee Smith “said * * * in general to the [family] that he was
the lawyer representing the documents and [told the family] what [he was]
preparing [them] for the estate of our parents.”
The record further demonstrates that the attorney-client relationship
was formed with Thomas and Donna by the fact that appellee Bartimole requested
at the April 2018 meeting that appellant and Timothy leave the room so that he could
speak to Donna alone. “The attorney-client privilege is one of the oldest recognized
privileges for confidential communications.” Swidler & Berlin v. United States, 524
U.S. 399, 403, 118 S.Ct. 2081, 141 L.Ed.2d 379 (1998). It “exempts from the
discovery process certain communications between attorneys and their clients.”
Cargotec, Inc. v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 155 Ohio App.3d 653, 2003-Ohio-7257,
802 N.E.2d 732, ¶ 7 (6th Dist.). The joint-client and common-interest doctrines
operate as exceptions to the general rule that voluntary disclosure of
communications made with one’s attorney to a third party waives the attorney-client
privilege. MA Equip. Leasing I, L.L.C. v. Tilton, 10th Dist. Franklin Nos. 12AP-564
and 12AP-586, 2012-Ohio-4668, 980 N.E.2d 1072, ¶ 26; Cooey v. Strickland, 269
F.R.D. 643, 652 (S.D.Ohio 2010). The joint-client doctrine “‘applies when multiple
clients hire the same counsel to represent them on a matter of common interest.’”
Id., quoting In re Teleglobe Communications Corp. v. BCE Inc., 493 F.3d 345, 359
(3d Cir.2007).
Appellee Bartimole’s request that appellant and Timothy leave
Donna’s room so that he could speak to Donna alone evidences that the attorney-
client relationship was created with Thomas and Donna and later after Thomas’s
death, with just Donna.
In addition to a lack of evidence demonstrating that appellees
impliedly represented appellant personally, they also did not impliedly represent
her in her capacity as an officer or manager of Teepee & Petunia.
Ohio law has consistently held that “an attorney’s representation of a
corporation does not make that attorney counsel to the corporate
officers and directors as individuals.” Nilavar v. Mercy Health System
Western Ohio (S.D. Ohio 2001), 143 F.Supp.2d 909, 913. See, also, Hile
v. Firmin, Sprague & Huffman Co., L.P.A. (1991), 71 Ohio App.3d 838,
595 N.E.2d 1023. Therefore, Ohio law has consistently recognized that
because the corporation is a separate entity from its directors and
officers, causes of action belonging to the corporation may not be
litigated by the officers for their own benefit. See Maloof v. Squire,
Sanders & Dempsey, L.L.P., et al., Cuyahoga App. No. 82406, 2003
Ohio 4351.
Maloof v. Benesch, Friedlander, Coplan & Aronoff, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 84006,
2004-Ohio-6285, ¶ 17.
Appellant’s request for relief on her claim that she had an attorney-
client relationship with appellees based on her position as an officer or manager of
Teepee & Petunia is a claim personal to appellant; it does not seek redress for Teepee
& Petunia. See complaint, ¶ 74, 76 (“Defendants breached their duty to [appellant]
when they advised her to sign documents against her interest as Trustee” and “as a
direct and proximate result of defendants’ negligence, [appellant] suffered damages
* * *.”). Notwithstanding her claim of damages, appellant admitted that as of the
time of her deposition, she had not suffered any damages — her contention that her
brothers were trying to divest her of her 25 percent of the income from the farm was
“hypothetical.”
We are also not persuaded by appellant’s claim that she had an
attorney-client relationship with appellees based on her capacity as a successor and
beneficiary under her parents’ trusts. According to appellant, she became the
successor trustee of her parents’ trusts when Donna died in May 2018, and she has
standing to sue appellees for malpractice on behalf of the trusts.
Alternatively, in regard to Thomas’s trust, appellant contends that she
was in privity with appellee Smith by virtue of her role as successor trustee and
beneficiary of the trust and, by operation of law, upon Thomas’s death in 2012, she,
along with the other beneficiaries, were in privity with appellees. Thus, according
to appellant, she has standing to bring this malpractice action against appellees.
As it relates to Donna’s initial trust formed in 2010, appellant was a
successor trustee but Donna changed appellant’s role as sole successor when she
formed her 2018 trust. Under the 2018 trust, appellant became a co-trustee with
her brother Timothy. Appellant has no standing on her own to bring a suit on behalf
of the 2018 trust.
Appellant’s contention that she had an attorney-client relationship
with appellees in her role as a beneficiary also fails. Potential beneficiaries do not
have the right to sue the attorney who represented the settlor of a trust for alleged
negligence arising from pre-death estate planning matters. Peleg v. Spitz, 8th Dist.
Cuyahoga No. 89048, 2007-Ohio-6304; Lewis v. Star Bank, N.A., 90 Ohio App.3d
709, 630 N.E.2d 418 (12th Dist.1993); see also Meisler v. Weinberg, 2017-Ohio-
1563, 90 N.E.3d 146, ¶ 7 (8th Dist.). A potential beneficiary does not possess the
requisite privity to bring a suit for legal malpractice allegedly occurring prior to the
settlor’s death. Peleg at ¶ 17; Lewis at 712.
Appellant’s complaints of appellee’s negligence related to events that
occurred prior to Donna’s death; she was not in privity with appellees and therefore,
does not have standing to bring this suit.
Appellant’s citation to David v. Schwartzwald, Robiner, Wolf & Rock
Co., L.P.A., 79 Ohio App.3d 786, 607 N.E.2d 1173 (8th Dist.1992), is not helpful to
her case. In David, the attorney-defendant attempted to argue that he was merely
a witness in the underlying divorce proceedings, but this court rejected his
argument: “plaintiff’s evidence indicated that defendant was approached to assist
[co-counsel] on discovering [husband’s] assets, evaluate a professional economist’s
appraisal of the business, and render an expert opinion regarding [co-counsel’s]
attorney fees.” Id. at 798. On that record, this court concluded that the attorney in
David was the attorney for the client in the underlying divorce proceeding:
“defendant was retained as co-counsel in the divorce proceedings.” Id. at 791.
David, therefore, is distinguishable from this case.
Finally, appellant relies on a report authored by her expert, Kevin
Williams, who opined about appellant’s relationship with appellees. According to
appellant, Williams’s report supports “the reasonableness of their objective view
that [appellees] represented them.” Thus, according to appellant, “[a]t the very
least, this expert opinion raises a general issue of material fact as to the objective
reasonableness of whether an implied attorney-client relationship existed between”
appellant and appellees.
Williams’s opinion in and of itself does not create a genuine issue of
material fact. This court has held that an implied attorney-client relationship
involves both an objective and subjective test. Bohan, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No.
110060, 2021-Ohio-4131, at ¶ 23, citing Stuffleben v. Cowden, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
No. 82537, 2003-Ohio-6334, ¶ 22. Under the tests, “[a] court must consider (1)
whether the putative client believed there was an attorney-client relationship, and
(2) whether the putative client’s belief was reasonable ‘based on the surrounding
circumstances.’” Bohan at id., quoting Stuffleben at ¶ 21-22.
Appellant averred in an affidavit that she believed she had an
attorney-client relationship with appellees. However, for the reasons discussed, her
belief was not objectively reasonable based on the surrounding circumstances of this
case, including appellant’s own admissions and deposition testimony. Upon our de
novo review of the record, we agree with the trial court and find that there are no
genuine issues of material fact.
In light of the above, appellant’s three assignments of error are
without merit and are hereby overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
It is ordered that appellees recover from appellants costs herein taxed.
The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
It is ordered that a special mandate be sent to the common pleas court to carry
this judgment into execution.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27
of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
______________________________
CORNELIUS J. O’SULLIVAN, JR., JUDGE
MICHELLE J. SHEEHAN, P.J., and
MARY J. BOYLE, J., CONCUR