Search




Publications

Articles

Newsletter

Blog



Categories

District of Columbia

Federal Civil Procedure

Insurance

Legal Malpractice

Maryland

Virginia

Workers Compensation



Most Recent Entries

In Maryland workers’ compensation claim, employer must show actual prejudice from late notice

Virginia Supreme Court addresses superseding cause in legal malpractice

Legal Malpractice Claim Against Immigration Attorney Is Dismissed

D.C. Court of Appeals Declines To Follow Exhaustion of Appeals Rule in Legal Malpractice Action

Award of Permanent Partial Impairment by Virginia Commission Is Voided On Appeal



Monthly Archives

November 2009

September 2009

August 2009

April 2009



Syndicate

RSS 2.0

 
D.C. Court of Appeals Recognizes Defense of Judgmental Immunity in Legal Malpractice Action
In Biomet, Inc. v. Finnegan Henderson LLP, No. 07-CV-813 (D.C. March 19, 2009), the Court formally recognized the defense of judgmental immunity in legal malpractice actions. Concerning this defense, the Court stated the following:

Essentially, the judgmental immunity doctrine provides that an informed professional judgment made with reasonable care and skill cannot be the basis of a legal malpractice claim. Central to the doctrine is the understanding that an attorney's judgmental immunity and an attorney's obligation to exercise reasonable care coexist such that an attorney's non-liability for strategic decisions 'is conditioned upon the attorney acting in good faith and upon an informed judgment after undertaking reasonable research of the relevant legal principals and facts of the given case.'


Id. The Court also observed that if judgmental immunity were not recognized as a defense, that would

"mean that 'every losing litigant would be able to sue his attorney if he could find another attorney who was willing to second
guess the decisions of the first attorney with the advantage of hindsight.'


The Court also pointed out that "no claim of legal malpractice will be actionable for an attorney's reasoned exercise of informed judgment on an unsettled proposition of law." Id., at p. 10. This unsettled law exception to malpractice liabiity is a specific application of the judgmental immunity doctrine.

Posted by David B. Stratton on 04/05/2009 at 12:42 PM
District of ColumbiaLegal MalpracticePermalink


Page 1 of 1 pages