Fraud Claim Against Lawyer Dismissed

November 20, 2014

In a prior action, the plaintiff (through counsel) negotiated a settlement through the defendant’s attorney and the attorney then sent the plaintiff a final settlement agreement, which the plaintiff signed.  The defendant, however, refused to sign the agreement and later filed bankruptcy.  The plaintiff then sued the defendant’s attorney for fraud, arguing that the attorney had misrepresented that her client would settle based on the agreed upon terms.

The trial court granted the attorney’s motion for summary judgment, holding that the plaintiff could not establish the justifiable reliance element of his fraud claim.  The Court of Appeals affirmed because the attorney made no express representation that her client had approved or would sign the settlement agreement, and reliance on representations made in business transactions are  not justified when the representation takes place in an adversarial context such as litigation.

Weilbacher v. Craft