Ciambrone v. COIA & LEPORE, LTD.

Decision Date10 April 2003
Docket NumberNo. 2002-59-Appeal.,2002-59-Appeal.
Citation819 A.2d 207
PartiesDolores CIAMBRONE v. COIA & LEPORE, LTD. et al.
CourtRhode Island Supreme Court

Present: WILLIAMS, C.J., FLANDERS, and GOLDBERG, JJ.

Christopher P. Corbett, for plaintiff.

Lawrence P. McCarthy, Providence, for Defendant.

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This case came before the Supreme Court on February 4, 2003, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and reviewing the memoranda submitted by the parties, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown. Accordingly, we shall decide the appeal at this time.

On February 5, 1999, the plaintiff, Dolores Ciambrone (Ciambrone or plaintiff), filed suit against the defendants, the law firm of Coia & Lepore, Ltd., and an attorney in the firm, Raymond Coia (collectively as Coia or defendants), alleging attorney malpractice. Ciambrone alleged negligent misrepresentation arising from erroneous advice that Coia allegedly gave her about her eligibility for accidental disability retirement benefits. A Superior Court hearing justice granted summary judgment in defendants' favor on the ground that the suit was time-barred pursuant to G.L.1956 § 9-1-14.3.1 The plaintiff timely appealed. We affirm.

In her complaint,2 Ciambrone alleged that she relied on the advice provided by Coia to her detriment, and accepted a workers' compensation settlement offer based on her understanding that she was eligible to apply for an accidental disability pension from her employer, the State of Rhode Island. In reality, pursuant to G.L.1956 § 36-10-14, when Coia allegedly rendered this incorrect advice, the time to apply for a disability pension — three years from the date of injury or recurrence — already had expired.3 The plaintiff alleged that but for the reassurances given to her by Coia, she would have refused the workers' compensation settlement offer and would have continued to receive her weekly workers' compensation payment.

Relying on the three-year statute of limitations set forth in § 9-1-14.3 for lawyer malpractice, defendants moved for summary judgment and argued that Ciambrone's claim was time-barred and, further, that plaintiff failed to establish that Coia's alleged negligent advice was the proximate cause of her damages. The trial justice granted the motion on a finding that the suit was untimely. In so doing, he relied on Ciambrone's deposition testimony that she was represented by defendants from 1983 to 1994, and concluded that any malpractice had to have occurred before 1994, more than three years before the lawsuit was filed, February 5, 1999.

The basic facts are not in dispute. In 1982, while employed as a social worker for the State of Rhode Island, Ciambrone suffered a work-related injury. On May 10, 1983, she retained Coia to assist her in securing total disability benefits, and she again sought defendants' services upon a recurrence of her injury four years later. With the assistance of Coia, Ciambrone settled her workers' compensation case on May 6, 1991, and received a lump sum settlement of $29,750. Ciambrone alleged that she accepted the settlement because she relied on Coia's erroneous advice that she was eligible to seek an accidental disability pension. Several months after settling her workers' compensation claim, Ciambrone applied for both accidental and ordinary disability benefits from the state. But the resolution of her benefits application was delayed because of a conflict concerning the percentage of contributions made by the state. Thereafter, on April 15, 1994, Coia accompanied Ciambrone to a meeting with James M. Reilly (Reilly), assistant executive director of the Employees' Retirement System, to discuss her pension options. The discussion between plaintiff and Reilly is when Ciambrone became aware of Coia's alleged legal malpractice and is the basis of our conclusion that her claim was time-barred pursuant to the provisions of § 36-10-14.

In a deposition taken on May 25, 2000, Ciambrone testified that it was at the 1994 meeting with Reilly that she first was advised of her ineligibility for accidental disability retirement benefits. As a result of this discussion on April 15, 1994, Ciambrone was on notice of Coia's alleged malpractice. However, in a later affidavit, prepared in August2001, plaintiff alleged that she did not remember this discussion with Reilly. Instead, she alleged that she did not recall Reilly's informing her that the time to apply for a disability pension had passed, and recalled only that Reilly discussed the state's percentage of contributions made on her behalf. On the basis of this affidavit, plaintiff alleged that a factual dispute existed about when she discovered Coia's negligence and that defendants' motion for summary judgment therefore was not warranted.

Just as there are inconsistencies in her recollections of exactly when she discovered Coia's malpractice, so, too, are there various inconsistencies in Ciambrone's claim of damages. Although Ciambrone alleged in her complaint that damages arose from the incorrect advice she received when she settled her workers' compensation case, she asserted a different basis for damages in her subsequent answers to interrogatories and memorandum opposing a summary judgment. In those pleadings, plaintiff argued that the injury occurred as a result of defendants' failure to timely inform her of the deadline for seeking an accidental disability pension and that this negligence resulted in her being deprived of those benefits.

On appeal, Ciambrone argues that the trial justice erroneously failed to consider the discovery provision in § 9-1-14.3(2) which allows for the commencement of suit within three years of the time that the malpractice was discovered or, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, should have been discovered. She argues that her claim falls within this exact circumstance and, when this evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the trial justice should have denied summary judgment. Ciambrone contends that the issue of when she became aware of her ineligibility for a disability pension is a disputed issue of fact to be resolved by the fact-finder. Furthermore, although she acknowledges that the trial justice, having found the statute of limitation to be dispositive, did not address the issue of proximate cause, she argues to this Court that the issue of whether defendants' action was the proximate cause of her injuries appears on this record and that a trial on this issue is warranted.

The defendants assert that there are no disputed issues of fact about when Ciambrone first discovered that she was ineligible for accidental disability benefits. Coia argues that Ciambrone never contradicted her deposition testimony in which she admitted that Reilly informed her of her pension ineligibility in 1994, and that her later assertions about this meeting are equivocal. We note that the trial justice was provided with an affidavit from Reilly attesting to the substance of his 1994 meeting with plaintiff and that she was advised that, pursuant to the provisions of § 36-10-14, she was not entitled to a disability pension.

Additionally, defendants argue that plaintiff failed to establish that Coia's advice was the proximate cause of her alleged injuries, a necessary element for a claim of legal malpractice. The defendants allege that at the time of Coia's incorrect advice, plaintiff already was time-barred from seeking an accidental pension benefit and that her judicial admission before the workers' compensation judge that she was able to return to work, is dispositive on the issues of damages. By her own admission, plaintiff no longer was eligible to receive weekly payments, regardless of the advice she received about a disability retirement. Accordingly, defendants argue, the suggestion that plaintiff would...

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6 cases
  • Rose v. Brusini
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • November 29, 2016
    ...care, but also a breach thereof and the damages actually or proximately resulting therefrom to the plaintiff.” Ciambrone v. Coia & Lepore, Ltd., 819 A.2d 207, 211 (R.I. 2003) (quoting Richmond Square Capital Corp. v. Mittleman, 773 A.2d 882, 886 (R.I. 2001) ). “Failure to prove all three of......
  • Va. Sharkey v. Prescott
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • May 16, 2011
    ...of material fact exists and the defendant was entitled to summary judgment on this count as a matter of law. See Ciambrone v. Coia & Lepore, Ltd., 819 A.2d 207, 211 (R.I.2003) (affirming grant of summary judgment because of the absence from the record of a genuine issue of material fact, bu......
  • Zanni v. Voccola
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Supreme Court
    • March 8, 2011
    ...marks a point at which all the facts exist from which clients could discover potential acts of malpractice. See Ciambrone v. Coia & Lepore, Ltd., 819 A.2d 207, 209 (R.I.2003) (upholding summary judgment in favor of the defendants where the trial justice “relied on [the plaintiff's] depositi......
  • Cambio v. Potomac Realty Capital, LLC
    • United States
    • Rhode Island Superior Court
    • March 2, 2015
    ...on a motion seeking summary judgment, it is the duty of a trial justice to find the issues, not to resolve them. Ciambrone v. Coia & Lepore, Ltd., 819 A.2d 207, 210 (R.I. 2003). With these standards in mind, the Court finds that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether an agree......
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