Flanders & Medeiros v. Bogosian ( 1995 )


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  • September 27, 1995
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 95-1023
    FLANDERS & MEDEIROS, INC.,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    ELIZABETH V. BOGOSIAN,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
    [Hon. Ronald R. Lagueux, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Torruella, Chief Judge,
    Stahl, Circuit Judge,
    and Dominguez, * District Judge.
    ERRATA SHEET
    ERRATA SHEET
    Please make the following correction:
    Page 2, line 5 from bottom of page:
    Delete "Woloohojian (now deceased) and Harry
    Woloohojian."
    Insert "Woloohojian and Harry Woloohojian (now
    deceased)."
    *Of the District of Puerto Rico, sitting by designation.
    United States Court of Appeals
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    For the First Circuit
    No. 95-1023
    FLANDERS & MEDEIROS, INC.,
    Plaintiff, Appellee,
    v.
    ELIZABETH V. BOGOSIAN,
    Defendant, Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
    [Hon. Ronald R. Lagueux, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Torruella, Chief Judge,
    Stahl, Circuit Judge,
    and Dominguez,* District Judge.
    Keven A. McKenna with whom Bruce Hodge was on brief for
    appellant.
    Matthew F. Medeiros and Erik Lund with whom Robert Karmen,
    Flanders & Medeiros Inc., Cynthia C. Smith, and Posternak, Blankstein
    & Lund were on brief for appellee.
    September 13, 1995
    *Of the District of Puerto Rico, sitting by designation.
    STAHL, Circuit Judge.  This case arises from the
    STAHL, Circuit Judge.
    representation of defendant-appellant Elizabeth Bogosian
    ("Bogosian") by plaintiff-appellee Flanders & Medeiros
    ("F&M") in hotly contested litigation involving family real-
    estate partnerships.  After Bogosian failed to endorse over
    to F&M checks made payable to Bogosian by the defendant in
    the underlying litigation and delivered to F&M as her
    counsel, F&M sued Bogosian for breach of contract.  Bogosian
    counterclaimed for malpractice and breach of the attorney-
    client contract.  The district court awarded summary judgment
    to F&M on all claims.  We now reverse the award of summary
    judgment on F&M's breach-of-contract claim, and affirm the
    district court's ruling on Bogosian's counterclaims.
    I.
    I.
    In  November  1989,  following  the  withdrawal  of
    Bogosian's prior counsel from the underlying litigation, F&M,
    a  Providence,   Rhode  Island,  law  firm,   took  over  the
    representation  of Bogosian,  a  citizen of  Florida, in  the
    ongoing lawsuits  stemming from  her involvement in  a family
    real estate empire created by her and her two brothers, James
    H.   Woloohojian  and   Harry  Woloohojian   (now  deceased).
    Bogosian had few liquid assets at  the time from which to pay
    her lawyers  but stood  to receive  substantial amounts  as a
    result of  her lawsuits.   In  a letter sent  to Bogosian  on
    November  24,  1989 (the  "November  24  letter"), and  which
    -2-
    2
    Bogosian then signed indicating her  agreement, F&M explained
    the terms of  its representation.   The firm  would obtain  a
    $25,000  retainer  from  Bogosian,  to  be  deposited  in  an
    interest-bearing account; it would   bill Bogosian each month
    at  its lawyers' hourly rates, with each bill due and payable
    within ten days after receipt; and interest would  accrue (at
    a local  bank's prime  rate) on  bills outstanding for  sixty
    days or more.  The letter further stated:
    We  recognize that you  may be  unable to
    pay our monthly statements  in full on an
    ongoing basis.   To the  extent that  you
    are unable to pay  those bills from other
    sources,  you have  agreed to  apply your
    first  proceeds  out   of  the   E  &   J
    receivership,   the  Woloohojian   Realty
    Associates   receivership    and/or   the
    federal  court  litigation,[1
    ] until  all
    of our outstanding  bills, including  any
    accrued  interest,  are  paid   in  full.
    Appended to this  letter as Exhibit  A is
    an Assignment that  we would  ask you  to
    execute.   That  assignment gives  us  an
    interest in the  proceeds of those  court
    proceedings  up  to  the  amount  of  our
    bills.   It is my  understanding that you
    1.  The  "E &  J  receivership" and  the "Woloohojian  Realty
    Associates receivership" are  state court actions  concerning
    two  family real  estate  partnerships.   The "federal  court
    litigation"  (or  "valuation"  litigation)  was   brought  by
    Bogosian in the United States District Court for the District
    of  Rhode Island  to  dissolve the  family-owned  Woloohojian
    Realty   Corporation  ("WRC"),   pursuant  to   Rhode  Island
    corporations  law.   See R.I.  Gen. Laws    7-1.1-90.   After
    Bogosian filed her lawsuit,  WRC exercised its option to  buy
    out Bogosian's one-third share of the corporation rather than
    face dissolution.  In April 1995,  the district court adopted
    as its  findings  the  report  of a  special  master  valuing
    Bogosian's  WRC  stock  at   $4,901,801.    See  Bogosian  v.
    Woloohojian, 
    882 F. Supp. 258
    , 261, 266 (D.R.I. 1995).
    -3-
    3
    have  reviewed  this  agreement with  Ted
    Pliakas[2] and have found it acceptable.
    (emphasis added).  The referenced assignment (the "assignment
    document") included the following language:
    1.    Assignee  has agreed  to  represent
    Assignor in said actions at  hourly rates
    set  forth in a  letter from  Assignee to
    Assignor dated November 24, 1989.
    2.   Assignor  anticipates that  she will
    receive substantial sums in  said actions
    (the  "Recoveries"),  out  of  which  she
    expects and  agrees to pay the legal fees
    and  out-of-pocket  expenses  payable  to
    Assignee.
    3.   To  the  extent  that Assignor  owes
    Assignee  any   money  for  out-of-pocket
    expenses and legal  services rendered  by
    Assignee in connection with said actions,
    Assignor  hereby   assigns  to  Assignee,
    effective as  of the  day and  year first
    above  written,  that   portion  of   the
    Recoveries which is necessary to  pay all
    of  Assignee's  then unpaid  bills.   The
    remainder  of  the  Recoveries  shall  be
    payable to Assignor.
    4.  In the event that there is a recovery
    in fewer  than all of  said actions,  and
    Assignee  is paid  in full,  and Assignor
    later incurs additional legal  expense to
    Assignee which is  not paid on a  current
    basis,  Assignee  shall   be  paid   such
    additional    legal   expense    out   of
    additional amounts, if any,  recovered by
    Assignor in the remaining actions.
    5.   Nothing  contained herein  shall  be
    construed  so as  to  limit  Assignee  to
    payment  of  its   legal  expenses   from
    amounts  recovered  by  Assignor in  said
    actions.
    2.  Bogosian's personal attorney.
    -4-
    4
    (emphasis added).   Both parties  signed the  document.   F&M
    filed an  appropriate financing statement with  the office of
    the  Secretary of  State, asserting  F&M's rights  as secured
    party to "[a]ll of Debtor's rights to the recoveries received
    by Debtor arising from" Bogosian's various lawsuits.
    F&M  represented  Bogosian  pursuant to  the  above
    terms in at least ten different matters between late 1989 and
    the  end of 1992,  with the bulk  of its time  devoted to the
    valuation litigation.   In July  1990, the district  court in
    that case ordered  WRC (1)  to grant Bogosian  a $10  million
    mortgage  on one of WRC's properties as security to guarantee
    eventual payment  of her  shares' value  once that  value had
    been determined,  and (2)  to provide Bogosian  with "interim
    distribution" payments  of an  initial $100,000  plus $10,000
    per  month, to continue until  the entry of  a final judgment
    determining the fair value of her shares.3
    On December  23,  1992, without  -- so  far as  the
    record shows -- any solicitation from either Bogosian or F&M,
    WRC delivered two  checks to F&M  made payable to  Bogosian.4
    3.  F&M  asserted  no  claim  to  these payments,  presumably
    because it had argued to the district court that the payments
    were necessary  for Bogosian to meet  her day-to-day expenses
    and  demands of other  creditors.  WRC  appealed the district
    court's  order, and  we  affirmed.   Bogosian v.  Woloohojian
    Realty Corp., 
    923 F.2d 898
     (1st Cir. 1991).
    4.  The voluntary payment  followed on  the heels  of a  jury
    verdict in  Bogosian's favor  in a Massachusetts  state court
    lawsuit  initiated by  WRC, in  which  WRC sought  damages in
    excess of  $20 million  for Bogosian's alleged  usurpation of
    -5-
    5
    The checks, one for $900,000 and the other for $100,000, were
    accompanied by a letter stating the following:
    Enclosed   please   find   two   (2)
    Woloohojian  Realty Corp.  ("WRC") checks
    totalling $1 Million  Dollars payable  to
    Elizabeth   V.   Bogosian.     This   sum
    represents a  voluntary principal payment
    made by WRC on account of Mrs. Bogosian's
    former shareholder interest.  This entire
    sum shall constitute an  immediate credit
    toward  any  principal  sums   which  may
    become  due and owing to Mrs. Bogosian in
    the federal court  proceeding on  account
    of  WRC's purchase  of her  shares and/or
    WRC's liquidation.
    WRC,   James  Woloohojian   and  the
    Estate   of   Harry  Woloohojian   remain
    willing to negotiate a  global settlement
    with  Mrs. Bogosian  which covers  all of
    the  substantive  areas  detailed in  the
    offer of settlement  dated September  30,
    1992 which  I sent  to Mr. Prentiss.   If
    Mrs. Bogosian  is interested in  a global
    settlement,  kindly  forward her  written
    counterproposal on or before December 31,
    1992.      We   are  prepared   to   meet
    immediately  thereafter  to  negotiate  a
    final resolution.
    Kindly  acknowledge your  receipt of
    this letter and the two checks by signing
    and returning  the enclosed copy  of this
    letter. . . .
    When WRC  delivered  the checks  to F&M's  offices,
    Bogosian owed the  law firm $999,957  in accrued legal  fees,
    expenses and  interest.   F&M  contacted Bogosian's  attorney
    corporate  opportunities.   WRC had  previously held  out the
    prospect of obtaining substantial damages from this and other
    lawsuits -- thus offsetting the value of Bogosian's  stock in
    WRC  --   in  contesting  Bogosian's   request  for   interim
    distributions in the valuation litigation.
    -6-
    6
    (Pliakas)5  and asked  that Bogosian  indorse the  two checks
    over to F&M pursuant to their assignment agreement.  Bogosian
    refused,  and  that  same  day faxed  to  F&M  the  following
    handwritten letter:
    Please be  advised that  I do not  accept
    nor  do I authorize  the acceptance  of a
    check  from  Woloohojian Realty  Corp. or
    any affiliates as partial payment  of any
    kind for any purpose.
    I  have  been advised,  as your  firm has
    represented to Judge Boyle, by Eustace T.
    Pliakas, Esq., my primary counsel, that a
    355  division  of  the corporation  would
    have no adverse  tax consequences for  me
    or WRC and that  if his Honor Judge Boyle
    so  decides as to effect that result that
    it would be very favorable to me.
    As you know, WRC has purported that there
    will  be major  tax consequences  for the
    liquidation of  property in order  to pay
    for  my  shares  which  sale  Judge Boyle
    stated in the  last hearing would  "never
    happen."
    If by  some means,  at the time  of Judge
    Boyle's  final decision,  I am  forced to
    take  dollars   instead  of  mortgageable
    property,  I question whether or not such
    principal of tax effecting does not apply
    to me. [sic]
    In any event I do not wish to prematurely
    determine   Judge   Boyle   [sic]   final
    [unreadable]  decision.    I   will  only
    accept, as  I have requested  you pursue,
    similar interim relief as I have received
    in  the  past   to  meet   my  on   going
    obligations.
    5.  F&M  explained  that  it contacted  Pliakas  rather  than
    Bogosian  directly  because  it  recognized  that  it  had  a
    conflict of interest with Bogosian regarding the checks.
    -7-
    7
    I  will  not  in  my  present  health  or
    circumstances accept any coercive tactics
    or any actions taken which is directed to
    creating fear of retribution to myself or
    any members of my family.
    WRC   eventually  dropped   its  requirement   that  Bogosian
    acknowledge in  writing receipt  of the checks  (and possible
    acknowledgment  that the  checks were  payments of  principal
    rather than interest), but  Bogosian still refused to indorse
    them.   F&M  and Pliakas  discussed over  the next  couple of
    weeks whether  the parties  could share  the  money,6 but  no
    agreement  was  reached.   Thus,  on  January  14, 1993,  F&M
    initiated the present action  in the district court, alleging
    that  Bogosian  had  breached  the  assignment  agreement  by
    refusing  to indorse the checks over to F&M.  Bogosian denied
    the breach, arguing that the  checks were not "proceeds" from
    the  litigation  because  neither   the  court  nor  she  had
    authorized such payment,  and counterclaimed, alleging  legal
    malpractice  and  breach  of  contract  by  F&M.    Following
    discovery,  both parties  moved  for summary  judgment.   The
    district  court  ruled  that  F&M  was  entitled  to  summary
    judgment on all claims, and Bogosian appealed.
    6.  Bogosian claims that she neither knew  of nor approved of
    these negotiations,  but that  Pliakas undertook them  on his
    own  because he  feared  that F&M's  abandonment of  Bogosian
    could severely harm her position in the ongoing litigations.
    -8-
    8
    II.
    II.
    A.  Standard of Review
    We  review a  grant  of summary  judgment de  novo,
    reading  the  record  in  the  light  most  favorable  to the
    nonmovant.  See,  e.g., Byrd  v. Ronayne,      F.3d      (1st
    Cir.  1995).    Summary   judgment  is  appropriate  if  "the
    pleadings,  depositions,  answers  to   interrogatories,  and
    admissions  on file,  together with  the affidavits,  if any,
    show that there is no  genuine issue as to any material  fact
    and  that the  moving party  is entitled to  a judgment  as a
    matter of law."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).
    B.  F&M's Breach-of-Contract Claim
    The district court granted  F&M summary judgment on
    its   breach-of-contract   claim   because   the   assignment
    agreement, the court  reasoned, was an "absolute  assignment"
    of Bogosian's  "entire interest  in any future  proceeds from
    those  litigations to F&M up to the outstanding amount of the
    legal bills.  Having  so assigned the proceeds, Bogosian  had
    no power to reject  them.  She was  obligated to indorse  the
    checks and pay them over to F&M."   Flanders & Medeiros, Inc.
    v.  Bogosian, 
    868 F. Supp. 412
    , 421 (D.R.I.  1994).  Whether
    Bogosian  had a good faith basis for refusing the checks, the
    court held, is "irrelevant."  
    Id.
    The  district  court's  analysis contains  a  fatal
    flaw:    It  assumes  that,  because  Bogosian  assigned  her
    -9-
    9
    interest in future  litigation proceeds up  to the amount  of
    any  outstanding legal bills, she  also gave up  her right to
    reject  any  offer  of  partial  payment.    But  the  latter
    proposition does  not necessarily  follow from the  former; a
    litigant may (and often  does) assign expected proceeds while
    retaining  the right to accept or reject any offer of payment
    or settlement.  None of the cases cited by the district court
    in support of its construction of the assignment agreement --
    and subsequently adopted by F&M as authority for its position
    in  its appellate brief -- stands for the proposition that an
    assignment   of  expected  litigation   proceeds  deprives  a
    litigant  of his  or  her  right  to  control  the  terms  of
    settlement.    For  example,  the court  cited  Berkowitz  v.
    Haigood,  
    606 A.2d 1157
    , 1160 (N.J. Super. Ct. Law Div. 1992)
    (holding that assigned  proceeds in attorney's trust  account
    belong to  client's  assignee  and client  has  no  right  to
    receive  them), for  the  proposition that  Bogosian,  having
    assigned the proceeds, had  no power to reject the  proffered
    checks.  But the funds the assignee was claiming in Berkowitz
    were part of  a settlement  to which Haigood  had agreed  and
    which  had  already  been  paid  into  his  attorney's  trust
    account.  
    Id. at 1159-60
    .   The court's reliance on Herzog v.
    Irace,  
    594 A.2d 1106
      (Me. 1991),  is similarly  misplaced.
    That decision's  holding that a  "client is  not entitled  to
    receive  funds once he has  assigned them to  a third party,"
    -10-
    10
    
    id. at 1109
    , is predicated on the client's acceptance of the
    settlement offer from which the funds in question derive, 
    id. at 1108
    .   In  neither  of  these  cases  did  the  assignee
    challenge  the assignor-litigant's  rejection of an  offer of
    settlement or partial payment.
    Nothing  in the  assignment  agreement purports  to
    transfer  Bogosian's fundamental  right  to  control her  own
    litigation and  accept or reject a  settlement offer, whether
    in whole or in part.  See R.I.  Rules of Professional Conduct
    Rule 1.2(a) ("A  lawyer shall  abide by  a client's  decision
    whether  to accept  an offer  of  settlement of  a matter.").
    Whether a  contract that abrogated this  axiomatic duty would
    even be upheld under Rhode  Island law is a question  we need
    not  reach,   for  the  assignment  contains   no  indication
    whatsoever  that  the  parties  intended   such  a  contract.
    Without  a   clear  expression   of  intent  to   abrogate  a
    fundamental  rule  of  the  attorney-client  relationship, we
    would be loath to find such intent.  Thus, the assignment  of
    "recoveries"  or "proceeds"  by  Bogosian  to  her  attorneys
    presumes  her  prior  acceptance   of  a  proffered  payment.
    Otherwise, the  proffered payment  remains nothing  more than
    just  that; until  it  has been  accepted  by the  client  or
    ordered by  the court, it constitutes  neither "proceeds" nor
    "recoveries"  but  only  an   offer  of  payment  or  partial
    settlement.
    -11-
    11
    Nor   does  F&M  seriously  dispute  that  Bogosian
    retained  the right to accept or reject any settlement offer.
    In  fact,  F&M concedes  in  its  brief that  the  assignment
    agreement operated  as a  security  agreement, with  Bogosian
    retaining control over  her cause  of action, and  not as  an
    absolute assignment of litigation rights:
    The agreement did  not assign  Bogosian's
    causes  of action  to F&M (F&M  could not
    have sued WRC on those causes of action),
    but only assigned the first proceeds from
    the  litigation; it did  not give  F&M an
    interest  in  the  litigation beyond  the
    amount  of its  earned  fees  and  costs.
    Moreover,   the    assignment   was   not
    absolute: it would have  been ineffective
    if Bogosian had simply paid her bills.7
    Brief  of  Plaintiff-Appellee  at  20.8    These  concessions
    7.  A few  pages further along  in its brief,  F&M apparently
    decided  that  it  had   better  argue  that  the  assignment
    agreement was in fact an absolute  assignment.  Responding to
    Bogosian's attempt  to distinguish In  re Apex  Oil Co.,  
    975 F.2d 1365
     (8th Cir.  1992) -- which the district  court cited
    for the  proposition that an assignment  transfers all rights
    in the assigned property -- on the ground that the assignment
    in  that  case  was  absolute rather  than  conditional,  F&M
    informed  this  Court  that  "the  assignment  here  was  not
    conditioned upon  anything."  Brief of  Plaintiff-Appellee at
    28 n.13.  We find F&M's first interpretation more convincing.
    8.  F&M  also cited  numerous cases  as  upholding agreements
    "such  as  the  one  between  F&M  and  Bogosian,"  Brief  of
    Plaintiff-Appellee  at   20,  all  of  which   construed  the
    agreements  as security  for  an attorney's  unpaid fees  and
    expenses  rather than  as absolute  assignments of  proceeds.
    E.g.,  Skarecky & Horenstein, P.A.  v. 3605 N.  36th St. Co.,
    
    825 P.2d 949
    , 952 (Ariz. App. 1991); In re Conduct of Taylor,
    
    878 P.2d 1103
    , 1110  (Or. 1994); Burk v. Burzynski,  
    672 P.2d 419
    ,  423  (Wyo.  1983).    Although   the  language  of  the
    agreements in  some of  these cases more  clearly established
    that  they were  intended to  operate as  security agreements
    than  the assignment  agreement  here, both  the November  24
    -12-
    12
    notwithstanding, F&M argues that  Bogosian still had no right
    to reject WRC's  $1 million voluntary payment because  it was
    not an offer  of settlement.  At least after  WRC dropped the
    requirement that  Bogosian stipulate that the  money would be
    applied  to  principal  and  not interest,  F&M  argues,  WRC
    imposed no conditions on  Bogosian's acceptance of the money.
    Therefore, so this argument goes, Bogosian could not have had
    any valid reason for rejecting the checks.
    This  argument  also  misses  the  mark,   for  the
    proffered payment did in  fact contain an implicit condition:
    namely, that  the $1  million portion of  Bogosian's ultimate
    award represented by the two checks would be paid in cash and
    not property.   Bogosian, in accepting  the checks, would  be
    forgoing  her right to attempt in the future to structure the
    payment  of that  portion  of her  award  in an  advantageous
    manner.  Thus, while WRC's offer of payment may not have been
    a  partial  "settlement  offer"   in  the  usual  sense,  its
    acceptance nevertheless could  have limited Bogosian's future
    options, and she  may well  have had  legitimate reasons  for
    refusal.
    letter  and   the   assignment  document   limit   Bogosian's
    assignment of proceeds  to the extent  that Bogosian has  not
    paid F&M's  bills.   Thus, F&M  would have  no rights to  any
    proceeds unless and only to the extent that Bogosian fails to
    pay her attorney's bills.  This is an assignment for purposes
    of security.  See In  re Apex Oil, 
    975 F.2d at 1369
      ("We see
    no meaningful  difference between a security  interest and an
    assignment for purposes of security.").
    -13-
    13
    Moreover, there is evidence that the possibility of
    Bogosian  ultimately receiving property  rather than  cash in
    exchange  for  her  shares  is no  pipedream.    The  statute
    governing  the valuation  litigation provides that,  once the
    value of  Bogosian's shares have been  determined, "the court
    shall set forth in its order . . . the purchase price and the
    time within which the  payment shall be made, and  may decree
    such other terms and  conditions of sale as it  determines to
    be  appropriate . .  . ."  R.I.  Gen. L. 7-1.1-90.1 (emphasis
    added).  The  district court in  the valuation case  recently
    stated:
    What   [Bogosian's]   judgment  will   be
    remains to be seen.   It may be that  the
    court  will  order  satisfaction  of  the
    purchase   price   by  the   transfer  of
    particular  parcels  of  real estate,  at
    least  in part, a result contended for by
    Plaintiff.      What   is  clear   beyond
    peradventure is that it is for this Court
    to  determine, under the precise terms of
    the statute, the "terms and conditions of
    sale   as  it   determines  appropriate."
    Until  this Court has had the opportunity
    to do  so,  Plaintiff  does  not  have  a
    definable   interest   in  any   specific
    property.    There  is  no  judgment  for
    Plaintiff which may be levied upon.
    Bogosian v. Woloohojian,  C.A. No. 88-0373B, slip. op. at 7-8
    (D.R.I. Aug. 4, 1995) (emphasis added).
    Nevertheless, F&M  argues that, even  assuming that
    Bogosian eventually could receive property instead of cash as
    payment for her shares,  she could not have had  a good-faith
    reason  for  rejecting  the  checks because:  (1)  she  would
    -14-
    14
    eventually  have to  pay  the law  firm  in cash,  so even  a
    disposition  of property  by the  court would  necessitate an
    eventual sale of  assets, and (2) any payments made  to F & M
    would be tax-deductible, so a cash payment from WRC would not
    have  any  adverse  tax   consequences.    This  argument  is
    similarly unpersuasive: Bogosian  could conceivably  mortgage
    any  property she receives and  pay F&M from  those funds, or
    perhaps F&M would even acquire  an interest in the  property.
    And even if a  cash payout would be tax-deductible,  Bogosian
    might prefer  a disposition of  property for  non-tax-related
    reasons,  e.g., because  she believes  the property  is worth
    more  than  its  court-assigned  valuation,  or  because  she
    believes its  appreciation rate  and income stream  will more
    than compensate  for interest costs she  incurs in mortgaging
    it to  pay off F&M.   In any event, Bogosian  asserted in her
    faxed response to F&M, on the same day that F&M requested her
    indorsement of  the checks, that she did not want to do so in
    part  to avoid  foreclosing the  possibility of  the district
    court awarding her "mortgageable property" instead of cash.
    If  Bogosian did not  in fact reject  the checks in
    good faith,9 but rather simply because she wanted the cash in
    9.  F&M  is correct, of course, in stating that good faith is
    not a defense to a breach-of-contract claim.  See Restatement
    (Second) of Contracts   11, introductory note (1979).   We do
    not  hold that a  good-faith belief that she  did not have to
    assign the checks to F&M would absolve Bogosian of liability;
    rather,  we hold that if Bogosian rejected the checks in good
    faith  -- i.e., for some legitimate reason not connected to a
    -15-
    15
    her hands rather  than in  F&M's coffers, then  she may  well
    have  breached the  covenant of  good  faith implicit  in all
    contracts under Rhode Island  law.  See Crellin Technologies,
    Inc. v. Equipmentlease Corp.,  
    18 F.3d 1
    , 10 (1st  Cir. 1994)
    ("Rhode  Island  recognizes  that  virtually  every  contract
    contains  an implied covenant of good  faith and fair dealing
    between the parties."); Ide Farm & Stable, Inc. v. Cardi, 
    297 A.2d 643
    , 645 (R.I.  1972) (stating that  purpose of implied
    covenant  of   good  faith  and  fair  dealing  is  "so  that
    contractual objectives may be  achieved").  We find, however,
    that a  rational jury, presented with  the evidence contained
    in the summary judgment  record, could conclude that Bogosian
    rejected the  checks for  a legitimate reason,  and therefore
    summaryjudgment
    onF&M'sbreach-of-contractclaim
    isinappropriate.10
    desire  to keep the money  herself and avoid  the dictates of
    the assignment  agreement --  then she has  not breached  the
    contract.
    10.  A  rational jury  might also  conclude, of  course, that
    Bogosian only had an  aversion to receiving cash when  it was
    going  into F&M's pocket,  as counsel for F&M  put it at oral
    argument.  The fact  that Pliakas tried to negotiate  a share
    of the $1  million for Bogosian,  and Bogosian's argument  to
    the  district court that F&M should not have asserted a claim
    to  the money when  it knew that  she needed the  cash to pay
    other creditors, support this view.  Divining Bogosian's true
    intent requires an assessment of  her credibility, a task for
    the factfinder, not the court.
    We have also considered, and found meritless, F&M's
    assertion that  comments by Bogosian's attorney  in a related
    interpleader  action estops  her  from arguing  now that  the
    proffered $1 million were  not "proceeds."  In the  course of
    arguing  against  the  interpleading  of  WRC's  $1  million,
    Bogosian's  attorney  told  the  court that  the  funds  were
    "proceeds" of the valuation  litigation and their disposition
    -16-
    16
    Although  we  remand  for  trial on  the  issue  of
    liability,  we leave intact that part of the district court's
    summary judgment ruling establishing the amount Bogosian owed
    F&M  as  of  the  date  of  alleged  breach,  plus  interest.
    Bogosian argues that this  would be inappropriate because F&M
    never  specifically  asked  for  "partial  summary  judgment"
    pursuant to  Fed. R.  Civ.  P. 56(d).   We  know  of no  such
    requirement; Rule 56(d) states that a court,  "[i]f on motion
    under this rule (Rule  56) judgment is not rendered  upon the
    whole case[,] . . . shall if practicable" specify those facts
    that  are without  substantial controversy.   F&M's pleadings
    and  affidavits made  clear that  it was  asserting that  the
    legal fees  and expenses  detailed in its  billing statements
    were  fair  and  reasonable  in  light  of  the  services  it
    performed  for  Bogosian.    Bogosian   never  contested  the
    accuracy or truthfulness  of any of those statements, nor did
    she adduce any expert testimony that the  requested fees were
    excessive.   Bogosian offered her  own opinion that  the fees
    charged  for   certain  portions   of  the  litigation   were
    should  be determined in that  action.  We  do not understand
    his  comments to amount to an assertion of rights by Bogosian
    to  the money,  and we  therefore hold  that Bogosian  is not
    estopped  from  arguing  that  the  funds  were  not in  fact
    "proceeds" or "recoveries."
    -17-
    17
    excessive,11 but her  generalized assertions  are not  enough
    to create a "substantial controversy" about the amount she is
    obligated to pay  under her contract with  F&M, assuming that
    she is found  to have breached  that contract.   See Fed.  R.
    Civ.  P. 56(e) ("When a  motion for summary  judgment is made
    and  supported as provided in this rule, an adverse party may
    not  rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the adverse
    party's  pleading,  but  the  adverse  party's  response,  by
    affidavits or  as otherwise provided  in this rule,  must set
    forth specific facts  showing that there  is a genuine  issue
    for  trial."); see  also  Bennett v.  Martin-Trigona, 
    686 F. Supp. 6
    ,  9  (D.D.C.  1988) (awarding  summary  judgment  to
    plaintiff-attorney after defendant-client  failed to  provide
    evidence of specific errors in  bills); cf. Pfeifer v. Sentry
    Ins.,  
    745 F. Supp. 1434
    , 1443 (E.D. Wis. 1990) (stating that
    when  amount  of attorney  fee  is  challenged, attorney  has
    burden of  proving reasonableness of fee,  but opposing party
    has responsibility to state objections with particularity and
    clarity).
    This  is not a  fee-award case, where  the court is
    called on  to determine  a reasonable  attorney's fee  in the
    11.  For example, Bogosian asserted  that she was billed more
    than   $200,000  for   work   concerning   her   "Section   8
    partnerships" yet no lawsuit was ever  filed.  Bogosian never
    bothered to direct us (or the district court) to the specific
    billing  entries that  she  claims represent  this work,  let
    alone those entries that she deems excessive.
    -18-
    18
    first  instance;  it  is  a  contract  case,  and  Bogosian's
    obligations to F&M are defined by that contract.  See Laverty
    v.  Pearlman,  
    654 A.2d 696
    , 703  (R.I.  1995)  ("[W]hat  a
    plaintiff may be bound to pay and what an attorney is free to
    collect under a fee agreement are not necessarily measured by
    the  'reasonable attorney's  fee' that  a defendant  must pay
    pursuant to a court order." (quoting Venegas v. Mitchell, 
    495 U.S. 82
    ,  90 (1990)); see also A Sealed Case, 
    890 F.2d 15
    , 17
    (7th Cir.  1989) ("Fees are  matters of contract,  and unless
    the  fee  is  so   exorbitant  that  its  collection  offends
    [professional   conduct  rules],  disputes   about  that  are
    resolved under  that body of  law.").  A  $1 million  fee for
    extensive  work  performed  in a  number  of  bitterly-fought
    lawsuits  is not  on its  face exorbitant,  and Bogosian  has
    utterly failed  to provide evidence  that any of  the claimed
    fees   and  expenses   were   in  fact   not  incurred,   are
    unreasonable, or exorbitant.  Thus, the amount owed to F&M on
    its   breach-of-contract   claim   is  not   in   substantial
    controversy and is deemed established upon remand.12
    C.  Bogosian's Counterclaims
    Bogosian's  counterclaim,  by the  district court's
    count,   alleged  thirty-four  instances  of  malpractice  or
    breach-of-contract  by F&M.    Flanders &  Medeiros, Inc.  v.
    12.  Subject,  of  course,  to appropriate  recalculation  of
    interest and  fees incurred under the  contract subsequent to
    the district court's summary judgment order.
    -19-
    19
    Bogosian,  
    868 F. Supp. at
    417  n.4  (D.R.I. 1994).13   The
    district  court granted  F&M summary  judgment on  each claim
    because Bogosian had failed  to adduce competent evidence, in
    the form of  expert testimony,  on the standard  of care  and
    scope of  duty to  which F&M should  be held, or  on damages.
    
    Id.
       Bogosian  now  argues  that the  district  court  erred
    because (1)  merely identifying  an expert witness  who would
    13.  The   district   court's    characterization   of    the
    allegations, with which we largely agree, was as follows:
    (a)  F&M's  failure to  obtain sufficient
    interim relief in the WRC litigation; (b)
    F&M's   failure  to   properly  supervise
    expert  witness  Eric  Berenson   in  the
    appraisal  proceeding before  the Special
    Master;  (c) F&M's  failure to  insist on
    certified  income and  expense statements
    from WRC in the valuation proceeding; (d)
    F&M's  failure to  object to  the Special
    Master's  report on  the basis  of, inter
    alia,   the    appropriateness   of   the
    comparables  relied  upon by  the Special
    Master to  arrive at the value of certain
    real  estate,  his  valuation   of  WRC's
    management business based upon two years'
    management  contracts,  and the  issue of
    whether there  was a waterway  on another
    site;   (e)   F&M's  withdrawal   of  its
    representation  of  Bogosian  in the  WRC
    litigation, and its failure to bring suit
    to   enjoin   Bogosian's   brother   from
    entering  into  unauthorized   management
    contracts; (f) F&M's numerous failures to
    take  action  in  relation  to   the  two
    receiverships; and (g)  F&M's failure  to
    take  action  to have  Bogosian's brother
    declared incapacitated  and terminated as
    a   general  partner  of  the  Section  8
    limited partnerships.
    886 F. Supp. at 417 n.4.
    -20-
    20
    testify  in support  of her  claims was  enough to  survive a
    summary  judgment motion,14  and  (2) certain  of her  claims
    did not require expert testimony.
    Bogosian's first  argument is  plainly  wrong.   We
    stated  in Focus Inv. Assocs. v. American Title Ins. Co., 
    992 F.2d 1231
    , 1239 (1st Cir. 1993), that under Rhode Island law,
    "a legal malpractice plaintiff  must present expert testimony
    establishing  the  appropriate standard  of  care  unless the
    attorney's  lack of  care and  skill is  so obvious  that the
    trier of  fact can resolve  the issue as  a matter of  common
    knowledge."  We further explained that claims that "fall into
    the  'common   knowledge'  category   are  those  where   the
    negligence is  'clear and palpable,' or where  no analysis of
    legal  expertise  is  involved."    
    Id.
        Virtually  all  of
    Bogosian's claims require  analysis of  legal expertise,  and
    therefore the  mere identification  of an expert  expected to
    testify  at trial would in no way demonstrate the standard of
    care applicable to F&M, an essential element of her case.
    14.  Bogosian   filed  a   supplemental  response   to  F&M's
    interrogatories  identifying an  expert  witness prepared  to
    testify on  her  behalf on  February  15, 1994,  almost  five
    months after  the September 24, 1993,  discovery closure date
    and only  a week  before the  summary  judgment motions  were
    argued before  a magistrate-judge.  The supplemental response
    contained  no  indication  of  the  nature or  basis  of  the
    expert's  expected testimony other than to  say that he would
    testify    "in   support   of"    Bogosian's   defenses   and
    counterclaims.
    -21-
    21
    Summary  judgment is  "mandate[d] .  . .  against a
    party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the
    existence of an  element essential to that  party's case, and
    on which that party will bear the burden of proof  at trial."
    Celotex  Corp. v.  Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    ,  322 (1986).   The
    moving  party  discharges  his   or  her  initial  burden  of
    "showing"  the  absence of  a  genuine  issue concerning  any
    material  fact by pointing  out to  the district  court "that
    there is  an absence  of evidence  to  support the  nonmoving
    party's  case."  
    Id. at 325
    .  F&M  discharged this burden by
    pointing in its summary judgment motion to Bogosian's absence
    of  expert  testimony  in  support  of  her  counterclaims.15
    Therefore, summary judgment was appropriate as to all of  her
    claims that required the analysis of legal expertise.16
    15.  Bogosian argues that F&M  only complained of her failure
    to  identify an  expert witness,  and thus  she was  under no
    obligation  to do  any  more than  that.   F&M's  motion  for
    summary judgment, however, clearly states that Bogosian "must
    present  expert  testimony"  and  that  she  "has  no  expert
    testimony to support this claim."  Stating that Bogosian  had
    not  yet  even  identified an  expert  witness  was  simply a
    stronger way  of stating that she had  no hope of bearing her
    burden of proof at trial.
    16.  Bogosian also argues that  the district court abused its
    discretion  in denying her request,  pursuant to Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 56(f), for more time to produce expert witness affidavits.
    She  bases this argument  on the notion  that the requirement
    that she adduce expert  testimony to survive summary judgment
    was  a "new rule" dreamed  up by the  magistrate-judge at the
    summary  judgment hearing,  and that  its application  to her
    case constitutes an  abuse of discretion.   This argument  is
    legal  poppycock;  the  requirement of  expert  testimony  in
    proving most types  of malpractice claims has been  so widely
    adopted  that "it may even be malpractice to litigate a legal
    -22-
    22
    Bogosian  also argues  that not  all of  her claims
    were of  the  type  that  required  expert  testimony.    For
    example, she argues that the district court failed to realize
    that  her allegation that F&M breached its duty of loyalty to
    Bogosian  when it  placed its  own interest  in getting  paid
    ahead of Bogosian's possible interest in receiving a property
    distribution rather than cash, adequately limned a breach-of-
    fiduciary  duty  claim.    Similarly,  she  argues  that  her
    allegation  that  F&M  withdrew  from  ongoing litigation  in
    violation of their contract states a breach-of-contract claim
    (assuming  that  the contract  contains  an  implied term  to
    continue   representation  until   the   conclusion  of   the
    litigation) that  is completely  distinct from F&M's  duty to
    perform to the  appropriate standard of care.   These claims,
    Bogosian  argues,   as  well  as  a   smattering  of  similar
    allegations contained in her counterclaim, require  no expert
    testimony because they do not  require the analysis of  legal
    expertise.
    We  need not  answer the  question  Bogosian poses,
    because even  assuming arguendo that Bogosian  has adequately
    stated claims that  do not require expert  testimony, she has
    failed to  introduce adequate evidence of  damages to support
    any  of her  claims.   See 1  Ronald E.  Mallen &  Jeffrey M.
    malpractice case without expert  testimony."  Wilburn Brewer,
    Jr., Expert Witness Testimony  in Legal Malpractice Cases, 
    47 S.C. L. Rev. 727
    , 733 (1994).
    -23-
    23
    Smith, Legal Malpractice    16.1 (1989) ("Since the objective
    of  a  legal malpractice  suit  is  usually  the recovery  of
    monetary compensation  for an  injury, pleading and  proof of
    damages  are essential to a cause of action."); cf. Moores v.
    Greenberg,  
    834 F.2d 1105
    , 1111  (1st Cir.  1987) ("Whatever
    form a legal malpractice action takes, the plaintiff  has the
    burden  of  introducing  evidence  to  justify  an  award  of
    consequential  damages.").    In  her  Counterclaim, Bogosian
    raised the  specter of having  to hire additional  lawyers to
    duplicate work  already performed by  her abandoning lawyers,
    yet  she never provides further  evidence of such  costs.  In
    answering  F&M's  interrogatories  regarding the  nature  and
    scope  of  her  damages,  Bogosian  repeatedly  answered  (or
    incorporated by reference) that  "[a]n expert will assess the
    value of  damages sustained from Flanders  & Medeiros' breach
    upon obtaining  further discovery."   Such an  assessment was
    never  forthcoming.  As for F&M's placing its own interest in
    getting   paid  ahead  of  Bogosian's  possible  interest  in
    obtaining a property distribution for the  full amount of her
    stock's  value, the $1 million was never received by F&M, and
    the  record  contains no  evidence  that  the possibility  of
    Bogosian receiving a  distribution entirely  in property  has
    been diminished  at all.17   Thus,  Bogosian had  not adduced
    17.  The   checks  eventually   expired;  WRC   initiated  an
    interpleader action  in the  district court to  determine the
    rights of  various creditors  of Bogosian, including  F&M, to
    -24-
    24
    competent evidence sufficient  to prove an essential  element
    of her claim, namely,  that these alleged breaches by  F&M --
    whether or not proof thereof would require expert testimony -
    - have in fact damaged her.  Therefore, summary judgment must
    be granted for F&M on these claims.
    III.
    III.
    For  the foregoing  reasons,  the  decision of  the
    district  court is reversed  in part,  affirmed in  part, and
    remanded  for   further  proceedings  consistent   with  this
    opinion.
    funds WRC expected to pay to her.
    -25-
    25