110 Cal. 339 | Cal. | 1895
Action to recover for negligence of attorney in drafting and executing a will.
The court below sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and plaintiff failing to amend, judgment was entered against him, from which he appeals.
The complaint alleges, in substance, that on October 5, 1883, defendant, an attorney at law, was employed by Mrs. O. M. A. Buckley, the mother of plaintiff, to draw her will, which she desired and directed to be so drawn as to leave all the residue of her estate (after certain specific legacies), to her two sons, then living, the plain, tiff and one John P. Buckley, to the exclusion of the children of a deceased son of the testatrix; that in pursuance of such employment defendant on said day drew a will for said testatrix, and superintended and directed the execution thereof; that in the preparation of said will, and in directing the execution thereof, the defendant was guilty of gross carelessness and negligence in the performance of his professional duties, in this, that said will was so drawn as not to legally express the de
It is further alleged that said John P. Buckley died before the testatrix; that thereafter,- in May, 1891, said testatrix died without having revoked or altered said will; that the will was admitted to probate, and the estate of said testatrix duly administered, and that under the decree of distribution said grandchildren received one-half of said estate, amounting to eighty-five thousand dollars, in which amount plaintiff alleges himself damaged, and for which he asks judgment against defendant.
We think the demurrer was properly sustained. In our judgment the complaint clearly fails to state a cause of action against defendant in favor of the plaintiff. It is to be observed that the action is not by the client, but by a third party, her son. It is a general doctrine, sustained by an overwhelming weight of authority, that an ¿attorney is liable for negligence in the conduct of his professional duties, arising only from ignorance or want ¿pi care, to his client alone—that is, to the one between whom and the attorney the contract of employment and service existed, and not to third parties. The exceptions to this general rule, if they may be in strictness deemed such, are where the attorney has been guilty of fraud or collusion, or of a malicious or tortious act. Responsibility for a fraudulent act is independent of any contractual relation between the guilty party and the one injured; and one committing a malicious or tortious act to the injury of another is liable therefor, without reference to any question of privity between himself and the wronged one. Where, however, neither of these elements enter into the transaction, the rule is
In Savings Bank v. Ward, supra, the general rule above adverted to is exhaustively discussed, and its limitations stated by Mr. Justice Clifford for the court. That was a case where a third party sought to maintain an action against the attorney for damages resulting to him from relying upon the correctness of a defective certificate of title to a piece of real estate furnished by the attorney to a client, upon the faith of which the plaintiff had loaned money on the property. In holding that the plaintiff could not maintain the action, it. is there said: “ Beyond all doubt the general rule is, that the obligation of the attorney is to his client, and not to a third party, and, unless there is something in the circumstances of this case to take it out of that general rule, it seems clear that the proposition of the defendant must be sustained. (Shearman and Redfield on Negligence, sec. 215.) Conclusive support to that rule is found in several cases of high authority. (Fish v. Kelly, 17 Com. B., N. S., 194.)” And after commenting upon the case of Fish v. Kelly, supra, and the case of Robertson v. Fleming, 4 Macq. 167, 209, from the latter of which cases Lord Wensleydale is quoted as saying that “he only who, by himself or another as his agent, employs the attorney to do the particular act in which the alleged neglect has taken place, can sue him for that neglect, and that that employment must be affirmed in the declaration of the suit in distinct terms,” the learned justice proceeds: “Analogous cases, involving the same principle, are quite numerous, a few of which only will be noticed. They show to a demonstration that it is
In Roddy v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co., supra, it is said; “ The right of a third party to maintain an action for injuries resulting from a breach of contract between two contracting parties has been denied by the overwhelming weight of authority of the state and federal courts of this country, and the courts of England. To hold
■No authority has been brought to our . notice contravening the rule as stated in the foregoing citations. Some, which at first glance might be so taken, will be' found upon analysis to fall within one or the other of the exceptions noted, and not to infringe upon the general doctrinfe. Within such class fall the cases relied upon by plaintiff to support his general right to maintain the action. This case c'onfes strictly within the general doctrine as above stated. No fact is alleged bringing it within any of the exceptions thereto. It is
It is claimed, however, that the action can be maintained under the rule expressed in section 1559 of our Civil Code, that a contract made by one person with another for the benefit of a third person may be enforced by the latter, the argument being that the employment of defendant by plaintiff's mother to draw her will was clearly for plaintiff’s benefit, inasmuch as the latter was one of the objects of her bounty, as expressed in her will; and a number of cases are cited which are supposed to bring the case within that rule. But in our judgment that provision has no application to this case. ¡ It is intended to apply to instances where the contract i is made expressly for the benefit of the third person, not where the third person is or may be merely incidentally or remotely benefited as a result of such contract. Such is the language of the code, and such will be found to be the application of the doctrine in all the cases cited by counsel, or which have come to our attention. The terms of section 1559 are: “ A contract made expressly for the benefit of a third person may be enforced by him at any time before the parties thereto rescind it.’' This rule, we are told by Mr. Pomeroy (Remedies and Remedial Rights, sec. 139), was originally adopted prior to the reformed procedure, being based partly upon considerations of convenience and partly upon a liberal construction of the nature of the contract, and the purpose of which was to avoid circuity of action, and to
It is so ordered.
Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.