Opinion
The Considine Company, Inc., and Considine Vineyard Company, cross-complainants and appellants (Considine), appeal from a sum
Facts
On August 1, 1979, Considine entered into a lease of restaurant space with George Moulios and his wife Concetta. The leased premises were located in Considine’s Vineyard shopping center. The lease included the right to use patio space outside the restaurant for outdoor dining.
Moulios’s proposed restaurant was located next to a Swensen’s ice cream parlor operated by Judd Goldfeder. Goldfeder was also a lessee of Considine. Goldfeder objected to Moulios’s plan for an outdoor dining area and brought suit against Considine and Moulios to enjoin Moulios’s proposed construction on the patio. On August 28, 1979, Considine asked SH&H to defend both Considine and Moulios in the Goldfeder lawsuit.
Goldfeder’s motion for preliminary injunction was heard by the Hon. Judge Charles Froehlich, Judge of the San Diego Superior Court. On October 1, 1979, Judge Froehlich issued a memorandum of intended decision. In his decision, Judge Froehlich suggested that the parties work out an agreement which would permit Moulios to operate an outside dining area, but in such a way as to suggest to the public that he was using a common area rather than reserving the patio space for the exclusive use of his patrons. Judge Froehlich stated that in the absence of an agreement, he would enjoin Moulios from making any structural changes in the patio or erecting any screens or barriers without prior court approval. To obtain such an injunction Goldfeder would have to post a $5,000 bond.
SH&H sent Considine a copy of the memorandum of intended decision and asked Considine to discuss it with Moulios. Later a Considine employee contacted SH&H and informed the law firm that she had spoken with Moulios about Judge Froehlich’s decision. According to Considine’s employee, Moulios felt that if he could not have the fully enclosed dining patio he had planned, he did not want any patio at all. Thereafter, SH&H took no further action on behalf of Considine or Moulios and on February 20, 1980, filed a substitution of attorneys.
On June 29, 1982, the current round of litigation began. On that date, Considine filed an unlawful detainer action against Moulios in which it alleged that his rent was overdue. On September 16, 1982, Moulios responded by filing a separate complaint against Considine. Moulios alleged
Next, both Moulios and Considine turned to their prior counsel. On May 31, 1983, Moulios filed a separate malpractice action against SH&H. Moulios alleged the firm failed to properly advise Moulios about the status of the Goldfeder lawsuit after September 7, 1979.
On March 8, 1984, Considine filed a cross-complaint against SH&H, alleging that SH&H was responsible for all or part of any damages Considine owed Moulios. The cross-complaint was filed as part of the consolidated unlawful detainer-breach of contract lawsuit.
After the cross-complaint was amended, SH&H moved for summary judgment against Considine. Relying on the deposition testimony of Moulios, the law firm argued that the substance of Judge Froehlich’s memorandum had been accurately communicated to Moulios. Because Moulios was not the victim of any affirmative misconduct by SH&H, the law firm argued Considine was not entitled to any indemnity.
In opposition to the motion, Considine filed the declarations of two of its employees and Moulios. In the declarations the employees and Moulios stated that SH&H never advised them that the injunction required Goldfeder to post a $5,000 bond or how long it would take to appeal any injunction entered.
According to Moulios, the bond was significant because Goldfeder had indicated a willingness to settle their dispute. Moulios apparently believed that the bond would have helped him in reaching such a settlement. Alternatively, had an injunction been entered and had he been advised as to the time involved in an appeal, Moulios claimed he would not have waited in hopes of resolving his differences with Goldfeder.
The trial court granted SH&H’s motion and on June 21, 1985, entered a judgment dismissing the cross-complaint. Considine filed a timely appeal.
While Considine’s appeal has been pending, it has resolved its differences with Moulios by paying him $77,000.
We must reverse because the circumstances alleged in the cross-complaint and declarations filed in opposition to the motion are sufficient to support a claim for indemnity.
Both here and in the trial court SH&H has misapprehended the scope of the allegations made against it. Although SH&H was able, by way of Moulios’s deposition, to establish that it did not make any affirmative misrepresentations, an attorney’s duty to his client goes further. “ ‘The general rule with respect to the liability of an attorney for failure to properly perform his duties to his client is that the attorney, by accepting employment to give legal advice or to render other legal services, impliedly agrees to use such skill, prudence, and diligence as lawyers of ordinary skill and capacity commonly possess and exercise in the performance of the tasks which they undertake. . . .’”
(Kirsch
v.
Duryea
(1978)
In this case, SH&H states that it sent a copy of Judge Froehlich’s memorandum to a Considine employee, asked her to discuss the memorandum with Moulios and call back if they wanted SH&H to take any further action. In opposing the motion for summary judgment, Considine submitted declarations which stated that SH&H did not inform Considine about what, according to Considine and Moulios, was a material portion of the memorandum—the $5,000 bond. The declarations also imply that SH&H did not discuss with Considine or Moulios alternative remedies, their cost and the likelihood of their success.
A trier of fact may at some point believe that, under the circumstances, SH&H’s contact with Considine’s employee was sufficient to discharge its duty to fully advise its clients. However, on this conflicting record we cannot say so as a matter of law. Since there are issues of material fact, the summary judgment should not have been granted unless SH&H is immune from claims of indemnity as a matter of law. (Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c).)
Equitable Indemnity Among Tortfeasors
Commercial Standard
SH&H relies extensively on
Commercial Standard Title Co.
v.
Superior Court
(1979)
The title companies brought a cross-complaint against the plaintiff’s lawyer, alleging that in advising his client to rely on a guaranty the lawyer was partially responsible for the plaintiff’s loss. The title companies argued that their cross-complaint was proper under the holding in
American Motorcycle Assn.
v.
Superior Court
(1978)
The
Commercial Standard
court also took note of the fact that the lawyer was not the title companies’ counsel. (
Without either shared liability or concerted action, the
Commercial Standard
court was unwilling to imply any right of indemnity. In addition, as a matter of public policy, the court held it was inappropriate to permit defendants to sue their adversaries’ attorneys. (
SH&H believes that it is in the same position as the lawyer in Commercial Standard. SH&H argues that because Considine’s liability to Moulios may include injuries which occurred both before and after the firm was retained, SH&H and Considine do not share liability for the whole of an indivisible injury. Further, SH&H argues that with respect to such injuries, it was not acting in concert with Considine, it shared no duty with Considine and it could not foresee Considine’s conduct. Because it does not believe that it fits snugly within the categories prescribed in Commercial Standard, SH&H argues that Considine is not entitled to any indemnity.
By the same token, the availability of equitable indemnity is not unlimited. As the
Turcon
court pointed out: “[I]f there were in fact two separate and distinct torts committed, one by the appellant and one by the respondents, appellant would never, under any theory, be entitled to indemnity damages attributable to its tortious conduct.”
(Turcon Construction, Inc.
v.
NortonVilliers, Ltd., supra,
Under the terms of the lease, Considine was obligated to provide Moulios with a patio. In order to discharge that obligation, Considine retained SH&H to represent itself, as well as Moulios. Under these circumstances SH&H’s duties were not exclusive. They ran to Considine as well as to Moulios. Moreover, while Considine would not be vicariously liable for SH&H’s negligence (see
Lynn
v.
Superior Court
(1986)
Contrary to SH&H’s argument, when the Commercial Standard court spoke of “entire damage proximately resulting,” it did not mean to bar equitable indemnity in every instance where one defendant may be liable for less damage than another. Rather, we believe, even where one of two tortfeasors may be solely responsible for part of a plaintiff’s damages, the conduct or relationship of the tortfeasors may still permit them to share the burden of those damages for which responsibility is shared. Thus, Considine’s conduct prior to retaining the law firm and after SH&H filed a substitution of attorneys does not alter Considine’s ability to seek indemnity. SH&H may not be liable for events which occurred outside the temporal limits of its relationship with Considine. During the course of the relationship, however, Considine’s conduct was not, as a matter of law, an unforeseeable, independent intervening force.
Because SH&H was Considine’s counsel, as well as Moulios’s, the public policy considerations which barred an indemnity action in
Commercial Standard
and
Held
v.
Arant
(1977)
Misrepresentation
If, on remand, SH&H is able to show that Considine intentionally deceived Moulios at the time the lease was signed, we do not believe Considine would be entitled to equitable indemnity. (See
Li
v.
Yellow Cab Co.
(1975)
“Godfrey v. Steinpress, supra, . . . merely reiterated the Carroll holding and adopted some of its sweeping generalizations: . . .
“The Godfrey court did not suggest a sound reason for ruling out comparative indemnity among joint tortfeasors in a commercial misrepresentation action.” (Id. at pp. 331-332.)
We agree with this interpretation of
Carroll
and
Godfrey.
Those cases do not suggest the principles enunciated in
AMA
are inapplicable to defendants charged with negligent misrepresentation. Moreover, nothing in
AMA
or Code of Civil Procedure section 877.6 limits the doctrine of comparative negligence to noncommercial lawsuits. If a commercial action requires determination of the “negligence” or “fault” of various defendants, their rights are governed by the principles set forth in
AMA.
(See
Kohn
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Having determined that SH&H is subject to indemnity claims under
AMA,
we need not consider whether Considine’s contractual relationship with SH&H also gives rise to indemnity for the negligence alleged by Moulios. Under
AMA,
Considine may attempt to shift either all or part of the tort liability to SH&H.
(E. L. White, Inc.
v.
City of Huntington Beach
(1982)
Breach of Contract
It is possible that a trier of fact will determine that Considine was not guilty of any negligence but that it nonetheless breached its contract with Moulios. Thus, we must determine whether Considine may recover from SH&H amounts paid to Moulios for such a breach.
A defendant sued for breach of contract may have a right of implied indemnity against a third person whose wrong caused the defendant’s breach.
(County of Los Angeles
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
In our view, resolution of this question depends upon the circumstances which give rise to the implied right of indemnity. As the Supreme Court explained in
E. L. White
v.
City of Huntington Beach
(1978)
In light of the deference we must afford the reasonable expectations of contracting parties, we believe that where the alleged breach of an express promise gives rise to a claim for implied indemnity, principles of contract law should control. Thus, where one party has promised to perform a particular act, upon breach the injured promisee should not face a comparative negligence defense. (See
Bear Creek Planning Com.
v.
Title Ins. & Trust Co.
(1985)
However, when indemnity is based, not upon breach of a promise, but upon breach of a duty of care, the principles of comparative fault set forth in
Li
v.
Yellow Cab Co., supra,
Considine’s claim for indemnity is based upon SH&H’s alleged breach of its duty of care. Under our analysis, Considine should be able to recover from SH&H the law firm’s proportionate share of Considine’s contract loss.
Conclusion
Because, based upon the pleadings and declarations, Considine may pursue its claim for indemnity, we reverse the judgment dismissing its cross-complaint.
Kremer, P. J., and Riggs, J., * * concurred.
Notes
Code of Civil Procedure section 877.6 was a codification of the equitable principles set forth in AMA,
supra,
It is important to recognize that our analysis may be useful only in those instances, such as
County of Los Angeles, supra,
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
