Mary Donahue and Sundy McClung appeal a dismissal of their legal malpractice claim. In their petition they assert that because of the defendant attorneys’ malpractice, an attempted testamentary transfer failed. Among other grounds for relief, they claim to have standing to bring this action even though they were not the clients of the attorneys involved. FoEowing opinion by the Missouri Court of Appeals, Westеrn District, this Court granted transfer. Rule 83.03. The order of dismissal is affirmed in part, reversed in part and the cause remanded.
In reviewing the sufficiency of the petition, this Court determines if the facts pleaded and inferences reasonably drawn therefrom state any ground for relief.
Martin v. City of Washington,
FACTS
Defendant J. Harlan Stamper is an attorney and shareholder of the defendant law firm Shughart, Thomson & Kilroy, P.C. (law firm). Gerald E. Stockton died in November 1988. For many years prior to his death, Mr. Stamper had been an attorney to Mr. Stockton. In 1979, Mr. Stockton established a living trust naming himself as trustee. The benefiсiaries of the trust included persons other than Mary Donahue and Sundy McClung.
In May 1988, Stockton explained to Stamper that he was entering the hospital for surgery. He sent Stamper $150,000.00 in checks on the trust account made payable to Mary Donahue and Sundy McClung. Stamper was directed to see to it that Donahue and McClung received the proceeds of the checks on the trust account when Stockton died. Stoсkton also directed Stamper to prepare a deed to his home transferring a fifty percent interest in the home to Donahue, effective on Stockton’s death. Donahue and McClung were the sole intended beneficiaries of these transfers.
In September 1988, Stockton gave Stamper another check drawn on the trust in the amount of $100,000.00 payable to “Mary Donahue, G.E. Stockton, J,T,W,R,0,S, [sic] J. Harlan Stamper, Trustee.” Mr. Stamper understood that Stockton wanted Mary Donahue to receive the proceeds of this check upon his death. On October 26,1988, Stamper was informed that Stockton’s death was imminent. Stamper then sought advice from others in his law firm on how to make the checks and deed effective. He and other law firm attorneys attempted to take action to effectuate Stockton’s wishes, including the recording of the deed. Stockton died November 5, 1988. The steps taken to effectuate the transfers were brought into question by declaratory judgment action, which resulted in an opinion by the Missouri court of appeals holding the transfers were invahd. 1
I.
The four elements of a legal malpractice action are: “(1) that an attorney-client relationship existed; (2) that defendant acted negligently or in breach of contract; (3) that such acts were the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ damages; (4) that but for defendant’s conduct the plaintiffs would have been successful in prosecution of their [underlying] claim.”
Boatright v. Shaw,
Accepting the facts pleaded as true and giving those facts the benefit of all reasonable inferences, they state that plaintiffs had an attorney-client relationship with Stamper and the law firm at the time of the late September 1988 meeting, that Stamper and others in the law firm acted negligently, that Stamper’s conduct was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs’ damages and that but for such conduct, the transfers would have been valid. It is true that lawyers frequently make statements or express opinions to persons engaged in transactions with their clients without intending to assume a duty as attorney to such persons, and reliance alone upon the advice or conduct of a lawyer does not create an attorney-client relationship. Ronald E. Mallen and Jeffrey M. Smith,
Legal Malpractice
§ 8.2, at 96 (3rd ed. Supp. 1993). Also, representation of Donahue in unrelated matters is insufficient to establish that Stamper represented her in regard to the Stockton transfers.
See Ginsberg v. Chastain,
II.
The more complicated question is whether the intended beneficiaries, in this
There are cases in Missouri indicating that circumstances may exist where an attorney will be held liable to third parties for the attorney’s unprofessional conduct. For example, there are exceptional cases involving fraud, collusion, or malicious or tortious acts by the attorney that might justify liability to third parties.
Kennedy v. Kennedy,
In comparable circumstanсes, this Court held that an indemnitor of a surety could sustain, in the absence of privity of contract, an action against an architect-defendant who allegedly failed to exercise ordinary care in certifying the amount of material furnished and labor performed.
Westerhold v. Carroll,
In
Westerhold,
the Court applied a case-by-case balancing of factors test established by
Biakanja v. Irving,
[T]he extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the plaintiff, the foreseeability of harm to [the plaintiff], the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury, the closeness of the connection between the defendant’s conduct and the injury suffered, the moral blame attached to the defendant’s conduct, and the policy of preventing future harm.
Id. This Court concluded that all the factors were satisfied except the one involving “moral blame” and allowed the plaintiff to maintain the action.
Courts of other states have considered whether an attorney can be held liable for negligence to a person other than the client. Generally, the analysis begins with the historical rule requiring privity of contract to maintain an action for professional negligence. Ronald E. Mallen and Jeffrey M. Smith, Legal Malpractice § 7.4, at 364 (3rd ed.1993). However, “the vast majority of modern decisions have favored expanding privity beyond the confines of the attorney-client relationship where the plaintiff was intended to be the beneficiary of the lawyer’s retention.” Id., § 7.10, at 379.
The balancing test cited in
Westerhold
was used by the California Supreme Court to determine whether non-client beneficiaries of a will could maintain a legal malpractice action.
Lucas v. Hamm,
The two most common approaches do not appear to be irreconcilable. The first factor of the balancing test addresses the extent to which the transaction was intended to benefit the plaintiff and bears a remarkable resemblance to the third party beneficiary theory. The question of whether the client had a specific intent tо benefit the plaintiff plays an important role in determining if a legal duty exists under the balancing of factors test. The first factor identified in Westerhold and Lucas should be modified to reflect that the factor weighs in favor of a legal duty by an attorney where the client specifically intended to benefit the plaintiffs. With that modification, that approach is an appropriate method for determining an attorney’s duty to non-clients. The weighing of factors allows cоnsideration of relevant policy concerns and is consistent with prior case law, as expressed in Westerhold. Concurrently, the ultimate factual issue that must be pleaded and proved is that an attorney-client relationship existed in which the client specifically intended to benefit the plaintiff.
The primary arguments against allowing a non-client to bring a legal malpractice action are the possibility that liability will extend to an unlimited class of individuals and will interfere with the attorney-client relationship. These concerns are addressed by proper application of the modified balancing of factors approach. If the transaction was specifically intended to benefit the plaintiff, liability is not extended to an unlimited class and it does not interfere with the attorney-client relationship, particularly where thе client is deceased or incompetent. A benefit that is merely incidental or indirect will not satisfy this factor. Neither will a benefit to one in an adversarial relationship to the client be sufficient to satisfy the factor. Within the bounds of the law, the attorney’s duty is solely to advance the client’s interest. Further, recognizing liability to an intended beneficiary of a testamentary transfer does not unduly burden the legal profession whеn liability is limited to those the client intended but is no longer able to benefit and where no other remedy exists to prevent harm to the beneficiaries.
See Williams,
To summarize, the Court concludes that the first element of a legal malpractice action may be satisfied by establishing as a matter of fact either that an attorney-client relationship exists between the plaintiff and defendant or an attorney-client relationship existed in which the attorney-defendant performed services specifically intended by the
(1) the existence of a specific intent by the client that the purpose of the attorney’s serviсes were to benefit the plaintiffs.
(2) the foreseeability of the harm to the plaintiffs as a result of the attorney’s negligence.
(3) the degree of certainty that the plaintiffs will suffer injury from attorney misconduct.
(4) the closeness of the connection between the attorney’s conduct and the injury.
(5) the policy of preventing future harm.
(6) the burden on the profession of recognizing liability under the circumstances.
Applying these six factors here, the pleadings statе that Stockton’s primary purpose in writing the checks and preparing and signing the deed was to benefit the plaintiffs and, aside from Stockton’s desire that his property be distributed according to his directions after his death, no benefit to him is apparent. It is clear that plaintiffs cannot be characterized as incidental or indirect beneficiaries. Negligent advice or preparation of testamentary documents was almost certain to cause plaintiffs injury. The conduct of Stamper and the law firm was directly connected to the injury. Future harm may only be prevented by allowing intended beneficiaries of failed testamentary transfers some avenue of recovery in malpractice claims, particularly where the estate has interests inconsistent with those of the intended beneficiaries. The legal profession will not be unduly burdened by being required to act competently toward identifiable persons that a client specifically intends to benefit when such persons have no other viable remedy and where such persons are not in an adversarial relationship to the client. The Court-concludes that the facts as pleaded here are sufficient to assert a breach of a legal duty and to state a cause of action in a lawyer malpractice action.
III.
The plaintiffs also argue that they have pleaded a claim as for breach of a third party beneficiary contract. While one element of one of their malpractice claims requires a showing that Stockton intended to benefit plaintiffs, a careful reading of the pleadings discloses that liability hinges not on contract but on an attorney’s alleged negligence toward a client. The duty allegedly breached was not the violation of the contract to deliver the checks and deed as per the directions of Stockton, but that Stamper was negligent in performing professional obligations to Stockton. Plaintiffs’ third party beneficiary claim is merely one of attorney malpractice, clothed in a contract theory. For that reаson, the counts alleging breach of a third party beneficiary contract were properly dismissed.
IV.
Similarly, the counts based upon breach of fiduciary relationship were properly dismissed. The fiduciary relationship, if one existed, arose out of the attorney-client relationship. The specific breach is dependent on the existence of attorney negligence, not on the breach of a trust.
Plaintiffs cite cases stating that the attorney-client relationship is a fiduciary relationship.
See, e.g., In re Oliver,
CONCLUSION
The judgment dismissing the amended petition is affirmed as to all counts except as to counts I, II, V, VIII, and XI. The judgment dismissing counts I, II, V, VIII and XI is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The effect of that opinion is dubious. This Court is informed by footnote in the court of appeals opinion in this case that the trial court in the declaratory judgment action held the transfers were valid as gifts
causa mortis.
On appeal, the court of appeals published an opinion holding the transfers were not valid gifts
causa mor-tis.
However, before the mandate of the court of appeals issued, the declaratory judgment action was settled and the court of appeals withdrew its
. More allegations of negligence are recited in the petition, but only those supporting a cause of action are reiterated. Stamper and the law firm’s conduct prior to Stamper’s first meeting with Donahue regarding the transfers would not state a cause of action because no allegations are made indicating an attorney-client relationship existed regarding the transactions prior to the first meeting.
