In а derivative suit brought to recover secret profits gained by appellants at the expense of the corporation which they had promoted and formed, appellants cross-complained against their former attorney for negligently giving advice which led them into а position of liability to the corporation and to its shareholders. Cross-defendant attorney demurred on the ground that the cause of action against him was barred by the two-year statute of limitations. (Code Civ. Proc., § 339, subd. 1.) We hold that the trial court correctly sustained the demurrer.
Put into nаrrative form, the pertinent allegations of the amended cross-complaint follow. In March 1962, appellants (the clients) became interested in trying to buy at a bargain price the Weber Ranch in Marin County. Respondent (the attorney) was engaged for the purpose of forming a joint venture among the clients, negotiating the purchase in behalf of the joint venture, and forming a corporation to issue shares to local residents and with the proceeds purchase the property from the joint venturing clients. The purchase of the propеrty was arranged for $215,000, which the clients regarded as a bargain price. On March 28, 1962, the clients executed an agreement among themselves, drafted by the attorney, to sell the property to a corporation which the parties would form for that purchase, or comрlete the purchase themselves as equal owners.
The attorney advised his clients that they could lawfully realize a profit upon the resale of the property to a corporation promoted by them. Acting on instructions given in reliance on that advice, the attorney drafted a pre-incorporation subscription agreement which provided that the corporation would purchase the property for $319,800. The attorney advised his clients that they need not disclose to other subscribers the fact that they planned to make a profit of $104,800 in the transaction. In fact, the profit was disclosed to only one subscriber in response to his specific inquiry.
Articles of incorporation were filed with the Secretary of State on April 30, 1962. Title to the property was transferred to the corporation and on May 31, 1962, the clients received in exchange cash and corporate stock representing the agreed purchase price. Between June 7 and July 6, the corporation issued 218 shares of stock of which a major proportion were sold to persons other than the оriginal promoters. On January 6, 1964, after various skirmishes not pertinent here, certain of the shareholders brought a derivative action to recover the *4 clients’ secret profits. On August 24, 1964, the clients cross-complained against their attorney alleging his malpractice in advising them that thеy had no duty to disclose promoters’ profits and seeking indemnity in the amount of their liability as established in the main action.
An amendment to the cross-complaint added an allegation that at the time of a shareholders’ meeting on December 17, 1962, the attorney was still acting for his cliеnts in a professional capacity and negligently failed to advise them of their continuing duty to disclose secret profits.
The attorney demurred, asserting that more than two years had elapsed from the negligent rendering of advice, and from the time the cause of action аrose, to the filing of the cross-complaint. The demurrer further asserted that the allegations added to the cross-complaint by amendment do not show that a new cause of action arose on December 17, because the advice given that day was not acted uрon by the clients and did not cause detriment to them. After sustaining the demurrer, the court entered judgment dismissing the cross-complaint.
On appeal, the clients assert that (1) the statute of limitations runs from the time an attorney’s negligent advice causes actionable damage rather than from the time such advice was given and (2) in any event the attorney was guilty of negligence within two years of the filing of the cross-complaint. In their opening brief, appellants urged us to hold that by analogy to the rule applicable to medical malpractice actions the period of limitation does not commence to run until the client discovers or should have discovered the negligence of the attorney. That point has now been abandoned, appellants conceding that we are bound by the recent contrary decision of the California Supreme Court in
Alter
v.
Michael
(1966)
Commencement of the Period op Limitation
Promoters, directors, and officers of corporations have a fiduciary duty to deal in good faith with or on behalf of the corporation’s shareholders and pre-incorporation subscribers. (Corp. Code, § 820;
Tevis
v.
Beigel
(1957)
*5
Appellants in effect concede that under these principles they are liable to thе other shareholders and subscribers, and allege that they were led into this position by their attorney’s erroneous advice, negligently given, that they need not disclose the secret profit. The elements of a cause of action for malpractice arising out of legal аdvice negligently given are: (1) the existence of the attorney-client relationship; (2) the negligent giving of advice in the course of that relationship; (3) change of position on the part of the client in reliance on that advice; (4) the suffering of loss and injury as a direct and proximate result of the client’s change of position.
(Modica
v.
Crist
(1954)
It is generally held that the period of limitation applicable to any class of action commences when the cause of action is complete.
(Merchants Fire Assur. Corp.
v.
Retail Credit Co., Inc.
(1962)
The general rule in the United States is that “. . . in the absence of fraudulent concealment, where an attorney at law is guilty of negligence or breach of duty in performing services for his client, the client’s cause of action accrues and the statute begins to run at the time when the negligence or breach of duty occurs, not at the time when it is discovered or actual damage results or is fully ascertained; ...” (54 C.J.S. § 135, subd. c, p. 57.) The California decisions conform to that statement. In
Lattin
v.
Gillette
(1892)
Appellants rely heavily upon
Lally
v.
Kuster
(1918)
Appellants also cite
Walker
v.
Pacific Indem. Co.
(1960)
In the present case, the clients unlawfully took profits on May 31, 1962, when they received cash and stock in exchange for the property. Actionable wrongs to the subscribers occurred no later than June 7 and July 6, 1962, when the original shares were issued. Since the cross-complaint was filed on August 24, 1964, that cause of action was barred by the statute.
Does the Amendment to the Cross-complaint Allege actionable Negligence Within Two Years Prior to Piling the Cross-complaint?
The cross-сomplaint was amended to allege that respondent continued to act as attorney for appellants at the first meeting of the shareholders of the corporation on December 17, 1962, and that at this meeting respondent failed to advise appellants of thеir duty to make disclosure. Appellants advance the theory that the events of December 17 did not give rise to a new cause of action but indicate that the attorney’s wrongful conduct was not completed until then because he had been retained to carry out an entire plan to realize
*8
profit in a certain manner, a plan which was not completed until that moment. Appellants also assert that the shareholders could have ratified the secret profit taking at the first meeting, thereby relieving them of liability. Here appellants rely principally upon
Fazio
v.
Hayhurst, supra,
The judgment of dismissal is affirmed.
Devine, P. J., and Rattigan, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied June 14, 1967, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 12, 1967. Peters, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
