*1104 Opinion
The question on this appeal is whether a nonfiduciary defendant can be liable for conspiring with a fiduciary defendant to breach the fiduciary’s duty to the plaintiff. The answer, in our view, is sometimes yes and sometimes no. When the nonfiduciary is an agent or employee of the fiduciary, the nonfiduciary is entitled to the benefit of the “agent’s immunity rule” (and thus not liable on a conspiracy theory) unless the nonfiduciary was acting for its own benefit. If the nonfiduciary is neither an employee nor agent of the fiduciary, it is not liable to the plaintiff on a conspiracy theory because a nonfiduciary is legally incapable of committing the tort underlying the claim of conspiracy (breach of fiduciary duty). 1 Since the answer in this case is “no,” we affirm the order of dismissal that is the subject of this appeal.
Facts
A.
Everest Investors 8, LLC (and related entities included in our references to Everest) sued McNeil Investors, Inc. (and related individuals and entities included in our references to the General Partners, all of whom were in one way or another involved with several McNeil limited partnerships), and Whitehall Real Estate Limited Partnership XI (the only respondent on this appeal), alleging causes of action for breach of fiduciary duty, unfair competition, and constructive fraud.
Reduced to its essentials, the complaint alleges that Everest was a limited partner in several McNeil partnerships. In 1995, some of the McNeil partnerships’ limited partners (but not Everest) sued the General Partners for breach of fiduciary duty, alleging they had acted for their own benefit and not for the benefit of the partnerships. In 1998, in an attempt to settle the 1995 lawsuits, the General Partners “conspired among themselves and with Whitehall to sell [the] McNeil partnerships to Whitehall for significantly less than the fair market value of the assets of such partnerships.” Instead of soliciting bids and selling to the highest bidder or otherwise maximizing the return on the limited partners’ investments as required by the General Partners’ status as fiduciaries, the General Partners (acting with Whitehall’s *1105 “knowing cooperation”) “negotiated and conspired with Whitehall to sell all of the limited partnerships to Whitehall for less than [their] fair market value . . . and in a manner calculated to benefit the [G]eneral [P]artners and Whitehall at the expense of the limited partners.”
More specifically, the General Partners and Whitehall “breached their fiduciary duties to Everest” by refusing to consider higher bids for the assets purchased by Whitehall, structuring the Whitehall transaction to benefit the General Partners at the expense of the limited partners, and improperly allocating the proceeds of the sale. As a result of these and similar breaches, Everest’s share of the proceeds was reduced by about $3 million. In separate causes of action, Everest alleges that the same acts constituted an unfair business practice and constructive fraud. 2
B.
Whitehall demurred on the ground that (as “an arms’ length third-party acquirer”) it did not owe a fiduciary duty to Everest and thus could not be “held liable for conspiring to breach the [General Partners’] fiduciary duty to [Everest] as a matter of law.” (See
Pierce v. Lyman
(1991)
*1106 In reply, Everest conceded that Whitehall did not owe an independent fiduciary duty to Everest (and did not claim that Whitehall was the agent or employee of the General Partners) but insisted that Whitehall could nevertheless be liable for its conspiracy with the General Partners because Whitehall was acting to further its own interests.
The trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend, finding that a cause.of action for civil conspiracy does not arise if the alleged conspirator, although a participant in the agreement underlying the injury, was not personally bound by the duty violated by the wrongdoing. Everest appeals from the order of dismissal thereafter entered. 3
Discussion
A.
Relying on
Doctors’ Co. v. Superior Court
(1989)
By its nature, tort liability arising from a conspiracy presupposes that the conspirator is legally capable of committing the tort—that he owes a duty to the plaintiff recognized by law and is potentially subject to liability for the breach of that duty. Standing alone, a conspiracy does no harm, engenders no tort liability, and does not per se give rise to a cause of action. It must be activated by the commission of an actual tort.
(Applied Equipment Corp.
v.
Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd.
(1994)
Everest construes
Doctors’ Co., Gruenberg,
and
Applied Equipment
to authorize this suit against Whitehall for a conspiracy to breach the General Partners’ fiduciary duty simply because Whitehall
was not
the agent or the employee of the General Partners and
was
acting for its own benefit as a party to the underlying contract. Everest misperceives the rule. In
Applied Equipment Corp. v. Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd., supra,
In the context of our case, this means (1) that the General Partners’ agents and employees (if named as defendants) could not be liable for their employer’s conspiracy because—absent allegations that they were acting for their own benefit—the “agent’s immunity rule” protects them
(Applied Equipment Corp. v. Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd., supra,
Since the only duty allegedly breached as a result of the alleged conspiracy is a fiduciary duty owed by the General Partners but not by Whitehall, Whitehall cannot be held accountable to Everest on a conspiracy
*1108
theory.
(Doctors’ Co. v. Superior Court, supra,
B.
The conspiracy rule we articulate in this case is based on our interpretation of the relevant Supreme Court cases. For the record, however, we note the existence of language in several Court of Appeal opinions that is not entirely reconcilable with our analysis. For example, in
Pierce v. Lyman, supra,
In Kidron v. Movie Acquisition Corp., supra, 40 Cal.App.4th at pages 1597-1598, an action by the originator of a failed television series against his former partners and the proposed distributor of the series, Division Seven of our court rejected the plaintiff’s “conspiracy to breach fiduciary duty” claim against the proposed distributor because the distributor did not owe a fiduciary duty to the plaintiff.
In
City of Atascadero v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.
(1998)
In
Wolf
v.
Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp
(1999)
We see fruit salad where there should be separate stacks of apples and oranges. When an alleged conspirator is neither an agent nor an employee, we do not believe the “agent’s immuniiy rule” has anything to do with the price of tomatoes. This immunity rule and its exception (when an agent acts for his “own individual advantage”) are based on the proposition that a corporation cannot conspire with itself—because an agent or employee who is acting within the scope of his authority is (in the eyes of the law) one and the same “person” as the corporation.
(Black
v.
Bank of America
(1994)
Perhaps it is time for the Supreme Court to revisit these issues.
*1110 Disposition
The order of dismissal is affirmed. Whitehall is entitled to its costs of appeal.
Spencer, P. J., and Ortega, J., concurred.
Notes
We do not mean to include within this statement of the rule those cases where the “nonfiduciary” does not owe the fiduciary duty owed by his coconspirator but does owe a separate and distinct fiduciary duty—for example, where a client alleges that his former lawyer, who owed a fiduciary duty to his client, conspired with a trustee or some other person who owed a distinct fiduciary duty to the client.
The only allegation added to the unfair business practice cause of action (in which Everest asks for the same $3 million) is this: “The foregoing acts constitute unlawful, unfair, and/or fraudulent conduct and therefore violate Business [and] Professions Code [section] 17200 et seq. The majority of the other limited partners already have released similar claims by accepting the settlement of the class action that led to the bulk sales of the partnerships that are the basis for this action. Everest opted out of the class action. As a result, Everest is entitled to an order disgorging from Defendants the percentage of their improperly gained profits from their self-dealing transactions that is commensurate with Everest’s percentage interest in the partnerships.” The only allegation added to the constructive fraud cause of action is this: “In committing the foregoing facts [szc], Defendants benefited financially at the expense of Everest and other limited partners to whom they owed a fiduciary duty and/or to whom their coconspirators owed a fiduciary duty. As a result, they are liable for constructive fraud. HQ Because Defendant Whitehall conspired with the other fiduciary defendants in committing the foregoing tortious acts, a constructive trust should be imposed on the funds it . . . received so that they can be disgorged and returned to Everest.”
While this appeal was pending, the trial court granted the General Partners’ motion for summary judgment. For that reason, Whitehall asks us to dismiss Everest’s appeal. (See
In re Dani R.
(2001)
