The plaintiffs Glidden, husband and wife, brought suit against the defendant Terranova, an attorney, alleging several claims in tort and contract arising from the defendant’s representation of them in a prior legal proceeding. The plaintiffs had been sued in District Court by a real estate broker seeking to recover a commission earned in the *598 sale of the plaintiffs’ home. They now contend that the defendant promised to represent them and remove the action to the Superior Court for a jury trial, and that the defendant’s failure to do so resulted in default judgments and, in subsequent supplementary proceedings, the arrest and imprisonment of Mr. Glidden for contempt in not paying the judgment. At the trial below, the plaintiffs presented evidence to support their claim, after which the defendant filed a motion for a directed verdict. The issues argued on appeal are whether the Superior Court judge was justified in allowing the motion for a directed verdict on the grounds that (1) the plaintiff did not offer expert testimony to establish either an attorney-client relationship or that the defendant violated the standard of care owed by a lawyer to his client in these particular circumstances, and (2) the plaintiffs’ evidence could not support a conclusion that the defendant’s inaction was a proximate cause of the damages alleged by the plaintiffs. We hold that the evidence was sufficient to require denial of the motion for a directed verdict and reverse the judgment of the Superior Court.
1. An attorney owes his client an obligation to exercise a reasonable degree of care and skill in the performance of his legal duties.
Caverly
v.
McOwen,
The plaintiffs here testified that the defendant agreed to represent them in an outstanding legal action and that all legal papers relative to that action were delivered to the defendant. According to their testimony, the defendant promised to remove the action to the Superior Court for a jury trial and later informed the plaintiffs that he had removed the action. The plaintiffs further testified that they did nothing about the action in reliance on the defendant’s representation that “everything is well in hand” and that he would “straighten the whole thing out.” Actually, the defendant neither filed an answer nor removed the action, a fact which came to the plaintiffs’ attention only after default judgments were entered in the District Court. The evidence indicates that the defendant was notified in advance, yet failed to appear at both the supplementary process hearing and the contempt hearing which resulted in Mr. Glidden’s arrest and imprisonment. Finally, the plaintiffs testified that they telephoned the defendant after Mr. Glidden was committed for contempt, at which time they were told by a secretary that the defendant was in conference and could not be disturbed. According to their testimony, the sole response to the plaintiffs’ request for legal assistance was a subsequent telephone call from the defendant’s secretary to Mrs. Glidden suggesting that they “raise bail” and seek other counsel. Viewed in the light most
*600
favorable to the plaintiffs,
DiMarzo
v. S.
& P. Realty Corp.,
2. Where a party who was the plaintiff in a legal action sues his attorney for negligence in the prosecution of that action, he must establish that he probably would have succeeded in the underlying litigation were it not for the attorney’s negligence.
McLellan
v.
Fuller,
Judgment reversed.
