Plaintiffs—minors, by their guardian ad litem, declined to amend their complaint within the time allowed after a demurrer thereto had been sustained; according to the caption of the pleading, the action is for damages for “Malpractice, Wilful and Malicious Injury to Plaintiffs’ Property Interests.” Judgment of dismissal was thereupon entered, and plaintiffs have appealed.
The principal defendants are certain attorneys in Los An. geles and elsewhere in California. The demurrer in question was interposed by Mr. Freedman only—it does not appear that the remaining defendants ever appeared, including the plaintiffs’ mother who was joined as a defendant in view of her asserted refusal to join as plaintiff (Code Civ. Proc., § 376).
As indicated by the allegations of the complaint, the background of the litigation is briefly as follows: Mrs. Haldane secured an interlocutory decree of divorce from the plaintiffs’ father;. she was then represented by one of the defendant attorneys. Mr. Freedman was subsequently substituted as
Coming now to the apparent
gravamen
of the complaint, two theories are advanced. By reason of certain fraudulent and negligent conduct on the part of the defendant attorneys, it is claimed that Mrs. Haldane’s estate is being wasted and that plaintiffs, as her lawful heirs, are being deprived of their inheritance. Also, and assertedly due to Haldane’s imprisonment, it is alleged that plaintiffs (as well as their mother) were deprived of his support and society. The nature of defendants’ fraudulent conduct is not specified. Thus, and with respect to the waste committed against Mrs. Haldane’s estate, it is alleged that “none of the defendants discharged an attorney’s fiduciary duty toward plaintiffs’ mother; as a direct result of said fraudulent advice and unskilled attention to their client’s affairs, plaintiffs’ mother’s estate has been gutted, despoiled, scattered and dissipated from approximately $30,000 to the point of insolvency”—it is also alleged that Mrs. Haldane is past 50 years of age, possesses no special skills and is virtually unemployable, which circumstances were known or should have been known by the defendants. With respect to plaintiffs’ deprivation of their rights as heirs, it is simply averred that the employment of defendants in combination contributed “to the destruction of the estate these minors would reasonably expect to inherit from their parents.” Respondent maintains that the foregoing allegations of fraud do not measure up to the rule “requiring specific language descriptive of the acts relied upon to constitute fraud.”
(Lawrence
v.
City of Santa Rosa,
As mentioned above, negligence on the part of the defendants is also alleged, it being specifically averred that they failed to exercise reasonable and ordinary care and failed to exercise that degree of learning possessed by others of the legal profession. The pleading requirements in an action for negligence (or malpractice) might possibly have been met
(Modica
v.
Crist,
We have concluded, giving the complaint the liberal construction called for, that neither theory of recovery is sound and that the trial court’s order was proper.
The guardian concedes that there is no privity between the plaintiffs and respondent-attorney—or any of the attorneys concerned, for that matter. He argues, however, that the privity of contract principle is no longer required in California since the result reached in
Biakanja
v.
Irving,
If any of the above factors are found in the litigation at bar, their presence cannot be twisted or tortured to bring the case within the exception invoked in
Biakanja
v.
Irving, supra.
With respect to “the extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the plaintiff,” an attorney commits no actionable wrong simply because, pursuant to express
Next, we consider “the foreseeability of harm to (plaintiffs)” and “the degree of certainty that the (plaintiffs) suffered injury.” As far as the change in family relationship is concerned, we have already expressed ourselves on the noneconomic aspects of the matter; in its economic aspects, there is no degree of certainty that the plaintiffs have been, or will be, affected by the conduct of respondent or other attorneys concerned. Specifically, it is claimed that the depletion of the mother’s estate has destroyed or diminished their inheritable interests therein. But the provisions of section 20 of the Probate Code entitle every person of sound mind to dispose of his or her property as he or she sees fit—not in equal proportions to his or her relatives or to those who would inherit under the laws of succession. Since there is no allegation that plaintiffs’ mother ever executed a will (which remains unrevoked), how can it be validly argued (unlike the situation in
Biakanja)
that plaintiffs have a
certain
or
fixed
interest in her estate which has been affected by respondent’s asserted acts? Cases are legion to the effect that a person can make a cruel or unnatural will provided, of course, there was testamentary capacity and an absence of other circumstances serving to invalidate the instrument. Plaintiffs here have a mere expectancy, not a vested right, in their mother’s estate. “One cannot be defrauded of that in which he has no vested right. A vested right is property which the law protects, while a mere expectancy is not property, and therefore is not protected.”
(Hoeft
v.
Supreme Lodge,
In conclusion, no California case has been cited which would have the effect of supporting the theories advanced by the guardian. This includes
Lucas
v.
Hamm,
The judgment is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
