This is a legal malpractice action in which the plaintiff-client appeals from a summary judgment granted the defendant-attorney. The factual narrative will possess heightened significance against a backdrop of general doctrine:
Actionable legal malpractice is compounded of the same basic elements as othеr kinds of actionable negligence: duty, breach of duty, proximate cause, damage.
(Hege
v.
Worthington, Park & Worthington,
Quite without reference to the four basic elements of the traditional negligence analysis, a 1931 California appellate decision announced the following statement of essentials in the pleading and proof of legаl malpractice: “ ‘First, that there existed the relationship of attorney and client; second, that in connection with such relationship advice was given; third, that he [the client] relied upon such advice and as a result thereof did things that he would not otherwise have done; fourth, that as a direct and proximate result of such advice and the doing of such acts, he suffered loss and was damaged thereby.’ ”
(McGregor
v.
Wright,
*524 In this сase the defense is that the client sought no advice from the attorney and was given none; by the client’s1 express admission, she did not rely on the attorney, thus, that her alleged damage was not proximately caused by the attorney’s cause of action.
The facts are presented by summary judgment affidavits, which include extracts from depositions. There is no significant conflict in the evidence. Roberta Ishmael, the plaintiff, was formerly married to Earl F. Anders. The couple had three children. They lived in Gridley, where Mr. Anders was a partner in a family trucking business. Domestic difficulties resulted in a separation, and Mrs. Anders moved to Sacramento where she secured employment. She and her husband agreed upon a divorce and property settlement. She knew that she was entitled to one-half the marital property.
Mr. Anders called upon defendant Robert Millington, a Gridley attorney who had for some time represented him and his trucking firm. Mr. Millington advised Anders that if he could establish adulterous conduct by Mrs. Anders, he might be awarded more than one-half the community property. For one reason or another there was a decision that the wife rather than the husband would apply for divorce. At Anders ’ request Mr. Millington agreed to act as the wife’s attorney, to prepare the necessary papers and to file a divorce action for her. He drew up a complaint and a property settlement agreement and handed.these documents to Mr. Anders, who took them to Sacramento and had his wife sign them. She knew that Mr. Millington had represented her husband in the past. Faulty recall prevents ascertainment whether Mrs. Anders ever met personally with the attorney before the papers were drawn. She did not discuss the property settlement agreement with the attоrney before she signed it. Mr. Millington believed the divorce and property settlement arrangements were “cut and dried” between the husband and wife; he “assumed that she knew what she was doing;” he believed that she was actually getting half the property but made no effort to confirm that belief.
In her deposition the former Mrs. Anders testified that in signing the complaint and рroperty settlement agreement she relied solely on her husband and did not rely on the attorney. Later, when so instructed, she traveled to the courthouse at Oroville, where she and her corroborating witness met Mr. Millington. He escorted her through a routine ex parte hearing which resulted in an interlocutory divorce decree and judicial approval of the property settlement.
*525 According to her complaint, the former Mrs. Anders discovered that in return for a settlement of $8,807 she had surrendered her right to community assets totaling $82,500. Ascribing her loss to the attorney’s negligent failure to make inquiries as to the true worth of the community property, she seeks damages equivalent to the difference between what she received and one-half the asserted value of the community.
Summary judgment proceedings are not available where there are issues of fact to be tried; the question posed to the trial court and to this reviewing court is whether the pleading an'd affidavits disclose triable issues of fact.
(Simmons
v.
Civil Service Emp. Ins. Co.,
In any negligence action the existence of a duty of care owed by the defendant to the plaintiff is a question of law for the court.
(Amaya
v.
Home Ice etc. Co.,
By the very act of undertaking to represent Mrs. Anders in an uncontested divorce suit, Mr. Millington assumed a duty of care toward her, whatever its degree. Described in terms traditionally applicable to the attorney-client relationship, the degree of care exacted by that duty was that of a figurative lawyer of ordinary skill and capacity in the performance of like tasks.
(Lucas
v.
Hamm, supra,
The 'degree of care is related to the specific situation in which the defendant found himself. The standard is that of ordinary care under the circumstances of the particular case.
(Cucinella
v.
Weston Biscuit Co.,
Divorces are frequently uncontested; the parties may make their financial arrangements peaceably and honestly; vestigial chivalry may impel them to display the wife as the injured plaintiff; the husband may then seek out and pay an attorney to escort the wife through the formalities of adjudication. We describe these facts of life without necessarily approving them. Even in that situation the attorney’s professional obligations do not permit his descent to the level of a scrivener. The edge of danger gleams if the attorney has previously represented the husband. A husband and wife at the brink of division of their marital assets have an obvious divergence of interests. Representing the wife in an arm’s length divorce, an attorney of ordinary professional skill would demand some verification of the husband’s financial statement; or, at the minimum, inform the wife that the husband’s statement was unconfirmed, that wives may be cheated, that prudence called for investigation and verification. Deprived of such disclosure, the wife cannot make a free and intelligent choice. Representing both spouses in an uncontested divorce situation (whatever the ethical implications), the attorney’s professional obligations demand no less. He may not set a shallow limit on the depth to which he will represent the wife. 4
*528 The general standard of professional care described in Lucas v. Hamm, supra, is appropriate to the garden variety situation, where the attorney represents only one of several parties or interests. It falls short of adequate description where the attorney’s professional relationship extends to two clients with divergent or conflicting interests in the same subject matter. A more specific statement of the same rule is needed to guide the fact trier to the law’s demands when the attorney attempts dual representation. In short, an attorney representing two parties with divergent interests must disclose all facts and circumstances which, in the judgment of a lawyer of ordinary skill and capacity, are necessary to enable his client to make free and intelligent decisions regarding the subject matter of the representation. 5
In view of the degree of care imposed by law on an attorney in defendant’s position, a fact trier might reasonably find him negligent in failing to disclose to plaintiff the limited representation she was receiving and in failing to point to the possibility of independent legal advice. The question of breach *529 was thus a triable issue which could not be resolved on a summary judgment motion. We pass to the causation factor.
As we noted earlier, the general doctrine of negligence law establishes causality as a fact issue for the jury except in those cases where reasonable men cannot differ. At this point defendant adverts to the rule requiring reliance upon the attorney’s advice, as stated in McGregor v. Wright, supra, and Modica v. Crist, supra. Although by way of dictum, these cases seemingly announce an unyielding rule of causality, requiring not only that the attorney gave advice but also that the client relied on that advice. The McGregor-Modica formulation implies that the attorney’s conduct does not as a matter оf law cause the client’s harm where there is no reliance.
To pose lack of reliance as a fixed doctrinal demand invades the jury’s province as the trier of causation in fact; alternatively, such a demand rests upon the inacceptable proposition that all reasonable men will agree in rejecting the attorney’s conduct (including his inaction and silence) as a cause of damage where the client relies on other sources of information. The McGregor-Modica demand for reliance cannot be regarded as a fixed condition of recovery or as authority for a finding of noncausality as a matter of law.
Legal malpractice may consist of a negligеnt failure to act.
(Feldesman
v.
McGovern,
Contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part was specially pleaded and, if established, would bar malpractice recovery.
(Theobald
v.
Byers,
Thus, notwithstanding the lack of conflict in the evidеnce, the summary judgment rests on the determination of issues reserved for decision by a fact trier and which could not be resolved as a matter of law. Since triable issues of fact existed, the motion should have been denied.
Judgment reversed
Pierce, P. J., and Regan, J., concurred.
Notes
An early California decision states that when the facts of a legal malpractice action are ascertained, the question of negligence is one of law for the court.
(Gambert
v.
Hart,
See
Grove
v.
Grove Valve
&
Regulator Co.,
See Cheatham, Cases and Materials on Legal Profession, p. 151 et seq.
Anderson
v.
Eaton,
The Committee on Ethics of the Los Angeles Bar Association has condemned dual representation in divorce suits even with parties
’
consent, basing its opinion on American Bar Association Canon 6 rather than the California rules. (Opinion No. 207, July 10, 1953, 29 L.A. Bar Bulletin 137.) An aggravated instance of dual representation in a divorce suit
*528
appears in
In re Rubin,
In
Anderson
v.
Eaton, supra,
