Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
This аppeal arises out of a dispute over the dissolution of an accounting partnership. At issue is the propriety of the trial court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of third-party defendants, Elliott I. Goodman and the law firm of Gottlieb and Schwartz, on the claim for indemnity brought by third-party plaintiffs, Marshall Kerschner and Ronald Karlin.
The record reveals that Marshall Kerschner, Ronald Karlin, Burton Sharpe, Jerry Weiss, Franklyn Lee, and Anne Seefor were partners in an accounting firm known as Weiss & Company. In the summer of 1989, Kerschner, Karlin and Sharpe (KKS) retained Elliott I. Goodman, a partner in the law firm of Gottlieb & Schwartz (Goodman), to provide professional advice relative to their withdrawal from Weiss & Company and to the formation of a new accounting partnership.
After consulting with Goodman and prior to withdrawing from the partnership, KKS informed certain clients of Weiss & Company of their intention to leave that firm and requested those clients direct Weiss & Company to deliver their client files to KKS. They also offered employment with their new firm to certain employees of Weiss & Company. In addition, KKS withdrew $150,000 from the Weiss & Company bank account and deposited those funds in their personal accounts. After announcing their withdrawal from Weiss & Company, KKS accepted payment on accounts receivable due Weiss & Company and deposited such funds in the account held by the new accounting firm. KKS also billed clients in the name of the new firm for services performed while they were still partners in Weiss & Company.
In October 1989, KKS announced their withdrawal from Weiss & Company and demanded that the remaining partners deliver to them the client files for all clients who had signed letters of direction to that effect. The remaining partners refused to comply with these directions, and KKS filed an action in chancery against them, seeking production of those client files.
The trial court entered an agreed order, requiring the partners to deliver the client files to KKS and requiring KKS to return $75,000 to the partners. The furniture and office equipment of the partnership were divided between the parties, and the remaining Weiss partners were ordered to furnish an accounting to KKS, calculating their remaining interest in the firm. This accounting established that KKS were entitled to receive approximately $49,000 in addition to the assets prеviously distributed. KKS filed objections to the accounting, and the trial court transferred the case to the law division for trial on the issues raised by the objections.
In February 1991, the remaining Weiss partners (the plaintiffs) filed a separate action against KKS, and the two actions were consolidated for trial. Plaintiffs sought an accounting as well as recovery of damages for the allegedly wrongful termination of the Weiss partnership, for alleged breaches of fiduciary duty, and for alleged tortious interference with the contractual relations of the Weiss partnership.
Thereafter, Kerschner and Karlin filed a third-party complaint against Goodman and the law firm of Gottlieb and Schwartz in the 1991 case. Sharpe elected not to join as a third-party plaintiff. In the third-party complaint, Kerschner and Karlin alleged that Goodman had advised them that, prior to announcing their withdrawal from the Weiss partnership, it was lawful and advisable to establish a new accounting firm, to lease office space in the name of the new firm and to obtain insurance and utility service. Kerschner and Karlin claimed thаt Goodman also advised them that it was lawful and advisable to solicit clients and employees of the Weiss partnership, to withdraw funds from the Weiss partnership for deposit in their personal accounts, to accept payment on accounts receivable due the Weiss partnership, to deposit such funds in the new accounting firm’s account and to bill clients in the name of the new accounting firm for services performed while they were still members of the Weiss partnership.
Kerschner and Karlin alleged that Goodman had acted nеgligently in advising them on their withdrawal from the Weiss partnership and on the creation of their new accounting firm. They also alleged that they would not have performed any of the acts set forth above had they not been advised by Goodman that it was lawful and advisable for them to do so. In the prayer for relief, Kerschner and Karlin sought to recover from Goodman and his law firm only those amounts for which they may be held liable to the plaintiffs as a result of having followed Goodman’s allegedly negligent advice.
Plaintiffs subsequently amended their complaint аgainst KKS. The amended complaint added as defendants Diana Nolan and Paul Karlin and alleged that these additional defendants had "conspired” with KKS to remove funds from the Weiss partnership and to solicit clients and employees of the partnership. Kerschner and Karlin did not request leave to amend their third-party complaint.
Goodman and his firm filed an answer, denying the substantive allegations in the third-party complaint. They then filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting that they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law based upon the Joint Tortfeasor Contribution Act (Contribution Act) (740 ILCS 100/0.01 et seq. (West 1992)) and upon the law governing claims for implied indemnity. The motion for summary judgment was predicated upon the assertions contained in the pleadings and was not supported by affidavit, deposition testimony, or any other evidentiary material.
Kerschner and Karlin opposed the motion for summary judgment, claiming that the Contribution Act was inapplicable and that Goodman and his firm were not entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In their reply memorandum, Goodman and his firm argued that Kerschner and Karlin had no cause of aсtion and that the third-party complaint was legally insufficient.
The trial court granted the motion for summary judgment, without hearing oral argument. The court’s order included a finding that there was no just reason to delay enforcement or appeal of the order. Kerschner and Karlin have appealed the entry of summary judgment in favor of Goodman and his law firm.
Summary judgment is proper when the pleadings, depositions, affidavits, and admissions on file demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Sеe 735 ILCS 5/2 — 1005(c) (West 1994). In the absence of affidavits, admissions or deposition testimony to support the motion for summary judgment, we look to the allegations contained in the pleadings to determine whether the third-party defendant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
The question presented in this appeal is whether individual members of an accounting partnership, who have been sued for wrongful termination of the partnership, can maintain a third-party action for implied indemnity against the lawyers who provided them with professional advice regаrding their termination of the partnership and withdrawal from the firm.
Assertion of a third-party claim is the procedural device by which a defendant in a lawsuit is permitted to bring an additional party into the action. The filing of a third-party action is governed by section 2 — 406 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure, which provides as follows:
"[A] defendant may by third-party complaint bring in as a defendant a person not a party to the action who is or may be liable to him or her for all or part of the plaintiffs claim against him or her.” 735 ILCS 5/2 — 406(b) (West 1994).
The purpose of this procedure is to avoid a multiplicity of litigation and to provide a means of resolving in one action an entire matter arising from a single set of facts. See People v. Brockman,
Because a third-party claim is premised upon derivative liability, the basis for most such actions has been indemnity or contribution. People v. Fiorini,
Implied indemnity emerged as a means to avoid the harsh result of the common law rule prohibiting contribution and evolved from two distinct theories, one based on tort principles and one based on quasi-contract principles. American Nationаl Bank & Trust Co. v. Columbus-Cuneo-Cabrini Medical Center,
Yet, implied indemnity based on quasi-contract principles is supported by a fundamentally different premise. American National Bank & Trust Co.,
To state a cause of action for implied indemnity based upon quasi-contractual principles, a third-party complaint must allege (1) a pretort relationship between the third-party plaintiff and the third-party defendant, and (2) a qualitative distinction between the conduct of the third-party plaintiff and the third-party defendant. Frazer v. A.F. Munsterman, Inc.,
In the instant case, Kerschner and Karlin have clearly alleged a pretort relationship with Goodman. The third-party complaint alleged that KKS retained Goodman in the summer of 1989 to provide professional advice regarding their withdrawal from Weiss & Company and regarding the formation of a new accounting partnership. This attorney-client relationship existed prior to the conduct upon which plaintiffs’ tort claims are predicated. As a result of this relationship, Goodman assumed contractual and fiduciary duties to Kerschner, Karlin and Sharpe. The assertion of this relationship is sufficient to satisfy the first element necessary to allege a claim for implied indemnity.
In addition, Kerschner and Karlin have alleged a qualitative difference between their conduct and that of Goodman. In their third-party complaint, Kerschner and Karlin alleged that Goodman had advised them that, prior to announcing their withdrawal from the Weiss partnership, it was lawful and advisable to establish a nеw accounting firm, to lease office space in the name of the new firm and to obtain insurance and utility service, to solicit clients and employees of the Weiss partnership, to withdraw funds from the Weiss partnership for deposit in their personal accounts, to accept payment on accounts receivable due the Weiss partnership, to deposit such funds in the new accounting firm’s account and to bill clients in the name of the new accounting firm for services performed while they were still members of the Weiss partnershiр.
Kerschner and Karlin also alleged that they would not have performed any of the acts set forth above had they not been advised by Goodman that it was lawful and advisable for them to do so. The allegations in the third-party complaint assert that the actions of Kerschner and Karlin were controlled by the professional advice and judgment of Goodman. These assertions alleged a qualitative distinction between the conduct of Kerschner and Karlin and that of Goodman and were adequate to meet the second elemеnt of an implied-indemnity claim.
A third-party complaint must state a cause of action and disclose some relationship upon which a duty to indemnify may be predicated. Brockman,
Goodman contends that Kerschner and Karlin are not entitled to contribution under the Contribution Act and that they cannot recover under the doctrine of "active-passive negligence.” Although both of these contentions are correct, they have no relevance in the case at bar.
The Contribution Act envisions a sharing of common liability by two or more parties who are jointly responsible for the injury suffered by the plaintiff. See Frazer,
Goodman also contends that because the doctrine of "active-passive negligence” no longer exists, it cannot support a claim fоr implied indemnity. As previously noted, the doctrine of "active-passive negligence” was applicable only where the claim for indemnity was based upon tort principles, i.e., where the third-party plaintiff and the third-party defendant were joint tortfeasors. Kerschner, Karlin and Goodman are not joint tortfeasors, and the third-party claim for implied indemnity was predicated upon quasi-contractual principles rather than on tort principles. Thus, the now obsolete doctrine of "active-passive negligence” is irrelevant to our consideration of the third-party claim.
The Contribution Act did not abolish all forms of common law implied indemnity, but only that premised on apportionment of common liability based on relative fault. American National Bank & Trust Co.,
Because a third-party claim for indemnity cannot be determined until the underlying action establishing liability and damages is decided, the clаim for implied-indemnity does not accrue until the defendant has a judgment entered against him or until he settles the underlying suit against him. Ashley,
In the case at bar, Kerschner and Karlin asserted that their actions were directed by Goodman. Accordingly, their liability to the plaintiffs, if any, was wholly derivative, arising solely out of the advice offered by Goodman. See generally Faier v. Ambrose & Cushing, P.C.,
Although not falling precisely within the classic forms of derivative liability, the claims asserted by the plaintiffs and by KKS are sufficiently interrelated to allow а third-party action. A finding of liability against KKS in the underlying action is a necessary predicate to a determination of liability in the third-party action against Goodman. Consequently, the broad purposes of judicial economy are best served by having both actions tried together. In light of the procedural posture of this case, our resolution avoids the fundamental unfairness of allowing the entry of summary judgment in favor of Goodman, which constitutes an adjudication on the merits, to forever bar a claim for legal malpractice by Kerschner and Kаrlin.
Goodman has also argued that Kerschner and Karlin are precluded from asserting a claim for indemnity because the underlying complaint, as finally amended, contained allegations which were not included in the third-party complaint. Specifically, Goodman refers to the plaintiffs’ allegations that KKS neglected their specific duties to the partnership, failed to perform services for clients of the partnership, and conspired with Nolan and Paul Karlin to remove funds from the Weiss partnership and to solicit clients and emplоyees of the partnership. We note that the plaintiffs’ amended complaint did not include a count for negligence. Rather, the allegations set forth above constituted minor components of the aggregated allegations supporting the claims for wrongful termination, breach of fiduciary duties, and for tortious interference with contractual relations. As such, these allegations were insufficient to preclude Kerschner and Karlin from asserting a claim for implied indemnity. Because the claim raised by Kerschner and Karlin was derivative, it was properly brought as a third-party claim for implied indemnity.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
Reversed and remanded.
EGAN, J., concurs.
Notes
We recognize that in Farm Credit Bank v. Gamble,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
For the reasons which follow, I respectfully dissent from the majority holding that Kerschner and Karlin are entitled to maintain a third-party action based on implied quasi-contractual indemnity.
In a line of carefully drafted post-Contribution Act opinions, our supreme court has considered the continued viability of implied indemnity as a method of third-party recovery. The rule from these cases is consistent and crystal clear: a party who is culpable, negligent, or factually at fault is not entitled to quasi-contractual indemnification.
In Allison v. Shell Oil Co.,
However, following Allison, in Frazer v. A.F. Munsterman, Inc.,
In Thatcher o. Commonwealth Edison Co.,
In Dixon o. Chicago & North Western Transportation Co.,
In Dixon, the plaintiff was a passenger in a Jеep driven by a coworker in the course of their employment. The Jeep went out of control and crashed. The plaintiff then sued his employer under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 U.S.C. § 51 et seq. (1988)), the driver in negligence, and the Jeep defendants in strict products liability. The employer and driver asserted a third-party action against the Jeep defendants. In denying implied indemnity, the court held the scope of implied indemnity in a defective products case is limited to those situations where the indemnitee was not at fault in causing the loss. Dixon,
"Wherе the party seeking indemnity was not at fault, it can rightfully seek to shift its entire liability to the truly responsible party. However, if the party seeking indemnity is found to have been at fault in causing the injury, fairness dictates that it not be allowed to shift the entire loss to other parties.” Dixon,151 Ill. 2d at 119 .
Consequently, because the driver’s liability to the plaintiff was based on negligence, the driver was barred from seeking indemnity. Likewise, because the employer’s liability was vicarious, the driver’s negligence would be charged to the employer, thereby precluding the employer from seeking implied indemnity from the Jeep defendants. Dixon,
In American National Bank & Trust Co. v. Columbus-Cuneo-Cabrini Medical Center,
On the one hand, the premise supporting implied indemnity in a quasi-contractual context "recognizes that the law may impose upon a blameless party liability derivatively through another’s conduct.” American National Bank & Trust Co.,
On the other hand, the Contribution Act is premised on fault-based considerations and is thus "theoretically 'ill-suited to the task of addressing’ quasi-contractual relationships.” American National Bank & Trust Co.,
In the case sub judice, Kerschner and Karlin are charged with actual wrongdoing for the wrongful termination of the partnership, breaches of fiduciary obligations, and tortious interference with contractual relations. Kerschner and Karlin are not susceptible to liability solely because of a legal relationship, nondelegable duty, or vicarious liability scheme. One cannot reasonably say that a person so charged is blameless, not culpable, or not factually at fault. The fact that Kerschner and Karlin relied on the attorney’s advice in acting as they did may suggest a malpractice claim. However, it does not render their actions any less culpable with respect to Weiss. Put another way, Kerschner and Karlin are subject to liability for their own actual conduct, rather than for the actions of their attorney.
Dixon is directly on point. Kerschner and Karlin are barred from seeking implied indemnity because they are charged with actual wrongdoing. To allow a third-party action here amounts to a resurrеction of active-passive indemnity and a legal "game of pin the tail on the donkey.” See Allison,
Finally, the majority’s reliance on Faier v. Ambrose & Cushing, P.C.,
In sum, because Kerschner and Karlin have not set forth a proper claim for contractual implied indemnification, subrogation, breach of warranty, or some form of derivative liability, they are not entitled to maintain a third-party action pursuant to section 2 — 406 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure. Accordingly, I would affirm the finding of the circuit court.
