This case involves allegations of legal malpractice arising from defendant’s legal representation of plaintiffs in connection with their construction of an office building in Troy. Leave to appeal was granted following the circuit court’s order granting summary judgment to defendant.
In 1973, plaintiffs formed a partnership and retained defendant to represent them in the construction of an office building. Problems arose during construction and the general contractor refused to complete the project for the original contract price. Negotiations between defendant, as legal counsel for plaintiffs, and the general contractor resulted in a new partnership and a new financing arrangement in which plaintiffs executed a promissory note payable to the general contractor. The building was completed and the general contractor sued on the promissory note in 1975. On July 28, 1975, defendant filed a motion to *592 withdraw as counsel for plaintiffs. Plaintiff Luce Lipton was served with a copy of the motion sometime prior to July 30, 1975. She further conferred with and engaged other counsel prior to the hearing on the motion to withdraw.
The general contractor moved for summary judgment. The motion for summary judgment and defendant’s motion to withdraw as counsel were heard by the trial court on July 30, 1975. At that hearing, the trial judge first granted the general contractor’s motion for summary judgment against plaintiff Luce Lipton. He then granted defendant’s motion to withdraw as counsel. At that time, defendant made no attempt to proffer any substantive defense in favor of the Liptons, relying instead on the motion to withdraw and the fact that the Liptons were present in court with newly retained attorneys.
On August 20, 1975, plaintiffs, represented by new counsel, moved to set aside the summary judgment, which motion was denied as was a later motion for rehearing. No appeal was taken.
On July 29, 1976, plaintiffs filed this action against defendant alleging seven separate instances of malpractice. Defendant filed an answer and counter-complaint for legal fees. He then filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging that his motion to withdraw as counsel in the earlierv case effectively terminated the attorney-client relationship on July 30, 1975, and that he owed no duty on which a claim of malpractice could be based.
The trial judge first granted summary judgment only as to paragraph five of the complaint, then, by amended order, dismissed all seven allegations of malpractice. Apparently, the order for summary judgment was based on both GCR 1963, 117.2(1) and 117.2(3), although the order does not specify either subrule.
*593 Plaintiffs’ complaint charged that defendant:
1. Refused in open court, through his agent, while being the attorney of record in a civil action, to oppose a motion for summary judgment against Luce Lipton, and allowed summary judgment to enter in violation of Disciplinary Rule 2-110 of the Code of Professional Responsibility;
2. Allowed in that same action default to enter against plaintiff Leo Lipton in violation of Disciplinary Rule 6-101;
3. Failed to file a breach of contract lawsuit against the firm of Andries-Butler, Inc., contrary to his representation that he was preparing to file a lawsuit for breach of contract, while at great expense to plaintiffs claiming to be documenting the facts necessary to pursue such lawsuit, all in violation of Disciplinary Rules 7-101, and 6-101(A)(3), and 1-102(A)(4);
4. Failed to properly advise plaintiff Luce Lipton as to the feasibility and propriety of engaging in the construction project known as 363 East Big Beaver, Troy;
5. Misrepresented to plaintiffs that their execution of a particular assumption agreement would relieve them of any liability for the cost of construction or mortgage financing related to the project known as 363 East Big Beaver, Troy, in violation of Disciplinary Rules 6-101 and 1-102(A)(4);
6. Advised plaintiffs that it was in their best interest in dealing with the property known as 363 East Big Beaver Road, Troy, to assign any and all right, title, and interest in said property in violation of the Canons of Ethics, the Code of Professional Responsibility and the standard of care for lawyers in the State of Michigan engaged in these kinds of transactions;
*594 7. Converted to his own use $12,000 worth of valuable oil paintings owned by plaintiff Luce Lipton under the guise of reducing the amount of the fee payable to the defendant for services rendered to the plaintiffs, illegally deducting 30% of the value of the paintings from his credit to the legal fees of plaintiffs, titling the same his commission.
We first review the trial court’s order under GCR 1963, 117.2(1), failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. In reviewing a motion granted under this subrule, we use the following standard:
"In reviewing a grant of summary judgment under GCR 1963, 117.2(1), the motion is tested by the pleadings alone.
Todd v Biglow,
An attorney is obligated to use reasonable skill, care, discretion and judgment in representing a client.
Eggleston v Boardman,
" 'Once an attorney accepts a retainer to represent a client, he is obligated to exert his best efforts wholeheartedly to advance his client’s legitimate interests with fidelity and diligence
until he is relieved of that obligation either by his client or by a court. State Bar of Michigan v Daggs,
Each of the alleged acts of malpractice were committed before the court granted defendant’s motion to withdraw as counsel. Plaintiffs have stated legally sufficient claims of malpractice and it is up to the trier of fact to determine if these claims are valid.
Corley v Logan,
Although plaintiffs have alleged breach of the common-law duty of care, they also posit their claims on alleged violations of the Code of Professional Responsibility. Defendant argues that such violations are not actionable in a civil suit for damages. Plaintiffs not only alleged that a violation of the Code is actionable but also that proof of a breach should be evidence of malpractice per se.
Under the previous Canons of Ethics, it was said that discipline is administered as a measure for the protection of the bench, bar and public.
In re Block,
*596 "Discipline, it goes without saying, must be such as is necessary in preserving the integrity of the bar and the orderly and effective administration of justice in this State. Discipline under the internal rules of the State Bar is not concerned necessarily with harm to the client, but rather with the professional conduct and ethics of the attorney in dealing with the client.” Block, supra, 707.
The Court in In re Mains, supra, 609, quoting from Weeks, Attorneys, § 80, held:
" 'As an attorney-at-law is an officer of the court, the latter may exercise its summary jurisdiction over him to the extent of depriving him of his office and striking his name from the rolls. This the court may do in cases of malpractice, though the offense be not indictable. Attorneys may forfeit their professionable franchise by abusing it, and a power to exact the forfeiture must be lodged somewhere. Such a power is indispensable, to protect the court, the administration of justice, and themselves. Abuses must necessarily creep in, and attorneys themselves are vitally concerned in preventing the vocation from being sullied by the misconduct of unworthy members. The court, too, has this power on the ground of self-protection, outside of the common law, and outside of the statutory doctrine of contempt, in cases where an attorney has shown himself unfit to be one of its officers; and such unfitness may be displayed, not only by moral delinquency, but by acts calculated and intended to injure the court.’ ”
The Supreme Court in State Bar of Michigan v Daggs, supra, 733, said:
"Whatever the motive of the complainant in invoking the grievance procedure, the responsibility of our profession is to provide a fair and full method of ascertaining the validity of the complaint and imposing such sanction on a lawyer’s conduct as may be warranted in the public interest. In this proceudre we are not con *597 cerned with enforcing the rights of the individuals involved. The civil courts are provided for that. Rather here we seek to make sure that all of us who hold ourselves out to the public as counsellors and agents in the administration of justice will so conduct ourselves as to merit the trust imposed in us.”
While none of the previous cases seems to have dealt with the question of whether a violation of the Code of Professional Responsibility is grounds for a malpractice action, we believe an analogous situation may be found in the criminal law and the law of torts. The same wrongful act may be offensive to the private individual as well as to the public generally, and from early times this was true of the lesser offenses. The punishment for serious offenses was death and forfeiture of goods, hence, no recovery could be had for a tort.
Austin on Jurisprudence, § 17, states:
"The difference between crimes and civil injuries is not to be sought in a supposed difference between their tendency, but in the difference between the mode wherein they are respectively pursued, or wherein the sanction is applied in the two cases. An offense which is pursued at the discretion of the injured party, or his representative, is a civil injury. An offense which is pursued by the sovereign, or by a subordinate of the sovereign is a crime.”
To the same effect is Prosser, Law of Torts (4th ed, 1971), § 2, p 7.
The Code of Professional Responsibility is a standard of practice for attorneys which expresses in general terms the standards of professional conduct expected of lawyers in their relationships with the public, the legal system, and the legal profession. Holding a specific client unable to rely on the same standards in his professional relations
*598
with his own attorney would be patently unfair. We hold that, as with statutes, a violation of the Code is rebuttable evidence of malpractice. See
Zeni v Anderson,
We next address the trial court’s grant of summary judgment under GCR 1963, 117.2(3). A motion grounded on no genuine issue as to any material fact is designed to test whether there is factual support for the claim.
Crowther v Ross Chemical & Manufacturing Co,
Defendant in this case filed a supporting affidavit as required by GCR 1963, 117.3. He dealt only with the issue of whether an attorney-client relationship still existed and did not address the remaining allegations of malpractice, all of which were alleged to have occurred prior to July 30, *599 1975, when the trial court granted defendant’s motion to withdraw as counsel. We need not deal at length with the subsequent grant of summary judgment as to the remaining allegations. The trial court clearly erred in granting the motion as to all counts.
In his affidavit averring that no attorney-client relationship existed, defendant relied on the fact that plaintiffs appeared in court with new counsel. However, an attorney owes a duty of care to his client until he is discharged by the client or the court.
State Bar of Michigan v Daggs, supra,
732,
Basic Food Industries, Inc v Travis, Warren, Nayer & Burgoyne, supra.
At the July 30, 1975, hearing, defendant’s motion to withdraw was not granted until after summary judgment was granted against plaintiff Luce Lipton. Defendant does not claim or state facts sufficient to show that he was discharged by his client. At a minimum, an attorney cannot withdraw unless he has good cause. See
Ambrose v The Detroit Edison Co,
Review of the record convinces this Court that a genuine issue of fact exists and that summary judgment was improperly granted under GCR 1963, 117.2(3).
Reversed and remanded.
