Plаintiff brought, this action against defendants for legal malpractice and negligent misrepresentation. The trial court granted defendants’ summary judgment motion because defendants owed plaintiff no duty. We affirm.
In March 1986, plaintiff agreed to sell a parcel of land to his cousin, Steve Lord, 1 who intended to develop the property and then sеll it in lots. The actual sale and transfer of title took place some five months later in August. The sale agreement provided that plaintiff would be paid as lots were sold. The agreement also stated that plaintiff and Lord were dealing at arm’s length, were not acting as partners, and had not entered into a joint venture.
Defendant Frank Parisi is an attorney. In June 1986, Lord met with Parisi concerning the development of the property and asked him to draft Covenants, Conditions and Restrictions (CC&Rs). 2 Lord asked Parisi to represent only his interests. Parisi explained:
“[Plaintiff] has never been my client. No one has ever requested that I have the interests of [plaintiff] (or [plaintiffs] trust) in mind in the preparation оf any document. In particular, my client, Steve Lord, never requested that I prepare any document or take any other action for the benefit of [plaintiff] or a trust in the name of [plaintiff]. Rather, it was my understanding that even though Steve Lord and [plaintiff] were distant cousins, they dealt as arms length business partners, and that my duty was to protect the intеrests of Steve Lord and his company in connection with preparation of the CC&Rs.”
Over the next several months, Parisi met with Lord several times. Parisi met with plaintiff only once. The meeting was brief, and plaintiff has no memory of what either he or Parisi said during that meeting. Plaintiff never consulted *274 with his own attorney regarding this matter but says that he never considered Parisi his attorney.
The CC&Rs were completed in March 1987. They identified plaintiff as the owner of the property and Lord as the developer. Together, plaintiff and Lord were referred to as “declarants.” The CC&Rs set out the declarants’ obligations with respect to maintaining the property during the course of development. They also prоvided that those obligations would end when the homeowners’ association was formed. The documents did not differentiate between the two declarants in terms of their obligations or benefits. Lord took the documents to plaintiff and asked him to sign them. Plaintiff never objected to being named as the owner of the property. Both he and Lord signed the CC&Rs.
Several months later, the purchasers of the lots brought suit against both plaintiff and Lord because of some problems with a road on the property that the CC&Rs required them to build and maintain. Lord filed for bankruptcy, and a substantial judgment was ultimately entered against plaintiff.
Plaintiff then brought this action against Parisi and his law firm, claiming legal malpracticе and negligent misrepresentation. Specifically, plaintiff alleged that Parisi had been negligent in naming plaintiff as the land owner in the CC&Rs and making him responsible for the obligations set out in that document and a related maintenance agreement. Plaintiff alleges that because he was no longer the owner of the property when the documents were prepared, there was no reason to name him as such or to make him responsible for any obligation. Doing so, he alleged, amounted to both negligence and negligent misrepresentation on Parisi’s part. The trial court granted Parisi and his firm’s summary judgment motion on both claims. The court reasoned that Parisi was not plaintiffs attorney and did not owe a duty of care to plaintiff.
On appeal, plaintiff does not dispute that he must establish that Parisi owed him a duty before he may sue him for malpractice.
See Hale v. Groce,
Rather, plaintiff advances three reasons why he may bring a malpractice action against Parisi. He argues first that, under Oregon case law, he was an intended beneficiary. Second, plaintiff asks us to adopt the so-called “California test” for determining when a court should recognize exceptions to the rule that only a client may sue his or her attorney for malpractice. Third, plaintiff argues that this is a case in which the defendant has “blurred the lines” of representation to such a degree he should be entitled to maintain an action against Parisi. It is helpful to put plaintiffs arguments in historical context before we address their merits.
Initially, the Oregon Supreme Court held that only a client may sue his or her attorney for malpractice.
Currey v. Butcher,
Three Oregon Supreme Court decisions have addressed that question. The first recognized the possibility of an exception to the general rule in
Currey,
based roughly along the lines of the California test that plaintiff urges us to adopt.
See Metzker v. Slocum,
The court returned to the issue two years later in
McEvoy v. Helikson,
Finally, in
Hale,
the court clarified the basis for finding exceptions to the general rule that only a client may bring a malpractice claim against his or her attorney. The court started from the proposition that “one ordinarily is not liable for negligently causing a stranger’s purely economic loss without injuring his person or property.”
Hale,
In
Hale,
the court found that duty in the law of contracts. It reasoned that the plaintiff in that case was “a classic ‘intended’ third-party beneficiary” of the attorney’s promise to his client to include the plaintiff in his will and that the plaintiff could bring a breach of contract action against the attorney.
Id.
at 286. The court then reasoned: “Because under third-party analysis the contract сreates a ‘duty’ not only to
*277
the promissee, the client, but also to the intended beneficiary, negligent nonperformance may give rise to a negligence action as well.”
Id.
The court thus held that the plaintiff could pursue a negligence claim against the attorney not because the harm was foreseeable but because thе court could identify a duty that the attorney owed the plaintiff apart from the foreseeability of the harm.
3
See Onita Pacific Corp. v. Trustees of Bronson,
Plaintiff argues initially that he is an intended beneficiary. He reasons that because Parisi intended to benefit Lord and because the documents treated Lord and him the same, Parisi also intended to benefit him.
Hale
directs us to look to contract law to determine whether plaintiff qualifies as an intended beneficiary.
See
Under contract law, a beneficiary is a donee beneficiary if “the purpose of the promiseе in obtaining the promise * * * is to make a gift to the beneficiary or to confer upon him a right against the promisor.”
Johnston,
In determining whether a party is more than an incidental beneficiary, the Oregon cases have focused on the intent of the promisee and the promisor — that is, in the context of legal malpractice, the client and the attorney — at the time of the contract.
See, e.g., Stayton Coop. Telephone v. Lockheed Electronic,
After reviewing the record, we are unable to find any evidence to support the conclusion that plaintiff was either a donee or creditor beneficiary. There is nothing in the “terms of the promise,” or in the surrounding circumstances, that indicates an intent on Lord’s part to make a gift to plaintiff or to confer some right upоn plaintiff. Nor was plaintiff a creditor beneficiary. If we look beyond the promise itself, Lord was not under any duty or obligation to plaintiff that he was attempting to satisfy by obtaining Parisi’s promise to draft the documents. The only evidence regarding the purpose of the representation was that Parisi was to draft documents providing an “exit stratеgy” for Lord with respect to the development project. To be sure, plaintiff benefitted from Parisi’s efforts, but he was at most an incidental beneficiary. 4 *279 Under Hale, that is insufficient to permit him to bring a malpractice claim against Parisi.
Next, plaintiff urges us to adopt the so-called California test to determine when it is appropriate to reсognize that an attorney owes a duty to a nonclient. 5 The test balances six factors:
(1) The extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the nonclient;
(2) The foreseeability of harm to the nonclient;
(3) The degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury;
(4) The closeness of the connection between the defendant’s conduct and the injury;
(5) The policy of preventing future harm; and
(6) Whether recognition of liability under the circumstances would impose an undue burden on the profession.
See Lucas v. Hamm,
56 Cal 2d 583,
As noted above, the court recognized in Metzker that similar factors might be used to define exceptions to the general rule in Currey but did not have occasion to decide whether to adopt them. The court did not use those factors in McEvoy and, we conclude, foreclosed their use in Hale.
The court explained in
Hale
that a nonclient may not bring a malpractice action against an attorney unless the attorney owes that рerson a duty that arises apart from the foreseeability of the harm. Applying the six-factor California approach would result in the court making a judgment about
*280
a defendant’s duty (or lack of duty) based, in part, on its evaluation of the foreseeability of harm to the plaintiff. Not only would adoption of the California test interject forеseeability into the calculation of duty, contrary to the court’s reasoning in
Hale,
but it would also require the court to make that determination — an approach that the court rejected in
Fazzolari v. Portland School Dist. No. 1J,
Plaintiff argues finally that, because defendant “blurred the lines” of representation, a legal duty should be implied under
Lee v. Nash,
Plaintiff also assigns error to the trial court’s ruling granting defеndants’ motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs negligent misrepresentation claim. Plaintiff may prevail on this claim only if Parisi owed him a duty of care, that is, a duty to avoid negligent misrepresentations.
Onita Pacific
*281
Corp.,
Affirmed.
Notes
We refer to plaintiff, Richard Lord, as plaintiff and to his cousin, Steve Lord, by his last name.
The CC&Rs contained several provisions regarding the development of the property, including the manner in which the property would be maintained and other rights and responsibilities of the developers and the homeowners.
The court’s initial statement of its holding makes the same point. The court stated:
“We hold that the complaint states claims for damages under both theories, a claim as the intended beneficiary of defendant’s professional contract with the decedent and a derivative tort claim based on the breach of the duty created by that contract to the plaintiff as its intended beneficiary.”
Hale,
In a case involving a breach of contract claim by a nonclient against an attorney based on an intended third-party beneficiary theory, we held that a complaint must state ultimate facts showing an intent to confer a contractual right on the plaintiff.
Huang v. Claussen,
The case most frequently cited for this rule is
Lucas v. Hamm,
56 Cal 2d 583,
We note that, in Hale, the court described the California approach somewhat pejoratively as “applying ‘public policy’ by ‘balancing’ half a dozen ‘factors’ in each case.”
