Janice D. Loyd, trustee and liquidator of First Assurance Casualty Co., Ltd., appeals the district court’s dismissal of her complaint against the company’s former law firm, Aguilar & Sebastinelli. The complaint charged the firm with malpractice for failing to prevent the company’s shareholders from conducting a fraudulent insurance scheme. The district court dismissed the action on the alternative grounds that: (1) the trustee lacked standing to Sue; and (2) the complaint failed to state a claim for legal malpractice. We conclude the trustee had standing, but the complaint failed to state a claim for malpractice under California law.
I.
This appeal arises out of an alleged conspiracy to defraud purchasers of First Assurance Casualty’s insurance policies.
Offshore insurance companies are regulated by the California Department of Insurance. They must prove they have sufficient capital to pay potential claims, and must maintain a trust account in the United States. See Cal. Ins.Code 1765.1(b)(1). If the Department is not satisfied with an offshore company’s financial status, it may prohibit in-state insurance brokers from selling or promoting the company’s policies.
The insiders retained Craig Aalseth, an account manager at Paine Webber, to manage the required trust account. Although the company was virtually insol-' vent, Aalseth prepared reports attesting to its financial viability and compliance with California law. Meanwhile,, the insiders were diverting policy premiums into their personal accounts. They permitted the company to pay claims of policyholders only when those claims were small or the claimants threatened to complain to the Department of Insurance.
The company retained Aguilar & Sebas-tinelli to represent it in state regulatory matters. In
In early 1994, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Oklahoma appointed Janice Loyd trustee for the company. She filed suit on behalf of the company against the insiders, the in
II.
The district court recognized that, as trustee, Loyd was empowered to bring any claim the company could have brought on its own behalf. However, the court held that the company itself would have lacked standing to sue the law firm because it was a sham corporation with no identity separate from its shareholders. We disagree.
Standing to sue is a question of law reviewed de novo. See Byrd v. Guess,
The company’s status as a “sham” corporation did not preclude it from suffering an injury cognizable under Article III. A corporation is a distinct legal entity that can sue and be sued separately from its officers, directors, and shareholders. See Merco Constr. Eng’rs, Inc. v. Municipal Court,
The causation element is also satisfied. The complaint alleges that the law firm failed to discover the fraudulent scheme and take action to prevent the insolvent company from continuing to sell insurance in California.
As a legal entity distinct from its shareholders, the company had a cognizable claim under Article III against the law firm prior to the bankruptcy proceeding. Because a trustee may assert claims possessed by the debtor immediately prior to bankruptcy, see 11 U.S.C. §§ 541, 542, Loyd has standing to sue the law firm.
III.
The district court further held that even if the trustee had standing to sue the law firm, the complaint failed to state a
Dismissal for'failure to' state a claim is reviewed de novo. See Steckman v. Hart Brewing, Inc.,
The trustee made the following allegations:
• The law firm “provided legal services to [the company] with respect to regulatory and corporate matters, securities and litigation from no later than April of 1991 to March of 1994. At all times material to this case, Aguilar & Sebastinelli held itself out as an expert in the field of offshore insurance. ' While representing [the company] the law firm also represented other alien insurance companies, most of which were in financial difficulty or were operated by con men for the purpose of looting premiums.”
• “At all times, Aguilar & Sebastinelli knew that [the company] was relying upon Aguilar & Sebastinelli to represent its interests in California as an insurance company, and not the adverse interests of the Insider Rico Defendants' who were looting the company of its assets during the time period of Aguilar & Sebastinel-li’s representation.”
• Aalseth’s fraudulent misrepresentation regarding the worth of the company’s securities “was communicated directly to Sebastinelli, the attorney for [the company] who, in reliance on the accuracy, transferred the information to CDI in response to request for further information
• “In performing professional services for [First Assurance Casualty Co.], the attorney firm breached its duty •' to use the care and skill ordinarily used by reputable attorneys, all to . the detriment of FACC in the form ■ of looted premiums and increased insolvency. Said attorney firm breached its duties of loyalty and prudence owed to FACC by allowing the Insider RICO Defendants to act adverse to the interests of FACC and by advising FACC to continue to operate' as an insurer in violation of state insurance regulations and at a time when FACC was insolvent and therefore incapable of responding to its contractual obligations.”
The elements of a cause of action for attorney malpractice under California law are: (1) the duty to use such skill, prudence and diligence as members of the profession commonly possess; (2) breach of that duty; (3) a proximate connection between the breach and the injury; and (4) actual loss or damage. See Wiley v. County of San Diego,
The complaint fails to satisfy the duty element. It alleges only that: 1) the law firm relied upon faulty reports provided by Paine Webber and transmitted those documents to the California Department of Insurance; and 2) the firm has represented crooked clients in.the past. The trustee contends that these allegations support an inference that the law firm “turned a blind eye to insider misconduct,” and “should have known that the company was being looted.” However, absent accompanying allegations that the firm knew or should have known the reports were fraudulent,
Alternatively, Loyd argues that these allegations are sufficient to state a claim for malpractice under FDIC v. O’Melveny & Meyers,
IV.
Although Loyd, as trustee of a corporation whose assets were looted by its shareholders, had standing to sue the law firm, her complaint failed to state a claim for legal malpractice under California law. Accordingly, the district court properly dismissed the complaint.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. Because Loyd is appealing a dismissal pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), the Court takes the allegations in the complaint as true. See Pareto v. FDIC,
. "At the pleading stage, general factual allegations of injury resulting from the defendant's conduct may suffice” to establish causation for the purpose of standing. Lujan,
. Our holding that the trustee failed to state a claim for legal malpractice under California law does not undermine this conclusion. The complaint sufficiently alleges that the law firm's conduct was a cause of the injury. Whether this conduct rises to the level of legal malpractice goes to the merits of the lawsuit, not to the preliminary question of standing.
. At oral argument, counsel for the trustee asserted that the firm must have been aware of the fraud because it was apparent on the face of the documents submitted to the Department of Insurance. However, this assertion that the documents should have alerted the firm to fraud was absent from the complaint, which the trustee had two opportunities to amend.
