delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiffs appeal from orders of the circuit court dismissing their three-count second-amended complaint and denying them leave to replead. Because the complaint in issue was dismissed in response to the defendants’ motion brought pursuant to section 2 — 615 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2 — 615 (West 1992)), the only question before this court is whether the dismissed counts stated causes of action. The issue is one of law and our review is de novo. Metrick v. Chatz (1994),
In determining whether the plaintiffs stated causes of action upon which relief could be granted, we must accept as true all wellpled facts in their complaint (Miner v. Gillette Co. (1981),
In their second-amended complaint, the plaintiffs sought relief against the defendants, who were their former attorneys, for legal malpractice. Count I alleged negligence, count II alleged breach of contract, and count III alleged breach of fiduciary duty. The following facts, taken exclusively from the plaintiffs’ second-amended complaint, form the basis of their claims for relief.
In 1974, the plaintiff, Amalendu Majumdar, M.D. (Majumdar), became an employee of the Bel-Austin Medical Corporation (BelAustin). In February 1977, Majumdar acquired a 49% interest in the outstanding stock of Bel-Austin and was named an officer and director of the corporation. The defendants acted as Bel-Austin’s corporate legal counsel in the transaction.
In June 1980, Majumdar, while still a shareholder, officer, and director of Bel-Austin, contacted the defendants and requested that they represent him in forming a medical corporation independent of Bel-Austin. The defendants accepted the engagement and the plaintiff, Amalendu Majumdar, M.D., S.C. (AMSC), was incorporated on July 1, 1980. The corporate purpose contained in the articles of incorporation for AMSC drafted by the defendants permitted the corporation to engage in the unrestricted practice of medicine, which is the same purpose as contained in Bel-Austin’s articles of incorporation. Majumdar was the sole shareholder of AMSC and became its only officer and director. Beginning upon its incorporation, AMSC acted as an independent contractor providing medical services to BelAustin.
The allocation of Bel-Austin’s profits was restructured in 1986 because Majumdar was displeased with the income disparity between himself and Dr. Bruce Zummo, Bel-Austin’s other shareholder. In March 1987, Majumdar informed Zummo that he would be seeing patients outside of his relationship with Bel-Austin. In November 1987, the defendants were present at a meeting where Zummo announced that Majumdar was seeing patients in direct competition with Bel-Austin.
On December 2, 1987, the defendants, acting as corporate legal counsel for Bel-Austin, sent a letter to Majumdar outlining a proposed acquisition of his interest in Bel-Austin by Zummo. Nothing further is alleged in the complaint relating to the buyout.
In 1988, the plaintiffs, represented by counsel other than the defendants, filed an action in the circuit court of Cook County against Zummo and Bel-Austin known as case No. 88 CH 1190. Bel-Austin filed a counterclaim in that action against Majumdar alleging that he breached his fiduciary duty as an officer and director of Bel-Austin by engaging in direct competition and diverting fees due from its patients to himself. That action was settled and dismissed on February 5, 1992, upon terms which required, inter alia, that Majumdar resign as an officer and director of Bel-Austin, assign all of his BelAustin stock to Zummo, and pay Bel-Austin $70,000.
In the instant action, the plaintiffs assert that the defendants improperly incorporated AMSC, failed to advise Majumdar of his fiduciary duties as an officer and director of Bel-Austin, failed to advise him to resign as an officer and director of Bel-Austin, and engaged in a conflict of interest in representing both the plaintiffs and BelAustin. The plaintiffs conclude that the defendants’ acts and omissions constituted negligence (count I), breach of contract (count II), and breach of fiduciary duty (count III), all of which proximately resulted in the damages sustained by them as a consequence of the settlement in case No. 88 CH 1190.
As we stated in Metrick: "To plead a good and sufficient cause of action against an attorney for legal malpractice, a plaintiff must allege facts, which establish (1) an attorney / client relationship, (2) a duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff arising out of that relationship, (3) a breach of that duty on the part of the defendant, (4) a proximate causal relationship between the defendant’s breach of duty and the damages sustained by the plaintiff, and (5) damages.” (Metrick,
Actions for breach of contract must allege facts sufficient to indicate the terms of the contract because the duty imposed by those terms gives rise to the breach. (See Nielsen v. United Services Automobile Association (1993),
The plaintiffs alleged that the defendants owed Majumdar a duty to explain the obligations of a corporate officer and director in 1977 when he was named an officer and director of Bel-Austin. The complaint, however, is void of any allegations of an attorney/client relationship existing between the defendants and Majumdar in 1977, much less allegations as to the terms of such an engagement. The fact that Majumdar became a shareholder, officer, and director of the defendants’ client, Bel-Austin, is of no moment because the attorney for a corporate client owes his duty to the corporate entity, not its individual shareholders, officers, or directors. (ABC Trans National Transport, Inc. v. Aeronautics Forwarders, Inc. (1980),
The plaintiffs’ first allegation of an attorney/client relationship between the defendants and Majumdar related to the incorporation of AMSC in 1980. According to the plaintiffs, Majumdar informed the defendants "that he wanted to form an independent corporation so that he could manage his own profit sharing plan (instead of being in the same plan with Zummo), be 'his own boss’ and to operate his own corporation independently from Bel-Austin.” He told the defendants "that his priorities were different from Zummo’s, as [he] was raising children and needed more cash, while the older Zummo was more interested in donating to the Bel-Austin Pension Plan.” The plaintiffs concluded that the defendants were negligent and breached their contract of engagement by incorporating AMSC with an unrestricted right to practice medicine and by failing to advise Majumdar at the time of AMSC’s incorporation that serving as an officer and director of both AMSC and Bel-Austin either constituted a conflict of interest or caused a likely conflict of interest. We fail to find, however, any allegation of fact in the plaintiffs’ complaint to support these conclusions.
The plaintiffs have not cited to, nor has our research uncovered, any case which stands for the proposition that holding directorships in two corporations constitutes a per se conflict of interest. Also, while we agree with the plaintiffs that attorneys are obligated to inform their clients of the risks associated with a proposed legal course of action (Metrick,
In this case, there are no facts pled in the plaintiffs’ second-amended complaint which suggest that the defendants knew or should have known at the time AMSC was incorporated that it or Majumdar intended to engage in direct competition with Bel-Austin. The only reasonable inference we are able to draw from the facts alleged is that Majumdar engaged the defendants to incorporate AMSC to enable him to manage his own profit sharing plan and reduce his pension contributions in favor of a higher salary by having AMSC act as Bel-Austin’s independent contractor as opposed to remaining an employee of Bel-Austin. The plaintiffs do not even allege that Majumdar intended to compete with Bel-Austin when AMSC was incorporated. Consequently, we are at a loss to understand how the defendants could have reasonably foreseen a conflict of interest at the time AMSC was incorporated. Further, the fact that AMSC was incorporated with unrestricted powers to practice medicine adds nothing to the plaintiffs’ contentions in this regard for two reasons. First, AMSC needed those powers to act as an independent contractor rendering medical services to Bel-Austin’s patients and second, the conflict of interest created by Majumdar’s direct competition with Bel-Austin would have existed even if AMSC had never been incorporated.
The plaintiffs’ second-amended complaint does allege, however, that the defendants were informed of Majumdar’s direct competition with Bel-Austin in November 1987. By reason of their dual representation of Bel-Austin and AMSC, it can reasonably be inferred that the defendants knew of Majumdar’s status as an officer and director of both corporations at that time. The plaintiffs alleged that even when the defendants were advised of Majumdar’s actual conflict of interest they still failed to advise him to resign as an officer and director of Bel-Austin. Further, the plaintiffs alleged that the defendants were acting as corporate legal counsel for both Bel-Austin and AMSC. If proven, these facts could support a finding that the defendants breached their attorney / client relationship with the plaintiffs by not advising Majumdar to either cease direct competition with Bel-Austin or to resign as an officer and director of BelAustin, and that their independent judgment on behalf of the plaintiffs was affected by their loyalty to Bel-Austin, placing them in the position of a conflict of interest. See In re LaPinska (1978),
Even when a plaintiff has sufficiently pled an attorney/client relationship and the breach of the duties arising therefrom, to state a good and sufficient cause of action for legal malpractice in either tort or contract, the plaintiff must plead facts establishing that the breach was the proximate cause of the alleged damages. (Metrick,
However, as we have already found based upon the facts alleged by the plaintiffs, the earliest point in time that the defendants could have breached their duties to the plaintiffs was in November 1987 when they were first informed of Majumdar’s direct competition with Bel-Austin. Consequently, only that portion of the plaintiffs’ damages occasioned by Majumdar’s direct competition with Bel-Austin during and after November 1987 could possibly stand in a proximate causal relationship to the defendants alleged malpractice. From the plaintiffs’ second-amended complaint, we are unable to determine what portion, if any, of the amounts paid in settlement of case No. 88 CH 1190 were attributable to Majumdar’s competition with BelAustin during or after November 1987. What we do know from the copy of Bel-Austin’s counterclaim, attached as an exhibit to the plaintiffs’ second-amended complaint, is that Majumdar was accused of competing with Bel-Austin from January 1, 1985 through December 31, 1987. Since the period of direct competition is alleged to encompass some period of time after the defendants were made aware of Majumdar’s activities, the plaintiffs have pled facts establishing a proximate causal relationship between the defendants’ alleged malpractice and at least a portion of the damages they alleged.
Based upon the foregoing analysis, we find that the plaintiffs have alleged facts which if proven could entitle them to relief, and as a consequence, the trial court erred in dismissing their second-amended complaint. However, we do believe that the complaint should be stricken.
While the plaintiffs are entitled to plead a legal malpractice action in either tort or contract, recovery under both theories in the same complaint is sought in the alternative. (Collins,
For the foregoing reasons, the order dismissing the plaintiffs’ second-amended complaint without leave to amend is reversed, and this case is remanded to the circuit court with directions.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
CAHILL and THEIS, JJ., concur.
