This is an appeal from the order of the trial court sustaining preliminary objections to appellant’s complaint to join additional defendants. The issue raised is whether attorneys who performed a title search for buyers of property may be properly joined as third-party defendants under Pa.R.C.P. 2252(a) when the buyers sue the seller for damages resulting from an allegedly fraudulently concealed and defective culvert and the attorneys failed to discover the existence of the culvert in their title search. We now affirm the order of the trial court.
Appellant Bruno Ferrari, the original defendant, sold a parcel of land located in Westmoreland County to Mentzer and Rhey, Inc., an auto dealership, in August of 1970. On August 16, 1984 a portion of the land located on Mentzer & Rhey’s used car lot collapsed, creating a dangerous hole. On September 20, 1985 Mentzer & Rhey filed an action for damages alleging the cause of the collapse to be a defective culvert constructed by Ferrari and also fraudulently concealed by him during the sales transaction. On June 9, 1984 Ferrari filed a complaint to join Fisher, Long and *125 Rigone, the law firm representing Mentzer & Rhey in the property sale. The complaint alleged that Mentzer & Rhey’s lack of knowledge of the existence of the culvert was due entirely to the attorneys’ negligence in performing the title search and that therefore the proposed third-party defendant attorneys should be solely liable to Mentzer & Rhey for damages or in the alternative should be jointly liable with original defendant.
The additional defendants filed preliminary objections alleging misjoinder of a cause of action. The Honorable Joseph A. Hudock sustained the preliminary objections in an order filed on December 1, 1986. Ferrari filed an appeal from this order to this Court on December 10, 1986.
The litigants frame the issue as whether Pa.R.C.P. 2252(a) permits Ferrari to join plaintiff’s attorneys Fisher, Long and Rigone on the theory that the attorneys would be solely or jointly and severally liable for the damage to plaintiff’s land, if professional malpractice were to be found.
Rule 2252(a) states:
Rule 2252. Right to Join Additional Defendants
In any action the defendant or any additional defendant may, as the joining party, join as an additional defendant any person whether or not a party to the action who may be alone liable or liable over to him on the cause of action declared upon by the plaintiff or jointly or severally liable thereon with him, or who may be liable to the joining party on any cause of action which he may have against the joined party arising out of the transaction or occurrence or series of transactions or occurrences upon which the plaintiff’s cause of action is based.
Pa.R.C.P. 2252(a). As amended in 1969, the rule enlarged the scope of additional defendant practice in Pennsylvania by allowing causes of action arising out of the same transaction or occurrence to be tried together, thus avoiding multiple lawsuits.
Free v. Lebowitz,
However, “[w]hile the 1969 amendment enlarges the kinds of causes of action which may be joined, it certainly does not eliminate the necessity of pleading a valid cause of action.”
American Metal Fabrications Company v. Goldman,
We stand with the trial court upon the principle that “[t]he general rule [in Pennsylvania] is that an attorney will be held liable for negligence only to his client. In the absence of special circumstances, he will not be held liable to anyone else.”
Smith v. Griffiths,
Even assuming a valid cause of action, however, defendant Ferrari could not join plaintiffs attorneys because the attorneys’ liability, if any, would be secondary to Ferrari’s primary liability. Secondary versus primary liability “depends on a difference in
character
or
kind
of the wrongs which cause the injury and in the nature of the legal obligation owed by each of the wrongdoers to the injured person.”
Builders Supply Co. v. McCabe,
secondary as distinguished from primary liability rests upon a fault that is imputed or constructive only, being based on some legal relation between the parties, or arising from some positive rule of common or statutory law or because of a failure to discover or correct a defect or remedy a dangerous condition caused by the act of the one primarily responsible.
Builders Supply,
If the party sought to be joined as a third party defendant is secondarily liable to the original defendant, then the original defendant “may not require a party secondarily liable to be joined as an original defendant.”
Eckrich v. DiNardo,
While a party secondarily liable is entitled to indemnity for any damages he is compelled to pay from one who is *128 primarily liable, the converse is not true. Therefore, at least where the liability of the party sought to be joined is secondary, Rule 2252 precludes joinder since the proposed additional defendant cannot be solely liable to the plaintiff, liable over to the original defendant, jointly or severally liable with the original defendant, or liable to him on a separate cause of action in the nature of a cross claim.
Id.,
In light of our disposition of the joinder issue, it is unnecessary to address the personal liability issue raised by attorney Donald R. Rigone, partner in the law firm of Fisher, Long and Rigone, in his individually filed brief.
Judgment affirmed.
