In this action for damages allegedly caused by the negligence of an attorney in the giving of professional advice, general and special demurrers to the fourth amended complaint were sustained with leave to amend. Plaintiff chose not to amend. Judgment of dismissal was entered and plaintiff has appealed.
Inasmuch as the order sustained “the demurrer" without specifying the grounds, general or special, but with leave to amend, the judgment must be affirmed if the order is sustainable upon any of the grounds presented by the demurrer.
(Haddad
v.
McDowell,
The complaint is not vulnerable to a general demurrer. It pleads adequately all of the essential facts
that constitute a cause of action for negligence in this type of case,
*
notably:
*146
“First, that there existed the relationship of attorney and client; second, that in connection with such relationship advice was given; third, that he relied upon such advice and as a result thereof did things that he would not otherwise have done; fourth, that as a direct and proximate result of such advice and the doing of such acts, he suffered loss and was damaged thereby.”
(McGregor
v.
Wright,
The complaint alleges negligence with sufficient particularity, indeed is probably more specific than necessary. “It is settled by a long line of decisions in this state, beginning with the leading ease of
Smith
v.
Buttner,
*147 Defendants contend a complaint against an attorney for alleged negligence in the giving of advice must allege facts which show that any loss was caused solely by the attorney’s negligence and must negative any other probable cause for the loss. We know of no such requirement. Defendants’ authorities do not support their contention.
Lally
v.
Kuster,
Nor does
Martin
v.
Hood,
In
McGregor
v.
Wright,
Feldesman
v.
McGovern, supra,
A complete answer to defendants’ contention is furnished by two cases in . which, though not attorney-client cases, the question of “sole cause”, was
directly
raised and answered. “The law does not require that negligence of the defendant must be the sole cause of the injury complained of in order to entitle the plaintiff to damages therefor. All that is required in either respect is that the negligence in question shall be
a
proximate cause of the injury complained of . . . ”
(Griffith
v.
Oak Ridge Oil Co.,
*149
Defendants further argue that the following asserted defects render the complaint insufficient. (1) For aught that appears in the complaint, plaintiff may have acquired knowledge of all of the prior creditors’ claims before completing the initial payment. That is not true, as a reading of clause (3) of our summary of the complaint will show. (2) The “satisfactory partnership agreement” contemplated by the parties and presumably later formulated and executed, may have contained a provision which tied plaintiff’s hands concerning any prior debts of the business (she may have therein agreed to take subject to them), and thus have rendered noncompliance with section 3440 innocuous. That, if in fact developed at the trial, might break the causal connection but it is not a situation which plaintiff need negative in stating her cause of action. (3) It does not appear why she could not have recouped the amount of her payments to the prior creditors by collecting from the seller or from the assets of the business. That assumes, contrary to the law, that one wrongdoer is exculpated or exonerated if another wrongdoer contributes to the injury, or that concurrent wrongdoers must be joined in the same complaint, or that the injured party must exhaust his remedies, if any, against the second wrongdoer before proceeding against the first. (4) There is no apparent, .causal connection between defendants’ advice and plaintiff’s loss as represented by her payment of partnership debts which were incurred after she became a member of the firm. This is a point which, even if well taken (we need not and do not undertake to decide whether it is well taken), does not adversely affect those allegations of the complaint which clearly state facts sufficient to-constitute a cause of action.
(Armstrong
v.
Adams,
Nor is the complaint vulnerable to the special demurrer for uncertainty, ambiguity and unintelligibility, in support of which defendants present the same points and the same argument as advanced by them in support of their general demurrer.
We need not go over that ground again in detail. There is no uncertainty, ambiguity, or unintelligibility-in plaintiff’s statement of facts which constitute a cause of action. In a negligence case, “ ‘ [a] 11 that is required of a plaintiff,
as a matter of pleading, even as against■ a special demurrer,
is that his complaint set forth the essential facts of the case with reasonable precision and with sufficient particularity
*150
to acquaint the defendant with the nature, source and extent of his cause of action.’
(Dunn
v.
Dufficy, supra,
at p. 391.) ”
(Rannard
v.
Lockheed Aircraft Corp., supra,
pp. 156-157 of 26 Cal.2d; emphasis added.) This rule “finds justification in the fact that the person charged with negligence may ordinarily be assumed to possess at least equal, if not superior, knowledge of the affair to that possessed by the injured party.” (Same, p. 157.) If further authority be needed, it is furnished by
Armstrong
v.
Adams, supra,
What we have said bears only upon issues of law presented by demurrers to the complaint. We, of course, do not intend to foreclose the determination of any issue of fact that may develop.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
Peters, P. J., and Bray, J., concurred.
Respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 19, 1955. Shenk, J., and Sehauer, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
The complaint alleges: (1) defendant retained one of the defendants, a member of the defendant partnership of attorneys as attorney to represent her in effecting the purchase by her of an interest in a certain restaurant and he agreed to represent her in a skillful and diligent manner; (2) in connection with that relationship he advised her that it was unnecessary to comply with the provisions of section 3440 of the Civil Code by recording and publishing notices therein provided or in escrowing the purchase price, and in so doing he was negligent and unskillful; (3) she relied upon that advice and in consequence did things she would not otherwise have done, to wit: did not prepare or publish or record notice of intended sale, did not escrow the purchase price for payment of claims, if any, and did not otherwise comply with section 3440, and paid $4,000 directly to the seller on transfer of partnership interest; but for defendant’s negligence she would have done said acts, except would not have paid said $4,000 to seller, and would have been apprised of the existence of outstanding creditors and had she so complied with said Civil Code section 3440 the damages suffered as hereinafter specified would not have been sustained; as a direct, proximate and sole result of said defendant’s and plaintiff’s failure to comply with section 3440, she suffered damages as follows: (a) initial payment to seller for half interest in restaurant business, $4,000, (b) debts of seller outstanding at date of transfer, subsequently paid by her in *146 effort to salvage business, $1,148.51, and (e) debts of partnership incurred subsequent to transfer of partnership interest to buyer and paid by funds of buyer, $2,592.51; that but for defendant’s negligence plaintiff would have been timely apprised of the outstanding indebtedness of seller and could have repudiated the agreement of sale and avoided said losses.
The agreement of sale allegedly provided that buyer pay $7,000 for an equal one-half partnership interest in the business; $250 presently, $3,750 when a satisfactory partnership agreement has been prepared between buyer and seller, and the balance out of the profits of the business or sooner if buyer elect to pay the same; upon consummation of sale seller to deliver bill of sale to said one-half interest “free of all liens and encumbrances.”
