*1091 Opinion
The decedent, Gilbert Paul, retained Attorney Richard Patton to draft an amendment to his revocable living trust. The decedent signed the “Trust Amendment,” which, as drafted by Patton, named the decedent’s wife, Helen, and his children, Stephen Paul, David Paul, Alan Paul, and Nancy Dybdahl as beneficiaries. Stephen and David Paul also are the successor trustees of the trust. Following the decedent’s death, they petitioned the probate court to modify the Trust Amendment, alleging it failed to conform to the decedent’s intentions by erroneously granting Helen an interest in the decedent’s brokerage accounts and personal and real property. In connection with that probate court action, Patton admitted the Trust Amendment did not reflect the decedent’s intention that his brokerage accounts and personal and real property be divided among his children. Stephen and David settled the probate court action with Helen.
Subsequently, Stephen, David, Alan, and Nancy (the Pauls) filed the legal malpractice action that is the subject of this appeal against Patton. They alleged that Patton failed to exercise reasonable care in performing legal services for the decedent by failing to draft the Trust Amendment in a manner consistent with the decedent’s intentions. The trial court sustained without leave to amend Patton’s demurrer to the Pauls’ first amended complaint. We shall reverse.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Because this matter comes to us following a judgment sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend, we assume the truth of the material facts properly pleaded in the Pauls’ operative first amended complaint.
(Blank
v.
Kirwan
(1985)
A. The 1995 Trust
The Pauls are the decedent’s four children with his first wife, who died in 1970. The decedent married Helen in 1988. At that time, he had substantial separate property, including real property referred to as “the Quick Stop Property,” other real property, brokerage accounts, and personal property.
In 1995, the decedent established a revocable living trust (the 1995 Trust) under which he was both trustor and trustee. The 1995 Trust provided that if Helen survived the decedent, she would have the right to live in (or lease) the marital home for the rest of her life and to receive the net income from the Quick Stop Property. The rest of the decedent’s property was to be divided among his children, the Pauls. Upon Helen’s death, the Pauls were to receive the decedent’s one-half community property interest in the marital home.
B. The Trust Amendment
The decedent’s health and his relationship with Helen began to decline in 2009. In 2011, he retained Patton to amend the 1995 Trust.
As drafted by Patton and executed by the decedent, the Trust Amendment defines “beneficiaries” as “Trustor’s adult children: Stephen Paul, Alan Paul, David Paul and Nancy Dybdahl (in equal shares, share and share alike) and Trustor’s spouse Helen C. Paul.”
In a section entitled “Marital Home,” the Trust Amendment states “[i]t is Trustor’s wish that the marital home be sold after his death.” It provides that, upon the sale of the home, half the net proceeds from the sale shall go to Helen and the other half shall be distributed to “Trustor’s beneficiaries.”
With respect to the income from the Quick Stop Property, the Trust Amendment directs the successor trustees “to use up to $4,000 per month” of that income “to pay for the mortgage, insurance, taxes and maintenance of *1093 the marital home.” If the marital home has been sold, the successor trustees are to pay “$4,000 per month from the Quick Stop Property to Helen” as monthly income.
In a section entitled “Other Assets — Personal Property,” the Trust Amendment provides: “All other assets held in the Trust at the time of the Trustor’s death, shall be distributed as soon as practicable to my beneficiaries, in equal shares, share and share alike. Personal property held in the Trust shall be equally divided between my children as they agree.”
Thus, as drafted and executed, the Trust Amendment (1) entitled Helen to one-half plus one-fifth of the proceeds of the sale of the marital home, (2) limited the income Helen could receive from the Quick Stop Property to $4,000 per month, and (3) gave Helen a one-fifth share of the decedent’s other assets (aside from his personal property). Under the 1995 Trust, she was entitled to live in or lease (but not to sell) the marital home and to all of the Quick Stop Property income, but to none of the decedent’s other assets.
C. The Petition to Modify the Trust Amendment and Resulting Settlement
The decedent died in July 2011. In their capacities as successor trustees of the 1995 Trust, Stephen and David filed a petition to modify the Trust Amendment, arguing it did not conform to the decedent’s intentions. (Estate of Paul (Super. Ct. Santa Cruz County, 2012, No. PRSPR045708).) Helen opposed the petition.
In connection with the petition to modify, Patton stated in a December 13, 2011 letter, “I am certain that [the decedent] did not intend to give Helen Paul a one-fifth interest in his assets.” Patton further wrote, “[i]t was never [the decedent’s] intention to change the distribution pattern of his real property and/or his brokerage account but rather to clarify the language of the original Trust and to limit the amount of income Helen Paul was to receive from the Quick Stop property. ... [¶] ... I am prepared to make a sworn statement that [the decedent’s] intention was not to grant a one-fifth interest to Helen in his portion of the marital home or his separate property including the Quick Stop real property and the brokerage accounts. Any language to the contrary in the Amendment is a ‘scrivener’s error’ and does not reflect the intention of my client, Gilbert Paul.”
Patton was deposed on June 5, 2012, also in connection with the action seeking to modify the Trust Amendment. He stated that, upon reviewing the “Other Assets — Personal Property” provision of the Trust Amendment after the decedent’s death, he realized “confusion is caused by the word ‘beneficiaries,’ as opposed to ‘children.’ And my reaction to that was that that was not *1094 what Gilbert intended.” According to Patton, the decedent “did not want [Helen] to share in the personal property, the Morgan Stanley account and the Quick Stop property.” As such, Patton characterized the “Other Assets— Personal Property” provision of the Trust Amendment as containing a “clerical error.”
Stephen and David reached a settlement agreement with Helen under which she received more than the decedent intended.
D. The Pauls’ Professional Negligence Action Against Patton
The Pauls sued Patton for professional negligence on March 29, 2013. The operative first amended complaint, filed on August 29, 2013, alleged Patton “failed to use reasonable skill and care in drafting the Trust Amendment in that Patton negligently and carelessly: [¶] a. included the term ‘beneficiaries’ ... in the section titled ‘Other Assets — Personal Property’ instead of ‘children,’ which directly contradicted [the decedent’s] clear intent and instruction; [¶] b. referred to ‘beneficiaries’ instead of ‘children’ in the Trust Amendment section entitled ‘Marital Home,’ which also directly contradicted [the decedent’s] clear intent and instruction.” The first amended complaint also alleged that “[a]s a direct result of Defendant Patton’s negligence, . . . Plaintiffs have been damaged,” in that they “were forced to litigate to have the Trust Amendment modified[,] . . . [they] lost equity value of real property trust assets, and . . . [they] incurred substantial litigation expenses and attorney fees in connection with the Petition for modification of the Trust Amendment,” suffering damages “in excess of $115,000.”
E. Patton’s Successful Demurrer
Patton demurred to the first amended complaint, arguing he owed no duty of care to the Pauls because they were not his clients. In an order filed on December 16, 2013, the trial court sustained the demurrer without leave to amend, stating “no liability exists as a matter of law under the analysis and precedent set forth in,
inter alia, Chang
v.
Lederman
(2009)
II. Discussion
The single issue raised on appeal is whether the trial court erred in sustaining Patton’s demurrer without leave to amend. Because the court’s order apparently was based on the conclusion that Patton did not, as a matter of law, owe a duty to the Pauls, “[t]he issue on appeal contains two
*1095
subquestions: (a) whether the court properly sustained the demurrer because the complaint, as drafted, failed to state a cause of action for professional negligence; and (b) whether the court abused its discretion by refusing [the Pauls] leave to amend — i.e., that the court correctly concluded that there was no reasonable possibility that [the Pauls] could amend the complaint to state a viable cause of action.”
(Osornio
v.
Weingarten
(2004)
A. Standard of Review
A
demurrer tests the sufficiency of the complaint as a matter of law.
(Osornio, supra,
“ ‘We treat the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded, but not contentions, deductions or conclusions of fact or law. [Citation.] We also consider matters which may be judicially noticed.’ [Citation.] Further, we give the complaint a reasonable interpretation, reading it as a whole and its parts in their context. [Citation.] When a demurrer is sustained, we determine whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. [Citation.] And when it is sustained without leave to amend, we decide whether there is a reasonable possibility that the defect can be cured by amendment: if it can be, the trial court has abused its discretion and we reverse; if not, there is no abuse of discretion and we affirm. [Citations.] The burden of proving such reasonable possibility is squarely on the plaintiff.”
(Blank, supra,
B. Elements of a Professional Negligence Claim
The elements of a claim for professional negligence are “ ‘(1) the duty of the professional to use such skill, prudence, and diligence as other members of his profession commonly possess and exercise; (2) a breach of that duty; (3) a proximate causal connection between the negligent conduct and the resulting injury; and (4) actual loss or damage resulting from the professional’s negligence.’ ”
(Osornio, supra,
C. Attorney Liability to Nonclients
Generally, “ ‘an attorney owes a duty of care, and is thus answerable in malpractice, only to the client with whom the attorney stands in privity of contract.’ ”
(Osornio, supra,
Attorney “[liability to testamentary beneficiaries not in privity is not, however, automatic.”
(Bucquet, supra,
An attorney also may be held hable for professional negligence to a successor trustee, despite the fact that the attorney was hired by the original trustee.
(Borissoff
v.
Taylor & Faust
(2004)
The Pauls argue their suit against Patton should have been permitted to go forward on either of two alternate theories — (1) Patton owed them a duty of care as trust beneficiaries or (2) they had standing as successor trustees. We address each theory in turn.
D. The Pauls Should Be Granted Leave to Allege Patton Owed Them a Duty as Beneficiaries
The first amended complaint does not allege Patton owed the Pauls a duty. Therefore, the trial court properly sustained Patton’s demurrer. The more difficult question is whether there was a reasonable possibility that the Pauls could have amended their complaint to allege the duty element of their legal malpractice claim, such that the court should have granted leave to amend. At this early stage in the litigation, we cannot say as a matter of law that Patton did not owe the Pauls a duty to ensure the Trust Amendment reflected the decedent’s testamentary intent. Accordingly, we conclude the Pauls should have been accorded the opportunity to amend their complaint.
Here, there is no executed trust instrument reflecting the decedent’s alleged intent. According to Patton, that is fatal to the Pauls’ action because attorneys owe a duty of care only to beneficiaries of executed wills or trust instruments that expressly reflect the testator’s intent. The Pauls contend that whether the testamentary document properly reflects the testator’s intent is irrelevant; as long as the testator’s intent to benefit the plaintiff is clear, a duty exists.
It certainly is the case that the testator’s intent is central to the duty analysis. Where a doubt exists as to whether the plaintiff was the decedent’s intended beneficiary, no duty exists.
(Boranian v. Clark
(2004)
By contrast, courts have found a duty where the executed testamentary document itself reflects the testator’s undisputed intent that the plaintiff receive a specific benefit.
(Bucquet, supra,
In short, the testator’s intent to benefit the plaintiff is a prerequisite to the imposition of a duty on the attorney to the plaintiff. This makes sense, as the rationale for allowing testamentary instrument beneficiaries to recover in the event of a breach by the attorney is that “the main purpose of the testator in making his agreement with the attorney is to benefit” those beneficiaries “and this intent can be effectuated . . . only by giving the beneficiaries a right of action . . . .”
(Lucas, supra,
Read liberally, as is appropriate in evaluating a demurrer, the amended complaint alleges the decedent intended to grant the Pauls a particular bequest, directed Patton to draft an amendment to his trust effectuating that bequest, and signed the resulting Trust Amendment believing it made the intended bequest. But, as a result of Patton’s drafting error, the Trust Amendment does not contain the terms that were intended by the decedent.
*1099
Accepting those allegations as true, as we must, we view this case as more analogous to
Osornio
than to
Radovich.
Unlike in
Radovich,
here the decedent signed the testamentary document at issue, alleviating any concern that he changed his mind after directing Patton to amend the trust. And, under the facts as alleged, “there is none of the ambiguity concerning the testator’s donative intent as was presented in Radovich.”
(Osornio, supra,
The six
Biakanja/Lucas
factors support our conclusion. We find
Chang
instructive as to the first four factors. In
Chang,
the plaintiff alleged the decedent instructed the defendant attorney to revise the decedent’s trust (which named the decedent’s son and the plaintiff as beneficiaries) to leave the entire trust estate to the plaintiff.
(Chang, supra,
In our view, the fifth
Biakanja/Lucas
factor — the policy of preventing future harm — also weighs in favor of finding Patton owed the Pauls a duty of care with respect to the Trust Amendment. “If testamentary beneficiaries who” lose some or all of an intended bequest because of an attorney’s admitted clerical error “are deprived of the right to bring suit against the attorney responsible ... , no one would be able to bring such action. The policy of preventing harm would thus be impaired.”
(Osornio, supra,
*1100 Finally, the sixth factor — whether extension of liability would impose an undue burden on the profession — also favors the Pauls. Imposing liability on attorneys to properly define and use basic terms such as “beneficiaries” and “children” to carry out the testator’s wishes does not impose an undue burden on the legal profession. And, where, as is alleged here, there is no dispute regarding the decedent’s intent, the imposition of liability will not compromise the attorney’s duty of undivided loyalty to the testator.
We recognize that in
Chang,
which is factually analogous to this case in many ways, the court found no duty based exclusively on the sixth factor. The
Chang
court expressed concern that “any disappointed potential beneficiary — even a total stranger to the testator — could make factual allegations similar in most respects to those in the second amended complaint . . . .”
(Chang, supra,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude the trial court erred in concluding as a matter of law that the Pauls could not establish Patton owed them a duty as beneficiaries. On remand, the Pauls should be permitted to amend their complaint to allege such a duty.
E. The Pauls Failed to State a Claim as Successor Trustees
The Pauls also maintain that Stephen and David stated a claim against Patton in their capacity as successor trustees. The Pauls did not raise this argument below, but we agree with their contention that they can assert it for the first time on appeal.
(20th Century Ins. Co. v. Quackenbush
(1998)
Under the Probate Code, “successor [trustees], but not beneficiaries, [have] the same rights as predecessor [trustees], including the power
to sue for malpractice causing loss to the
estate.”
(Borissoff, supra,
III. Disposition
The judgment is reversed and, on remand, the trial court is directed to grant the Pauls leave to amend. The Pauls shall recover their costs on appeal.
Notes
The Pauls request that we take judicial notice of their first amended complaint and the documents attached to it as exhibits. Judicial notice is unnecessary because, in our review of the demurrer ruling, we accept the allegations in the complaint and the facts in the exhibits as true.
(Blank, supra,
Biakanja
v.
Irving
(1958)
