Opinion
Richard B. LeVine, Inc. (plaintiff), appeals from a summary judgment and also challenges the court’s earlier rulings on demurrer. We conclude an arbitration award in favor of defendants’ alleged coconspirators bars any claim grounded on an aiding and abetting ór conspiracy theory, and plaintiff failed to establish any independent duty owed by defendants to plaintiff. Accordingly, in the published portion of this opinion, we affirm the summary judgment. In the unpublished portions of this opinion, we discuss an evidentiary ruling and also affirm the earlier rulings on demurrer.
FACTS
Plaintiff was a partner in a medical partnership named Orange County Heart Institute and Research Center (OCHI) formed in 1994. Cardiologist Richard B. LeVine was plaintiff’s officer, employee, and sole shareholder.
Gerald Higashi and HMWC CPAs & Business Advisors (collectively Higashi) were retained to provide accounting services to OCHI, including the calculation of each partner’s share of the partnership рrofits and the amount of each partner’s capital account. Higashi’s calculation of each partner’s share of the 1994 profits was completed without controversy in accordance with the provisions of article 7 of the OCHI partnership agreement. Thereafter, Dr. LeVine died in June 1995, and his wife Roberta LeVine became plaintiff’s sole shareholder and president.
*571 After Dr. LeVine’s death, OCHI’s chief executive officer informed Higashi that the OCHI partners had agreed to change the method of allocating the partners’ income and had decided to allocate $239,501 to plaintiff for 1995. Higashi followed these instructions and directed one of his firm’s bookkeepers to prepare a worksheet reflecting the new allocation. Before Higashi prepared plaintiff’s 1995 Schedule K-l, he wrote OCHI a letter confirming the latter’s instructions regarding the calculation of profits. The confirming letter was countersigned by OCHI’s chief executive officer on March 8, 1996. Accordingly, plaintiff’s 1995 Schedule K-l, prepared by Higashi, reflected a profit allocation of $239,501. In February 1996, OCHI paid plaintiff $81,611 to buy out plaintiff’s partnership interest. The payment was accepted under protest, and plaintiff’s accountant wrote a letter claiming additional amounts were owed under the partnership agreement.
In October 1996, OCHI advised Higashi that plaintiff’s partnership interest had been bought out and that plaintiff was no longer a partner, its voting powers and interest in the profits having terminated upon Dr. LeVine’s death on June 15, 1995. Higashi received further instructions from OCHI in February 1997 to prepare the 1996 partnership tax return and the partners’ K-l statements to reflect the redemption of plaintiff’s partnership interest with a resultant zero balance in its capital account.
Meanwhile, Mrs. LeVine had attempted to obtain financial information about the OCHI partnership, apparently without success. In October 1995, she sought the assistance of Stephen Bennett, a certified public accountant who had provided services for plaintiff since the 1980’s, to obtain the partnership financial information. Beginning in February 1996, Bennett demanded further payments for plaintiff’s partnership interest in OCHI, including the disputed 1995 profits.
Plaintiff also retained a law firm to pursue its claims, and, in 1998, initiated an arbitration proceeding against OCHI and its partners pursuant to an arbitration provision in the partnership agreement. In a two-phase arbitration proceeding, the arbitrator ruled in phase one that under the partnership agreement plaintiff was not entitled to partnership profits accruing after Dr. LeVine’s death, and in phase two that plaintiff was not entitled to additional profits for 1995. The final arbitration award was made on September 7, 2000.
On November 7, 2001, plaintiff filed the instant action against Higashi. The demurrer war began. Ultimately, plaintiff’s third amended complaint alleged constructive and actual fraud, negligence, and conspiracy. The court sustained *572 Higashi’s demurrer to the constructive and actual fraud causes of action. Later, the court granted Higashi’s summary judgment motion as to the remaining causes of action. On this appeal, plaintiff challenges the court’s rulings on both the demurrer and the summary judgment motion.
DISCUSSION
I
The Evidentiary Ruling at the Summary Judgment Hearing *
II
The Court Correctly Adjudicated the Conspiracy and Aiding and Abetting Claim
After a seemingly endless round of demurrers, the only matters at issue at the time of defendants’ summary judgment motion were two causes of action contained in plaintiff’s fourth amended complaint labeled “Civil Conspiracy (Aiding and Abetting)” and “Professional Negligence.” We conclude the court correctly granted Higashi’s motion as to each cause of action.
The standard for deciding a summаry judgment motion is well-established, as is the standard of review on appeal. “[T]he party moving for summary judgment bears the burden of persuasion that there is no triable issue of material fact and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. . . . There is a triable issue of material fact if, and only if, the evidence would allow a reasonable trier of fact to find the underlying fact in favor of the party opposing the motion in accordance with the applicable standard of proof.”
(Aguilar v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
(2001)
A. The Arbitration Adjudicated the Same Cause of Action Raised in the Conspiracy and Aiding and Abetting Claim
The stated basis for the court’s ruling granting the motion with respect to the civil conspiracy claim was threefold: (1) Plaintiff’s evidence was “not *573 only inconclusive,” it was “actually unintelligible”; (2) the conspiracy claim was barred by the statutes of limitation applicable to the underlying torts of breach of fiduciary duty and conversion; and (3) the awards in the arbitration proceeding between plaintiff, OCHI, and its partners collaterally estopped plaintiff from proceeding on the conspiracy claim. We conclude the third reason, which the court called collateral estoppel, but we will call res judicata or claim preclusion, conclusively established Higashi’s complete defense to the claim for civil conspiracy. 4
“ ‘Res judicata’ describes the preclusive effect of a final judgment on the merits. Res judicata, or claim preclusion, prevents relitigation of the same cause of action in a second suit between the same parties or parties in privity with them. Collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion, ‘precludes relitigation of issues argued and decided in prior proceedings.’ [Citation.] Under the doctrine of res judicata, if a plaintiff prevails in an action, the cause is merged into the judgment and may not be asserted in a subsequent lawsuit; a judgment for the defendant serves as a bar to further litigation of the same cause of action.”
(Mycogen Corp. v. Monsanto Co.
(2002)
It is unclear from plaintiff’s operative fourth amended complaint whether it was relying on a conspiracy theory or an aiding and abetting theory. But it doesn’t matter. Under either legal avenue, summary judgment was properly granted because Higashi’s liability is dependent upon the commission of an underlying tort by OCHI and its partners, a claim decided adversely to plaintiff in the prior arbitration.
*574
We begin by recognizing the well-worn principle applicable to the civil conspiracy theory: “[T]here is
no separate tort
of civil conspiracy, and there is
no civil action
for conspiracy to commit a recognized tort unless the
wrongful act
itself is committed and damage results therefrom.” (5 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (9th ed. 1988) Torts, § 44, p. 107; see
Unruh v. Truck Insurance Exchange
(1972)
Closely related to plaintiff’s conspiracy theory is its aiding and abetting theory. “ ‘Liability may ... be imposed on one who aids and abets the commission of an intentional tort if the person (a) knows the other’s conduct constitutes a breach of duty and gives substantial assistance or encouragement to the other to so act or (b) gives substantial assistance to the other in accomplishing a tortious result and the person’s own conduct, separately considered, constitutes a breach of duty to the third person.’ ”
(Fiol v. Doellstedt
(1996)
The unifying principle under either theory of rеcovery, civil conspiracy or aiding and abetting, is that Higashi’s liability depends upon the actual commission of a tort. Here, the underlying tort is the alleged breach of fiduciary duty committed by plaintiff’s OCHI partners. As plainly alleged in plaintiff’s fourth amended complaint, “Plaintiff’s Partners . . . violated] . . . their fiduciary duties to Plaintiff, to cause Plaintiff’s share of Profits to be withheld and allocated to one or more of Plaintiff’s Partners from 1995 until June 1999.” Plaintiff further alleged, “As a result of Plaintiff’s Partners’ breach of their fiduciary duties to Plaintiff, Plaintiff did not receive its proper allocation of Partnership Profits from 1995 until June 1999 . . . . [¶] [and] Plaintiff did not receive it[s] appropriate portion of distributions or capital withdrawals that Plaintiff’s Partners made to themselves from 1995 until June 1999 . . . .” Plaintiff’s pleading went on to allege Higashi “substantially assisted Plaintiff’s Partners in this scheme” when he “was required to engage in fraudulent accounting practices to withhold a portion of Plaintiff’s share of the Pаrtnership Profits for the year 1995 and to allocate such Profits to Plaintiff’s Partners contrary to the provision of the Partnership Agreement” and to make “certain improper and fraudulent accounting entries to Plaintiff’s Capital Account, eliminating Plaintiff’s capital and its interest in future Profits, and made those entries retroactive to January 1, 1996.”
*575 Unless plaintiff’s partners in OCHI committed the underlying tort alleged here, i.e., breach of fiduciary duty, Higashi cannot be held liable either as a conspirator or as an aider and abettor. An arbitrator determined in September 1998, after a four-day hearing, that plaintiff “is not entitled to share in the profits of [OCHI] accruing after the death of Dr. LeVine.” Moreover, although the arbitrator found the OCHI partners had breached the partnership agreement by not buying out plaintiff’s interest “forthwith,” but instead had unreasonably delayed the purchase, the arbitrator expressly ruled: “The evidence dоes not establish a breach of fiduciary duty by [the OCHI partners] or conduct otherwise entitling [plaintiff] to punitive damages.” Finally, the arbitrator found the OCHI partners “did not convert [plaintiff’s] partnership interest.” On September 7, 2000, after the phase two arbitration proceeding had concluded, the arbitrator found plaintiff had been paid all amounts to which it was entitled from the 1995 partnership profits, and made no further monetary award based on the alleged diversion of profits.
The question which remains, of course, is whether the findings of the arbitrator must be given preclusive effect in the instant action brought against Higashi and his firm, who calculated the numbers used in making the profit distributions. We hold the arbitrator’s award in favor of the OCHI partners on plaintiff’s claims of breach of fiduciary duty and conversion precludes the claims of civil conspiracy and aiding and abetting made against Higashi in this action. Thus summary judgment was properly granted on those theories.
We find support in the primary right theory utilized in California to determine whether causes of action are identical. “California follows the primary right theory of Pomeroy; i.e., a cause of action consists of 1) a primary right possessed by the plaintiff, 2) a corresponding primary duty devolving upon the defendant, and 3) a delict or wrong done by the defendant which consists in a breach of such primary right and duty. [Citation.] Thus,
two actions constitute a single cause of action if they both affect the same primary right.” (Gamble
v.
General Foods Corp.
(1991)
The primary right asserted in the arbitration against the OCHI partners was the right to bе free of the wrongful diversion of plaintiff’s rightful share of partnership profits to other OCHI partners. The instant conspiracy and aiding and abetting claim against defendants asserts the identical primary right. Thus *576 plaintiff’s claim against the OCHI partners is identical to its claim against defendants. Of course, liability for invasion of that primary right must be established against each party charged with the invasion. But if plaintiff’s primary right is not violated at all, no defendant is liable.
B. Res Judicata Applies to an Arbitration Award That Eliminates the Basis for a Nonarbitrating Party’s Derivative Liability
Plaintiff contends res judicata cannot be based on the arbitration award against it because Higashi was not a party to the arbitration. Plaintiff relies on
Vandenberg
v.
Superior Court
(1999)
We turn to the cases we conclude are determinative. In
Sartor
v.
Superior Court
(1982)
Thibodeau v. Crum
(1992)
Thibodeau also addressed another issue having importance to resolution of the instant case. It held the arbitration award against the general contractor precluded relitigation of the identical claim against the subcontractor even though the award was never confirmed as a judgment. (Thibodeau, supra, 4 Cal.App.4th at p. 761.)
After
Sartor
and
Thibodeau,
the California Supreme Court decided
Vandenberg, supra,
The
Vandenberg
court’s limitation of its own holding was applied by a different panel of this court in
Brinton v. Bankers Pension Services, Inc.
(1999)
Sartor, Thibodeau, and Brinton, all held a claim preclusion defense was available where the liability of one of the parties would be derivative only. In Sartor, the arbitration award that exonerated the principal for the acts of its employees precluded an action against the employees. In Thibodeau, the arbitration award against the general contractor precluded a subsequent action against the subcontractor who had done the work. And in Brinton, an arbitration award that exonerated the investment broker precluded an action against the broker’s principal.
Plaintiff acknowledges the holdings of
Sartor, Thibodeau,
and
Brinton
but characterizes these cases as comprising “an existing narrow body of law holding employees, agents, or subcontractors are essentially the same [as] their employers for res judicata purposes when their liability derives from that of parties in a prior action and the claims against both are identical.” Plaintiff argues that such a finding of identity of separate parties is limited to circumstances wherein the liability of one party is established only derivatively because of its relationship to another party, typically an employer and employee. Indeed, the seminal case
Bernhard v. Bank of America, supra,
But imposition of derivative liability is not limited to the doctrine of respondeat superior. Liability based on an aiding and abetting or conspiracy theory is also “derivative,” i.e., liability is imposed on one person for the direct acts of another. “Conspiracy is not a cause of action, but a legal doctrine that imposes liability on persons who, although not actually committing a tort themselves, share with the immediate tortfeasors a common plan or design in its perpetration. [Citation.] By participation in a civil conspiracy, a coconspirator effectively adopts as his or her own the
torts of other coconspirators
within the ambit of the conspiracy.”
(Applied Equipment Corp.
v.
Litton Saudi Arabia Ltd.
(1994)
Thus, we perceive no reason why the “strict res judicata”
(Vandenberg, supra,
*580 III
The Court Correctly Adjudicated the Professional Negligence Claim
Plaintiff insists it has established a duty owing to it by Higashi, or at least established a triable issue of fact regarding the existence of a duty, precluding summary judgment on the professional negligence claim. Plaintiff begins its argument with a moment of candor by acknowledging “it is undisputed there was no contract or privity between [Higashi] and [plaintiff].” Nevertheless, plaintiff contends it was either an intended third party beneficiary of the work done under Higashi’s contract with OCHI to calculate each partner’s individual profits (see
Goodman
v.
Kennedy
(1976)
A. Higashi’s Work Was Not Intended to Benefit Plaintiff
In
Goodman,
the California Supreme Court considered the circumstances under which a lawyer could be held liable in negligence for bad advice given to the lawyer’s own client which, when the advice was followed, caused harm to a third party. The
Goodman
court concluded no duty existed under the circumstances of that case based on an analysis and balancing of the various factors mentioned in
Biakanja v. Irving
(1958)
Here, of course, the professional defendants are accountants, not lawyers. Significantly, the evidence does not even show that Higashi’s professional advice was solicited or given. The undisputed evidence establishes Higashi merely calculated the profit allocations in the manner instructed by OCHI, and confirmed these instructions in writing. Despite the undisputed evidence that Higashi was only following instructions from his acknowledged client, the entity that had retained Higashi, plaintiff nevertheless asserts Higashi owed it an independent noncontractual duty as an intended beneficiary of Higashi’s contracted services with OCHI. According to plaintiff, this duty is established by balancing the factors set forth in Biakanja.
*581 At the outset, plaintiff’s theory is somewhat difficult to understand. According to plaintiff’s theory, Higashi’s negligence was not the failure to perform the actual services requested of him. Instead, he was allegedly negligent for performing the services exactly as instructed by his client. Plaintiff asserts Higashi should have refused to follow OCHI’s instructions, or should have advised plaintiff of the instructions he had received. On our de nova review, a balance of the Biakanja factors tips the scale sharply in favor of Higashi. As in Goodman, we conclude Higashi did not have the duty asserted by plaintiff.
The
Biakanja
factors were applied to a negligence claim agаinst accountants in
Bily v. Arthur Young & Co.
(1992)
The first
Biakanja
factor is the “extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the plaintiff.”
(Biakanja, supra,
The second
Biakanja
factor is the “foreseeability of harm” to plaintiff.
(Biakanja, supra,
The third
Biakanja
factor is “the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury.”
(Biakanja, supra,
The other
Biakanja
factors require little discussion. The connection between the conduct and the alleged harm was not close.
{Biakanja, supra,
B. Plaintiff Was Not Higashi’s Client
Plaintiff argues a triable issue of fact exists as to whether Higashi owed it an implied duty based on Higashi’s representation of the partnership. Its argument is based on the discussion in Johnson, supra, 38 Cal.App.4th at *583 pages 474 — 479, wherein the court identified several nonexhaustive factors to be considered in determining whether a lawyer’s representation of a partnership also establishes an аttorney-client relationship with the individual partners.
First, we question whether all the factors identified by the
Johnson
court, even if relevant, bear the same weight for determining the existence of an accountant-client relationship as they do for determining the existence of a lawyer’s duty of care owed to a client, or for identifying a lawyer’s disqualifying conflict of interest. The
Johnson
court drew its factors from
Responsible Citizens
v.
Superior Court
(1993)
But even accepting that the finding of an implied agreement not to represent adverse interests is an appropriate factor to determine the existence of an implied accountant-client relationship, the evidence here does not support such a finding. If, as suggested by the Responsible Citizens court, the sharing of client confidences with the professional is the source of the duty of loyalty, that source is lacking here. Mrs. LeVine stated in her declaration she did not even know Higashi was keeping the books for the OCHI partnership until November 1999, much less that she or her corporation shared any *584 confidences with Higashi. And even before Higashi calculated the allocation of profits for 1995, plaintiff had retained its own accountant, Stephen Bennett, to assist in obtaining financial information from OCHI. When Bennett contacted Higashi in late 1995 to ask how he could obtain partnership financial information, he was referred to Ilse Loy, an employee of the OCHI partnership. Thereafter, Bennett dealt directly with Loy, not Higashi. It would be anomalous indeed to conclude that plaintiff was Higashi’s client under these circumstances.
At bottom, the finding of an accountant-client relationship must be founded upon an agreement which, if not expressed, must at least be implied in fact. We do not find any evidence in this case from which it can be implied that Higashi was performing accounting services for plaintiff, as contrasted with the performance of services for the partnership generally. We do not imply a contract between an individual partner and the partnership’s accountant from the mere provision of a Schedule K-l to the individual partner. Providing a Schedule K-l to individual partners satisfies the partnership’s obligation under the Internal Revenue Code. (26 U.S.C. § 6031(b) [“Each partnership required to file a return . . . shall. . . furnish to each person who is a partner ... a copy of such information required to be shown on such return as may be required by regulations”].) Thus, the partnership as an entity, rather than an individual partner, appropriately contracts with an accountant to perform this service.
The “totality of the circumstances” here, including the total lack of аny reliance by plaintiff on Higashi, weighs conclusively against an implied contract between Higashi and plaintiff. Plaintiff asserts it relied on the Schedule K-l for 1995 provided by Higashi. Not so. The evidence establishes conclusively that plaintiff at all times challenged the accuracy of the profit allocation, and continued to complain about its inability to verify its accuracy because of OCHI’s denial of access to the books and records. But that denial of access cannot be attributed to Higashi. That the income reported on Schedule K-l may well have been reported to the Internal Revenue Service, does not mean plaintiff relied on that document as accurately showing its entitlement to profits. It means only that plaintiff reported that which was acknowledged by the partnership.
Consideration of the other factors identified by the Johnson court does not change our conclusion there was no implied contract between plaintiff and Higashi, and thus no implied duty in negligence. One of these factors, the relatively small size of the partnership, may in some circumstances weigh in favor of a separate accountant-client relationship with each partner. But here, *585 the absence of any contacts between plaintiff and Higashi negates any implication of a separate relationship. And another factor, the accountant’s access to financial information relating to the individual partner’s interest, doesn’t assist either. The only financial information in Higashi’s possession was the information necessary to provide accounting services to its client, the OCHI partnership.
The remaining two Johnson factors, the nature and scope of the engagement, and the kind and extent of contacts between the accountant and the individual partners, weigh heavily against a separate accountant-client relationship with Higashi. Regаrding the nature and scope of Higashi’s engagement, it is significant that no evidence suggests Higashi was engaged to determine how to allocate profits following the death of Dr. LeVine. On the contrary, Higashi received those instructions from OCHI. And there is no evidence that Higashi had reason to believe plaintiff was not a participant in the decision to modify the method of allocation set forth in the written partnership agreement. From Higashi’s perspective, the method of allocation was a partnership decision, not Higashi’s decision. If the instructions he received in that regard constituted a violation of the partnership agreement, the partnership would need to deal with the problem. Higashi was not retained to advise the partnership as to how or in what manner it could modify or adjust the methodology set forth in the written partnership agreement. Put simply, the scope of Higashi’s engagement was to count thе dollars coming in and going out, to calculate the partnership profits, and to allocate the profits among the partners as instructed, not to launch an independent investigation to determine whether the partnership was or was not acting in compliance with the written partnership agreement.
Finally, as noted ante, the complete absence of any contacts between Higashi and plaintiff weighs heavily against the imposition of any duty owing by Higashi to plaintiff. We conclude as a matter of law, based on the evidence in this record, there was no implied accountant-client contract between plaintiff and Higashi for the provision of any accounting services. Thus a duty owing to plaintiff in tort cannot be founded upon the so-called Johnson theory.
C. Defendant Did Not Owe an “Attributed” Fiduciary Duty
Plaintiff also contends that Higashi’s services to the partnership “attributed” to Higashi the same fiduciary duty owed by the OCHI partners because Higashi was acting as an agent оf the partners who themselves were fiduciaries. Plaintiff acknowledges, however, that “[a] professional’s representation of a fiduciary does not of itself impose upon that professional a fiduciary obligation to the beneficiary.” Plaintiff nevertheless urges that *586 a fiduciary duty will be attributed to a professional acting as an agent of a fiduciary whenever the professional is engaged to assist the beneficiary and the fiduciary equally, and not as an adversary.
Plaintiff overstates its argument. The creation of a fiduciary obligation or duty must, at a minimum, arise from facts demonstrating the formation of a confidential relationship. None are present here. “A fiduciary relationship is created where a person reposes trust and confidence in another and the person in whom such confidence is reposed obtains control over the other person’s affairs.”
(Lynch
v.
Cruttenden & Co.
(1993)
D. Statutes and Regulations Did Not Establish a Duty to Plaintiff
Finally, plaintiff argues that certain statutes and regulations governing accounting practices establish Higashi’s duty to plaintiff. Plaintiff asserts that standards adopted by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) establish that duty. But plaintiff did not produce any AICPA standard for our review, and the expert opinion submitted in opposition to the summary judgment motion was similarly unsupported by any such foundation.
Plaintiff also contends that former part 10.29 of title 31 of the Code of Federal Regulations provides the source of a duty. During the years relevant to this case, part 10.29 provided: “No attorney, certified public accountant, enrolled agent, or enrolled actuary shall represent conflicting interests in his practice before the Internal Revenue Service, except by express consent of all directly interested parties after full disclosure has been made.” But plaintiff presents no authority or argument to establish that the preparation of an informational partnership tax return with the required K-l Schedules constitutes “prаctice before the Internal Revenue Service.” The regulation is inapt.
*587
At oral argument, plaintiff asserted that Higashi was required to calculate the profit allocation by strictly following the methodology set forth in the written partnership agreement, despite receiving contrary instructions from the partnership, and, as authority for that proposition, cited section 704 of the Internal Revenue Code. (26 U.S.C. § 704.) Section 704(a) provides: “A partner’s distributive share of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit shall, except as otherwise provided in this chapter, be determined by the partnership agreement.” In other words, distributive shares of profit or loss must be reported to the Internal Revenue Service in the manner
agreed
to by the partners, unless the Internal Revenue Code overrides their agreement. But that begs the question. Here, although the
written
partnership agreement provided a method of allocation, the partners
orally
agreed to modify the formula, and gave Higashi a written confirmation that the modification had been made. Although paragraph 15.4 of the written partnership agreement requires amendments to the agreement to be in writing, this type of provision may be waived.
(Biren v. Equality Emergency Medical Group, Inc.
(2002)
We conclude no duty was owed to plaintiff under the circumstances shown by the evidence. Higashi merely did a calculation in the manner instructed by his client. We decline to place Higashi in the position of policing his own client to ensure strict compliance with the client’s own partnership agreement, or to assume that instructions received from his own client cannot be relied upon оr should not be followed, or, in the absence of any evidence of necessity, should first be discussed individually with each partner. Summary adjudication was correctly granted on the cause of action for professional negligence.
IV
The Rulings on Demurrer *
*588 DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed. Higashi shall recover his costs on appeal. O’Leary, Acting P. J., and Aronson, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 22, 2005, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied November 16, 2005.
Notes
See footnote, ante, page 566.
We choose not to rest our decision on the statute of limitations defense. The problem here is that the court overruled plaintiff’s demurrer to the statute of limitations defense pleaded in Higashi’s answer to the operative fourth amended complaint. The answer had alleged plaintiff’s claims are “barred by the applicable statute of limitations set forth in California Code of Civil Procedure Sections 337, 338, and 339, and any other apрlicable statute of limitations, including but not limited to, those arising under the Internal Revenue Code and/or other tax authorities.” Section 458 of the Code of Civil Procedure requires the statute of limitations to be pleaded either by alleging the facts constituting the time bar or alleging the statute and the
subdivision
of the statute which bars the action. Higashi did not plead the applicable subdivision of the relevant statutes. Thus, the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the answer. According to long-standing case law, the failure to allege the appropriate subdivision of the statute of limitations waives the defense.
(Davenport
v.
Stratton
(1944)
While we concede a confidential relationsMp may exist between an accountant and a client, the law gives that relationship less protection than an attorney-client relationship. For example, “[t]he United States Supreme Court [has] recognized the public function of the CPA auditor as a reason to deny work product protection to the auditor’s work papers.”
(Bily, supra,
See footnote, ante, page 566.
