OPINION
Aрpellants, Henry and Jacqueline Schroeder, brought suit against Attorney Richard S. Hudgins and Robertson, Molloy, Fickett & Jones, P.C., the law firm with which Hudgins was associated. The complaint charged that appellees (1) were negligent in the performance of their duties as legal counsel for appellants; and, (2) brеached their fiduciary duty toward appellants in continuing to represent them after a conflict of interest arose between their obligations to appellants and those owed to another of the firm’s clients. Appellees moved for summary judgment; the requested relief was granted and this appeal resulted.
On this appeal, appellants assert that the trial court erred in the following rulings:
(1) That the complaint, brought in appellants’ individual capacities, failed to state a cause of action;
(2) That the doctrine of judicial estoppel precludes appellants from аsserting a cause of action against appellees; and
(3) That the action is barred by the running of the applicable statute of limitations.
In reviewing the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, this court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to appellants, giving them the
*397
benefit of all favorable inferenсes that may reasonably be drawn therefrom.
Cote v. A.J. Bayless Markets, Inc.,
Appellant, Henry N. Schroeder, was the sole owner of the corporate stock in Howlen Corporation, a California corporation which became the sole shareholder of Great Frontier Properties, Inc., (hereinafter referred to as Great Frontier), an Arizona corporation. In 1973, Great Frontier purchased a 33 acre subdivision known as Rolling Hills Vista from M.M. Sundt Construction Company (hereinafter referred to as Sundt); 19 acres were zoned for single family homes and 14 acres were zoned for multifamily use. Sundt took back a first mortgage on the property but agreed, by the terms of a purchase agreement, to subordinate its lien interest to the construction financing which Great Frontier would obtain to develop the site. On June 8, 1973, Great Frontier entered into two loan agreements with Lomas & Nettle-ton Financial Corporation (hereinafter referred to as Lomas & Nettleton) for the financing of the off-site construction of the single family portion of Rolling Hills Vista. One promissory note in the sum of $230,-000 was to provide funds for the off-site development of the 19 acre parcel; a second note in the sum of $470,000 was to finance the construction of single family residences. Appellants backed these loans by a guarantee agreement executed in their individual сapacities. By November 1973, Great Frontier was financially overextended, the $230,000 loan was in default and liens had been filed against the Rolling Hills Vista Property for unpaid bills. The monetary difficulties arose out of Great Frontier’s attempt to complete off-site improvements for the entire 33 acres with thе $230,000 fund designated by the lender for development of only the 19 acre single family home section.
In the summer of 1973, Attorney Richard S. Hudgins, an associate of Robertson, Molloy, Fickett & Jones, P.C., (hereinafter referred to as Robertson, Molloy), was hired by Henry Schroeder to represent Great Frontier. Mr. Hudgins negotiatеd with Lo-mas & Nettleton on behalf of Great Frontier regarding the project’s financial difficulties and assisted Mr. Schroeder in efforts to secure additional financing for Great Frontier from other sources. In early February, 1974, Lomas & Nettleton advised Great Frontier that it would not lend it additional monies to comрlete the development of Rolling Hills unless Sundt agreed to resubordinate its first mortgage on the property to the extent of a proposed additional loan in the sum of $150,000.
Robertson, Molloy had been general counsel to Sundt for a number of years. However, it is Mr. Schroeder’s position that he first learned that the law firm represented Sundt when it became necessary to seek Sundt’s consent to subordinate. Mr. Hudgins asserts that although he knew Sundt was a major client, he first learned that Sundt had an interest in Great Frontier’s property when Lomas & Nettleton requested that Great Frontier seek Sundt’s consent to subordinate. As a rеsult of the direct conflict which had now arisen between the interests of two of the firm’s clients, Mr. Hudgins advised Mr. Schroeder that he must obtain new counsel. However, as time was of the essence in obtaining construction monies, Mr. Schroeder requested that the attorneys who represented Sundt approach their client with his request for subordination of its mortgage interest. This was done but Sundt refused Great Frontier’s request. In March, 1974, Mr. Hudgins told Mr. Schroeder that the firm could no longer represent Great Frontier and surrendered the corporation’s files to. him. Approximately three days later attorney Donald Schroeder was rеtained as Great Frontier’s new counsel. Thereafter, *398 Attorney Schroeder was successful in obtaining Sundt’s consent to subordinate to the additional loan. In May, 1974, Great Frontier executed a third loan agreement with Lomas & Nettleton and a “Reinstatement and Modification Agreement”; and appellаnts executed a new guaranty agreement.
When Great Frontier began experiencing financial difficulties in the fall of 1973, liens were filed against the Rolling Hills Vista property by materialmen and subcontractors who were not being timely paid. In late 1973 and early 1974 a number of lawsuits were filed against Great Frontier upon these delinquent accounts. Mr. Hudgins agreed to accept service of process in these lawsuits and he contacted adversary counsel in a number of these matters seeking their clients’ forbearance in anticipation of new financing for the project. Hudgins also filed answers in sevеral of the lawsuits but judgments by default were taken in a number of others. When Donald Schroeder became counsel to Great Frontier, he negotiated with the various creditors and ultimately arranged for the satisfaction of all of the liens and judgments out of the proceeds of the new loan.
In June 1974, Lomas & Nettleton declared the Great Frontier loans in default, asserting that appellant Henry Schroeder had misrepresented the “work in place” at Rolling Hills Vista in seeking to draw upon his credit line with Lomas & Nettleton. The project failed; Great Frontier filed for bankruptcy on December 3, 1974. Lomas & Nettleton foreclosed on its Deed of Trust and successfully sued appellants upon their personal guarantees for the balance of the indebtedness.
The complaint in this action was filed on April 1, 1976, on behalf of appellants individually. In November 1978, attorney Schroeder purchased “any and all” of Great Frоntier’s causes of action from the trustee in bankruptcy and then assigned these claims to appellants.
Appellants first contend that the trial court erred in ruling that they had failed to state a legally sufficient cause of action. They assert their entitlement to bring suit in their individual capacities both as assignees of Great Frontier’s claims and as guarantors who have been held individually responsible upon the corporation’s defaulted loans. They also assert an individual right of action based upon appellees’ legal representation of them individually.
Generally, even where all of the stоck in a corporation is owned by a sole shareholder, he may not maintain an action individually for wrongs against the corporation.
Funk v. Spalding,
Furthermore, while a guarantor who has paid upon his principal’s debt is entitled to reimbursement and has an immediate right of action against the principal,
Dykes v. Clem Lumber Co.,
Appellants’ reliance upon the assignment to them of Great Frontier’s claims as a basis for this action is also misplaced. Section 70 of the Bankruptcy *399 Act, applicable in the instant matter, provides in pertinent part:
Title to property. The trustee of the estate of a bankrupt * * * shall in turn be vested by operation of law with the title of the bankrupt as of the date of the filing of the petition initiating a proceeding under this [act] * * * to all of the following kinds of property wherever locatеd * * * (5) property, including rights of action, which prior to the filing of the petition he could by any means have transferred or which might have been levied upon and sold under judicial process against him or otherwise seized, impounded or sequestered; Provided, That rights of action ex delicto for libel, slander, injuries to the person of the bankrupt or of a relative, whether or not resulting in death, seduction, and criminal conversation shall not vest in the trustee unless by the law of the State such rights of action are subject to attаchment, execution, garnishment, sequestration, or other judicial process * * 11 U.S.C. § 110(a)(5) (1964). (Emphasis added).
Thus, the determination of whether the ownership of a cause of action is transferrable and rests in the trustee in bankruptcy must be made in accordance with state law.
Arnold v. Phillips,
In Arizona, actions for legal malрractice are tort claims subject to the two year statute of limitations for personal injuries
Long v. Buckley,
In
Goodley v. Wank & Wank, Inc.,
In
Christison v. Jones,
With its unique aspects, the tort of legal malpractice does not fit well into categories previously established for determining assignability. It has aspects of the tort to property, inasmuch as the injuries resulting are to property interests, and it has highly personal aspeсts without being a personal injury tort. We find that the personal nature of the relationship and the duty imposed upon the attorney, coupled with public policy considerations surrounding that relationship and any potential assignability of breaches thereof (giving rise to causes of action in legal malpractice) lead us to conclude *400 that the legal malpractice claim is not subject to assignment.
Appellants also assert that they have an individual right of action as appellees pro: vided legal representation to them personally as well as to Great Frontier. While the law firm has stated in a response to requests for admission that it represented Henry Schroeder, Attorney Hudgins, who undisputedly provided all of the legal services undertaken at the request of Schroeder, has asserted consistently and unequivocally that he was hired to represent Great Frontier only. It is Hudgins’ position that the sole actions taken by him on behalf of appellants individually consisted of the acceptance of service of process in some lawsuits against Great Frontier in which Henry Schroeder was named individually as a defendant and the referral of Henry Schroeder to appropriate legal counsel when he was faced with criminal charges. Mr. Schroeder’s sole allegation that appellees committed legal malpractice in providing legal services to him consists of an unsupported assertion that appellees wrongfully allowed creditors to оbtain default judgments against him individually. When pressed for details during pretrial discovery, he was unable to provide the specifics with regard to even one matter in which this had allegedly occurred.
“[T]he opponent of a motion for summary judgment does not raise an issue of fact by merely stating in the record thаt an issue of fact exists, but rather he must show that competent evidence is available which will justify a trial ...”
Cullison v. City of Peoria,
Since, for all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that appellants are precluded from maintaining this action we find that it is -unnecessary to consider the issues raised regarding judicial estoppel and the statute of limitations.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
