Opinion
In this appeal we consider whether a defendant, who has been forced to defend a lawsuit precipitated by the negligence of the plaintiff’s counsel, is entitled to recover from the negligent lawyer attorney fees and costs incurred in defending the lawsuit. We conclude that the defendant is not entitled to such compensation in this case.
*1308 Facts 1
The issue on appeal arises from a foreclosure sale of real property located in Napa County. San Francisco Federal Savings and Loan held the first deed of trust on the property and was represented in the foreclosure by its attorney, appellant Charles D. Sooy. Eddie and Lynn Whitehead were the beneficiaries of a junior deed of trust on the property. They were represented in the foreclosure proceedings by their attorney, respondent Bradley Peter.
The property was sold under the first deed of trust in March of 1987. San Francisco Federal was the sole bidder at its own foreclosure sale. The Whiteheads did not appear at the sale and alleged they did not learn of the sale until weeks after it occurred.
After San Francisco Federal sold the property to a third party, the Whiteheads filed suit, naming San Francisco Federal, appellant Sooy and the third party buyer as defendants. The Whitehead complaint alleged causes of action for negligent misrepresentation, fraud, and improper trustee sale, among others. The heart of the Whitehead complaint was that Sooy had falsely represented to their attorney Peter “(1) that a pending foreclosure sale of the property was stayed by order of the Bankruptcy Court; (2) that the stay would remain in effect so long as the debtor in possession continued making current payments on San Francisco Federal’s Note; (3) that [the Whiteheads] would receive prompt notification if, or when, the debtor in possession subsequently defaulted on the Note, causing the stay to automatically terminate; (4) that upon any subsequent termination of the stay plaintiffs would receive adequate and sufficient notice of each scheduled foreclosure date; and (5) that plaintiffs would be provided with adequate and sufficient notice of each and every postponement of the foreclosure sale.”
The complaint further alleged that Sooy failed to provide the promised notice and that this caused the Whiteheads to miss the foreclosure sale and deprived them of an opportunity to bid on the property, thus resulting in the loss of their security interest.
*1309 Appellant Sooy answered and generally denied the allegations in the complaint. In addition, he filed a cross-complaint against Peter seeking compensation for attorney fees and other costs incurred by Sooy in defending the Whiteheads’ suit on the theory that these costs were damages attributable to a “Third Party Tort” (namely, Peter’s professional negligence). In particular, Sooy alleged in his cross-complaint that Peter had negligently failed to protect the Whiteheads’ interests when he did not keep informed of the status of the bankruptcy stay and that this failure caused the Whiteheads to miss the foreclosure sale. The cross-complaint further alleged that as a direct result of Peter’s negligence, the Whiteheads had filed suit against Sooy requiring him to employ counsel and sustain other costs. The cross-complaint sought compensation for these expenses. 2
Peter demurred to the cross-complaint’s “Third Party Tort” cause of action on the ground that Peter owed no duty of due care to Sooy. The trial court sustained the demurrer and granted Sooy 20 days to amend the cross-complaint. Sooy did not amend, and the trial court dismissed the cross-complaint and entered judgment in favor of Peter. Sooy filed a timely notice of appeal from this judgment. 3
Discussion
Sooy contends he is entitled to recover from Peter the costs of defending the Whitehead lawsuit (including attorney fees) on the theory that he incurred those costs as the result of the “tort of another” (the “other,” of course, being Peter). Peter contends the “tort of another” doctrine is not applicable here because he owed no legal duty of due care to Sooy. We agree with Peter that the “tort of another” doctrine is inapplicable on the facts pled.
The doctrine permitting a litigant to recover attorney fees and related costs incurred as the result of the “tort of another” has its modern genesis in
Prentice
v.
North Amer. Title Guar. Corp.
(1963)
Later cases make it clear, however, that the so-called “third party tort exception” to the rule that parties bear their own attorney fees is not really an “exception” at all but an application of the usual measure of tort damages. The theory of recovery is that the attorney fees are recoverable as damages resulting from a tort in the same way that medical fees would be part of the damages in a personal injury action. In such cases there is no recovery of attorney fees qua attorney fees.
(Brandt
v.
Superior Court
(1985)
Because the third party tort “exception” is in fact an element of tort damages, nearly all of the cases which have applied the doctrine involve a clear violation of a traditional tort duty between the tortfeasor who is required to pay the attorney fees and the person seeking compensation for those fees. (See, e.g.,
Brandt
v.
Superior Court, supra,
37 Cal.3d at pp. 815-820 [breach of insurer’s duty of good faith and fair dealing to insured];
Gray
v.
Don Miller & Associates, Inc.
(1984)
Sooy, however, relies on two cases where it is less clear that the person required to pay the attorney fees committed a tort vis-a-vis the person receiving that compensation. He contends that these cases establish that the Prentice “exception” applies even when there is no violation of a tort duty between those two parties.
In the first case,
Lang
v.
Klinger
(1973)
Lang
was followed in
Manning
v.
Sifford
(1980)
Like the concurring justice in
Manning,
we are concerned by the
Lang
and
Manning
courts’ suggestion that attorney fees are recoverable under
Prentice
other than as damages in a tort action. In our view,
Prentice
merely holds that necessary attorney fees incurred in third party litigation which is proximately and foreseeably caused by a tortfeasor are recoverable as damages in an action against the tortfeasor.
(Brandt, supra,
In analyzing the Prentice issue in this case, it is important to note that Sooy’s cross-complaint alleges only that Peter acted negligently when he *1313 failed to keep himself informed of the bankruptcy proceedings, and that this failure caused the Whiteheads to miss the foreclosure sale, and ultimately caused them to file suit against Sooy. The cross-complaint does not allege that Peter falsely told his clients that Sooy had promised to provide the notice. Consequently, we are concerned here only with the scope of Peter’s duty as it relates to his alleged professional negligence. 4
In general, an attorney is not liable to a nonclient for the consequences of professional negligence.
(Fox
v.
Pollack
(1986)
On the other hand, the courts have consistently found that an attorney has no duty of due care to protect the interests of an adverse party
(Schick
v.
Lerner
(1987)
In the present case, it is absolutely clear that Sooy—who represented a potentially adverse party in the foreclosure—was not an intended beneficiary of Peter’s services. At best, Sooy represented a client who was dealing at arm’s-length with Peter’s client. In
Goodman
v.
Kennedy, supra,
the Supreme Court resolved “the legal question of whether or under what circumstances an attorney’s duty of care in giving legal advice to a client extends to persons with whom the client in acting upon the advice deals wholly at arm’s length. . . . [Attorneys have] no such duty in the absence of any showing that the legal advice was foreseeably transmitted to or relied upon by [the nonclients] or that [the nonclients] were intended beneficiaries of a transaction to which the advice pertained.” (
We are aware that the question whether an attorney owes a duty of care to a third person is one of law and in each case involves “a judicial weighing of the policy considerations for and against the imposition of liability under the circumstances. [Citations.]”
5
(Goodman
v.
Kennedy, supra,
Since Peter owed no duty of due care to Sooy, there is no basis for awarding attorney fees as damages under Prentice.
The judgment is affirmed. Costs on appeal are awarded to respondent.
Merrill, J., and Strankman, J., concurred.
Notes
The present case is before us following a judgment of dismissal entered after the trial court sustained a demurrer to a cross-complaint. Since “[a] demurrer tests only the legal sufficiency of the pleading”
(Committee on Children's Television, Inc.
v.
General Foods Corp.
(1983)
The cross-complaint also alleged causes of action for equitable indemnity and comparative indemnification. However, Sooy has abandoned those causes of action on appeal.
Since this judgment dismisses a cross-complaint by the defendant against a third party, it is appealable as a final determination of a collateral matter independent of the rest of the action.
(Herrscher
v.
Herrscher
(1953)
We emphasize that we are referring to duty as an element of ordinary negligence, and not a duty based on fraud, conspiracy, or intentional torts. As indicated, Sooy has not alleged that Peter lied to his clients in an effort to shift liability from himself to Sooy. Significantly, Peter is not representing the Whiteheads in their suit against Sooy, and consequently was not directly responsible for drawing the allegations in the complaint.
In particular, “the determination whether in a specific case the [attorney] will be held liable to a third person not in privity is a matter of policy and involves the balancing of various factors, among which are the extent to which the transaction was intended to affect the plaintiff, the foreseeability of harm to him, the degree of certainty that the plaintiff suffered injury, the closeness of the connection between the [attorney’s] conduct and the injury, and the policy of preventing future harm. [Citation.]”
(Lucas
v.
Hamm, supra,
