¶ 1 Under Arizona law, an insurance agent’s clients may assert claims for professional negligence against the agent. We hold that clients may assign such claims to third parties.
I.
¶ 2 In 2000, Neal and Gail Berliant bought a liquor store called The Liquor Vault. To insure themselves, they purchased a business and umbrella liability policy from Victoria Gittlen, a licensed insurance agent. Gittlen then worked for G & G Insurance Service; she later moved to CDS Insurance Agency. The Berliants allege that Gittlen did not advise them that they could also purchase liquor liability coverage.
¶ 3 In 2001, The Liquor Vault sold beer to a minor who gave it to another. The second youth drove his car into a cement barrier, killing his passenger. The passenger’s father, D. Jere’ Webb, filed a wrongful death claim against the Berliants and The Liquor Vault. The Berliants tendered the claim to their insurance company, which refused to defend because the Berliants lacked liquor liability coverage.
¶ 4 To settle the wrongful death claim, the Berliants stipulated to the entry of a $3 million judgment; Webb agreed not to execute on the judgment and, in exchange, the Berliants assigned to Webb their rights to sue both their insurer and their insurance agent and her employers. Webb then sued Gittlen, G & G, and CDS, alleging negligence and breach of fiduciary duty. The trial court dismissed these claims, citing
Premium Cigars International Ltd. v. Farmer-Butler-Leavitt Insurance Agency,
which held that claims against an insurance agent for professional negligence are not assignable.
¶ 5 The court of appeals affirmed in a memorandum decision that also relied upon Premium Cigars. We granted review to consider whether insureds may assign claims against their insurance agent. This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to Article 6, Section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution, Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) § 12-120.24 (2003), and Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure 23(c)(3).
II.
¶ 6 Arizona case law generally allows the assignment of unliquidated legal claims except those involving personal injury. This distinction reflects the evolution of the common law, which once held that “dioses in action” could not be assigned, except to the crown.
Welch v. Mandeville,
¶ 7 The broad prohibition on assignment exemplified the common law view that litigation was vexatious or otherwise socially undesirable. Max Radin, Maintenance by Champerty, 24 Cal. L.Rev. 48, 57-58 (1935). Illustrative is Lord Coke’s statement:
And first was observed the great wisdom and policy of the sages and founders of our law, who have provided that no possibility, right, title, nor thing in action, shall be granted or assigned to strangers, for that would be the occasion of multiplying of contentions and suits, of great oppression of the people.
Lampet’s Case, (1613) 77 Eng. Rep. 994, 997 (K.B.).
¶ 8 As courts became more accessible and litigation a more accepted means for resolving disputes, the prohibition on assignment gradually became the exception rather than
¶ 9 One class of unliquidated claims was excluded from the emerging rule of assignability: personal injury claims. Restatement (First) of Contracts § 547 (1932). Since Roman times, such claims were considered “personal” to the claimant and could not be asserted by others. Holdsworth,
supra
¶ 6, at 1002-03, 1022-24. Consistent with this perspective, absent a statute allowing for survival, a deceased claimant’s personal injury claim could not be asserted by heirs or an estate.
See McClure v. Johnson,
¶ 10 This “survivability” test did not itself survive in Arizona after 1955, when the legislature enacted a statute providing for the survival of most causes of action, including personal injury claims.
See Harleysville Mut. Ins. Co. v. Lea,
¶ 11 This Court subsequently endorsed
Harleysville
and expressly relied on public policy considerations in reaffirming the rule against assignment of personal injury claims.
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Knapp,
¶ 12 Public policy considerations have also guided courts in determining the assignability of claims not involving personal injury. For example, the court of appeals has held that legal malpractice claims cannot be assigned, although the principal policy consideration offered has been deference to the attorney-client relationship, not fears about trafficking in lawsuits.
See Botma v. Huser,
¶ 13 The current principles under Arizona law for determining if an unliquidated claim may be assigned can be summarized as follows: (1) claims generally are assignable except those involving personal injury; (2) the legislature may specify whether particular claims are assignable; and (3) absent legislative direction, public policy considerations should guide courts in determining whether to depart from the general rule. Cf. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 178 (1981) (stating that contracts are unenforceable where legislation so provides or where public policy clearly outweighs contractual terms). 3
III.
¶ 14 Against this background, Gittlen argues that claims against insurance agents for professional negligence cannot be assigned because (1) claims against lawyers for legal malpractice are not assignable; (2) the court of appeals in Premium Cigars correctly extended this rule to insurance agents, as their relationship with clients is analogous to the attorney-client relationship; and (3) although the legislature has not addressed the assignment of claims against insurance agents, allowing such assignment would violate public policy.
A.
¶ 15 In contending that legal malpractice claims may not be assigned, Gittlen presumes this Court has embraced such a rule. Although the court of appeals has done so, this Court has not yet decided this issue. Some, but not all, states prohibit the assignment of such claims.
Compare Greene v. Leasing Assocs., Inc.,
B.
¶ 16 Gittlen argues that professional negligence claims against insurance agents are sufficiently analogous to legal malpractice claims to justify extending the prohibition on assignment. We disagree.
1.
¶ 17 The cases prohibiting assignment of legal malpractice claims do so because of the “uniquely personal” relationship between attorney and client, which gives rise to a “fiduciary relation of the very highest character.”
Botma,
¶ 18 In
Premium Cigars,
the court of appeals extended this rationale to professional negligence claims against insurance agents. It held that such claims may not be assigned because the relationship of insurance agent
2.
¶ 19 We reject the Premium Cigars rationale. The relationship between an insurance agent and client, while certainly important, differs from that between an attorney and client in several critical respects.
¶ 20 Attorneys are fiduciaries with duties of loyalty, care, and obedience, whose relationship with the client must be one of “utmost trust.”
In re Piatt,
¶ 21 Similarly, although clients share personal information with both their insurance agents and attorneys, they typically share much less with their agents. While clients often inform their agents about their medical history, financial information, prior claim history, and personal habits, they provide then-attorneys more extensive or sensitive information about their private and public conduct, including activities that may expose them to civil or criminal liability.
¶ 22 Furthermore, attorney-client confidentiality protects broader interests than does insurance agent-client confidentiality. It protects the public interest in accessible legal advice by allowing people to consult their attorneys without fear of retribution. It also ensures that clients are effectively represented, which in criminal cases is essential to defendants’ constitutional right to assistance of counsel. Ariz. R. Sup.Ct. 42, ER 1.6 cmt. 2;
cf. McClure v. Thompson,
¶23 Once attorneys receive information, they are also bound by stricter confidentiality duties than are insurance agents. Attorneys may disclose information only to prevent client crimes, Ariz. R. Sup.Ct. 42, ER 1.6(b), (d)(1), or in a few other limited circumstances,
id.
at (d)(3)-(4) (also allowing disclosure to secure legal advice about compliance with the rules and to defend against suits brought by the client). Insurance agents, by contrast, are statutorily allowed to disclose client information in seventeen different circumstances, including when an affiliate seeks the information for marketing purposes. A.R.S. § 20-2113 (2002 & Supp.2007) (also allowing disclosure connected with proposed sales of the insurance institution or requests for verification of benefits from hospitals or doctors).
¶24 Considered together, these distinctions demonstrate that the relationship between insurance agents and their clients, while perhaps personal, is not “uniquely personal” in a sense comparable to an attorney-client relationship. The differences are substantial and the similarities do not justify holding that claims against agents cannot be assigned.
C.
¶ 25 Gittlen also advances four public policy reasons for prohibiting the assignment of professional negligence claims against insurance agents.
1.
¶26 Gittlen first suggests that allowing assignment would undermine the personal relationship between agent and client by allowing professional negligence claims to become a “bargaining chip” that may be “com-mercializ[ed].”
¶27 This argument is unpersuasive. Although the agent-client relationship has personal dimensions, it arises from a commercial transaction — the purchase of insurance. It is therefore odd to suggest that it should not be commercialized. At any rate, to the extent that the relationship contains personal elements, they exist for the client’s benefit. Clients are best positioned and should be empowered to decide whether to value that relationship above the benefits they could obtain from assigning a professional negligence claim.
2.
¶ 28 Gittlen also contends that allowing assignment conflicts with this Court’s decision in
Napier v. Bertram,
which held that a taxicab company’s insurance agent did not owe a passenger the duty to secure uninsured motorist insurance for the company.
¶ 29 This argument misconstrues the scope of
Napier
and the nature of a claim asserted by an assignee.
Napier
holds that agents generally owe duties to their clients only, but it does not address whether claims for a breach of these duties may be assigned. Assignees do not seek to expand insurance agents’ duties beyond those owed to the client. Instead, they merely seek to assert
the client’s
claim. Allowing them to do so does not improperly increase the beneficiaries of an insurance agent-client relationship, because even though the insurance agent’s duties do not extend beyond the client,
Napier
recognizes that such duties “are discharged for the benefit of the non-client.”
3.
¶ 30 Gittlen and her amici next argue that allowing assignment of professional negligence claims will result in “collusive” stipulated judgments that will bind insurance agents who had no chance to contest them. This argument rests on a faulty premise. Such judgments would not bind the agent.
¶31 This Court has recognized that, in some circumstances, an insurer may be bound by a stipulated judgment entered pursuant to a settlement between an insured and a plaintiff. This typically occurs after the insurer has either reserved its rights to contest coverage or declined to defend or indemnify the insured.
See United Servs. Auto. Ass’n v. Morris,
¶ 32 The rule that a stipulated judgment may bind the insurer arises from the insurer’s contractual obligations to defend and indemnify its insured.
Id.
When the insurer breaches these obligations or reserves the right to deny coverage, insureds are allowed to protect themselves from “the sharp thrust of personal liability,”
id.
at 118,
¶ 33 In contrast, an insurance agent generally has no contractual duty to defend and indemnify the client. Our prior holdings that an insurer may be bound in certain circumstances by a judgment entered against the insured arose out of, and are limited to, the insurer-insured relationship. Absent such a relationship, we do not perceive, and Gittlen has not suggested, any basis for concluding that insurance agents would be bound by stipulated judgments to which they were not parties. Indeed, principles of issue preclusion suggest the opposite conclusion. Under those principles, the insurance agent would be barred from re-litigating an issue only if, among other things, the agent or her privy was a party in a prior action in which the issue was actually litigated.
See Maricopa-Stanfield Irrigation & Drainage Dist. v. Robertson,
4.
¶ 34 Finally, Gittlen argues that allowing assignment would flood courts with unwarranted litigation. We think this unlikely. Although allowing assignment may lead to an increase in the number of professional negligence claims that are actually pursued, this is not necessarily a bad result. Insofar as the claims are meritorious, they will serve the goals of affording compensation for the clients who are victims of professional negligence (who benefit from the consideration they receive for assigning their claims), increasing the likelihood that the victims of the underlying tort are compensated (insofar as they can recover on the assigned claim against the agent), and deterring negligence on the part of insurance agents.
See
Michael Abramowicz,
On the Alienability of Legal Claims,
114 Yale L.J. 697, 741 (2005). To the ejctent that allowing assignment might foster non-meritorious claims, we believe they will be better deterred by specifically targeted rules, such as Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 11, rather than an absolute bar on assignment.
Cf. Guerrero,
¶ 35 In short, the policy concerns identified by Gittlen do not support a rule generally barring the assignment of professional negligence claims against insurance agents.
IV.
¶36 Because we hold that the Berliants may assign to Webb their claims for professional negligence, we reverse the decision of the court of appeals and the judgment of the trial court and remand this case for further proceedings.
Notes
. Webb also sued the insurance company. Those claims are not at issue here.
. Under the modern survivability statute, the only claims that do not survive are those for damages for breach of promise to marry, seduction, libel, slander, maintenance, alimony, loss of consortium, and invasion of privacy. A.R.S. § 14-3110(2005).
. Despite the common law prohibition on assigning personal injury claims, the law allows a claimholder to release a claim as part of a settlement and a tortfeasor to purchase an insurer’s agreement to defend prospective claims. Although neither of these scenarios involves assertion of a claim by a third-party assignee, they can be regarded as variations of an "assignment" of rights to assert or defend a personal injury claim. See Michael Abramowicz, On the Alienability of Legal Claims, 114 Yale L.J. 697, 710 (2005). Some commentators advocate allowing assignment of all tort claims. See Isaac Marcushamer, Note, Selling Your Torts: Creating a Market for Tort Claims and Liability, 33 Hofstra L.Rev. 1543 (2005); Patrick T. Morgan, Note, Unbundling Our Toil Rights: Assignability for Personal Injury and Wrongful Death Claims: Lingel v. Olbin, 66 Mo. L.Rev. 683 (2001).
