Opinion
KREMER, P. J.
Plaintiffs Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company, General Star Indemnity Company, and North Star Reinsurance Corporation (together Insurers) appeal a judgment of dismissal entered after the superior court sustained without leave to amend the demurrer of defendants McDonald, Hecht & Solberg et al. (together Law Firm)
to Insurers’ cause of action in subrogation for legal malpractice. Seeking reversal of their dismissal as plaintiffs in this lawsuit, Insurers contend the court erred in concluding California law prohibited prosecution of a legal malpractice cause of action by a subrogee. We affirm the judgment.
I
Introduction
Insurers paid more than $10 million to settle a lawsuit against their developer insureds by homeowners alleging misrepresentations in the sales of residential units. The insureds then filed a legal malpractice case against their attorneys (Law Firm) for causing those misrepresentations to be made. Later, Insurers joined the malpractice lawsuit as plaintiffs under a theory of subrogation. Law Firm successfully demurred on the ground California law prohibiting assignment of legal malpractice actions also precluded Insurers from proceeding as subrogees to their insureds’ claim against Law Firm. The court entered judgment dismissing Insurers as plaintiffs.
Insurers contend the superior court improperly extended the doctrine of the nonassignability of legal malpractice claims to a subrogation situation where public policy considerations ordinarily warranting application of the doctrine were assertedly not present. We conclude the superior court properly determined settled law barred Insurers from proceeding against Law Firm on a theory of subrogation.
II
Facts
For purposes of determining the propriety of the order sustaining Law Firm’s demurrer, we accept as true the facts alleged by Insurers in the second amended complaint.
(Buckaloo
v.
Johnson
(1975) 14 Cal.3d 815, 828 [122 Cal.Rptr. 745, 537 P.2d 865].)
Insurers issued comprehensive general liability policies to Pacific Scene, Inc., its successor Sundance Financial, Inc., and joint venture Treetops Unlimited (together Insureds).
In 1980 Pacific Scene retained Law Firm to provide legal services in connection with the development and sale of the Hillsborough planned development. Law Firm advised Pacific Scene about disclosures to be made to prospective buyers of Hillsborough units. Law Firm also prepared for filing with state regulators or distribution to prospective buyers legal documents containing disclosures, warranties and representations about Hillsborough units.
In September 1988 various Hillsborough homeowners associations filed a lawsuit (Homeowners action) against Insureds alleging misrepresentation of
numerous facts to Hillsborough owners. Law Firm was not a party to the Homeowners action.
In November 1990 Law Firm ceased representing Insureds.
Eventually, the Homeowners action was settled. Law Firm declined an invitation to participate in the settlement negotiations.
In June 1991—because the claims made against Insureds in the Homeowners action implicated the potential for coverage arising under the liability policies Insurers had issued to Insureds—settlement payments were made by Fireman’s Fund ($4,762,616.56), North Star ($4,031,772.75), and General Star ($1,343,927.25).
Insurers’ payment of settlement and defense costs in the Homeowners action depleted Insureds’ insurance coverage, depriving Insureds of insurance coverage for other claims asserted against them. Under the settlement, Insureds were to replenish the limits of their insurance policies with items recovered in their contemplated lawsuit against Law Firm.
Ill
Superior Court Proceedings
A
Plaintiffs’ Pleadings
In October 1991 Insureds sued Law Firm for legal malpractice.
In April 1992 a second amended complaint was filed adding Insurers as plaintiffs on a subrogation cause of action against Law Firm. The second amended complaint alleged Law Firm’s negligence in performing legal services for Insureds involving the Hillsborough development caused the misrepresentations alleged in the Homeowners action. Under the second amended complaint, Insureds sought recovery from Law Firm for all sums Insureds became legally obligated to pay under the settlement of the Homeowners action, whether paid directly by Insureds or on their behalf by Insurers. Alleging in making the settlement payments Insurers acted in compliance with the terms of the insurance policies and California insurance law, Insurers sought to recover those settlement sums from Law Firm. Insurers alleged entitlement to such recovery to the extent the court found
Insureds’ cause of action for legal malpractice against Law Firm transferred to Insurers by subrogation as a matter of law by virtue of Insurers making settlement payments on Insureds’ behalf.
B
Law Firm’s Demurrer to Second Amended Complaint
Law Firm demurred to Insurers’ subrogation cause of action on the ground it failed to allege facts sufficient to state a cause of action “in that as a matter of public policy a legal malpractice claim is nonassignable and plaintiff insurers may not be subrogated to that nonassignable claim.” After hearing, the superior court sustained without leave to amend Law Firm’s demurrer to Insurers’ subrogation cause of action. In sustaining Law Firm’s demurrer, the court stated: “The law is well settled that a cause of action personal to the assignor, cannot be assigned. Legal malpractice actions have traditionally been held to be such causes of action. [Citations.] A subrogation clause in an insurance contract is an implied assignment and subject to this restriction. [Citations.] Therefore the insurers cannot directly complain of the defendants for legal malpractice.”
The court entered judgment dismissing Insurers as plaintiffs.
Insurers appeal.
IV
Discussion
In noting the law was “well settled” that a legal malpractice action is personal to the plaintiff and cannot be assigned, the superior court relied on
Jackson
v.
Rogers & Wells
(1989) 210 Cal.App.3d 336 [258 Cal.Rptr. 454] and
Goodley
v.
Wank & Wank, Inc.
(1976) 62 Cal.App.3d 389 [133 Cal.Rptr. 83]. In concluding subrogation was an implied assignment and thus subject
to the prohibition against assigning legal malpractice actions, the court cited
Fifield Manor
v.
Finston
(1960) 54 Cal.2d 632 [7 Cal.Rptr. 377, 354 P.2d 1073, 78 A.L.R.2d 813] and
Peller
v.
Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co.
(1963) 220 Cal.App.2d 610 [34 Cal.Rptr. 41].
In
Goodley
v.
Wank & Wank, Inc., supra,
62 Cal.App.3d 389, the appellate court stated: “It is the unique quality of legal services, the personal nature of the attorney’s duty to the client and the confidentiality of the attorney-client relationship that invoke the public policy considerations in our conclusion that malpractice claims should not be subject to assignment.”
(Id.
at p. 397; accord,
Jackson
v.
Rogers & Wells, supra,
210 Cal.App.3d at pp. 342-343.)
In
Kracht v. Perrin, Gartland & Doyle
(1990) 219 Cal.App.3d 1019 [268 Cal.Rptr. 637], we stated:
“Goodley
and
Jackson
noted that because of the uniquely personal nature of the relationship, numerous public policy considerations were involved in determining whether claims for legal malpractice should be assignable.
Goodley
noted the attorney owes a duty of undivided loyalty and diligence in representing the client. Such duty is personally owed by the attorney and may not be delegated to others, and is owed solely to the client, his one intended beneficiary. Assignability would encourage commercialization of claims, and would force attorneys to defend themselves against persons to whom no duty was ever owed. Moreover, the legal profession is debased by such commercialization, because it could (1) encourage unjustified lawsuits; (2) generate increased malpractice lawsuits, burdening the profession, the court system and (to the extent malpractice premiums would inevitably rise and be passed to the consumers) the public; and (3) promote champerty. [Citation.] Assignability could conceivably reduce the public’s access to legal services, since the ever present threat of assignment by irresponsible clients (seeking quick financial gain) could cause lawyers to evaluate more selectively the desirability of representing a particular client. [Citation.]”
(Kracht
v.
Perrin, Gartland & Doyle, supra,
at pp. 1023-1024.)
In
Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
54 Cal.2d 632, the Supreme Court concluded although “subrogation and assignment have certain technical differences, each operates to transfer from one person to another a cause of action against a third, and the reasons of policy which make certain causes of action nonassignable would seem to operate as forcefully against the transfer of such causes of action by subrogation.”
(Id.
at p. 640.)
Based upon those cases, the superior court concluded Insurers were prohibited from asserting as subrogees a legal malpractice claim against Law Firm to recover the settlement payments Insurers made on Insureds’ behalf in the Homeowners action.
B
Although acknowledging the existence of case law holding that legal malpractice claims are generally not assignable and nonassignable claims are not subject to subrogation absent statutory authorization, Insurers contend the public policies articulated in those cases to restrict the assignability of legal malpractice claims are not applicable to a subrogation claim by a liability insurer who paid a claim against its insured client resulting from the insured’s attorney’s negligence. Insurers seek to distinguish those cases factually as not involving a subrogee insurer whose interests were directly affected by its subrogor’s attorney’s malpractice and whose interests were “aligned” or “virtually identical” with (and indeed “derivative” of) the insured’s interests against the attorney.
Characterizing the superior court’s ruling as inequitable in light of other public policies favoring reasonable settlements, encouraging liability carriers to meet their insureds’ reasonable expectations, transferring risks to actual tortfeasors, and spreading loss among cotortfeasors, Insurers assert those public policies require that their lawsuit as subrogees be permitted and the holding in
Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
54 Cal.2d 632, not be extended to apply here.
Although Insurers’ public policy arguments have substance, we are not the proper tribunal to depart from established law.
C
“In 1872 our Legislature effected a change in the common law rule of nonassignability of choses in action by enacting sections 953 and 954, Civil Code. Thus a thing in action arising out of either the violation of a right of property or an obligation or contract may be transferred [citations]. The construction and application of the broad rule of assignability have developed a complex pattern of case law underlying which is the basic public policy that ‘ “[a]ssignability of things in action is now the rule; nonassignability the exception” ’ [citations]. ‘ “[A]nd this exception is confined to wrongs done to the person, the reputation, of the feelings of the injured party, and to contracts of a purely personal nature, like promises of marriage.” ’ [Citation.] Thus, causes of action for personal injuries arising out of a tort are not assignable nor are those founded upon wrongs of a purely personal nature such as to the reputation or the feelings of the one injured. Assignable are choses in action arising out of an obligation or breach of contract as are those arising out of the violation of a right of property (§ 954, Civ. Code) or a wrong involving injury to personal or real property.”
(Goodley
v.
Wank & Wank, Inc., supra,
62 Cal.App.3d at pp. 393-394, fns. omitted; accord,
Jackson
v.
Rogers & Wells, supra,
210 Cal.App.3d at pp. 341-342.)
“It is now well settled that under California law a former client may not voluntarily assign his claims for legal malpractice against his former attorneys. In
Goodley
v.
Wank & Wank, Inc.
(1976) 62 Cal.App.3d 389 [133 Cal.Rptr. 83], and more recently in
Jackson
v.
Rogers & Wells, supra,
210 Cal.App.3d p. 336, the courts determined that although choses in action for property or pecuniary losses are generally assignable, a claim for legal malpractice is more akin to those types of claims which are
not
assignable, i.e., claims for personal injury, wrongs of a purely personal nature (such as injuries to the reputation or feelings of the injured party) or breaches of contracts of a purely personal nature (such as promises of marriage). [Citations.]
Goodley
and
Jackson
concluded that the attorney-client relationship (although containing contractual elements) is unique and involves a highly personal and confidential relationship, making the relationship ‘. . . more analogous to a contract of a personal nature than to an ordinary commercial
contract’ [citation], and rendering claims for negligent breach thereof nonassignable.”
(Kracht
v.
Perrin, Gartland & Doyle, supra,
219 Cal.App.3d at p. 1023, italics in original.)
In
Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
54 Cal.2d 632, the Supreme Court considered the question “whether a third party may be subrogated either by the operation of equitable principles (legal subrogation) or by contract with the injured party (conventional subrogation) to any part of a cause of action for injury to the person in view of the fact that under our law no such cause of action may be assigned.”
(Id.
at p. 639.)
The court concluded “the principles of subrogation should not be here applied in view of the express reservation against assignment in Civil Code, section 956.”
(Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
at p. 643.)
The court stated: “Whether the transfer be technically called assignment or subrogation or equitable assignment or assignment by operation of law its ultimate effect is the same, to pass the title to a cause of action from one person to another.”
(Id.
at p. 640.)
The court also noted the plaintiff had not identified any California case “where a right of subrogation to a cause of action for tortious injury to the person has
been recognized, except in cases where such right of subrogation has been expressly granted by statute.”
(Id.
at p. 639.)
However forceful we may deem the equities supporting Insurers’ contentions that various public policy concerns underlying the rule of nonassignability of legal malpractice claims are inapplicable where, as here, a liability insurer seeks to recoup from its insured’s negligent attorney payments made by the insurer on the insured’s behalf, we cannot depart from settled law. As noted, California courts have consistently held legal malpractice claims are nonassignable to protect the integrity of the uniquely personal and confidential attorney-client relationship.
(Kracht
v.
Perrin, Gartland & Doyle, supra,
219 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1022-1026;
Jackson
v.
Rogers & Wells, supra,
210 Cal.App.3d at p. 342;
Goodley
v.
Wank & Wank, Inc., supra,
62 Cal.App.3d at p. 397.)
Further, under principles of stare decisis we are bound to follow the Supreme Court’s holding in
Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
54 Cal.2d 632, that absent express statutory authorization nonassignable claims are not subject to subrogation.
(Auto Equity Sales, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1962) 57 Cal.2d 450, 455 [20 Cal.Rptr. 321, 369 P.2d 937].)
D
In sum, under well settled law, Law Firm owed its client (Insureds) a “duty of undivided loyalty and diligence.”
(Kracht
v.
Perrin, Gartland & Doyle, supra,
219 Cal.App.3d at p. 1023.) Such duty was owed “solely” to Insureds, the intended beneficiary.
(Ibid.)
Insurers were not clients of Law Firm. Neither were Insurers intended beneficiaries of Law Firm’s performance of legal services.
(Goodley
v.
Wank & Wank, Inc., supra,
62 Cal.App.3d at p. 396.) “Because of the inherent character of the attorney-client relationship, it has been jealously guarded and restricted to only the parties involved.”
(Ibid.)
Assignability would imperil the “sanctity” of that
relationship.
(Kracht
v.
Perrin, Gartland & Doyle, supra,
at p. 1024.) “The public policy concerns expressed in
Jackson
and
Goodley
are violated by
any
assignment of claims, whether voluntary or (as here) involuntary.”
(Ibid.,
italics in original.) “Differences between lawyer and client respecting malpractice should be limited to themselves.”
(Goldfisher
v.
Superior Court
(1982) 133 Cal.App.3d 12, 22 [183 Cal.Rptr. 609].)
Further, California courts have uniformly held nonassignable claims are not subject to subrogation absent express statutory authorization.
(Fifleld Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
54 Cal.2d 632;
Allianz Insurance Co.
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
126 Cal.App.3d 1043;
Patent Scaffolding Co.
v.
William Simpson Constr. Co., supra,
256 Cal.App.2d 506.) No statute expressly authorizes subrogation of legal malpractice claims. Hence, as legal malpractice claims are nonassignable, such claims may not be subrogated. Thus, case law compels a holding Insureds’ legal malpractice cause of action is not assignable to Insurers.
E
Without merit is Insurers’ contention the concerns expressed in
Goodley
v.
Wank & Wank, Inc., supra, 62
Cal.App.3d 389, about the personal nature of legal services and the confidential attorney-client relationship have been undercut by the holding in
Merenda
v.
Superior Court
(1992) 3 Cal.App.4th 1 [4 Cal.Rptr.2d 87], where the court assertedly focused on the “economic” rather than the “personal” nature of the attorney-client relationship in denying a client the right to seek emotional distress damages against the attorney.
(Id.
at p. 10.)
Merenda
referred to “economic” interest, not in describing the attorney-client relationship itself, but instead when discussing the client’s interest—with respect to a third party—sought to be protected by the attorney-client relationship.
(Ibid.)
We find nothing in
Merenda
suggesting the attorney-client relationship is other than personal and confidential simply because the lawyer was retained to assert against a third party a claim made in the client’s economic interest.
2
Insurers seek to distinguish
Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
54 Cal.2d 632, as based on former section 956’s last sentence, construed by Insurers as precluding assignment of personal injury causes of action. However, Insurers misapprehend the import of that portion of former section 956. “Historically at common law the assignability of causes of action sounding in tort depended upon survivability. So causes of action for damage to property, since they survived the death of the parties, were assignable and causes of action for injury to the person, since they did not survive, were not assignable. [Citations.]”
(Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
at p. 638.) Former section 956 was enacted to provide for the survivability of certain personal injury claims. The last sentence of that statute simply reaffirmed the common law rule that such claims—though now surviving—remained nonassignable.
(Peller
v.
Liberty Mut. Fire Ins. Co., supra,
220 Cal.App.2d at p. 612.) “By adopting this reservation against assignability, the Legislature placed the law as regards the causes of action [provided for in section 956] in the same position as all other causes of action arising from tortious injury to the person.”
(Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
at p. 639.)
Insurers cite
Employers Ins.
v.
Musick, Peeler & Garrett
(9th Cir. 1992) 954 F.2d 575, where the court permitted subrogation of liability insurers to the insured’s claim for contribution against the insured’s attorneys.
{Id.
at pp. 577-578.) However, Insurers’ reliance on
Employers Ins.
is inapposite since that case involved federal statutory law, a matter not pertinent here.
Insurers meritlessly contend in
Kirtland & Packard
v.
Superior Court
(1976) 59 Cal.App.3d 140 [131 Cal.Rptr. 418] the appellate court implicitly recognized an insurer ordinarily had a right of subrogation to its insured’s legal malpractice claim against the insured’s attorney. The court did not state there was a validly existing right of subrogation but instead simply noted the real party in interest conceded “the insurance company is not dissatisfied with the outcome of [the underlying medical malpractice case] and has waived any rights of subrogation it
might
have had.”
{Id.
at p. 145, fn. 3, italics added.) Moreover, it appears the insurer in
Kirtland & Packard
v.
Superior Court
could have asserted a direct cause of action for legal malpractice as the employer and client of the defense attorney.
Finally, without merit is Insurers’ contention there is or should be an exception to the rule against subrogation of a nonassignable claim to permit
an insurer to assert a subrogation claim for equitable indemnification or contribution against an attorney liable to the insured/client.
Insurers contend the rule against subrogation of nonassignable claims should not apply to claims for indemnity or contribution against parties equitably responsible to the insured. Insurers seek to analogize this case to
Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Constr. Co.
(1956) 46 Cal.2d 423 [296 P.2d 801, 57 A.L.R.2d 914], where the Supreme Court held an employer’s insurer who paid a judgment against the employer for injuries caused by an employee’s unauthorized negligent act was subrogated to the employer’s recoupment cause of action against the employee or the employee’s insurer.
{Id.
at p. 429.) Insurers contend Insureds here were in the position of the employer in
Continental Cas. Co.
whose insurer had to pay for the misfeasance of the employer’s agent/employee attorneys; and, having drafted various documents leading to Insureds’ liability in the Homeowners action, Law Firm here was in the same position as the ultimately responsible agent in
Continental Cas. Co.
In discussing
Continental Cas. Co.,
the Supreme Court in
Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
54 Cal.2d 632, stated: “The employer’s cause of action against the employee in such circumstances is based upon the breach of the servant’s duty to his master and is one for indemnification [citations], and the holding in Continental Casualty does not impinge in any way upon the question now before us.”
{Fifield Manor
v.
Finston, supra,
at pp. 642-643.) Thus, according to Insurers, the court in
Fifield
distinguished the situation where an insurer was subrogated to its insured’s claim for indemnification against another responsible party and hence similar principles should allow Insurers to be subrogated to Insureds’ claim for contribution or indemnity against joint tortfeasor Law Firm. We disagree.
Insurers characterize Insureds’ claim against cotortfeasor Law Firm as essentially for indemnification based upon (1) general indemnity principles
{Rossmoor Sanitation, Inc.
v.
Pylon, Inc.
(1975) 13 Cal.3d 622, 628 [119 Cal.Rptr. 449, 532 P.2d 97]); (2) Insureds’ special relationship with Law Firm
(City & County of S.F.
v.
Ho Sing
(1958) 51 Cal.2d 127, 130 [330 P.2d 802]); or (3) Law Firm’s concurrent duty of care owed directly to Homeowners (Co
urtney
v.
Waring
(1987) 191 Cal.App.3d 1434, 1443-1444 [237 Cal.Rptr. 233];
Cicone
v.
URS Corp.
(1986) 183 Cal.App.3d 194, 209 [227 Cal.Rptr. 887];
Roberts
v.
Ball, Hunt, Hart, Brown & Baerwitz
(1976) 57 Cal.App.3d 104, 110-111 [128 Cal.Rptr. 901]). However, regardless whether styled as a claim for subrogation, indemnity or contribution, the gravamen of Insurers’ claim was legal malpractice as Insureds’ actionable injury was allegedly the result of Law Firm’s professional negligence.
{Kracht
v.
Perrin, Gartland & Doyle, supra,
219 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1022-1023.) Accordingly, Insurers’ cause of action was barred by the rule against assignment of legal malpractice claims.
(Ibid.;
accord,
Jackson
v.
Rogers & Wells, supra,
210 Cal.App.3d at pp. 344-350.)
F
In sum, we may not depart from well settled law prohibiting assignment or subrogation of legal malpractice claims absent express statutory authorization. Since the rule prohibiting assignment or subrogation of such claims has not been modified by the Legislature or the Supreme Court, Insurers as subrogees may not pursue this lawsuit against Law Firm.
The superior court properly sustained Law Firm’s demurrer without leave to amend and entered judgment dismissing Insurers as plaintiffs in this lawsuit.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Benke, 1, and Nares, L, concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied March 16, 1995.