1. The Fiduciary Relationship and Core Duties
The attorney-client relationship is inherently fiduciary. From the moment a lawyer agrees to represent a client, the attorney assumes duties that go beyond ordinary contractual obligations. These include the duty of loyalty, meaning the lawyer cannot represent conflicting interests or pursue personal gain at the client's expense; the duty of competence, requiring the attorney to possess and apply the knowledge and skill reasonably expected of attorneys in similar matters; and the duty of candor, obligating full disclosure of material information affecting the client's interests.
Courts recognize that breach of fiduciary duty claims arise when an attorney's conduct violates these foundational obligations. A lawyer may breach fiduciary duty by failing to communicate material information, pursuing a course of action contrary to the client's stated objectives, or prioritizing the attorney's own financial or personal interests. The scope of the fiduciary relationship extends throughout the representation and, in some contexts, after the attorney-client relationship ends.
What Distinguishes Fiduciary Breach from Malpractice
While breach of fiduciary duty and legal malpractice are related concepts, they are distinct claims. A legal malpractice claim typically focuses on whether the attorney failed to exercise the standard of care expected in the profession, resulting in injury to the client. A breach of fiduciary duty claim, by contrast, emphasizes the attorney's failure to act in the client's best interest or a conflict of interest that undermined the representation.
In practice, a single course of conduct may support both claims, but they require different proof. Malpractice requires showing that the attorney's conduct fell below professional standards and caused damage. Fiduciary breach focuses on whether the attorney prioritized interests other than the client's or failed to disclose a material conflict. Courts may find an attorney breached fiduciary duty even if the attorney did not commit malpractice, and vice versa. Understanding this distinction helps clarify which legal theories best address the client's harm.
2. Establishing the Elements of Breach
A client suing for breach of fiduciary duty must demonstrate several elements. First, the client must show that an attorney-client relationship existed and that the attorney owed fiduciary duties. Second, the client must prove the attorney breached a specific duty by acting in a manner inconsistent with the client's interests or failing to disclose a material conflict. Third, the client must establish that the breach caused actual harm.
The causation element is particularly demanding. A client cannot recover simply because the attorney made an error; the client must show that the breach directly caused or materially contributed to the loss. For example, if an attorney fails to disclose a conflict of interest and that undisclosed conflict leads the attorney to provide advice favoring the conflicted party, causation may be clear. If, however, an attorney makes a strategic choice that the client later regrets but the choice was within the scope of reasonable advocacy, courts may find no breach occurred.
How New York Courts Apply the Causation Standard
New York courts have held that a client must prove not only that the attorney breached a duty but that the breach was the proximate cause of the client's injury. In matters involving settlement negotiations or litigation outcomes, courts examine whether the client would have achieved a better result absent the breach. This inquiry can be complex when the underlying dispute involved discretionary legal judgments.
When a client alleges the attorney failed to pursue a particular strategy or settlement offer, New York courts often require the client to demonstrate that the foregone opportunity was likely to have succeeded. A client cannot recover damages based on speculative harm or outcomes that were uncertain at the time of the breach. Documentation of the attorney's advice, communications, and the client's instructions becomes essential in establishing what the client would have done had the attorney properly performed.
3. Common Scenarios Involving Fiduciary Breach
Breach of fiduciary duty claims often arise in several recurring contexts. One common scenario involves undisclosed conflicts of interest, where an attorney represents parties with competing interests without obtaining informed consent from all clients. Another involves failure to communicate material information, such as settlement offers, court deadlines, or developments in the case. A third involves the attorney pursuing a course of action contrary to the client's express instructions or best interests.
| Scenario | Fiduciary Duty at Issue | Typical Harm |
| Undisclosed conflict of interest | Duty of loyalty | Compromised advice or representation favoring the other party |
| Failure to disclose settlement offer or plea opportunity | Duty of candor and loyalty | Loss of opportunity to settle or resolve favorably |
| Pursuing strategy contrary to client instructions | Duty of loyalty | Adverse outcome the client did not authorize |
| Misuse of client funds or property | Duty of loyalty | Direct financial loss |
As counsel, I observe that these scenarios often involve a breakdown in communication or a situation where the attorney's incentives diverge from the client's objectives. A client who suspects fiduciary breach should document all communications with the attorney and preserve records of instructions given and advice received.
4. Remedies and the Role of Contract Claims
A client who succeeds in proving breach of fiduciary duty may recover compensatory damages, which aim to place the client in the position the client would have occupied had the breach not occurred. In cases involving misappropriation of funds or intentional misconduct, courts may award punitive damages, though such awards are rare and require clear and convincing evidence of egregious conduct.
Clients often pursue breach of contract claims alongside fiduciary duty claims. A breach of contract theory may apply if the attorney's engagement letter or fee agreement contained specific obligations the attorney failed to meet. The advantage of a contract claim is that it may not require proof of causation in the same demanding way fiduciary duty claims do; however, contract claims are typically limited to the scope of the written agreement.
Procedural Considerations in New York State Court
A client bringing a breach of fiduciary duty claim against an attorney must file the action in New York Supreme Court. The claim must be pleaded with sufficient specificity; a bare allegation of breach is insufficient. The client must describe the specific conduct constituting the breach, the duty owed, and how that conduct harmed the client.
Discovery in these cases often focuses on communications between the attorney and client, the attorney's file, and evidence of what the client's position would have been absent the breach. An attorney defendant may move to dismiss the claim if the complaint fails to allege facts supporting each element. Timing matters; New York imposes a three-year statute of limitations for breach of fiduciary duty claims, though this period may be tolled in certain circumstances. A client should preserve all documents related to the representation and consult with counsel promptly to avoid missing the deadline for filing suit.
5. Relationship to Broader Legal Accountability
Clients harmed by attorney misconduct may also file complaints with the New York State Bar Association's Grievance Committee, which investigates ethical violations separately from civil litigation. A successful disciplinary complaint does not automatically result in a damage award but may support a civil claim and may result in sanctions against the attorney's license.
Additionally, clients may pursue claims for breach of fiduciary duty in the context of fee disputes or when an attorney's conduct involves a clear conflict between the attorney's financial interests and the client's legal interests. Courts scrutinize fee agreements carefully and may reduce fees or award restitution if the attorney's conduct was improper.
A client evaluating whether to sue an attorney should gather all relevant documents, including the engagement letter, fee agreement, correspondence, and any written advice provided. The client should identify with specificity what duty the attorney owed, how the attorney breached that duty, and what harm resulted. Early consultation with another attorney experienced in professional liability matters can help clarify whether the facts support a viable claim and what remedies may be available. The strength of any claim depends on the clarity of the underlying attorney-client relationship, the specificity of the alleged breach, and the ability to prove causation between the breach and the client's injury.
15 Apr, 2026

