MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Joseph Bonanno (“Bonanno”) has responded to this Court’s July 10,1981 memorandum opinion and order (the “Opinion”) by filing an Amended Complaint (the “Complaint”) against Dale Potthoff (“Potthoff”). Bonanno again attacks Potthoff’s alleged lawyer malpractice in two counts, one sounding in tort and the other in contract. Once again Potthoff has moved to dismiss the Complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. (“Rule”) 12(b)(6), relying on an Illinois statute of limitations bar as to each count. For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, Potthoff’s motion is denied as to each count.
Facts 1
Latе in 1974 Bonanno, having retained Potthoff as his lawyer by a written retainer agreement, became the owner of over $1 million in claims in then-pending litigation against LaSalle & Bureau County Railroad Co. (“LSBC”) in downstate Illinois. Though the lawyers for Bonanno’s predecessor in ownership sеnt Potthoff a substitution-of-attorney form, Potthoff (both negligently and in breach of the retainer agreement) failed to file his appearance in *563 the lawsuit. Very shortly thereafter a previously pending motion to dismiss the Complaint against LSBC, based on easily curable techniсal defaults, was granted without Potthoff having appeared in opposition. After the lapse of several more months without Potthoff’s having appeared in the litigation, LSBC obtained a final order dismissing the case with prejudice June 9, 1975.
Less than 30 days later Potthoff finally filed his appearance and moved to vacate the dismissal. That motion was denied, and Potthoff failed either to take an appeal or to advise Bonanno of his right to appeal. Instead Potthoff filed a new action on Bonanno’s behalf in September 1975 оn grounds similar or identical to those in the original action. That new action was dismissed in 1979 on res judicata grounds, and the Illinois Appellate Court upheld the dismissal August 28, 1980.
Bonanno v. LaSalle & Bureau County Railroad Co.,
Count I — Bonanno’s Tort Claim
All substantive law issues in this diversity action are to be determined under Illinois, law.
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
It is not however an easy matter to discern just what the applicable Illinois law of limitations is. There are conflicting signals in the Illinois Appellate Court decisions, and this Court must choose among them.
Each Illinois trial court is bound by the decision of еach Illinois Appellate Court, but when those Courts conflict the trial court must follow the decisions in its own-district.
People v. Thorpe,
But as will be seen, on at least one important issue in this case there is a conflict
within
Illinois’ First Appellate District (in which this Court sits). This Court will then satisfy its
Erie
obligations by employing a Supreme-Court-predictive approach to ascertaining Illinois law. See
In re Air Crash Disaster,
Potthoff’s motion as to Bonanno’s tort claim asserts the five-year Illinois statute of limitations (Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 83, § 16 [“Section 16”]) as a bar to the claim. Because more than five years separate the June 1975 final dismissal of the original state court lawsuit from the institution of this action, the critical question is whether Bonanno’s tort claim had “accrued” (the operative term in Section 16) in June 1975.
Potthoff argues that under
Dolce v. Gamberdino,
Bonanno responds that the applicable Illinоis law is rather “that a cause of action does not accrue until a plaintiff has knowledge or should have knowledge of the defendant’s wrongful acts.”
E.J. Korvette v. Esko Roofing Co.,
Thus there is an arguable conflict between the two First District decisions. 2 Free to choose the most likely result before the Illinois Supreme Court, this Court elects to embrace Korvette and eschew Dolce precisely because of what the Supreme Court has done in related cases.
Dolce
(as Potthoff would have us read it) is inconsistent with the Illinois Supreme Court cases that adopted the “discovery rule,”
Rozny v. Marnul,
It would be extraordinary for the Supreme Court to sanction one rule for plaintiffs suing doctors for malpractice and another — more restrictive — rule for plaintiffs suing lawyers for malpractice. It seems far more likely, as well as more consistent with its own precedents, to espouse the
Korvette
approach and the squarely applicable decision of the Fourth District in
Kohler v. Woollen, Brown & Haskins,
a cause of action for legal malpractice has not accrued until the client discovers, or should have discovered, the factors establishing <the elements of his cause of action. 3
Applying that doctrine requires rejection of Potthoff’s limitations defense. Under Illinois law “there is no cause of action [for negligence] until the injury or damage has occurred.”
West American Insurance Co. v. Sal E. Lobianco & Son Co.,
Common sense supports that conclusion. Had Potthoff’s new lawsuit on Bonanno’s behalf been decided on the merits, Bonanno simply would have suffered no “injury or damage” from the 1975 dismissal of the earlier lawsuit — hеnce from Potthoff’s malpractice in not appealing that dismissal. Only when it was determined that such an appeal, rather than institution of a second action, was the sole means for prosecution
*565
of Bonanno’s claims against LSBC could it be known that Bonanno hаd sustained harm. Until the Appellate Court’s decision (or at worst the trial court’s decision) dismissing the second case, it was not clear that Bonanno had lost anything (except perhaps time) by Potthoff’s failure to appeal. But
after
that decision it was plain that Bonanno had lost
everything
he sought to gain from the litigation.
6
Indeed the force of that analysis is supported by case law indicating that a suit brought against Potthoff
before
the Appellate Court decision might well have been dismissed as premature.
7
See, e.g., People ex rel. Cheadle v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 37
Ill.App.3d 950, 951,
Consequently the most probable result is that the statute of limitations did not begin to run on Bonanno’s tort claim against Potthoff until August 28,1980, for only on that date did Bonanno truly sustain legal injury or damage — final loss of his claim against LSBC — at the hands of Potthoff’s negligence. By definition then that was also the date on which, in the language of the discovery rule cases, Bonanno “discover[ed], or should have discovered, the factors [here the fact of injury or damage] establishing the elements of his cause of action.”
That outcome would spare the necessity of resolving what is clearly an intra-FirstDistrict conflict regarding the discovery rule. As already indicated,
Dolce
expressed its own unique perception of the discovery rule,
The discovery rule is the exception to the traditional rules, to be applied only when the discovery occurs after the statute of limitations has run or when discovery occurs at a time so near the running that the action, for all practical reasons, has been barred before a party has leаrned of the accrual.
That statement represents a sport in the law. It is squarely contradicted by various First District and other Appellate Court decisions that without exception calculate the running of the statute from the date of discovery (one such decisiоn is
Korvette,
*566 In any event, if August 28,1980 is accepted as the date on which Bonanno’s cause of action accrued, his February 1981 filing of this action was timely under either approach. On the facts of this cаse August 28, 1980 was only two days before the statute could have run even under the Dolce theory of “accrual” already discussed in this opinion. And of course two days must unquestionably be “a time so near the running that the action, for all practical reasons, ha[d] been barred before'[the] party ha[d] learned of the accrual.”
This opinion has hаd to travel a longer route than the Court would have preferred, because of the conflicts with established (and sound) law posed by Dolce. But the conclusion of that journey is that Bonanno’s Count I is not barred by Section 16’s statute of limitations.
Count II — Bonanno’s Contract Claim
Potthoff’s motion to dismiss Bonanno’s second сount, which sounds in contract, needs far less discussion. Potthoff argues that Illinois’ ten-year statute of limitations for actions upon written contracts (Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 83, § 17) does not apply. This is so, Potthoff argues, because Bonanno’s contract claim is based upon a retainer agreement that does not contain the specific undertaking claimed to have been breached.
See Yazzie v. Olney, Levy, Kaplan & Tenner,
That contention is unsound. This is not a situation in which Bonanno’s claim asserts only a general failure to provide reasonably competent professionаl services or some other broad noncontractual claim. It rather charges Potthoff with failure to perform precisely what he had contracted to do. Under the retainer agreement Potthoff undertook to represent Bonanno in the prosecution or settlement of all claims against LSBC. Count II’s gravamen is that Potthoff failed so to represent Bonanno in the 1975 litigation because of the same negligent actions already discussed. Thus Bonanno’s action is certainly based on the written contract and on Potthoff’s non-performance of his contractual undertaking.
Cf. Stanley v. Chastek,
Conclusion
Potthoff’s motion to dismiss Counts I and II of Bonanno’s Complaint is denied. Potthoff is ordered to answer the Complaint on or before October 30, 1981.
. On this motion the “facts” dо not represent findings by the Court but are rather derived from allegations in the Complaint. Though already stated for the most part in the Opinion, they are repeated here so that this opinion will be self-contained.
Notes
.
Dolce
did not in fact hold that the discovery rule would not apply tо temper the traditional “time of the negligent act” rule in appropriate circumstances. Rather it adopted, as discussed later in this opinion, a far narrower view of the
scope
of the discovery rule than
Korvette.
Its discussion of the problem plainly contemplated the discovery rule as a recognized and proper exception to the traditional rule,
.
Kohler
(and indeed the specific quoted language) were cited by the Illinois Supreme Court in
Tom Olesker’s Exciting World of Fashion, Inc.
v.
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.,
. That was the date on which the trial court dismissed Bonanno’s lawsuit on res judicata grounds.
. That was the date on which the Illinois Appellate Court upheld the res judicata dismissal.
. This result comports with reality as the Dolce rule does not. Until the second lawsuit was dismissed in 1979 Bonanno had no reason to doubt that his lawyer, Potthoff, though he had not pursued an appeal in the first case (an appeal whose success could only have returned Bonanno to the trial court), had acted to save both time and money by filing another lawsuit in the trial court in the first instance.
. Another perspective on the effect of Dolce, which would require the earlier malpractice filing, demonstrates serious policy problems generated by that holding. First it would place a premium on mistrust of the client’s own lawyer — it would in essence fоrce a continuing check with other counsel as to the validity of the advice being received, to prevent the loss of a claim for any wrongful advice given by the client’s own lawyer. Second it must be remembered that once a client does sue his lawyer, continuation of the relationship is obviously untenable. Adoption of a rule different from that suggested in the text would place the client who did learn of a possible claim on the horns of an unacceptable dilemma: He could
(1) file a lawsuit before it is known that harm has been sustained, thus bearing the hardship that must flow from withdrawal of the original counsel familiar with the second case; or
(2) withhold suit, taking the risk that the claim might be time-barred before counsel concluded the representation in the second case with an adverse result.
. If it were neсessary to choose between the alternatives, this Court would again predict the Supreme Court would reject the Dolce approach. Suppose the “so near” time for discovery is (say) four months before the statute of limitations would have run. Dolce would then produce the bizarre result that a plaintiff who discovered a cause of action four years and seven months after it arose would have five months in which to bring suit, whereas the plaintiff who made the discovery two months later would have five years to do so. By COn *566 trast the uniform result under all the other case law would give every plaintiff the same five-year period after his claim had been discovered.
