OPINION
J. Edward Ramsey and C & E Corporation (collectively “Ramsey”) appeal the trial court’s decision to grant the motion to dismiss filed by Lincoln National Life Insurance Company and Lincoln National Investment Management, Inc. (collectively “Lincoln”), raising the following issue- for review: whether the continuing wrong theory applies to this claim of tortious interference with contract.
We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In December 1993, R.I. Corporation (“R.I.”) entered into a contract to buy Rameo Industries, Inc. (“Rameo”) from Ramsey. The contract required R.I. to make five annual payments to Ramsey as part of the purchase price. The amount of each payment was to be determined by a formula based on earnings performance.
In 1994, the parties disputed the amount that was due under the formula and submitted the matter to arbitration. On October 18, 1995, the arbitrator determined that R.I. owed Ramsey an additional $168,335 for the 1994 payment. On October 19, 1995, Ramsey issued a formal written demand for the amount due him. The following day, Lincoln wrote a letter to Ramsey and R.I., informing them of its “determination hereby to block ... any payment representing 1994 performance earnout.” Record at 92.
In December 1996, R.I. paid' Ramsey the money due according to the arbitrator’s award. In March 1998, Ramsey filed its First Amended Complaint against R.I. and Lincoln. . Rapisey claimed that Lincoln’s attempts to block payment of the installment constituted tortious interference with contract. Lincoln filed a motion to dismiss, claiming the .two-year statute of limitations barred Ramsey’s claim. The trial court agreed, and dismissed Ramsey’s claim; We granted Ramsey’s petition'for interlocutory appeal of this order according to Indiana Appellate Rule 4(B)(6).
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
A motion to dismiss under Ind. Trial Rule 12(B)(6) is made to test the legal sufficiency of the claim, not the supporting facts.
Hosler ex rel. Hosler v. Caterpillar, Inc.,
The parties do not dispute the facts or the relevant dates. Therefore, the only issue is whether Ramsey’s claim is time-barred. The parties also agree that the two-year statute of limitations set forth at IC 34-1-2-2 applies. Ramsey’s suit was filed more than two years after Lincoln’s letter, but within two years of when it received the disputed payment.
Ramsey argues that Lincoln’s interference with its contract with- R.I. constitutes a continuing wrong that did not abate until it received payment under the contract in December 1996. It contends, therefore, that the statute of limitations was tolled until that date. Lincoln maintains that the statute of limitations began to run when it sent the letter on October 20, 1996. It argues that the continuing wrong theory does not apply where the complained-of action is a single act, rather than a number of actions occurring over a period of time that constitute a unified course of conduct.
Generally, a cause of action accrues when a wrongfully inflicted injury causes damage.
Keep v. Noble County Dep’t of Pub. Welfare,
“Injury precedes damages. Hence damages susceptible of ascertainment resulting from injuries to person would ordinarily be the test for determining when a cause of action exists, but where, as here, ‘the action is for the damages resulting from the various consequences of one continuous wrong,’ the statute of limitations will not begin to run until there is a cessation of the overt acts constituting the wrong.”
Id.
at 679,
The continuing wrong theory has been asserted primarily in medical malpractice cases. Where the plaintiffs harm results from a course of treatment, the argument is sometimes successful.
See Follett v. Davis,
The argument has met with less success in other types of cases.
See Dague v. Piper Aircraft Corp.,
In this case, the wrong about which Ramsey complains is Lincoln’s action in blocking the 1994 payment from Rameo. It was at that point in time that Ramsey suffered a legal injury and resulting damages. His cause of action accrued when Lincoln blocked the payment that Rameo would otherwise have paid. According to the allegations of the complaint, Lincoln blocked the payment on October 20, 1995. It was at that point that injury and damages occurred and the statute of limitation began to run on Ramsey’s claim against Lincoln. As in Smith, although the impact of Lincoln’s action in,sending the letter and opposing the payment continued over several months, it did not constitute a continuing wrong.
Moreover, the doctrine of continuing wrong will not prevent the statute of limitations from beginning to ran when the plaintiff learns of facts which should lead to the discovery of his cause of action even if his relationship with the tortfeasor continues beyond that point.
Doe v. United Methodist Church,
Affirmed.
