The appellant, Jeffery David Cox, challenges the judgment of the circuit court dismissing, with prejudice, his legal malpractice claims against Robert P. Geary, John F. McGarvey, Michael Morchower, Lee W. Kilduff, and the law firm of Morchower, Luxton & Whaley (collectively the Attorneys). 1 The circuit court held, among other things, that Cox suffered "one indivisible injury for which he had but one claim or cause of action." We agree and will affirm the circuit court's judgment.
*18 I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In 1991, Cox was convicted in the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond of abduction, murder, and burglary. He was subsequently sentenced to a term of incarceration for life plus 50 years. At trial, Geary and McGarvey represented Cox as court-appointed counsel. After his convictions, Cox retained Morchower and Kilduff to represent him on appeal.
In 1997, Cox petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus. 2 In an order dated November 14, 2001, the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond granted Cox habeas corpus relief. 3 The next day, in the criminal case of Commonwealth v. Cox, the Commonwealth and Cox jointly moved to vacate the 1991 convictions and dismiss the underlying indictments. The Circuit Court of the City of Richmond granted the motion and entered an order vacating Cox's 1991 convictions, dismissing the indictments, and releasing Cox from custody. Id. At the time of his release, Cox had served approximately 11 years of his sentence.
In December 2001, Cox requested assistance from a member of the Senate of Virginia in procuring compensation from the Commonwealth for his wrongful incarceration. The General Assembly approved "An Act for the relief of Jeffery D. Cox" (the Act) on April 7, 2002. 2002 Va. Acts ch. 746. In relevant part, the Act stated:
Whereas, Jeffery D. Cox (Cox) was arrested on October 18, 1990 in the City of Richmond and charged with First Degree Murder, Abduction with Intent to Defile and Breaking and Entering; and
Whereas, on February 13, 1991, Cox was convicted of these charges and sentenced to life imprisonment plus fifty years; and
...
Whereas, new evidence was revealed which supported Cox's innocence of the crimes including confessions by other parties; and
Whereas, based on this new evidence, the Office of the Attorney General reached a settlement agreement with Cox resulting in the Richmond Circuit Court entering an order on November 14, 2001 vacating the convictions; and
...
Whereas at the time of his arrest, Cox was employed as an air conditioning repairman and was working towards obtaining his tradesman's certification as an electrician; and
Whereas, Cox has lost income and a promising career during his eleven years of incarceration; and
Whereas, Cox has also suffered severe physical, emotional and psychological damage as a result of this wrongful incarceration and has no other means to obtain adequate relief except by action of this body; now, therefore,
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. § 1. That there shall be paid for the relief of Jeffery D. Cox from the general fund of the state treasury, upon execution of a release of all claims he may have against the Commonwealth or any agency, instrumentality, officer, employee, or political subdivision in connection with the aforesaid occurrence, (i) the sum of $350,000 to be paid to Jeffery D. Cox on or before August 1, 2002 ... and (ii) an annuity for the primary benefit of Jeffery D. Cox ... in the cumulative amount of $400,000.
As required by the terms of the Act, Cox subsequently executed a document releasing
all claims [Cox] may have against the Commonwealth or any agency; instrumentality; officer; employee or political subdivision of *19 the Commonwealth in connection with [his] arrest, conviction and incarceration during the time period 1990-2001, subsequently vacated by the Richmond Circuit Court, and more specifically described in the Virginia Acts of Assembly 2002.
Two years later, in November 2003, Cox filed the motion for judgment in the present case alleging that the Attorneys each "fail[ed] to comply with the applicable standard of care as... Cox's attorney" and breached their respective "contract of representation" with Cox. Cox sought damages from the Attorneys, jointly and severally, for
punishment; incarceration; personal injuries; pain and suffering; severe mental anguish; emotional distress; loss of income; humiliation, indignities and embarrassment; degradation; injury to reputation; permanent loss of natural psychological development; and restrictions on all forms of personal freedom including but not limited to diet, sleep, personal contact, educational opportunity, vocational opportunity, athletic opportunity, personal fulfillment, sexual activity, family relations, recreation, travel, enjoyment and expression.
The Attorneys countered with numerous defensive pleadings, motions, and special pleas. After hearing argument and considering the parties' memoranda on the various motions and other filings, the circuit court dismissed Cox's claims and the motion for judgment with prejudice. In its final order, the circuit court made the following rulings:
1. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction to entertain the claims asserted by the plaintiff in the Motion for Judgment by which he initiated this action (the "Motion for Judgment").
2. The plaintiff has standing to bring this action.
3. The claims asserted by the plaintiff in the Motion for Judgment are not time barred.
4. The claims asserted by the plaintiff in the Motion for Judgment are not barred by collateral estoppel.
5. The injuries suffered by the plaintiff from his incarceration referred to in the Motion for Judgment constitute one indivisible injury for which he had but one claim or cause of action.
6. The habeas relief granted to the plaintiff by this Court was based on newly discovered evidence.
7. An Act for the Relief of Jeffery D. Cox preempted any cause of action the plaintiff may otherwise have had for his incarceration, and there is no civil action that survives it.
8. The claims asserted by the plaintiff in the Motion for Judgment are barred and precluded by:
a. the doctrine of waiver;
b. the doctrine of estoppel; and
c. the plaintiff's election of remedies.
The circuit court also denied Cox's motion to reconsider. Cox appeals from the circuit court's judgment.
II. ANALYSIS
On appeal, Cox assigns error to the rulings of the circuit court adverse to him. One issue is dispositive-whether the circuit court erred in finding that the injuries suffered by Cox as a result of his wrongful incarceration constitute a single, indivisible injury for which he had one claim or cause of action.
It is a generally recognized principle that there can be only one recovery of damages for a single wrong or injury.
Pennington v. Bluefield Orthopedics, P.C.,
The injury for which Cox received compensation from the Commonwealth, through the Act, was his wrongful incarceration. The *20 damages sustained as a result of that injury, as described in the Act, included loss of income and severe physical, emotional, and psychological distress. In the present legal malpractice action, the injury suffered by Cox as a result of the Attorneys' alleged "failure to exercise a reasonable degree of care, skill and diligence in their legal representation of ... Cox and by breaching their contracts of representation with him" was his wrongful incarceration. Moreover, the elements of damage Cox seeks in this action are the same as those for which he received compensation from the Commonwealth.
Cox does not argue that the type of injuries for which the General Assembly compensated him differs from the type of injuries he currently alleges. Nor does he seek in his motion for judgment punitive damages or attorneys' fees, both of which would have differed from his claim against the Commonwealth. In other words, Cox has made no attempt to differentiate between the injury or the damages caused by the negligence of the Commonwealth and the injury or damages suffered by Cox as a result of the Attorneys' alleged legal malpractice.
See Dwyer v. Yurgaitis,
It is helpful to compare the nature of Cox's legal malpractice action, i.e., arising out of the Attorneys' defense of criminal charges, with a legal malpractice action arising out of representation in a civil case. In the former, wrongful incarceration was the sole injury suffered by Cox as a result of the alleged negligent acts of the Commonwealth
and/or
the Attorneys' alleged breach of their respective contract of representation. Indeed, a showing of wrongful incarceration is an element of a cause of action for legal malpractice arising out of the defense of a criminal charge.
See Adkins v. Dixon,
This distinction is borne out by our decision in
Katzenberger v. Bryan,
the [purchasers] alleged that they were damaged because they were "caused to spend a large sum of money for property to which they did not receive legal title" and to expend "large sums of money in the erection of improvements on property to which they did not have lawful means of ingress and egress."
We concluded that the settlement of the cause of action against the sellers was not an accord and satisfaction of the purchasers' claim against the attorney.
Id.
at 84,
Later in
Cauthorn v. British Leyland, U.K., Ltd.,
[o]ur decision ... did not rest solely on the distinction between the theories of recovery; it was also based on the difference between the relief sought in the two actions. In either proceeding, the purchasers could have recovered the value of the portion of the property not conveyed and the diminution in the value of the residue caused by the loss of ingress and egress over the portion not conveyed. But a third element of damages was not common to both causes of action. The loss of the use of certain improvements to the property made by the purchasers was an item of consequential damages not available in the contract action against the sellers but recoverable in the tort action as proximately resulting from the negligence of the lawyer. Thus, the purchasers' damages were not identical in the two actions and did not arise from a single indivisible injury; therefore, their release of the sellers was not an accord and satisfaction of their claim against the lawyer.
Id.
at 206,
The difference in the relief sought was likewise a factor in our decision in
Hiss v. Friedberg,
On appeal, the attorneys argued that the release of the sellers and dismissal of the suit against them barred any recovery by the purchasers from the attorneys.
Id.
at 576,
In the present legal malpractice action, Cox, unlike the purchasers in Katzenberger and Hiss, does not seek to recover from the Attorneys an element of damage different from the damages provided by the Act, such as his litigation expenses incurred in obtaining habeas corpus relief. In the Act, the General Assembly stated that it was compensating Cox for the "physical, emotional and psychological" damages arising out of his "wrongful incarceration." That injury, and those damages, are the same as Cox now alleges were caused by the Attorneys' legal malpractice. As stated earlier, Cox has not made any differentiation between the damages under the Act and the damages under his legal malpractice claim.
We now turn to the release executed by Cox upon receiving compensation pursuant to the Act and its effect, if any, on this legal malpractice action in light of our conclusion that Cox suffered a single, indivisible injury. Cox argues that the provisions of Code § 8.01-35.1 are applicable and therefore the release of the Commonwealth did not discharge the Attorneys from their liability. In relevant part, Code § 8.01-35.1(A)(1) states that "[w]hen a release or covenant not to sue is given in good faith to one of two or more persons liable in tort for the same injury, [i]t shall not discharge any of the other tort-feasors from liability for the injury." The premise of Cox's argument is that a legal malpractice action is based in tort, and the Attorneys and the Commonwealth are joint tortfeasors. Again, we do not agree.
"A cause of action for legal malpractice requires the existence of an attorney-client relationship which [gives] rise to a duty, breach of that duty by the defendant attorney, and that the damages claimed by the plaintiff client must have been proximately caused by the defendant attorney's breach."
Rutter v. Jones, Blechman, Woltz & Kelly, P.C.,
Implicit in this contractual relationship is the duty to "`exercise a reasonable degree of care, skill, and dispatch in carrying out the business for which [the attorney] is employed.'"
Id.
at 181,
Cox erroneously relies on our decisions in
Shipman
and
Lyle
for the proposition that a cause of action for legal malpractice is a tort claim. In both cases, this Court said that legal malpractice sounds in tort,
Shipman,
*23 [T]he attorney-client relationship is formed by a contract. Nonetheless, the duty upon the attorney to exercise reasonable care, skill, and diligence on behalf of the client arises out of the relationship of the parties, irrespective of a contract, and the attorney's breach of that duty, i.e., the appropriate standard of care, constitutes negligence.
Since Cox's action against the Attorneys for their alleged negligence in the performance of their professional services is an action for breach of contract, the Attorneys are not joint tortfeasors with the Commonwealth. Accordingly, the provisions of Code § 8.01-35.1, which expressly apply only when "two or more persons [are] liable in tort for the same injury," have no bearing on the question of the effect, if any, of the release executed by Cox. To answer that question, we therefore turn to the common law.
In
Cauthorn,
On appeal, we concluded that the minor "sustained injuries which, although they may have had more than a single cause, constituted a single, indivisible injury. [The] settlement with and release of the insurance companies and their insureds constituted an accord and satisfaction of [the minor's] cause of action for her single indivisible injury."
Id.
at 205,
III. CONCLUSION
Cox suffered a single, indivisible injury-his wrongful incarceration. 6 Because his legal malpractice cause of action is one for breach of contract, the Attorneys and the Commonwealth are not joint tortfeasors, thereby making the protection afforded by Code § 8.01-35.1 unavailable to Cox. Consequently, under the common law, his release of the Commonwealth now bars recovery against others allegedly liable for his wrongful incarceration, regardless of the theory upon which such liability may be predicated.
For these reasons, we will affirm the judgment *24 of the circuit court. 7
Affirmed.
Hereinafter, all references to Morchower and Kilduff will include the law firm of Morchower, Luxton & Whaley, unless otherwise indicated.
The 1997 petition for a writ of habeas corpus was the third such petition filed by Cox.
The circuit court initially dismissed Cox's petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Cox petitioned for an appeal to this Court from that judgment. While his petition for appeal was pending, the parties advised the Court that they had settled the matters in controversy, and we therefore remanded the habeas petition to the circuit court for entry of an order carrying out the terms of the settlement. In the circuit court, the Attorney General of Virginia, who represented the respondent in the habeas proceeding, moved to grant Cox a writ of habeas corpus.
We note that Code § 8.01-443 allows a plaintiff to bring separate actions against several joint wrongdoers and proceed to judgment in each action. However, the plaintiff's acceptance of payment in satisfaction of such judgment discharges all joint wrongdoers. Cox does not argue that this statute salvages his legal malpractice action against the Attorneys. The legislative policy reflected in Code § 8.01-443, however, is in full accord with the principle that there can be only one recovery for a single, indivisible wrong. Cox, of course, recovered for his injury by accepting the compensation provided in the Act and executing the release.
A circuit court approved the settlement.
In 2004, the General Assembly enacted Code § 8.01-195.11, which provides for compensation to certain persons wrongfully incarcerated; the statute is inapplicable to this action.
In light of our decision, it is not necessary to address the remaining assignments of error or the assignments of cross-error. We do, however, conclude that the circuit court had subject matter jurisdiction.
