Opinion
Plaintiff, executrix of the estate of Valentine Davies, appeals from a trial court determination that her action for breach of confidence is barred by the statute of limitations. The parties stipulated for purpose of the limitation issue that in 1951 Valentine Davies submitted his written stoiy “Love Must Go On” to defendant in confidence and that defendant incorporated the idea, central theme, and dramatic core of that stoiy into his successful play “Who Was That Lady I Saw You With,” first produced in 1958. The trial court found that in 1954 and thereafter defendant disclosed the story to various persons in the entertainment industry in violation of Davies’ confidence, and that Davies learned of these disclosures sometime before November 11, *505 1955. 1 The trial court concluded that the instant suit, filed November 19, 1959, was barred by the statute of limitations.
As we shall explain, this court has never ruled that a cause of action for breach of confidence can rest upon a basis other than a contract that protects that confidence. Assuming the viability of such a cause of action in the present litigation—an assumption compelled here by the law of the case—we conclude that the trial court correctly determined that the two-year period of Code of Civil Procedure section 339, subdivision 1, bars this cause of action.
We shall point out why we reject plaintiff’s contention that the statute of limitations should not begin to run until 1958 when defendant profited from the exploitation of Davies’ idea. We shall explain that Davies had already suffered actual and appreciable damage from defendant’s breach before November 11, 1955. Neither Davies’ difficulty in proving the extent of damage, nor the absence of profits upon which he could impose a constructive trust, delays the running of the period of limitations. Because plaintiff’s suit was not filed within two years after November 11, 1955, it is barred by the statute of limitations.
The legal proceedings which followed the filing of plaintiff’s first complaint in 1959 doubtless deserve a place in the annals of protracted and maddeningly inefficient litigation not far removed from that of Charles Dickens’ Jarndyce v. Jarndyce. Plaintiff’s first complaint asserted two causes of action: breach of contract and breach of confidence. Valentine Davies died before trial, and plaintiff pursued the litigation as the executrix of the estate. At trial, in 1962, the court dismissed the breach of confidence claim for insufficient evidence. It submitted the breach of contract cause to the jurors, but the jurors failed to reach a verdict.
A second trial the following year focused solely on plaintiff’s contract claim. The jurors rendered a defense verdict. The Court of Appeal subsequently affirmed the defense verdict on the contract issue but reversed that part of the judgment that granted a nonsuit as to the cause for breach of confidence. The appellate court remanded this issue for a possible third trial.
(Davies
v.
Krasna
(1966)
Undaunted, defendant obtained leave to file still another amended answer, this one for the purpose of asserting the statute of limitations. 2 Following a 1972 proceeding devoted solely to resolving the limitations issue (see Code Civ. Proc., § 597), the trial court held that the two-year limitations period prescribed in Code of Civil Procedure section 339, subdivision 1, barred plaintiff’s breach of confidence claim.
Plaintiff once again seeks appellate relief. She argues that her action is one for constructive fraud and thus not governed by the limitations period of section 339, subdivision 1; in any event, she contends, Davies’ cause of action did not arise until 1958 when defendant and others transformed Davies’ story into a Broadway production and first reaped monetary rewards. Defendant, on the other hand, urges that the limitations period began to run no later than November 11, 1955, by which date Valentine Davies had learned of the alleged breach of confidence.
Logically, before determining the applicable statute of limitations, we should decide whether a cause of action lies against one who discloses an idea given him in confidence when such action does not rest upon contract expressed or implied in fact. The court has never resolved that issue. 3 Our latitude in this case, however, is substantially constrained by *507 the law of the case, indeed doubly so, since plaintiff obtained two favorable appellate decisions. These decisions held that California recognizes a cause of action for breach of confidence, and that plaintiff had presented sufficient evidence at the 1962 trial to reach the jury on that cause of action.
We are asked, therefore, to resolve a statute of limitations issue with respect to a theory of liability never acknowledged or rejected by this court. Under normal circumstances, our first step would be to explore whether California law should recognize such liability. If we were to reject plaintiff’s theory of action, however, we would violate the rule that a matter adjudicated on a prior appeal normally will not be relitigated on a subsequent appeal in the same case.
4
(P
eople
v.
Shuey
(1975)
On the other , hand, were we to declare that California law does recognize liability for breaches of artistic confidences, we would slight whatever interests cut against our declaring such liability, since the *508 parties not surprisingly have foregone the presentation of arguments on the issue. We believe it unwise to create a new genre of liability without full argumentation on the question. Instead, we choose the admittedly intellectually unsatisfying course of resolving a statute of limitations issue with respect to a theory of liability not yet part of the fabric of this court’s law.
Following the law of the case, we assume that plaintiff has stated a valid cause of action for breach of confidence.
(Davies I,
We turn now to the question whether plaintiff’s cause of action as so described is barred by the statute of limitations of Code of Civil Procedure section 339, subdivision 1. That statute provides a two-year limitation period for “An action upon a contract, obligation or liability not founded upon an instrument of writing . . . .” Reasoning that plaintiff’s complaint asserted an action upon an obligation not founded on an instrument of writing, and was filed more than two years after the breach of that obligation, the trial court held the suit barred by section 339, subdivision 1.
Plaintiff contends, however, that her suit should be classified as one for constructive fraud (see Civ. Code, § 1573) based upon breach of a duty arising from a confidential relationship, and is thus governed by Code of Civil Procedure section 338, subdivision 4, which provides a three-year period from discovery of the fraud. Although the trial court findings suggest that plaintiff’s suit was untimely even under the more liberal provisions of that section, defendant pleaded only the two-year period of section 339, subdivision 1, as a bar to the complaint. An answer which cites only an inapplicable statute of limitations cannot raise an issue as to the timeliness of a complaint (see Code Civ. Proc., § 458;
Davenport
v.
Stratton
(1944)
The only two cases to consider this issue have applied the two-year limitation of section 339, subdivision 1. In
Thompson
v.
California Brewing Co.
(1957)
In
Monolith Portland Midwest Co.
v.
Kaiser Aluminum & C. Corp.
(9th Cir. 1969)
Plaintiff offers no plausible grounds for distinguishing
Thompson
or Monolith.
6
She contends, however, that those precedents were wrongly
*510
decided. Her argument is that a breach of a duty arising from a confidential relationship constitutes constructive fraud
(Day
v.
Greene
(1963)
Plaintiff’s argument confuses a cause of action for breach of confidence with a cause of action for violation of a duty ¿rising from a confidential relationship. “A confidential relation exists between two-persons when one has gained the confidence of the other and purports to act or advise with the other’s interest in mind. A confidential relation may exist although there is no fiduciary relation; it is particularly likely to exist where there is a family relationship or one of friendship or such a relation of confidence as that which arises between physician and patient or priest and penitent.” (Rest. 2d Trusts, § 2, com. b, quoted in
Vai
v.
Bank of America
(1961)
The creator of the idea may transmit the idea in the protective context of a confidential relationship, as, for example, when an inventor reveals his concept to a patent lawyer (cf.
Stevens
v.
Marco
(1956)
*511
In the present case, plaintiff alleges in her amended complaint the existence of a confidential relationship, but her conclusionaiy allegations, unsupported by factual averments, are insufficient to give rise to a triable issue. (See
Odorizzi
v.
Bloomfield School Dist.
(1966)
Since plaintiff’s cause of action for breach of confidence does not rest upon a confidential relationship it cannot be classed as an action for constructive fraud. Following the earlier decisions of
Thompson
v.
California Brewing Co., supra,
Defendant, to Davies’ knowledge, had breached his duty of confidence before November 11, 1955; if the period of limitation commenced on or before that date, plaintiff’s action does not overcome the bar of limitations. Plaintiff contends, therefore, that the cause of action did not accrue until 1958 when defendant used Davies’ idea to produce a profitable Broadway play. She advances three arguments: (1) that Davies’ cause of action for breach of confidence did not arise until defendant publicly exhibited Davies’ idea; (2) that the cause of action did not arise until Davies had an effective remedy, which condition, she asserts, first obtained in 1958; and (3) that the cause of action, to the extent it seeks to impose a constructive trust, did not arise until defendant by profiting from Davies’ idea created a trust res. We shall discuss each argument in turn.
Plaintiff’s first argument, that Davies’ cause of action did not arise until defendant publicly exhibited Davies’ idea in 1958, confuses two different theories of action. A suit for breach of an implied contract not to exploit an idea without paying for it does arise only with the sale or
*512
exploitation of the idea.
(Donahue
v.
United Artists Corp.
(1969)
Plaintiff secondly argues that Davies lacked an effective remedy for defendant’s breach of confidence until 1958. A 1955 action for injunctive relief, she maintains, would have been futile since defendant had already disclosed Davies’ idea; an action for damages would have resulted in merely nominal recovery. Only when defendant, by producing a profitable play in 1958, demonstrated the true value of Davies’ idea, did Davies have an effective remedy.
Plaintiff's contention that a period of limitation should not begin to run until the injured party possesses an effective remedy raises issues which turn upon the practical purpose that a statute of limitations serves in our legal system. The fundamental purpose of such statutes is to protect potential defendants by affording them an opportunity to gather evidence while facts are still fresh.
(Elkins
v.
Derby
(1974)
Impelled by this concern for the pragmatic, we have drifted away from the view held by some that a limitations period necessarily begins when an act or omission of defendant constitutes a legal wrong as a matter of substantive law. (See generally Developments in the Law—Statutes of Limitations (1950) 63 Harv.L.Rev. 1177.) Rather, we generally now subscribe to the view that the period cannot run before plaintiff possesses a true cause of action, by which we mean that events have developed to a point where plaintiff is entitled to a legal remedy, not merely a symbolic judgment such as an award of nominal damages.
Thus in
Budd v. Nixen
(1971)
Particularly illustrative in this regard is
Walker
v.
Pacific Indemnity Co.
(1960)
We conclude from the above decisions that although a right to recover nominal damages will not trigger the running of the period of limitation, the infliction of appreciable and actual harm, however uncertain in amount, will commence the statutory period. Under present authority, neither uncertainty as to the amount of damages nor difficulty in proving damages tolls the period of limitations. 8
In the case at bar, the trial court expressly found that the “disclosure of [Valentine Davies’] story ... in 1954 by defendant Krasna to the market... substantially destroyed the marketability of [the] story.” This finding impels the conclusion that, by the time Davies learned of the unauthorized disclosures, he had incurred actual and appreciable damage sufficient to start the running of the period of limitation. Plaintiff responds that at the time of discovery the actual damages were too speculative to justify an award, but as we have observed (see cases cited fn. 8, supra), once plaintiff has suffered actual and appreciable harm, neither the speculative nor uncertain character of damages nor the difficulty of proof will toll the period of limitation.
Davies, moreover, could have included in a 1955 action for actual damages a prayer for injunctive relief to bar defendant from further unauthorized disclosure or use of Davies’ story. 9 Such an action would have enabled him to cover all fronts—to collect for past damage and demonstrable prospective damage, and to minimize the likelihood that defendant would later act in ways likely to increase damages.
*515
To delay the running of the period of limitation until defendant’s acts furnished plaintiff with a more certain proof of damages would contravene the principle that victims of legal wrong should make reasonable efforts to avoid incurring further damage. (See
Valencia
v.
Shell Oil Co.
(1944)
We fear that plaintiff’s interpretation of the statute of limitations would impair the safeguards it imposes in cases involving unliquidated damages. As Justice Allport pointed out in his dissenting opinion in the Court of Appeal, “The argument [advanced by plaintiff] would be available in all such actions that the applicable statute is tolled for an indefinite time simply because the nature and extent of the damage was not determined or readily provable within the otherwise applicable statutory period of limitation.” We conclude that the statutory period commenced once Davies suffered actual and appreciable damage, and thus no later than November 11, 1955.
Plaintiff thirdly and finally asserts that, for want of a res, the remedy of constructive trust was not available to Davies until 1958; she maintains that consequently the period of limitation on that remedy should not begin to run until 1958. This argument overlooks the principle that “The statute of limitations to be applied is determined by the nature of the right sued upon, not by the form of the action or the relief demanded.”
(Day
v.
Greene, supra,
In summary, we hold that if plaintiff has a cause of action for breach of confidence, that cause of action is subject to the two-year limitation of Code of Civil Procedure section 339, subdivision 1. Under the facts as found by the trial court, plaintiff had suffered actual and appreciable harm from defendant’s breach by November 11, 1955; . the statutory period therefore began to run no later than that date. Neither plaintiff’s difficulty in proving the extent of damage, nor the lack of a res on which to impose a constructive trust, delays the running of the period of limitation. Consequently plaintiff’s suit when filed on November 19, 1959, was "barred by limitations.
The judgment is affirmed.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Sullivan, J., Clark, J., Molinari, J., * and Burke, J., † concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a rehearing was denied July 3, 1975. Mosk, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
PIaintiif asserts that certain findings are not supported by the evidence, but her quarrel, upon closer analysis, is not with the factual findings but with the legal conclusion the trial court derived from those findings.
Plaintiff does not claim that the trial court abused its discretion by permitting defendant to amend his answer this late in the proceedings.
Besides
Davies I
and
II,
several Courts of Appeal have recognized or mentioned liability similar to that claimed by plaintiff:
Carpenter Foundation
v.
Oakes
(1972)
The rule applies even though the subsequent appeal comes before this court whereas the prior appeals were before Courts of Appeal. “Where a decision upon appeal has been rendered by a District Court of Appeal and the case is returned upon a reversal, and a second appeal comes to this court directly or intermediately, for reasons of policy and convenience, this court generally will not inquire into the merits of said first decision, but will regard it as the law of the case.”
(United Dredging Co.
v.
Industrial Acc. Com.
(1930)
Because Davies II considered Davies I to'be law of the case, one indeed can say that the law of the case is the law of this case.
The doctrine of law of the case of course is not inflexible.
(England
v.
Hospital of Good Samaritan
(1939)
PIaintiff argues that the defendant’s obligation of confidence in
Thompson
and
Monolith
was based upon an implied in fact contract, but that her suit is based upon quasi-contract. This argument misreads
Thompson,
in which the plaintiff asserted independent causes of action for breach of contract and breach of confidence, and the court construed the action for breach of confidence as lying in tort.
(Thompson
v.
California Brewing Co., supra,
150 Cal.App.2d at pp. 474-475; see
Thompson
v.
California
*510
Brewing Co.
(1961)
Noting that
Thompson
v.
California Brewing Co., supra,
See
Budd
v.
Nixen, supra; Merchant’s Fire Assur. Corp.
v.
Retail Credit Co., Inc.
(1962)
Plaintiff asserts that an injunction running against defendant would not have afforded Valentine Davies effective relief since it would have failed to prevent third party disclosees from exploiting his creation; she further asserts the impracticability of joining discloseesf as defendants in order to close this loophole. Whatever the merits of this argument, it fails when considered in conjunction with the fact that plaintiff prays.for damages reflective of the profits earned only by defendant, a prayer, incidentally, which arguably is inconsistent with her claim of injury by virtue of a breach of confidence. By pleading as she has, plaintiff has indicated that she would be fully satisfied were she awarded the profits realized only by defendant. Given the bounds of her prayer, we presume Valentine Davies would have been similarly satisfied with an injunction commanding defendant to refrain from taking the steps which earned him those profits.
Assigned by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Retired Associate Justice of the Supreme Court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
