In this lеgal malpractice action, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for accelerated judgment under GCR 1963, 116.1(5), ruling that the period of limitation had already expired. Plaintiff appeals as of right.
The alleged malpractice arоse out of plaintiffs attempts to recover payment from Wayne Harding for construction work done on his home by plаintiffs business. In February, 1980, defendants filed both a claim of lien on the Harding property and a lawsuit against Wayne Harding in circuit court. Wе have not been apprised of the exact nature of this lawsuit. The lien, which defendants concede was defeсtive, was withdrawn by defendants, apparently in April, 1980, but the lawsuit continued.
By letter dated March 1, 1982, plaintiff informed defendants that he no longer wished for them to represent him, because they had twice adjourned the scheduled trial date due to unpreрaredness. Defendants confirmed by letter dated March 3, 1982, that they would no longer represent plaintiff. Plaintiff hired another attorney and the case against Wayne Harding proceeded to trial in June, 1984. However, on June 15, 1984, Wayne Harding filed for bankruрtcy, listing Dowker as an unsecured creditor, and the circuit court trial was halted and removed from the calendar without conclusion.
Plaintiff filed his complaint alleging legal malpractice on August 9, 1984.
In Michigan, an action for legal malpractice must be brought within two years of the date the attorney discontinues serving the plaintiff or within six months after the plaintiff discovers or
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should have discovered the existence of the claim, whichever is later. MCL 600.5805(4), 600.5838; MSA 27A.5805(4), 27A.5838,
Luick v Rademacher,
Plaintiffs argument that his discharge of defendants in March, 1982, was not discontinuation of service for purposes of the statute, because defendant Peacock did not sign a formal consent to substitution of attorneys until August 27, 1982, is unavailing. An attorney discontinues serving, for purposes of this statute, when the attorney is relieved of that obligation either by the client or by a court.
Berry v Zisman,
Plaintiff must, therefore, show that he did not or could not have disсovered the existence of his claim until after February 9, 1984.
As with other tort actions, a malpractice claim accrues only when all the necessary elements of a cause of action have occurred, including damages. Luick v Rademacher, supra, p 806. It is the fact of identifiable and appreciable loss, and not the finality of monetary damages, that gives birth to the causе of action. Id.
In
Biberstine v Woodworth,
It is plaintiff’s theory in this case that, even though defendants negligently filed the lien in 1980 and withdrew it without his permission, plaintiff still could have recovered from Wayne Harding through the circuit court lawsuit, or at least acquired a judgment lien, which would have put him in the same position as if he had a valid construction lien. It was only when Wayne Harding filed for bankruptcy, before the lawsuit could be prosecuted to judgment, that the lack of a valid construction lien caused identifiable loss to plaintiff. Therefore, plaintiff argues, his malpractice claim did not mature until June 15, 1984, when Wayne Harding filed for bankruptcy.
Defendants аppear to be arguing that the circuit court lawsuit was fatally defective and plaintiff never could have attainеd a favorable judgment, so his claim accrued as soon as the time limit within which to amend either the lien or the lawsuit complaint had passed, which would have been in 1982.
We have no way of evaluating or verifying defendants’ "case-within-the-case” аrgument. From the record before us, it would be pure speculation
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to say that plaintiff never could have prevailеd in the lawsuit. If plaintiff had prevailed in the lawsuit against Wayne Harding, he would have no claim of malpractice against dеfendants for the defective lien, having suffered no injury.
Bourke v Warren,
The trial court in this case made numerous explicit findings of fact before granting accelerated judgment to defendants. This was improper, and is in itself grounds for reversal.
Gojcaj v Moser,
Plaintiff states in his affidavit that, although he knew by early May, 1980, that defendants had withdrawn the construction lien on the Wayne Harding proрerty, defendant Peacock assured him the withdrawal did him no harm because of the circuit court action. Plaintiff’s pursuit of an alternative route to recover his claim against Harding is what distinguishes this case from cases like Luick v Rademacher, where the plaintiff knew аlmost immediately that he had definitely suffered a loss through his attorney’s negligence, but was fighting to have the judgment set aside.
*675 Plaintiff’s injury was not certain until Wayne Harding filed for bankruptcy on June 15, 1984, so plaintiff’s claim for malpractice filed less than two months later was timely.
Reversed.
