Pursuant to S.J.C. Rule 3:21,
According to the Court of Appeals, the complaint made the following allegations. In April, 1961, the plaintiffs retained the defendant, a Massachusetts attorney, to search the title to real estate in Topsfield. The defendant certified to the plaintiffs that the title was “valid, clear and marketable,” except for an encumbrance not relevant here. The plaintiffs then purchased the property and remained unaware of other encumbrances until they contracted to sell the property in 1970. In June, 1970, the prospective purchasers refused to buy because of a recorded easement running through the premises, and the plaintiffs suffered a loss in effecting modification of the easement and in the ultimate sale of the property.
On October 27, 1971, the plaintiffs commenced the action in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. The judge allowed a motion by the defendant to dismiss the action on the ground that the limitation period had run.
Hendrickson
v.
Sears,
1. Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure the plaintiffs’ complaint need not and did not label the action as an action of contract or as an action of tort. Compare Mass. R. Civ. P., Rule 2,
post,
733, effective July 1, 1974. Under our traditional practice, a plaintiff may elect to bring either an action of contract or an action of tort in such a case, but he need not choose between the two labels.
Ashley
v.
Root,
That limitation statutes should apply equally to similar facts regardless of the form of proceeding is intrinsically a sound proposition. See
New Bedford
v.
Lloyd Inv. Associates, Inc.
In the present case the Federal district judge found that *86 the statute of limitations had run as to the plaintiffs’ claim, regardless of whether the action was classified in contract or in tort, since the alleged malpractice occurred more than ten years before the action was commenced. Since there is no claim here that the alleged malpractice was discovered or should have been discovered more than two years before the action was commenced, the outcome cannot turn on whether it is governed by § 2 or by § 2A of c. 260. We have not been asked to determine that question, and we do not.
2. The traditional view of an action for damages resulting from the negligence of an attorney is that the gist of the action, regardless of its form, is the attorney’s breach of contract, and that the cause of action therefore accrues at the time of the breach.
Short
v.
M’Carthy,
3 B. & Ald. 626, 630 (K. B. 1820) (action in assumpsit).
Howell
v.
Young,
5 B. & C. 259, 266 (K. B. 1826) (action on the case).
Wilcox
v.
Plummer,
Nevertheless, the parties and the Court of Appeals agree that we have not previously addressed ourselves to the precise question now presented. In deciding such a matter of first impression, we should take account of modern legal thought on the subject as well as of such intimations as we can find in our own opinions on related points. In
Pasquale
v.
Chandler,
Some, of those decisions may be thought to depend on statutes which differ significantly from ours. Most of the others bring the law on legal malpractice into line with decisions of the same court on medical malpractice. The defendant therefore argues that the legal profession in Massachusetts should be held to the same rules as the medical profession by extending the
Capucci
doctrine to the present case. The Federal district judge adopted this reasoning: “There certainly is no valid reason why the legal profession should be treated more harshly than the medical profession as to the date when their members may successfully bar adverse claims under the statute of limitations.”
We think, however, that the Legislature put medical malpractice cases in a distinct category. The
Capucci
doctrine was originally thought by us to follow from generally applicable principles. But in
Haggerty
v.
McCarthy,
*88 The “recent legislation” referred to consisted primarily of the amendment of G. L. c. 260, § 4, by St. 1965, c. 302, relating solely to actions for medical malpractice. Until 1948 the limitations period generally applicable to actions of contract, tort and replevin was six years. R. L. c. 202, § 2 (1902), the predecessor of c. 260, § 2. Section 4 provided a two-year period for a list of specified actions, and St. 1921, c. 319, added to that list “actions of contract or tort for malpractice, error or mistake, against physicians, surgeons, dentists, hospitals and sanitaria.” In 1965 an amendment was proposed establishing a two-year discovery rule and a five-year outer limit for such actions, but the Legislature instead changed the period from two years to three years. We gave this recent legislation great weight in our decision in 1966 not to reconsider the Capucci doctrine.
There is no comparable recent legislation with respect to actions for legal malpractice. The question presented to us is one of first impression, the Capucci doctrine is relevant only by way of analogy, we are free to consider for the first time its utility for the present purpose, and we are still disposed to reconsider its intrinsic soundness.
3. Statutes of limitations stem from 21 Jac. 1, c. 16 (1623). A general six-year period for torts and contracts, with a two-year period for listed intentional torts, dates in Massachusetts from Rev. Sts. c. 120, § § 1, 2 (1836), as does the commencement of the period when “the cause of action accrues.” Statutes define accrual in a few situations. G. L. c. 260, § 6 (mutual current account); c. 106, § 2-725 (2) (breach of contract for sale). But in general the definition of accrual has been left to judicial rationalization and interpretation. See
New Bedford
v.
Lloyd Inv. Associates, Inc.
No general change in the basic provision of G. L. c. 260,
*89
§ 2, for a six-year period was made until 1948, but there have been numerous amendments to § 4, providing shorter periods for particular types of actions. Among the most important have been the amendments beginning with St. 1925, c. 346, § 10, which subjected certain motor vehicle torts first to a one-year period and later to a two-year period under § 4. See, e.g.,
Gaudette v.Webb,
As noted above, the Legislature has long provided a discovery rule for cases of fraudulent concealment. G. L. c. 260, § 12. In 1949, it established a discovery rule with an outer limit for tort actions arising out of hit and run accidents. G. L. c. 260, § 4B, inserted by St. 1949, c. 531, and amended by St. 1954, c. 107. See
Pasquale
v.
Chandler,
Thus we think the question whether a discovery rule is applicable to this case is fairly open. If so, the arguments for application of such a rule are overwhelming. The practical consequence of the rule for which the defendant contends is “that a title report which cannot be relied upon two years after its issuance is practically valueless.”
Neel
v.
Magana, Olney, Levy, Cathcart & Gelfand,
These considerations have particular force, however, where as here the alleged defect in the certified title is a recorded easement. The defect is “inherently unknowable” to the client unless he duplicates the attorney’s title search. The certification is a written instrument; the title is a matter of public record, and the danger of faulty recollec- *91 tian by observers of fleeting events is much less than in many other types of cases. The certification of title by an attorney is widely regarded as an alternative to title insurance, which would provide protection far beyond two years. See Johnstone, Title Insurance, 66 Yale L. J. 492, 497 (1957).
4. We have considered the possibility that some outer limit should be provided, although that subject is not mentioned in the question certified to us. Suffice it that in matters affecting real estate titles the Legislature has commonly employed periods of twenty or thirty years, well beyond the period involved here. See, e.g., G. L. c. 260, § 21; c. 184, § 27 (b), inserted by St. 1961, c. 448, § 1. Similarly, we do not consider the question whether the cause of action would accrue on discovery in the absence of appreciable harm. Compare
Budd
v.
Nixen,
5. The question certified is answered as follows: A client’s cause of action against an attorney for negligent certification of title to real estate does not “accrue” for the purposes of G. L. c. 260, §§ 2 and 2A, until the misrepresentation is discovered or should reasonably have been discovered, whichever first occurs. The Reporter of Decisions and the clerk of this court are to follow the procedure set forth in
Hein-Werner Corp.
v.
Jackson Indus. Inc.
So ordered.
Notes
“Does a client’s cause of action against an attorney for negligent certification of title to real estate ‘accrue’ for purposes of Mass. G. L. c. 260 § 2A at the time the certification was given, at the time of discovery of the misrepresentation, or at the time when any misrepresentation should reasonably have been discovered?”
Statute 1973, c. 777, § 1, amends § 2A to provide for a three-year period, effective January 1,1974, for “causes of action arising on and aftersaid date.”
