In January 1997, Wilbur Hiligh was seriously injured while working at a Federal *71Express facility in Washington, D.C. He retained a law firm, Duncan and Hopkins, P.C., to represent him in seeking remedy. In 2000, the firm filed a civil suit on his behalf but dismissed it after realizing it had sued the wrong defendants. Nearly two decades later, Hiligh has sued the firm and several of its attorneys, alleging malpractice. One Defendant, William S. Sands, Jr., moves for summary judgment, contending he was not Hiligh's lawyer at the time and thus could not have committed malpractice. The firm itself, along with one of its named partners, John C. Duncan, III, moves to dismiss the case or, in the alternative, asks for summary judgment, insisting that the three-year statute of limitations for Hiligh's legal malpractice claim elapsed long ago. Because Sands did not have an attorney-client relationship with Hiligh during the alleged malpractice, the Court will grant his motion. However, the Court will deny the other Defendants' motion because the statute of limitations was tolled while the firm continuously represented Hiligh through 2017.
I. Background
The Court draws this background from the facts alleged in Hiligh's First Amended Complaint, which the Court must take as true at this early stage of the litigation. See, e.g., Sissel v. U.S. Dep't of Health & Human Servs.,
Hiligh signed a written fee agreement with Duncan and Hopkins in January 1998. Id. ¶ 3. The firm's representation focused in part on Hiligh's workers' compensation claim, conducted through administrative proceedings under D.C. law. Id. ¶¶ 13-15; see generally
District of Columbia law imposes a three-year statute of limitations for Hiligh's civil claim.
Hiligh alleges that, from the time he hired Duncan and Hopkins until it filed the suit, its attorneys failed to take appropriate action to investigate the proper defendants.
Although Hiligh's civil suit was dismissed in 2000 and the statute of limitations barred new claims for products liability, Duncan and Hopkins continued to represent him in the workers' compensation administrative proceedings.
II. Standard of Review
Defendant Sands moves for summary judgment, which is appropriate when "the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A court must accept as true the nonmovant's evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in his favor. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
The other Defendants have moved to dismiss for failure to state claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) or, in the alternative, for summary judgment. When assessing a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), the Court "assumes the truth of all well-pleaded factual allegations in the complaint and construes reasonable inferences from those allegations in the plaintiff's favor, but is not required to accept the plaintiff's legal conclusions as correct." Sissel,
*73III. Analysis
A. Claim Against William S. Sands, Jr.
Defendant William S. Sands, Jr. has moved for summary judgment, contending that because he did not represent Hiligh until 2014, he cannot be liable for the alleged 2000 malpractice. In the District of Columbia, to prevail on a legal malpractice claim, "a party must prove: (1) that there is an attorney-client relationship; (2) that the attorney neglected a reasonable duty; and (3) that the attorney's negligence resulted in and was the proximate cause of a loss to the client." Chase v. Gilbert,
courts consider factors such as whether the client perceived that an attorney-client relationship existed, whether the client sought professional advice or assistance from the attorney, whether the attorney took action on behalf of the client, and whether the attorney represented the client in proceedings or otherwise held herself out as the client's attorney.
Teltschik v. Williams & Jensen, PLLC,
Sands has submitted a sworn declaration indicating that he neither had substantive communication with Hiligh nor reviewed Hiligh's claim until late 2014, at the earliest. See Declaration of William S. Sands, Jr., Esq. ("Sands Decl."), ECF No. 4-1, ¶ 6. He also declares that he did not perform any legal work on Hiligh's behalf until that time, upon the death of another Duncan and Hopkins lawyer who had been representing Hiligh.
Instead, in opposing Sands's motion, Hiligh argues that his Complaint pled "respondeat superior liability of Duncan & Hopkins employees, including associate lawyers like defendant Sands." Plaintiff's Opp'n, ECF No. 9, at 11; see also FAC ¶ 6. That is not how respondeat superior works. "Under the traditional tort theory *74of respondeat superior , 'an employer may be held liable for the acts of his employees committed within the scope of their employment.' " Davis v. Megabus Ne. LLC,
Because Sands was not Hiligh's attorney at the time of the alleged malpractice, he had no duty to Hiligh. He therefore could not have breached a duty sufficient to support a malpractice action and is entitled to summary judgment.
B. Claim Against Duncan and Hopkins, P.C. and John C. Duncan, III
Unlike Sands, the other Defendants-the law firm itself as well as partner John C. Duncan, III-do not contest that they were Hiligh's attorneys at the time of the alleged malpractice. Nor, at this stage, do they suggest an absence of malpractice. Rather, they insist that, whatever occurred in 2000, the statute of limitations for Hiligh's claim has long since passed.
District of Columbia law provides a three-year statute of limitations for legal malpractice claims. See
As other judges have noted, the precise contours of the continuous-representation rule are sometimes murky, and it is not always easy to discern exactly what constitutes a "particular matter" in which a lawyer's representation was continuous. See, e.g., Jones v. Lattimer,
Fellow judges in this district have concluded that "the continuous representation rule may extend to different legal actions where they 'all relate[ ]' to the same issue." Jones,
To be sure, Jones is no perfect parallel. The two court cases in which the attorney-defendant had represented the client-plaintiff were both filed against the same party, and the client had been offered a settlement agreement to dispose of both cases together. Id. at 16. The Court does not view this as a crucial distinction, however. In De May v. Moore & Bruce, LLP, for example, another judge in the district applied the continuous-representation rule where a law firm had created a trust asset and separately represented the trust during an Internal Revenue Service audit and subsequent Tax Court litigation. See
At bottom, Jones and De May suggest that application of the rule is appropriate when an attorney represents a client in separate proceedings stemming from the same event, regardless of whether the types of proceedings are similar or involve similar legal tasks. Here, Hiligh pleads that his agreement with Duncan and Hopkins covered "remedies available," including a civil suit. FAC ¶ 13. He indicates that the attorneys' initial investigation into remedy focused simultaneously on administrative- and litigation-based remedies.
Further, the facts alleged here are far afield from those in cases where courts in this district have declined to apply the continuous-representation rule. In Rocha v. Brown & Gould, LLP, for example, the court concluded that trial court litigation and a subsequent appeal constituted separate matters, but the analysis centered on the written agreement that the parties had entered. See
Here, by contrast, nothing in Hiligh's Complaint indicates anything but continuous representation. Unlike in Rocha, which was decided at the summary judgment stage, the Court has not yet seen the relevant agreement or any other evidence to rebut a finding of continuous representation. See Rocha,
Finally, the policy objectives of the rule counsel in favor of its application here. The continuous-representation rule is designed to achieve two goals. First, it aims to avoid *77forcing a would-be plaintiff "to choose between (i) disrupting an ongoing lawyer-client relationship to enable bringing a malpractice claim and (ii) continuing the relationship but relinquishing the claim." Seed Co. Ltd. v. Westerman,
The Court, of course, expresses no view on whether Duncan and Hopkins actually breached a duty of care to Hiligh. And discovery may yet show facts indicating that the representation was not as intertwined as Hiligh's Complaint alleges, as was the case in Rocha. But at this early stage of litigation, accepting as true the facts in that Complaint and without the benefit of any written agreements between the parties, the Court concludes that Hiligh has plausibly alleged that Duncan and Hopkins's continued work on his behalf sufficed to toll his cause of action until 2017.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant Defendant Sands's Motion for Summary Judgment and deny the remaining Defendants' Motion to Dismiss. A separate Order shall accompany this memorandum opinion.
Notes
Because the Court can decide these motions without the benefit of Mr. Hiligh's proposed sur-reply, see ECF No. 12-1, it will deny his motion for leave to file a sur-reply, see ECF No. 12.
Because this suit was filed within the three years of the 2015 letter indicating that Hiligh would have to find new counsel, the precise date of termination is immaterial. Throughout this opinion, the Court will refer to 2017 as the year in which Duncan and Hopkins's continuous representation of Hiligh ended.
Hiligh's briefing devotes significant attention to the allegation that Duncan and Hopkins attorneys failed to alert him of a potential malpractice claim, ostensibly in violation of their ethical duties. See Plaintiff's Opp'n, ECF No. 9, at 1-4, 7-9; see also FAC ¶¶ 38-39. The Court understands this argument to reflect a separate basis for tolling the statute of limitations. But to the extent that Hiligh believes it constitutes a separate allegation of malpractice, it does not suffice to state a claim against Sands. As explained, Sands played no role in the civil case and Hiligh does not suggest that Sands represented him until years later. While Hiligh contends that attorneys have a duty to alert a client of a potential malpractice claim against them, he provides no authority to suggest that an attorney has a duty to advise clients of potential malpractice by another attorney especially where, as here, there is no indication that the attorney knew of it.
Hiligh all but concedes that he has not alleged a claim against Sands, insisting instead that "[i]t is simply too early for defendant Sands to seek dismissal," because Hiligh "has the right to obtain insurance coverage information" under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26. Plaintiff's Opp'n, ECF No. 9, at 10. This, he contends, might obviate the need to serve the estates of deceased lawyers who he alleges did actually represent him during the malpractice.
Moreover, while it does not appear that the D.C. courts have faced precisely the same fact pattern as this one, other jurisdictions' application of the rule is a useful guide to predicting how the D.C. Court of Appeals would assess this situation. See Beach TV Properties, Inc. v. Solomon,
