delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error filed a suit against the defendant in error, a duly licensed attorney of the Shelby County Bar, for his failure to prosecute a suit for malpractice against a certain doctor and a hospital in Memphis. The declaration was duly amended and a demurrer was filed to both the original and amended declarations, which the trial judge sustained. The ground of the demurrer was that the statute of limitations of one (1) year had run against the claim of the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error. Thus it is, that the sole issue here is, does the one year personal injury statute of limitations apply, in a suit sounding in contract, against an attorney at law for his failure to institute a personal injury action in time, where the plaintiff in the suit against the attorney *364 does not allege in his declaration that the attorney, defendant in error, caused the injuries to the person of plaintiff.
The declaration alleges that plaintiff in error had a cause .of action for personal injuries against a doctor and hospital in Memphis and that this suit was turned over to the defendant in error on or about April 1, 1963. It is alleged that this doctor and hospital on or about September 1, 1962, were operating on plaintiff in error and negligently left a surgical needle in the incision thereby causing the plaintiff in error physical pain, suffering, injury and damage. It is further alleged that after this defendant in error was employed to institute this action for the plaintiff in error that nothing was done by the defendant in error until January 23, 1964, when he filed a summons and later a declaration; and that this action came on to be heard in September, 1965, and the . suit of the plaintiff in error against the doctor and hospital was dismissed on the ground that the. one year statute of limitations had run. It was after this that plaintiff in error brought the present action against the defendant in error, the attorney, on January 21, 1966, alleging the above and demanding a recovery in the amount of $20,000.00.
Beading the declaration as a whole, even though the arrival of the question of damages is based upon the malpractice of the doctor and the hospital, it is clear to us that the action is based on the contract that the plaintiff in’error had with the attorney to institute this action, ■ which he failed to do before the statute of limitations of .one year had run on such action. Certain parts of the ■ declaration in effect sound in tort, but these are negative in' effect because there is nothing in the declaration to *365 allege that the defendant in error caused or inflicted upon the plaintiff in error personal or bodily injuries, but that the injuries to the plaintiff in error are due to the negli- - gence of the defendant in error in failing to institute this action within the statutory period. It seems to us that the allegations about the personal injuries which it is claimed this doctor and hospital inflicted upon the plaintiff in error are stated to show what damages the plaintiff in error has received, and they in no way allege that the plaintiff in error was damaged personally, or any injuries done to his person, by the defendant in error, and the whole reason for the lawsuit is the failure of the defendant in error to carry out his duties as an employed lawyer to file this action for these damages.
It seems to us that his declaration really is stating that the defendant in error caused the plaintiff in error a financial loss for negligently failing to do his duty as a lawyer and file this action within time. This action here is not for personal injuries or bodily injuries.
The trial judge in sustaining the demurrer herein largely based his opinion upon our case of
Bland v. Smith,
The one year statute of limitations, of course, is set out in T.C.A. sec. 28-304. In arriving at his conclusion in Blcmd v. Smith, supra, we said that upon a reading of the declaration we were lead to the conclusion that the plaintiff not only based his action upon tort but also upon injuries to his person and therefore this one year statute applied. In arriving at this we noted that the six year statute (T.C.A. sec. 28-309), which applied for breach of action of contracts, was applicable only where the recoyery sought was based upon a contract and no element of personal injury, and that in this Blcmd case it was obvious that the plaintiff was seeking punitive damages as well as compensatory damages and that in this State as a general rule punitive damages were allowed only in tort actions involving fraud, malice, or gross negligence and not in actions of breach of contract. We cite this to show the Court’s feeling in so deciding the Bland lawsuit.
Among other cases cited in the
Bland
case is that of
Bodne v. Austin,
In
Bland
as in the
Bodne
case, onr case of
Bruce v. Baxter,
“* * * The recovery is claimed on the ground of breach of contract to collect, which involved an obligation to use reasonable diligence in doing what was undertaken under all the circumstances of the case; and a failure to use such diligence, resulting in a loss to complainant, would make the attorney liable to the extent of such loss, no further: Wait’s Act. and Def., vol. 1,445; secs. 1 and 2, 459-60. Since the liability grows out of breach of contract, it is within the terms of the above section — not being provided for by any other.”
The Section referred to above is the six year statute of limitations (T.C.A. sec. 28-309). The Court in the Baxter case further quoted from Wait’s Actions thus:
* * When a person adopts the profession of the law, and assumes to exercise its duties in behalf of another for hire and reward, he must be held to employ *368 in Ms undertaking a reasonable degree of care and skill; and if any injury result to the client from want of such reasonable care and skill, the attorney must respond to the extent of the injury sustained.”
As we read the declaration in this case, the gravamen of the declaration is that the defendant in error failed in Ms professional duty to exercise these duties wMch he had assumed for hire to such a degree that the plaintiff in error was damaged by his failure to file this action in time. It is true that the damage to the plaintiff in error was for personal injuries he had received at the hands of another and not at the hands of the defendant in error. The only damage received at the hands of the defendant in error was his failure to exercise the proper degree of care in instituting the suit which had been turned over to him before the statute of limitations ran and by his failure to do so the lawsuit was lost.
As said above the basis for the Bland lawsuit is the Bodne v. Austin- suit, which is indeed a well reasoned lawsuit. Among other things it was said there that the inquiry always comes to hand in this type of lawsuit as to whether or not on facts alleged “the defendant has inflicted injuries to the person, on account of which recovery is sought.” In other words here tMs defendant in error didn’t inflict any injury upon the plaintiff in error, but is wrong in his alleged failure to comply with his contract of employment as an attorney in not instituting action before the statute of limitations had run and thus losing the lawsuit. In other words the damages sought here are not for personal injuries to the plaintiff in error but were for a financial loss which plaintiff in error sustained by reason of the negligent acts of the defendant in error.
*369
There are many cases pro and con on the questions here involved, hut as we see it the nearest case in point is that of
O’Neill v. Gray,
2 Cir.,
The Court held that the statute of limitations for libel, slander, assault, malpractice, etc., dealt with purely personal wrongs and that it involved injuries known to the person of such a nature that he could be required to decide promptly whether they were sufficient to warrant suit, and that such a statute applied only to wrongs to the person and did not comprehend injuries to property through an attorney’s negligent conduct of a litigation, and thus where the alleged negligence of an attorney in the prosecution of this wrongful death action resulted in *370 the action being barred by the statute, it was held that in this action for damages against the attorney such an action was either an action for the breach of contract or retainer or for injury to property, and that in either case it came under the six year statute of limitations. The Court in this case said:
“Inasmuch, therefore, as six years had not elapsed between February 16, 1923, when the plaintiff *s action against H. H. Yought & Co. was lost, and the time when this action was brought, there can be no bar of the statute of limitations, and we must consider whether the plaintiff offered proof which justified submission to the jury of a good cause of action against H. H. Yought & Co.”
It seems to us that this same statement could and should be made in the instant case, and it should be remanded for the purpose of answer and proof to determine whether or not the plaintiff offered sufficient proof which would justify submission to the jury as to whether or not this doctor and hospital committed these wrongs, if the action had been filed by the attorney who was employed to file it before the statute had run.
In
Jackson v. Kemp,
“ * * * Thus it is that even though this suit is based on this contract in establishing what these damages were there seems to be no good reason to us for applying any different rule in establishing them than would be in an action if based on the tort.”
It seems to us that in an action of this kind based on the employment of an attorney to represent one and the attorney negligently failing to do it by unskilled professional management or doing something wrong that many claims, as in this case, would be barred by the one year statute, T.C.A. sec. 28-304, before they were discovered. We feel that this suit is based upon an attorney-client relationship of trust, and in addition to being an implied contract it was an express contract that he would exercise reasonable skill and diligence in doing what was undertaken and that when there was a failure to thus exercise such diligence this was a breach of contract rendering the attorney liable for the loss resulting, but no more.
The rationale of the rule in Bodne v. Austin, supra, upon which Bland v. Smith, supra, is based is that a plaintiff has a right to either a tort or contract action growing out of the same facts, and where the injury is to the *372 person the one year limitation is applicable. Here the plaintiff in error has only one right — the negligent breach of contract with an attorney wherein the injury is not to the person but the negligent failure of the attorney to perform his agreement.
It results from what we have said above the judgment below must be reversed and the cause remanded to the Circuit Court of Shelby County for such further action as is deemed necessary.
