Defendant law firm and individual attorneys filed a shareholders derivative suit on October 26, 1972, on behalf of Joseph J. *805 Lahiff and others against Euley T. Morgan, the principal officer and director of L.E.P.A Investments, Inc. They prayed for judgment in the amount of $350,000 for acts of malfeasance-misfeasance and fraud. The applicable statute of limitation on that claim expired April 13, 1975.
On January 28,1974, the case was called for trial. When counsel for plaintiffs failed to announce ready, the trial court dismissed the action with prejudice for want of prosecution. Counsel for plaintiffs, defendants here, were not present at the calendar call, having requested another attorney to answer the call. After belatedly learning that the case had been dismissed, counsel for plaintiffs refiled the suit on July 10, 1975, in the name of Joseph J. Lahiff, Walter J. Jankowski and others. Morgan answered and raised the statute of limitation found in Code Ann. § 22-714, and counterclaimed. Morgan’s motion to dismiss was heard on September 4, 1975, and the court dismissed the complaint, specifically stating that the dismissal did not apply to the counterclaim.
On April 9, 1979, Walter Jankowski, individually and in his capacity as a shareholder and on behalf of L.E.P.A. Investments, Inc., brought the present action for legal malpractice against his former legal counsel, individually and as a professional corporation. Defendants answered and raised the statute of limitation. The trial court sustained defendants’ motion to dismiss.
The Court of Appeals, holding that the applicable statute of limitation for an oral contract is four years, Code Ann. § 3-706, affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of the malpractice action.
The basic issues to be examined are two. First, when does the statute of limitation begin to run; and, second, does the failure to correct a prior wrongful act constitute a separate breach for which the client has a cause of action?
(1) It has been long recognized and is well established that a statute of limitation begins to run on the date a cause of action on a claim accrues. In other words, the period within which a suit may be brought is measured from the date upon which the plaintiff could have successfully maintained the action.
Hoffman v. Insurance Co. of N. A.,
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At first glance, it would appear that Georgia cases are in conflict with this proposition. In
Mobley v. Murray County,
There can be no question in the case at bar as to whether a negligent act is alleged in allowing the original lawsuit to be dismissed. Likewise, it cannot be argued that no damage resulted from this dismissal even though the statute of limitation in that lawsuit had not then expired. Before the dismissal occurred, the plaintiff had a lawsuit pending which was ripe for trial. After the dismissal, there was no lawsuit pending, court costs would be cast upon the plaintiff and obvious delays would be occasioned in having the caiise of action adjudicated. These factors among others are damages. They are, in fact, more than nominal damages and can be described as being appreciable.
Taking these facts into account, we hold that a cause of action arose against the defendant law firm immediately upon the dismissal of the original lawsuit.
(2) The remaining question is whether the failure of the law firm to correct the act which caused the damage constitutes a
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separate breach for which the client has a cause of action. The absence of action by defendant here to correct the breach and thereby avoid its consequences is analogous to the failure of a building contractor to correct a defect in construction. It has been held that a cause of action against a contractor accrues when the wrongful act occurred and not when the building which he improperly built collapsed.
Wellston Co. v. Sam N. Hodges & Co.,
We have held in Division 1 that the client had a cause of action against the law firm on the day the original suit was dismissed. This was a complete cause of action. For a period of time, the law firm had an opportunity to reinstitute the action and thereby lessen the extent of the claim which the client could have made against the law firm. This omission on the part of defendants was a failure to avoid the ultimate effect of the earlier breach and a failure to mitigate their own damages. It was not an act inflicting new harm.
Judgment affirmed.
