Opinion
Plaintiff, Sherman Johnson, appeals from a summary judgment in favor of defendants, James J. Simonelli and Simonelli, Simonelli & Carash, a professional law corporation, after the trial court determined that plaintiff’s action for attorney malpractice was barred by the statute of limitations. 1 We shall affirm.
Facts
Plaintiff retained defendants on June 1, 1981, to represent him in connection with the sale of his business, Vogue Cleaners. Defendants prepared a document dated August 1, 1981, and entitled agreement of sale and sale of assets of Vogue Cleaners, which provided plaintiff would sell his laundry and dry cleaning business to Rollie M. Pennington and Andrew Piegnet, Jr., for $125,000. A portion of the purchase price was paid in cash and the buyers executed a promissory note for the remaining balance of $117,000. The contract provided the promissory note would be secured by the equipment of Vogue Cleaners, the equipment and inventory of St. Mark’s Dry Cleaners, which was owned by Pennington, and a deed of trust on Piegnet’s house at 617 Kermit Court. At the time of the sale, plaintiff was aware there were two prior trust deeds on Piegnet’s house and that there was a prior
After the contract of sale was executed, the buyers took possession of Vogue Cleaners and on July 12, 1983, they defaulted on the note which had a remaining balance of $112,000. Soon thereafter, plaintiff retrieved his entire file from defendants and transferred it to another attorney, David Ross. Plaintiff consulted Ross about enforcing his security interests and Ross advised plaintiff to forget about collecting the debt from the buyers and to declare bankruptcy instead. Plaintiff prepared a list of creditors and paid Ross $500 to commence the bankruptcy proceeding, but later decided not to pursue the matter.
Plaintiff sought the advice of another attorney, Patrick Riddle, concerning plaintiff’s legal remedies against the buyers. Riddle explained that the security for the balance of the promissory note was defective and inadequate. Riddle determined there was less than $20,000 available equity in the Kermit Court residence. At the time plaintiff first consulted Riddle, plaintiff had executed a declaration of default on the Kermit Court trust deed, had commenced foreclosure proceedings and had received a trustee’s sale guarantee showing two prior encumbrances.
On June 22, 1984, plaintiff attempted to enforce his security interest in Vogue Cleaners by conducting a public lien sale. No one attended the sale except plaintiff and Riddle and plaintiff made a credit bid of $50,000 for the property. Plaintiff subsequently sold Vogue Cleaners for $7,000. Plaintiff concedes that as of June 1984, he was aware of the inadequacy of the collateral securing the promissory note.
On October 31, 1985, plaintiff filed a complaint against Pennington asserting causes of action for conversion, breach of contract and judicial foreclosure. Plaintiff sought $64,397.18, the balance due on the note after the application of plaintiff’s credit bid, plus interest, attorney’s fees and costs as provided for in the promissory note. Plaintiff did not pursue his remedies against Piegnet as Piegnet was bankrupt.
On December 5, 1985, plaintiff filed a complaint against defendants for attorney malpractice. According to plaintiff, but for the defendants’ negligent failure to warn him that additional security was necessary and the defendants’ negligent failure to file appropriate financing statements, plaintiff would have been able to collect the whole purchase price agreed upon in the contract of sale.
Discussion
Plaintiff contends the court erred in granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment because defendants failed to establish plaintiff had sustained actual harm more than one year prior to the filing of his complaint. We disagree.
The statute of limitations in a legal malpractice action does not begin to run until the client discovers, or should have discovered, the attorney’s negligence and the client has sustained actual and appreciable harm.
(Budd
v.
Nixen
(1971)
Ordinarily, the determination of the time when a plaintiff suffered damages giving rise to a cause of action for attorney malpractice is a question of fact, but where there are no triable issues of fact as to when the plaintiff suffered such damage then a court may determine this as a matter of law.
(Budd
v.
Nixen, supra,
The thrust of plaintiff’s malpractice claim is that defendants failed to warn and inform plaintiff that the security for the note was inadequate and
We may presume the security was inadequate at that time, as otherwise plaintiff would have no cause of action against defendants. Defendants have committed no malpractice unless, due to the their negligence, there was insufficient security to make plaintiff whole upon the buyers’ default. Due to this lack of security, if plaintiff wished to recover the money owed to him, he was required to resort to the very process he hired defendants to avoid: a lawsuit against the defaulting buyers, with its attendant legal expenses. That plaintiff might recover the money owed to him from the buyers does not negate the fact that he was deprived in 1983 of something he would have received but for defendants’ alleged negligence, i.e., sufficient security to cover the entire balance owing on the note. Moreover, plaintiff had been deprived of the value of the attorneys’ fees that had been paid to defendants for their services in negotiating the 1981 transaction as plaintiff did not receive the benefit for which he had bargained. Hence, at the time of default on the note if the security was adequate, plaintiff had no cause of action; if the security was inadequate actual injury occurred and the statute of limitations commenced running.
Relying on
Bell
v.
Hummel
(1982)
A recent case out of the Fourth Appellate District,
Laird
v.
Blacker
(1991)
The use of the term “irremediable” appears to have its genesis in
Heyer
v.
Flaig
(1969)
In
Bell
v.
Hummel, supra,
Although
Bell
and
Robinson
speak of the plaintiff’s injury being irremediable, the facts of these cases show that the courts were actually concerned, as was the court in
Heyer
v.
Flaig,
with when the attorney’s error or negligence became irremediable. In both
Bell
and
Robinson,
the available judicial and administrative remedies, if successful, would have remedied the malpractice. In
Bell,
the plaintiff would have been able to assert his loss of consortium claim; in
Robinson,
the plaintiff would have been reinstated in his job or received a disability pension. In the present case, the alleged negligence of defendants will not be cured by pursuing collection of the debt by judicial remedy against the defaulting buyers. A judgment against the buyers will not provide plaintiff with adequate security, ensure that the debt
Since defendants established plaintiff discovered the alleged malpractice in June 1984 and was harmed when the buyers defaulted in July 1983, the court did not err in granting summary judgment on the ground the complaint, filed in December 1985, was barred by the statute of limitations.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Carr, Acting P. J., and Raye, J., concurred.
Notes
The action was originally commenced in 1985 by Sherman Johnson and his wife Violet. According to plaintiff’s opening brief, Violet Johnson died in November 1989. It is also interesting to note that on June 11, 1990, a notice of appeal was filed which stated Sherman and
Violet
Johnson appealed from the court’s judgment. Although Violet’s cause of action survives her death (Code Civ. Proc., § 385; Prob. Code, § 573) a trial cannot proceed and judgment cannot be given for or against the decedent, nor for or against the decedent’s personal representative until the latter has been made a party by substitution.
(Herring
v.
Peterson
(1981)
Section 340.6 provides in pertinent part: “(a) An action against an attorney for a wrongful act or omission, other than for actual fraud, arising in the performance of professional services shall be commenced within one year after the plaintiff discovers, or through the use of reasonable diligence should have discovered, the facts constituting the wrongful act or omission, or four years from the date of the wrongful act or omission, whichever occurs first. In no event shall the time for commencement of legal action exceed four years except that the period shall be tolled during the time that any of the following exists: [1] (1) The plaintiff has not sustained actual injury. . . .”
