Lead Opinion
Opinion
In this case, we again address the meaning of “actual injury” under the legal malpractice statute of limitations, Code of Civil Procedure section 340.6.
This court most recently considered the actual injury provision in Adams v. Paul (1995)
Ordinarily, the client already has suffered damage when it discovers the attorney’s error. (Budd, supra,
We conclude that actual injury occurred before the client’s settlement with the insurer. In reaching this conclusion, we reaffirm the basic principles established in Budd and reiterated in Adams. Actual injury occurs when the client suffers any loss or injury legally cognizable as damages in a legal malpractice action based on the asserted errors or omissions. (See Adams, supra, 11 Cal.4th at pp. 588-589 (lead opn. of Arabian, J,); Budd, supra, 6 Cal.3d at pp. 200-202.) Under the Legislature’s codification of Budd, section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1), will not toll the limitations period once the client can plead damages that could establish a cause of action for legal malpractice.
Here, the attorneys’ alleged neglect allowed the insurers to raise an objectively viable defense to coverage under the policies. The insurers’ assertion of this defense necessarily increased the client’s costs to litigate its coverage claims and reduced those claims’ settlement value. (Cf. Laird,
The loss or diminution of a right or remedy constitutes injury or damage. (Adams, supra,
Factual and Procedural Background
Jordache Enterprises, Inc., and Avi, Joe, and Ralph Nakash (the Nakashes), retained the law firm of Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison (Brobeck) in 1984 to defend them in Georges Marciano et al. v. Joe Nakash et al. (the Marciano action), a lawsuit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court.
Jordache did not request from Brobeck, and Brobeck did not offer, any advice concerning insurance coverage for the Marciano action.. Brobeck did
In April 1987, Jones, Day, Reavis & Pogue replaced Brobeck as Jordache’s counsel of record in the Marciano action. Its new counsel advised Jordache there was potential insurance coverage for that action. In August 1987, Jordache instructed its counsel to demand that its insurers defend the Marciano action and two related cases then pending in Delaware and Hong Kong. Counsel sent copies of the fifth amended complaint in the Marciano action and the Delaware and Hong Kong complaints to Advocate Brokerage and asked it to submit the claims to Jordache’s insurers.
In December 1987, Jordache retained the law firm of Conkle & Olesten and gave it “exclusive authority” to make and prosecute claims concerning the Marciano action against Jordache’s liability insurers. By December 1987, Jordache had discovered Brobeck’s alleged negligence in not notifying or advising Jordache to notify its insurers of the Marciano action.
At the outset, Jordache and its new counsel discussed the predicament in which Jordache found itself because of Brobeck’s omissions. A “big issue” in these early discussions was the probability that the insurers would raise a late notice defense to Jordache’s coverage claim. For instance, one of Jordache’s liability insurance policies required Jordache to notify the insurer “whenever [Jordache] has information from which [it] may reasonably conclude that an Occurrence covered . . . involved injuries or damages which, in the event that [Jordache] should be held liable is likely to involve [the] policy . . . .”
More than three years after the Marciano action begin, Conkle & Olesten formally tendered defense of the action directly to Jordache’s liability insurance carriers. Soon after, in February 1988, Jordache sued its insurers, alleging they failed to provide a defense and wrongfully refused to acknowledge coverage. Jordache sought reimbursement for $30 million it had allegedly paid for attorney fees and costs in the Marciano action. Jordache also asserted the Nakashes and their companies lost millions of dollars in profits because the funds spent on legal fees would otherwise have been used for profitable investments.
One of the insurers Jordache sued was National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (National Union). Its answer to the complaint and its November 1988 interrogatory answers denied any liability, alleging that Jordache’s untimely notice of the Marciano action had caused it substantial prejudice.
Jordache and Brobeck agreed to toll the statute of limitations from August 15, 1990, to February 15, 1991, for any claims Jordache had against Brobeck. As a result, Jordache’s legal malpractice action against Brobeck, filed February 14, 1991, was deemed to have been filed on August 15, 1990. Jordache’s malpractice complaint alleged only omissions by Brobeck: (1) failing to investigate—or to advise Jordache to investigate—whether Jordache’s insurance might cover the Marciano action, (2) failing to recognize that Jordache’s liability insurance potentially covered the Marciano action, and (3) failing to notify—or to advise Jordache to notify—the liability insurers whose policies potentially covered the Marciano action.
Brobeck moved for summary judgment, asserting that section 340.6 barred Jordache’s claims because, no later than 1987, Jordache discovered the alleged omissions and sustained actual injury in the form of (1) lost profits from business investment monies diverted to defense costs in the Marciano action, and (2) forgone insurance benefits for defense costs incurred before Jordache tendered defense of the Marciano action. Jordache agreed that it discovered Brobeck’s alleged omissions by December 1987. Jordache opposed the motion on the ground that it did not sustain actual injury until it settled with National Union for less than the full amount of its claim.
The trial court granted summary judgment. It found that more than one year before Jordache’s suit was deemed filed, Jordache sustained actual
The Court of Appeal reversed, holding that Jordache suffered no actual injury within the meaning of section 340.6 until it settled the National Union action in July 1990. The Court of Appeal concluded that whether Brobeck’s omissions impaired Jordache’s interests in the benefits of its insurance policies was contingent on the outcome of the National Union action. The court said the resolution of that action “necessarily included a determination regarding the effect of Brobeck’s purported malpractice. Thus, the . causal connection between Brobeck’s negligent advice and Jordache’s damages, both components of which are necessary to give rise to actual injury, was established when Jordache settled the insurance lawsuit after the trial court found both the potential for coverage and late notice of the Marciano claims.”
We granted Brobeck’s petition for review and limited the issue “to whether [Jordache’s] ‘actual injury’ (. . . § 340.6, subd (a)(1)) from [Brobeck’s] allegedly negligent failure to tender defense of a third party action to [Jordache’s] insurers occurred upon settlement of the subsequent coverage actions against the insurers.”
Discussion
This case presents a relatively narrow legal question: When does a former client—having discovered the facts of its attorneys’ malpractice— sustain actual injury so as to require commencement of an action against the attorneys within one year?
Budd and Actual Injury
Section 340.6 is not simply a mechanical transcription of the holdings in Neel v. Magana, Olney, Levy, Cathcart & Gelfand (1971)
The Legislature considered section 340.6 as Assembly Bill No. 298 (1977-1978 Reg. Sess.). When the bill went to the Assembly Committee on the Judiciary, it contained a tolling provision for the time the plaintiff had not sustained “significant injury.” (Digest, supra, pp. 1, 4.) The Digest noted that the committee members had been “provided the detailed analysis of recommended legal malpractice statutes of limitations recently published in the State Bar Journal.” (Digest, supra, p. 3.) That analysis proposed to toll the statute until “significant” injury occurred based on Budd’s holding that any “appreciable and actual harm” sufficed for a cause of action’s accrual and commencement of the limitations period. (Budd, supra,
Therefore, as we have noted, the Legislature’s choice of “actual injury” for the tolling provision plainly was intended to invoke Budd. (See, e.g., Adams, supra,
Budd’s basic premise was that a plaintiff could not assert a cause of action for legal malpractice, and hence the limitations period should not commence, until the plaintiff sustained some damage occasioned by the attorney’s negligence. (Budd, supra, 6 Cal.3d at pp. 200-201.) Budd recognized that “actual loss or damage resulting from the professional’s negligence” was an essential element of a cause of action in tort for professional negligence. (Id. at p. 200.) Thus, Budd held that the statute of limitations began to run when the plaintiff sustained loss or damage from the attorney’s negligence that allowed the plaintiff to assert a malpractice cause of action. (Id. at pp. 200-201.) In section 340.6’s terms, the one-year limitations period that commences when the plaintiff actually or constructively discovers the attorney’s wrongful act or omission is no longer tolled after the plaintiff sustains actual injury, i.e., when the plaintiff can plead a legal malpractice cause of action.
Budd remains instructive on the test for actual injury: “If the allegedly negligent conduct does not cause damage, it generates no cause of action in
Subsequent decisions have made explicit what Budd implied. Thus, Davies v. Krasna (1975)
Budd’s discussion of the possible damages the plaintiff there incurred further illuminates the nature of actual injury. In Budd, the defendant attorney failed to allege a crucial defense in a third party’s suit against the plaintiff and the corporation of which he was president. (Budd, supra, 6 Cal.3d at p. 198.) New counsel tried unsuccessfully to rectify the defendant’s omission; the trial court entered judgment against the plaintiff personally. (Id. at pp. 198-199.) Budd said the facts presented after remand could demonstrate the plaintiff suffered damage when he paid the defendant attorney’s fees, if the attorney’s negligence caused these payments to exceed the value of the legal services. (Id. at pp. 201-202.) The court also observed
The “actual injury” provision in section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1), effectively continues the accrual rule Budd established. Under Budd, the cause of action could not accrue until the plaintiff suffered actual loss or damage resulting from the allegedly negligent conduct. {Budd, supra, 6 Cal.3d at pp. 200-201.) After sustaining damages compensable in a negligence action, the plaintiff could establish a cause of action for professional negligence, and the limitations period commenced. {Ibid.) Under section 340.6, the one-year limitations period commences when the plaintiff actually or constructively discovers the facts of the wrongful act or omission, but the period is tolled until the plaintiff sustains actual injury. That is to say, the statute of limitations will not run during the time the plaintiff cannot bring a cause of action for damages from professional negligence.
The test for actual injury under section 340.6, therefore, is whether the plaintiff has sustained any damages compensable in an action, other than one for actual fraud, against an attorney for a wrongful act or omission arising in the performance of professional services. This interpretation is consistent with the plain language of the statute and the Legislature’s manifest intent in enacting section 340.6. As the lead and concurring opinions in Adams emphasized, determining when actual injury occurred is predominantly a factual inquiry. {Adams, supra,
The Court of Appeal suggested that actual injury requires an established causal nexus between the attorney’s negligent acts and an invasion of the client’s legally protected interests. The court also suggested that establishing this nexus often will turn on the outcome of related litigation, and, therefore, actual injury does not occur until related litigation concludes.
However, this approach departs from Budd and Adams. Actual injury refers only to the legally cognizable damage necessary to assert the cause of action. There is no requirement that an adjudication or settlement must first confirm a causal nexus between the attorney’s error and the asserted injury. The determination of actual injury requires only a factual analysis of the claimed error and its consequences. The inquiry necessarily is more qualitative than quantitative because the fact of damage, rather than the amount, is the critical factor. (Adams, supra,
Of course, nominal damages will not end the tolling of section 340.6’s limitations period. Thus, there is no basis for Jordache’s expressed concern that the statutory period will run once the plaintiff sustains the “first dollar” of injury. Instead, the inquiry concerns whether “events have developed to a point where plaintiff is entitled to a legal remedy, not merely a symbolic judgment such as an award of nominal damages.” (Davies v. Krasna, supra,
Here, the undisputed facts established that Jordache sustained actual injury as a result of Brobeck’s alleged neglect no later than December 1987. By then, Jordache had lost millions of dollars—both in unpaid insurance benefits for defense costs in the Marciano action and in lost profits from diversion of investment funds to pay these defense costs. As Brobeck asserts, these damages were sufficiently manifest, nonspeculative, and mature that Jordache tried to recover them as damages in its insurance coverage suits.
Brobeck also asserts that the years of delay in tendering defense of the Marciano action to the insurers gave them a defense to payment they would not have had if the tender had been made as Jordache’s insurance policies required. Consequently, Brobeck’s alleged neglect diminished Jordache’s insurance contract rights. Because the insurers could and National Union did
Ultimately, however, Jordache’s insurance coverage litigation could not determine the existence or effect of Brobeck’s alleged negligence. As Brobeck notes, the alleged failure to advise Jordache on insurance matters was not at issue in the coverage lawsuits. Thus, the resolution of that litigation would not determine whether Brobeck breached its duty to Jordache. For the same reason, the coverage litigation could not determine the consequences resulting from Brobeck’s alleged breach of duty. The coverage litigation’s resolution was relevant to Brobeck’s alleged negligence only insofar as it potentially affected the amount of damages Jordache might recover from Brobeck.
The Court of Appeal nonetheless stated that any injury Jordache sustained was only speculative until settlement of the coverage actions. The court reasoned that if Jordache had prevailed on its claim that notice to Advocate Brokerage was timely notice to the insurers, then Brobeck’s omissions would have caused no injury. Similarly, the court said that if Jordache’s policies were found to provide no potential coverage for the Marciano action, then Brobeck’s failure to advise Jordache to tender the defense would not have affected Jordache’s policy rights.
However, the result of Jordache’s coverage litigation could only confirm, but not create, Jordache’s actual injuries from the late tender of the Marciano action’s defense. Jordache’s right to an insurer-funded defense existed or not when that action first embroiled Jordache. The right to that insurance benefit, the impairment of that right, and Jordache’s expenditures while that right was unavailable, did not arise for the first time when Jordache settled with the insurers. As Brobeck suggests, a finding in Jordache’s coverage litigation that its policies provided no coverage could have given Brobeck at best a defense to some of Jordache’s damage claims. Similarly, a determination that Jordache’s contacts with Advocate Brokerage satisfied the policies’ notice requirements would not preclude Brobeck’s potential liability for not advising a more direct, certain, and timely method of obtaining an insurer-funded defense of the Marciano action. To paraphrase an observation from Laird: Although the outcome of the coverage litigation may have reduced Jordache’s damages, that action could neither necessarily exonerate Brobeck, nor extinguish Jordache’s action against Brobeck for failure to render timely advice on insurance issues. {Laird, supra,
The circumstances of this case highlight the problems, and ultimate futility, of attempting to formulate categorical rules to determine actual injury for broad classes of legal malpractice claims. The Court of Appeal believed the resolution of Jordache’s coverage litigation was necessary to determine the effect of Brobeck’s alleged malpractice and to establish a causal connection between its omissions and Jordache’s damages. However, the settlement terminated the coverage litigation without determining issues pertinent to the malpractice claims. In any event, the coverage litigation could not have determined the cause of Jordache’s long delay in formally tendering defense of the Marciano action directly to its insurers. Therefore, that litigation could not establish either the existence of Brobeck’s alleged negligence or any causal connection between that neglect and Jordache’s damages.
Two obstacles preclude any attempt to create a general rule that tolls the limitations period until a related lawsuit establishes a causal connection between attorney error and resulting injury. First, such a rule would have no basis in the language of the statute involved or the legislative intent. Second, such a rule often would be frustrated by the exigencies of litigation. Most civil lawsuits for damages settle,
As Adams established, the determination of actual injury does not necessarily require some form of adjudication, judgment, or settlement. {Adams, supra,
As a party to related litigation, however, a prospective malpractice plaintiff could influence the course of the collateral suit and the timing of its conclusion. A rule that invariably tolls the limitations period if collateral litigation might affect damages conflicts with section 340.6’s terms and is inimical to its purposes. Laird’s comments about tolling the limitations statute pending appeal apply as well to the Court of Appeal’s tolling rule in this case. (See Laird, supra,
Jordache’s Public Policy Arguments
Limitations statutes are intended to enable defendants to marshal evidence while memories and facts are fresh and to provide defendants with repose for past acts. (See Romano v. Rockwell Intemat., Inc. (1996)
Jordache acknowledges these purposes but argues for a countervailing policy, citing decisions that deem limitations statutes “ ‘technical defenses’ ” that are strictly construed to avoid forfeiture of a plaintiff’s rights. {Steketee v. Lintz, Williams & Rothberg (1985)
First, as the lead opinion in Adams stated: “[Statutes of repose are in fact favored in the law, ‘designed to promote justice by preventing surprises through the revival of claims that have been allowed to slumber until evidence has been lost, memories have faded, and witnesses have disappeared. The theory is that even if one has a just claim it is unjust not to put the adversary on notice to defend within the period of limitation and that the right to be free of stale claims in time comes to prevail over the right to prosecute them.’ [Citation.]” {Adams, supra,
Second, section 340.6 reflects the balance the Legislature struck between a plaintiff’s interest in pursuing a meritorious claim and the public policy interests in prompt assertion of known claims. The courts may not shift that balance by devising expedients that extend or toll the limitations period. The Legislature expressly disallowed tolling under any circumstances not stated in the statute. {Laird, supra,
Jordache also suggests that statutes of limitation are designed to discourage prosecution of unnecessary lawsuits and promote judicial
From Romano’s discussion Jordache attempts to glean policy rules generally applicable to all statutes of limitations and particularly applicable to section 340.6. Thus, Jordache reasons that the interests of judicial economy require parties to be able to determine promptly and accurately the date a limitations period commences and the viability of a limitations defense. Jordache also asserts judicial economy would be served if the plaintiff did not have to sue while a chance remained that the wrongful act might leave no damage. Lastly, Jordache contends the statutory period should not run when it is inconvénient or difficult for a plaintiff to sue, as when related litigation remains pending.
Whatever the merits of these policies in other settings, the legislative scheme embodied in section 340.6 allocates their relative weight in legal malpractice actions. Section 340.6 does not commence the one-year limitations period with a single, immediately ascertainable event. Instead, the Legislature decided the statutory period would depend first on the factually intensive question of when the plaintiff discovered, or reasonably should have discovered, the facts constituting the wrongful act or omission. (§ 340.6, subd. (a).)
The legislative scheme also effectively accommodates concerns about premature suits by tolling the limitations period if the plaintiff has not sustained any actual injury. (§ 340.6, subd. (a)(1).) As a result, a plaintiff who actually or constructively discovered the attorney’s error, but who has suffered no damage to support a legal malpractice cause of action, need not file suit prematurely. Rather, that plaintiff still has one year after sustaining actionable injury to assess whether, and how, to pursue a remedy against the attorney. The Legislature has accorded a measure of relief to a plaintiff who finds it impossible to bring suit by tolling the statutory period during the time the plaintiff “is under a legal or physical disability which restricts the
Jordache’s other policy concerns likewise do not require us to interpret actual injury in a way that prolongs the limitations period, undermines the statute’s fundamental purposes, and conflicts with the Legislature’s intent. Jordache suggests that attorney-client relationships and privileges for confidential matters would be disrupted if clients had to sue their attorneys while pursuing related litigation. However, the explicit tolling provision for continuous representation addresses some of these concerns. (§ 340.6, subd. (a)(2).) Moreover, as Adams observed, existing law provides the means for courts to deal with potential problems that may arise from the filing of a legal malpractice action when related litigation is pending. {Adams, supra, 11 Cal.4th at pp. 592-593 (lead opn. of Arabian, J.).) The case management tools available to trial courts, including the inherent authority to stay an action when appropriate and the ability to issue protective orders when necessary, can overcome problems of simultaneous litigation if they do occur. {Ibid.)
Reconciling Budd, Section 340.6, and Subsequent Case Law
Jordache argues that several appellate decisions addressing section 340.6 support its view, while Brobeck’s position is contrary to other decisions, including Adams, supra,
Jordache relies on Sirott v. Latts (1992)
The Court of Appeal, following Budd, supra, 6 Cal.3d 195, said the doctor sustained actual injury when he incurred attorney fees to defend the medical malpractice suit. (Sirott v. Latts, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at pp. 928-929.) The doctor argued the attorney fees were not actual injury because they were less than the premium he would have paid if he had disregarded the negligent advice. The court rejected this “novel and unsupported argument” that actual injury can be negated by some form of offset. (Id. at p. 929.)
Sirott went on to comment that the doctor sustained another form of actual injury more than one year before he sued the attorneys. The court said that when the judgment confirmed the arbitration award, the doctor suffered damage at that point as well because he lost the right to malpractice insurance coverage—the subject of the allegedly negligent advice. (Sirott v. Latts, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at p. 929.)
However, contrary to Jordache’s suggestion, Sirott does not support a general rule that judicial determinations are necessary precursors to actual injury. First, the court properly found under Budd that the doctor sustained actual injury for purposes of section 340.6 when he incurred costs to defend the medical malpractice action because he had no malpractice insurance. (Sirott v. Latts, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at pp. 928-929; see Adams, supra, 11 Cal.4th at pp. 591, fn. 5 and accompanying text (lead opn. of Arabian, J.); id. at p. 597 (cone. opn. of Kennard, J.); cf. Walker v. Pacific Indemnity Co. (1960)
Second, the attorneys’ negligent insurance advice essentially was their prediction of how the insurer’s right to the tail coverage premium, and the doctor’s right to coverage without paying the premium, would be resolved if adjudicated. Thus, we view this aspect of the Sirott decision as an instance where the propriety of the attorney’s advice or actions depended on the outcome of a claim by or against a client. (See Baltins v. James, supra, 36 Cal.App.4th at p. 1208.) In these circumstances, the claim may have to be resolved in order for the client to know that the attorney erred. The pertinent inquiry there may not be when the plaintiff sustained actual injury, but when the plaintiff discovered, or reasonably should have discovered, the facts constituting a wrongful act or omission. (§ 340.6, subd. (a).)
Jordache also refers to Foxborough v. Van Atta, supra,
Jordache finds it significant that Foxborough did not hold the plaintiff sustained actual injury when the exchange agreement became effective without unlimited automatic development rights. Jordache suggests Foxborough therefore supports the proposition that an immediate diminution of a right, such as the unlimited development right, is not actual injury. However, as Foxborough noted, the plaintiff could have exercised the development rights at any time during the initial three-year period. Thus, during that time, the attorney’s alleged negligence created only the potential for harm. (Fox-borough v. Van Atta, supra,
Jordache also relies on Baltins v. James, supra,
Jordache contends that, as in Baltins v. James, Brobeck’s alleged negligence exposed Jordache only to a threat of injury that depended on the insurers’ successfully raising the late notice defense. However, the alleged negligence in Baltins v. James was that the attorney predicted incorrectly how a court would resolve an issue in the future. Thus, the propriety of the legal advice, and hence the existence and effect of error, depended on the future resolution of the issue adversely to the client. {Baltins v. James, supra, 36 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1196, 1208; cf. Sirott v. Latts, supra, 6 Cal.App.4th at pp. 929-930.)
By contrast, Brobeck’s alleged professional negligence did not require an adjudication to indicate its existence. Jordache’s claims against Brobeck do not require another proceeding to determine the propriety of affirmative advice or actions. Nor was this an instance where the alleged negligence would have no effect at all until a subsequent adjudication. Brobeck’s neglect required Jordache to pay defense costs in the Marciano action for years and to lose investment opportunities for those funds. The alleged omissions also gave the insurers an objectively viable defense, which National Union raised immediately when it answered Jordache’s complaint in the insurance coverage action. The circumstances Jordache alleges are not comparable to those of Baltins v. James, supra,
Turning to the more recent decisions of this court, Jordache contends that interpreting actual injury to mean only the damage necessary to assert a cause of action would be contrary to ITT, supra, 9 Cal.4th 245, Feddersen, supra, 9 Cal.4th 606, and Adams, supra,
In ITT, the defendant attorney prepared a promissory note and loan documents to give the plaintiff lender various security interests. (ITT, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 248.) A few years later, the borrower filed for bankruptcy and instituted an adversary proceeding that challenged the adequacy of the documents to protect the security interests. (Ibid.) The lender retained counsel to defend the documents’ sufficiency in the adversary proceeding. The lender notified the attorney that it expected to be indemnified for losses attributable to negligence in preparing the loan papers; it also suggested that the attorney should notify his malpractice insurer. (Id. at pp. 248-249.) About two years later, the lender settled with the debtor and received less than the full value of its security. Two months after the settlement, the lender sued the attorney for negligence in preparing the loan documents. (Id. at p. 249.)
The attorney argued that, in transactional malpractice actions, once the former client incurs attorney fees defending the attorney’s work, it “has discovered the fact of damage that triggers the running of the limitations period . . . .” (ITT, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 251, original italics.) Of course, discovery of damage is not a necessary component of actual injury under section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1). (Foxborough v. Van Atta, supra,
In ITT, the lender alleged that it incurred attorney fees in an effort to protect its security interests and to mitigate its damages. (ITT, supra, 9
In ITT and again in Adams, this court described ITT as presenting a narrow holding restricted to the circumstances of that case. (ITT, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 258; Adams, supra,
The facts of each case must be examined in light of the specific attorney errors the plaintiff in each case alleges. Consequently, the rule that applies when a plaintiff sustains actual injury from malpractice in transactional matters cannot differ from the rule that applies when claims involve other areas of legal advice and services. The resolution of litigation related to alleged malpractice may or may not mark the point at which a plaintiff first sustains actual injury under section 340.6. The statutory scheme cannot accommodate a peremptory rule that declares otherwise. Accordingly, because ITT employed criteria for determining actual injury under section 340.6 that conflict with the principles reaffirmed in this opinion, we overrule it.
Jordache misconceives Feddersen by attempting to apply that case to an analysis of section 340.6. As Adams noted, Feddersen presented specialized circumstances and did not articulate a rule of broad or general applicability. (Adams, supra,
A key distinction between Feddersen and Jordache’s case is the particular limitations statute involved. Feddersen dealt with section 339, subdivision 1,
Conclusion
As this court recognized in Adams, the determination of when attorney error has caused actual injury under section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1), cannot depend on facile, “bright line” rules. (Adams, supra, 11 Cal.4th at pp. 588, 591 (lead opn. of Arabian, J.); id. at pp. 594, 596 (cone, opn. of Kennard, J.).) Instead, the particular facts of each case must be examined in light of the wrongful act or omission the plaintiff alleges against the attorney. When the alleged error causes injury or harm recoverable in a legal malpractice action, the plaintiff has “sustained actual injury” that ends tolling under section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1).
This rule conforms to the language of the statute and the Legislature’s intention to codify Budd, supra,
. Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., and Brown, J., concurred.
Notes
Code of Civil Procedure section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1), states: “(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 exist: [H] (1) The plaintiff has not sustained actual injury; . . .”
All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure, except as otherwise noted.
The Nakashes were officers, directors, and shareholders of Jordache Enterprises, Inc. Together with their company and another related company, Ditto Apparel of California, Inc., they are the plaintiffs in this action. We refer to the plaintiffs collectively as Jordache in this opinion.
Jordache also asserted that Brobeck continued to represent it in the Marciano action through November 1989, thus tolling the limitations period under section 340.6, subdivision (a)(2). That provision tolls the period during the time “(2) The attorney continues to represent the plaintiff regarding the specific subject matter in which the alleged wrongful act or omission occurred . . . .” (§ 340.6, subd. (a)(2).) The trial court concluded Brobeck no longer represented Jordache regarding the “subject matter” of the alleged malpractice by December 1987, when Jordache gave Conkle & Olesten exclusive authority over insurance coverage matters.
Having found that Jordache did not sustain actual injury more than one year before filing suit, the Court of Appeal found it unnecessary to address the other issues Jordache raised, including the applicability of any other tolling provision.
By phrasing the issue in these terms, we do not decide the merits of Jordache’s claim that the “continuous representation” tolling provision of section 340.6, subdivision (a)(2), also applies to this case. The Court of Appeal did not reach the merits of the trial court’s ruling on that point. Our grant of review did not include this issue, and we do not resolve it. We assume other tolling provisions do not apply only for the purpose of focusing on the “actual injury” question.
Both Brobeck and Jordache requested judicial notice of various legislative history materials and other documents. We grant both requests with respect to a document that is contemporaneous with the adoption of the “actual injury” language—the Assembly Committee on the Judiciary Digest of Assembly Bill No. 298 (1977-1978 Reg. Sess.) as amended May 9, 1977 (Digest). (Evid. Code, § 452, subd. (c).)
The parties’ requests for judicial notice included other legislative materials and copies of other courts’ decisions. However, the requests present no issue for which judicial notice of these items is necessary, helpful, or relevant. Accordingly, we deny the request for judicial notice of the additional legislative history materials and the various sister state and-federal court decisions. (See Mangini v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. (1994)
With respect to the plaintiff’s proposed date of damage, the court said, “If plaintiff’s action in tort had not earlier accrued, it at least matured on entry of judgment because he clearly then became obligated to pay a considerable sum to the [other party] or to post a bond on appeal. [Citation.]” {Budd, supra,
See Lynch, California Negotiation and Settlement Handbook (1991) page vii (foreword by former California Supreme Court Chief Justice Malcolm M. Lucas).
Baltins contains language suggesting that Laird, ITT, and Feddersen established a “bright line test” for actual injury with broad, general applicability. {Baltins v. James, supra, 36 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1196, 1204-1205.) However, as Adams made clear, there are no short cut “bright line” rules for determining actual injury under section 340.6. {Adams, supra, 11 Cal.4th at pp. 588, 591, fn. 4 (lead opn. of Arabian, J.); id. at pp. 594, 596 (cone. opn. of Kennard, J.).) Instead, actual injury issues require examination of the particular facts of each case in light of the alleged wrongful act or omission. {Id. at pp. 588, 591-592 (lead opn. of Arabian, J.); id. at pp. 595-597 (cone. opn. of Kennard, J.).) Thus, to the extent the language in Baltins v. James, supra,
Feddersen relied in part on the reasoning of ITT, supra, 9 Cal.4th 245, in applying section 339, subdivision 1, to an accountant’s allegedly negligent filing of a tax return. (Feddersen, supra, 9 Cal.4th at pp. 619-620.) However, for the reasons noted above, we have no occasion in this case to reexamine Feddersen’s rationale or rule.
Dissenting Opinion
I respectfully dissent. I do so consistent with the position I took in Adams v. Paul (1995)
In Adams, the attorney allegedly failed to apprise the client that she should file a wrongful death action against an estate prior to expiration of the period of limitations relevant to the wrongful death action, and the client’s late filing of the wrongful death action against the estate was opposed by the estate as barred by the statute of limitations. The lead opinion in Adams remanded the case to the trial court to determine whether actionable injury occurred (1) at the time the statute of limitations for the wrongful death action expired, (2) at the time the client opposed the estate’s assertion of the defense that the statute of limitations had expired, or (3) at some other time, such as when the client and the estate arrived at a settlement. (
The dissent by former Chief Justice Lucas, in which I concurred, raised two general objections. First, it noted the inconsistency of the result in the lead opinion with our prior decisions in Laird v. Blacker (1992)
Second, the dissent in Adams concluded that “important policy considerations are best served by a rule recognizing that ‘actual injury’ in missed-statute malpractice cases involving an underlying action occurs at the point of disposition of plaintiff’s underlying lawsuit, whether by settlement, dismissal or adverse judgment.” (Adams, supra,
The present case does not involve a missed statute of limitations, as in ' Adams, but rather what was analogous to a missed contractual deadline. Nonetheless, that circumstance does not appear to justify the majority here, any more than it did the plurality in Adams, in abandoning the reasoning employed in Laird v. Blacker, supra, 2 Cal.4th 606, ITT Small Business Finance Corp. v. Niles, supra,
For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
See Kaplan v. Superior Court (1971)
Dissenting Opinion
dissent.
In ITT Small Business Finance Corp. v. Niles (1994)
The illogic of the majority’s approach is patent. Here, defendant lawyers, representing plaintiff in an action involving manufacture and marketing of clothing “knock offs,” did not offer advice concerning the availability of insurance coverage for defense costs. Plaintiff contacted its insurance broker and was told that it did not have such coverage. After paying its own defense costs for several years, it learned of potential coverage and tendered defense of the action to the insurers. The insurers asserted that there was no coverage at all, or, alternatively, that tender was too late. Plaintiff sued the insurer, eventually settling for a substantial sum, albeit less than the amount of full coverage. It then sued the lawyers for malpractice. The majority conclude that the latter suit was barred by the statute of limitations, which, they determine, commenced to run at the time plaintiff first had a potential claim for coverage, i.e., when it first paid its own defense costs. They determine that such payment constituted actual injury under Code of Civil Procedure section 340.6, subdivision (a)(1).
As the Court of Appeal persuasively concluded, however, actual injury, properly construed, means invasion of a legally protected right. (See Rest.2d Torts, § 7 [“The word ‘injury’ is used throughout the Restatement of this Subject to denote the invasion of any legally protected interest of another.”].) Under that definition, plaintiff did not suffer actual injury as a consequence of alleged malpractice until the conclusion of the action against the insurers, which involved issues of coverage and notice and thus had a direct bearing on the question whether it suffered any compensable injury at all as a result of the lawyers’ alleged omissions. The failure of defendant to investigate the insurance issues could not have been the legal cause of harm to plaintiff if, as the insurers contended, the claims were not covered under the policy, or if, as plaintiff contended, it gave adequate, timely notice of the action. In either case, no claim for malpractice would exist because the lawyers’ omissions could not be deemed to have required plaintiff to pay defense costs. Although the lawyers’ omission exposed plaintiff to the possibility that its insurers might have a viable defense, such defense was neither certain to be raised nor certain to succeed. The causal connection
The impracticality of the majority’s approach is also apparent. In the absence of a bright line rule, clients will be constrained to bring actions against their lawyers even before they could prove any compensable injury—resulting in potentially unnecessary expense and hardship to the parties and a waste of judicial time and resources. Moreover, clients wishing to preserve their legal malpractice claims may be forced to litigate two suits simultaneously, thus raising obvious additional legal and practical problems.
For these reasons, I would adhere to the rule summarized by the Court of Appeal as follows: “Pinpointing the time when a client suffers actual injury within the meaning of Code of Civil Procedure section 340.6 requires a factual determination of what legally protected interest the client claims the attorney invaded, and when that invasion occurred. If a third party lawsuit is filed, the results of which will determine whether or not the client’s legally protected interest has in fact been invaded, or if the malpractice occurs during the course of litigation which will determine that issue, the client will not sustain actual injury until disposition of that third party lawsuit by settlement, dismissal, or adverse judgment. If, on the other hand, an underlying lawsuit has been filed but the outcome of that proceeding will have no bearing on the existence or effect of the lawyer’s malpractice, or will only serve to mitigate damages, resolution of that action will not constitute ‘actual injury’ within the meaning of section 340.6. Finally, in so-called ‘missed statute’ cases in which the attorney fails to timely file a third party lawsuit and takes no further action, the client will suffer actual injury upon expiration of the statute of limitations applicable to the underlying action.” (Fn. omitted.)
Applying the foregoing rule to the present facts, I conclude that the malpractice action should be resolved on the merits. Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
Appellants’ petition for a rehearing was denied September 30, 1998. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Concurrence Opinion
is the fourth decision in as many years in which this court has addressed the question of what constitutes “actual injury” from professional malpractice for purposes of applying a statute of limitations. In the first two decisions, a majority of the court made a misguided attempt to formulate “bright line” rules to govern the actual injury determination. (International Engine Parts, Inc. v. Feddersen & Co. (1995)
In the third decision, in which- I concurred, a majority of the court recognized that the actual injury determination is a question of fact and that “[t]he number of potential variables, which do not necessarily follow a set pattern, precludes defining the point of harm as a fixed point or event because reasonable application becomes too problematic.” (Adams v. Paul (1995)
In this decision and in Adams, supra,
