Pursuant to D.C.Code § 11-723 (1995), the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (“Circuit Court”) has certified the following question to this court:
Under District of Columbia law, and upon the facts described in this opinion, when parties have entered into a contract in which payment is due on the first of each month, calculated as a percentage of the promisor’s revenues from a specific service already rendered by the promissee, does the limitation period begin to run separately on each missed payment, as is generally the case with installment contracts, or, does repudiation or breach of the contract as a whole trigger a single limitations period?
Keefe Co. v. Americable Int’l, Inc.,
*471 I.
The facts may be summarized as follows. 1 In the mid-1980’s, Keefe Co. (“Keefe”) and Americable International, Inc. (“Americable”) entered into a letter agreement by which Keefe agreed to assist Americable in obtaining cable television (“CATV”) contracts with U.S. military bases. Paragraph’ 4 of the agreement set forth in three separate subparagraphs the compensation Keefe was to receive for each contract so acquired: (A) a one-time fee of $10.00 per “home passed,” (B) 3% of gross monthly subscriber revenues received from 90 days after service initiation until sale of the system, payable once a month on the first day of each month, and (C) 2% of the gross sale price of the system when sold.
As to the monthly payments, paragraph 4(B) of the contract provided, “Termination of this agreement as hereinafter provided shall not affect the Keefe Company [sic] right to said fee or [Americable’s] obligation to pay the same on bases where a service agreement has been executed and a CATV system has been constructed by the Company.” Paragraph 4(C), pertaining to the 2% due on sale, contained a similar provision. The termination provision of the contract also stated more generally: “It is mutually understood and agreed that termination of this agreement shall not in any way affect The Keefe Company [sic] right to receive compensation for services performed pursuant to the terms and conditions of this agreement prior to the effective date of said termination where a Service Request Agreement has been executed and a cable T.V. system has been constructed by the Company.”
The contract terminated sometime between 1987 and 1989. 2 In 1994, Keefe filed the instant suit in federal district court, alleging that Americable had failed to make $395,000 worth of “one-time” payments due in 1988, as well as missing $870,000 in monthly payments due between 1988 and 1994. Americable moved for summary judgment on multiple grounds, including that the statute of limitations had run in 1991, three years after the contract was first breached. See D.C.Code § 12-301(7) (1995)(creating three-year statute of limitations for actions on contract). As to the one-time payments, the district court ruled that the statute of limitations barred recovery since the payments were due in 1988. However, as to the monthly payments, it concluded that those were installment payments with individual statutes "of limitation, such that only payments due more than three years prior to Keefe bringing suit were barred. 3 Americable’s appeal of the latter ruling led to certification of the question now before us. 4
*472 II.
It may be useful to begin with an examination of the operation of the general rule relating to the statute of limitations as applied to installment obligations. This rule was relied upon by the district court in this case and has been established in the jurisprudence of the District of Columbia, as in most of the nation, for at least a century. “[I]t is well settled that where a debt is payable in independent instalments the right of action accrues upon each as it matures, and if the obligee shall fail to commence his action until the statutory bar has intervened in the case of one or more instalments, he can only recover those not barred when his action was commenced.”
Washington Loan & Trust Co. v. Darling,
The theory is that each installment due is a separate obligation as to which the statute runs separately. There is nonetheless some recognition of a “single action” principle in the requirement that if and when an obligee elects to file an action, the complaint must include all installments “then due and owing” or the obligee will otherwise be barred as to such overdue obligations not sued upon.
See Le John, supra,
Indeed, so embedded is this concept of distinct installment obligations that there is doubt whether an obligee even has the option, absent an acceleration clause, to bring a single suit, seeking both past-due and future payments, based solely on the obligor having missed installments. There is some authority for the proposition that an obligee
may
bring such suit.
See, e.g., Goodwin, supra,
Further, even where the obligor expressly informs the obligee that no further payments will be made, most courts have declined to apply the doctrine of anticipatory repudiation.
See, e.g., Parker v. Moitzfield,
But even if the nonrepudiating party
may
file suit seeking both past-due and future installments, the question remains whether the party must do so at peril of the bar of the statute of limitations. Otherwise put, must the non-repudiating party “accept” the anticipatory repudiation to render it effective. An early case in this jurisdiction observed, “[a] so-called anticipatory breach only becomes a wrongful act if the promisee elects to treat it as such.”
Sheffield v. Paul T. Stone, Inc.,
There is no necessity for making the statutory period of limitation begin to run against the plaintiff until the day fixed by the contract for the rendition of performance, at least unless the plaintiff definitely elects to regard the anticipatory repudiation as a final breach. It is generally said that he need not so elect and that he may properly wait until the time that performance was due, before regarding the contract as broken. He is not justified in forbearing to take steps that will mitigate his injury; but the defendant ought not to be allowed to complain at the delay in bringing action against him.... The plaintiff should not be penalized for leaving to the defendant an opportunity to retract his wrongful repudiation; and he would be so penalized if the statutory period of limitation is held to begin to run against him immediately.
Acceptance is also required by Texas law.
Townewest, supra,
Ordinarily, where an obligee wishes to have the option to require present payment of the entire installment debt in the event of a default on an installment payment, a so-called acceleration clause is included in the contract. Conversely, where the obligor wishes to have the right to satisfy the debt in full at any time, a so-called prepayment clause can be included. A consequence of requiring a non-breaching party to bring a present action upon repudiation of future installment payments would be to place the question of acceleration of an installment obligation in the hands of the obligor rather than the obli-gee. Absent a clause to that effect, the breaching party would have no right to accelerate such payments and should not be able to do so through the mechanism of a breach. Other considerations may be at stake as well where, as here, the amount of the future installment payments is not predetermined but rather dependant on future events.
III.
It would thus appear, on its face, that the installment obligation rule would readily permit Keefe to bring suit on all unpaid monthly installments that fell due within three years prior to the filing of the complaint. However, Americable argues that the rule does not apply in this case because the contract obligation at issue is simply a “stream of payments.” Furthermore, as the certified question indicates, Americable argues that the situation here is different because it.has repudiated or breached the contract “as a whole” and thus triggered a single limitations period. We examine those arguments in light of the principles set forth in the previous section.
A.
Initially, Americable suggests that its contract with Keefe contemplated a “stream of payments,” not an installment obligation at all. However, this distinction is merely grammatical. Whether an installment obligation exists does not depend on whether it is labeled as such but rather on the nature of the obligation, and we cannot fault the district court for concluding that this contract creates an installment obligation. See, e.g.,
Bay Area Laundry & Dry Cleaning Pension Trust Fund v. Ferbar Corp. of Cal.,
This interpretation of the Keefe-Ameri-cable contract does not allow a single cause of action to “re-appear, phoenix-like, every month,” as Americable characterizes it, but rather recognizes that new, independent causes of action accrue each month as a direct result of the installment obligation Americable negotiated with Keefe. Indeed, Americable’s obligation here seems to us quite comparable to that
*475
in
Darling, supra,
We turn then to Americable’s argument that its asserted repudiation or breach of the contract as a whole negated the application of the installment obligation rule. In essence, it argues that such action triggered a single limitations period when the contract was terminated; that is, Keefe was required at its peril to bring an action, even on the future installment obligations, within three years of that time.
B.
We must observe preliminarily that there is considerable doubt whether, on the record before us, an adequate showing has been made by Americable of a sufficient repudiation or breach of the contract as a whole. “For a repudiation of a contract by one party to be sufficient to give the other party the right to recover for breach, the repudiating party must have communicated, by word or conduct, unequivocally and positively its intention not to perform.”
Order of AHEPA v. Travel Consultants, Inc.,
We see nothing in the record that could meet this requirement. Where a contract involves future installment obligations, it seems logically to follow that repudiation of the contract in its entirety would require a clear anticipatory breach of all future obligations in addition to any present breach. We would hesitate to infer anticipatory breach from present breach in any case.
See Trustees for Alaska Laborers-Constr. Indus. Health & Sec. Fund v. Ferrell,
Similarly, we do not readily find any clear indication of “breach of the contract as a whole.” Americable had a number of obligations under its contract with Keefe, some of which it fulfilled, some of which it allegedly breached, and some of which are likely not yet due. “A total breach may be by repudiation or by such a material failure of performance when due as to ‘go to the essence’ and frustrate substantially the purpose for which the contract was agreed to by the injured party.”
San Carlos Irrigation & Drainage Dist. v. United States,
However, notwithstanding these reservations, we shall take the certified question as it comes to us, assume that Americable has sufficiently repudiated and breached the contract as a whole to the extent that such actions are possible in the circumstances here, and proceed to Americable’s further arguments.
C.
To begin with, we think it patent that the termination of the contract itself pursuant to the terms thereof, see supra note 2, cannot in itself affect the outcome. Here, the contract expressly provided that its termination would not affect Keefe’s right to continued payments. Furthermore, such payments were in consideration of services that had already been fully performed, and there was no future performance by Keefe upon which the payments were contingent.
Thus, this case is quite different from, say, those in which the damages flowed from the alleged wrongful termination or suspension of employment itself. For example,
Press v. Howard Univ.,
A similar one-action rule applies in malpractice actions: the plaintiff must bring a single suit for all present and future damages flowing from a discrete act of negligence as soon as he or she becomes aware of some injury on which to base the suit.
See Moattar v. Foxhall Surgical Assoc.,
It cannot be, though, that termination or repudiation of an installment contract which the obligee has already fully performed on his part can have the same effect. As already indicated, the rule in such cases is clear that nonpayment of one installment triggers no requirement to sue on the totality of the debt and that the very principle of anticipatory repudiation is in doubt, much less any obligation on the obligee to bring suit in such a situation. Nor does the concept of a breach of the installment obligation as a whole have any place in the application of the installment obligation rule.
D.
If the installment obligation rule is not to apply here, the only basis for ruling that a single statute of limitations applies would have to be that the contract in question did not consist solely of installment obligations payable monthly but also contained a distinct and significant “one-time” payment clause that was breached in its entirety. Since the statute of limitations clearly began to run on that entire payment when it fell due, the argument might go, the entirety of the installment payment obligations likewise was subject to a single statute of limitations.
We think such a concept, generally applied, would cut against the very foundation of the installment obligation rule as discussed above. It would permit, in effect, unilateral acceleration of that debt by the defaulting obligor and negate the principle of separate obligations and separate statutes of limitations. If Americable could not trigger the statute of limitations by repudiating or breaching the installment obligation itself, we are unable to see why the presence of an additional and distinct obligation to presently pay other monies under the contract should change the situation in the circumstances here. 7
A case cited by both parties,
Habib v. Raytheon Co.,
In February 1978, Habib brought suit for breach of contract and other claims. Treating the first part of the contract like a typical employment agreement, the appellate court ruled that any claims relating to the consultancy arrangement accrued in January 1971 when Rayserve breached that agreement.
Id.
at 16,
The
Habib
court specifically noted that “Rayserve [could not] unilaterally terminate its obligation to pay Habib a commission once he had performed.”
Id.
at 17 n. 6,
It is true that the
Habib
contract provided for a distinct service to be rendered in exchange for the commission as opposed to that rendered for the annual salary, and met a classic definition of severability, a fact noted and relied on by the court.
See Habib, supra,
For the foregoing reasons, we answer the certified question by holding that, on the facts as presented to us, the statute of limitations does not bar Keefe’s action to recover installment payments that accrued within three years prior to the filing of the action. Pursuant to D.C.Code § 11-723(g), the Clerk is hereby directed to transmit a copy of this opinion to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and to the parties.
So ordered.
Notes
. These facts are taken from the Circuit Court opinion, the copy of the letter agreement provided to us by the parties, and undisputed representations of the parties in their briefs.
. The terms of the contract permitted either party to terminate on ninety days written notice. According to the parties, their relationship “soured” in mid- to late 1987, America-ble stopped making payments in 1988, and Keefe ceased all performance in 1989. Although it is not entirely clear how or when the contract was "terminated,” both parties agree that it was, and the Circuit Court has deemed the details of the event immaterial since the issue was not raised in either the district court or on appeal.
See Keefe, supra,
. Keefe does not contest the court’s ruling that it cannot recover any payments due more than three years prior to its bringing suit.
. The statute of limitations issue “may be determinative of the cause pending,” D.C.Code § 1 l-723(a), because summary judgment will be granted in Americable’s favor if its argument is correct. Although there is also a question regarding the legality of the contract, the Circuit Court has already concluded that such question was not appropriate for summary judgment.
See Keefe, supra,
. This court is bound by decisions of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit issued prior to February 1, 1971, under the doctrine of
M.A.P. v. Ryan,
. An interesting twist in
Keller, supra,
is that the employer actually continued paying wages for some time after terminating the plaintiff, but ceased doing so before the term of employment would have expired had the contract run its course. We explicitly declined to consider whether the statute started running on the date of termination or the date of payment cessation.
Keller, supra,
. This is not to say that a factual situation could not exist where the installment obligation and other breached provisions of the contract were so intertwined and interdependent that the installment obligation was necessarily affected by the breached provisions. That plainly is not the case here.
