Linda S. Nettles brought this action against her former employer, American Telephone and Telegraph Company (AT & T), alleging claims of promissory estoppel and fraudulent misrepresentation. Applying the Missouri borrowing .statute, the district court 1 found that Nettles’ claims were untimely under the applicable statute of limitations and granted summary judgment in favor of AT & T. We affirm.
I.
Nettles was employed by AT & T in its Maitland, Florida, office from June 1987 to October 1988. In July 1988, AT & T instituted a Strategic Force Redeployment Career Opportunity Program (the “Program”). The stated purpose of the Program was to strengthen the company’s sales staff by providing additional training to management level employees and redeploying them in various sales positions throughout the country.
On August 9, 1988, Nettles applied for a position under the Program and requested that she be relocated to one of three offices in California. According to Nettles’ complaint, AT & T orally promised her that a position would be available in Oakland, California, for a person with her qualifications. AT & T made certain other representations to Nettles concerning salary and benefits, job duties, training, and performance evaluation, all of which she relied on in seeking relocation. On September 12,1988, AT & T selected Nettles to participate in the Program and assigned her to its branch office in Oakland. The relocation became effective on October 2, 1988.
Nettles alleges that after relocating to Oakland, she discovered in October 1989 that the representations made by AT & T concerning the Program were false and that AT & T had redeployed far more people to California than there were jobs available. Thus, she claims, the position promised her by AT & T was not available, and she was reassigned to a pool of excess redeployed employees. Nettles alleges that as a result, she was forced to relocate in February 1990 to a lower paid and lower management level position in AT & T’s office in Kansas City, Missouri.
Nettles claims that she continued to work in the Kansas City office until she was placed on disability leave in March 1992. She alleges that as a result of her experience with AT & T and the Program, she has suffered damages, including the costs associated with relocating from Florida to California and from California to Missouri. She further alleges that she has suffered, and continues to suffer, from depression and severe emotional distress, resulting in her total employment disability. Beginning in 1992, Nettles received treatment from a psychiatrist and a psychologist, both of whom diagnosed Nettles as being disabled due at least in part to the relocation. Finally, Nettles alleges that AT & T forced her to take disability retirement in March 1993 because her health prohibited her from returning to work on a full-time basis.
In August 1993, Nettles sued AT & T in Missouri state court, asserting claims of promissory estoppel and fraudulent misrepresentation. AT & T removed the case to federal court and promptly moved for summary judgment, claiming that Nettles’ complaint was untimely under the applicable statute of limitations. The district court granted the motion. It held that under Mo. Rev.Stat. § 516.190 (1986), Nettles’ claims originated in California no later than October 1989, the date on which Nettles discovered the alleged fraud and AT & T’s failure to comply with its representations concerning the redeployment. Applying California’s three-year statute of limitations, the district court held that Nettles’ suit was untimely. This appeal followed.
*1362 II.
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standards employed by the district court.
Sperry v. Bauermeister, Inc.,
Nettles argues that the district court erred in finding that the Missouri borrowing statute operates to require application of California law to determine the timeliness of her claims. She contends that Missouri’s five-year statute of limitations for actions based on breach of contract and fraud, Mo.Rev. Stat. § 516.120 (1986), applies in this case and that because her complaint was filed within the requisite five-year period, it was not untimely.
A federal court exercising diversity jurisdiction is required to apply the law of the forum when ruling on statutes of limitations.
Guaranty Trust Co. v. York,
Whenever a cause of action has been fully barred by the laws of the state ... in which it originated, said bar shall be a complete defense to any action thereon, brought in any of the courts of this state.
Under section 516.190, when a eause of action originates in a state other than Missouri and that state’s statute of limitations bars the action as untimely, the borrowing statute operates to adopt the foreign state’s statute, thereby barring the action in Missouri as well.
Renfroe,
The term “originated,” as used in section 516.190, “has been construed to mean ‘accrued.’ ”
Thompson v. Crawford,
Mo.Rev.Stat. § 516.100 (1986) provides that
for the purposes of section 516.100 to 516.370, the cause of action shall not be deemed to accrue when the wrong is done or the technical breach of contract or duty occurs, but when the damage resulting therefrom is sustained and is capable of ascertainment, and, if more than one item of damage, then the last item, so that all resulting damage may be recovered, and full and complete relief obtained. ’
Under the capable-of-ascertainment test set forth in section 516.100, “a cause of action accrues when ‘the injury to plaintiff was complete as a legal injury.’ ”
Koester v. American Republic Investments, Inc.,
Nettles argues that the resolution of this case lies in the interpretation of section 516.100. Under her theory, although some damage may have been sustained and become capable of ascertainment when she discovered in October 1989 that AT & T had breached its promise of employment in California, the last item of damage — that is, her severe emotional distress and depression and resulting disability — did not occur until she was diagnosed in 1993 as suffering from those conditions. Therefore, her theory goes, because this last item of damage was not sustained and capable of ascertainment until she had returned to Missouri, the cause of action accrued and therefore originated in Missouri.
Nettles’ theory rests on the assumption that damages resulting from a single wrong that develop and become more serious over time constitute separate items of damage. The Missouri courts have declined to give to the term “item of damage” the broad interpretation that Nettles argues for here. Section 516.100 “does not change the general rule that “when an injury is complete as a legal injury at the time of the act, the period of limitation will at once commence.’ ”
Rippe v. Sutter,
In
Allison,
the plaintiff was accidentally struck in the face by a steel bar in 1926. He argued that although he was aware of at least some damage at the time the injury occurred, the serious and disabling nature of his injuries were separate items of damage that were not ascertainable until those conditions were diagnosed some three years later in 1929. Thus, the plaintiff maintained that his suit filed in 1932 was timely under the applicable five-year limitation period. The court found, however, that aggravating circumstances arising from a single legal injury do not constitute separate items of damage under section 516.100.
The reasoning in
Allison
has been consistently cited with approval by the Missouri courts.
See, e.g., Dixon,
It has never been a requirement of the law that the precise amount [of damages] be determinable_ In many actions the extent of damage may be dependent on uncertain future events. A personal injury plaintiff might be awaiting an operation which might substantially affect the extent of liability. If a lawyer overlooks the statute of limitations in filing his suit, there may be no certainty that the suit, if filed, would be successful or of the amount which might be recovered. Such uncertainties have never been held to preclude the filing of suit and ... have not delayed the accrual of the plaintiffs claim for purposes of the statute of limitations.
In this case, Nettles’ promissory estoppel claim is essentially an action for breach of an oral contract.
See, e.g., In re Jamison’s Estate,
Nettles also relies on our decision in
Renfroe,
Nettles’ reliance on the Missouri Supreme Court’s decision in
Davis
is also misplaced. In
Davis,
the court held that the defendant’s actions in continuing to supply natural gas delivered through a defective gas meter constituted a continuing tort, thereby permitting recovery for damages sustained during the five years preceding the commencement of the action.
Having concluded that Nettles’ promissory estoppel claim originated in California, we must next determine whether that claim is timely under California law. California provides for a two-year statute of limitations for actions based on an oral contract. CaLC.C.P.Code § 339 (West 1995);
Kurokawa v. Blum,
Nettles makes the same argument with respect to section 516.100 to determine where the fraud claim originated. “ ‘An action for relief on the ground of fraud, however, accrues — not when the resulting damage is capable of ascertainment — but when the facts constituting the fraud are discovered.’ ”
Neman v. Alexander Grant & Co.,
We again look to California law to determine if Nettles’ fraud claim was untimely. In California, “[a]n action for fraud must be commenced within three years of the discovery of the facts constituting the fraud.”
Kurokawa,
We recognize that the accrual of a cause of action may at times conflict with the ability of plaintiffs to realize the full extent of their damages before commencing a lawsuit to recover for those damages. As a federal court exercising diversity jurisdiction, however, we do not write on a clean slate, and “we are not free to fashion rules of law from whole cloth.”
Jackson v. Anchor Packing Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Dean Whipple, United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
