Appellant Tamrat Medhin challenges the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of appellee Teshome Hailu. Hailu sued for a declaratory judgment that funds he had placed in escrow pending resolution of a dispute over a commission fee with Medhin, his real estate broker, belonged to him. Finding that the statute of limitations had run on any claim Medhin may have had to the commission, the trial court granted judgment to Hailu.
On appeal, Medhin argues that the funds held in escrow were presumptively his, and because he would have no reason to sue to obtain his own property, the statute of limitations should not have begun to run until the trial cоurt awarded the funds to Hailu. While it is true that under certain circumstances the placement of disputed funds into an escrow account may extend the limitations period by delaying the onset of an “injury” for statute of limitations purposes, here it is undisputed that Medhin had been aware for over four years that Hailu did not intend to pay him any commission for the sale of the property. Thus, the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment to Hailu since the three-year statute of limitations for bringing breach of contract actions had expired. Accordingly, we affirm.
I. FACTS
Beginning in 2001, Medhin, who at the time was an agent with the Remax Premiere Selections real estate firm,
However, an escrow fund was set up by Hailu and the buyers to cover any potential claim by Medhin and Remax. The escrow agreement directed the escrow agent to hold the funds until directed to release them in writing by both the buyers and Hailu, or until the “disposition of Commission status has been determined,” at which timе the escrow agent was instructed to “release [the] funds to the appropriate party — either [Hailu] or [the] listing company (Remax).” Medhin was not a party to this escrow agreement, and in his brief he asserts that he was not even aware of its existence until Hailu filed his suit for declaratory judgment.
On several ocсasions after the closing, Hailu contacted Medhin and Remax to ask them to relinquish their claim to the commission payment. Medhin refused, but never took any action to collect the commission. Rather, as Medhin writes in his brief, after being told that “no commission would be paid,” he “gave it to God and left it.”
Over four years latеr, Hailu filed a lawsuit seeking a declaratory judgment that the funds in the escrow account belonged to him. Hailu argued that by failing to bring any action to collect the commission, Medhin forfeited any claim he may have had to the commission because the District’s three-year statute of limitations for contract-based claims had run.
We review orders granting summary judgment de novo. See Gilbert v. Miodovnik,
In general, a “claim ... accrues for statute of limitations purposes when injury occurs.” Doe v. Medlantic Health Care Grp., Inc.,
With regard to contract actions, “[a] cause of action for breach of contract accrues, and the statute of limitations begins to run, at the time of the breach.” EastBanc, supra,
A. Notice of Hailu’s Refusal to Pay
Medhin’s entitlement to a commission was based on the parties’ brokerage contract. The statute of limitations for a contract-based action is three years. See D.C.Code § 12-301(7) (2001). It is undisputed that more than threе years elapsed between Hailu’s refusal to pay Medhin a commission and Hailu’s declaratory judgment lawsuit. When Hailu represented to Medhin that he would not pay any commission, Medhin could have sued to enforce his rights under the parties’ brokerage agreement. See News World Communications, Inc. v. Thompsen, 878 A.2d 1218, 1224-25 (D.C.2005) (“[T]he statute of limitations began to run no later than [the date] Ms. Thompsen had per formed her last service to the Times, [and] the Times had declined to compensate her ..., for by that date she had been definitively told that she would not be paid.”); Pardue v. Center City Consortium Sch. of Archdiocese of Wash., Inc.,
B. The Ejfect of the Escrow
However, Medhin contends that while the funds at issue were being held in an escrow account he did not suffer any injury and therefore the statute of limitations did not begin to run until the triаl court granted Hailu access to the escrowed funds.
For example, in Coleman, supra, which involved a suit between a real estate аgent and a seller over the agent’s commission, the agent’s commission was not paid at the time of closing due to ongoing litigation between the buyer and seller.
Here, like in Coleman, supra, while the escrow account likely was set up to protect the buyer from any claim by Medhin, unlike in Coleman, supra, Medhin was told that he wоuld not be paid his commission. Thus, he was not lulled into a false sense of security that he would eventually be paid for his services.
Without more, the fact that Hailu had placed funds in an escrow account to ensure that the closing on the real estate transaction could go forward does not undermine the trial court’s conclusion that Medhin was on notice that he had been
Affirmed.
Notes
. Remax was the listing company in this transaction. Remax was also named аs a
. Medhin has proceeded pro se in this particular litigation.
. Gleaning from the pleadings below, Hailu’s rationale for disputing the commission was either that in the litigation between Hailu and the buyer, Medhin provided testimony that Hаilu deemed violative of Medhin's duty to him as his broker, or that following the buyer-seller suit, the sale was ultimately consummated on a different agreement than the original purchase agreement for which Medhin had advised, or both of these reasons. We do not evaluate thé soundness of Hailu's reasons for refusing the commission, however, and mention them only to illustrate the context and timing of Hailu’s refusal to pay Medhin.
.See D.C.Code § 12-301(7) (2001).
. Medhin goes so far as to claim in his brief that the monies in escrow were presumptively his, or held on his behalf, so he had no need to sue to recover them. He cites no authority for his position, however, and we cannot aсcept it. Rather, we have stated that in a typical "escrow arrangement, the escrow holder is the dual agent of both parties until the performance of the conditions of the escrow agreement,” at which time the parties become "entitled” to "those things placed in escrow.” Ferguson v. Caspar,
. See, e.g., Bailey v. Greenberg,
. We have stated that "[t]he purpose of statutes of limitation is 'to bring repose and to bar efforts to enforce stale claims as to which evidence might be lost or destroyed.’ ” Hobson v. District of Columbia,
