The plaintiff in a diversity suit for legal malpractice appeals from the dismissal of his suit on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The essential facts, construed as favorably to the plaintiff as the record permits, are as follows. In 1982 the executive board of a hospital recommended that Dr. Winskunas’s surgical privileges be revoked. He requested review by the hospital’s peer review committee and retained lawyer Birn-baum to represent him before the committee. He and Birnbaum made elaborate preparations for the hearing but when the time came the lawyer unaccountably failed to raise the points they had discussed, to call the right *1266 witnesses, or, in short, to represent Winsku-nas competently. Winskunas was concerned about Birnbaum’s performance but the lawyer told him not to worry; things were going well. Nevertheless the committee approved the board’s recommendation to revoke Win-skunas’s privileges, as did a further review committee before which Birnbaum’s performance was again lackluster at best. At that hearing Winskunas wrote himself a note saying, “Did Jim [Birnbaum] drop the ball again? I hope not.” Winskunas’s surgical privileges were revoked effective May 14, 1984. In July, after the hospital had notified the state medical examining board of its decision, Winskunas hired different counsel to try to save his medical license but retained Birnbaum to bring a suit in a Wisconsin state court to set aside the hospital’s decision revoking his surgical privileges. Again (according to Winskunas, whose version of the facts we must accept for purposes of this appeal) Birnbaum represented Winskunas incompetently, and on November 10, 1987, the court rendered a decision dismissing the suit. Winskunas instructed Birnbaum to appeal the decision, but he failed to do so. Winsku-nas read the decision, in which the judge noted that one of the grounds on which he had rejected an affidavit submitted by Birn-baum was that “the unsigned affidavit was prepared pursuant to an adjournment procured, at least in part, by [Birnbaum’s] chicanery.” And about a year later Winskunas read in a newspaper article that in another case Birnbaum had been hit with a $1000 sanction for delay in discovery. At last the scales fell from Winskunas’s eyes — yet he did not file this suit until 1992.
The district judge held that the suit, insofar as it challenges Birnbaum’s representation of Winskunas before the peer review committee, is barred by the six-year statute of limitations that is applicable to malpractice actions in Wisconsin.
Acharya v. Carroll,
The general rule, in Wisconsin
(Hansen v. AH. Robins, Inc.,
The application of this rule is difficult in malpractice cases because the injury and the claim tend to merge. If a person goes to a doctor with a complaint and is treated and nevertheless dies, it may be entirely unclear whether it was the doctor who killed him or the disease that brought him to the doctor which killed him. And in this legal malpractice ease it may have been unclear, initially at any rate, whether the hospital, or lawyer Birnbaum, or both, or for that matter Winskunas himself — or all three — had, or more precisely ought to be deemed to have, caused the revocation of hospital privileges and the resulting loss of income and other harm. Understanding such a case requires recognition that the relevant knowledge is not only knowledge that one has been injured but also knowledge that one may have been injured by someone who conceivably might be legally liable.
Hennekens v. Hoerl,
There are two doctrinal paths to this conclusion. The first is that the cause of action does not accrue, that is, the statute of limitations does not begin to run, until the plaintiff learns not only that he has been injured but also that the injury may have had a culpable source. The second' is that the statute of limitations begins to run when the plaintiff learns that he has been injured, but its running is arrested for as long as it would take him with reasonable diligence to discover that he had been injured by someone who might be legally liable for the injury, and to prepare and file a suit against that someone. The second approach goes by the name “equitable tolling” and differs from the first or accrual approach only in that the plaintiff must act with reasonable diligence throughout, rather than having the full statutory period after discovery of the facts that he needs in order to sue within which to file the suit.
Singletary v. Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co., supra,
The Wisconsin cases do not distinguish between the two approaches; indeed it is not clear that the doctrine of equitable tolling exists in Wisconsin.
Esser Distributing Co. v. Steidl,
We turn to the later acts of alleged malpractice — Birnbaum’s conduct of the state court suit challenging the hospital’s revocation of Winskunas’s surgical privileges and his failure to appeal the defeat in that suit. A suit for legal malpractice based on the handling of a trial or other litigation entails a suit within a suit in the following sense: the plaintiff cannot recover for legal malpractice if, even had he been competently represented, he would have lost the suit that his lawyer hobbled.
Glamann v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
Birnbaum invoked this rule by arguing in his motion for summary judgment that Winskunas could not win the suit within a suit — could not, in other words, show injury from the alleged malpractice — because he had no evidence with which to overcome the presumption created by Wisconsin law that the members of a peer review committee acted in good faith, Wis.St.Ann. § 146.37, in which event their decision cannot be attacked in court.
Limjoco v. Schenck,
AFFIRMED.
