Aрpellants Allan and Alvin Zidell pray we reverse a summary judgment that they take nothing by their suit against their former attorney, Donald E. Bird, for legal malpractice. We will affirm the judgment.
The Zidells contracted with Edward A. Zidd to sell him a parcel of land. Before consummation of the sale, however, they contracted with Gates Steen to sell him the same property, at a higher price, in the event the Zidd sale was not consummated. Allegedly acting on Bird’s advice, the Zi-dells sold the propеrty to Steen. Zidd ultimately sued the Zidells for breach of his contract with them, obtaining a judgment for money damages. That judgment was affirmed by a panel of this Court in an unpublished opinion. Zidell v. Zidd, No. 13,861, Tex.App.—Austin, February 13, 1985. The Zidells then sued Bird, seeking *553 among other relief an award of damages in the amount of Zidd’s judgment against them. The trial court concluded that the cause of action pleaded by the Zidells was barred by limitations. We agree.
THE CAUSE OF ACTION PLEADED BY THE ZIDELLS
The Zidells alleged that Bird was negligent in three particulars: (1) in agreeing, without their authority, to postpоne the date for “closing” the Zidd contract; (2) in failing to prepare the “closing” documents in time for the “closing” date specified in the Zidd contract; and (3) in advising the Zidells to consummate the “stand-by” contract with Steen, thereby exposing them to liability on the Zidd contract, a liability upon which Zidd ultimately recovered judgment. In the present circumstances, any duty owed by Bird to the Zidells arises by virtue of the employment contract whereby they engaged his services.
A party contracting to supply services owes a common-law duty to perform the services with reasonable care, skill, expedience, and faithfulness. A negligent failure to do so may constitute a “tort” as well as a breach of contract.
Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Scharrenbeck,
An attorney, like any other individuаl, is answerable in tort for any negligent performance of his employment obligations. The attorney’s negligence may consist in the giving of an erroneous legal opinion or advice, in failing to give any advice or opinion when legally obliged to do so, in disobeying a client’s lawful instruction, in taking an action when not instructed by the client to do so, in delaying or failing to handle a matter entrusted to the attorney’s care by the client, or in the attorney’s want of ordinary care in рreparing, managing, and presenting litigation that affects the client’s interests. 1
In the present case, it is undisputed that the two-year statute of limitations, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 5526 (Supp. 1985), applies to the three instances of negligence alleged against Bird in the Zidells’ petition, and elaborated upon in the summary-judgment record. If the Zidells’ cause of action for negligence, based upon *554 any of the three allegations, accrued more than two years before the filing of their suit, their cause of action is barred, and the trial court did not err in its summary judgment to that effect. Determining when the Zidells’ cause of action accrued is not, as we shall see, a matter free of difficulty.
THE BASIC RULE FOR DETERMINING WHEN A CAUSE OF ACTION FOR NEGLIGENCE “ACCRUES”
The word “accrual” signifies the date when one having a right of action first becomes legally entitled to apply to a court for relief by a proceeding commenced therein; that is to say, it signifies the date when the plaintiff first becomes entitled to sue the defendant based upon a legal wrong attributed to the lattеr. In negligence cases generally, the basic rule is that a cause of action so “accrues” when the duty of ordinary care is breached by some act or omission on the defendant’s part.
Blondeau v. Sommer,
Against the theory of the basic rule— that a right of action accrues in the plaintiff with the defendant’s breach of duty, although “damage” or an injury does not result until sometime later — one must consider the qualifying proposition that “[a]n action for negligence cannot be maintained unless
some
damage has resulted therefrom.”
Johnson v. Sovereign Camp, W.O.W.,
THE LEGAL INJURY RULE
In
Houston Water-Works Co. v. Kennedy,
1.
“Lawful acts,
”
or conduct for which no immediate right of action is given by applicable law.
If, in the circumstances, thе defendant’s conduct will not form the basis of an immediate suit by the plaintiff for judicial relief, because no legally protected interest of the plaintiff has been invaded in consequence of the conduct, a cause of action will not accrue
until
that interest
has
been invaded or “injured.”
Ft. Worth & D.C. Ry. Co. v. Speer,
*555
2.
“Unlawful acts,” or conduct for which an immediate right of action does lie under applicable law.
If, in the circumstances of the case, the law affords an immediate remedy to redress harm to the plaintiffs legally protected interest, his cause of action accrues at the time of the conduct of which he complains, notwithstanding that the injury is not practically harmful at the time or that it is slight in comparison to what may develop subsequently.
Houston Water-Works Co. v. Kennedy, supra
(defendant’s act in cutting arch which supported plaintiffs house constituted injury to plaintiffs legally protected interest in his property for which applicable law afforded immediate relief for the invasion, so that plaintiffs cause of action accrued with the cutting of the arch and not on subsequent settling and cracking of house);
Robertson v. Texas & N.O.R. Co.,
The foregoing illustrate the general contours of the “legal injury” rule: If the defendant’s conduct results in an invasion of the plaintiff’s legally protected interest, so that he may obtain an immediate remedy in court, his right of action “accrues” with the invasion, provided some legally cognizable injury however slight, has resulted from the invasion or would necessarily do so. The defendant’s conduct is in such case, categorized as “unlawful.” Conversely, if no right of redress exists by reason of the defendant’s conduct, because no legally protected interest of the plaintiff has been invaded at the time of the conduct complained of, the defendant’s conduct is categorized as “lawful” and any cause of action based thereon does not accrue until some invasion of the legally protected interest does occur. The distinctions to be drawn seem fine indeed and the decisions are not easy to reconcile.
Cf. Tennessee Gas Transmission Co. v. Fromme, supra;
and
Town of Jacksonville v. McCracken, supra, Quinn v. Press, supra,
and
Jim Walter Homes, Inc. v. Castillo,
*556
Commencing with the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Atkins v. Crosland,
Also to be included within the idea of an event arising after the conduct complained of, to first expose the plaintiff’s legally protected interest to some specific and concrete risk of harm caused by that conduct, are the following decisions:
McClung v. Johnson,
It is readily apparent from such decisions that harm to the plaintiff’s legally protected interest, by rеason of the defendant’s earlier conduct, need not be finally established or an inevitable consequence of the conduct. Rather, the specific and concrete event which follows the defendant’s conduct need raise only a risk of harm to that interest. For example, the deficiency assessment issued by the Internal Revenue Service in Crosland, and the government’s claim evidenced thereby, might not have been sustained on administrative and judicial review; and, in the Giles case, indeed, it had not even been issued and might never have been issued to this date. Or a defendant might not plead limitations as a bar to the plaintiff’s cause of action, filed by the latter’s attorney outside the period of limitations, or the plea of limitations might not be sustained for a variety of reasons. And in Lyles, for a further example, the plaintiff might have prevailed on the merits in his trespass-to-try-title action.
In contrast, however, it was held in
Linkenhoger v. American Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
• With these principles and decisions in mind, we turn to an analysis of when the Zidells’ cause of action against Bird did accrue under the “legal injury” rule, having in mind the three kinds of conduct alleged by the Zidells to have beеn negligent.
ACCRUAL OF THE ZIDELLS’ CAUSE OF ACTION FOR NEGLIGENCE
In reference to the Zidells’ allegation that Bird exceeded his authority when *558 he obtained an extension of time for consummation of the Zidd contract, beyond the “closing” date specified in the Zidd contract, we hold Bird’s conduct to have been unlawful under the Zidells’ own allegations. Stillwell v. City of Fort Worth, supra. Hence, a cause of action for “negligence” accrued simultaneously with Bird’s alleged breach of his employment contract, which constituted, under the Zidells’ allegations, a legal injury to their contract right of timely performance, if it constituted an injury at all. (It would appear rather that the Zidells were, in legal contemplation simply not bound by Bird’s unauthorized act, if they so elected.)
In reference to the Zidells’ allegation that Bird was negligent in failing to have prepared the documents necessary to consummate the Zidd contract, by the date specified therein for “closing,” we hold the Zidells’ cause of action accrued on the “closing” date so specified. McClung v. Johnson, supra; Anderson v. Sneed, supra; Pack v. Taylor, supra. That is to say, a cause of action for negligence accrued simultaneously with the expiration of the last day when Bird could have performed his employment contract in a timely fashion or without negligence. Stated otherwise, Bird owed a contract duty to the Zidells to prepare the “closing” documents in time for them to be tendered by the Zidells in consummatiоn of their contract with Zidd. Conversely, the Zidells had a contract right to Bird’s timely performance of that obligation. When, as the Zidells allege, Bird failed to furnish the documents by the date required, he repudiated his employment obligation to do so, at which time his conduct became “unlawful” and injurious to the Zidells’ contract right to timely performance, irrespective of whether Zidd might eventually assert any claim against the Zidells.
The Zidells’ final allegation, to the effect that Bird negligently аdvised them to consummate the Steen contract, is an allegation of negligence that accrued in our view, at the latest, when the Zidells conveyed the property to Steen under his “standby contract.” The effect of their conveyance to Steen was to repudiate the Zidd contract and to fix the Zidells’ legal relation to the property in such a way that they were thereafter disabled from performing the Zidd contract if called upon to do so. Thе Zidells’ cause of action against Bird, for his allegedly negligent advice, therefore accrued when they acted on that advice, irrevocably fixing their legal position in regard to the property and their contract with Zidd. Attwell v. Browning, supra; Pack v. Taylor, supra; Cox v. Rosser, supra.
Each of the events described above, as being the time when the Zidells’ cause of action accrued, occurred under the undisputed facts well before the two years allowed fоr the bringing of the cause of action alleged against Bird.
THE ZIDELLS’ REMAINING CONTENTIONS
The Zidells’ assert that, even if their cause of action accrued more than two years before the institution of this suit, a “fact issue” was raised as to whether Bird fraudulently concealed his negligent conduct, thus tolling the statute of limitations.
Owen v. King,
Finally, the Zidells contend that the “discovery rule” should apply to this case, as it does in other cases of professional negligence, such as medical malpractice. However, we need not address this issue. The only allegation to which the discovery rule might arguably apply is the Zidells’ contention that Bird extended the closing date on the Zidd contract without аuthority to do so. As noted above, the Zidells’ cause of action on this allegation accrued when the act was committed sometime in the latter part of 1978. Even assuming the statute was tolled until discovery, it is undisputed that the Zidells learned of the alleged act on March 22, 1979, over three years before the institution of this suit on October 7, 1982, as pointed out above. We overrule the Zidells’ contention.
We overrule all of the Zidells’ points of error discussed above; and beсause of our disposition of these points of error, it is unnecessary to address their remaining points.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Numerous Texas decisions expressly recognize a cause of action for various acts or omissions by a client’s attorney which result in injury to the client’s economic interest. The alleged negligence may consist of inaction or delay by the attorney.
Morgan v. Giddings,
. The "legal injury” rule may have been altered somewhat in
Atkins v. Crosland,
