From time to time we forget that Louisiana is a completely different environment. Its laws are different, its emphasis is different, and even its terms are wholly different. Here is an article from Hinshaw & Culbertson on the case of McGuire v. Mosley Rogers Title Co., L.L.C., 997 So.2d 23 (La. App. 2008) in which plaintiffs had to admit that they received a letter from their attorney following a closing of the sale of their house [in which they obtained a purchase money secutity interest] and didn’t open the envelope for a year.
"Plaintiffs retained attorney Lance Mosley to help them with the sale of commercial real estate. The sale involved a mix of seller financing and a traditional loan. As a part of the deal, plaintiffs agreed to subordinate their mortgage to the lender’s mortgage. For protection, plaintiffs sought personal guarantees from the buyers and allegedly obtained Mosley’s assurance that he would secure such guarantees. After signing, plaintiffs received copies of the closing documents in the mail but did not even open the envelope, much less review the documents. Over one year later, when the buyers began to have trouble paying, plaintiffs discovered the absence of personal guarantees.
Plaintiffs then sued Mosley for legal malpractice for failure to obtain the personal guarantees. Mosley filed an exception based on prescription, or the statute of limitations. The trial court granted this exception and dismissed the case because the prescriptive period for legal malpractice is one year from when the malpractice should have been discovered. The trial court held that plaintiffs should have discovered the malpractice when they received the closing documents in the mail. Plaintiffs appealed.