Last August we reported on the legal malpractice case which arose in California and made its way here. "In this recurring situation, plaintiff has both a California and a NY connection, and hired an attorney to do some work, which eventually goes sour. Frequently a case like this comes up in the entertainment field, with its CA and NY roots. As an example, Basilotta v Warshavsky ; 2011 NY Slip Op 32185(U); August 2, 2011; Sup Ct, NY County; Docket Number: 115525/09; Judge: Paul Wooten shows how the short CA statute of limitations (1 year) undermines the longer NY statute (3 years).
"During the 1980’s plaintiff was a singer known for her popular 1982 song Hey Micky. At all relevant times she has been a California resident. In or about 2003, non party Fallon Inc produced a television commercial for the non-party Subway restaurant franchise that featured Micky without Plaintiff’s knowledge or consent. Subsequent to becoming aware of this commercial, plaintiff retained defendant Oren J. Warshavsky, who at the time worked at defendant law firm Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan, Griffinger & Vecchione (“Gibbons”).’ Plaintiff alleges that she retained Warshavsky and Gibbons I) to seek compensation for the unauthorized use of Mickey in the commercial, and 2) to clarify her ownership rights to the Mickey master recordings. The retainer agreement between the parties was strictly contingency-fee based, and defines the scope of the retainer as “regarding all causes of action."
The gist of the legal malpractice case is that the attorneys got a settlement offer of $ 35,000 and when plaintiff did not accept, sent a letter to a successor attorney advising him of their position that, among other things, plaintiff had terminated her relationship with Gibbons in December, 2006.
The later legal malpractice case revolved around the ownership and exploitation of the master recordings and whether Gibbons was to blame for legal malpractice. Under CPLR 202, a cause of action accruing in a jurisdiction outside NY must be timely both in NY and in that other jurisdiction
Now, the Appellate Division has reversed and dismissed. "Accepting the allegations in plaintiff’s complaint as true and resolving all inferences in her favor, as we must in considering a motion to dismiss (see Leon v Martinez, 84 NY2d 83, 87 [1994]; Benn v Benn, 82 AD3d 548, 548 [2011]), this legal malpractice action accrued in California at the latest in November 2007, when plaintiff received defendants’ letter unequivocally informing her that they were no longer representing her or prosecuting her underlying actions. Accordingly, under California’s applicable one-year statute of limitations (Cal Code Civ Proc § 340.6[a]), this action, commenced in February 2010, is time-barred.
Contrary to the motion court’s finding, plaintiff’s assertion that it was not until October 2009 that she discovered that Radialchoice, the record company with whom she had held a recording contract, was involuntarily liquidated, did not raise an issue of fact as to whether this action is time-barred. Indeed, plaintiff’s allegation was asserted only in her memorandum of law in opposition to the motion, not in her pleadings or any accompanying affidavit (see Coppola v Applied Elec. Corp., 288 AD2d 41, 42 [2001]). Moreover, plaintiff’s alleged discovery is simply an additional facet of the same nonfeasance of which, according to her complaint, she had been aware since November 2007; thus, it does not constitute a separate wrongful act or omission for statute of limitations purposes (see Peregrine Funding, Inc. v Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP, 133 Cal App 4th 658, 685, 35 Cal Rptr 3d 31, 51 [2005]).
Lastly, plaintiff’s allegations support the conclusion that she had inquiry notice of defendants’ alleged nonfeasance more than one year before commencing this action. Indeed, since January 2007, when plaintiff obtained her case files and observed that defendants had performed very little work on her underlying cases, she should have discovered, through the use [*2]of reasonable diligence, the facts supporting liability, including the fact that Radialchoice had been involuntary liquidated (see McGee v Weinberg, 97 Cal App 3d 798, 803, 159 Cal Rptr 86, 89-90 [1979]). "