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Swain v. Leahy

9/7/1993

On 18 April 1990 plaintiff filed a complaint against defendants alleging negligence in their representation of plaintiff's personal injury claim. Defendants asserted the doctrine of election of remedies as a defense, and the trial court granted summary judgment for defendants on 27 February 1992.


On 20 April 1985, plaintiff, a Hertford County, North Carolina resident, was injured in an automobile collision in Chesapeake, Virginia. When the accident occurred plaintiff was a passenger in an automobile driven by Ida M. Allen and owned by Sarah K. Swain, both residents of North Carolina. Clara McDonald, a Virginia resident, was operating the other vehicle.


Sometime prior to 20 May 1985, plaintiff retained Carter W. Jones, an attorney in defendants' law office, Leahy & Moore, to represent her personal injury claim. Mr. Jones died in August 1986, however. At that time Leahy & Moore undertook to continue to represent the plaintiff in a personal injury action against McDonald. On 7 April 1988 they filed a claim against McDonald in North Carolina, but the action was dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction. By then plaintiff was precluded from bringing suit in Virginia, where McDonald would have been subject to personal jurisdiction, because Virginia's two-year statute of limitations had expired on 20 April 1987.


Defendants then advised plaintiff to retain another attorney, Donnie R. Taylor, to bring an action against Sarah Swain and Ida Allen in North Carolina, explaining that a conflict of interest prohibited their firm from bringing the action. Taylor stated in his affidavit that he had accepted the case without disclosure from defendant regarding the expiration of the applicable statute of limitations or potential problems with election of remedies. After Taylor filed the claim, the insurance adjuster made an offer to settle the case, and plaintiff accepted a $3,244.04 settlement and executed a general release.


Plaintiff then brought suit against Leahy & Moore, alleging negligence in their representation of her claim against Clara McDonald. Plaintiff now appeals from the trial court's grant of summary judgment as a matter of law in favor of defendants pursuant to N.C.G.S. ยง 1A-1, Rule 56 (1990).


Plaintiff claims she has a valid case for attorney malpractice and that defendants conceded as much in their answer to the complaint. In paragraph seven of their answer defendants admitted that they failed to institute suit against McDonald within the applicable statute of limitations, and in paragraph nine they admitted that plaintiff "probably would have recovered some sum from either Clara B. McDonald or Ida Mae Allen or both." Defendants contend,


however, that by accepting a settlement from two of the joint tortfeasors and by signing a general release, plaintiff satisfied her claim and is thereby barred from bringing a legal malpractice claim against them by the doctrine of election of remedies. The only issue on appeal is whether defendants' affirmative defense of the doctrine of election of remedies applies to preclude plaintiff's claim against them. We find that it does not.


The doctrine of election of remedies generally is invoked to estop the plaintiff from suing a second defendant


only if [plaintiff] has sought and obtained final judgment against a first defendant and the remedy granted in the first judgment is repugnant or inconsistent with the remedy sought in the second action.


McCabe v. Dawkins, 97 N.C. App. 447, 448, 388 S.E.2d 571, 572 (1990) (action not barred by doctrine of election of remedies where, fol

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