Lozano v. Alvarez ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    No. 113,060
    DARIO LOZANO,
    Appellant,
    v.
    OSCAR ALVAREZ and ARACELY ALVAREZ,
    Appellees.
    SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
    1.
    The savings statute provisions of K.S.A. 60-518 apply only to an action that was
    commenced during the statute of limitations period and that was dismissed for a reason
    other than on the merits after the expiration of the statute of limitations period.
    2.
    The dismissal of an action that was refiled during K.S.A. 60-518's 6-month grace
    period does not trigger another grace period because the refiled case is not an "action" to
    which K.S.A. 60-518 applies.
    Review of the judgment of the Court of Appeals in an unpublished opinion filed October 2, 2015.
    Appeal from Ford District Court; VAN Z. HAMPTON, judge. Opinion filed May 26, 2017. Judgment of the
    Court of Appeals affirming the district court is affirmed. Judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    Peter J. Antosh, of Garcia & Antosh, LLP, of Dodge City, argued the cause and was on the brief
    for appellant.
    Andrew M. Stein, of Doll Law Firm, LLC, of Dodge City, argued the cause and was on the brief
    for appellees.
    1
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    JOHNSON, J.: Plaintiff, Dario Lozano, filed an intentional tort lawsuit against the
    defendants, Oscar and Aracely Alvarez, claiming that they battered him at a company
    holiday party. The case was dismissed for lack of prosecution, refiled, and dismissed
    again for lack of prosecution. Lozano filed this third action, relying once again on K.S.A.
    60-518. Ultimately, the district court dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice and the Court
    of Appeals affirmed, holding, inter alia, that a party may use the Kansas savings statute,
    K.S.A. 60-518, only one time to resurrect a case dismissed for a reason other than upon
    the merits, when the statute of limitations for the underlying cause of action has expired.
    We affirm the result in this case.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL OVERVIEW
    The underlying facts are undisputed. On December 4, 2010, Lozano and the
    Alvarezes fought during a company-sponsored Christmas party. Exactly 1 year later, on
    the last day before the applicable statute of limitations in K.S.A. 60-514(b) would run,
    Lozano filed a civil action against the Alvarezes for injuries he suffered as a result of the
    battery. (Lozano I.) Lozano I was dismissed without prejudice by the Ford County
    District Court on August 28, 2012, for lack of prosecution.
    On February 27, 2013, Lozano refiled his case using the Kansas savings statute,
    which allows a case that has been dismissed for a reason other than the merits to be
    refiled within 6 months of the dismissal, notwithstanding that the statute of limitations
    has expired. (Lozano II.) The district court dismissed Lozano II without prejudice on
    December 31, 2013, once again for a lack of prosecution.
    2
    Lozano refiled the action on June 18, 2014, attempting to invoke K.S.A. 60-518 a
    second time. (Lozano III.) The Alvarezes moved to dismiss with prejudice, claiming the
    savings statute did not permit the refiling. The district court granted the motion, ruling
    that Clanton v. Estivo, 
    26 Kan. App. 2d 340
    , 
    988 P.2d 254
    (1999), was controlling and
    that it prohibited the use of K.S.A. 60-518 more than once.
    A timeline of the relevant events is as follows:
    December 4, 2010: Fight.
    December 5, 2011: Lozano files Lozano I; statute of limitations expires.
    August 28, 2012: Lozano I dismissed without prejudice for lack of prosecution.
    February 27, 2013: Lozano II filed under K.S.A. 60-518.
    February 28, 2013: Six months expires after dismissal of Lozano I.
    December 31, 2013: Lozano II dismissed without prejudice for lack of
    prosecution.
    June 18, 2014: Lozano III filed under K.S.A. 60-518.
    June 30, 2014: Six months expires after dismissal of Lozano II.
    October 20, 2014: Lozano III dismissed with prejudice.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed the district court's dismissal with prejudice. Lozano
    v. Alvarez, No. 113,060, 
    2015 WL 5750439
    (Kan. App. 2015) (unpublished opinion). The
    panel noted Clanton and Denton v. Atchison, 
    76 Kan. 89
    , 
    90 P. 764
    (1907), but relied
    principally on the plain language of K.S.A. 60-518 to find two limitations on the
    plaintiff's ability to refile: (1) The application of the savings statute "is limited to a
    plaintiff's original action," and, thus, the statute provides only one, 6-month grace period;
    and, (2) "K.S.A. 60-518 clearly limits a plaintiff refiling under the statute a single time."
    Lozano, 
    2015 WL 5750439
    , at *4-5. The panel found that Lozano had exceeded both
    limitations; Lozano III's June 18, 2014, filing date was more than 6 months after the
    3
    August 28, 2012, dismissal of the originally filed lawsuit, and it was Lozano's second
    invocation of the savings statute.
    Lozano timely seeks review of the Court of Appeals decision, contending that the
    panel misconstrued the plain language of K.S.A. 60-518.
    APPLICATION OF THE K.S.A. 60-518 SAVINGS STATUTE
    This case requires us to construe and apply K.S.A. 60-518. Specifically, we will
    need to answer whether the statute may be invoked in serial fashion, with the only
    limitation being that each new case must be filed within 6 months of the prior case's
    dismissal. We hold that the savings statute may not be invoked after the expiration of 6
    months following the dismissal of the original action that was filed within the statute of
    limitations.
    Standard of Review
    The interpretation of a statute is a question of law subject to unlimited review.
    Neighbor v. Westar Energy, Inc., 
    301 Kan. 916
    , 918, 
    349 P.3d 469
    (2015). Likewise, a
    district court's decision to grant a motion to dismiss is reviewed de novo. Platt v. Kansas
    State University, 
    305 Kan. 122
    , 126, 
    379 P.3d 362
    (2016).
    Analysis
    Our first step in statutory interpretation is to attempt to ascertain what the
    legislature intended by simply reading the statutory language, ascribing ordinary meaning
    to common words. State v. Urban, 
    291 Kan. 214
    , 216, 
    239 P.3d 837
    (2010). The savings
    statute reads as follows:
    4
    "If any action be commenced within due time, and the plaintiff fail in such action
    otherwise than upon the merits, and the time limited for the same shall have expired, the
    plaintiff, or, if the plaintiff die, and the cause of action survive, his or her representatives
    may commence a new action within six (6) months after such failure." K.S.A. 60-518.
    K.S.A. 60-518 has not been amended since being enacted in 1963. Other than
    removing language regarding reversals, shortening the length of time for refiling from 1
    year to 6 months, and adding gender-neutral language, our 21st century law is the same as
    the 19th century law in Kansas. Compare K.S.A. 60-518 with G.S. 1868, 80-23; see
    
    Clanton, 26 Kan. App. 2d at 343
    . The Kansas savings statute was a codification of the
    common-law "rule of 'journeys account,'" which was intended to allow a plaintiff time to
    travel (by the slower means of conveyance in those days) to the courthouse to refile a
    case which had been dismissed for some matter of form, rather than on the merits.
    
    Denton, 76 Kan. at 91
    ; Black's Law Dictionary 967 (10th ed. 2014). The savings statute
    does not modify the applicable statute of limitations, nor does it create a new one;
    instead, K.S.A. 60-518 operates to toll the statute of limitations under certain
    circumstances, in order to allow a party to gain a determination on the merits. See Roy v.
    Young, 
    278 Kan. 244
    , 249-50, 
    93 P.3d 712
    (2004).
    The Denton court was faced with applying the earlier version of the savings
    statute—which allowed 1 year to refile—to a circumstance similar to this case. Denton's
    first case, which was filed within the statute of limitations, was dismissed for a failure to
    prosecute, and he refiled within 1 year. After the refiled case (second case) was
    dismissed, Denton filed yet another case (third case) within 1 year of the dismissal of the
    second case. The third case filing date was beyond the statute of limitations and well past
    the original 1-year grace period.
    5
    Denton rejected the notion of serial refiling under the savings statute, whereby a
    plaintiff could "dismiss and reinstate at will and 
    indefinitely." 76 Kan. at 92
    . It held that
    "[t]he general periods of limitation are not changed" by the savings statute provision, but
    it was "intended to give a party who . . . brought an action [in time,] which was disposed
    of otherwise than upon the merits after the statute of limitations had run[,] a year of grace
    in which to reinstate his case and obtain a determination upon the 
    merits." 76 Kan. at 91
    .
    But "[o]nly one year after such failure is given to bring a new action" and a new action
    begun after more than 1 year, "whether it was the second or third action, would be an
    [impermissible] enlargement of the time fixed by statute." (Emphasis 
    added.) 76 Kan. at 92
    .
    Just shy of a century later, a panel of the Court of Appeals applied our current
    statute in Clanton, where the plaintiff sought to use K.S.A. 60-518 more than once. The
    panel found that Denton was still good law with respect to the current statute and held
    that the plaintiff could not refile her case a second time, despite being within 6 months of
    the dismissal of her first refiled case, because it was more than 6 months after the
    dismissal of the original case. 
    Clanton, 26 Kan. App. 2d at 344
    . But the opinion went
    beyond what was necessary to decide the case, stating in the syllabus that "[a] plaintiff is
    limited to a single use of the savings provision of K.S.A. 60-518 after a statute of
    limitations has run." 
    26 Kan. App. 2d 340
    , Syl.
    Lozano acknowledges that the holdings in both Denton and Clanton are adverse to
    his position. If he gets only one statutory grace period, as Denton held and Clanton
    confirmed, that period expired under K.S.A. 60-518 on February 28, 2013, long before
    the current case was filed in June 2014. If he can use K.S.A. 60-518 only one time, as the
    dictum in Clanton declared, he spent that one opportunity on February 27, 2013, with
    Lozano II. Consequently, Lozano is left with the tack of arguing that Denton was
    applying a different statute and that Clanton misread a plainly worded statute.
    6
    Lozano's plain language argument is, at first blush, mildly seductive. He points out
    that the statutory language begins by declaring that it applies to "any action."
    Consequently, he argues, Lozano II was "any action"; it was commenced within due time
    because it was filed within the first 6-month grace period; it failed other than on the
    merits; its time limit had expired; and its cause of action can survive if Lozano III is filed
    within 6 months of Lozano II's failure. Lozano contends that the only way in which one
    can defeat his plain language interpretation of K.S.A. 60-518 is to add language to the
    statute. Then he points to Bergstrom v. Spears Manufacturing Co., 
    289 Kan. 605
    , 609,
    
    214 P.3d 676
    (2009), for the proposition that this court has "elected to refrain from
    reading language into the statutes." Therefore, he concludes, the statute plainly permits
    serial refiling.
    The Court of Appeals acknowledged that Lozano had correctly identified the
    "three external events" that must occur to trigger the savings provision of K.S.A. 60-518,
    to-wit: "(1) if the plaintiff commences his or her action within due time; (2) if the
    plaintiff fails in such action otherwise than upon the merits; and (3) if the time limited for
    the plaintiff to file the same shall have expired." Lozano, 
    2015 WL 5750439
    , at *4. But
    the panel opined that the statute is not broad enough to encompass a refiled action, as
    Lozano suggests. Rather, the statutory phrases "any action"; "such action"; and "the
    same," all "refer to a plaintiff's original action." 
    2015 WL 5750439
    , at *4. In support of
    that interpretation, the panel invoked "the last antecedent rule, which states that
    'qualifying words are "ordinarily confined to the last antecedent, or to the words and
    phrases immediately preceding."' [Citations omitted.]" 
    2015 WL 5750439
    , at *4.
    Accordingly, if the three external events all refer to the original action, then Lozano only
    had one grace period of 6 months following dismissal of the original action; and the
    current action was appropriately dismissed.
    7
    Although that holding was sufficient to dispose of the case before the panel, it
    chose to go further and hold that "the plain language of K.S.A. 60-518 clearly limits a
    plaintiff to refiling under the statute a single time." 
    2015 WL 5750439
    , at *5. Its rationale
    is based on the statutory language that says a plaintiff "'may commence a new action
    within six (6) months after such failure.'" 
    2015 WL 5750439
    , at *5. The panel believed
    that the word "a," being a singular article, denoted an intent that K.S.A. 60-518 could
    only be invoked one time. 
    2015 WL 5750439
    , at *5. We take the liberty of addressing
    this holding first.
    We are not convinced that the statutory language upon which the panel relied
    plainly limits refilings to one time. For instance, Lozano followed the statutory directive
    of commencing "a" new action within 6 months after a failure; he filed but one new
    action on February 27, 2013, (Lozano II) when the original action failed and then filed
    only one new action on June 18, 2014, (Lozano III) when Lozano II failed. In other
    words, the use of the article "a" does not clearly preclude serial refilings under K.S.A. 60-
    518.
    Nevertheless, the statutory language employed, when coupled with our precedent,
    clearly signals that the intent is to provide but one grace period from the dismissal of the
    originally filed action. Specifically, K.S.A. 60-518 limits the phrase "any action" with the
    qualification that it be "commenced within due time." For at least 130 years in this state,
    "within due time" has referred to the statute of limitations. See Seaton v. Hixon, 
    35 Kan. 663
    , 666, 
    12 P. 22
    (1886). The Seaton court rejected an argument that the phrase "within
    due time" precluded the application of the savings statute to a case which had been filed
    prematurely by explaining as follows:
    "These words are used with reference to the full running of statutes of limitations and the
    absolute barring of actions thereby, and not with reference to anything else. All that they
    8
    require to bring the action within said § 23 [the predecessor statute to K.S.A. 60-518] is
    that the action shall be commenced before any statute of limitations has barred a
    recovery. If the action is commenced before it has been barred by any statute of
    limitations, then it is commenced 'within due time' within the meaning of the foregoing
    section; but if it is not commenced until after it has been barred, then it is not commenced
    'within due time.'" (Emphasis added.) 
    Seaton, 35 Kan. at 666-67
    .
    Denton cited Seaton when it rejected the argument that the plaintiff should be
    allowed to use the savings statute a third time, outside of the statute of limitations and
    outside of the original grace period following the first dismissal, because doing so would
    constitute an unlawful enlargement of the statute of limitations. 
    Denton, 76 Kan. at 92
    -
    93; see also Bush v. Cole, 
    1 Ohio App. 269
    , 271-72 (1913), aff'd 
    91 Ohio St. 369
    (1914)
    (words "due time" referred to statute of limitations).
    Therefore, based on our interpretation of K.S.A. 60-518, bolstered by Denton and
    Seaton, we hold that the 6-month grace period in the savings statute applies only to an
    action that was commenced during the statute of limitations period, i.e., "within due
    time." Then, because the savings statute is specifically applicable only where "the time
    limited for the [original action] shall have expired" at the time of dismissal, any action
    subsequently filed during the 6-month grace period would always be after the statute of
    limitations has expired and could never be "commenced within due time." Consequently,
    the dismissal of an action that was filed during K.S.A. 60-518's 6-month grace period
    does not trigger another grace period because it is not an "action" to which K.S.A. 60-518
    applies. In short, a plaintiff is limited to one 6-month period of grace to get a
    determination on the merits; refilings beyond that 6-month period are barred by the
    statute of limitations.
    Whether a plaintiff may refile multiple actions within the 6-month grace period
    following dismissal of a timely filed original action is a question that is not presented by
    9
    the facts of this case, and we decline to address it. Here, Lozano II could not qualify for a
    separate 6-month grace period under K.S.A. 60-518 because Lozano II was not
    "commenced within due time," i.e., commenced within the statute of limitations period.
    Lozano III was not filed within 6 months of the failure of the only action that was subject
    to K.S.A. 60-518, which was Lozano I. In other words, Lozano III was barred by the
    statute of limitations and the district court correctly dismissed the action with prejudice.
    Affirmed.
    10