Richard Catena v. Raytheon Company , 447 N.J. Super. 43 ( 2016 )


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  •                     NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-4636-13T4
    RICHARD CATENA,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.                                          August 18, 2016
    RAYTHEON COMPANY, individually            APPELLATE DIVISION
    and as successor to Air
    Associates, Inc. and Electronic
    Communications, Inc.; HONEYWELL
    INERNATIONAL, INC., individually
    and as successor to Bendix
    Corporation and Allied Corp.;
    ORIGINIT FABRICS, INC.; ORIGINIT
    FABRICS OF NEW YORK, INC.;
    COMBINATES CORPORATION,
    Defendants,
    and
    DANIEL P. ANDERSEN; WELLS FARGO
    BANK, N.A., a division of which
    is Wachovia Bank, N.A., successor
    to First Fidelity Bank,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ___________________________________
    Submitted December 16, 2015 – Decided August 18, 2016
    Before Judges Alvarez, Ostrer and Haas.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Law Division, Bergen County, Docket
    No. L-1267-11.
    Szaferman, Lakind, Blumstein & Blader, P.C.,
    attorneys for appellant (Janine G. Bauer, on
    the briefs).
    Fitzgerald and McGroarty, attorneys for
    respondent Daniel P. Andersen (Joseph P.
    McGroarty and Michael J. Malinsky, on the
    brief).
    Fox Rothschild LLP, attorneys for respondent
    Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (Robert J. Rohrberger
    and Matthew S. Adams, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    OSTRER, J.A.D.
    This appeal requires us to apply the discovery rule to
    claims of common law fraud and a violation of the New Jersey
    Consumer Fraud Act (CFA), N.J.S.A. 56:8-1 to -20.                Plaintiff
    Richard Catena appeals from the summary judgment dismissal of
    his fraud claims against defendants David P. Andersen and Wells
    Fargo Bank, N.A. (Wells Fargo).         The claims were based on the
    allegation that Andersen and a Wells Fargo predecessor, First
    Fidelity Bank (FFB), fraudulently concealed the facts that the
    Teterboro    property     Catena    purchased      from    Andersen        was
    contaminated   with   hazardous    waste   and   that   they   had   done     a
    partial clean-up.     The trial court held that Catena should have
    discovered the fraud in June 1998, when he learned the property
    was contaminated.       As that was more than six years before he
    filed his respective claims, the court concluded the claims were
    time-barred under N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1.
    2                                A-4636-13T4
    We      disagree     with        the    trial        court's          reasoning.           The
    limitations period began when Catena knew or through reasonable
    diligence     should     have        discovered          the        fraud.         Under      the
    circumstances,      Catena's         discovery          of     contamination         did       not
    constitute    discovery        that        Andersen      and        FFB    concealed         their
    knowledge    of    the   contamination            and    their       subsequent      cleanup.
    Even with a diligent inquiry, a reasonable person would not have
    discovered the fraud more than six years before the claims were
    filed against Andersen and Wells Fargo in August 2005 and May
    2008, respectively.         Therefore, we reverse.
    I.
    We discern the following facts from the record, extending
    all favorable inferences to Catena as the non-movant.                                Brill v.
    Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    142 N.J. 520
    , 540 (1995).
    Catena's         fraud           claims         are            based      on         alleged
    misrepresentations        by       Andersen       and        FFB    in     connection         with
    Catena's     purchase     of       the     property          from    Andersen       in       1988.
    Andersen     had    owned      the       property,       personally          or    through       a
    partnership, since 1983.              That year, his partnership and First
    National    Bank,    a   predecessor           to       FFB,       entered    into       a    loan
    agreement    secured     by    a     mortgage       on    the       property.        In      1986,
    Andersen acquired sole title, but his partnership defaulted on
    the loan in 1987.           In August 1987, FFB took possession of the
    3                                        A-4636-13T4
    property without obtaining title, intending to sell the property
    and keep the proceeds to satisfy the debt.
    At     FFB's   direction,     Environmental    Waste    Management
    Associates (EWMA) conducted an environmental assessment of the
    property to determine if there were any environmental problems
    on the property.   After taking soil samples, EWMA reported "high
    levels of tetrachloroethylene," also known as perchloroethylene
    (PCE), on the property.     Following EWMA's recommendations, in
    the fall of 1987 FFB authorized roughly eighty to 100 yards of
    contaminated soils to be excavated and replaced by clean fill.
    Even after the excavation, however, EWMA could not guarantee FFB
    that all the contaminated soil had been removed.
    FFB's attorney sent Andersen's attorney the EWMA reports in
    December   1987,   along   with     a   letter    stating   that    the
    contamination impeded the bank's ability to sell the property
    and that prospective buyers had "expressed concern" about the
    "environmental problem" on the property.         In another letter to
    Andersen's attorney in March 1988, FFB's attorney wrote that FFB
    expected Andersen to arrange for the removal of the excavated
    soil that was still on the property.
    In June 1988, Andersen and FFB agreed that Andersen would
    negotiate the sale of the property and sell the property "as
    is," with FFB retaining the proceeds of the sale.       Their written
    4                          A-4636-13T4
    agreement also stated that Andersen, at FFB's expense, would
    remove the excavated soil evidently still being stored on the
    property.        Thereafter, the contaminated soil was disposed of
    offsite, and replaced by clean soil onsite.                          EWMA opined that
    the    property      would     pass    inspection           under   the    Environmental
    Cleanup Responsibility Act (ECRA).                      However, neither EWMA nor
    FFB     informed       the    New     Jersey      Department        of     Environmental
    Protection (DEP) of the cleanup.
    Catena    was    unaware       of   this   contamination           or    remediation
    when he purchased the property.                   The June 29, 1988 contract of
    sale    stated     Catena      was    buying      the   property      "as        is."     The
    contract stated that Catena had inspected the premises to his
    satisfaction, and no representations or warranties had been made
    regarding the premises, other than those in the contract.
    However, the day before the sale, FFB provided Catena's
    attorney a July 31, 1987 affidavit (1987 Affidavit) Andersen had
    submitted to DEP.            The affidavit stated that the only occupants
    of     the   property        since    1984   were       a    dry    wall       construction
    contractor,      a   bank,      and   a    trucking      concern.          The    affidavit
    stated that, "on information and belief," these occupants had
    not "engaged on the Subject Property in any operations which
    involve the generation, manufacture, refining, transportation,
    treatment, storage, handling or disposal of hazardous substances
    5                                      A-4636-13T4
    or wastes," and that, therefore, the property was not subject to
    the requirements of ECRA.              The letter to Catena's attorney that
    accompanied      this       affidavit       also      included           a     "letter    of
    nonapplicability" (LNA) that DEP had issued based on the 1987
    Affidavit.
    Following      execution      of    the    June      29,    1988       contract,   but
    before the closing, Andersen submitted a second affidavit (1988
    Affidavit)     to    DEP    on    August       12,   1988,       for   the     purpose    of
    obtaining another LNA.              This affidavit also stated that, "on
    information     and        belief,"      the     three       previously         identified
    occupants     had    not    "engaged      on    the       Subject      Property    in    any
    operations which involve the generation, manufacture, refining,
    transportation,        treatment,        storage,     handling         or     disposal    of
    hazardous substances or wastes . . . ."                         This affidavit failed
    to mention that PCE-contaminated soil had been found on the
    property in 1987.           Based on the 1988 Affidavit, DEP issued a
    second LNA on September 1, 1988, which stated that the sale to
    Catena was not subject to ECRA, with the caveat that the LNA was
    not   a    finding    as    to   the     "existence        or    nonexistence      of    any
    hazards to the environment at this location."
    On    November       1,    1988,    Catena      closed      on     the    sale,    and
    acquired     title     from      Andersen.           In     1989,      Catena     retained
    environmental        consultant        EcolSciences,            Inc.    to     perform    an
    6                                      A-4636-13T4
    environmental assessment.                 EcolSciences' March 1989 assessment
    stated that past uses of the property included: "production of
    aircraft parts," "assembly of mechanical electrical parts," a
    "textile    knitting       and     dyeing    operation,"         the    "manufacture      of
    prefabricated exterior building facades," and "a distribution
    center    for    screen-printing           inks   and    related        supplies."       The
    assessment made no mention of contaminated soil or PCE, but
    recommended further investigation of the possible presence of
    other contaminants.
    Nearly a decade later, when Catena sought to refinance the
    property, the prospective lender hired Property Solutions, Inc.
    (PSI) to conduct an environmental investigation.                               In multiple
    reports    completed         in     the    spring       of     1998,     PSI    documented
    tetrachloroethylene              contamination          exceeding         DEP      cleanup
    standards.            In   April      1998,       PSI        notified     DEP    of    soil
    contamination on the property.
    Catena was made aware of PSI's findings as early as May 26,
    1998,    when    he    was    provided       PSI's      May    26   report      disclosing
    tetrachloroethane contamination exceeding DEP cleanup standards.
    In that report, which was provided to DEP, PSI sought a "No
    Further Action Required" letter from DEP.                              This report also
    stated     the    "likely         cause"    of    the        contamination       was   "the
    historical use of the property in airplane related industries."
    7                                     A-4636-13T4
    By letter dated June 4, 1998, DEP advised Catena that it
    would not issue the requested no-action letter.                         DEP's letter
    stated that Catena must apply for and execute a Memorandum of
    Agreement     (MOA)     setting     forth         a    plan    to     clean   up    the
    contamination.        The letter noted that a cleanup satisfying DEP
    standards could result in DEP issuing a "no further action"
    letter.     On June 22, 1998, Catena and DEP executed a MOA that
    required him to conduct further investigation and submit a site
    investigation report to DEP.                In the MOA, Catena acknowledged
    that      hazardous     wastes         —        specifically,       PCE,      toluene,
    ethylbenzene, and xylene — had been "used, generated, treated,
    stored, disposed or discharged" at the site.
    Following   Catena's       submission          of   a   site    investigation
    report in October 1998, DEP advised him, on December 22, 1998,
    that the contaminated soil "must be addressed" and "remediated."
    In July 1999, DEP notified Catena his MOA was "administratively
    complete" and directed him to submit a schedule for implementing
    the steps set forth in the MOA.                       To comply with the steps
    required by the MOA, Catena once again retained EcolSciences to
    further investigate the property.                     By letter dated March 21,
    2000, EcolSciences reported to Catena the results of recent soil
    sampling,    writing     that     it       had    detected     soil    contamination
    requiring additional investigation and sampling.                        On June 27,
    8                                 A-4636-13T4
    2000,       DEP   wrote     to     Catena       that    it     accepted        EcolSciences'
    proposed work plan for additional investigation and soil and
    groundwater sampling.
    For reasons that are unclear, EcolSciences' work plan was
    not    implemented,         causing       DEP    to     terminate        the    MOA     due    to
    inactivity        in   March      2001.         Following      another         delay,      Catena
    entered into a new contract with EcolSciences in December 2003.
    In a May 2004 letter, EcolSciences informed Catena that new soil
    and     groundwater          sampling        revealed          a        "larger       area     of
    contamination"         on    the    property,          including         ground      water    and
    stream contamination in what was a "former oil recovery area"
    used    by    prior    owner(s).          This      letter        also    recommended         that
    Catena "retain an environmental lawyer to notify the prior owner
    responsible for the former oil recovery area."
    On    August    22,     2005,      Catena       filed      his    initial      complaint
    against      Andersen       and    the    successors         of    other       prior    owners,
    asserting claims of common law fraud and violations of the CFA
    and    other      environmental        protection        statutes.             The    complaint
    alleged that defendants committed fraud by failing to disclose
    the    contamination         on    the    property.            Catena      took      Andersen's
    deposition in December 2007, at which time Andersen produced the
    1987    EWMA      reports    and     communications            between      his      and   FFB's
    attorneys.         These documents demonstrated that Andersen and FFB
    9                                       A-4636-13T4
    knew that PCE-contaminated soil was excavated, stored, removed,
    and then replaced with clean soil.
    Catena had not seen these documents before 2007.                         At his
    deposition, Catena testified that no one informed him of any
    environmental issues on the property at the time of the sale.
    He conceded that, before buying the property, he did not ask
    Andersen or FFB whether there were any environmental issues, or
    investigate past uses of the property.                     Catena also asserted
    that he was "under the impression that [the property] was clean"
    when he bought it, and was "unaware that it was polluted."
    In    February       2008,    Catena      filed    an   amended    complaint
    asserting a more detailed claim of common law fraud against
    Andersen.         On May 21, 2008, he filed another amendment asserting
    common      law    fraud    and     CFA   claims   against     Wells     Fargo,      the
    successor to FFB.
    Defendants moved for summary judgment on the fraud and CFA
    claims on the ground that they were brought more than six years
    after they accrued, and thus were time-barred under N.J.S.A.
    2A:14-1.       Catena cross-moved for summary judgment.                  On January
    16,    2009,      the   court     granted     defendants'      motion    and    denied
    Catena's motion.           In a brief oral decision, the judge determined
    that   Catena's         fraud   claims     accrued   in    June   1998,    when       he
    executed the MOA.           The judge rejected Catena's claim that he did
    10                                 A-4636-13T4
    not discover the fraud until 2007, noting that Catena first
    asserted his fraud claim in 2005.
    Catena appeals from the summary judgment dismissal of his
    fraud claims, arguing that, under the discovery rule, the claims
    did not accrue until December 2007, when he took Andersen's
    deposition.      Wells    Fargo      argues   that       the   limitations     period
    began to run no later than June 1998, when Catena signed the
    MOA,   acknowledging      the   presence      of    contamination.        Andersen
    contends it began no later than December 22, 1998, when DEP
    required remediation.
    II.
    A.
    We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the
    same standard as the trial court.               Henry v. N.J. Dep't of Human
    Servs., 
    204 N.J. 320
    , 330 (2010).               Whether a cause of action is
    barred by a statute of limitations is a question of law, also
    reviewed de novo.         Estate of Hainthaler v. Zurich Commercial
    Ins., 
    387 N.J. Super. 318
    , 325 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    188 N.J. 577
    (2006).        The application of the discovery rule is for
    the court, not a jury, to decide.               Lopez v. Swyer, 
    62 N.J. 267
    ,
    274-75 (1973).
    Catena   was   required    to    bring      his    fraud   and   CFA    claims
    within   six    years    of   when     they   accrued.         N.J.S.A.   2A:14-1;
    11                                   A-4636-13T4
    D'Angelo v. Miller Yacht Sales, 
    261 N.J. Super. 683
    , 688 (App.
    Div. 1993).       The sole issue before us is when these claims
    accrued.
    To determine when Catena's fraud claims accrued, we apply
    the   discovery    rule,    which     delays      the     commencement       of    the
    limitations period in appropriate cases.                      Under the rule, a
    claim does not accrue until the plaintiff "discovers, or by an
    exercise of reasonable diligence and intelligence should have
    discovered that he may have a basis for an actionable claim."
    
    Lopez, supra
    , 62 N.J. at 272.               The party seeking the rule's
    benefit bears the burden to establish it applies.                 
    Id. at 276.
    Long before the discovery rule was applied to negligence
    claims,    Fernandi   v.   Strully,    
    35 N.J. 434
      (1961),    courts     of
    equity held that, in fraud cases, the limitations period does
    not   commence    until    the   fraud      was     discovered,         or   through
    reasonable diligence should have been discovered.                   See Partrick
    v. Groves, 
    115 N.J. Eq. 208
    , 211 (E. & A. 1934); Giehrach v.
    Rupp, 
    112 N.J. Eq. 296
    , 302-03 (E. & A. 1933); Lincoln v. Judd,
    
    49 N.J. Eq. 387
    (Ch. 1892).            The application of the discovery
    rule to fraud claims has also received general acceptance in our
    modern court system.       See SASCO 1997 NI, LLC v. Zudkewich, 
    166 N.J. 579
    , 590-92 (2001) (applying discovery rule to fraudulent
    transfer claim under version of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfers
    12                                    A-4636-13T4
    Act then in effect); Belmont Condo. Ass'n v. Geibel, 432 N.J.
    Super.    52,    83    (App.       Div.)   (applying      discovery        rule   to     CFA
    claim), certif. denied, 
    216 N.J. 366
    (2013); Simpson v. Widger,
    
    311 N.J. Super. 379
    , 391 (App. Div. 1998) (applying discovery
    rule to fraud); Dreier Co. v. Unitronix Corp., 
    218 N.J. Super. 260
    , 274 (App. Div. 1986) (applying discovery rule to common law
    fraud claim); Fed. Ins. Co. v. Hausler, 
    108 N.J. Super. 421
    , 426
    (App.     Div.      1970)    (applying          discovery      rule     to     fraudulent
    concealment claim).            
    Lopez, supra
    , the seminal case for the
    statement of the rule, recognized its applicability to fraud
    
    claims. 62 N.J. at 275
    n.2.
    The discovery rule is "essentially a rule of equity."                               
    Id. at 273.
           While      statutes       of     limitations       "are     designed     to
    stimulate    litigants        to    pursue      their   actions       diligently,"       the
    discovery rule mitigates "the unfairness of barring claims of
    unknowing parties."          Mancuso v. Neckles, 
    163 N.J. 26
    , 29 (2000).
    The discovery rule is designed "to avoid harsh results that
    otherwise would flow from mechanical application of a statute of
    limitations."         Vispisiano v. Ashland Chem. Co., 
    107 N.J. 416
    ,
    426 (1987).
    In     fraud     cases,   the     discovery        rule   is     justified     by   an
    additional consideration not present in negligence cases: the
    victim's lack of awareness of the fraud is the wrongdoer's very
    13                                   A-4636-13T4
    object.    The rule thus prevents the defendant from benefiting
    from his own deceit.            As the United States Supreme Court has
    explained,    "something       different        [is]   needed    in   the   case    of
    fraud,    where    a    defendant's    deceptive       conduct     may   prevent     a
    plaintiff from even knowing that he or she has been defrauded.
    Otherwise, 'the law which was designed to prevent fraud' could
    become 'the means by which it is made successful and secure.'"
    Merck & Co. v. Reynolds, 
    559 U.S. 633
    , 644, 
    130 S. Ct. 1784
    ,
    1793-94,   176    L.    Ed.    2d   582,    594   (2010)   (quoting      Bailey     v.
    Glover, 88 U.S. (21 Wall.) 342, 349, 
    22 L. Ed. 2d 636
    , 639
    (1875)).     A defendant should "not be permitted to take advantage
    of his own wrong" where it was "his fraudulent conduct" that was
    "responsible      for   [the   plaintiff's]        delay   in    prosecuting"      his
    claims.    
    Partrick, supra
    , 115 N.J. Eq. at 211.
    In general, the date of discovery is when the plaintiff
    learns or reasonably should learn "the existence of that state
    of facts which may equate in law with a cause of action."                       Burd
    v. N.J. Tel. Co., 
    76 N.J. 284
    , 291 (1978).                      This determination
    is highly fact-sensitive, and will "vary from case to case, and
    . . . from type of case to type of case."                       
    Vispisiano, supra
    ,
    107 N.J. at 434.
    Yet the discovery rule does not toll the statute until the
    plaintiff has "legal certainty" of an actionable claim, Lapka v.
    14                               A-4636-13T4
    Porter Hayden Co., 
    162 N.J. 545
    , 555-56 (2000), or until the
    full    extent    of     the    damage      becomes    apparent,        Russo    Farms    v.
    Vineland Bd. of Educ., 
    144 N.J. 84
    , 115 (1996).                                 The claim
    accrues once the plaintiff "is aware of facts that would alert a
    reasonable person to the possibility of an actionable claim."
    
    Lapka, supra
    ,     162    N.J.       at    555-56.        Mere   suspicion      that    the
    plaintiff has a claim, however, is not enough.                                 
    Vispisiano, supra
    , 107 N.J. at 434.               Thus, the plaintiff's knowledge "must
    be   evaluated     in     light    of      the     requirements     of   the     cause   of
    action" he asserts.             Enertron Indus., Inc. v. Mack, 242 N.J.
    Super. 83, 91 (App. Div. 1990).
    Beginning        with    the     elements       of    common      law    fraud,     a
    plaintiff        must      prove           that      the     defendant          materially
    misrepresented a presently existing or past fact; the defendant
    knew or believed it was false, intending that the plaintiff
    would    rely      on     the     misrepresentation;              and    the     plaintiff
    reasonably relied on the misrepresentation and suffered damage
    as a result.        Gennari v. Weichert Co. Realtors, 
    148 N.J. 582
    ,
    610 (1997).       In the real estate context, misrepresentation may
    consist of intentional nondisclosure of a material defect not
    observable by the buyer.              State Dep't of Envir. Prot. v. Ventron
    Corp., 
    94 N.J. 473
    , 503-04 (1983); Weintraub v. Krobatsch, 
    64 N.J. 445
    , 455 (1974).             Likewise, the "unlawful practice" element
    15                                  A-4636-13T4
    of a CFA violation encompasses a knowing concealment or omission
    of    material    fact    with    the    intent        that    others     rely      on   it.
    N.J.S.A. 56:8-2; see also Gonzalez v. Wilshire Credit Corp., 
    207 N.J. 557
    , 576 (2011) (CFA violation consists of (1) an unlawful
    practice, (2) an ascertainable loss, and (3) a causal nexus
    between the unlawful conduct and ascertainable loss).
    The date of discovery, therefore, is when the fraud was or
    reasonably should have been discovered.                        In 
    Belmont, supra
    , a
    condominium       association      brought        a     CFA     claim     premised       on
    misrepresentations by the general contractor, after the building
    was severely damaged from water 
    leaks. 432 N.J. Super. at 60
    ,
    62-63.       We   held    that    the    claim        did    not    accrue     until     the
    plaintiff     "had      reason    to    believe       that     it   had    suffered       an
    ascertainable loss," which we found was the point at which "the
    true nature and extent of the water infiltration problem first
    became evident . . . ."            
    Id. at 83.
             In other words, the claim
    did    not    accrue      until    the    plaintiff           was    aware     of    facts
    establishing an essential element of its claim.
    Because     the    wrongdoer's      mental           state   is    an   essential
    element      of   the    claim,   discovery       does        not   occur      until     the
    plaintiff is aware of facts indicating the wrongdoer knew his
    statement was false, and intended the other party to rely on its
    falsity.      See 
    Merck, supra
    , 559 U.S. at 
    649, 130 S. Ct. at 1796
    ,
    16                                     
    A-4636-13T4 176 L. Ed. 2d at 597
    (stating that it would "frustrate the very
    purpose     of    the    discovery          rule"       if   the       limitations      period
    commenced "regardless of whether a plaintiff had discovered any
    facts    suggesting      scienter.").              In    determining        what      facts     a
    plaintiff knew or should have known, we will not assume the
    plaintiff's        knowledge      of        information           available      in     public
    records.     
    Giehrach, supra
    , 112 N.J. Eq. at 303 (declining to
    impute     knowledge      of     facts        that       "might        easily    have       been
    ascertained from the public records").                       Proof of industry custom
    is not determinative of what inquiry a reasonable person would
    make to discover the fraud, but it is relevant to the discovery
    rule analysis.         SASCO 1997 
    NI, supra
    , 166 N.J. at 590-91.
    In applying the discovery rule, we will not require a level
    of circumspection that is unreasonable under the circumstances.
    The Supreme Court stated that "it would be inequitable for a
    physician        who    has    given        [assurances           of    progress       towards
    recovery] to claim that a patient, in relying upon them and not
    suspecting their falsity or inaccuracy, failed to exercise the
    'reasonable        diligence      and        intelligence'             required        by    the
    discovery    rule."           Lynch    v.    Rubacky,        
    85 N.J. 65
    ,    75    (1981)
    (applying discovery rule to medical malpractice claim) (quoting
    
    Lopez, supra
    , 62 N.J. at 274).                       That is consistent with the
    general principle in fraud cases, that "[o]ne who engages in
    17                                       A-4636-13T4
    fraud . . . may not urge that one's victim should have been more
    circumspect or astute."            Jewish Ctr. of Sussex Cty. v. Whale, 
    86 N.J. 619
    , 626 n.1 (1981) (rejecting argument that fraud victim's
    reliance on misrepresentation was unreasonable).                    The same trust
    that a wrongdoer exploits to perpetrate a fraud in the first
    place may delay the victim's eventual discovery of the fraud.
    We   are   persuaded    by     New    York    decisions      applying    their
    discovery rule to fraud claims.                  The New York Court of Appeals
    has held that "knowledge of the fraudulent act is required and
    mere   suspicion      will   not    constitute      a   sufficient    substitute."
    Erbe   v.   Lincoln    Rochester      Tr.    Co.,    
    144 N.E.2d 78
    ,   81   (N.Y.
    1957); see also Sargiss v. Magarelli, 
    909 N.E.2d 573
    , 576 (N.Y.
    2009); Axelrod v. CBS Publications, 
    185 N.J. Super. 359
    , 367
    (App. Div. 1982) (citing 
    Erbe, supra
    , 144 N.E.2d at 81).                             A
    plaintiff is deemed to have discovered the fraud when he has
    "knowledge of facts from which the alleged [fraud] might be
    reasonably inferred."         
    Erbe, supra
    , 144 N.E.2d at 81; see also
    
    Sargiss, supra
    , 909 N.E.2d at 576; Koch v. Christie's Int'l PLC,
    
    699 F.3d 141
    , 155 (2d Cir. 2012) (plaintiff "could reasonably
    have inferred the fraud" from knowledge that there was "a high
    probability" the wine he purchased "was in fact counterfeit").1
    1
    New York law also recognizes a form of "inquiry notice," which
    triggers the limitations period if the plaintiff knows facts
    (continued)
    18                              A-4636-13T4
    B.
    Applying these principles, we conclude the trial court was
    mistaken in finding that Catena's claims accrued in June 1998,
    when he executed the MOA.
    When Catena first became aware of the contamination and the
    need to remediate in 1998, he had no reason to suspect fraud,
    nor had he discovered facts supporting the elements of a fraud
    claim.2    His discovery of contamination was not at odds with any
    prior     representation   by   Andersen   or   FFB.   No   one    had
    affirmatively represented to Catena in 1988 that the property
    (continued)
    which would lead a reasonable person to inquire into possible
    fraud, but fails to pursue an investigation.   
    Koch, supra
    , 699
    F.3d at 155-56 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Our Court has not adopted this adjunct to the discovery rule in
    New Jersey.
    2
    Wells Fargo misplaces reliance on cases applying the discovery
    rule to strict liability environmental claims and other
    environmental torts.    In environmental torts generally, the
    claim accrues when the plaintiff is aware of contamination and
    that it was the fault of another. See, e.g. Hatco Corp. v. W.R.
    Grace & Co., 
    801 F. Supp. 1309
    , 1323-24 (D.N.J. 1992) (strict
    liability claim accrued when plaintiff was put on notice of
    contamination); but see SC Holdings, Inc. v. A.A.A. Realty Co.,
    
    935 F. Supp. 1354
    , 1368 (D.N.J. 1996) (rejecting argument that
    "the point at which plaintiff should know of another party's
    fault [is] the first instance in which the NJDEP or EPA finds
    the existence of contamination").      A fraud claim, however,
    requires proof of a knowing and intentional misrepresentation or
    concealment of material fact.       Catena's knowledge of the
    contamination (even assuming he knew it was another's fault)
    does not constitute knowledge "of that state of facts which may
    equate in law with a cause of action" for fraud.    
    Burd, supra
    ,
    76 N.J. at 291.
    19                        A-4636-13T4
    was not contaminated.                 The 1987 Affidavit contained no                      such
    representation, since Andersen omitted the crucial fact that he
    had excavated and replaced contaminated soil.                          The discovery of
    contamination        in       1998     did       not       directly     contradict           any
    representation         that    Andersen         or   FFB    made,     such    that     Catena
    should       immediately      have     suspected        fraud.          See    Antelis        v.
    Freeman, 
    799 F. Supp. 2d 854
    , 862 (N.D. Ill. 2011) (securities
    fraud    claim      did     not   accrue        in     2005    where     there       was     "no
    indication that Plaintiff had any reason to even suspect fraud"
    until one of the wrongdoers declared bankruptcy in April 2010);
    
    Belmont, supra
    , 432 N.J. Super. at 83 (CFA claim did not accrue
    until the plaintiff "had reason to believe" it had suffered
    ascertainable loss).
    Nor    did   the     presence       of   contaminants         reasonably       suggest
    that    Andersen       or   FFB      had   withheld        information        from    Catena.
    Since the 1987 Affidavit only pertained to the activities of
    occupants since 1984, it was plausible that Andersen had no
    knowledge of the activities of pre-1984 occupants.                             It was also
    plausible,      from      Catena's     perspective,           that    Andersen       would    be
    unaware of contamination caused by his own tenants, since his
    1987 Affidavit stated only that, "on information and belief,"
    none of his tenants discharged hazardous wastes on the property.
    Indeed, given that Catena's own environmental assessment in 1989
    20                                    A-4636-13T4
    failed to uncover contamination, it was reasonable to presume
    that Andersen and FFB were unaware of it.                            The fact that PSI's
    May 1998 report stated the contamination was likely caused by
    "airplane       related     industries"         also        suggested        that     none    of
    Andersen's tenants were the cause, since none of them fell into
    that category.          See 
    Mancuso, supra
    , 163 N.J. at 37 (stating that
    patient     was    entitled       to     rely      on       competent        expert       advice
    regarding cause of injuries).
    Given       Andersen's           qualified            representations,              Catena
    reasonably could have assumed that Andersen and FFB were unaware
    of the contamination when they entered into the sale contract in
    June 1988.        See CSAM Capital, Inc. v. Lauder, 
    885 N.Y.S.2d 473
    ,
    478-79    (App.      Div.     2009)       (significant             loss      in     value     of
    investments did not put investors on notice of fraud where,
    under    the    circumstances,         they    "reasonably           could    have     assumed
    that their losses were not necessarily the product of fraud.").
    Because he had no reason to suspect fraud in June or December of
    1998, Catena was unaware of facts suggesting a cause of action
    for   fraud.       Therefore,      he    lacked         a    basis    to   plead      a    well-
    grounded claim.         It follows that his claims had not yet accrued.
    See White v. Mattera, 
    175 N.J. 158
    , 164 (2003) (stating that a
    claim    does     not    accrue    until        "the        date   when      the    right     to
    21                                      A-4636-13T4
    institute and maintain a suit first arose.") (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    Therefore, we must determine at what point Catena, through
    the exercise of reasonable diligence, should have discovered the
    alleged fraud.    
    Partrick, supra
    , 115 N.J. Eq. at 211.            If he can
    demonstrate that reasonable diligence would not have revealed
    the fraud before August 1999 in the case against Andersen, and
    May 2002 in the case against Wells Fargo, his claims will not be
    time-barred.    We are satisfied that Catena has met this burden.
    As a preliminary point, we will not impute knowledge of a
    fraud to a plaintiff who "could not have discovered the fraud
    through the exercise of reasonable diligence."                CSAM 
    Capital, supra
    ,   885   N.Y.S.2d   at   479.        In   assessing   what   reasonable
    diligence would reveal, we will not impute knowledge of facts
    constituting fraud if a plaintiff had no "access to the relevant
    information even if he had endeavored to seek it out."               
    Antelis, supra
    , 799 F. Supp. 2d at 861.         "[T]he time at which a plaintiff
    should discover the facts that constitute the violation cannot
    take place before the plaintiff is able to discover such facts."
    Ibid. (citing 
    Merck, supra
    , 559 U.S. at 
    651, 130 S. Ct. at 1797
    ,
    176 L. Ed. 2d at 598).
    Although Catena may have inferred fraud had he known about
    the 1987 cleanup, he had no access to information that would
    22                             A-4636-13T4
    have revealed that fact, since neither Andersen, FFB nor EWMA
    reported the cleanup to DEP.           Thus, no search of public records
    would have led to discovery of the cleanup.                       Further, their
    concealment of the partial cleanup was so effective that none of
    the numerous environmental assessments commissioned by Catena
    discovered    evidence        that    eighty     to   100    cubic    yards      of
    contaminated soil had been removed and replaced with clean fill.
    It   follows     that    reasonable       diligence    would     not    have
    uncovered facts suggesting fraud until Catena filed suit and had
    the   right   to     compulsory      discovery.       It    was    only   through
    discovery that Catena obtained the EWMA reports, which revealed
    that Andersen and FFB knew about the contamination, performed a
    cleanup, and withheld that information.                There is no evidence
    that a more diligent pre-suit investigation would have led to
    discovery of the EWMA reports or other evidence of the 1987
    cleanup.
    Catena's delay in implementing the MOA does not change the
    fact that reasonable diligence would not have uncovered evidence
    of fraud before he filed suit.                 The question is not whether
    Catena should have been more diligent in his clean-up efforts,
    but rather whether "greater diligence . . . would have uncovered
    the cause of action any sooner."               Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips
    Elecs., N.V., 
    85 A.3d 725
    , 798 (Del. Ch. 2014) (tolling the
    23                                A-4636-13T4
    statute    on    fraud    claim     premised      on    undisclosed    price-fixing
    cartel where plaintiff was "blamelessly ignorant" of that fact).
    We cannot say that it would have, since, even by the early
    2000s, Catena still had no reason to suspect fraud.                         The mere
    presence of contamination was not directly at odds with any
    representations made to Catena before he purchased the property,
    and there was no indication in his consultants' reports that
    contaminated soil had previously been excavated and replaced,
    which may have led him to suspect that Andersen or FFB withheld
    information from him.
    Lastly,       we    reject     Wells      Fargo's    argument    that   Catena's
    delay in asserting the fraud claim resulted in prejudice such
    that the claim should be dismissed on equitable grounds.                           The
    discovery rule accounts for the fact that a victim's belated
    discovery of fraud directly results from the wrongdoer's deceit.
    To give the wrongdoer the benefit of that late discovery would
    convert "the law which was designed to prevent fraud" into the
    "means    by    which    it   is   made    successful     and    secure."      
    Merck, supra
    , 559 U.S. at 
    644, 130 S. Ct. at 1793-94
    , 176 L. Ed. 2d at
    594 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).                          To the
    extent defendants must cope with the loss of documents or fading
    witness    memories,      that     is   the     consequence     of   Andersen's    and
    FFB's calculated silence, not Catena's unreasonable delay.                          In
    24                                A-4636-13T4
    any   event,      defendants   are   not     "peculiarly   or   unusually
    prejudiced," 
    Lopez, supra
    , 62 N.J. at 276, as Catena, who bears
    the burden of proof, must also cope with the loss of evidence.
    In sum, Catena discovered or through reasonable diligence
    could have discovered the facts giving rise to the fraud claims
    no earlier than May 21, 2002.             Therefore, his claims against
    Andersen and Wells Fargo, which were filed less than six years
    after this date, were not time-barred.
    Reversed.    We do not retain jurisdiction.
    25                          A-4636-13T4