Damron v. Media General, Inc. , 1999 Tenn. App. LEXIS 326 ( 1999 )


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  •              IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    GILES DAMRON, on behalf of himself
    and all others similarly situated,
    )
    )
    FILED
    )
    May 25, 1999
    Plaintiff/Appellee,          )        Appeal No.
    )        01-A-01-9805-CV-00251
    Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    VS.                                 )
    Appellate Court Clerk
    )        Lincoln Circuit
    MEDIA GENERAL, INC., NES, II, INC., )        No. C-96-00043
    d/b/a ONDULINE SALES and            )
    SERVICE, and GARDEN STATE           )
    PAPER COMPANY, INC., a wholly       )
    owned subsidiary of                 )
    MEDIA GENERAL, INC.,                )
    )
    Defendants/Appellants.       )
    APPEALED FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LINCOLN COUNTY
    AT FAYETTEVILLE, TENNESSEE
    THE HONORABLE F. LEE RUSSELL, JUDGE
    C.J. GIDEON, JR.
    BRYAN ESSARY
    EDWARD A. HADLEY
    Suite 1900, NationsBank Plaza
    Nashville, Tennessee 37219-1782
    RAYMOND W. FRALEY, JR.
    205 East Market Street
    Fayetteville, Tennessee 37334
    Attorneys for Plaintiff/Appellee
    E. CLIFTON KNOWLES
    ROBERT E. COOPER, JR.
    SAMUEL L. FELKER
    E. STEELE CLAYTON, IV
    Suite 2700, First American Center
    Nashville, Tennessee 37238-2700
    Attorneys for Defendants/Appellants
    W. OVID COLLINS, JR.
    JOSEPH R. WHEELER
    Suite 2700, Nashville City Center
    Nashville, Tennessee 37219
    Attorneys for Tennessee Association of Business
    REVERSED AND DISMISSED
    BEN H. CANTRELL
    PRESIDING JUDGE, M.S.
    CONCUR:
    KOCH, J.
    CAIN, J.
    OPINION
    In this action, the plaintiff sought to represent a class of purchasers of
    a roofing product. The defendants moved for summary judgment on the product
    liability statute of repose, the applicable statute of limitations, the economic loss
    doctrine and laches. The Circuit Court of Lincoln County overruled the motion for
    summary judgment and granted the plaintiff’s motion for class certification. We
    granted the defendants’ motion for an interlocutory appeal under Rule 9, Tenn. R.
    App. Proc. We reverse the lower court’s order and dismiss the action.
    I.
    Onduline roofing material is made of compressed paper fibers
    impregnated with asphalt. In the fall of 1979, Mr. Giles Damron, a Lincoln County
    farmer, bought approximately 5,300 square feet of the material to roof a pig barn.
    Before he completed the roof, he noticed that water collected on its underside and
    dripped on the barn floor. This problem turned out to be persistent, and despite Mr.
    Damron’s efforts to correct it by painting the underside of the roof and installing a
    ventilation system, the roof continued to sweat. However, the water no longer dripped
    on the floor.
    Three years later, the roof developed cracks and started to leak. Mr.
    Damron patched the roof with roofing cement, which temporarily stopped the leaks.
    Over the next two years, additional cracks appeared, however, and Mr. Damron finally
    covered the roof with tin.
    On March 27, 1996, Mr. Damron filed suit in the Circuit Court for Lincoln
    County against three defendants that allegedly manufactured and distributed Onduline
    roofing materials. The complaint sought damages for breach of contract, breach of
    express and implied warranties, misrepresentation, negligence, strict liability, and
    fraud. Mr. Damron sought to represent a class of plaintiffs that had been damaged
    by the failure of Onduline products.
    -2-
    The defendants moved for summary judgment, alleging that Mr.
    Damron’s claims were barred by the product liability statute of repose, the applicable
    statute of limitations, the economic loss doctrine, and laches. The plaintiff responded
    to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and moved for certification of the
    class. The court denied the motion for summary judgment and granted the class
    certification. The trial court and this court granted the defendants’ Rule 9, Tenn. R.
    App. Proc. motion for permission to appeal.
    II.
    THE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS/STATUTE OF REPOSE
    Actions seeking to recover damages for the harm caused by goods that
    fail to meet the promises of the sellers or are defective or unreasonably dangerous
    must be brought within specified time periods, depending on the harm alleged and --
    sometimes -- on the cause of action. See Turner v. Aldor Co. of Nashville, Inc., 
    827 S.W.2d 318
     (Tenn. App. 1991). In general, actions for damages to property must be
    brought within three years of the accrual of the cause of action, 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-105
    (1), except where the action is based on a breach of warranty, in which case
    the action may be brought within four years of accrual. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-2
    -
    725(1). “Accrual” occurs at different times for the different claims. Under 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-105
    (1) the cause of action does not accrue until discovery, Prescott v.
    Adams, 
    627 S.W.2d 134
     (Tenn. App. 1981); under 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 47-2-725
    (1),
    however, the cause of action generally accrues upon tender of delivery, and the time
    may run even before the breach is discovered. Layman v. Keller Ladders, Inc., 
    455 S.W.2d 594
     (Tenn. 1970); Poppenheimer v. Bluff City Motor Homes, 
    658 S.W.2d 106
    (Tenn. App. 1983).
    The discovery rule allows actions to be brought well beyond the
    limitation period measured from the sale of the product or the negligent act. To add
    an outside limit to the exposure period the legislature has seen fit to pass various
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    statutes of repose beyond which a cause of action cannot accrue. Cronin v. Howe,
    
    906 S.W.2d 910
     (Tenn. 1995). Thus, there is a three year statute of repose for
    medical malpractice claims, 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-116
    (a)(3), a four year statute
    of repose for the defective design or construction of improvements to real estate,
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-202
    , and a four year statute of repose for a faulty survey,
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-114
    (a)(running from the date the survey is recorded on the
    plat.) In one form or another all these statutes of repose incorporate a tolling feature
    triggered by fraudulent concealment.
    In 1978 the legislature passed the “Tennessee Product Liability Act of
    1978.” It applied to all actions seeking to recover for personal injuries, death, or
    property damage caused by defective or unreasonably dangerous products, i.e. by
    tangible objects or goods. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-28-102
    (5) and (6). Any action
    “under any substantive legal theory in tort or contract” came within the Act’s
    definitions. 
    Id.
     at (6).
    The Product Liability Act contained its own statute of repose:
    (1)    Any action against a manufacturer or seller
    of a product for injury to person or property caused by its
    defective or unreasonably dangerous condition must be
    brought within the period fixed by §§ 28-3-104, 28-3-105,
    28-3-202 and 47-2-725, but notwithstanding any
    exceptions to these provisions it must be brought within
    six (6) years of the date of injury, in any event, the action
    must be brought within ten (10) years from the date on
    which the product was first purchased for use or
    consumption, or within one (1) year after the expiration of
    the anticipated life of the product, whichever is the
    shorter, except in the case of injury to minors whose
    action must be brought within a period of one(1) year after
    attaining the age of majority, whichever occurs sooner.
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-28-103
    (a).
    Under this statute, an action must first meet the requirements of the
    “ordinary” statutes of limitations; but if any exceptions to these statutes make them
    inapplicable, there is an outside limit of ten years from the date the product is first
    purchased for use or consumption.
    -4-
    Mr. Damron was able to avoid summary judgment in the court below by
    contending that there are facts in dispute relative to whether the defendants
    fraudulently concealed the cause of action from him. The defendants argue that there
    is no fraudulent concealment exception to 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-28-103
    .
    We are persuaded that the defendants are correct. An exception is not
    found in the statute itself, and it appears that the choice not to include the exception
    was deliberately made by the legislature. When the House of Representatives
    debated the bill in 1978, one of the members proposed the following amendment:
    “Any defect discovered in a product during the 10 year
    period for claims which is known to the manufacturer or
    seller, and is concealed by him, shall toll the running of
    the 10 year period and the computation shall
    recommence only when the manufacturer or seller makes
    a bona fide effort to inform persons who possess or use
    the product.
    One of the sponsors moved to table the amendment and the motion
    carried by a vote of fifty-two to forty. Although the amendment’s sponsor was not
    crystal clear in his explanation of the amendment, the amendment itself is clear and
    its defeat is a powerful indication that the House of Representatives intended that a
    ten year period would be the outside limit and would not be affected by concealment
    of a defect by the manufacturer or seller.
    Mr. Damron cites King-Bradwell Partnership v. Johnson Controls, Inc.,
    
    865 S.W.2d 18
     (Tenn. App. 1993) as authority for the proposition that fraudulent
    concealment will toll the products liability statute of repose. In that case, however, the
    court did not address the question directly.         While assuming that fraudulent
    concealment would toll the statute, the court found that the facts in the case were
    insufficient to support a finding of fraudulent concealment. So far as we have been
    able to discover, this is the first case where the parties have joined issue in the state
    courts on the question of whether fraudulent concealment will toll the products liability
    statute of repose.
    -5-
    The issue was raised in the federal court in Hayes v. General Motors
    Corporation, No. 95-5713, 
    1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 22345
     (6th Cir. Aug 8, 1996), and
    the Sixth Circuit concluded that the sweeping language in the statute (“in any event,
    the action must be brought within ten years . . .”) allowed for no exceptions.
    Mr. Damron also relies on an earlier case, Patten v. Standard Oil Co. of
    Louisiana, 
    55 S.W.2d 759
     (Tenn. 1933), for the proposition that all statutes of
    limitations in Tennessee are statutes of repose and that fraudulent concealment will
    toll the running of the statute. That conclusion is drawn from a statement by the court
    near the end of that opinion, after the court had already found that the plaintiff had not
    alleged facts amounting to fraud, that “the statute of limitations is looked upon with
    favor as a statute of repose.” 
    55 S.W.2d at 762
    . We think, however, if that was the
    view of the Supreme Court in 1933, the court abandoned that view completely in
    subsequent cases. See Harrison v. Schrader, 
    569 S.W.2d 822
     (Tenn. 1977); Watts
    v. Putnam Co., 
    525 S.W.2d 488
     (Tenn. 1975) (dealing with the question of how
    discovery affects statutes of limitation and statutes of repose.)
    We are also aware of cases in which the courts have tolled the running
    of a statute of repose for reasons not recognized in the statute itself. See Bowers v.
    Hammond, 
    954 S.W.2d 752
     (Tenn. App. 1997)(medical malpractice statute of repose
    tolled by minority of the plaintiff).
    In none of these cases, however, do we have a strong indication from
    the legislature of its intent to make the statute of repose the outside limit in which the
    cause of action could accrue. We hold that the statute of repose in 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-28-103
    (a) is a bar to Mr. Damron’s claim.
    Since we have held that Mr. Damron’s claim must be dismissed, the
    issue of his ability to represent a class of Onduline purchasers is moot. We,
    therefore, will not address that issue.
    -6-
    The judgment of the court below is reversed and the complaint is
    dismissed. Remand the cause to the Circuit Court of Lincoln County for any further
    proceedings that may become necessary. Tax the costs on appeal to the appellee.
    _________________________________
    BEN H. CANTRELL,
    PRESIDING JUDGE, M.S.
    CONCUR:
    _____________________________
    WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
    _____________________________
    WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE
    -7-