Davenport v. Comstock Hills-Reno

46 P.3d 62, 118 Nev. 389, 118 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2002 Nev. LEXIS 47
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 2002
Docket37044
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 46 P.3d 62 (Davenport v. Comstock Hills-Reno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. Comstock Hills-Reno, 46 P.3d 62, 118 Nev. 389, 118 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2002 Nev. LEXIS 47 (Neb. 2002).

Opinions

[390]*390OPINION

By the Court,

Rose, L:

As the primary issue of this appeal, we consider the breadth of Nevada’s statutes of repose, which absolutely bar any action stemming from injuries caused by a negligently designed or constructed improvement to real property after a certain period of time has passed. In this case, appellant sued the respondents for injuries that she suffered after falling from a retaining wall on their property. The district court granted summary judgment to the respondents, concluding, among other things, that a statute of repose barred the suit. We conclude that the district court interpreted the statute of repose far too broadly, and we reverse.

FACTS

Appellant Milsen Davenport was a tenant at the Comstock Hills Apartments in Reno, a complex owned by the respondents, Comstock Hills-Reno and Reitman Reno Properties Inc. (collectively “Comstock Hills”).

On June 25, 1999, after returning home from work, Davenport took her dog for a walk around the apartment complex. During the walk, Davenport and her dog traversed a sidewalk in a common area of the complex. To one side of the sidewalk was a cluster of two-story apartments. To the other side was an area of grass running along the sidewalk and separating the sidewalk and apartments from the parking lot. The grass strip was approximately eleven feet wide and sloped slightly downward toward the parking [391]*391lot. The grass strip was elevated above the parking lot approximately four feet and was supported laterally by a white brick retaining wall. The top of the retaining wall was more or less flush with the grass area it supported. There was no fence or other structure along the edge of the retaining wall’s precipice.

As Davenport and her dog walked along the sidewalk, a girl in a nearby apartment unexpectedly let two dogs out of her apartment. The two dogs were larger than Davenport’s dog, and they rushed toward Davenport and her dog snarling and snapping. Davenport quickly retreated backwards to pull her dog away from the attacking dogs. She moved off of the sidewalk and across the grass strip. In her haste, she backed up to the edge of the grass strip, stumbled over the edge of the retaining wall, and fell onto the parking lot below. In consequence, she suffered fractures to a rib, a hip, and a femur.

Construction of the retaining wall had been completed in 1987. The parties seem to agree that the retaining wall has remained structurally unchanged since that time. Also of note, Comstock Hills is not the original owner of the apartment complex.

Davenport sued Comstock Hills, alleging that it had acted negligently by failing to design, build, and maintain a reasonably safe retaining wall and by failing to warn her of the hazard. She requested an award of $43,867.00 in medical expenses, in addition to awards for loss of income and pain and suffering. Later in the proceeding, Comstock Hills filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Nevada’s statute of repose barred all of Davenport’s claims and, in addition, that Davenport could not prevail on her failure-to-warn claim because the alleged hazard was obvious. The district court agreed and granted summary judgment in favor of Comstock Hills on those bases. Davenport appealed.

DISCUSSION

In contrast to a statute of limitation, which forecloses suit after a fixed period of time following the occurrence or discovery of an injury, a statute of repose “bar[s] causes of action after a certain period of time, regardless of whether damage or an injury has been discovered.”1 For instance, NRS 11.203 bars causes of action for, among other things, personal injury or property damage allegedly caused by a deficiency in the improvements to real property when the action is commenced more than ten years after “substantial completion” of the improvements in question. If the damage or injury occurs after the specified period, it is barred [392]*392without regard to whether the statute of limitations has run on the injured party’s claim.2 Similarly, NRS 11.204 and 11.205 respectively set time limits of eight years for “latent” or non-apparent deficiencies and of six years for “patent” or apparent deficiencies. Nevada’s statutes of repose protect ‘ ‘the owner, occupier or any person performing or furnishing the design, planning, supervision or observation of construction, or the construction of an improvement to real property.”3

In the case at hand, the district court granted summary judgment on the premise that Comstock Hills was an “owner” protected by the statutes of repose. Davenport acknowledges that Nevada’s statutes of repose protect owners of real property, such as Comstock Hills, but she asserts that the legislature intended that in order to claim the protection of the statutes, the owner must have actually participated in designing or constructing the improvements that caused the injury. In the proceedings below, Davenport emphasized the fact that Comstock Hills was not the original owner, and therefore did not participate in designing or constructing the retaining wall and elevated grass area. Responding to this argument, Comstock Hills asserts that Davenport’s interpretation of the statutes of repose would protect only original property owners. Comstock Hills argues that such an interpretation would violate equal protection by creating an arbitrary pair of classifications, namely, original owners that participate in designing or constructing an improvement, whom the statutes of repose would protect, and subsequent owners that did not participate, who would enjoy no protection. But these arguments ignore a key facet of the statutes of repose — the type of action the statutes bar.4

A review of the plain language of the statutes of repose as well as their fundamental purpose presses the conclusion that the legislature intended to shield those involved in creating improvements [393]*393from actions grounded in design or construction defect, but not from actions asserting negligent maintenance.5 Turning first to the language, we note that the statutes specifically protect the “owner” and “occupier” of the property, but the statutes also contain a broad catchall category that includes “any person performing or furnishing the design, planning, supervision or observation of construction, or the construction of an improvement to real property.”6 The phrasing of this catchall category indicates the legislature’s intent to qualify the functions that the statutes are concerned with, namely, fimctions that have to do with designing, planning, and constructing, or supervising or observing the same, in a word — creating—the improvement. Nothing in the statutes’ language indicates that their protection extends to functions performed after the improvement in question has been completed, such as maintenance.

The basic purpose behind the statutes of repose confirms this interpretation: the purpose is “ ‘to require trials of actions based upon defects in construction to be held within a relatively short time after the work is completed.’ ”7

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Davenport v. Comstock Hills-Reno
46 P.3d 62 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 P.3d 62, 118 Nev. 389, 118 Nev. Adv. Rep. 39, 2002 Nev. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-comstock-hills-reno-nev-2002.