Dickie v. Farmers Union Oil Co. of LaMoure

2000 ND 111, 611 N.W.2d 168, 2000 N.D. LEXIS 122, 2000 WL 676110
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 2000
Docket990389
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 2000 ND 111 (Dickie v. Farmers Union Oil Co. of LaMoure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickie v. Farmers Union Oil Co. of LaMoure, 2000 ND 111, 611 N.W.2d 168, 2000 N.D. LEXIS 122, 2000 WL 676110 (N.D. 2000).

Opinion

NEUMANN, Justice.

[¶ 1] Invoking N.D.R.App.P. 47, the United States District Court, Southeastern Division for the District of North Dakota, certified the following question of law to this Court:

Is N.D. Cent.Code § 28-01.3-08, the North Dakota Product Liability Act Statute of Repose, unconstitutional under Article I, § 21 of the North Dakota Constitution because it denies to the plaintiffs in this action equal protection of the law?

Our answer is that N.D.C.C. § 28-01.3-08 creates an unconstitutional classification in violation of N.D. Const, art. I, § 21.

I

[¶ 2] A statement of facts relevant to this question is supplied by the Federal District Court order. On August 5, 1998, Lillian Maria Dickie, while employed by Peter Schockman on the Schockman farm, sustained serious burn injuries from an explosion and fire attributed to a gas leak through an underground pipe which connected gas storage tanks to an LP gas-fired grain dryer. On October 6, 1975, LaMouTe Farmers Union Oil Company (“Farmers”) sold and delivered black iron pipe to Orville Schockman, Peter Schoek-man’s father. Farmers installed the pipe beneath the ground on the Schockman farm, connecting one storage tank to a grain dryer. Lillian Dickie and her husband, John Dickie, claim that when the pipe was installed by employees of Farmers it was not protected against corrosion and was, therefore, in violation of the National Fire Protection Association codes. After the August 5, 1998 explosion and fire, the pipe was exhumed and examined. A leak was found in the pipe. The Dickies claim corrosion caused the leak.

[¶ 3] The Dickies commenced a products liability action against Farmers, seeking damages for injuries caused by the explosion. Farmers asserted the Dickies’ claims are barred by the statute of repose under N.D.C.C. § 28-01.3-08. The Federal District Court, recognizing this Court had declared a prior version of a similar statute of repose unconstitutional, certified the foregoing question of law to this Court.

II

[¶ 4] Section 28-01.3-08, N.D.C.C., as enacted by the legislature in 1995, provides in relevant part:

*170 28-01.3-08. Statute of limitation and repose.
1.Except as provided in subsections 4 and 5, there may be no recovery of damages in a products liability action unless the injury, death, or property damage occurs within ten years of the date of initial purchase for use or consumption, or within eleven years of the date of manufacture of a product.

[¶ 5] This Court, in Hanson v. Williams County, 389 N.W.2d 319, 328 (N.D.1986), declared unconstitutional a substantively identical statute of repose, enacted by the 1979 legislature and codified at N.D.C.C. § 28-01.1-02. 1 In Hanson we applied an equal protection analysis to the 1979 statute of repose and determined it involved important substantive rights requiring an intermediate standard of review:

A statute of repose period begins to run from the occurrence of some event other than the event of an injury that gives rise to a cause of action and, therefore, bars a cause of action before the injury occurs. A person injured after the statutory period, of repose is left without a remedy for the injury.

Id. at 321.

While there are economic consequences for manufacturers and them insurers underlying the legislation in question, we believe our focus must be on the individuals affected. We are unwilling to view human life and safety as simply a matter of economics.... [T]he right to recover for personal injuries is an important substantive right. We conclude that the appropriate standard of review to be applied in the present case is the intermediate standard or the close correspondence test.

Id. at 325 (citation omitted).

The question, therefore, is whether or not there is such a close correspondence between this statutory classification and the legislative goals as would justify this classification.

Id. at 327. In performing the equal protection analysis in Hanson, this Court expressed its concern about statutes “which arbitrarily deny one class of persons important substantive rights to life and safety which are available to other persons.” Id. at,328. This Court stated the legislature had failed to advance a basis for selecting the period of years for bar or repose other than the economic interests of the manufacturers and suppliers and concluded there was no close correspondence between the legislative goals and the classification created by the statute to withstand the equal protection challenge. Id.

[¶ 6] While conceding the 1979 and 1995 legislation is substantively identical, Farmers argues the 1995 legislature demonstrated a close correspondence between the goals sought and the legislative classification allowing personal injury actions by persons injured within, but not beyond, 10 years of the date of initial purchase or 11 years of the date of manufacture of a product. The legislative intent for adopting the 1995 statute of repose is expressed, in relevant part, under N.D.C.C. § 28-01.3-07(2) and (3):

2. In recent years it has become increasingly evident that there are still serious problems with the current civil justice system. As a result, there is an urgent need for additional legislation to establish clear and predictable rules with respect to certain matters relating to products liability actions.
3. The purpose of sections 28-01.3-08 and 28-01.3-09 is to clarify and improve the method of determining responsibility for the payment of dam *171 ages in products liability litigation; to restore balance and predictability between the consumer and the manufacturer or seller in product liability litigation; to bring about a more fair and equitable resolution of controversies in products liability litigation; to reenact a statute of repose to provide a reasonable period of time for the commencement of products liability litigation after a manufacturer or seller has parted with possession of its product; to address problems that have been created by judicial interpretation of our previous enactments; to enact, with minor changes, several provisions of former chapter 28-01.1; and to simplify and provide an increased degree of certainty and predictability to our products liability laws.

Farmers argues the 1979 statute of repose was enacted to reduce products liability insurance costs, but the 1995 legislation was primarily enacted to provide a reasonable period of time for commencement of products liability litigation and thereby establish a needed degree of certainty and predictability in the law.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 ND 111, 611 N.W.2d 168, 2000 N.D. LEXIS 122, 2000 WL 676110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickie-v-farmers-union-oil-co-of-lamoure-nd-2000.