Greczyn v. Colgate-Palmolive

869 A.2d 866, 183 N.J. 5, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 210
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 21, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 869 A.2d 866 (Greczyn v. Colgate-Palmolive) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greczyn v. Colgate-Palmolive, 869 A.2d 866, 183 N.J. 5, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 210 (N.J. 2005).

Opinion

*7 Justice LONG

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On this appeal, we address the interplay of the statute of repose protecting designers and builders, N.J.S.A. 2A.T4-1.1, and the rule governing our fictitious-party practice. R. 4:26-4. The case arose when plaintiff was injured on a staircase in a building approximately nine years after its completion. One month prior to the expiration of the ten-year statute of repose, plaintiff filed suit against the building’s owner and several fictitious defendants, identified as the designers and builders of the staircase. A year after the expiration of the ten-year period, plaintiff amended her complaint, substituting the name of the designer of the staircase for one of the fictitious defendants. The designer moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted and the Appellate Division affirmed. We granted plaintiff’s petition for certification and now reverse.

We hold that, when plaintiffs injury and the filing of her lawsuit occur within the period of repose, utilization of our fictitious-party practice allows a previously unknown, although functionally identified, designer or builder to be named after the expiration of the period of repose, so long as plaintiff has acted diligently.

I

The essential facts in the ease are not in dispute. Plaintiff, Wendy Greczyn tripped and fell on a staircase in the Colgate-Palmolive office center in Piseataway on March 11, 1999. On October 3, 2000, Greczyn filed suit to recover damages for personal injuries allegedly arising from that fall. 1 She joined her employer, Colgate-Palmolive, solely for the purposes of discovery and named as additional defendants John Does, one through twenty, and ABC Corps., one through twenty. Greczyn described *8 fictitious defendants eleven through fifteen as the designers of the staircase on which she fell, and then, during discovery, learned that Kling .Lindquist was the designer involved in the renovation and construction of that staircase. Kling Lindquist substantially completed its work on the staircase in November 1990, nearly ten years prior to Greezyn’s initial complaint. 2 In October 2001, a trial judge granted Greezyn’s motion to amend her complaint, substituting Kling Lindquist for a fictitious defendant. Greczyn filed an amended complaint in December 2001, explicitly naming Kling Lindquist in the suit for the first time.

In March 2003, a different trial judge granted Kling Lindquist’s motion for summary judgment based on the ten-year statute of repose found in N.J.S.A. 2A:14-1.1.

The Appellate Division affirmed, relying on the distinction between a statute of limitations and a statute of repose. Acknowledging the considerations undergirding fictitious-party practice, the court nevertheless concluded that a statute of repose does not permit “relation back” under fictitious-party practice because relation back “would result in the complete evisceration of the period of repose the Legislature intended to confer.” Greczyn v. Colgate-Palmolive, 367 N.J.Super. 385, 393, 842 A2d 895, 900 (App. Div.2004). Moreover, the court concluded that because a statute of repose is substantive, it cannot be tolled under equitable principles. Id. at 394, 842 A2d at 901. This petition for certification ensued. 180 N.J. 453, 852 A2d 190.

II

The parties reiterate the arguments they advanced before the Appellate Division. Greczyn contends that both the accident and *9 the original lawsuit occurred within the ten-year statute of repose and that that is all that is required. She argues that the occurrence of the injury and the filing of suit within the ten-year period is what distinguishes this case from the cases cited by Kling Lindquist and the Appellate Division. She further argues that any concern over endlessly extending the liability of designers and builders into the future are overstated in light of the requirement of diligence in fictitious-party practice. Finally, she urges “substantial compliance” as an alternative ground for reversing the Appellate Division.

Fling Lindquist counters that the plain language of N.J.S.A 2A:14-1.1 prohibits the importation of the fictitious-party practice rules into the statute of repose; that that statute created substantive rights that we are without power to alter; that our longstanding jurisprudence supports the imperviousness of the statute of repose to Greczyn’s attack; and that equitable notions such as substantial compliance have no place in a statute of repose analysis.

Ill

Through its statute of repose, New Jersey provides protection from liability for architects and builders after a specific time period. N.J.SA 2A:14-1.1 provides in relevant part:

No action ... to recover damages for any deficiency in the design, planning, surveying, supervision or construction of an improvement to real property ... shall be brought against any person performing or furnishing the design, planning, surveying, supervision of construction of such improvement to real property, more than 10 years after the performance or furnishing of such services and construction.

The legislative history of the act is singularly unhelpful. As we observed in Rosenberg v. Town of North Bergen, 61 N.J. 190, 194, 293 A2d 662, 664 (1972), it is “meager and unrevealing.” See also O’Connor v. Altus, 67 N.J. 106, 121, 335 A2d 545, 552 (1975) (stating that legislative history is “of little assistance”). We do know this however: the adoption of the discovery rule and the repudiation of the “completed and accepted rule” were two “unre *10 lated developments in the law [that] may well have provided the motivation for [N.J.S.A. 2A.14-1.1].” Rosenberg, supra, 61 N.J. at 194, 293 A.2d at 664.

The discovery rule provides that the statute of limitations does not start to run until a victim discovers or should have discovered that a wrong has been inflicted. Fernandi v. Strully, 35 N.J. 434, 173 A.2d 277 (1961). The advent of the discovery rule exposed defendants, including architects and builders, to “potential liability for injuries caused by defective workmanship [that] would last indefinitely, inasmuch as many defects would often not be discovered or give rise to a claim for damages until an injury had in fact occurred.” E.A. Williams v. Russo Development Corp., 82 N.J. 160, 165, 411 A2d 697, 699 (1980) (citing O’Connor v. Altus, supra, 67 N.J. at 117, 335 A2d at 550-51; Lunch, ‘Why Statutes of Limitations?,” 22 Consulting Engineer, 70, 70-71 (February 1964)).

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Bluebook (online)
869 A.2d 866, 183 N.J. 5, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greczyn-v-colgate-palmolive-nj-2005.