Kuk v. Nalley

166 P.3d 47, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 108, 2007 WL 2570024
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 2007
DocketS-12024
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 166 P.3d 47 (Kuk v. Nalley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuk v. Nalley, 166 P.3d 47, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 108, 2007 WL 2570024 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

A statute provides that when a defendant leaves the state her absence is not part of a limitations period. Does this statute apply when she is temporarily out of the state but amenable to service of process? We answer "no" because our case law establishes that the absence contemplated by the statute must obstruct or prevent a suit. This interpretation serves the policy of limitations statutes by providing a definite time and avoiding needless uncertainty.

Facts and Proceedings

On November 17, 2002, motor vehicles driven by Janet Nalley and Thomas Kuk collided. Thomas, his wife, Sabina, and their children, Ryan and Laura, were injured in the accident. More than two years later, on November 30, 2004, Thomas and Sabina sued Nalley for personal injuries and property damage arising out of the accident. In the same suit Thomas also sued on behalf of the Kuks' children.

Nalley moved for summary judgment, arguing that the two-year statute of limitations applicable to tort claims for personal injury and property damage, AS 09.10.070, barred the claims of the adult Kuks. 1 The Kuks opposed the motion and filed a cross-motion on the same issue, arguing that under AS 09.10.1830 the statute of limitations should be extended for the period of time that Nalley was absent from the state during the limitations period.

The superior court granted Nalley's motion for summary judgment and denied the cross-motion of the Kuks. 2 A final judgment *49 was then entered in accordance with the court's summary judgment order in favor of Nalley and against Thomas and Sabina Kuk. From this judgment the Kuks have appealed.

Introductory Discussion

As this case is presented, there are no genuine issues of material fact. We therefore review the superior court's grant of summary judgment nondeferentially in order to determine whether Nalley was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 3

The Kuks point to the fact that Nal-ley was outside of Alaska for health and surgery reasons from November 2003 to June 2004. They argue that this period of absence should be excluded from the two-year statute of limitations under the absent-from-the state tolling provision contained in AS 09.10.130. 4 Nalley argues that our decision in Byrne v. Ogle 5 held that the absence tolling provision in AS 09.10.1830 does not apply where substituted service is available under AS 09.05.020(a) 6 and AS 09.05.040 7 and that substituted service on her was available during her absence.

The Kuks seek to distinguish Byrne. They argue that Byrne held that the absence tolling provision does not apply only when statutory substituted service under AS 09.05.020 and .040 is available. They contend that substituted service was not available because even though Nalley had temporarily "departed" from the state for purposes of the tolling statute she had not "moved" from the state within the meaning of the substituted-service statute. Therefore Nalley was not a nonresident-as required under section .020-and she was not a person "who has moved to another state after the accident"as required under section .040. They argue that since Byrne does not apply, the case is controlled by the plain language of the see-ond sentence of AS 09.10.1830; "If a person departs from the state ... the time of absence ... is not part of the time limited for *50 the commencement of the action." Therefore the time of Nalley's absence should not be counted in computing the two-year limitations period. The Kuks also contend that the tolling provision does not require a showing that a plaintiff is actually unable to effect service on an absent defendant, but instead that "[the statute correctly presumes that a seven-month absence seriously decreases the Kuks' ability to prove their cause of action and effectuate commencement of an action against Ms. Nalley."

We do not find it necessary to resolve the question whether the "moved to" language of AS 09.05.040 applies to any departure from the state. Instead, we affirm on the basis that the reasoning in Byrne is not limited to the substituted-service statute, but also applies to extraterritorial service under the Civil Rules authorized by the long-arm statute, AS 09.05.015. Our reasons follow.

Byrne v. Ogle

Alaska Statute 09.10.130 has not been changed since it was first adopted by the state legislature in 1962. Similar provisions existed in the statutes governing the Territory of Alaska and the pre-territorial District of Alaska. 8 Numerous other states also have statutes with similar tolling provisions. 9

This court addressed the continuing relevance of the absence tolling statute in Byrne. The defendant, Ogle, was in an automobile accident in Alaska. 10 The United States Army rotated him out of the state before the two-year statute of limitations ran, but he remained amenable to service under the statutory substituted-service provisions of AS 09.05.020 and AS 09.05.040. 11 We held that the tolling statute and the substituted-service statute must be examined together in order to determine the true meaning of the tolling statute:

It is conceded that if the tolling statute is examined in isolation, while ignoring all other considerations, it might be read as indicating that where a defendant departs from the state after a cause of action accrues, the time he is absent should not be considered as part of the period of limitation. However, in order to give a statute its true meaning, it must be examined in conjunction with other statutes bearing upon the problem being considered.[ 12 ]

We noted that under the substituted-service statute the plaintiff was able to serve the defendant notwithstanding his absence from the state. 13 Because the defendant's absence was thus irrelevant to the ability of the plaintiff to commence and maintain a suit, we concluded that applying the tolling statute was neither necessary nor justifiable:

The right of the plaintiff to commence his action and obtain a judgment, being complete and unaffected by the defendant's absence, it is not necessary or justifiable to extend AS 09.10.180 to cover this situation in which the appellee was personally absent, but at all times subject to substituted service upon the Commissioner of Revenue. To ignore this fact and give a broader application to the tolling statute would lead to undesirable results inconsistent with the purposes of statutes dealing with periods of limitation.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P.3d 47, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 108, 2007 WL 2570024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuk-v-nalley-alaska-2007.