Martin Griffin and Denise Griffin v. Garratt-Callahan Company

74 F.3d 36, 1996 WL 21381
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 18, 1996
Docket499, Docket 95-7430
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 74 F.3d 36 (Martin Griffin and Denise Griffin v. Garratt-Callahan Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin Griffin and Denise Griffin v. Garratt-Callahan Company, 74 F.3d 36, 1996 WL 21381 (2d Cir. 1996).

Opinion

CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiffs Martin and Denise Griffin appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (I. Leo Glasser, District Judge), granting summary judgment in favor of the defendant, Garratt-Callahan Company (Garratt-Callahan). The District Court concluded that the plaintiffs’ claims were time-barred because New York’s statute of limitations for injuries arising from exposure to toxic substances, N.Y.Civ.Prac.L. & R. 214-c, affords potential plaintiffs three years from the date of discovery of the injury, and Mr. Griffin discovered his injuries in 1985, more than seven years before he began his suit. The District Court rejected Mr. Griffin’s contention that injuries he sustained in 1991, less than three years before he sued Garratt-Callahan, were “separate and distinct” injuries that triggered a new limitations period. The court also dismissed Mr. Griffin’s breach of warranty claims as time-barred by N.Y.U.C.C. § 2-725, which allows suit only within four years after the last date of delivery of a product. Finally, the District Court dismissed Mrs. Griffin’s claims for loss of consortium because those claims were derivative of Mr. Griffin’s claims and hence were only viable so long as Mr. Griffin’s claims were good.

We review a District Court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. See LaFond v. General Physics Serv. Corp., 50 F.3d 165, 171 (2d Cir.1995). And summary judgment is appropriate only when, taking the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, those facts warrant a judgment for the moving party as a matter of law. See id.

*38 Between 1981 and 1991, Mr. Griffin was an employee in a Manhattan office building. His responsibilities included changing chemicals in the building’s water tower. During the course of his employment he regularly handled certain chemicals manufactured by Garratt-Callahan. In 1985, while at work, Mr. Griffin apparently inhaled a substantial amount of the chemicals that he was putting into the water tower. Soon after this incident, he was admitted to a hospital and diagnosed with pneumonia and emphysema. His doctor told him that, particularly given the timing of the injury, his injury was likely to have been caused by the chemicals, but added that he could not say unequivocally that Mr. Griffin’s lung problems were caused by these chemicals. His doctors never discussed any other possible cause of the injuries with Mr. Griffin. Between 1985 and 1990, Mr. Griffin experienced various lung problems, ranging from the above-mentioned pneumonia and emphysema to surgery for growths on his lungs. The pain he suffered required him to take valium and other drugs, and in 1987 he underwent treatment for addiction to valium. After his lung surgery, which occurred in 1990, Mr. Griffin’s addiction to his pain-killers apparently recurred. In 1992, Mr. Griffin suffered a seizure as a result of his drug addiction. During the seizure, he collapsed and fractured his vertebrae.

Mr. Griffin brought suit against Garratt-Callahan in 1993. Both parties agree that the relevant limitations period is dictated by N.Y.Civ.Prac.L. & R. 214 — e(2), which starts the clock running at the date when an individual discovers, or reasonably should have discovered, an injury. Mr. Griffin contends that the limitations period requires not only the discovery of an injury, but also discovery of the cause of that injury. And he asserts that he did not know that his injury was caused by exposure to Garratt-Callahan’s chemicals until 1992.

In support of his position that the statute of limitations does not run until a potential plaintiff has discovered the cause of her or his injury, Mr. Griffin notes that the New York legislature passed § 214 — c(2) in order to liberalize the limitations period for individuals exposed to toxic substances. See, e.g., Jensen v. General Elec. Co., 82 N.Y.2d 77, 85-87, 603 N.Y.S.2d 420, 423-24, 623 N.E.2d 547, 550-51 (1993). The old New York rule was that a claim was time-barred if it was asserted more than three years after initial exposure to the toxic substance. Because many injuries from toxic exposure do not manifest themselves until long after initial exposure the legislature passed § 214-c(2) in 1986. See id.

Mr. Griffin argues that the purpose of § 214-c(2) would be substantially negated by a rule that started the running of the limitations period before an injured person could reasonably be aware that a known injury was in fact caused by toxic exposure. This argument has force. Indeed, Judge Weinstein recently went a good way toward adopting it when, in Braune v. Abbott Laboratories, 895 F.Supp. 530, 541-46 (E.D.N.Y.1995), he held, in the context of a DES class-action suit, that the time period under § 214-c(2) does not start running until the injured person knows, or ought reasonably to know, that the injury suffered was the result of human, rather than natural causes. Judge Weinstein then added that interpreting § 214-c(2) to require discovery of both an injury and its cause might well be most consistent with the expressed goals of the legislature that enacted this liberalizing statute of limitations.

There is, moreover, strong additional support for this approach in the historical context of the statute. In a memorandum approving the bill, the governor noted that the old rule was amended in large part so that New York could “join[] the more than 40 other states which have legislatively or judicially created” similar discovery-rule limitations periods. Governor’s Memorandum filed with Senate Bill Number 9391-A (July 30, 1986), in Governor’s Bill Jacket, Chapter 682, 1986 (N.Y.Legis.Serv.) And most of those other states that New York sought to join require that a potential plaintiff discover — or that he or she reasonably should have discovered — both the injury and its cause to trigger the limitations period. See, e.g., Braune, 895 F.Supp. at 548-51 (citing cases from numerous jurisdictions); Dawson v. Eli Lilly & Co., 543 F.Supp. 1330, 1338 (D.D.C. *39 1982) (discussing discovery rules generally). It seems unlikely that the New York legislature, which sought to bring New York law in line with the law applied in other jurisdictions and to make the state’s limitations rules more hospitable to plaintiffs’ toxic tort claims, would silently create a rule significantly more restrictive than that applied in most of those states.

Nonetheless, several New York courts that have considered the application of § 214-c(2) have read the statute to require an injured person to file suit "within three years after discovery of the injury — regardless of whether the cause of the injury was known at that time. See Sweeney v. General Printing, Inc., 210 A.D.2d 865, 865-66, 621 N.Y.S.2d 132, 133 (3d Dep’t 1994); Johnson v. Ashland Oil, Inc., 195 A.D.2d 980, 981, 601 N.Y.S.2d 756, 757 (4th Dep’t 1993). These courts note, and Garratt-Callahan emphasizes, that an interpretation of the statute requiring both discovery of the injury and discovery of the cause of the injury would make § 214-c(4) of the statute superfluous.

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Bluebook (online)
74 F.3d 36, 1996 WL 21381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-griffin-and-denise-griffin-v-garratt-callahan-company-ca2-1996.