McCroskey v. Bryant Air Conditioning Company

524 S.W.2d 487, 17 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 454, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 668
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by148 cases

This text of 524 S.W.2d 487 (McCroskey v. Bryant Air Conditioning Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCroskey v. Bryant Air Conditioning Company, 524 S.W.2d 487, 17 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 454, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 668 (Tenn. 1975).

Opinions

OPINION

HENRY, Justice.

This products liability action presents the question of when the statute of limitations begins to run.

I.

The cause of action for personal injuries and wrongful death is based upon an al[488]*488legedly defective gas furnace. Named as parties defendant are the manufacturer, the distributor, the general contractor, the sub-contractor and installer, and the owners of the apartment building. Recovery is predicated upon negligence, strict liability, misrepresentation and breach of warranty.

The record reflects that the gas furnace was manufactured in 1967 and distributed and installed on or about 9 February 1968. The injuries were sustained by Mattie J. McCroskey on 1 May 1971. Suit was filed 28 July 1971. Mrs. McCroskey died on 10 September 1971. After her death the suit was properly and timely revived, and an amended and substituted complaint was filed.

All parties moved the Court for a summary judgment upon the ground that the suit was barred by Sec. 28-304 T.C.A.

Relying primarily upon Jackson v. General Motors, 223 Tenn. 12, 441 S.W.2d 482 (1969) and Ford Motor Company v. Moulton, 511 S.W.2d 690 (Tenn.1974), and with evident reluctance (stating that he was “bound to follow (laws and decisions) even those which may be offensive to one’s traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice”), the trial judge sustained all motions, held that the cause of action was barred by the one year statute of limitations, and dismissed the suit.

In complete fairness to the Trial Judge, we acknowledge the correctness of his actions when confronted, as he was, with the applicable statutory and decisional law, by which he was bound.

This Court labors under no such handicap.

II.

The time sequence becomes important.

On the date of the sale of this product and on the date of its distribution, Sec. 28-304, T.C.A. read in pertinent part as follows:

Actions . . . for injuries to the person . . . shall be commenced within one (1) year after cause of action accrued.

On 31 January 1969 this Court filed its opinion in Jackson v. General Motors, supra, holding that under Sec. 28-304, T.C.A. the statute begins to run on the date of purchase of the defective commodity and not the date of the injury.

The Legislature reacted promptly and properly to correct the harsh results of this holding. Sec. 28-304 was amended,1 by adding thereto the following:

For the purpose of this section, insofar as products liability cases are concerned, the cause of action for injury to the person shall accrue on the date of the personal injury not the date of the negligence or the sale of a product .
This act shall not apply to causes of action accruing prior to the effective date of this act.2

The Code section as thus amended was in full force and effect on the date of injury (1 May 1971) in this case.

On the surface, the suit was permitted by the Code section as amended; however, under Jackson the plaintiff’s cause of action accrued on the date of sale (Feb. 9, 1968) and expired Feb. 9, 1969, despite the fact that the injury had not yet occurred. This conclusion is mandated by the holding of this Court in Flynn v. Camp, 225 Tenn. 457, 470 S.W.2d 347 (1971).

Next in point of time the Legislature in 1972 again responded by further amending 3 Sec. 28-304, T.C.A., by deleting the language providing that the 1969 act would not apply to causes of action accruing prior to its effective date and adding to the Code section the following:

[489]*489and in said products cases no person shall be deprived of his right to maintain his cause of action until one (1) year from the date of his injury and under no circumstances shall his cause of action be barred before he sustains an injury.4

This amendment, no doubt, was prompted by the holding of this Court in Flynn v. Camp, supra.

There the law stood until this Court decided Ford Motor Company v. Moulton, 511 S.W.2d 690 (Tenn.1974) holding that the 1972 amendment could not be applied retrospectively.

It was in this setting that the trial judge dismissed this suit. His action, followed by this appeal, forces this Court to re-examine Jackson v. General Motors, supra. We reexamine this case in the light of the evident public policy of our state as declared by the Legislature and of the recent decision of this Court in Teeters v. Currey, 518 S.W.2d 512 (Tenn.1974).

III.

We approach this analysis from a standpoint of reason, logic and fundamental fairness. These are criteria by which any rule of law should be tested. When we weigh the rule of Jackson v. General Motors, supra, in the balance, we find it to be wanting. It is only just for us to decree that in any tort action the cause of action accrues when, and only when, the force wrongfully put in motion, produces injury. We cannot embrace or continue any rule of law which charges a litigant with sleeping upon any right which he does not have.

We are challenged by the cogent and colorful language of Judge Jerome Frank’s dissenting opinion in Dincher v. Marlin Firearms Co., 198 F.2d 821 (2 Cir. 1952):

Except in topsy-turvey land, you can’t die before you are conceived, or be divorced before ever you marry, or harvest a crop never planted, or burn down a house never built, or miss a train running on a non-existent railroad. For substantially similar reasons, it has always heretofore been accepted, as a sort of legal “axiom,” that a statute of limitations does not begin to run against a cause of action before that cause of action exists, i. e., before a judicial remedy is available to the plaintiff. Id. at 823.

In Campbell v. Colt Industries, Inc., 349 F.Supp. 166 (W.D.Va.1972) the court in holding that, whether based on negligence or breach of warranty, a cause of action for personal injuries did not accrue until the injury occurred, quoted from the Virginia case of Caudill v. Wise Rambler, Inc., 210 Va. 11, 168 S.E.2d 257 (1969), as follows:

Obviously, since the plaintiff had not been injured at the time she purchased the car, she could not then maintain an action for her injuries. To say, then, that her right of action accrued before her injuries were received is to say that she was without remedy to recover damages for her alleged injuries. Such an unjust and inequitable result is not the purpose of statutes of limitation. They are de[490]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
524 S.W.2d 487, 17 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 454, 1975 Tenn. LEXIS 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccroskey-v-bryant-air-conditioning-company-tenn-1975.