McEaddy v. New Mexico State Agency for Surplus Property

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 29, 2015
Docket33,576
StatusUnpublished

This text of McEaddy v. New Mexico State Agency for Surplus Property (McEaddy v. New Mexico State Agency for Surplus Property) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McEaddy v. New Mexico State Agency for Surplus Property, (N.M. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions. Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of Appeals and does not include the filing date.

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 EUGENIA MCEADDY, Individually and as 3 Wrongful Death Personal Representative of 4 JULIUS MCEADDY, Deceased,

5 Plaintiff-Appellant,

6 v. NO. 33,576

7 NEW MEXICO STATE AGENCY FOR 8 SURPLUS PROPERTY,

9 Defendant-Appellee.

10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY 11 Sarah M. Singleton, District Judge

12 Will Ferguson & Associates 13 David M. Houliston 14 Albuquerque, NM

15 for Appellant

16 Brennan & Sullivan, P.A. 17 Frank D. Weissbarth 18 James P. Sullivan 19 Santa Fe, NM

20 for Appellee

21 MEMORANDUM OPINION 1 VANZI, Judge.

2 {1} Plaintiff Eugenia McEaddy appeals the district court’s ruling dismissing her

3 case for failing to timely serve a tort claim notice on the State of New Mexico Risk

4 Management Division (risk management). Plaintiff’s five arguments can be

5 consolidated into two issues: (1) whether the State may be estopped from invoking the

6 notice of claims provision in the Tort Claims Act (the TCA), NMSA 1978, § 41-4-

7 16(C) (1977), when right and justice demand; and (2) whether Plaintiff was entitled

8 to equitable tolling under the discovery rule. We hold that right and justice demand

9 that estoppel be applied against the State under the unique factual circumstances in

10 this case and reverse.

11 BACKGROUND

12 {2} This case involves a tragic accident. On August 3, 2011, Julius McEaddy and

13 his companions were riding their motorcycles westbound on Interstate 40 near

14 Tucumcari, New Mexico. Close to milepost 329, McEaddy came upon a large plastic

15 object in the middle of the highway and, unable to avoid it, lost control of his

16 motorcycle. As a result of the collision, McEaddy was thrown from the motorcycle

17 and suffered fatal injuries. The object on the road was the bucket liner of a bucket

18 truck aerial lift device.

19 {3} In late June 2012, some eleven months after the accident, Plaintiff, the widow

20 of Julius McEaddy, hired an attorney in Tennessee who then retained co-counsel

2 1 (counsel) in New Mexico. At the time counsel was retained, the only information

2 about the plastic object with which McEaddy collided was that contained in the New

3 Mexico State Police Uniform Crash Report (State Police Report). The State Police

4 Report described the plastic object and noted several markings on it including the

5 name “Horizon Fleet.” The investigating officer wrote that he researched the name

6 “Horizon Fleet” and found a website with the name of a company named ETI. The

7 officer called ETI and explained to a person who identified himself as the director of

8 Horizon Fleet Services about the plastic object and what had happened to McEaddy.

9 The director told the officer that he would “ask around” and “research the

10 information” he was given and that he would call the officer back. He never did.

11 {4} After speaking with the officer who wrote the State Police Report, counsel

12 independently learned through ETI’s1 website that it was a manufacturer of aerial lifts

13 and that it was connected with Horizon Fleet Services. Based on the information in

14 the State Police Report and counsel’s investigation, Plaintiff filed a complaint for

15 damages against ETL on September 21, 2012.

16 {5} Several months later, during the course of discovery, counsel learned that the

17 bucket liner in fact had been sold to the New Mexico Agency for Surplus Property

18 (the Agency) in June or July 2011. Further investigation revealed that two days before

1 19 ETI was an Oklahoma corporation called Equipment Technology, Inc. that 20 subsequently changed its name to Equipment Technology, L.L.C. (ETL).

3 1 the accident, John Francisco, an employee of the State of New Mexico’s General

2 Services Department, drove a tow truck with a trailer to Oklahoma to pick up two

3 trucks that had been donated to the State of New Mexico by the federal government.

4 One truck was a bucket truck located at the Fort Sill Army Installation, and the other

5 was a sweeper truck located at Altus Air Force Base. Francisco drove the trailer with

6 the two trucks loaded on it back to Santa Fe, New Mexico, on August 3, 2011, the date

7 of the accident. Because he returned after business hours, Francisco left the trucks on

8 the trailer in the yard intending to help unload them the next day. However, the trucks

9 were unloaded by the time he returned to work, and he did not handle the bucket truck

10 again. The Agency ultimately donated it to the Northwest New Mexico Regional Solid

11 Waste Authority. No one ever reported to the Agency that the bucket liner was

12 missing. Further, the Agency contends that the first time it had any knowledge that

13 there might have been an accident involving the bucket liner was on January 22, 2013,

14 when Francisco received an e-mail from a claims examiner at Fort Sill.

15 {6} Within a matter of days of learning that the bucket liner belonged to the

16 Agency, on January 28, 2013, Plaintiff hand-delivered a letter to risk management

17 giving them notice under the TCA of a claim for wrongful death and property damage.

18 On February 13, 2013, Plaintiff filed an amended complaint adding the Agency as a

19 defendant in the case. Among other things, Plaintiff alleged that she was prevented

20 from giving notice within the six-month period required by the TCA because the

4 1 Agency failed to notify the public safety authorities that the bucket liner had been lost

2 somewhere along the route from Fort Sill, Oklahoma to Santa Fe, New Mexico, and

3 because of time-consuming discovery to learn that on the date of the collision the

4 bucket truck was owned by the Agency.

5 {7} The Agency filed a motion to dismiss or in the alternative for summary

6 judgment for untimely tort claim notice. After briefing was complete, the district court

7 held a hearing at which Plaintiff’s counsel conceded that the six-month notice period

8 ran before Plaintiff did anything. The district court requested supplemental briefs on

9 that and other issues, which both parties timely submitted. On January 11, 2014,

10 finding that further hearing was not necessary, the district court granted the Agency’s

11 motion and dismissed Plaintiff’s claims with prejudice. The district court concluded

12 that Plaintiff’s delay resulted in the claim being untimely because, by her own

13 admissions, Plaintiff “did nothing for ten months at which point she hired an

14 attorney.” The district court also found that Plaintiff identified the Agency as a

15 possible defendant eighteen months after the accident and that, had she acted with due

16 diligence, she would instead have known it was a possible defendant within seven

17 months after the accident. Lastly, the district court noted that, given Plaintiff’s

18 admitted lack of diligence, there was no question of fact in dispute. This appeal

19 followed.

20 STANDARD OF REVIEW

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McEaddy v. New Mexico State Agency for Surplus Property, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mceaddy-v-new-mexico-state-agency-for-surplus-property-nmctapp-2015.