Moffitt v. Barr

837 P.2d 572, 181 Utah Adv. Rep. 71, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 33, 1992 WL 41604
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 4, 1992
Docket910290-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 837 P.2d 572 (Moffitt v. Barr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moffitt v. Barr, 837 P.2d 572, 181 Utah Adv. Rep. 71, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 33, 1992 WL 41604 (Utah Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

Appellant challenges the trial court’s ruling that his counterclaim was time barred, even though it arose from the same incident which gave rise to appellee’s complaint, which was timely by virtue of the statutory savings clause. We reverse.

FACTS

In February of 1985, appellees filed a complaint against appellant alleging assault, battery, and other claims resulting from an altercation that took place during appellant’s repossession of appellees’ Ken-worth truck in November of 1984. The complaint was dismissed on December 1, 1986, apparently due to ineffective service. 1 *573 Pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-40 (1987), appellees filed a second complaint on November 7, 1987. Appellant answered the second complaint on December 23, 1987, and included in his answer a counterclaim against appellees alleging assault and battery. Appellees moved to have the counterclaim dismissed, which motion was granted on the ground that appellant’s counterclaim had not been filed within one year after the causes of action had accrued, as required by Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-29(4) (1987). At trial, the court accordingly precluded affirmative defenses and testimony to the effect that appellant had acted in self defense and was himself the victim of violence. Appellant now appeals the trial court’s grant of appellees’ motion to dismiss his counterclaim and seeks a new trial. 2

ANALYSIS

Under Utah law,

[i]f any action is commenced within due time and ... the plaintiff fails in such action or upon a cause of action otherwise than upon the merits, and the time limited either by law or contract for commencing the same shall have expired, the plaintiff ... may commence a new action within one year after the reversal or failure.

Utah Code Ann. § 78-12-40 (1987). Section 78-12-40 permits a plaintiff whose action has been dismissed on non-substantive grounds to file a new complaint within one year of the date of dismissal, if the dismissal has occurred after the statute of limitations for plaintiff’s action has run. The statute thus acts as a “savings clause,” extending the statute of limitations to ensure that a complaint’s procedural shortcomings will not prejudice the plaintiff’s legitimate claim for relief.

In the instant case, appellees’ original complaint included claims for assault and battery. An action for assault or battery must be commenced within one year after the cause of action has accrued. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 78-12-29(4), 78-12-1 (1987). Thus, appellees were obligated to file their complaint within one year of the repossession incident.

Appellees filed their complaint in February of 1985, well within the one year statutory period. The complaint was dismissed on December 1, 1986. However, because the complaint was not dismissed on the merits, appellees were permitted to file a second complaint under section 78-12-40. Further, under this “savings clause,” ap-pellees had until December 1, 1987 — one year after the date of dismissal — to commence their new action, even though the statutory one-year limitations period for assault and battery claims had expired on November 5, 1985. In short, the dismissal effectively extended the limitations period for appellees’ assault and battery claims by over two years — from November 5,1985, to December 1, 1987. Appellees filed their second complaint within that period, on November 5, 1987.

Appellees now maintain that since appellant’s cause of action also arose from the November 5, 1984 repossession, section 78-12-29(4) statutorily required appellant to file an action along the lines of his counterclaim before November 5, 1985, without regard to the extra time the savings clause afforded appellees. Since appellant did not file his counterclaim until December 23, 1987, appellees continue, the trial court correctly dismissed the counterclaim as time barred. In other words, appellees claim that although the savings clause of section 78-12-40 excused them from section 78-12-29(4)’s one-year limitations period for assault and battery claims, it did not likewise excuse appellant. We reject this argument for three reasons.

First, appellees’ suggested interpretation of section 78-12-40 contravenes sound poli *574 cy established in Utah case law. In Doxey-Layton Co. v. Clark, 548 P.2d 902 (Utah 1976), the Utah Supreme Court held that

a counterclaim which arises out of the transaction alleged in the complaint and is in existence, at the time the complaint is filed, and is not then barred by a statute of limitations, will not be barred by the running of the statutory time thereafter. The statute will be suspended until the counterclaim is filed.

Id. at 906 (citations omitted). See also State ex rel. Egeland v. City Council, 803 P.2d 609, 612-13 (Mont.1990) (observing that some states suspend statute of limitations for counterclaims while others do not, and placing Utah in former group). Although the savings clause was not itself in issue in Doxey-Layton, by suspending the statute of limitations for counterclaims, the court in Doxey-Layton sought to eliminate the possibility that plaintiffs might escape counterclaim liability by filing complaints at the eleventh hour of a counterclaim’s limitations period, leaving defendants with insufficient time to assert counterclaims before that period expired. “The reluctant litigant ... should not be held to have lost his right to recover damages for a wrong done him simply because his adversary postpones commencement of an action until the statute of limitations is about to run out.” Lewis v. Merrill, 228 Or. 541, 365 P.2d 1052, 1055-56 (1961) (cited favorably in Doxey-Layton).

That policy rationale is equally applicable here. An interpretation of section 78-12-40 that permitted extension of the statute of limitations for complaints, but not counterclaims, would provide unscrupulous plaintiffs with a means of sabotaging a defendant’s right to assert a valid counterclaim. A plaintiff who was susceptible to a counterclaim could file a procedurally faulty complaint within one year from the date on which the statute of limitations for the counterclaim was due to run, and then have the complaint dismissed before the defendant answered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
837 P.2d 572, 181 Utah Adv. Rep. 71, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 33, 1992 WL 41604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moffitt-v-barr-utahctapp-1992.