O'Coin v. Woonsocket Institution Trust Co.

535 A.2d 1263, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 4, 1988 WL 1338
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 15, 1988
Docket85-558-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 535 A.2d 1263 (O'Coin v. Woonsocket Institution Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Coin v. Woonsocket Institution Trust Co., 535 A.2d 1263, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 4, 1988 WL 1338 (R.I. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

MURRAY, Judge.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff arising out of a judgment of the Superior Court granting a motion by the defendant for summary judgment. The plaintiff assigns as error that the trial justice misconstrued the applicable statute of limitation. The plaintiff further asserts that testimony given and documents produced by the defendant pursuant to a subpoena duces tecum were not subject to an absolute privilege. Because we hold as a matter of law that the plaintiff has sustained no legally cognizable injuries, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Initially we note that the granting of a motion for summary judgment is a drastic remedy, which should be applied with caution. In reviewing the same, this court applies the standards utilized by the trial justice. Only when our review reveals the existence of no material issues of fact and we find the moving party to be entitled to judgment as a matter of law will we uphold an order granting summary judgment. Violet v. Travelers Express Co., 502 A.2d 347, 349 (R.I. 1985); Barratt v. Burlingham, 492 A.2d 1219, 1220 (R.I. 1985). Applying this standard to the case at bar, we conclude that the trial justice properly granted the motion. We further note that although we decide the matter before us upon a different ground than that utilized by the trial justice, we affirm the determination of the court below, which we deem correct. In re Joseph J., 465 A.2d *1264 150, 152 (R.I. 1983); Costa v. Gagnon, 455 A.2d 310, 313 (R.I. 1983).

The plaintiff, William J. O’Coin (O’Coin), is an attorney-at-law. His wife, Claire H. O’Coin was previously employed by the Rhode Island Housing Investment Finid (RIHIF or the fund). The fund issued a check for $2,000 to the Woonsocket Institution Trust Company, also known as the Woonsocket Institution for Savings, the Woonsocket Trust Company, and the Woonsocket Savings and Trust (the bank), defendant herein. The check was used to pay most of the balance of a personal note to the bank executed by O’Coin. Mrs. O’Coin had knowledge that the fund would issue the check prior to its issuance. She was later indicted on various counts of conspiracy and embezzlement, which indictments were later quashed solely because the grand jury was improperly constituted.

The indictment arose out of an investigation of the finances of the fund. In that connection, an employee of the auditor general’s office telephoned an employee of the bank, Lucienne Moussas, and requested information about the $2,000 check issued by the fund to defendant bank to pay O’Coin’s personal note. 1 The record does not clearly indicate whether Moussas orally disclosed any information, but we assume for purposes of this opinion that she did. In any event, the bank disclosed in two writings information relating to the partial payment by RIHIF of a personal loan made by the bank to O’Coin. One of the writings was signed by Moussas. The bank concedes that this information was not disclosed pursuant to a subpoena.

Later the bank, pursuant to a subpoena duces tecum, produced documents and a witness, Alfred R. Stokes, Jr., to testify thereto. Stokes testified at the trial of Peter Coehlo in Superior Court. The trial justice held that Stokes’ testimony was both material and relevant. Because we hold that each disclosure complained of by plaintiff was compelled in open court, and was indeed material and relevant, plaintiff sustained no cognizable damages by virtue of Moussas’ prior confidential disclosure to the auditor general that the $2,000 expended by RIHIF was personal in nature.

I

The gravamen of counts 1 and 2 of O’Coin’s complaint is that he was damaged by virtue of the bank’s disclosures to the auditor general, which he alleges were erroneous. 2 O’Coin also asserts that the bank breached a contractual duty owed to him not to reveal information disclosed by O’Coin by virtue of that relationship. The bank argues that O’Coin’s damages were in the nature of a personal injury, and that recovery thereon is barred by G.L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 9-1-14, as amended by P.L. 1976, ch. 188, § 1 3 , which provides that actions to recover for personal injuries are barred after three years. O’Coin counters that even if his complaint were to be construed as one for personal injuries, the claim did not accrue until December of 1979, the date at which he asserts that he discovered the alleged contractual breach.

The plaintiff would take us into uncharted territory and have us address three pre *1265 viously undecided questions in order to provide him with a remedy. He asks us first to determine that his injuries are contractual in nature, and thus subject to the then applicable six-year statute of limitation. General Laws 1956 (1969 Reenactment) § 9-1-13. Second, we are asked to determine that an implied contractual duty was breached and that plaintiff sustained damages thereby. Third, if we find that the injuries sustained by plaintiff are personal in nature, and thus subject to § 9-1-14, the three-year statute of limitation for personal injuries, we are asked to apply the “discovery” rule and hold that, as to O’Coin, the statute of limitation did not begin to run until he purportedly discovered his injury in December of 1979.

A

Certain of our prior holdings may be construed as lending support to the proposition that the injuries sustained by plaintiff were contractual in nature. Recently we held in Church v. McBurney, 513 A.2d 22 (R.I. 1986), that although the plaintiff incurred physical injuries in an automobile accident, she stated a cause of action in contract against an attorney who did not timely file suit. In so holding we observed that it is the right being sued upon, not the injury sustained, that is determinative of the appropriate period of limitation. In Church we found the attorney-client relationship to be contractual in nature, id. at 24, and thus governed by § 9-1-13, the six-year statute of limitation.

Similarly, in Pickering v. American Employers Insurance Co., 109 R.I. 143, 150, 282 A.2d 584, 588 (1971), we held that the six-year statute of limitation applied in an action to recover upon an insurance contract, and noted that the relationship sued upon was fundamentally one in contract. There, we found the tortious injury to be merely an incidental element in the insured’s suit against the insurer.

Assuming, arguendo, the relation between plaintiff as debtor and the bank as creditor to be contractual in nature, plaintiff urges that we find that the bank, by revealing confidential information without legal compulsion, breached an implied term in the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
535 A.2d 1263, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 4, 1988 WL 1338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocoin-v-woonsocket-institution-trust-co-ri-1988.