The plaintiff, Alan F. Beane, appeals the decision of the Superior Court {McGuire, J.) dismissing his lawsuit alleging accounting malpractice as barred by the statute of limitations. We affirm.
Accepting the facts as alleged in the plaintiff’s writ, the trial court found as follows. The defendants, D. Scott Beane (Scott Beane), the plaintiff’s brother, and Dana S. Beane & Co., P.C. (Beane Co.), the company created by Alan and Scott Beane’s father and currently run by Scott Beane, prepared and filed all of the plaintiff’s federal tax returns for the years 1985 through 2002. Between 2001 and 2004, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) conducted an audit of the plaintiff’s tax returns for years 1998 and 1999. Due to medical issues, as well as his confidence in the defendants, the plaintiff did not participate-in the IRS examination. Following the examination, the IRS increased the plaintiff’s tax liability in late 2002 and again when it issued its Final Income Tax Examination Changes report on December 21, 2004. The defendants represented the plaintiff in an administrative appeal of the IRS’s action. The administrative appeal failed, and the IRS issued notice of a $3,080,430 deficiency. Although the deficiency notice itself is dated January 5,2005, the trial court accepted the plaintiff’s representation that the actual date of the notice was April 5, 2005.
The plaintiff then retained two law firms: Palmer & Dodge, to obtain advice regarding the tax deficiency; and Proskauer Rose, to challenge the deficiency finding in the United States Tax Court. At some point after October 19, 2006, the defendants terminated their relationship with the plaintiff and refused to cooperate with him or his tax counsel. During the plaintiff’s tax court trial on September 21,2008, the IRS examiner testified as to the nature of her examination of the plaintiff’s 1998 and 1999 tax liability. The tax court’s decision was pending when the plaintiff filed this action against the defendants on December 22, 2008. The plaintiff asserts claims for breach of fiduciary duty, professional errors and omissions, and violation of the New Hampshire Unfair Trade Practices Act. On May 19, 2009, the trial court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss based on the statute of limitations. The court ruled that the plaintiff’s December 2008 writ was time-barred because he knew or should have known of his cause of action against the defendants no later than April 5,2005, the date of the IRS notice of deficiency.
The plaintiff asserts that the trial court’s decision should be reversed because the court: (1) failed to conduct an evidentiary hearing; (2) failed to balance the equities as required by
Shillady v. Elliot Community Hospital,
In reviewing an order granting a motion to dismiss, “we assume the truth of the facts as alleged in the plaintiffs pleadings and construe all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.”
Perez v. Pike Inds.,
As to the plaintiffs first claim of error, we note that a trial court’s evaluation of a motion to dismiss does not necessarily require an evidentiary hearing. “The standard of review in considering a motion to dismiss is whether the plaintiffs allegations are reasonably susceptible of a construction that would permit recovery.”
Perez,
The plaintiffs remaining five arguments center on the application of the statute of limitations and its tolling provisions. “Statutes of limitation ... place a limit on the time in which a plaintiff may bring suit after a cause of action accrues.”
Big League Entm’t v. Brox Indus.,
The plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in concluding that the limitations period began to run no later than the date of the IRS notice of deficiency. He claims that he did not discover the defendants’ negligence until September 23, 2008, when he heard the IRS examiner testify at the tax court trial. He contends that the trial court erred in failing to apply
Shillady,
which states that “the discovery rule and the fraudulent concealment doctrine require that the interests of the opposing parties be identified, evaluated and weighed in arriving at a proper application of the statute [of limitations].”
Shillady,
Except as otherwise provided by law, all personal actions, except actions for slander or libel, may be brought only within 3 years of the act or omission complained of, except that when the injuryand its causal relationship to the act or omission were not discovered and could not reasonably have been discovered at the time of the act or omission, the action shall be commenced within 3 years of the time the plaintiff discovers, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered, the injury and its causal relationship to the act or omission complained of.
RSA 508:4,1 (2010).
“[T]he statute of limitations constitutes an affirmative defense, and... the defendant bears the burden of proving that it applies in a given case.”
Glines v. Bruk,
The discovery rule “is a two-pronged rule requiring both prongs to be satisfied before the statute of limitations begins to run.”
Big League Entm’t,
Although the discovery rule tolls the limitations period until a plaintiff discovers, or should reasonably have discovered, the causal connection between the harm and the defendant’s negligent or wrongful act, this rule “is not intended to toll the statute of limitations until the full extent of the plaintiff’s injury has manifested itself.”
Furbush v. McKittrick,
Given this legal framework, we conclude that the trial court did not err when it found that the plaintiff’s claim arose no later than April 5,2005, the date of the IRS notice of deficiency. The record supports the trial court’s finding that the plaintiff
knew “or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered” the causal relationship between the defendants’ negligence and the harm caused him in late 2002 when the IRS increased his tax liability for 1998 and 1999, or when the IRS issued its final report on December 21,2004 or, at the latest, when he lost his administrative appeal on April 5, 2005.
Accord Federated Industries, Inc. v. Reisin,
For similar reasons, the plaintiffs argument regarding the fraudulent concealment rule also fails. The plaintiff contends that he could not discover the defendants’ negligence because they fraudulently concealed their accounting errors. “[T]he fraudulent concealment rule states that when facts essential to the cause of action are fraudulently concealed, the statute of limitations is tolled until the plaintiff has discovered such facts or could have done so in the exercise of reasonable diligence.”
Bricker v. Putnam,
The plaintiffs argument regarding fiduciary tolling is also unavailing. The plaintiff contends that the defendants were fiduciaries who breached their duty to disclose their errors. The plaintiff alleges that the defendants withheld from him their accounting errors in 1998 and 1999, failed to inform him of the nature of the IRS examination, and refused to cooperate with him or his counsel during the tax court proceedings. He argues that the defendants’ failure to disclose these alleged breaches of duty tolls the limitation period. Assuming, without deciding, that the defendants acted in a fiduciary capacity,
but see Sorenson v. H & R Block, Inc.,
We are also not persuaded by the plaintiff’s contention that the trial court erred in refusing to extend the limitations
The plaintiff’s final argument is that the trial court erred in ruling that the statute of limitations precluded the assertion of his claims as an “offset recoupment” against Beane Co.’s claim in his bankruptcy case in Florida. In its dismissal order, however, the trial court did not address this argument. The plaintiff asserts that because his claims in this case arise out of the tax services which are the subject of Beane Co.’s claim in his bankruptcy case, he has a right of recoupment, and, therefore, even if the limitations period has expired, his claims remain “viable.”
Recoupment . . . refers to the defendant’s right, in the same action, to reduce or eliminate the plaintiff’s claim, either because the plaintiff has not complied with some cross-obligation of the contract on which he or she sues or because the plaintiff has violated some legal duty in the making or performance of that contract.
20 Am. Jur. 2d Counterclaim, Recoupment, Etc. § 5 (2005) (emphasis added). Accordingly, any claim for recoupment was not properly before the trial court, and we express no opinion with respect to that issue.
Affirmed.
