Plaintiff appeals a judgment for defendant in this product liability action. The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that plaintiffs injury occurred after the expiration of the eight-year period of ultimate repose. ORS 30.905. We reverse.
Plaintiff was injured on February 5, 1986, while trying to remove mud and other debris from the brake casing on a truck that he drove for his employer. The brake’s head assembly, which defendant had manufactured, exploded. Pieces of it hit plaintiff in the face. Defendant had manufactured the assembly and sold it to International Harvester (International), the manufacturer of the truck, in January, 1977. Plaintiffs employer had bought the truck new, signing a purchase order on March 11,1978, and taking delivery on May 5.
Defendant argues that plaintiffs action was untimely under ORS 30.905: 1
“(1) Notwithstanding ORS 12.115 or 12.140 and except as provided in subsection (2) of this section and ORS 30.907, a product liability civil action shall be commenced not later than eight years after the date on which the product was first purchased for use or consumption.
“(2) Except as provided in ORS 30.907, a product liability civil action shall be commenced not later than two years after the date on which the death, injury or damage complained of occurs.”
Defendant’s first argument is that the brake assembly was “first purchased for use or consumption” in 1977, when defendant sold it to International. If defendant is correct, ORS 30.905(1) bars plaintiffs claim, because he was injured more than eight years after that date. The question is whether the first purchase for use occurred when International bought the assembly to install in a truck or when plaintiffs employer bought the finished truck for use in his business. The answer is not clear from the statute alone.
In
Erickson Air-Crane Co. v. United Tech. Corp.,
Although International purchased the brake assembly for “use” in manufacturing the truck, that is not the sense in which ORS 30.905(1) uses the term. The purpose of the brake assembly was to stop a truck; it could not be used for that purpose until there was a truck that it could stop. Plaintiffs employer did not buy the brake assembly as a separate item; it bought a new truck, of which the brakes and many other components were parts. That was the first purchase in which the assembly could be used for braking. Under ORS 30.905(1), the liability of the manufacturer and the seller of the truck would be measured from that purchase. The legislature intended to establish a uniform period of ultimate repose to measure the liability of all entities involved in the manufacture and sale of the new truck. It is consistent with that purpose to measure the liability of the manufacturer of the entire truck and the manufacturers of each of the truck’s components from the same date. That is how we construe ORS 30.905(1). Defendant was not entitled to summary judgment on that ground.
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Defendant next argues that “plaintiff did not suffer a legal injury within eight years of the purchase of the truck by plaintiffs employer,” although he suffered the physical injury within that time, and that plaintiff had to be “legally injured” within eight years to satisfy ORS 30.905(1). ORS 30.905 combines two different concepts, one in each of its subsections.
See Sealey v. Hicks, supra
n 1,
In contrast, ORS 30.905(2) requires the plaintiff to commence the action within two years after the injury. It is a statute of limitations, and it does not begin to run until the plaintiff is injured.
The combination of a statute of ultimate repose and a statute of limitations creates problems in interpreting ORS 30.905. In the first case in which we considered the relationships between its provisions, the plaintiffs injury had occurred less than eight years after she had purchased the product. She commenced the action more than eight years after the purchase, but less than two years after her injury. After examining the words of the statute and its legislative history, we held that the action was timely. The legislature, we determined, intended that a plaintiff who was injured within eight years after the first purchase would have two years from the date of injury to commence the action, even if she did so more than eight years after the first purchase.
Baird v. Electro Mart,
In this case, plaintiff was injured within the eight-
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year period of ORS 30.905(1) and commenced the action within two years after that injury. He thereby complied with ORS 30.905, as we construed it in
Baird v. Electro Mart, supra.
Defendant, relying on
Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc.,
In
Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., supra,
the plaintiff had received a Daikon Shield intrauterine device in May, 1971. She developed a chronic uterine infection that caused scar tissue to build up in her left fallopian tube, culminating in an ectopic pregnancy that necessitated surgery and a tubal ligation in December, 1977. She alleged that she did not learn of the connection between the Daikon Shield and her problems until May, 1980; she commenced the action in September, 1980. ORS 30.905 presented a problem for her claim. If her injury was the measuring event, her action was untimely under ORS 30.905(2), because she did not commence it within two years after the injury. If, on the other hand, her discovery that the Daikon Shield was at fault was the measuring event, her action was untimely under ORS 30.905(1), because the discovery occurred more than eight years after her first use of the device. To avoid the dilemma, she argued, first, that her claim did not accrue until she discovered that the defendant’s product had caused her injuries and, second, that ORS 30.905(1) and (2) provide a unitary ten-year period of ultimate repose and that she had commenced the action within that ten-year period.
Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., supra,
The defendant argued in response that, even if the discovery rule applies to ORS 30.905, the plaintiffs “injury”
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did not occur until she learned, more than eight years after she received it, that the Daikon Shield was responsible and that, therefore, ORS 30.905(1) barred the claim.
Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., supra,
The foundation of our analysis in
Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., supra,
was that the phrase “date on which the * * * injury * * * complained of occurs” in ORS 30.905(2) has a legal meaning that supersedes its common meaning. We cited a number of cases in which we or the Supreme Court had held that a claim does not accrue for the purpose of a limitation until the plaintiff has discovered the harm and the object, action, or person that caused it.
Defendant relies on that discussion in contending that plaintiffs claim is barred, because it was not legally complete within the eight-year period, even though plaintiff suffered the harm for which he seeks to recover during that time. We conclude that, although the result in Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., supra, was correct, because the eight-year period in ORS 30.905(1) had expired, our reasoning was *563 wrong. We therefore overrule Dortch to the extent that it is based on that reasoning, because it would erroneously bar a claim for an injury that occurs within eight years after the date of first purchase by the user or consumer solely on the basis that the defendant’s role in causing the injury is not known until after the eight years has passed, even if the plaintiff commences the action within two years after the actual injury.
The flaw was our failure to give full effect to the fundamental distinction between a statute of ultimate repose and a statute of limitations. ORS 30.905(1) sets an absolute period within which the plaintiff must be injured in order to have a claim at all. That period passes of its own force, and the plaintiffs knowledge or lack of knowledge can have nothing to do with it. The discovery rule
cannot
apply to a statute of ultimate repose, because there can be no extension of an absolute period.
See DeLay v. Marathon LeTourneau Sales, supra,
On the other hand, ORS 30.905(2) is a statute of limitations. It requires a plaintiff to commence an action within a certain time after the injury or be barred. It measures time from the injury, not from the first purchase. By itself, it sets no outer limit on when a plaintiff may bring the action. The purpose of the discovery rule is to relieve a plaintiff from a limitation when it is unreasonable to impose it because the plaintiff could not have known of the claim. We correctly held in Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., supra, that the discovery rule applies to ORS 30.905(2).
In the context of this case, therefore, ORS 30.905 is a statute of ultimate repose that contains an exception in limited circumstances. ORS 30.905(1) requires that a product liability action be commenced within the eight-year period of ultimate repose, but in
Baird v. Electro Mart, supra,
we held, in effect, that ORS 30.905(2) provides an additional period of up
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to two years for injuries suffered before the end of the eight years.
See Dortch v. A. H. Robins Co., Inc., supra,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The Supreme Court recently rejected a constitutional challenge to ORS 30.905.
Sealey v. Hicks,
In its brief, defendant cites other legislative history that, it suggests, might modify the Supreme Court’s discussion. The short interchange in committee on which defendant relies is too inconclusive to be useful in determining the legislature’s intent.
Under defendant’s reasoning, had plaintiff been less seriously injured, and had he examined the brake assembly immediately after his injury, his claim would have accrued at the same time as the physical injury. However, also following defendant’s logic, because plaintiffs physical injury was so severe that he could not have discovered who was then responsible, his claim did not accrue until the statutory period had expired. That would be an absurd result.
