On April 21, 1989, California Sansome Company and Polk Market Company (“San-some”) filed an action against United States Gypsum Company and W.R. Grace & Company (“U.S. Gypsum”) claiming asbestos-related damages in two of their buildings located in San Francisco, California. The action was brought pursuant to federal diversity jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1382. U.S. Gypsum manufactured the asbestos-containing fireproofing used during the construction of these buildings. Sansome seeks approximately $20 million in compensatory and punitive damages, primarily to recoup costs for analysis, removal, and replacement of asbestos-contaminated property, and for the loss of the use of the buildings.
U.S. Gypsum contends Sansome’s action is barred by California’s three-year statute of limitations. It claims the alleged contamination occurred well before April 21, 1986, three years before Sansome filed suit. In addition, U.S. Gypsum asserts Sansome knew or should have known of the contamination of the buildings at or near the time of their construction in 1968, or at least at the time of the first remodeling shortly thereafter. Thus, U.S. Gypsum also argues that Sansome’s suit is barred under California’s “discovery rule” because Sansome was “on inquiry notice” of asbestos contamination well before April 1986. U.S. Gypsum relies on Sansome’s own investigations and its access to outside sources, such as articles, publications, regulations, and seminars on the hazards of asbestos. 1
Sansome responds that there is no evidence its buildings were contaminated prior to the summer of 1986. Sansome also argues that it did not know the buddings were con
The First Trial
The district court bifurcated the proceedings, setting the statute-of-limitations issue for trial in February 1991. 2 The court placed the burden of proving the buildings were damaged prior to April 21, 1986 on U.S. Gypsum. If the jury found evidence of such damage, under the court’s instructions, San-some then bore the burden of proving it had not discovered the damage and was not “on inquiry notice” of it prior to April 21, 1986. Following the trial, the jury returned a special verdict in favor of Sansome on the damage issue and therefore never reached the discovery question.
During the pendency of further proceedings on the merits, U.S. Gypsum brought forth allegations of impropriety on the part of Sansome’s counsel, claiming its counsel had failed to produce certain nonprivileged documents during discovery. On February 4, 1992, after both sides had presented arguments, the court ordered a new trial on the statute-of-limitations question. The court reasoned that although Sansome’s counsel’s misconduct did not warrant dismissal, its action did justify a new trial. In the alternative, the court found a new trial was warranted on the basis of newly discovered evidence. 3
The Second Trial
Before the second trial commenced, the court ruled that Sansome had to assume the burden of demonstrating no damage occurred to the buildings prior to April 21, 1986. The court focused on language in San-some’s complaint which alleged that U.S. Gypsum’s products, installed in 1968, “release asbestos spontaneously and in response to routine maintenance activities” and “in the course of normal and foreseeable use.” The court reasoned that because these allegations did not specify a date of injury, it could reasonably infer that the injury occurred “some time following the installation of defendants’ products in 1968.” Thus, the court concluded that since Sansome’s pleaded claims appeared to be barred by the statute of limitations, Sansome had the burden of providing by a preponderance of the evidence that its allegations fell within an exception tolling the statute. The court also refused to allow Sansome to amend its complaint to conform to the evidence and avoid this problem.
The statute-of-limitations question was tried for a second time beginning in September 1992. Following Sansome’s presentation of the evidence, U.S. Gypsum moved for a judgment as a matter of law, contending Sansome failed to prove both that its buildings were not damaged and it was not on inquiry notice of damage prior to April 21, 1986. After a few more witnesses had testified, the court granted the motion as to when the damage occurred, finding Sansome had
U.S. Gypsum filed post-trial motions requesting a new trial or a judgment as a matter of law. On April 19, 1993, the court granted the judgment as a matter of law in favor of U.S. Gypsum.
See California Sansome Co. v. United States Gypsum Co.,
Sansome filed a timely appeal and now asserts the court erred in 1) ordering a new trial, 2) shifting the burden of proof to San-some on the damage issue, 3) refusing to allow Sansome to amend its complaint after shifting the burden of proof, 4) granting the judgment as a matter of law on the damage issue during the second trial and on the discovery rule issue after the second trial, and 5) in excluding evidence of U.S. Gypsum’s fraud. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and order a new trial.
DISCUSSION
New Trial
Sansome first contends the court erred in granting a new trial on the statute-of-limitations question based on alleged misconduct on the part of Sansome’s counsel and newly discovered evidence. Because we ordinarily defer to the trial court’s more intimate knowledge of the case and facts, we review the grant of a new trial only for an abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., Murphy v. City of Long Beach,
In
Jones v. Aero/Chem Corp.,
Burden of Proof
In placing the burden of proving when the contamination
5
occurred on San-some, the court inferred from Sansome’s
We must respectfully disagree with the court’s ruling. A defendant raising the statute of limitations as an affirmative defense has the burden of proving the action is time barred.
See, e.g., Permanente Medical Group/Kaiser Found. Hosp. v. Workers’ Compensation Appeals Bd.,
The court’s analysis mistakenly treats the occurrence of appreciable injury as equivalent to the discovery of that injury. San-some’s sustaining some injury or harm is a requisite to the
commencement
of the orthodox limitations period, so prior to such an injury there can be no running of the statute. If the injury occurs after the wrongdoing, the orthodox limitations period is not tolled; rather, the period never even begins to run.
See, e.g., City of San Diego,
The “discovery rule,” on the other hand, assumes that the elements of accrual including harm exist, but tolls the ruling of the statute until the plaintiff is on inquiry notice of its injury (and its wrongful cause).
See, e.g., Jolly,
The language of Sansome’s complaint relied on by the district court cannot and does not shift the burden to Sansome on the issue of injury. If Sansome’s complaint admitted or necessarily implied that appreciable injury to its buildings occurred prior to April 21, 1986, U.S. Gypsum would be entitled to a judgment on the issue. For example, in
City of San Diego, swpra,
the California Court of Appeals affirmed a summary judgment in favor of the same defendant as in this ease, U.S. Gypsum. The court relied in part on the fact that the plaintiffs complaint had alleged the release of asbestos fibers had occurred continuously from the time of installation, and that the plaintiffs buildings would be continuously contaminated as long as the building material were present.
City of San Diego,
In the present case, Sansome’s complaint does not admit that the injury to its buildings occurred at the time of the installation of the fireproofing, or at some other point prior to April 21, 1986. California law makes clear that a plaintiff must allege specific facts establishing the applicability of the discovery-rule exception.
See, e.g., CAMSI IV,
Although the district court “inferred” from the pleadings that the damage probably occurred some time after installation in 1968, it did not rule as a matter of law that Sansome admitted as much in the complaint because it gave Sansome the opportunity to prove no injury occurred prior to April 1986. In its April 16, 1992 order shifting the burden of proof to Sansome, the court concluded:
While the Court does not dispute the notion that plaintiffs are bound by the factual assertions made in their complaint, the Court is unclear as to what time frame plaintiffs have “admitted” in the pleadings. The Court sees no reason at this time why plaintiffs should not be allowed to attempt to show that they avoided the limitations bar ... [by proving] they suffered no injury prior to the beginning of the limitations period.
As previously stated, we find the court erroneously viewed delayed injury as an “exception,” thereby shifting the burden. Nevertheless, the court’s own reasoning demon
Sansome’s complaint indeed did not admit or even imply that the mere presence of asbestos in the buildings immediately caused the injury, or that contamination occurred prior to April 21, 1986. The complaint makes no mention of the date of injury or contamination. While the complaint does allege U.S. Gypsum’s products “release asbestos spontaneously and in response to routine maintenance activities,” we reject the argument that this allegation supports the inference that actual and appreciable harm occurred immediately after installation or at the time of the first remodeling.
See, e.g., Kirby v. Albert D. Seeno Constr. Co.,
Because the existence of actual and appreciable harm is a necessary predicate for the commencement of the limitations period, U.S. Gypsum has the burden of demonstrating when this occurred. We therefore find the district court erred in shifting the burden on this issue to Sansome based on the allegations in the complaint. 9
As indicated, in the second trial the court granted U.S. Gypsum a directed verdict (judgment as a matter of law) on the issue of when the injury to Sansome’s property occurred. It did so, however, because the court found that Sansome had failed to carry the burden of proof on this issue. Based on an improperly allocated burden of proof, we find the court’s conclusion that the issue should not go to the jury constitutes reversible error. 10
Had the court properly allocated the burden of proof, we find the evidence presented would have raised a fact question as to whether the buildings suffered “appreciable harm” prior to April 1986. For example, U.S. Gypsum offered evidence of previous, similar building renovation and maintenance activities, and testimony regarding asbestos debris from which a jury could have inferred that the contamination alleged in Sansome’s complaint occurred earlier than this date. On the other hand, Sansome produced air sampling data showing no contamination and expert testimony sufficient to create the contrary inference that the injury did not occur until the summer of 1986. The court’s ruling therefore must be reversed. Because this issue did not go to the jury in the second trial, however, a remand for a new statute-of-limitations trial is required. 11
Gypsum’s Post-Verdict Motion for a Judgment as a Matter of Law on the Discovery Issue
After the jury returned a verdict in favor of Sansome on the “discovery-rule” issue, the
In light of our ruling on the damage issue, we need not pass on the discovery issue on this appeal since we hold that a new trial must be held. The discovery issue will not be reached if in fact the jury finds in favor of Sansome and against U.S. Gypsum on the damage issue. In addition, even if we were inclined to do so, we could not reinstate the jury verdict in favor of Sansome on the discovery question. In order to determine when Sansome was on inquiry notice of its injury, the jury would have to take into account at what point that injury first occurred between 1968 and April 1986. The jury’s conclusion concerning when the damage occurred could substantially affect its analysis of whether Sansome proved it should not have discovered the damage prior to April 1986. Thus, we deem it premature to rule on the discovery issue.
The order of the district court granting a new trial is affirmed, the judgment in favor of Gypsum on the damage issue is vacated, and a new trial ordered. 12 In granting a new trial on all issues, we also order the judgment in favor of Gypsum on the discovery issue vacated.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part, and REMANDED.
Notes
. The principal actors on behalf of Sansome in its dealings with U.S. Gypsum were members of the Cahill family, including Jay, Gerald, Richard, and William Cahill.
. On November 2, 1990, the court granted summary judgment in favor of U.S. Gypsum on San-some's breach of warranty claim, concluding it was barred by the four-year statute of limitations outlined in Cal.Civ.Proc. § 337. Sansome does not challenge this ruling on appeal. The court denied U.S. Gypsum’s motion as to all of San-some's remaining claims.
. Steve Callahan, a former associate at San-some’s counsel’s law firm, sent U.S. Gypsum's counsel a letter stating the firm had intentionally withheld documents relevant to the statute-of-limitations trial. His letter enclosed a copy of a 1973 letter ("Quad C letter”) addressed to Jay Cahill, a Sansome officer, informing him that the fireproofing installed in both buildings contained asbestos. The court then ordered Sansome to produce all other previously unproduced evidence relevant to this issue. Contained within the two boxes of files submitted were twenty potentially relevant documents, including newspaper articles and a list of buildings containing asbestos which had been requested by Cahill and which mentioned Sansome's buildings.
The Quad C letter, and other documents, according to the court, bore directly on the question of whether Jay Cahill was made aware of the presence and potential hazards of asbestos prior to 1986. The court determined that newly found evidence and newly submitted affidavits did not establish that the Cahills and Sansome knew prior to 1986 that the fireproofing created a hazard in the buildings. The documents did provide, the court concluded, circumstantial and impeachment evidence that U.S. Gypsum could use to support both its "damage” and "discovery rule” arguments.
. The court acknowledged in its opinion that it erred in its denial of U.S. Gypsum's request for a judgment as a matter of law at the close of all of plaintiff's evidence.
. While both parties agreed at oral argument that contamination — the release of asbestos fibers into the air of Sansome’s buildings sufficient to constitute elevated levels — is the "harm” that triggers the ruling of the statute of limitations, they seem to differ on whether this contamination must have caused significant damage. In
City of San Diego v. U.S. Gypsum,
. U.S. Gypsum relies on
G.D. Searle & Co. v. Superior Court, 49
Cal.App.3d 22,
.
Bradler v. Craig,
. We further note that the
City of San Diego
court's affirmance of the summary judgment was based neither on a rejection of all “delayed damage” theories, on a determination that the date of the wrongdoing is necessarily the trigger date, nor on a finding that a plaintiff bears the burden of pleading and proving when the “injury" occurred. Rather, the court merely held that the plaintiff had admitted in its complaint that the appreciable harm (contamination) had occurred in its buildings more than three years before it brought its suit.
See City of San Diego,
. We reject Gypsum's argument that
CAMSI IV
supports the shifting of the burden of proof. The complaint in this case, unlike the
CAMSI IV
complaint, does not necessarily imply that harm to the property occurred outside the limitations period. In addition, while
CAMSI IV
clearly places the burden on the plaintiff to plead facts in support of the discovery rule exception, it holds neither that the plaintiff bears a similar burden as to the issue of the occurrence of appreciable harm, nor that the burden of proving appreciable harm is ever shifted to the plaintiff.
See
. U.S. Gypsum contends Sansome has not properly appealed the directed verdict. We disagree. One of Sansome's principal arguments in its brief is entitled "The Trial Court Erred By Granting Judgment As A Matter of Law and Directing A Verdict." Although most of the discussion contained within this section relates to the JNOV (concerning the "discovery rule"), the opening portion also applies to "the directed verdict." In addition, in its discussion of the burden of proof, Sansome contends it proved the buildings were not damaged outside the statutory period, an argument obviously aimed at challenging the directed verdict. While Sansome’s brief could benefit from an expanded and clearer critique of the lower court's error in directing the verdict, we find the argument has been sufficiently raised.
.Because we find the court’s misallocation of the burden of proof constitutes reversible error even though Sansome's complaint remains unamended, Sansome was not prejudiced by the trial court’s denial of its motion to amend. Thus, we need not reach the issue of whether this denial was an abuse of discretion.
. Sansome contends the trial court further erred by excluding evidence of U.S. Gypsum's fraud. Specifically, Sansome argues the court should have allowed it to present evidence of an alleged campaign by U.S. Gypsum to misrepresent and downplay the dangers of asbestos, including an "educational” pamphlet read and relied upon by one of Sansome's experts. The court determined that Gypsum's evidence of fraudulent concealment is irrelevant to the statute of limitations issue and that its probative value was substantially outweighed by the danger of prejudice and waste of time. We review the court’s exclusion for an abuse of discretion.
E.g., Rogers v. Raymark Indus., Inc.,
We find the district court did not abuse its discretion. As the court stated, California law makes clear that U.S. Gypsum's alleged fraud and misrepresentation is immaterial to the statute-of-limitations question in the context of this case. In
Rita M. v. Roman Catholic Archbishop,
the California Court of Appeals stated, "The doctrine of fraudulent concealment [for tolling the statute of limitations] does not come into play, whatever the lengths to which a -defendant has gone to conceal the wrongs, a plaintiff is on notice of a potential claim.”
Sansome nevertheless contends that the pamphlet is relevant because its expert’s conclusion that the buildings probably were not contaminated was partly based on the pamphlet’s allegedly misleading contents. Sansome asserts its agents then reasonably relied on their expert's opinion and hence, did not suspect they were injured prior to April 1986. We reject this argument. Whether Sansome was on inquiry notice of its injury is determined from the information its officers received from their experts and other sources prior to April 1986. The communications between Sansome and its expert are therefore clearly relevant. Yet the sources of information available to the expert but not received or read by Sansome’s officers are immaterial. Thus, the court properly allowed evidence of the communications between Sansome and its expert, while excluding evidence of allegedly false or misleading information received and relied upon by that expert. Sansome’s "fraudulent concealment” evidence therefore shall be excluded on remand.
