ORDER
This matter is before the Court via the motion of Defendant Babcock Contractors, Inc., in Civil Action 1:87-0715, to dismiss Complaint. After careful consideration the Court is prepared to rule on this motion.
This Defendant asserts two grounds for its motion to dismiss Complaint. First, the Defendant contends that service of process is deficient and, second, that the statute of limitations bars the maintenance of this action. The Court will address each of these contentions in order.
I.
Service of Process
The Court finds that the Plaintiff properly served this Defendant. Although the Plaintiff attempted service of process upon this Defendant in various ways, the Plaintiff properly served this Defendant pursuant to W.Va.Code § 31-1-15 when it served the West Virginia Secretary of State. The Defendant attempts to invalidate this service because the Plaintiff did not post a bond pursuant to W.Va.Code § 56-3-33(e). The Court does not believe that the Plaintiff needed to post a bond, however. The Plaintiff in its Complaint states that this Defendant was authorized to do business in West Virginia from July 1963 through November 1986 when it received a Certificate of Withdrawal from West Virginia.
1
The Secretary of State may accept service of process against a corporation that has been issued a Certificate of Withdrawal in a contract action if the contract was entered into before withdrawal, and in a tort action if the cause of action arose before withdrawal,
DeBoard v. B. Perini and Sons, Inc.,
Accordingly, for the above reasons, the Defendant’s motion to dismiss is hereby ORDERED DENIED to the extent of the foregoing.
II.
Statute of Limitations
The parties argue that the statutes of limitations of several possible states, namely Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia, govern this action. To determine the applicable state statute of limitations, this Court must look to the conflict of laws rules of the forum state.
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co., Inc.,
*364
In West Virginia, the principles of lex loci contractus, i.e., the law of the state in which the contract was made and performed governs, has traditionally determined the applicable law as to contract claims.
State v. Hall,
The Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws (1971), which the Supreme Court of Appeals has cited with approval, provides at § 188 additional standards to consider in determining the applicable law in contract actions where the parties did not designate that the law of a particular state apply, as in the instant case. Relevant factors under § 188 include the following: place of contracting; place of negotiation of the contract; place of performance; location of subject matter of the contract; domicil, residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of the parties; and the state with the most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties.
As the contract in dispute was between a West Virginia municipal corporation and a corporation authorized to do business in West Virginia, and in fact at one time maintaining an office in Beckley, West Virginia, the Court deems it plausible to conclude that the contract was entered into in large part in West Virginia and was negotiated in large part in West Virginia. The place of performance, for the most part, was Virginia and West Virginia. The subject matter of the contract was in Virginia. The domicil, residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of the Plaintiff is West Virginia, and that of the Defendant Pennsylvania, Connecticut and West Virginia. The state with the most significant relationship to the contract at issue is West Virginia. Although Virginia benefited by the contract between the Plaintiff and the Defendant, the Plaintiff issued bonds to finance the project at issue, the Environmental Protection Agency gave a grant to the Plaintiff for seventy-five percent of the total cost, and the Plaintiff defended an enforcement action brought by the State Water Control Board of the Commonwealth of Virginia. Given the foregoing, the Court finds it appropriate to conclude that the law of West Virginia applies to the claims sounding in contract, Count I of the Complaint. 2
In West Virginia, the law of the place of wrong applies in tort actions.
Perkins v. Doe,
— W.Va. -,
*365 The Court must next determine the appropriate statutes of limitations to apply. The Court will apply the appropriate West Virginia statute of limitations as to Count I as the Court has determined that the contract causes of action accrued in West Virginia. Where a claim such as the tort claims herein accrued beyond state boundaries, this Court under West Virginia law must apply the shorter limitation, West Virginia or Virginia. W.Va.Code § 55-2A-2.
The Plaintiff argues that W.Va. Code § 55-2-6a or 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5536 applies to determine the appropriate period within which the Plaintiff must have brought suit. These provisions the Plaintiff labels construction statutes of limitations. These provisions are commonly known as architects’ and builders’ statutes of repose. These statutes have been enacted in many jurisdictions in response to the demands of architects, engineers and contractors that they be provided with immunity from suit after a reasonable period of time from the completion of their work on an improvement to real property.
See
Limitation of Action Statutes for Architects and Builders—Blueprints for Non-action, 18 Cath.U.L.Rev. 361 (1969). The Pennsylvania statute establishes a twelve year period and the West Virginia statute a ten year period. The Defendant argues that these statutes are merely outside limits within which the regular statutes of limitations for tort and contract operate. This Court finds the Defendant’s position well-taken and concludes that these architects’ and builders’ statutes of repose are outside limits within which the tort and contract statutes of limitations operate. An architects’ and builders’ statute of repose extinguishes a party’s substantive right to bring suit after a specified time period irrespective of the time of the party’s injury, with traditional statutes of limitations operating within this outer limit. The majority of jurisdictions so interpret these statutes.
See, e.g., President and Directors of Georgetown College v. Madden,
In applying the appropriate statutes of limitations, the Court will first consider the relevant architects’ and builders’ statute to see if the outside limit within which to bring suit has expired, and will then apply the conventional statutes of limitations as appropriate. The Court will address the tort causes of action first, Counts II, III and IV.
Count II alleges breach of express warranties, Count III alleges breach of im *366 plied warranties and Count IV alleges negligence/gross negligence. The Court has held that Virginia law applies to the tort claims. See supra at 364. The Virginia architects’ and builders’ statute of repose, Va.Code § 8.01-250, provides, in pertinent part, that
[n]o action to recover for any injury to property, real or personal, or for bodily injury or wrongful death, arising out of the defective and unsafe condition of an improvement to real property, nor any action for contribution or indemnity for damages sustained as a result of such injury, shall be brought against any person performing or furnishing the design, planning, surveying, supervision of construction, or construction of such improvement to real property more than five years after the performance of furnishing of such services and construction.
All work on the Facility and Plant were accepted by the Sanitary Board as complete “on or about June 17, 1981,” Complaint at 9, the appropriate date on which to commence the running of the five year period for purposes of § 8.01-250. As this action was instituted on June 26, 1987, more than five years after the furnishing of this Defendant’s services, the statute of repose bars the maintenance of Counts II, III and IV, without the necessity of reference to the operation of the customary statutes of limitations.
The Defendant’s motion to dismiss is accordingly hereby ORDERED GRANTED as to Counts II, III and IV inasmuch as they are time-barred.
Count I sounds in contract. The Court has determined that West Virginia law will apply to these matters.
See supra
at 364. The West Virginia architects’ and builders’ statute will not apply to determine the timeliness of Count I. The Fourth Circuit has declared, as to the Virginia and District of Columbia architects’ and builders’ statutes, that the statutes are restricted in their application to tort actions to recover for injury to property or persons, and not to actions in contract.
Fidelity & Dep. Co. of Maryland v. Bristol Steel,
West Virginia has a ten year statute of limitations for actions on a contract in writing. W.Va.Code § 55-2-7. The Court finds that the ten year statute of limitations governs the breach of contract claims of Count I. As the Plaintiff asserts various allegations within Count I, the Court will address the running of the ten year period as to each allegation. The claim for breach of reasonable care in design accrued on the date of the tender of the allegedly defective plans and designs.
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Wright,
The claim for negligent performance of the SSES (sewer system evaluation survey) accrued upon its completion. As the SSES was completed in 1978 and suit was instituted in 1987, the ten year statute of limitations is no bar. The Defendant’s motion to dismiss is accordingly hereby ORDERED DENIED as to the claim for negligent performance of the SSES.
The claims for negligent provision of construction management services and negligent recommendation as to the acceptance of equipment, occurring over the course of construction, did not therefore accrue until completion of construction in 1981. As suit was instituted within ten years of this date, this cause of action is not barred by the ten year statute of limitations. The Defendant’s motion to dismiss is accordingly *367 hereby ORDERED DENIED to the extent that the Plaintiff may maintain its claims for negligent provision of construction management services and negligent recommendation as to the acceptance of equipment.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In considering a motion to dismiss, the Court will construe the Complaint in a light most favorable to the Plaintiff and will accept its allegations as true.
Caddell v. Singer,
The Plaintiff urges the Court to convert this motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment as the Defendant has submitted matters outside of the pleadings in support of its motion to dismiss. Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b), it is within the discretion of the Court to consider the extraneous matters or not, and convert the motion, or not, as appropriate. As the Court did not consider the matters submitted outside of the pleadings, the Court declines to convert this into a motion for summary judgment.
. The Defendant urges the Court to construe the entirety of Plaintiffs Complaint as one in negligence. While the Court acknowledges the Defendant's interpretation, in passing on a motion to dismiss the Court should favorably construe to the pleader the allegations of the Complaint.
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
. The Court construes the claims for breach of express and implied warranties as sounding in tort. Unable to find a West Virginia case on point, the Court found guidance in
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond v. Wright,
