Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this appeal, we consider whether, as the trial court ruled, Code § 8.01-250,
The Commonwealth filed suit on February 26, 1985, seeking to recover the costs of abating the hazard of building materials containing asbestos that were installed in 1,016 public buildings and facilities located throughout the Commonwealth. Claiming compensatory damages of $24,752,274, and punitive damages of $25,000,000, the Commonwealth named Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation and 34 others as defendants.
The defendants filed responsive pleadings and certain special pleas. Included was a motion for summary judgment invoking the provisions of Code § 8.01-250. In order to facilitate determination of that motion, the parties stipulated that all the asbestos materials had been installed in the buildings during construction that had been completed more than five years before the Commonwealth filed its suit.
In a letter opinion, the trial court ruled that “since the statute in question is one of repose and not limitations, ... the plaintiff is barred from maintaining the suit,” that the defendants’ motion
The trial court rested its rulings on our decision in School Bd. of the City of Norfolk v. U.S. Gypsum,
In overruling the motion to reconsider, the trial court necessarily rejected the contention that the Commonwealth is exempt from the operation of Code § 8.01-250. That question was not raised in U.S. Gypsum, and we consider it now as a matter of first impression.
We begin with an analysis of the three distinct types of statutory enactments aimed at precluding litigation of stale claims. First, and most familiar, are procedural or “pure” statutes of limitation. These serve merely to time-restrict the assertion of a remedy. They furnish an affirmative defense and are waived if not pleaded. Second are substantive or “special” statutes of limitation.
With respect to the first category, it has been a part of the common law from time immemorial that the statute of limitations does not run against the sovereign. Nullum tempus occurrit regi is a rule that applies to the Commonwealth as it did to the Crown. Taylor & als’ Case,
No statute of limitations which shall not in express terms apply to the Commonwealth shall be deemed a bar to any proceeding by or on behalf of the same. This section shall not, however, apply to agencies of the Commonwealth incorporated for charitable or educational purposes.3
In Commonwealth v. Spotsylvania, 225 Va. 492, 495,
We do not agree. Ours is a government whose powers are limited by the Constitution. Where statutory enactments and common-law rules come into conflict with constitutional principles, the latter must prevail. We decided, in U.S. Gypsum, that after the statute of repose, Code § 8.01-250, had run, the potential defendants in that case had acquired substantive rights which the legislature could not constitutionally impair. More recently, in Roller v. Basic Construction Co.,
The Commonwealth argues that although rights of repose might accrue to potential defendants if sued by another plaintiff, such rights could never accrue against the Commonwealth because it was a potential plaintiff which had always been immune from any limitation bars. Thus, the argument runs, a potential defendant is always exposed to suit at the hands of the sovereign and any constitutionally protected rights of repose which may attach because of the lapse of time are always limited by, and subject to, that risk.
We do not agree. The Commonwealth’s argument treats this classic collision between a constitutionally protected right and a statutory power as one in which the statute, or the common-law maxim it codifies, must prevail. That result is repugnant to the bedrock principles of constitutional government.
The ancient common-law rule nullum tempus occurrit regi remains generally accepted as to traditional procedural statutes of limitations. Authorities in other jurisdictions are divided upon the question whether the rule applies also to substantive, or special limitations, but, as noted above, we held,, in Spotsylvania, that its statutory counterpart does so apply. Nevertheless, the effect of Code § 8.01-231, by its own terms, is limited to “statute[s] of limitations.” As we held in U.S. Gypsum, Code § 8.01-250 is not a statute of limitations, but a statute of repose, something “in fact, different in concept, definition, and function.”
In an alternative argument, the Commonwealth asserts that if it is not exempt from the operation of Code § 8.01-250, that section is unconstitutional as applied under the facts of this case. The argument is premised upon the assertion that asbestos is an inherently dangerous material and that the General Assembly, in enacting the statute of repose, had no rational basis for extending its protection to manufacturers of such materials; thus, the classification made by the statute is not rationally related to its legislative purpose.
We held, in Cape Henry v. Natl. Gypsum,
The Commonwealth finally argues that its rights of action had accrued and were fully vested before Code § 8.01-250 was enacted in its original form in 1964
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment will be
Affirmed.
Notes
In pertinent part, that statute provides:
No 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.
The following 13 defendants are those named by the Commonwealth as appellees:
OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS CORPORATION
ARMSTRONG WORLD INDUSTRIES, INC.
NATIONAL GYPSUM COMPANY
THE CELOTEX CORPORATION
EAGLE-PICHER INDUSTRIES, INC.
THE FLINTKOTE COMPANY
G.A.F. CORPORATION
KEENE CORPORATION
OWENS-ILLINOIS, INC.
UNITED STATES GYPSUM COMPANY
W.R. GRACE & COMPANY
NICOLET INDUSTRIES, INC.
U.S. MINERAL PRODUCTS COMPANY
The General Assembly deleted the second sentence of this statute by Acts 1988, c. 544. It was because this statute still contained the distinction between the Commonwealth and educational agencies when suit was filed in U.S. Gypsum (June 27, 1986) that the plaintiff in that case invoked Code § 8.01-250.1 (as amended by Acts 1986, c. 458) rather than Code § 8.01-231.
For a brief discussion of the legislative history of Code § 8.01-250, see Cape Henry,
We expressly refrain from deciding whether a statute of repose is constitutional as applied to a case in which it operates to extinguish a cause of action before a right of action could accrue to a plaintiff. Those facts are not before us.
Dissenting Opinion
with whom Chief Justice Carrico and Justice Whiting join, dissenting.
Because the majority has construed the holding in Commonwealth v. Spotslyvania,
The trial court, relying upon our decision in School Bd. of the City of Norfolk v. U.S. Gypsum,
At the outset, the Court must look to the common law. Statutes of general application ordinarily do not apply to the sovereign.
In general, legislative acts are intended to regulate the acts and rights of citizens; and it is a rule of construction not to embrace the government or effect [sic] its rights by the general rules of a statute, unless it be expressly and in terms included or by necessary and unavoidable implication.
Levasser v. Washburn,
It is old and familiar law, and is applicable to the state as well as the crown, at common law, that where a statute is*603 general, and any prerogative, right, title or interest is diverted or taken from the king, in such case, the king shall not be bound unless the statute is made by express words or necessary implication to extend to him.
Whiteacre, sheriff v. Rector & wife,
We have applied this basic rule not only to statutes of general application, see e.g., Deal v. Commonwealth,
One example of statutes of general application is the procedural statute of limitations, sometimes called a “pure” statute of limitations. As to the time restrictions in such statutes, the corollary rule consistently applied in this jurisdiction is defined in simple terms. “Time does not run against the State, nor bar the right of the public.” Buntin v. Danville,
In addition to the common law, the Court must consider Code § 8.01-231, the statute exempting the Commonwealth from time limitations. This statute has a history of more than 200 years, beginning “soon after the revolution ... by the act of October, 1778, c.2 s.4. [where] it is declared that ‘no time shall bar the Commonwealth of execution.’ ” Nimmo’s Executor v. Commonwealth, 14 Va. (4 Hen. & M.) 57, 79 (1809). As written when the suit at bar was filed, Code § 8.01-231 provided as follows:
*604 No statute of limitations which shall not in express terms apply to the Commonwealth shall be deemed a bar to any proceeding by or on behalf of the same. This section shall not, however, apply to agencies of the Commonwealth incorporated for charitable or educational purposes.
In Commonwealth v. Spotsylvania,
When a claim of any person against a county is disallowed ... by the board of supervisors . . . such person . . . may appeal from the decision of the board to the circuit court . . . but in no case shall the appeal be taken after the lapse of six months from the date of the decision ....
The right of judicial review of claims disallowed by counties was a right newly created by the original ancestor of § 15.1-552, and the time limitation was an element of the new right. In other words, this was a statute which
makes the limitation of time inhere in the right or obligation rather than the remedy. It is sometimes referred to as a statute of nonclaim, and, strictly speaking, is not a statute of limitations .... Illustrations of nonclaim statutes ... are those providing for liens of laborers and materialmen, claims against estates of deceased persons, and claims for damages against municipal corporations.
Lane v. Department of Labor and Industries,
Construing Code § 8.01-231, we said that the exemption it defines “is absolute and unqualified. It makes no distinction between so-called ‘pure’ statutes of limitation (those which time-restrict the availability of a remedy) and ‘special’ limitations (those prescribed by statute as an element of a newly-created right). Hence,
Although Code § 8.01-250 is a statute of repose, statutes of repose and nonclaim statutes are essentially the same in function and effect. The effect of both is to create a substantive right in potential defendants, immunizing them from suits once the applicable time period has run. They are different only in that the typical nonclaim statute creates a new right of action and imposes a time limitation as an element of that right, while, generally, a statute of repose creates a right of exemption from enforcement of an existing right of action and imposes a time limitation as an element of that exemption.
The majority suggests no principled distinction between statutes of repose like Code § 8.01-250 and nonclaim statutes such as § 15.1-552, and I see none. Consequently, under both the common-law rule and Code § 8.01-231 as we construed and applied it in Spotsylvania, the time limitation in Code § 8.01-250 does not run against the Commonwealth.
But, the defendants complain, this Court held in U.S. Gypsum that their exemption is a substantive right protected by the constitutional guarantee of due process.
As explained by the Supreme Court in Guaranty Trust Co. v. United States,
In 1964 when the General Assembly enacted Code § 8-24.2, the predecessor of Code § 8.01-250, such a “reservation, or exception” had been part of the statutory and common law in Virginia for more than two centuries. The legislature, charged with knowledge of that fact, could have included a provision modifying or repealing the common-law rule. It did not do so, and the omission cannot be attributed to oversight. Hence, insofar as applied to the Commonwealth, the new substantive rights created by the statute of repose never came into existence. And, absent relevant legislative amendment in the quarter of a century since the statute of repose was enacted, the Commonwealth’s exemption should prevail today,
Because I think the trial court erred in ruling that Code § 8.01-250 operates against the sovereign, I would reverse the judgment and remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings.
For an analysis of the origin, evolution, and modern rationale of this component of the doctrine of sovereign immunity, see Guaranty Trust Co. v. United States,
See District of Columbia v. Owens Corning, Fiberglas Corp.,
The majority contends that this case includes a “classic collision between a constitutionally protected right and a statutory power” and that, under the “bedrock principles of constitutional government”, the constitutionally protected right must prevail. Certainly, this is true when a statute conflicts with a right created by constitutional mandate. However, where, as here, the conflict is one between the substantive right created by Code § 8.01-250 and the right of sovereign immunity from time constraints, the former prevails
