¶ 1. Plaintiff Flex-A-Seal, Inc. appeals from the dismissal of its complaint to renew a judgment against defendant Deborah Safford. The trial court found the complaint barred by the statute of limitations, 12 V.S.A. § 506. On appeal, Flex-A-Seal argues that: (1) the controlling judgment for statute-of-limitations purposes was issued in 2004, not 2002; (2) the statute of limitations was tolled by the terms of a 2002 settlement agreement between the parties and by Safford’s acknowledgment and partial payment of her debt; and (3) Safford should be equitably estopped from asserting the statute of limitations as a defense. We reverse the trial court’s decision.
¶2. The record indicates the following. In 2001, Flex-A-Seal sued Safford, its former employee, based on her alleged embezzlement of funds. The parties entered into a settlement agreement. In October 2002, the court issued a stipulated judgment order pursuant to the parties’ agreement, granting judgment to Flex-A-Seal against Safford in the amount of $230,000. Flex-A-Seal later filed a motion for trustee process against earnings, and in November 2004 the court issued two orders: (1) a bi-monthly wage attachment of $150; and (2) a stipulated order stating the original judgment amount, the judgment amount with interest as of October 28, 2004, and providing for the suspension of
¶ 3. In April 2012, Flex-A-Seal filed a complaint to renew its judgment against Safford. It also filed a motion for trustee process against Safford’s earnings as Safford had changed jobs. In an entry order, the court sua sponte questioned if the action was timely filed, citing 12 V.S.A. § 506 (“Actions on judgments and actions for the renewal or revival of judgments shall be brought by filing a new and independent action on the judgment within eight years after the rendition of the judgment, and not after.”). Safford then raised the statute of limitations as a defense in her answer.
¶ 4. In a series of rulings, the court denied Flex-A-Seal’s motion for trustee process as time-barred and dismissed Flex-A-Seal’s complaint on the same grounds. The court rejected Flex-A-Seal’s argument that the relevant final judgment for purposes of 12 V.S.A. § 506 was the 2004 stipulated order rather than the 2002 judgment. It found that the plain language of § 506 required a new action to be filed within eight years of the original judgment, and that the statute did not contemplate successive limitations periods triggered by post-judgment rulings.
¶ 5. The court also cited
Ayer v. Hemingway,
¶ 6. On appeal, the plaintiffs argued that the 2006 order was a new “final judgment” from which a new eight-year statute-of-limitations period began to run. We rejected this argument. Id. ¶ 18. We concluded that the “final judgment” that triggered the running of the statute of limitations was the 2001 default order because this order “ended the litigation between the parties and finally disposed of the subject matter before the court.” Id. The 2006 order “was not a new decision on the merits”; it “merely set forth an agreed-upon payment plan for the 2001 debt.” Id. Any other conclusion, we reasoned, “would create a continually moving statute of limitations” because “[t]rial courts routinely issue post-judgment orders that identify payments made and interest that has accrued.” Id. ¶ 19. We found that the statute did not contemplate such a result, and that “the need for certainty and predictability in the law” required the rejection of such an approach. Id.
¶ 7. Based on these considerations, the trial court in this case similarly concluded that Flex-A-Seal’s 2002 judgment against Safford was the controlling judgment for statute-of-limitations purposes. The court also rejected Flex-A-Seal’s assertion that the statute of limitations was tolled when Safford acknowledged her debt to Flex-A-Seal and made partial payments on the debt. Citing J. Calamari & J. Perillo, Contracts § 5-7, at 255 (3d ed. 1987), the court recognized that, in contract law, an acknowledgment of the existence of a debt was considered to be an implied promise to pay that “has the effect of starting the
¶ 8. The court noted that under early Vermont law, this rule apparently applied to judgments as well as contracts. The court cited
Olcott v. Scales,
¶ 9. In
Nelson,
the court explained, this Court clarified that under 12 V.S.A. § 506 a plaintiff must file a new and independent action to renew a judgment and cannot do so by motion.
¶ 10. Finally, the court rejected Flex-A-Seal’s assertion that Safford should be equitably estopped from raising a statute-of-limitations defense. It found that Flex-A-Seal failed to show that it was ignorant of any facts or that it had reasonably relied on Safford’s assurances in lieu of renewing its judgment against her. Thus, for all of these reasons, the court dismissed Flex-A-Seal’s complaint as time-barred under 12 VS.A. § 506.
¶ 11. Flex-A-Seal moved for reconsideration under Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e), arguing that the court failed to consider a 2002 settlement agreement between the parties in which Safford
allegedly agreed to waive any defenses to enforcement of the judgment, including time-related defenses. The court explained that it had not considered this agreement because Flex-A-Seal had not provided it to the court; the agreement was not in the record of the case or in the record of the original 2001 case; and Flex-A-Seal made no mention of the settlement agreement in any of its prejudgment pleadings. The court found that Flex-A-Seal easily could have presented this evidence in a timely fashion, and that Rule 59(e) was not intended to relieve a party from its own mistakes. It thus concluded that, under
¶ 12. Flex-A-Seal now appeals. We review the trial court’s dismissal order de novo.
Dernier v. Mortg. Network Inc.,
¶ 13. We begin with Flex-A-Seal’s assertion that the 2004 order should be considered a new final judgment for statute-of-limitations purposes. According to Flex-A-Seal, the 2004 judgment is controlling because it significantly modifies and supersedes the 2002 judgment.
¶ 14. This argument is foreclosed by our decision in
Ayer.
As set forth above, we concluded in that case that the controlling judgment for statute-of-limitations purposes is the judgment that “end[s] the litigation between the parties and finally dispose[s] of the subject matter before the court.”
¶ 15. We next consider Flex-A-Seal’s assertion that the statute of limitations was tolled by the terms of the parties’ 2002
settlement agreement and by Safford’s acknowledgement and partial payment of her debt. We do not address Flex-A-Seal’s arguments concerning the 2002 settlement agreement because, as the trial court held, that agreement was not timely submitted below. The only issue that is properly raised with respect to this agreement is whether the court erred in refusing to consider it for the first time on reconsideration. On this point, we find no abuse of discretion. See
Rubin v. Sterling Enters., Inc.,
¶ 16. We thus turn to Flex-A-Seal’s second argument. Flex-A-Seal cites
Putnam,
¶ 17. The Court described the basis for this rule in
Gailer v. Grinnel,
¶ 18. The Court found that this principle “certainly applies as well to a debt arising on judgment as to any other debt.” Id. It found “nothing appertaining to a judgment debt, or in the language of the statute applied to it, to distinguish it, in this respect, from a debt on simple contract; and, to say that one may be revived by an acknowledgment or promise, and not the other, would be making a distinction, not founded in reason or principle, nor called for by any known rule of law.” Id. The Court thus held that:
the defendant’s liability was fixed by the judgment, and as the statute goes upon the presumption of payment after the lapse of eight years, the acknowledgment of the debt within eight years shows that it has not been paid, and thus, by removing the presumption, takes the case out of the statute. The acknowledgment . . . revives the debt ab initio, and the plaintiff recovers, not on the ground of having a new right of action, but that the statute, by reason of the acknowledgment, does not apply to bar the old one.
Id. at 354.
¶ 19. The statute of limitations in effect at the time of these decisions is similar to that in effect now. Between 1797 and 1972, the law provided that “all actions of debt or
scire facias
on judgment” must be brought “within eight years next after the rendition of such judgment, and not after.” See R. 1797, p. 597. The statute was modified in 1972 to read: “Actions on judgments and actions for the renewal or revival of judgments shall be brought within eight years after the rendition of the judgment, and not after.” 1971, No. 185 (Adj. Sess.), § 33. The statute was amended again in 2010, and now provides that “[a]ctions on judgments and actions for the renewal or revival of judgments shall be brought by filing a new and independent action on the judgment within eight years after the rendition of the judgment, and not after.” 12 V.S.A. § 506. The 2010 modification followed our decision in
Nelson,
where we concluded that, under the common law and 12 V.S.A. § 506, a party must file “a new and independent suit commenced in accordance with [Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure] 3” to renew a judgment, and that judgments could not be renewed by motion.
¶ 20. Safford has neither argued nor briefed the question of whether we should overrule
Gailer
and
Olcott
in light of the holdings and rationales of
Ayer
and
Nelson.
While we note some possible tension among those decisions, we leave to another day, following complete briefing, any consideration of that issue. See
Johnson v. Johnson,
Reversed and remanded.
