Before us is the issue of the timeliness of the claims against the defendant, Dryvit System, Inc. (Dryvit). On May 21, 1987, the plaintiff, Hanson Housing Authority,
The plaintiff had engaged Concrete to construct a housing project containing seventeen apartment buildings, a garage, and a community building. Among other things, the contract documents required Concrete to install an exterior wall system designed and supplied by Dryvit (the Dryvit System). 2 Concrete retained a subcontractor (who was ultimately im-pleaded in this action) to install the Dryvit System. Dryvit, other than supplying the components, was not involved in the physical installation of the Dryvit System. A certificate of completion of the project was issued by the plaintiff to Concrete on June 16, 1981.The plaintiff, in its complaint, alleged generally that the walls of the project were improperly constructed; that cracks developed in the exterior finish, joints, and caulking; and that, as a result, water penetrated the buildings causing “serious structural and cosmetic damage” to the project. The plaintiff’s complaint, in addition to stating claims against Concrete and its surety, contained the following described eight counts against Dryvit: Count VI, for negligent design; Count VII, for negligent failure to warn and provide adequate instructions; Count VIII, for negligent training and certification; Count IX, for negligent inspection and supervision; Count X, for breach of implied warranties; Count XI, for breach of express warranties; Count XII, for misrepresentation; and Count XIII, for violation of G. L. c. 93A, § 11. Dryvit, in its answer and motion for summary judgment, asserted that all of the claims against it were time barred by the applicable statutes of limitation. 3
On May 17, 1982, the maintenance supervisor and a representative of Dryvit inspected the exterior wall system of the project. The Dryvit inspector observed “some bubbling and cracking of an exterior wall . . ., some vertical cracks at right angle intersections of some walls [and] some failure of the caulking.” He also observed that, “[w]here finish was removed from bubbled area, fiberglass mesh was not imbedded into the primus adhesive and was totally exposed above the primus adhesive.” Although these observations are not imputed directly to the plaintiff, they confirm the existence and detectability, in 1982, of the physical signs observed. By a letter dated July 8, 1982, an architect notified the Department of Community Affairs of the Commonwealth that the
Between 1982 and 1985, the plaintiff was not informed of any aggravation of the condition of the exterior wall system or of any evidence of water penetration or other deficiency. In 1985, a consultant reported to the plaintiff that he observed some exterior cracks and mesh protrusion in the exterior walls of the project. In 1986, he concluded, on the basis of testing and laboratory analysis, that water had penetrated the exterior walls through the cracks in the project’s walls and caused damage to portions of the walls interior to the Dryvit System. He reported these conclusions to the plaintiff.
In ordering summary judgment, the judge relied on
Melrose Hous. Authy.
v.
New Hampshire Ins. Co.,
The plaintiff argues that the judge mistakenly read its complaint against Dryvit as being grounded on- improper installation of the exterior wall system rather than defects in its design; that its complaint presents essentially a products liability case; that the design defects were inherently unknowable at the time of construction and installation; that the discovery rule was, therefore, applicable to this action; and that summary judgment should not have been granted since genuine issues exist as to when the plaintiff knew or should have known that it had been harmed by the defendant’s conduct. 6
In the main, the judge’s reliance on
Melrose
was appropriate. Most of the plaintiffs claims against Dryvit relate to matters which could have been discovered by the architect and clerk of the works during the construction phase of the project. Any negligence of Dryvit in providing instructions (Count VII), in training and certification of installers (Count VIII), and in inspecting the wall construction (Count IX) was readily discoverable before completion of construction and, therefore, was not inherently unknowable.
Anthony’s Pier Four, Inc.
v.
Crandall Dry Dock Engrs., Inc.,
Portions of Count VI of the plaintiff’s complaint, given the manifold benefits of liberal construction, 7 reasonably may be read to allege inherently unknowable design defects in the form of components which were not thick enough to permit the proper imbedding of the fiberglass mesh and to prevent cracking and water penetration. Similarly, the warranty claims (Counts X and XI) could be construed as alleging inherently unknowable breaches of warranties relating to the exterior walls remaining waterproof and free of cracks and maintenance problems. The plaintiff argues that such allegations implicate the discovery rule and that there are genuine issues of fact as to when it learned or should have learned that it had been harmed by the design defects and breaches of warranty.
The Supreme Judicial Court has stated:
“In all cases the statute of limitations begins to run when the injured person has notice of the claim. The‘notice’ required is not notice of every fact which must eventually be proved in support of the claim. These details are properly the subject of requests for discovery once an action is filed. Rather, ‘notice’ is simply knowledge that an injury has occurred.” (Citation omitted.) White v. Peabody Constr. Co., 386 Mass. at 130 .
The requisite knowledge of injury occurs in a products liability action (whether brought under a negligence theory or a breach of warranty theory) when the plaintiff knows or reasonably should know that it has been harmed by the defendant’s conduct.
Fidler
v.
E. M. Parker Co.,
This court has stated that the discovery rule starts a limitations period running “when a reasonably prudent person (in the tort claimant’s position), reacting to
any suspicious circumstances
of which he might have been aware (what the Court of Appeals in
Fidler
called ‘likely cause’), should have discovered that he had been harmed by [the defendant]” (emphasis added).
Malapanis
v.
Shirazi, supra
at 383.
8
The controlling question is whether a plaintiff’s knowledge, actual or attributed, of both harm to it and the likely cause of such harm, was suEcient to stimulate further inquiry which was likely to alert it to a cause of action against a defendant.
Id.
There are circumstances in which the record on appeal is sufficient to permit appellate determination of the mixed factual and legal question of when a party knew or should have known it had been harmed by another.
Melrose Hous. Authy.
v.
New Hampshire Ins. Co.,
The circumstances known or attributable to the plaintiff by the end of 1982 were such as to alert it to the possible existence of a cause of action against Dryvit. The “falling out” of caulking, the bubbling in the finish coat, the two “big cracks,” the movability of a portion of an exterior wall, and the reference to “Dryvit leaks,” considered together, were sufficient to start the running of any applicable limitation clocks, even when considered “with an indulgence in the plaintiff’s favor.”
National Assn. of Govt. Employees, Inc.
v.
Central Bdcst. Corp.,
The plaintiff’s fallback position is that summary judgment should have been limited to those buildings “on which blemishes were observed in 1982.” This argument fails to recognize that the installation of the Dryvit System was accomplished under one contract and that the plaintiff alleges that
In its c. 93A count (XIII), the plaintiff bases its claim of unfair and deceptive conduct on Dryvit’s alleged breaches of warranty and misrepresentations. The accrual dates of the c. 93A claims are established by the same principles as govern the determination of the underlying actions. See International Mobiles Corp. v. Corroon & Black/Fairfield & Ellis, Inc., ante 215, 221 (1990). Accordingly, the c. 93A actions accrued no later than the end of 1982. The four-year limitations period set by G. L. c. 260, § 5A, therefore, had expired by 1987, when the plaintiff filed this action.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The Dryvit System has four components and is installed as an exterior wall facade by attaching polystyrene insulation boards to a gypsum substrate, then applying primus adhesive, into which fiberglass mesh is embedded before applying a finish coat.
The parties are in apparent agreement that the negligence, misrepresentation, and breach of warranty claims generally are subject to the
The plaintiff does not dispute that facts known to its maintenance supervisor are attributable to it.
The plaintiff does not quarrel with Dryvit’s contention that notice to the Department of Community Affairs of the Commonwealth, in effect, was notice to it by operation of G. L. c. 23B. It does argue, however, that the July 8, 1982, letter constituted inadmissible hearsay and should not be relied upon by this court. There is no indication in the record that the affidavit containing the letter was the subject of a motion to strike. The affidavit, therefore, properly may be considered.
Stetson
v.
Selectmen of Carlisle,
Implicit in the plaintiff’s argument is the notion, which we reject, that the appeal must stand or fall on the rationale articulated by the judge, i.e., the applicability of
Melrose Hous. Authy.
v.
New Hampshire Ins. Co., supra.
We “may consider any ground supporting the . . . motion.”
Champagne
v.
Commissioner of Correction,
See Mass.R.Civ.P. 8(f),
The “suspicious circumstances” approach to accrual of a cause of action is to be distinguished from that applied when wrongful conduct is discernible to a party but harm to it has not yet materialized. See, e.g., International Mobiles Corp. v. Corroon & Black/Fairfield & Ellis, Inc., ante 215 (1990).
The phrase is from
Urie
v.
Thompson,
