Since the solution to this case does not turn upon the sufficiency of the evidence to establish actionable negligence, we will not detail the testimony of experts and others with reference to the installation of the furnace, and to the cause and the origin of the fire. Suffice it to say, plaintiffs offered plenary, competent evidence tending to establish their allegations that the negligent installation of the furnace was the proximate cause of the destruction of their property.
The period prescribed for the commencement of this action, whether regarded as arising out of contract or of tort, is three years. G.S. 1-52(1) and (5). The critical question is whether plaintiffs have offered
any evidence tending to show that they instituted this action within three years from the date it accrued. If not, the nonsuit was proper. The defendant having properly pled the applicable statute of limitations,
Jennings v. Morehead City,
Plaintiffs rightly allow that subsection (5) of G.S. 1-50, enacted in 1963, after the institution of this suit, has no application. If this action was already barred when it was. brought on January 12, 1962, it may not be revived by an act of the legislature, although that body may extend at will the time for bringing actions not already barred by an existing statute.
Waldrop v. Hodges,
Eor a thoroughgoing analysis of the rules relating to when a cause of action accrues so as to start the statute of limitations running, see the opinion of Bobbitt, J., in
Shearin v. Lloyd, supra.
Where there is either a breach of an agreement or a tortious invasion of a right for which the party aggrieved is entitled to recover even nominal damages, the statute of limitations immediately begins to run against the party aggrieved, unless he is under one of the disabilities specified in G.S. 1-17.
Shearin v. Lloyd, supra; Lewis v. Shaver,
In this case, defendant’s negligent breach of the legal duty arising out of his contractual relation with plaintiffs,
Peele v. Hartsell,
This case is indistinguishable on its facts from Motor Lines v. General Motors Corp., supra, instituted September 8, 1958, in which the Court, speaking through Bobbit, J., said:
“Assuming, as alleged by plaintiff, the truck-tractor was equipped with a faulty and dangerous carburetor, likely to cause said truck-tractor to be ‘ignited with fire,’ when sold and delivered to plaintiff, and that defendants knew or by the exercise of due care should have known of such defective condition, and failed to warn plaintiff thereof, we are of opinion and hold that plaintiff suffered injury and his rights were invaded in the latter part of June, 1955, immediately upon the sale and delivery of the truck-tractor to plaintiff, and that a cause of action in favor of plaintiff and against defendants then accrued for which plaintiff was entitled to recover nominal damages at least. Hence, the judgment of the court below, based on the ruling that plaintiff’s action is barred by the three-year statute of limitations, is affirmed.” Id. at 326,128 S.E. 2d at 416 .
On principle this case is likewise indistinguishable from Shearin v. Lloyd, supra, upon which the Court relied in Motor Lines. In Shearin, on July 20, 1951, the defendant surgeon, in performing surgery on the plaintiff, left a lap-pack in his abdomen, which lap-pack was not discovered until November 18, 1952. The plaintiff brought an action for malpractice on November 14, 1955. In holding the action to be barred, the Court, per Bobbitt, J., said:
“Statutes of limitations are inflexible and unyielding. They operate inexorably without reference to the merits of plaintiff’s cause of action. They are statutes of repose intended to require that litigation be initiated within the prescribed time or not at all. It is not for us (the judicial branch) to justify the limitation period prescribed for actions such as this.” Id. at 370,98 S.E. 2d at 514 .
This action was
The judgment of involuntary nonsuit must be sustained.
Affirmed.
