Case Information
*1 Before McMILLIAN, JOHN R. GIBSON, and BOWMAN, Circuit Judges.
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BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.
The Kansas Public Employees Retirement System (KPERS) appeals the order of the District Court granting summary judgment to Michael Russell. The court granted summary judgment on the basis of a prior order in which it found KPERS's claims against Russell's co-defendants to be time barred. KPERS asserts that summary judgment must be reversed in light of an intervening decision of the Kansas Supreme Court. We agree and hold that KPERS's claims against Russell are timely. We therefore reverse.
I.
This litigation has been before our circuit a number of times. An exhaustive [1] recitation of the facts underlying KPERS's claims would be lengthy and, for purposes of this appeal, unnecessary. We recount only the events pertinent to the disposition [2]
of this appeal.
KPERS is a statewide retirement system for certain employees of the State of Kansas. To invest KPERS's assets, Reimer & Koger Associates was appointed KPERS's agent and attorney-in-fact to buy, sell, and trade in securities. In August 1985, Russell became chairman of KPERS's Board of Trustees. Russell was a friend and business associate of Kansas City banker Frank Morgan. In 1985, Morgan and his uncle, Sherman Dreiseszun, purchased Home Savings Association of Kansas City, a troubled Missouri savings and loan. Morgan and Dreiseszun named Russell as a director. Russell had in the past borrowed large amounts from Home Savings.
Morgan invited Reimer & Koger to invest $15 million of KPERS's funds in Home Savings debentures. Russell, who was at the time a member of both KPERS's *3 board and Home Savings's board, resigned from Home Savings's board. Shortly thereafter, KPERS invested $15 million in Home Savings. Russell then solicited each member of KPERS's board to approve an additional $50 million investment in Home Savings debentures. Russell represented to the board that the $50 million would be used to acquire a large St. Louis-based savings and loan. KPERS's board approved the investment.
In June 1986, Home Savings bid on the St. Louis savings and loan. By fall of 1986, Home Savings knew it had lost the bid and dropped the St. Louis acquisition from consideration. In 1991, regulators closed Home Savings and appointed the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) as receiver. KPERS lost its entire $65 million in principal.
KPERS initially filed suit against the Reimer & Koger defendants on June 5, 1991, in Kansas state court. On December 23, 1991, KPERS amended its petition to name as defendants Russell, various Home Savings defendants, and others. As to Russell, KPERS alleges that Russell told the other KPERS board members that the money would be used to buy the St. Louis savings and loan when, in fact, he knew the money would not be so used. Furthermore, KPERS alleges that Russell made these false statements so that Home Savings would, in turn, lend him $40 million. The Home Savings defendants impleaded the RTC, and the RTC removed the case to federal court in the Western District of Missouri.
In KPERS III, we held that Missouri limitation law governs the case. See
KPERS v. Reimer & Koger Assoc., Inc., 61 F.3d 608, 614 (8th Cir. 1995), cert.
denied,
When KPERS filed this lawsuit in 1991, the applicable Kansas statutes of
limitation were the two-year torts statute, see Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-513(a) (Supp.
1997), and the three-year statutory claims statute, see id. § 60-512(2) (1994). In 1992,
the Kansas legislature enacted a new ten-year statute of limitation for any "action
brought by, or on behalf of, [KPERS]." Id. § 60-522(a) (1994). Notwithstanding the
inclusion in § 60-522 that the limitations set forth therein "are to be construed and
applied retroactively," id. § 60-522(c), in KPERS III we relied on the reasoning in
Harding v. Kansas City Wall Products, Inc., 831 P.2d 958 (Kan. 1992), that the
legislature had not specifically expressed an intent to revive actions barred by the
statute of limitations. We therefore decided in KPERS III that the statute was not
effective with respect to causes of action asserted in cases filed before its enactment.
See KPERS III,
On remand, all of the defendants except Russell moved for summary judgment.
By way of two separate orders, the District Court granted summary judgment to the moving defendants on the grounds that KPERS's claims were barred by the Kansas two- and three-year statutes. The first order was entered in June 1996 and the second in July 1996. KPERS appealed those summary judgment orders, and argument was set for March 13, 1997. In November 1996, Russell moved for summary judgment. On March 4, 1997, the District Court entered its order granting summary judgment to *5 Russell. KPERS filed an appeal and moved to stay the March 13, 1997 argument so that the appeals could be consolidated. We denied the motion.
The appeal of the first two summary judgment orders became KPERS VI,
wherein we affirmed summary judgment as to those defendants. See KPERS v.
Blackwell, Sanders, Matheny, Weary & Lombardi, L.C.,
Our decision, issued on May 13, 1997, rejected KPERS's claims that it was
exempt from statutes of limitation because it was engaged in governmental, rather than
proprietary functions. Our decision relied on precedents of the Kansas Supreme Court
stating that "[m]aintaining KPERS is a proprietary function of the state," KPERS VI,
II.
Although KPERS VI is now final and would ordinarily be the law of the case, KPERS claims that the intervening Kansas decision should lead to a different result in its case against Russell.
The law of the case doctrine "does not apply when an intervening decision from
a superior tribunal clearly demonstrates the law of the case is wrong." Morris v.
American Nat'l Can Corp., 988 F.2d 50, 52 (8th Cir. 1993). The recent Kansas
Supreme Court opinion is clearly such an intervening decision. The Kansas Supreme
Court is a superior tribunal to decide whether a Kansas statute applies retroactively and
whether KPERS acts in a governmental or proprietary function. Further, the Kansas
Supreme Court unambiguously stated that the law of the case is wrong. We are
therefore obligated "to apply state law . . . in accordance with the then controlling
decision of the highest state court." Vandenbark v. Owens-Illinois Co.,
The Kansas Supreme Court concluded that "[t]he legislative intent is clear. The
legislature intended [the ten year statute of limitation applicable to actions brought by
or on behalf of KPERS] to be applied retroactively, and we hold it should be so applied.
. . . [W]e disapprove of the result reached in [KPERS III]." KPERS,
In KPERS III we determined that if KPERS's claims are not barred under the
borrowing statute by a shorter Kansas statute of limitation, the Missouri five-year statute
of limitation applies. The application of Missouri's statute of limitation assumed that
KPERS's functions were proprietary in nature and, thus, KPERS's claims were subject
to general statutes of limitation. See KPERS VI,
We decided in KPERS VI that the law of the case doctrine prevented KPERS from relitigating the issue of whether KPERS is exempt from statutes of limitation. That conclusion, however, was based on the assumption that KPERS was functioning in a proprietary manner. See KPERS VI, 114 F.3d at 687-88. Under the intervening decision of the Kansas Supreme Court, KPERS's investment activities are now to be viewed as governmental in nature. In light of this change, we must revisit in this appeal the issue of whether KPERS is subject to Missouri's statute of limitations.
We start with the fundamental proposition that "at common law statutes of
limitation did not apply to actions by the state." State v. Dalton,
The limitations prescribed in sections 516.101 to 516.370 [which includes the five-year statute of limitation] shall apply to actions brought in the name of this state, or for its benefit, in the same manner as to actions by private parties.
Id. (emphasis added). Because the legislature chose the phrase "this state" and not "any state," we read § 516.360 to subject only the State of Missouri to its general statutes of limitation. Section 516.360 thus does not apply to KPERS's suit because the statute's language does not apply its statutes of limitation to actions brought by other state governments, and KPERS is acting in a governmental capacity for the State of Kansas. We thus revert back to the common law doctrine that no statute runs against the state. Missouri's borrowing statute, however, which specifically applies to actions originating in other states, directs us to apply the statute of limitation from the state in which the cause originated if the period under that statute is shorter than it would be under Missouri law. See id. § 516.190. No period of limitation exists under Missouri statutory or common law with respect to actions by other state governments. We therefore must apply the shorter Kansas ten-year statute of limitation to determine whether the claims against Russell are barred.
Having filed its complaint against Russell on December 23, 1991, alleging claims based on conduct that occurred no earlier than 1985 or 1986, KPERS is well within the ten-year statutory period to bring this action. We therefore reverse the summary judgment granted to Russell and remand the case to the District Court for further proceedings.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
Notes
[1] Prior to this, six appeals have been brought before our court. We refer to these
appeals as KPERS I through KPERS VI, respectively. See KPERS v. Reimer & Koger
Assoc., Inc.,
[2] For a detailed account of the events leading to the filing of the lawsuit, see KPERS VI.
