OPINION
for the Court.
This сase comes before the Supreme Court on appeal from the Superior Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the *42 municipal defendants. The plaintiff, the Narragansett Electric Company (Narragansett Eleсtric), contends that this Court should vacate the judgment of the Superb or Court, which was based upon the hearing justice’s ruling (1) that in 2008 Narragansett Electric did not timely file its tax appeal with the City of Cranston Office of Tax Assessment and (2) thаt, for that reason, the Superior Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the instant civil action. In addition, Narragansett Electric asserts that the defendants are barred from raising the untimeliness and jurisdictional issues before this Court because they failed to make such contentions at the municipal level and did not sufficiently articulate those contentions as affirmative defenses within their answer filed in the Superior Court.
Narragansett Electric accordingly contends that the Superior Court’s order granting summary judgment should be vacated and the case remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings.
This case came before the Suprеme Court for oral argument pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After considering the record, the memo-randa submitted by the parties, and the oral arguments of counsel, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown and that this appeal may be resolved without further briefing or argument.
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we vаcate the judgment of the Superior Court and remand the case to it for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I
Facts and Travel
The pertinent facts of this case may be briefly summarized as follows. On December 31, 2007, the City of Cranston, by and through its tax assessor, valued plaintiffs tangible personal property located within that municipality at $23,290,814. It is undisputed that plaintiffs first quarter 2008 tax payment with respect to that property was due on July 15, 2008.
In October of 2008, Narragаnsett Electric appealed the just-referenced tax assessment by filing with the Cranston tax assessor an “Application for Appeal of Property Tax.” 1 By means of that document, Narragansett Electric took issue with the $23,290,814 assessment, contending that the fair market value of the property at issue was actually $16,917,909. In due course, both the tax assessor and the Tax Board of Review denied Narragansett Electric’s appeal.
On January 27, 2009, after the denial of its appeal at the municipal level, Narragansett Electric filed a complaint in the Superior Court, naming as defendants (in their official capacities) Cranston’s finance dirеctor and its tax assessor. 2 In response, defendants filed an answer in *43 which (inter alia) they set forth as an affirmative defense that “[t]he Court has no jurisdiction over the Defendants in this cause of action.”
Thereafter, relying on Rule 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, defendants filed a motion to dismiss Narragansett Electric’s complaint, contending (inter alia) that the Superior Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over this case. That assertion as to a lack of subject matter jurisdiction was predicated on defendants’ contention that Narragansett Electric had not timely filed its appeal in the Cranston Office of Tax Assessment. 3
On December 17, 2009, the Superior Court held a hearing on defendants’ motion to dismiss. (Bеfore passing upon that motion, however, the hearing justice converted it to a motion for summary judgment due to the fact that defendants had requested that the court consider materials outside the pleadings.) In a bench decision rendered that same day, the hearing justice stated that, in considering whether or not the tax appeal filed in the Cranston Office of Tax Assessment pursuant to § 44-5-26(a) was timely, the court would not take into account the fact that Cranston General Ordinance 3.12.010(D) of the Cranston Municipal Code provides that no interest will be assessed “for taxes received within a five business day processing period following each resрective due date.” 4 Instead, the hearing justice ruled that, for the purpose of determining whether or not Narragansett Electric had complied with the ninety-day requirement set forth in § 44-5-26(a) (see footnote 3, supra), the court would conduct its calculations by using as the point of departure the July 15 due date without regard for the “processing period” that is provided for in the Cranston ordinance; the hearing justice concluded that, if one employs the approach to the calculations concerning the timeliness issue that he deemed appropriate, the final date for a timely filing would have been ninety days after July 15, 2008 (excluding the July 15 date from the calculation). Consequently, the hearing justice ruled that, regardless of whether the appeal to the tax assessor had been filed on the ninety-first day after July 15 (i e., October 14, as Narragansett Electric contended was the case) or on the ninety-second day (ie., October 15, as defendants contended), both dates were beyond the ninety-day period referenced in § 44-5-26(a). 5 The hearing justice held that, for that reason, the Superior Court lаcked subject matter jurisdiction over this case.
The hearing justice accordingly granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the ground that, because of what he deemed to have been Narragansett Electric’s failure to have filed its appeal with the Cranston tax assessor in a timely manner, the Superior Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the instant case. *44 Narragansett Electric thereafter filed a timely notice of appeal to this Court.
II
Standard of Review
This Court reviews a hearing justice’s decision on a motion for summary judgment in a
de novo
manner.
Nunes v. Meadowbrook Development Co.,
III
Analysis
A party’s compliance or noncompliance with the timeliness requirements set forth in § 44-5-26 is a “condition[] precedent to the assertion of * * * claims under that [statute].”
See Nunes v. Marino,
It is true that the distinction between the “appropriate exercise of power and the absence of power” may at times be “blurry.”
See Mesolella,
A condition precedent must be pled in accordance with Rule 9(c) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, which specifically states that “[a] denial of performance or occurrenсe [of a condition precedent] shall be made
specifically
and
with
*45
particularity.”
(Emphasis added.)
See also Granoff Realty II Limited Partnership v. Rossi,
In the instant matter, as an affirmative defense, defendants merely stated that “[t]he Court has no jurisdiction over the Defendants in this cause of action.” That very generаl language utterly fails to comply with the specificity and particularity requirements of Rule 9(c); the quoted language makes absolutely no allusion to a failure to have fulfilled a condition precedent. In light of the fаct that defendants failed to plead as an affirmative defense plaintiffs noncompliance with a condition precedent in accordance with Rule 9(c), defendants have waived their contention thаt Narragansett Electric did not file its appeal with the tax assessor in a timely manner.
See Marcotte v. Harrison,
Accordingly, it is our view that the hearing justicе erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants. In view of our holding with respect to the defendants’ noncompliance with the requirement of Rule 9(c), we need not reach Narragansett Electric’s other arguments on appeal.
See Furlan v. Farrar,
IV
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we vacate the judgment of the Superior Court and remand the case to the Superior Court for a hearing on the petition for relief in accordance with § 44-5-26(a).
Notes
. The parties are not in agreement as to the precise date in October of 2008 on which Narragansett Electric filed its appeal with the Cranston tax assessor. Narragansett Electric contends that the appeal was filed on Tuesday, October 14, while the defendants contend that it was filed on Wednesday, October 15.
. In Narragansett Electric's original complaint, filed on January 27, 2009, one Frank Smith was named as a defendаnt, and the complaint stated that he was being sued “in his capacity as Assessor for the City of Cran-ston, Rhode Island.”
On the following day, however, Narragansett Electric filed an amended complaint that no longer named Mr. Smith аs a defendant and substituted in his place "Salvatore Sac-coccio, in his capacity as Assessor for the City of Cranston, Rhode Island.”
.General Laws 1956 § 44-5-26(a) reads in pertinent part as follows:
"Any person aggrieved on any ground whatsoever by any assessment of taxes against him or her in any city or town, or any tenant or group of tenants, of real estate paying rent therefrom, and under obligation to pay more than one-half of thе taxes thereon, may within ninety (90) days from the date the first tax payment is due, file an appeal in the Local office of tax assessment * * (Emphasis added.)
. Cranston General Ordinance 3.12.010(D) of the Cranston Municipal Code reads in pertinеnt part as follows: “Interest will not be assessed for taxes received within a five business day processing period following each respective due date.”
. It is uncontested that the ninety-first day after July 15 was Tuesday, October 14 and that the ninety-second day after July 15 was Wednesday, October 15.
