Plaintiff brought suit with a count in assumpsit for breach of contract and a count in negligence both seeking damages for the cost of remedying certain alleged defects in a garage and showroom erected by the *155 defendant for the plaintiff under a written contract. Plaintiff’s suit was brought February 9, 1970, more than six years after the building was completed and occupied by the plaintiff in November 1963. Defendant’s motion to dismiss based upon the six-year statute of limitations (RSA 508:4) was granted by the Trial Court {King, J.) who reserved and transferred plaintiff’s exception.
Plaintiff argues that the defects now complained of were not discovered by him until May 1964, and that the statute should not begin to run until that month. It was in May 1964 that plaintiff complained of certain defects to defendant who attempted to remedy them but was unsuccessful, according to plaintiff’s claims. Plaintiff relies upon
White v. Schnoebelen,
Plaintiff has not alleged fraudulent concealment of the defects by defendant so that he does not come within the exception that relieves a plaintiff from the statute of limitations until he knew or should have known of damages fraudulently concealed from him by the defendant.
Hamlin v. Olivier,
The general rule in tort actions has been that ignorance of the cause of action on the part of the plaintiff does not toll the statute of limitations. 54 C.J.S.
Limitations of Actions
§ 205 (1948); 51 Am.Jur.
2d Limitation of Actions
§ 146 (1970). An exception to this rule has been recognized by some courts and commentators generally in medical malpractice cases
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where a foreign object has been left in a plaintiff following an operation.
Fernandis v. Strully,
These cases have established a rule dating the cause of action from the date of discovery of the injury by the plaintiff. While this rule has not gained universal acceptance, courts which have rejected it have found the factual situation troublesome. This was true particularly when the statute barred a plaintiff’s claim before he knew he had been wronged.
Tantish v. Syendey,
The factual situation here is not as persuasive as in the tort actions involving malpractice since on the basis of the plaintiff’s allegations his ignorance of his cause of action for a few months left him over five years to bring his action. In any event, the discovery exception has generally been limited to tort actions and the plaintiff’s labeling of a count as tort is not determinative. “The determination of whether an action is on a contract or tort is not controlled by the form of the action but by its substance.”
Dunn & Sons, Inc. v. Paragon Homes of New England, Inc.,
An action for breach of contract unlike a tort action accrues when the breach occurs whether any damage then occurred or not. 11 Williston, Contracts § 1290 (3d ed. W.H.E. Jaeger 1968); 51 Am. Jur. 2d
Limitation of Actions
§ 126 (1970).
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Neither the one-year warranty nor the work performed by the defendant after acceptance of the building changes the date of accrual of the action since plaintiff’s claim arises from the original breach. The Uniform Commercial Code in establishing a four-year statute of limitations for actions for breach of contract of sales specifically provides: “A cause of action accrues when the breach occurs regardless of the aggrieved party’s lack of knowledge of the breach.” RSA 382-A:2-725 (2). No reason appears to apply a different rule to the six-year statute of limitations applicable to the contract here. RSA 508:4;
Poole v. Terminix Co. of Maryland and Washington, Inc.,
Plaintiff’s exceptions overruled;
judgment for the defendant.
