OPINION
The plaintiff in this case is a disgruntled former client, and the defendant is her former attorney. The plaintiff appeals *938 from the Superior Court’s grant of summary judgment in the defendant’s favor on statute of limitations grounds. We affirm on grounds that were alluded to but not entirely relied upon by the motion justice.
The substantive issues that lie in the background of this appeal are: (1) the applicability of one or more of our tolling statutes to the legal malpractice claim of a plaintiff who alleged that she was outside of the United States on some allegedly pertinent dates; and (2) the determination of the accrual date of that plaintiffs alleged cause of action.
As intellectually tantalizing as those issues are and as helpful as their resolution might be to bench and bar, we need not reach either issue (or the underlying claim of malpractice) because of plaintiffs failure to have complied with a fundamental and crucially important procedural requirement.
Well before this action was commenced, the plaintiff in this case was a plaintiff in another civil action, in which the present defendant served as her attorney. That earlier civil action, which eventually gave rise to the instant legal malpractice case, was an action for adverse possession brought by plaintiff against Kickemuit River Company — an entity that owned property adjacent to plaintiffs property in Bristol, Rhode Island. Eventually becoming dissatisfied with the legal advice that she had received in that adverse posses- ’ sion case, plaintiff brought this action, alleging legal malpractice.
In due course, defendant in this legal malpractice action moved for summary judgment on statute of limitations grounds. The plaintiff opposed that dis-positive motion by arguing that the running of the statute of limitations should have been tolled because she was allegedly outside of the United States when her cause of action accrued.
In opposing defendant’s motion for summary judgment and in support of her claim that she was in fact outside the United States on the date of accrual, plaintiff submitted what she called an affidavit. 1 But it was not a competent or valid affidavit. The purported affidavit that plaintiff filed in this case was not notarized, and we therefore do not deem it to have constituted a sufficient affidavit for purposes of Rule 56 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. 2
An affidavit is a written statement that has been sworn to by the affiant before a person authorized to administer oaths.
3
Since a more precise definition
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might prove useful in future situations, we are impressed by and hereby adopt the careful definition of the term “affidavit” that was formulated by the Supreme Court of Nebraska: “[W]e define an affidavit as a written or printed declaration or statement of facts, made voluntarily, and confirmed by the oath or affirmation of the party making it, taken before a person having authority to administer such oath or affirmation.”
State v. Haase,
The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine has succinctly and accurately summarized the important function served by affidavits in the summary judgment context: “It is the underlying purpose of the summary judgment process to expose a sham claim or untenable defense by requiring a party to commit himself under oath by an affidavit in support of the allegations in his pleadings.”
Farrell v. Theriault,
In view of these considerations, we cannot countenance plaintiffs failure to have abided by the clear and specific language of Rule 56. We view plaintiffs opposition to defendant’s motion for summary judgment as though it had been accompanied by
no
affidavit.
6
See Roth v. Illinois Farmers Insurance Co.,
A party seeking the sanctuary afforded by statutory tolling provisions is, by definition, already in an exceptional legal status. Such a party should be especially scrupulous about complying with the letter of the law while seeking that sanctuary. No plausible reason appears in the record as to why the plaintiff did not submit a proper affidavit in opposing the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
For these reasons, we affirm the Superi- or Court’s summary judgment in the defendant’s favor.
Notes
. Pursuant to Rule 56 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, once the defendant in his motion for summary judgment had properly articulated and elaborated upon the legal defense of statute of limitations, plaintiff was required to establish that there was a factual basis for her claimed entitlement to tolling.
See generally Garside v. Osco Drug, Inc.,
. The definitional question before us
(viz.,
what constitutes an affidavit as that term is used in Rule 56) involves an issue of law, which we consider on a
de novo
basis.
Heflin v. Koszela,
.See Mugavero v. Kenzler,
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It is noteworthy that the term "affidavit” had essentially the same meaning in the law for a very long time.
See, e.g., Harris v. Lester,
. Our legal system treats with great seriousness a statement that has been sworn to before a notary public. Statements sworn to in affidavits can have immensely serious consequences.
See, e.g., Huckin v. Connor,
. Our insistence that there be compliance with the affidavit requirement is not a symptom of pettifoggery. Procedural requirements like the affidavit requirement in Rule 56 usually are the product of careful deliberation, and they are intended to serve important functions in a complex system whose ultimate goal is the achievement of justice.
See Farrell v. Theriault,
.
See also Hough v. Weber, 202
Ill.App.3d 674,
. The plaintiff did file a document which indicated that it had been signed by her “under the pain and penalties of perjury.” Although such declarations are recognized in some jurisdictions for some purposes, our Rule 56 *940 makes no provision for same, and we see no reason to deviate from the clear requirements of our rule.
To the extent that plaintiff’s statement made under "the pain and penalties of perjury” represented a sort of promise that evidence would be offered at a later date as to her location at the time of accrual, that would not have been enough.
See Garside,
