OPINION AND ORDER
This is a negligence action commenced by the appellants, Delbert and Mary Stewart, for damage to their property resulting from a fire. They alleged the fire, which occurred in their home in September, 1985, to have been caused by the negligent installation of the plumbing and appliances, including a hot water heater in 1980 by the appellee, William H. Jolly Plumbing Company. The suit was commenced in October, 1986, 13 months after the fire. The trial court dismissed the complaint in May, 1987, on the basis that the claim was barred by the one-year limitation period in KRS 418.-135(2).
In Tabler v. Wallace, Ky.,
The trial court granted the appellee’s motion to dismiss determining that KRS 413.-135(2) required appellants to bring the suit for property damage within one year of the injury instead of the five years as provided in KRS 413.120, the ordinary property damage statute. In doing so the court noted that KRS 413.135(1) was unconstitutional for the same reasons as set forth in Tabler, supra, but found no constitutional or other impairment with KRS 413.135(2). The attorney general was not notified of the constitutional attack on the reenacted statute while the matter was pending in the trial court but was named in, and served with, the notice of appeal.
The appellee has moved this Court to dismiss the appeal solely because the appellants did not comply with that portion of KRS 418.075 requiring notice to the attorney general, or CR 24.03, likewise providing for such notice. Thе appellants have not filed a response to the motion. The appellee asserts that this Court and the Supreme Court “have consistently and repeatedly held that the notification provisions of KRS 413.075 [418.075] and CR 24.03 аre mandatory" to entertain appellate review of such matters. We disagree both with the contention that such consistency exists and that the appellee is entitled to a dismissal of the appeal, it being jurisdic-tionally flawed.
There is considerable confusion regarding notification to the attorney general when a statute is alleged to be unconstitutional, particularly in regard to the consequences of failing tо notify the attorney general. Thus, we have taken this opportunity to examine both the applicable statute and rule.
CR 24.03 provides in part:
When the constitutionality of an act of the General Assembly affecting the public interest is drawn in quеstion in any action to which the State or an officer, agency, or employe thereof is not a party, the movant shall serve notice of the motion upon the Attorney-General.
KRS 418.075 provides in part:
In any proceeding which involves the validity of a statute, the attorney general of the state shall, before judgment is entered, be served with a copy of the petition, and shall be entitled to be heard, and if the ordinance or franchise is alleged to be unconstitutionаl, the attorney general of the state shall also be served with a copy of the petition and be entitled to be heard.
The purpose for the notification to the attorney general is not to limit or define thе parameters of the subject matter jurisdiction of our trial or appellate courts. Nor is it designed as another hurdle for an aggrieved litigant to overcome in order to secure appellate review. It is obvious that
Any confusion in this regard is attributable in part to the ambivalent treatment of the issue by the courts. In Tabler v. Wallace, supra, which as stated before dealt with the constitutionality of the same statute at issue here, this Court disposed of the notification issue, as well as other unrelated issues pertaining to preservation, in a footnote, finding such arguments “unpersuasive.” The Supreme Court noted our ruling, also in a footnоte, and declined to express any opinion on the issue.
Part of the confusion, too, stems from the variance between the rule and the statute concerning when and who is to give notice to the attorney general. The rule dоes not provide when notice must be given and the statute merely provides that it must be given “before judgment is entered.” Although the rule provides the “movant” to serve notice, the statute is silent but indicates service to be a funсtion of the court. In Miles v. Shauntee, Ky.,
The merits of the appellee’s motion were specificаlly addressed in Dewey v. Allinder, Ky.,
Thus, to summarize, when one challenges the constitutionality of a statute without notifying the attorney general, he does so at peril that (1) any judgment rendered in the action adverse to the validity of the statute could be set aside upon the attorney general’s motion pursuant to CR 60.02, or (2) that this Court might remand, on motion of another party or on its own mоtion, to allow the attorney general the opportunity to intervene. Allinder, supra. In no event though is our jurisdiction, nor our ability to reach constitutional issue otherwise properly preserved, affected by the failure of а litigant to notify the attorney general. See Wallace v. Lieberman,
It appears to us to be an inefficient ritual to remand the case to the circuit court, have someone (either the court or a party) notify the attorney general and the attorney general, as usual in purely civil law statutes, decline the invitation to participate in the constitutional determination. Be mindful that, as in this case, it is not a question of preservation of error or issue; the circuit court considered the constitutional issue but merely did not have the benefit of the attorney general's counsel. It is sensible for us, and for all concerned, to give notice to the attorney general, such notice having been waived on the trial level, and let him address his advice to this Court or request that the matter be remanded before the trial court.
Therefore, the motion of the appellee to dismiss the appeal is DENIED.
All concur.
Notes
. KRS 413.135(1) requires suit to be brought within seven years from the "substantial completion” of the improvement but KRS 413.135(2) provides contrarily that suit must be brought within оne (1) year from the date of injury when the injury "occurred during the fifth year following substantial completion of such improvement ... but in no event may such an action be brought more than six (6) years after the substantial completion” of an improvement to real property. (Emphasis added.)
. The appellee erroneously states that the appellants set out only one issue in their prehearing statement, that of the constitutionality of KRS 413.135. Thе appellee should re-read the pre-hearing statement which clearly sets out two issues, (1) the constitutional issue and (2) the proper application of the statute, if found to be constitutional, to the faсts established in this case. Thus, dismissal of the appeal is not warranted as a nonconstitutional issue is clearly presented.
. Other cases cited by the appellee, cf. City of Louisa v. Newland, Ky.,
. In both cases, as is typically the case, the attorney general was not inclined to participate in the debate.
