Lead Opinion
Plaintiffs, members of the crew of a DC-7C sold by Douglas Aircraft Co. to Braniff Airways in 1957, were injured when the airplane crashed in Florida in the early morning of March 25, 1958, as the result of an engine failure shortly after taking off from Miami on a flight to South America. They brought this action against Douglas in the Southern District of New York on March 25, 1963, predicating federal jurisdiction on plaintiffs’ citizenship in Texas and defendant’s Delaware incorporation.
Section 48, subd. 3 of the New York Civil Practice Act, in effect when the action was brought, allowed a six year period for “An action to recover damages for a personal injury, except in a case where a different period is expressly prescribed in this article”; § 49, subd. 6 allowed only three years for “An action to recover damages for * * * a personal injury, resulting from negligence.” Blessington v. McCrory Stores Corp.,
New York’s borrowing statute as it stood on March 25, 1963, Civil Practice Act, § 13, forbade the bringing of an action by a non-resident to enforce a cause ’ of action “arising” outside New York “after the expiration of the time limited by the laws * * * of the state or country where the cause of action arose, for bringing an action upon the cause of action * *
Although the facts in Goldberg v. Kollsman Instrument Corp.,
Combining these radiations from the Goldberg opinions with the Poplar decision and Chief Judge Desmond’s statement in Goldberg that “strict tort liability” would be “a more accurate phrase” to describe the liability being imposed,
Although we travel thus far down the road with appellants, we cannot accept their conclusion that this necessarily means that New York would consider their cause of action to be one “arising” in Florida for the purpose of making Florida’s limitation period the controlling •one under § 13. As a matter of the ordinary meaning of language it seems equally possible to say that the cause of action ^‘arose” in California where defendant’s allegedly wrongful act was done or in Florida where plaintiffs were injured by it — and this even though Florida be regarded as furnishing the normative rule. In predicting which choice the New York Court of Appeals would make, we must give weight to the purpose of the borrowing statute. It has been said that such additions to the statute of limitations “were necessitated by the rule [e. g., New York Civil Practice Act, § 19] that the period is interrupted by absence of the defendant from the forum whether the cause of action arose in the forum or in a foreign jurisdiction against a nonresident defendant. In the absence of a borrowing statute, this rule would permit actions which have long since been barred by the lex loci and by the statutes of the state where the defendant resided and which would have been barred by the forum had the defendant resided there since the cause of action arose.” Note, Developments in the Law: Statutes of Limitations, 63 Harv.L.Rev. 1177, 1262-63 (1950). See also Ester, Borrowing Statutes of Limitations and Conflict of Laws, 15 U.Florida L.Rev. 33, 40-44 (1962).
New York’s response to this need has had a long and tortuous history. The initial effort was § 390 of the Code of Remedial Justice (later designated as the Code of Civil Procedure), Laws, 1876, c. 448. This provided, with exceptions not here material, that an action could not be brought in New York against a nonresident “after the expiration of the time, limited, by the laws of his residence, for bringing a like action. * * * ” In 1902 the Legislature supplemented this with § 390a, Laws, c. 193, which ultimately became § 13 of the Civil Practice Act. Since non-residents were already quite well taken care of by § 390, the initial purpose of § 390a must have been to protect residents from suits in New York that would have been barred in a state having a closer connection with the claim, as well as to give additional protection to non-residents as to claims “arising” in a state which was neither New York nor that of their residence, including the case, presumably a rare one, where the statute of the state of their residence had been tolled but the statute of the third
“§ 55. Action against nonresident; same limitation as against resident. Except as provided in section thirteen of this act an action upon any cause of action may be brought in a court of this state within the time limited therefor by the laws of this state, and may not be brought thereafter, and the time limited for bringing a like action by the laws of the place of residence of the person against whom the cause of action arose or by the laws of the place where the cause of action arose, shall not apply.” Laws 1943, c. 516.
The new CPLR omits this useless provision.
However difficult it may be to follow these meanderings, New York’s policy for nearly a century has been to protect a non-resident defendant against an action in New York, which was timely because of the tolling provision of § 19 of the Civil Practice Act, but had become barred elsewhere. From 1877 to 1902 this office was performed by § 390 of the Code of Civil Procedure, from 1902 to 1916 by a combination of §§ 390 and 390a, and since 1916 solely by the latter, subsequently § 13 of the Civil Practice Act and now § 202 of the CPLR. This being the principal evil with which the New York Legislature sought to deal, a court required to choose between two linguistically permissible decisions as to where a cause of action “arose” ought to lean to the reading more likely to achieve the underlying policy against prolonging the period of limitations because of the defendant’s absence from a jurisdiction where there was no reason to expect him to be present. The New York courts have shown their awareness of these considerations by interpreting § 13 to include a borrowing statute of a state where the cause of action “arose” barring the prosecution of a claim if an action is barred by the state of the defendant’s residence. Holmes v. Hengen,
Since we cannot be wholly confident as to the accuracy of that prediction, we think it well also to examine the consequences if New York would in fact consider the issue governed by Florida’s statutes of limitations. On that view, see fn. 5, plaintiffs acknowledge they could prevail only if their action is “upon any contract, obligation or liability founded upon an instrument of writing not under seal,” for which § 95.11(3) permits an action to be brought “within five years”
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although the point has not been raised, we note that the complaint is defective in failing to assert that Douglas’ principal place of business is not Texas. 28 U.S.C. § 1332(c) and F.R.Civ.Proc. Form 2. However, we shall assume that Douglas’ principal place of business is in California, and that the complaint could have been amended to allege this.
. The anomaly may have been only superficial since there may be more reason for a short statute of limitations in an action for negligence where pertinent evidence is likely to be lost than in an action based on strict liability. Also any anomaly was mitigated by the fact that under New York law actions for breach of warranty ruled by the six-year statute accrued on delivery, see Kakargo v. Grange Silo Co.,
. This statute has been carried forward as CPLR § 202, but with “accruing” and “accrued” replacing “arising” and “arose.”
. The contract provided that it “shall be construed and performance thereof shall be determined according to the laws of the State of California, U. S. A.”
. We shall follow the parties in assuming, although the papers do not make this clear, that Douglas was suable in Florida ever since the date of the accident. Otherwise, under Fla.Stat. § 95.07, F.S.A., the running of the statute of limitations would have been tolled.
. We have not thought it necessary to consider the possibility that New York would bar the action if it was barred either in Florida or in California, on the theory that conduct by the manufacturer and injury to the plaintiffs were both indispensable to the cause of action, so that the latter would “arise” in both states. Compare Pattridge v. Palmer,
. If § 95.11(3) were applicable, the action would be timely although the accident occurred early on March 25, 1958, and the suit was not begun until March 25, 1963. McMillen v. Hamilton,
. The insistence on using contract terminology and the lag in recognizing a tort liability to be what it is reminds of Sir Henry Maine’s comment that fictions are “the greatest of obstacles to symmetrical classification * * * There is at once a difficulty in knowing whether the rule which is actually operative should be classed in its true or in its apparent place.” Ancient Law, 32.
. On this view it is unnecessary for us to consider whether if the New York Court of Appeals would think the cause of action arose in Florida it would not also feel bound to inquire whether Florida would take the same view under its similar borrowing statute. Compare Holmes v. Hengen, supra. If, contrary to our belief, the Court of Appeals would think the Supreme Court of Florida would think the action was “upon any contract, obligation or liability founded upon an instrument of writing,” it might also think the Florida Court would think such a cause of action on the contract “arose” in California and would be barred by the Florida borrowing statute.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring) :
I concur in the result we have reached.
