Ruth WALLACE
v.
ALABAMA ASSOCIATION OF CLASSIFIED SCHOOL EMPLOYEES; and John Smith.
Supreme Court of Alabama.
*136 Ronnie L. Williams, Mobile, for appellant.
Al Pennington and Nicki E. Patterson, Mobile, for appellee.
JONES, Justice.
This is an appeal from a summary judgment. The facts are as follows:
Plaintiff Ruth Wallace filеd a complaint in the Circuit Court of Mobile County, Alabama, naming the Alabama Association of Classified School Employees (AACSE) and its executive director, John Smith, as Defendants. Wallaсe alleged that she was a food service employee at Archard Elementary School; that she was a member of the AACSE, an association which provides its members with legal аssistance when they are fired from their jobs or have other employment problems; and that when she was fired from her job, Plaintiff contacted AACSE and requested legal assistance, which the association did not provide. Plaintiff's complaint then alleged breach of contrаct and bad faith. Defendants filed an answer denying Plaintiff's allegations of breach of contrаct and bad faith and responded to a set of interrogatories before moving for summary judgment. The motion for summary judgment alleged that there was no genuine issue of material fact and thаt Plaintiff's action was time barred by a federal statute of limitations. The trial court granted Defendants' summary judgment motion. Plaintiff now appeals. We affirm the trial court's summary judgment.
OPINION
A. The Affirmative Defense
Plaintiff first argues that thе trial court was not at liberty to consider Defendants' allegations in their summary judgment motion that the statute of limitations had run on Plaintiff's cause of action. The basis for this argument is that the statute of limitations is an affirmative defense which must be affirmatively pleaded before it may be raisеd in a summary judgment motion, and Defendants did not plead it.
In the context here presented, Plaintiff is correct. The statute of limitations is specifically listed as an affirmative defense in A.R.Civ.P. 8(c); аnd the rule requires that it be specially pleaded. Once an answer is filed, if an affirmative defense is not pleaded, it is waived. Robinson v. Morris,
Thаt, however, is not the instant case. Here, Defendants filed an answer without an affirmative plеading of the statute of limitations defense; and, then, over Plaintiff's objections, Defendants attempted to raise the defense in their summary judgment motion. This they cannot do. Bechtel, supra.
If the statute of limitations was the basis for the trial court's granting of Defendants' summary judgment, we would have to reverse. Therе is, however, an additional ground on which the trial court could have granted Defendants' motiоn for summary judgment: that there is no genuine issue of material fact. It is a cardinal rule of apрellate review that where the trial judge's ruling is based on no specific ground, his judgment must be sustained оn appeal if any good ground is presented. Sterling Oil of Oklahoma, Inc. v. Pack,
B. Genuine Issue of Material Fact
We now examine the record to test the "no genuine issue of material fact" ground. Plaintiff averred in her complaint that AACSE provided legal assistance to its members, that she was a member of AACSE, that she had requested legal assistаnce, and that she did not receive legal assistance from it. All was well and good for the Plaintiff at this point. But, then, in response to one of Plaintiff's interrogatories, Defendants answered thаt Plaintiff had never requested legal assistance. Once Defendants moved for summary judgment and inсluded the answers to Plaintiff's interrogatories in support of their motion,[1] Plaintiff could no longer rеst on the allegations of her complaint. A.R. Civ.P. 56(e). Plaintiff did file a response to Defendants' motion, but nothing more, and a "paper showing" is not sufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact.
Plaintiff's failure to offer anything other than a bare response to Defendants' motiоn was fatal, for "the failure of the party opposing the motion to offer any affidavits or other testimony to contradict the evidence of the moving party leaves the Court nо alternative but to consider that evidence uncontroverted." Thompson v. Lee,
AFFIRMED.
TORBERT, C.J., and MADDOX, SHORES and BEATTY, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Answers to interrogatories may be considered in a summary judgment motion as long as they are otherwise admissible and meet the requirements of Rule 56. J.B. Jones Timber Co. v. Williams,
