The New Hampshire Supreme Court confirmed in Murray v. McNamara,
No. 2013-630 (N.H. March 20, 2015) that contractors are exempt from liability
under New Hampshire’s Consumer Protection Act (RSA 358-A) for transactions
occurring more than three years prior to the plaintiff learning of the alleged
violation of the statute (though
they may still have liability under other causes of action). This issue arose in the context of a construct defect claim
based on defendants’ purported breach of the implied warranty of workmanlike
quality. The defendants, owners of a construction business, constructed
the house for the original owner in 2004. Four years later, the
plaintiffs purchased the home. After living in the house for several months,
the plaintiffs discovered mold in in the house that was so widespread it forced them to vacate the
property while they attempted to remedy the problem.
The Defendants argued that the transaction was exempt from
liability under the CPA because it was brought more than three years after
construction was completed. RSA 358-A:3, IV-a provides that
“[t]ransactions entered into more than 3 years prior to the time the plaintiff
knew, or reasonably should have known, of the conduct alleged to be in
violation of [the CPA]” are exempt from the CPA.” The federal courts in
New Hampshire had interpreted this provision as being different from a statute
of limitation because it “focuses on the plaintiff’s knowledge of the
defendant’s wrongful conduct” to determine whether a transaction is exempt from
the CPA rather than “the plaintiff’s knowledge of his injury and its [causal]
relationship to the defendants’ conduct.” The NH Supreme Court had not
yet considered the issue since the provision was amended in 1996, but concluded
in Murray that it agreed with the federal court’s interpretation finding
that
To determine whether a claim is
exempt from the CPA, we look back from the time that the plaintiffs “knew or
reasonably should have known” of the alleged violation. If the transaction at
issue occurred more than three years before that time, then it is exempt. The
person claiming the exemption bears the burden of proving that the transaction
is exempt. See RSA 358-A:3, V (2009).
The Court found there was no dispute that the transaction at issue
- defendants’ alleged construction of the house with latent structural defects
- was completed in 2004 and that plaintiffs purchased the home four years
later. Because the allegedly wrongful transaction occurred more than
three years before the plaintiffs “knew or reasonably should have known” of it,
the construction of the house was an exempt transaction pursuant to RSA
358-A:3, IV-a. The Court therefore reversed the trial court’s ruling on
the CPA claim, but
left in place the jury award on the warranty claim against the contractor.
1 comment:
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