UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
Filed 10/11/96
TENTH CIRCUIT
Annette McIntire,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
No. 95-3172
(D.C. No. 94-CV-1205-PFK)
American Telephone & Telegraph Corp.,
District of Kansas
et al.,
Defendants-Appellees.
ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
Before TACHA, Circuit Judge, MURPHY, Circuit Judge, and MCWILLIAMS, Senior
Circuit Judge.
MCWILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge.
On April 21, 1993, Annette McIntire and her husband, Gale McIntire, both citizens
and residents of Kansas, brought suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of New York against American Telephone & Telegraph Corporation (AT&T) and
*
This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of
law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court generally disfavors the
citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order and judgment may be cited under
the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3
Apertus Technologies, Inc. (Apertus), formerly known as Lee Data Corporation.
Annette McIntire (hereinafter McIntire) was employed as an operator by Southwestern
Bell Telephone Company in Wichita, Kansas, from 1969 until the filing of her complaint.
From 1980 on, she continuously used computer keyboard equipment
manufactured by AT&T and Apertus.
In her complaint, McIntire alleged that the equipment manufactured by the
defendants was defective in design and, because of that defect, caused its users, including
McIntire, to suffer repetitive stress injuries. According to McIntire, her stress injuries
were “insidious in their onset” and therefore she could not “identify precisely the precise
date of the onset of symptoms.” However, McIntire went on to allege in her complaint
that in June 1990, she began to experience “some symptoms such as numbness, tingling,
pain and/or sensory motor impairments of the upper extremities, neck and torso, with
additional and new symptoms and injuries thereafter.” McIntire further alleged that “[o]n
or about December 1990; March 1991; and April 1991, [she] received the diagnosis of or
underwent surgery for the following condition(s), respectively: bilateral carpal tunnel
syndrome; surgery for right carpal tunnel syndrome; and surgery for left carpal tunnel
syndrome.”
McIntire asserted a claim based on negligence and a second claim based on
product liability, and requested compensatory damages in the amount of $1,000,000. Her
husband, Gale McIntire, asserted a claim for loss of services, society and consortium, and
-2-
sought $500,000 as compensatory damages. Each also sought an additional $10,000,000
as punitive damages. Apertus and AT&T filed detailed answers to the complaint and
each alleged affirmatively that the claims were barred by the applicable statute of
limitations.
McIntire’s case was consolidated with other keyboard product liability actions
pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York. The
Second Circuit Court of Appeals subsequently vacated the consolidation orders. See In re
Repetitive Stress Injury Litigation, 11 F.3d 368 (2nd Cir. 1993). Thereafter, on motion of
the defendants, McIntire’s action, and others, were severed and transferred pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1404(a) to the United States District Court for the District of Kansas.
On December 5, 1994, McIntire filed an amended complaint in the United States
District Court for the District of Kansas in which she added Honeywell, Inc. as an
additional defendant, alleging that the keyboard used by her bearing the name of Apertus’
predecessor was in fact manufactured by Honeywell, Inc. On January 3, 1995, AT&T
moved for summary judgment, alleging that McIntire’s claims were time-barred by both
the New York and Kansas statutes of limitations. On January 20, 1995, Apertus filed an
answer to McIntire’s amended complaint wherein it alleged, inter alia, that McIntire’s
claims were time-barred. On February 3, 1995, Apertus filed a motion for summary
judgment. On February 6, 1995, McIntire filed a memorandum in opposition to AT&T’s
motion for summary judgment. On February 6, 1995, Honeywell filed an answer to
-3-
McIntire’s amended complaint, alleging, inter alia, that the Kansas statute of limitations
barred her action. On March 7, 1995, Honeywell, Inc. filed a motion for summary
judgment based on both the Kansas and New York statutes of limitations.
On February 10, 1995, McIntire filed a second amended complaint against
Apertus, AT&T, and Honeywell, Inc. In that complaint she alleged, inter alia, that
“[c]ommencing at the time of [her] initial employment [in 1980 with Southwestern Bell
Telephone Company] and continuing thereafter while engaged in the operation of said
machines in the manner they were intended to be used, the Plaintiff began to experience
numbness, tingling, pain and/or sensory motor impairments of the upper extremities,
neck, torso and back with additional new symptoms thereafter.”
On March 15, 1995, after much discovery, the district court granted summary
judgment in favor of Apertus and AT&T, holding that McIntire’s claims were time-
barred under both the Kansas and New York statutes of limitations. Specifically, the
district court stated that the “evidence in the present action establishes that the plaintiff
was aware of the onset of her injuries more than three years prior to the filing of the
present action, and that she associated these injuries with her work.” A motion to
reconsider was denied on April 26, 1995. On that same date, the district court granted
summary judgment on statute of limitations grounds in favor of Honeywell, Inc. McIntire
filed a timely notice of appeal.
As indicated, McIntire was a citizen and resident of Kansas, and her injury
-4-
occurred in the State of Kansas. Suit was brought, however, in the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of New York, but was later transferred to the United States
District Court for the District of Kansas. When applying the New York statute of
limitations to an action arising outside of the state, the first step is to refer to New York’s
“borrowing statute.” See N.Y. Civ. Prac. L & R § 202 (McKinney 1990). That statute
provides as follows:
An action based upon a cause of action accruing without the
state cannot be commenced after the expiration of the time
limited by the laws of either the state or the place without the
state where the cause of action accrued, except that where the
cause of action accrued in favor of a resident of the state the
time limited by the laws of the state shall apply.
The parties agree that if McIntire’s cause of action is barred by either New York’s
statute of limitations (three years) or the Kansas statute of limitations (two years), then
her claims are time-barred. As stated, the district court held that McIntire’s claims were
time-barred by both the Kansas statute of limitations and the New York statute of
limitations.
As concerns the Kansas statute of limitations, counsel for McIntire states in their
brief that “[i]f defendants need only show under Kansas law that plaintiff knew she was
injured through use of her keyboard more than two years prior to the filing of the
Complaint, then defendants may have been entitled to summary judgment.” However,
counsel asserts such is not the test, and that under Kansas law the true test is whether the
injured party knew, or could reasonably have been expected to know, “of the alleged
-5-
negligence of defendants in designing their keyboards and in failing to warn plaintiff.” In
thus arguing, counsel relies on Gilger v. Lee Constr., Inc., 820 P.2d 390 (Kansas 1991).
In this connection McIntire apparently filed an affidavit in which she stated that she did
not know of possible negligent design of the equipment manufactured by the defendants
until shortly before she filed her complaint.
This same argument, i.e. that the injured party did not know until shortly before
filing the complaint that the defendants were negligent in the design of their keyboards,
was recently considered, and rejected, by us in Benne v. International Business Machines
Corp., 87 F.3d 419 (10th Cir. 1996). Like the instant case, Benne was a repetitive stress
product liability case involving a Kansas citizen and resident who allegedly incurred
injuries from keyboard equipment while employed in Kansas. Benne, too, brought her
action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, but her
case was later transferred to the United States District Court for the District of Kansas,
which court granted summary judgment for the defendants, holding that the complaint
was filed outside both the Kansas and New York statutes of limitation.
On appeal, Benne argued that Gilger should lead to a reversal in her case because
“she did not realize the keyboards had been negligently designed until 1992,” which was
within the Kansas two year statute of limitations. In Benne, we rejected that argument,
and affirmed the grant of summary judgment.
In Benne, we held that under the New York “borrowing statute” the plaintiff’s
-6-
claims “must have been timely under both the limitations periods of New York and
Kansas” if her claims were to “survive the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment.”
The two-year statute of limitations contained in K.S.A. 60-513 provides in subsection (b)
as follows:
Except as provided in subsection (c), the causes of action
listed in subsection (a) shall not be deemed to have accrued
until the act giving rise to the cause of action first causes
substantial injury, or, if the fact of injury is not reasonably
ascertainable until some time after the initial act, then the
period of limitation shall not commence until the fact of injury
becomes reasonably ascertainable to the injured party . . . .
In Benne, the plaintiff interpreted language in Gilger, supra, and its predecessor,
Hecht v. First Nat’l. Bank & Trust Co., 490 P.2d 649 (Kansas 1971), “as setting forth the
rule that a plaintiff’s knowledge of the cause of her injuries is irrelevant until she realizes
that the designer of the product may have acted negligently.” Benne, 87 F.3d at 426. In
rejecting such an interpretation of Gilger and Hecht, we, in Benne, spoke as follows:
We do not believe that the Kansas Supreme Court intended to
establish the rule that a plaintiff could be fully aware of the
cause of her injury, yet wait to bring a claim based upon
negligent design some indeterminate time later when the
plaintiff develops the thought that the defendant may have
been negligent. Rather we believe the rule from Hecht is
intended to give plaintiffs who suffer from latent or difficult
to diagnose injuries the same advantages as those plaintiffs
whose injuries are immediately connectible to their source.
* * * * *
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Benne, we
conclude that she may not have become aware of the
-7-
possibility that Defendants’ negligence could have caused her
injuries until as late as 1992, when she filed suit.
Notwithstanding her lack of knowledge of the exact scientific
nature of her injuries, until 1989, by as early as 1987, she
knew her injury was associated with excessive typing on
Defendants’ keyboards. The statute of limitations commenced
running at that time. Accordingly, Benne’s claims should
have been brought no later than 1989. We hold that the
district court correctly concluded that Benne’s cause of action
was barred by the Kansas two-year statute of limitations.
As above stated, in her second amended complaint, McIntire alleged that she had
experienced stress symptoms caused by her use of office machines manufactured by the
defendants “[c]ommencing at the time of initial employment” with Southwestern Bell.
McIntire also indicated in her complaint that she experienced additional symptoms in
June 1990; and further, that in December 1990, she was diagnosed as having bilateral
carpal tunnel syndrome. McIntire did not file suit until April 21, 1993, and accordingly
her action is barred by two year Kansas statute of limitations.
Having concluded that McIntire’s complaint was time-barred by the Kansas two
year statute of limitations, we need not here consider whether McIntire’s complaint was
filed within New York’s three year statute of limitations.
Judgment affirmed.
ENTERED FOR THE COURT
Robert H. McWilliams
Senior Circuit Judge
-8-