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April 10, 1998
California's One Year Statute of Limitations: Extended
until Suspicion of Injury
By Richard
Alexander, Esq
California's one-year
statute of limitations in personal injury cases begin to run upon
the date of the injury or when a person discovers an injury has
occurred.
Anyone with a valid, enforceable and
collectible claim, who files one day after the one year statute
of limitations period, is facing dismissal of an outlawed claim.
The discovery rule provides that the
limitations period commences when the plaintiff has or should
reasonably have knowledge of the injury and its cause and a suspicion
of wrongdoing.
Suspicion is examined from an objective
standpoint; the issue is what a reasonable person would know or
suspect under the facts of your case.
Under California law whenever there is
knowledge of an injury, and facts which would cause a reasonable
person to merely suspect negligence on the part of someone, the
statutory clock begins ticking, even when an informed professionals
render contrary opinions or the plaintiff truly has no personal
appreciation of the fact that he/she has been injured by someone's
wrongful conduct.
Two California Courts of Appeal concerning
the claims of breast implant recipients' against the implant manufacturers
demonstrate how little suspicion is necessary to cause the statute
of limitations clock to begin running and the importance to consult
an experienced lawyer whenever an injury has been suffered to
carefully calculate when the statute of limitations begins to
run.
In these two cases, the courts held that
the plaintiffs should have suspected that their injuries were
caused by the breast implants more than one year prior to filing
suit, despite each plaintiff's claims that she did not have such
a suspicion, but more importantly even though one plaintiff was
told by her doctor that her implants were safe.
The key cases are Goldrich v. Natural
Y Surgical Specialties (1994) 25 Cal. App. 4th 772, 31 Cal. Rptr.
2d 162 and Bristol-Myers Squibb Company v. Superior Court (1995)
32 Cal. App. 4th 959, 38 Cal. Rptr. 2d 298.
The starting point for an understanding
of delayed discovery is the California Supreme Court's decision
in Jolly v. Eli Lilly and Company (1988) 44 Cal. 3d 1103, 245
Cal. Rptr. 658, which is the basis for the Goldrich and
Bristol-Myers Squibb decisions.
In Jolly, a DES case, the court stated
that pursuant to California's discovery rule, " the accrual date
of a cause of action is delayed until the plaintiff is aware of
her injury and its negligent cause . . . . A plaintiff is held
to her actual knowledge as well as knowledge that could reasonably
be discovered through investigation of sources open to her." At
1109.
In rejecting the view that discovery
requires actual or imputed knowledge of facts establishing wrongful
conduct, the court held that, "the statute of limitations begins
to run when the plaintiff suspects or should suspect that her
injury was caused by wrongdoing, that someone has done something
wrong to her . . . [T]he limitations period begins once the plaintiff
"has notice or information of circumstances to put a reasonable
person on inquiry [citations omitted].
A plaintiff need not be aware of the
specific facts necessary to establish the claim. . . Once the
plaintiff has a suspicion of wrongdoing, and therefore an incentive
to sue, she must decide whether to file suit or sit on her rights.
So long as suspicion exists, it is clear
that the plaintiff must go find the facts; she cannot wait for
the facts to find her." 44 Cal. 3d at 1110.
Under California law a suspicion of wrongdoing,
coupled with knowledge of the harm and its cause, will commence
the limitations period and once that occurs, a complaint must
be filed within one year.
The facts supporting the court's determination
that the plaintiff in Jolly had a suspicion of wrongdoing were
contained in her deposition: "Plaintiff stated that as early as
1978 she was interested in 'obtaining more information' about
DES because she wanted to 'make a claim'; she felt that someone
had done something wrong to her concerning DES, that it was a
defective drug and that she should be compensated." At 1112.
Plaintiff did not bring her suit until
early 1991. Under these facts, summary judgment on the statute
of limitations issue was proper as a matter of law. In other words,
because Jolly knew something in 1978, she had to sue by 1979.
She filed in 1991 and was twelve years
late. The Jolly principle was applied in Goldrich , 25 Cal.
App. 4th 772, to bar the plaintiff's claims on statute of
limitations grounds. Mrs. Goldrich underwent her first breast
reconstructive surgery with implantation of polyurethane foam
implants in July 1983, and had an immediate severe local reaction.
She had both implants replaced in November
1983, and in December of that year had an implant extruding from
a nipple graft.
Over the next year, she consulted with
three specialists who recommended the removal of her implants,
and had four subsequent surgeries, culminating with the removal
of both implants in December 1984.
At that time, the surgeon noted that
her right implant was ruptured. Mrs. Goldrich sued Cox-Uphoff
and other defendants in July 1986. The court in Goldrich held
that summary judgment was properly granted on the ground that
Mrs. Goldrich's claim was time-barred.
The court stated that by December 1984,
Mrs. Goldrich "must have suspected or certainly should have suspected
that she had been harmed and she must have suspected or certainly
should have suspected that her harm was caused by the implants."
Id at 780.
The court also rejected the suggestion
that, on these facts, she did not have a very strong suspicion
of wrongdoing by December 1984.
The court also rejected Mrs. Goldrich's
argument that the trial could have erred in considering her knowledge
(actual or imputed) of the cause of the injury, and should have
instead focused on when she acquired a suspicion of wrongdoing.
Dismissing any "semantical differences"
between the two as immaterial, the court concluded that by December
1984, Mrs. Goldrich suspected or reasonably should have suspected
that her injury was caused by problems with her implants.
The court also rejected Mrs. Goldrich's
claims that she believed that her problems were due to her body
rejecting the implants rather than problems with the implants
themselves.
Even though she had not been warned about
the possibility of a defective implant (she had been told that
they would last a lifetime), the court stated that a "reasonable
woman would have been suspicious about the implants." Id at 780.
The fact that three breast implant specialists
recommended permanent removal of her implants, the court observed,
is itself sufficient to make a reasonable person suspicious.
This was all that was required to commence
the running of her statute. Under California law if she had filed
by December 1985 she would have been able to go forward with her
case.
Her July 1986 filing was seven months
too late and her claims were outlawed. In Bristol-Myers Squibb
Company v. Superior Court (1995) 32 Cal. App. 4th 959, 38 Cal.
Rptr. 2d 298 the court held that when a plaintiff has knowledge
of injury and a suspicion of wrongdoing, the statute of limitations
begins to run as to all potential defendants, whether or not they
are known to plaintiff.
Here the plaintiff had silicone gel breast
implants implanted in 1976. Following a severe injury to her chest
area in 1982, she noticed that her right breast appeared smaller
and that she had a lump under her right arm.
When her plastic surgeon told her that
the lump could not be silicone, she was dissatisfied and sought
a second opinion. Shortly thereafter, a second doctor confirmed
her suspicions that the implant was ruptured and that the lump
in her arm was silicone.
Her surgeon was unable to remove all
of the migrated silicone. In 1984, Ms. Jones had additional arm
problems including ulcerations, which, according to one doctor,
were caused by silicone migration.
Ms. Jones had filed a complaint against
the individual who had injured her, and in 1983 had consulted
attorneys regarding possible malpractice claims against her plastic
surgeon.
She did not file suit against the implant
manufacturer until April 1991. The Bristol-Myers Squibb court
cited Jolly and Goldrich in holding that Ms. Jones' statute of
limitation had been triggered by no later than 1984 or 1985.
The Jolly test was set forth as follows:
(1) knowledge of injury, and (2) knowledge of facts creating,
or which in a reasonable person would create, a suspicion of negligence
on the part of someone. At 965. By 1982, Ms. Jones had knowledge
of the rupture of her implant and migration of silicone (knowledge
of injury).
She had considered a malpractice action
against her doctor in 1983 (suspicion of wrongdoing). At that
time, she had an obligation to pursue her legal remedy since "as
a matter of law the plaintiff knew of her damage and injury and
knew or at least actually suspected that someone had been negligent."
At 966.
The court also cited examples of cases
in which it could not be held, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff
should reasonably have suspected wrongdoing.
For example, the court stated that the
mere fact that an operation does not produce hoped-for results
does not signify negligence and will not cause commencement of
the statutory period. Unjian v. Betman (1989) 208 Cal. App. 3d
881, 256 Cal. Rptr. 478.
In addition, the statute will not begin running
in cases where there is a logical explanation for the injury which
does not indicate negligence on anyone's part. Hills v. Aronsohn
(1984) 152 Cal. App. 3d 753, 199 Cal. Rptr. 816 (nodes in breast
implants were reasonably explained to plaintiff as the occasional
non-negligent results of silicone injections).
In any event, by 1984 or 1985 Ms. Jones
was suffering from ulcerations in her arm caused by silicone;
by this time, she was certainly aware of facts requiring the commencement
of an action.
According to the court, Ms. Jones' statute
of limitations began to run in 1984 or 1985, with respect to her
malpractice action as well as her action against the implant manufacturer.
Jones argued that while she may have
had cause to sue her doctor, she had no reason to believe that
she and an action against the implant manufacturer. She had been
told and believed that the silicone was biological inert and felt
that her injuries were caused by the person who battered her or
by her physician.
The court rejected these arguments, holding
that when a plaintiff has cause to sue based on knowledge or suspicion
of negligence the statute starts to run as to all potential defendants.
All that is required is an objective
suspicion of negligence; it is not necessary that the plaintiff
be able to identify the negligent party.
Under California law whenever there is
knowledge of an injury, and facts which would cause a reasonable
person to merely suspect negligence on the part of someone, the
statutory clock begins ticking, even when an informed professional
opines to the contrary.
[Editor's Note: Richard Alexander
is recognized by The State Bar of California as a certified specialist
in civil trial law and was first certified as a civil trial lawyer
by the National Board of Trial Advocacy in 1980. Emphasizing working
relationships with clients has led to an exceptional record
of success. He has served as a member of the Board of Governors
of The State Bar of California, President of the Santa Clara County
Bar Association and the Board of Governors of Consumer Attorneys
of California. He is a founding member of the National Association
of Consumer Advocates, and heads Alexander, Hawes & Audet,
LLP.]
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