LaVerne Armijo (plaintiff) appeals from a summary judgment granted to defendants, Regents of U.N.M. (Regents) and Dr. Willis Kephart. Plaintiff brought an action against defendants on her own behalf and on behalf of her deceased infant son, Raymundo Armijo (Raymundo). She alleged (1) medical malpractice against Dr. Kephart and Regents; (2) misrepresentation as to the quality of medical care received against Regents; and (3) fraudulent concealment of the facts surrounding the death of Raymundo, which, she claimed, gave rise to an action for punitive damages against Regents.
The trial court granted summary judgment to defendants on the basis of the running’ of the statute of limitations under the New Mexico Tort Claims Act (Act), NMSA 1978, Section 41-4-15 (Repl.Pamp. 1982). 1
FACTS
Plaintiff, the mother of Raymundo, was provided prenatal care at a branch clinic of the University of New Mexico Medical Center (U.N.M.) during 1978. Doctor Kephart was not involved in the care until December 5, 1978, the day before the birth of Raymundo. On December 5, 1978, at approximately 5:30 p.m., plaintiff went to the U.N.M. hospital because she believed she was in labor. She testified that the staff in attendance instructed her to go home because she was not dilated enough for admission. The staff instructed her to time her contractions, and to return if her water bag broke.
Plaintiff returned to U.N.M. at approximately 11:30 .p.m. that same evening because her contractions were frequent, with little or no time interval between them. Doctor Kephart examined her at that time, and instructed her to return home because she was not dilating. He also directed her to return to the hospital when her water bag broke. Plaintiff left the hospital, but “felt very strongly that it [Dr. Kephart’s instruction] was a wrong decision.” Plaintiff returned to her home, and remembered “feeling very, very angry and very frustrated.”
Subsequently, at home, plaintiff took a warm bath to relax, as recommended in the childbirth classes she had attended. She began to bleed in the tub, and felt intense pain. The father of Raymundo, Arthur Lucero, who was living with plaintiff at the time, called Dr. Kephart and told him that he was bringing the plaintiff into the hospital.
Plaintiff was admitted at approximately 2:30 a.m. on December 6, 1978. Shortly afterwards, she gave birth to Raymundo. Doctor Kephart delivered the baby. At the time of the birth, plaintiff realized that the baby was not crying. She remembered the staff placing the baby in an incubator and taking him outside the delivery room. Plaintiff also remembered that she was “starting to get semi-hysterical” at this time, and was “not getting any answers” to her questions concerning Raymundo’s health.
In the recovery room, plaintiff recalled Dr. Kephart later informing her that the umbilical cord apparently was pinched during birth, but that Raymundo was “in good hands now____” Plaintiff never saw Dr. Kephart after this conversation; U.N.M. pediatricians took over the care of the infant from that point forward in accordance with the clinic system at U.N.M. Plaintiff was discharged on December 7.
On December 8, the pediatrician treating Raymundo gathered the plaintiff and Mr. Lucero together at the hospital for a conference. According to the plaintiff, he told them that Raymundo “probably would never wake up, and that there was absolutely no brain activity whatsoever.” When plaintiff asked what was the cause of these findings, the pediatrician stated that “it was because he [Raymundo] had been asphyxiated during birth, and that he [Raymundo] had had several seizures.” Plaintiff did not ask how the asphyxiation occurred, owing to her “upset” condition. Shortly after leaving this conference, the plaintiff was called at her home by the pediatrician and notified that Raymundo had died. A hospital pathologist, who performed the autopsy, later met with plaintiff and related that the autopsy did not establish the cause of death, and that the baby appeared “normal.”
Plaintiff did not make any further inquiry into the circumstances surrounding Raymundo’s death during the following year. However, she gave birth again in November, 1979, at Presbyterian Hospital in Albuquerque. Prior to that birth, plaintiff consulted her new treating physician about the problems encountered with Raymundo’s
Plaintiff had no further involvement with the matter of Raymundo’s death until late 1980 or early 1981 when she requested the medical records relating to the labor, delivery, and death, and received from U.N.M. a summary of the autopsy report, a summary of lab tests, and a summary of the labor and delivery. She did not, at that time, receive the complete medical file.
In the summer of 1981 plaintiff saw an attorney regarding the circumstances of Raymundo’s death. This consultation was sought because of plaintiff’s feeling that she “hadn't gotten any answers” as to why Raymundo died, and because she “didn’t really know how else to go about getting ... answers.” Suit was filed on June 16, 1982.
DISCUSSION
I. Infant’s Cause of Action
The parties agree that Section 41-4-15(A) of the Act controls this action. The statute reads in pertinent part:
A. Actions against a governmental entity or a public employee for torts shall be forever barred, unless such action is commenced within two years after the date of occurrence resulting in loss, injury or death, except that a minor under the full age of seven years shall have until his ninth birthday in which to file ____ (Emphasis added.)
The statute, by its express terms, carves out an exception for minors’ causes of action from the two-year limitation applying to other plaintiffs. Tafoya v. Doe,
We are confronted, at the outset, with two separate actions in the present case. Plaintiff sued (1) on behalf of Raymundo, for his pain and suffering and the deprivation of his life; and (2) on her own behalf, for her pain and suffering, and the loss of the companionship and society of Raymundo as a result of malpractice and misrepresentation. (The validity of plaintiff’s individual claims are not involved in this appeal.) We read the limitation statute as applying the exception to a minor under seven years of age on the date of the “occurrence resulting in ... death.” We conclude that the deceased infant falls under the exception, and that the cause of action on his behalf is not barred until after December 6, 1987, the date of his ninth birthday. The trial court’s grant of summary judgment as to the claims brought on his behalf was error, and is reversed.
II. Plaintiffs Cause of Action
The question becomes whether plaintiff’s individual claims for her pain and suffering and the loss of companionship of Raymundo may be tacked on to the claims of the infant, thereby avoiding the operation of the two-year limitation period. A disability, such as minority, which saves one from the operation of a limitation statute is a personal privilege of the person under the disability only, and cannot confer rights on persons asserting independent actions. Slade v. Slade,
Under Section 41-4-15(A), the limitation period begins to run from the time of loss, or injury. Aragon & McCoy v. Albuquerque National Bank,
In a medical malpractice action the statute of limitations may be tolled where a physician or hospital has knowledge of facts relating to malpractice, and fails to disclose such facts to the patient under circumstances where the patient may not reasonably be expected to learn of the improper acts. Keithley v. St. Joseph’s Hospital,
Defendants argue that the doctrine of fraudulent concealment is not available to toll the statute of limitations under the Act. Because the Act creates a cause of action in derogation of common law, defendants contend that the commencement of an action within the two-year limitation period is an indispensable condition of the Act. Defendants cite Perry v. Staver,
We disagree. The Wrongful Death Act does not control the disposition of this action. Section 41-4-17 of the Tort Claims Act provides that the Act shall be the exclusive remedy for plaintiffs with claims against governmental entities and public employees. Moreover, because of the specific inclusion of a wrongful death claim within the definition of a tort claim in Sections 41-4-5 to -12 of the Act, the limitations provision under the Wrongful Death Act does not apply to plaintiff’s claims. See Armijo v. Tandysh,
We hold that the doctrine of fraudulent concealment applies to toll Section 41-4-15. The declared policy and intent of the Act is to reject “the inherently unfair and inequitable results which occur in the strict application of the doctrine of sovereign immunity”, Section 41-4-2(A), and to allow
Our application of fraudulent concealment to the statute is not only directed by the recognition of the traditional tort concepts of duty embodied in the Act. We are also directed by the purpose and goals of the legislature, as set out in Section 41-4-2(A). The Act mandates that suits against governmental entities and employees be allowed in certain instances to avoid the inequities inherent in the doctrine of sovereign immunity. Were we to preclude the application of fraudulent concealment to toll the statute, we would contravene the legislative intent. This would lead to an unreasonable and unjust result which we cannot allow. State v. Santillanes,
We now turn to the propriety of the grant of summary judgment as to plaintiff’s claims for pain and suffering and loss of companionship. A moving party must establish a prima facie case showing there is no genuine issue of material fact in order to be entitled to summary judgment. Lackey v. Mesa Petroleum Co.,
Plaintiff additionally brought a claim of misrepresentation against Regents as to the quality of medical care which
Plaintiff did not argue on appeal a claim based upon breach of contract, which apparently was incorporated in an amended complaint. This claim is abandoned. Novak v. Dow,
Plaintiffs final claim was a claim for punitive damages based on fraudulent concealment. Because we have concluded there was no factual issue as to fraudulent concealment, this claim for punitive damages must necessarily fail.
Affirmed as to the claims of plaintiff; reversed as to the claims of plaintiff’s deceased infant son, with instructions to reinstate these claims upon the trial court’s docket. Each party to bear its own costs.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. A personal injury and wrongful death claim based on medical malpractice of a government institution or government employee is controlled by Section 41-4-15. Claims based on medical malpractice not involving the government nor government employees are controlled by the Medical Malpractice Act, NMSA 1978, Section 41-5-13 (Repl.Pamp.1982)
