delivered the opinion of the court:
Plаintiffs, Leon and Isabel Avakian, appeal the dismissal of four counts of their third amended complaint that were directed against Jack Chulengarian, PC., & Associates (the corporation), and Northern Illinois Foot & Ankle Centres, Ltd. (NIFAC). These new allegations altered the plaintiffs’ theory of vicarious liability by changing the identity of the treating physician-agent. The trial court ruled that they were filed beyond the four-year statute of repose (735 ILCS 5/13— 212(a) (West 2000)). On appeal, plaintiffs assert that (1) the counts relate back to the original timely filed complaint; (2) the statute of repose does not bar the additional counts; (3) the affidavit and report pursuant to section 2 — 622 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2 — 622 (West 1994)) were sufficient; and (4) the trial court erred in denying their motion for reconsideration. We reverse and remand.
I. FACTS
This case involves injuries suffered by Leon Avakian after ingesting Diflucan, an oral medication prescribed to him for treatment of his athlete’s foot. Which of two doctors examined Avakian and prescribed the medicine is hotly debated between the parties. Plaintiffs adamantly assert that Avakian was treated by Dr. Chulengarian, while the defendants assert Chulengarian was not involved in the care or treatment of Avakian. Rather, defendants assert that Avakian was treated by Dr. Kachigian. Kachigian is not a party to this lawsuit and is believed to be in Los Angeles.
Avakian visited NIFAC on May 13, 1996, in response to a newspaрer offer for a free consultation. Physician services at NIFAC are provided by the corporation, through Chulengarian and Kachigian. Avakian was advised that he had a severe case of athlete’s foot and was told to schedule a regular appointment for treatment. On May 21, 1996, Avakian reported back to NIFAC for a scheduled visit and was again examined and diagnosed with athlete’s foot.
While the parties dispute the identity of the treating physician, it is undisputed that, during this May 21 visit to NIFAC, Avakian was given a prescription for Diflucan to treat the athlete’s foot. Avakian was advised that, after two or three months, new nails would grow and the condition would be gone, and he was directed to follow up in two or three weeks. Apparently, the prescription was written and signed by Kachigian but was written on Chulengarian’s prescription pad, and it was Chulengarian’s name that appeared on the prescription bottle. The prescription was filled at Walgreen’s on May 25, 1996.
On June 16, 1996, Avakian reported to the emergency room of Condell Memorial Hospital complaining of heartburn and allegedly manifesting jaundice. He was treated by Doctors Engel and Stover, given aspirin, and sent home. The next day, Avakian still felt ill so he visited Dr. Wolfe, his regular physician, of American Family Medical Center. Wolfe took blood tests and again sent Avakian home. The following day, on June 18, 1996, Wolfe phoned Avakian and advised him that he had tested positive for a hepatitis-like disease, and they made an appointment for the next day to discuss treatment. However, before this appointment, plaintiff reported to the emergency room at Highland Park Memorial, where he was diagnosed with total fiver failure and slipped into a coma-like condition. He was flown to Chicago and received a liver transplant on June 23, 1996.
On May 20, 1998, plaintiffs filed a 16-count complaint against various doctors and facilities. Counts I and II were directed against Chulengarian and alleged careless and negligent acts or omissions in the treatment of Avаkian stemming from the treatment Avakian received on May 21, 1996. Counts III and IV¡ directed against the corporation and NIFAC, alleged that Chulengarian was the agent or employee of the corporation and NIFAC and that they were vicariously liable for the treatment rendered to Avakian by Chulengarian. Counts V through XVI were not directed against Chulengarian, the corporation, or NIFAC (collectively defendants), but were directed against other doctors and facilities that are not involved in this appeal.
The complaint was accompanied by a section 2 — 622 attorney affidavit (735 ILCS 5/2 — 622(a) (West 1994)), and eventually plaintiffs filed section 2 — 622 physician’s reports. The report regarding the care received by Avakian on May 21, 1996, was concerned with the treatment rendered by NIFAC, the corporation, and Chulengarian, and named Chulengarian as the treating physician. It stated that medication with Diflucan calls for three months of medication, one tablet per day; that a base value of the patient’s liver status should have been taken prior to initial treatment with Diflucan and then repeated 30 days later in order to verify that there was no liver dysfunction; and that the care provided by these defendants had failed to meet the applicable standard of care and therefore proximately caused Avakian’s liver condition and his need for the transplant.
On November 19, 1998, in the midst of a flurry of separate motions to dismiss on behalf of the various defendants, Chulengarian filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to section 2 — 1010 of the Code. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 1010 (West 1998). Chulengarian asserted in his motion that he was not “directly or indirectly” involved in the care of Avakian or the occurrences alleged. The trial court ordered the expedited and limited depositions of Avakian and Chulengarian for the purposes of ruling on the motion to dismiss, and both depositions were taken on January 11, 1999. Avakian testified that he recognized Chulengarian and that it was Chulengarian who treated him on May 21, 1996. Chulengarian’s testimony during his own deposition was that he had no recollеction of treating Avakian and the handwriting on Avakian’s chart was not his own, did not look familiar, and must have been that of Kachigian. The court denied Chulengarian’s motion.
Plaintiffs filed both a first and a second amended complaint, which alleged with more particularity that plaintiffs’ injuries were caused by the prescription of Diflucan. Both of these amended complaints were supplemented by the same section 2 — 622 reports and affidavits. Defendants have not challenged the timeliness of either the first or second amended complaint. Defendants did, however, file a third-party complaint against Pfizer, Inc. (Pfizer), the manufacturer of the medication. On May 25, 2000, the plaintiffs amеnded their complaint for a third time, to add the four counts that are the subject of this appeal. Two of these four counts alleged a theory of vicarious liability against NIFAC and the corporation for the negligent treatment of Avakian by Kachigian. The remaining two counts alleged vicarious liability for Kachigian’s treatment of Avakian based upon apparent authority. Plaintiffs did not retreat from their claim that Chulengarian was the treating physician, and they retained those allegations in the third amended complaint. These four counts were added in the alternative.
On November 14, 2000, pursuant to section 2 — 619(a)(5) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2 — 619(a)(5) (West 2000)), the trial court granted Chulengarian’s mоtion to dismiss the four counts of the third amended complaint as time-barred by the statute of repose (735 ILCS 5/13— 212(a) (West 1998)). The trial court reasoned that plaintiffs had been aware since Chulengarian’s deposition that his theory of defense was that he was not the treating physician. Since plaintiffs failed to add a theory of recovery based upon negligent treatment by Kachigian within four years, the trial court held that the additional counts were beyond the statute of repose. Further, because the addition of the four counts would necessitate that defendants prepare a different defense, i.e., no treatment as opposed to nonnegligent treatment, thе trial court found that defendants would be prejudiced and held that the amendments did not relate back to an original timely filed complaint.
In their motion, defendants also asserted that the section 2 — 622 report spoke to treatment rendered by Chulengarian rather than Kachigian, and therefore could not support the four additional counts. Whether or not the trial court relied on this basis for granting the motion to dismiss is not clear from its order. Plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration, which was denied on January 4, 2001. Plaintiffs timely appealed pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (155 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)).
II. DISCUSSION
We first address plaintiffs’ contention on appeal that Pfizer lacks standing to assert its positiоn on this matter. It has been recognized that there is a need for a liberal method of appeal in multiparty litigation. See Kenney v. Churchill Truck Lines, Inc.,
A. Repose Period and Relation-Back Doctrine
A cause оf action may be dismissed if it has not been “commenced within the time limited by law.” 735 ILCS 5/2—619(a)(5) (West 2000). A motion to dismiss pursuant to section 2—619 of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2—619 (West 2000)) admits the legal sufficiency of the complaint and all well-pleaded facts and the inferences drawn therefrom, but asserts an affirmative matter that avoids or defeats the claim. Ferrara v. Wall,
Plaintiffs’ medical malpractice action must be filed within the time period provided in section 13—212(a) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/13—212(a) (West 1998)), which mandates that an action against a physician arising out of patient care must be brought within two years after the claimant knew or should have known of the injury for which the damages are sought. 735 ILCS 5/13—212(a) (West 2000). The section further states:
“[I]n no event shall such action be brought more than 4 years after the date on which occurred the act or omission or occurrence alleged in such action to have been the cause of such injury or death.” 735 ILCS 5/13 — 212(a) (West 1998).
Thus, the section provides both the statute of limitations and the statute of repose applicable to plaintiffs’ cause. The repose period of four years serves to keep the incorporated discovery rule from rendering the limitations period without end. Meyers v. Underwood,
Plaintiffs’ third amended complaint was filed on May 25, 2000. The parties appear to agree that May 21, 1996, the day the prescription for Diflucan was given to Avakian, began the repose period. Assuming this is true, the amended complaint, filed four years and four days after May 21, 1996, is outside the statutory repose period. However, plaintiffs assert that their third amended complaint is not barred by the four-year statute of repose, because it sufficiently relates back to their timely filed complaint. See 735 ILCS 5/2 — 616(b) (West 2000).
Section 2—616 of the Code provides that a pleading may be amended any time before final judgment. 735 ILCS 5/2—616(a) (West 2000). The amended pleadings may change the cause of action and will not be time-barred so long as (1) the original pleading was timely filed and (2) the cause of action added in the amended pleading grew out of the same transaction or occurrence as was set up in the original pleading. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 616(b) (West 2000). The “original pleading” need not be the first complaint filed, but can be an amended pleading so long as it was also filed within the appropriate time period. See Digby v. Chiсago Park District,
Section 2 — 616(b) provides that an amended claim will not be barred by the statute of repose, even if filed outside the four-year period, as long as it relates back to an original timely filed complaint. Zeh v. Wheeler,
We first note the liberality with which courts are to construe a plaintiffs pleadings. Section 2 — 603(c) of the Code of Civil Procedure explicitly provides that pleadings are to be liberally construed in order to do substantial justice between the pаrties. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 603(c) (West 2000). Further, the “relation back” doctrine, located in section 2 — 616, is remedial in nature and should be applied liberally to favor hearing a plaintiffs claim. Bryson v. News America Publications, Inc.,
Our supreme court examined, explained, and applied the relation-back doctrine in Zeh,
“ ‘whether there is enough in the original description to indicate that plaintiff is not attempting to slip in an entirely distinct claim in violation of the spirit of the limitations act.’ ” Simmоns v. Hendricks,32 Ill. 2d 489 , 497 (1965), quoting O. McCaskill, Illinois Civil Practice Act Ann., at 126, 127 (Supp. 1936).
In Zeh, the court explained that, because maintaining a stairway at one location involved different conduct by different persons at a different time and a different place from maintaining a stairway at another location, changing the address would involve two different locations (occurrences) and could not relate back to the original pleading. Zeh,
For their assertion that these four counts of the third amended complaint relate back, the plaintiffs rely on Marek, where the difference between the original and amended pleadings was that the original complaint named only the doctor-agent while the second amended complaint charged both the doctor-agent and the facility-principal separately with negligently failing to notify her of the results of her mammography. Marek,
Defendants rely on the case of Weidner v. Carle Foundation Hospital,
Defendants’ other cases are similarly distinguishable. Viirre v. Zayre Stores, Inc.,
The defendants’ assertions notwithstanding, the issue bеfore us is not the addition of a party to this lawsuit, the addition of a new cause of action, or the addition of claims of negligent medical treatment that predate those already alleged in the original complaint. Rather, the issue before us is whether defendants’ liability is changed by the alternative identity of the treating physician. We find that it is not.
We find the case of Cammon v. West Suburban Hospital Medical Center,
On appeal, the hospital argued that it had not been supplied with the necessary information to defend itself against the new claims for the treatment rendered by the different agents, since the claims asserted against it in the original complaint were based solely on the acts of the three radiologists. Cammon,
There is a distinction that we find instructive between those claims held to relate back and those that did not in Cammon. Those claims that related back sought only to change the identity of the actor from agent to principal, while those claims that did not relate back attempted to change both the identity of the actor and the acts that allegedly gave rise to the facility’s liability. See Cammon,
In counts XIV XV XVI, and XVII of the third amended complaint, plaintiffs seek to hold defendants vicariously hable for damages resulting from the treatment rendered by Kachigian, their alleged agent. Eаch of the three previous complaints alleged a cause of action for negligence predicated upon an agency relationship. The third amended complaint adds two additional counts predicated upon the alternative agency theory of apparent authority. However, we note that both the two counts of the earlier complaints and the four new counts of the third amended complaint are based upon agency, albeit slightly different, and the theory remains the vicarious liability of defendants for another’s acts, which has not changed from the original complaint.
We find it important to emphasize that the specific acts giving rise to defendants’ alleged liability remain the same. The original complaint alleged that defendants’ agent Chulengarian prescribed a treatment and failed to warn of its adverse effects. The first and second amended complaints, the timeliness of which defendants do not question, specifically alleged that Chulengarian’s prescribing Diflucan caused plaintiffs’ injuries. Therefore, defendants have received adequate notice that plaintiff was alleging damages as a result of the prescription. See Common,
In Steinberg v. Dunseth,
Defendants also assert that Chulengarian’s deposition testimony put plaintiffs on notice that he did not treat Avakian and plaintiffs were therefore obligated to seek the true identity of the physician. See Nickels v. Reid,
While defendants protest that they did not have notice of the claim against them for the acts or omissions of Kachigian, it is their own theory that Kachigian was the treating physician and not Chulengarian. Defendants were in possession of Avakian’s treatment records and could determine from the start who the treating physician was. Since it is they who adamantly assert the treating physician was Kachigian, they cannot be said to lack notice of the claim against them for the care Kachigian gave to Avakian.
Pfizer argues that it would be prejudiced by the reversal of the trial court’s order dismissing counts XIV through XVII of the third amended complaint because it will be unable to file a contribution action against Kachigian due to the expiration of the repose period. While we make no comment regarding the likelihood of success Pfizer may have in bringing a contribution action against Kachigian or what further action it may pursue in this case, we note that Pfizer has failed to provide any explanation or authority as to why our holding that these four counts relate back to the original complaint precludes its ability to file a contribution action.
B. Section 2 — 622 Report
Defendants also asserted in their motion to dismiss that plaintiffs’ health professional’s report, which must be filed along with thе complaint pursuant to section 2 — 622 of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2 — 622 (West 1994)), failed to meet the requirements of that section and therefore dismissal was proper. The order granting defendants’ motion does not specify on what basis the trial court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss, but the transcript of the hearing suggests that the trial court granted the dismissal on this basis as well.
Section 2 — 622 requires plaintiffs who seek damages for injuries resulting from healing art malpractice to file an affidavit along with the complaint. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 622(a)(1) (West 1994). This affidavit must establish that the affiant has consulted a health professional who has determined, upon a review of the medical record, that there is a reasonable and mеritorious cause for filing the action. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 622(a)(1) (West 1994). The report of the reviewing health professional must also be attached to the complaint. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 622(a)(1) (West 1994).
The purpose of section 2 — 622 is to deter frivolous suits. Cato v. Attar,
Defendants assert that our standard of review on this issue is an abuse of discretion, citing Premo v. Falcone,
The statute requires that, for eаch defendant who has been named in a complaint and each named at a later time, there must be a separate certificate and written report. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 622(b) (West 1994). However, this court has recognized that, when a single report is sufficiently broad to cover each defendant and discusses deficiencies in the medical care given by the defendants, the report can apply to more than one defendant and comply with section 2 — 622. Premo v. Falcone,
The requirement that the report clearly identify the reasons that a meritorious cause exists further supports our holding in Comfort. The identity of the treating physician means little to the health professional who reviews a patient’s medical record in order to assess the standard of care received by that patient. This is so because the expertise of the health professional lends itself to a review of the acts performed by the treating physician, not to a review of his or her identity. The reviewing physician must state with precision that the acts fell below the standard of care and why. Thus, it is the actions of the treating physician that give rise to liability. Accordingly, the theory of section 2 — 622 does not require a separate report for the addition of a party whose liability is not based upon different acts or omissions. See Premo,
Defendants’ assertion would require plaintiffs to incur the cost of another physician’s report, which merely substitutes the name Kachigian for Chulengarian. There would be no additional review of the treatment because the treatment itself would remain unchanged. We do not see how justice would be served by requiring plaintiffs to incur the cost of a physician’s expertise where such exрertise is not utilized.
The amended pleading before us changes only the identity of the agent, not the actions that give rise to defendants’ liability. The theory of liability asserted against defendants is that in their capacity as principals or employers they are responsible for the acts of their agent. In two of the four new counts, the cause of action remains one of agency, and in the remaining two, largely the same facts will be utilized to establish apparent authority. Moreover, the identity of the defendants and the acts giving rise to their liability have not changed from the first amended complaint to the third amended complaint. Therefore, under these faсts, we hold that, when the counts are directed against a principal, and the acts upon which liability is predicated remain the same, plaintiff does not need to change the section 2 — 622 report to correct the agent’s identity.
Because we hold that the amended counts relate back to an originally timely filed complaint and that plaintiffs’ section 2 — 622 physician’s report is sufficient to support the amended complaint, we need not address plaintiffs’ remaining argument that the trial court erred by denying their motion for reconsideration.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court’s order granting defendants’ motion to dismiss counts XIV¡ XV XVI, and XVII of the third amended complaint, and we remand the cause for proceedings consistent herewith.
Reversed and remanded.
McLAREN and BYRNE, JJ., concur.
