Opinion
Plаintiff Raymond Bruce Belton, an inmate in a federal prison, sued Bowers Ambulance Service (Bowers) for injuries he allegedly suffered
*930
on January 4, 1996, while Bowers transported him from the prison to a hospital. Belton filed the action on January 10, 1997, more than one year аfter the alleged injury. Bowers demurred to the complaint, contending that the statute of limitations barred the action. The trial court sustained the demurrer. The Court of Appeal reversed, holding that “A prisoner’s time to sue a health care provider can be еxtended by incarceration up to the maximum three years from time of injury permitted by the MICRA (Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act) limitations statute.” The court expressly disagreed with
Hollingsworth
v.
Kofoed
(1996)
We must decide whether a tolling provision for prisoners may apply to an action subject to the Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act (MICRA), enacted in 1975. The issue involves the interplay of Codе of Civil Procedure sections 340.5 and 352.1, subdivision (a). 1
Section 340.5, originally enacted in 1970 (Stats. 1970, ch. 360, § 1, p. 772), but amended in 1975 as part of MICRA, now provides as relevant: “In an action for injury or death against a health care provider based upon such person’s alleged professional negligence, the time for the commencement of action shall be three years after the date of injury or one year after the plaintiff discovers, or through the use of reasonable diligence should have discovered, the injury, whichever occurs first. In no event shall the time for commencement of legal action exceed three years unless tolled for any of the following: (1) upon proof of fraud, (2) intentional concealment, or (3) the presence of a foreign body, which has no therapeutic or diagnostic purpose or effect, in the person of the injured person.”
Section 352.1, subdivision (a), provides as relevant: “If a person entitled to bring an action . . . is, at the time the cause of action accrued, imprisoned on a criminal chаrge, or in execution under the sentence of a criminal court for a term less than for life, the time of that disability is not a part of the time limited for the commencement of the action, not to exceed two years.”
The parties do not dispute that Bowers is a “health care provider” within the meaning of section 340.5, or that Belton discovered the injury on the day it occurred. Accordingly, because Belton brought the action more than one year after discovery, the one-year time period of sectiоn 340.5 would bar the action unless some other provision extends the time. Belton’s status as a prisoner is also undisputed. Accordingly, section 352.1 would permit the action if it applies.
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No tolling provision outside of MICRA can extend the three-year maximum time period that section 340.5 establishes.
(Fogarty
v.
Superior Court
(1981)
The
Hollingsworth
court held the prisoner tolling provision does not apply to
any
MICRA time period. There, the prisoner plaintiff filed a medical malpractice action more than one year but less than three years from discovery of the injury. The court held that section 340.5 barred the action. It drew no distinction between the three-year maximum period and the one-year period from discovery. “We . . . recognize that
Fogarty
rejected tolling of the outside three-year period set by section 340.5, rather than specifically reaching the same result as to the one-yeаr discovery period set by section 340.5; but we find no legislative intent to apply tolling for a prisoner of the one-year period, in light of the overall inconsistency noted by
Fogarty
between the tolling provisions of section 352 or section 352.1, which are not part of MICRA, and section 340.5.”
(Hollingsworth, supra,
The difference between MICRA’s one-year period and its three-year period was critical to the Court of Appeal in this case: “We find nothing in the language of sections 340.5 and 352.1, nor in the policy underlying MICRA, which compels conclusion that section 352.1 сannot apply in health care provider cases, [ft . . . [ft The plain language of the two sections does not support the result in Hollingsworth. Section 352.1 does not exempt MICRA claims (or any other claims) from its application. ... [ft Likewise, section 340.5 does not exprеssly negate application of section 352.1 in health care provider cases. We agree with Hollingsworth that listing of specified tolling rules in section 340.5 implicitly excludes others, but these *932 limits apply only to tolling rules which extend the total limitations period beyond three yеars: ‘In no event shall the time for commencement of legal action exceed three years unless tolled for any of the following . . . (Italics added.) [H] The plain language of section 340.5 does not purport to limit tolling which extends the total limitations period less thаn or up to three years.” (Original italics.)
The Court of Appeal in this case was correct. The simple, but complete, answer to Bowers’s reliance on the second sentence of section 340.5 is that “the time for commencement of legal action” did
not
“exceed three years.” Belton filed this action well within three years of his injury. Bowers would have us read the second sentence as if it stated, “In no event shall the time for commencement of legal action exceed either the one-year periоd after discovery or the three-year maximum period unless tolled for any of the following . . . .” The second sentence does not so state, however. It specifically refers to the maximum period of three years and does not mention the one-year period from discovery. The
Fogarty
court noted that the second sentence provided exceptions to the three-year maximum, then stated, “The legislative enumeration of certain exceptions by necessary implication excludes all other exceptions.”
(Fogarty
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Bowers argues that prior decisions of this coiirt support its position. We have not, however, considered this question.
In
Young
v.
Haines
(1986)
In
Woods
v.
Young
(1991)
Most recently, in
Russell
v.
Stanford University Hospital, supra,
It is true that we have generally described MICRA as “an interrelated legislative scheme enacted to deal specifically with all medical malpractice claims.”
(Young
v.
Haines, supra,
Sanchez strongly supports Belton’s argument. We held that the internal tolling provisions of the original version of section 340.5 extended only the four-year (now three-year) maximum period and did not even apply to the one-year time limit. Although we interpreted only the original version of section 340.5, we fоund that the 1975 MICRA amendment bolstered our interpretation. “The Legislature, in its 1975 amendment of section 340.5, resolved any doubt as to its present intention by applying the tolling statute, with clarity, to the longer period only. It retained the one-year ‘discovery’ limitations period, reduced the four-year maximum limitation to three years, and provided that: ‘In no event shall the time for commencement of legal action exceed three years unless tolled for any of the following: (1) upon proof of fraud, (2) intentional concealment, or (3) the presence of a foreign body, which has no therapeutic or diagnostic purpose or effect, in the person of the injured person.’ (Code Civ. Proc., § 340.5, as amended, italics added.) . . . [T]he specific relationship and semantic tie thus created between the tolling prоvision and the statutory three- (formerly four) year period reasonably suggests that the Legislature previously intended a similar connection.” (Sanchez, supra, 18 Cal.3d at pp. 100-101, first italics added, second italics in Sanchez.) Sanchez also indicated that other tolling provisions, including the predecessor tо section 352.1, could extend the one-year period (although none applied in that case). (Sanchez, supra, 18 Cal.3d at pp. 102-103.) If section 340.5’s internal tolling provisions do not apply to the one-year period at all, they certainly are not the exclusive provisions that apply to that period.
We see no reason to apply the second sentence of section 340.5 to the one-year period it does not mention, in addition to the three-year period it does mention. The general purpose of MICRA does not require us to expand that sentence beyond its language. “In enacting MICRA in 1975, the Legislature ‘attempted to reduce the cost and increase the efficiency of medical malpractice litigation by revising a number of legal rules applicable to such litigation.’ ”
(Woods
v.
Young, supra,
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For these reasons, we adopt the Court of Appeal’s holding in this case, quoted in the first paragraph of this opinion, disapprove the contrary holding of
Hollingsworth, supra,
George, C. J., Mosk, J., Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Werdegar, J., and Brown, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory citations are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
