OPINION
I. Introduction
The trial court granted a partial summary judgment for Appellees on statute of limitations grounds in this medical malpractice case. Because Appellant Sharon Boyd pleaded the open courts provision of the Texas Constitution and also produced summary judgment evidence raising a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether she had a reasonable opportunity to learn of Appellees’ alleged wrongs or her alleged injury within the limitations period, we reverse the trial court’s partial limitations summary judgment for Appel-lees G. Byron Kallam, M.D., Mary Angeline Finke, M.D., and Gerald Thompson, M.D. on Boyd’s negligent failure to diagnose claims, misdiagnosis claims, and negligent failure to order diagnostic testing claims. We also reverse the trial court’s partial summary judgment for Appellees Family Healthcare Associates and the Medical Clinic of North Texas, P.A. on Boyd’s claims that these entities are vicariously liable for alleged negligence in failing to diagnose Boyd’s cancer, misdiagnosing her cancer, and failing to order diagnostic testing. We remand these claims to the trial court.
We affirm the trial court’s partial summary judgment for Appellees G. Byron Kallam, M.D., Mary Angeline Finke, M.D., the Medical Clinic of North Texas, P.A., Gerald Thompson, M.D., and Family Healthcare Associates on Boyd’s failure-to-screen-based-on-age claims. We also affirm the trial court’s partial summary judgment for Family Healthcare Associates on Boyd’s direct negligence theories of recovery. 1
An April 11, 2002 colonoscopy performed on Boyd revealed that she had stage IV colorectal cancer. The doctor who performed the colonoscopy told Boyd that she had a large, cancerous tumor in her sigmoid colon and that either this tumor or some precursor abnormality, probably in the form of an adenomatous polyp, had been present and growing in her colon since 1996. Boyd filed suit on August 30, 2002, alleging that Appellees’ treatment of her, including treatment as early as 1996, was negligent in several respects, including failing to screen her for colorec-tal cancer after she became fifty years old, misdiagnosing her rectal bleeding as stemming from hemorrhoids, failing to diagnose her colorectal cancer, and failing to order diagnostic testing that would have revealed the cancer. Boyd pleaded that the open courts provision of the Texas Constitution precluded the application of the statute of limitations to her claims because she did not have a reasonable opportunity to learn of Appellees’ alleged wrongs or her alleged injury prior to the expiration of limitations. Appellees filed motions for partial summary judgment on the affirmative defense of limitations. 2 Appellees asserted that Boyd’s claims alleging negligence occurring more than two years before Boyd filed suit — that is, prior to August 30, 2000 — were barred by the statute of limitations. 3 Boyd responded, filing summary judgment evidence that she claims raises a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether she had a reasonable opportunity to discover the Ap-pellees’ alleged wrongs or her alleged injury within the limitations period. The trial court granted Appellees’ motions for partial summary judgment and signed an order severing these claims. Boyd perfected this appeal.
III. Standard of Review
A. Summary Judgment for Defendants Based on Limitations
The statute of limitations is an affirmative defense. Tex.R. Civ. P. 94;
Woods v. William M. Mercer, Inc.,
B. Avoidance of Limitations Via Open Courts Provision
A plea in confession and avoidance is one that avows and confesses the truth in the averments of fact, either expressly or by implication, but then proceeds to allege a new matter which tends to deprive the facts admitted of their ordinary legal effect, or to obviate, neutralize, or avoid them.
Woods,
An assertion that the open courts provision of the Texas Constitution renders application of a statute of limitations to a particular plaintiff unconstitutional is a plea in confession and avoidance: confessing that the claims are brought outside the statutory limitations period, but asserting that the limitations statute, as applied to the particular plaintiffs claims, is unconstitutional as violative of the Texas Constitution’s open courts provision.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 94 (“In pleading to a preceding pleading, a party shall set forth ... any other matter constituting an avoidance .... ”). Thus, a plaintiff seeking to avoid a limitations summary judgment on the ground that application of the statutory limitations period violates the Texas Constitution’s open courts provision has the burden of pleading and proof on the as-applied unconstitutionality of the statute.
Accord Walker v. Gutierrez,
A plaintiff raising an as-applied open courts challenge to the constitutionality of article 4590i, section 10.01 in response to a defendant’s summary judgment motion conclusively establishing the affirmative defense of limitations bears the burden of raising a fact issue showing no reasonable opportunity to discover the alleged wrong and to bring suit before the limitations period expired.
Shah,
The open courts provision of the Texas Constitution provides,
“All
courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.” Tex. Const, art. I, § 13. The open courts provision specifically guarantees all litigants the right to redress their grievances — to use a popular and correct phrase, the right to their day in court.
LeCroy v. Hanlon,
To establish that a statute violates the open courts provision and thereby denies him due process, a plaintiff must satisfy a two-part test: (1) he must show he has a well recognized common-law cause of action that is being statutorily restricted; and (2) he must show the restriction is unreasonable or arbitrary when balanced against the legislature’s actual purpose in enacting the statute.
Sax,
Concerning the second prong, the legislature’s actual purpose in enacting statute of limitations provisions limiting the time for bringing a medical negligence suit is legitimate: to limit the length of time that medical professionals will be exposed to potential liability and thereby reduce medical malpractice insurance rates.
Id.; see also
Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4590i, § 1.02. The only undecided issue, therefore, is whether the restriction — the proscription of the plaintiffs medical negli
Appellees urge us, however, to apply a different requirement to Boyd’s open courts challenge. Appellees contend that to raise a genuine issue of material fact concerning application of the open courts provision, Boyd was not required to establish that she lacked a reasonable opportunity to discover the alleged wrong and to bring suit before the limitations period expired, but instead that “it was impossible or exceedingly difficult” for her to discover the wrong during limitations. Appellees cite
O’Reilly v. Wiseman
for this proposition.
We decline Appellees’ invitation to apply the impossible-or-exceedingly-difficult-to-diseover-the-wrong open courts requirement mentioned in
O’Reilly
to the present facts for four main reasons. The first two reasons are straightforward and will be discussed together. First,
O’Reilly
itself recognizes that the two requirements are the same: the long-used reasonable-opportunity-to-discover-the-wrong-before-limitations-expired requirement was simply renamed by the
O’Reilly
court as the impossible-or-exceedingly-difficult-to-dis
Third, Appellees argue that, based on
O’Reilly,
the supreme court’s opinion in
Hellman v. Mateo,
We cannot agree that the Texas Supreme Court previously ' departed from its well-established, two-pronged open courts analysis.
See, e.g., Owens Corning,
IV. SummaRY Judgment Evidence
Viewing only the summary judgment evidence favorable to Boyd, and taking that evidence as true, the summary judgment record shows that Boyd had office visits with Appellees on specific dates and that she claims that Appellees were negligent on those dates. 7 Boyd began seeing Dr. Kallam, a gynecologist, in October 1995. Boyd considered Dr. Kallam to be her primary doctor; accordingly, she saw him for minor ailments and for yearly well-woman examinations. Boyd saw Dr. Kal-lam for well woman examinations on December 4, 1996 and November 16, 1998. During both of these examinations Dr. Kallam performed a rectal examination and took a fecal occult stool sample, and these studies showed no evidence of blood. Due to a change in her health insurance, Boyd began seeing Dr. Thompson in October 1999. She designated Dr. Thompson as her primary care physician and saw him for yearly physical examinations, but she also continued to see Dr. Kallam and his partner, Dr. Finke, for well woman checkups. She saw Barbara Jeffries, R.N., N.P., a nurse practitioner with Dr. Kallam and Dr. Finke’s office, for a well woman examination on March 3, 2000. Nurse Jef-fries obtained a fecal occult stool sample, and again, it was negative. Neither Dr. Kallam nor Dr. Finke saw Boyd during this examination, but Dr. Finke read over and signed off on Nurse Jefferies’ examination. 8
According to Boyd, beginning in 1998, during each of the well woman and physical examinations, she complained of rectal bleeding and, on occasion, constipation.
Boyd filed numerous expert affidavits as summary judgment evidence. Boyd’s own affidavit explains that the doctor who performed her colonoscopy told her that the large, cancerous tumor in her sigmoid colon or some precursor abnormality, probably in the form of an adenomatous polyp, had been present and growing in Boyd’s colon since 1996. The thirty-page affidavit of Rhett Fredric, M.D., an oncologist, likewise explained as follows:
Had Ms. Boyd been properly screened prior to March 2000, or properly worked up beginning in March 2000, some abnormality would have been detectable, probably an adenomatous polyp. If an adenomatous polyp or cancer had been detected by screening, colonoscopy or lower GI studies, standard medical care would have been to remove the polyp or cancer, or biopsy the abnormality, and then institute surgery and/or chemotherapy if the tumor was malignant. The delay in diagnosing Ms. Boyd’s tumor occurred from 1996 to 2002, and resulted in, at a minimum, an approximate two[-]year delay in diagnosis. This delay in diagnosis in reasonable medical probability, based upon the medical literature, resulted in Ms. Boyd going from a Stage II or early Stage III to a Stage IV.
Boyd also filed expert affidavits opining that each of the Appellees was negligent and that their negligence proximately caused her injuries.
V. Application of Standards of Review TO SUMMARY JUDGMENT EVIDENCE
A. Boyd’s Negligence Allegations
Boyd alleges two general categories of negligence against the doctors and Nurse Jefferies in this case. First, she alleges that they were all negligent by failing at each visit after she turned fifty years old to recommend that she undergo colorectal cancer screening. Second, she alleges that they were all negligent by misdiagnosing or misinterpreting her rectal bleeding and symptoms as hemorrhoids and telling her that she suffered only from this nonthreatening condition, by not performing diagnostic testing concerning her rectal bleeding, and by failing to diagnose her cancer.
B. Appellees Conclusively Established the Affirmative Defense of Limitations
Article 4590i, section 10.01 provides that notwithstanding any other law, a person may not bring a health care liability claim unless the person files the action within two years from the occurrence of the tort. Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4590i, § 10.01. The limitations period provided in article 4590i, section 10.01 runs from one of three possible dates: (1) the date of the tort; (2) the last date of the relevant course of treatment; or (3) the last date of the relevant hospitalization.
Husain v. Khatib,
Here, Boyd claims that Appellees were negligent on the specific dates when one of them saw her and did not perform or order colorectal cancer screening because of her age, misdiagnosed her rectal bleeding as hemorrhoids, and failed to perform or order diagnostic testing: December 4, 1996, November 16, 1998, October 25, 1999, January 12, 2000, and March 3, 2000. Because the precise dates of the alleged torts by Appellees are known, the statutory limitations period began on those dates and expired two years later.
9
See Earle,
C. Open Courts Analysis
1. No Fact Issue on Negligent-Failure-to-Screen-Based-on-Age Claims
Boyd produced summary judgment evidence establishing that the standard of care requires colorectal cancer screening to be performed on all patients over fifty years old. She complains that Appellees breached this standard of care on multiple occasions by failing to order colorectal cancer screening on her after she became fifty years old. Boyd knew, however, at the time of each of her office visits with Appellees that she was fifty years old and that they had failed to order colorectal cancer screening.
See Jennings v. Burgess,
2. Fact Issues Exist on Negligent Failure to Diagnose Claims, Misdiagnosis Claims, and Negligent Failure to Order Diagnostic Testing Claims
According to Boyd, whose testimony we must take as true for purposes of this summary judgment proceeding, beginning in 1998, she complained to Appellees on each office visit of rectal bleeding and occasional constipation. Boyd claims that Appellees repeatedly told her that she suffered from hemorrhoids and attributed her symptoms to hemorrhoids. Boyd’s experts opined in their affidavits that changes in bowel habits and rectal bleeding are possible symptoms of colorectal cancer, that the standard of care required Appellees to take steps to “rule out a possible lower bowel etiology of her symptoms,” and that their failure to do so constituted negligence.
Boyd’s summary judgment evidence viewed in the light most favorable to her raises an issue of fact concerning whether she had a reasonable opportunity to discover Appellees’ alleged wrongs or her alleged injury.
11
See Hellman,
In
Batten,
the plaintiffs open courts challenge did not save his 1997 claim against Dr. Hunt alleging the negligent failure to recommend follow-up testing after the 1989 removal of a precancerous tumor from the plaintiffs colon because the plaintiff produced no summary judgment evidence that he ever saw Dr. Hunt between the 1989 surgery and the 1997 suit.
Here, unlike in Batten and Ericson, on the dates Appellees examined Boyd, and thereafter throughout the limitations period as to those visits, Appellees allegedly provided Boyd with a benign explanation for her rectal bleeding: hemorrhoids. Viewing the summary judgment evidence in the light most favorable to Boyd, she, unlike Mr. Batten and Mr. Ericson, was not aware during limitations of symptoms she reasonably should have attributed to the wrong she now alleges. The summary judgment evidence at least raises a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether Boyd reasonably should have disbelieved two doctors’ hemorrhoids diagnosis and attributed her symptoms to some other cause, perhaps colorectal cancer, which she would have had to do in order to learn of her cancer within limitations.
Appellees also claim that Boyd had a reasonable opportunity to learn of her cancer and of their alleged wrongs within the limitations period because in a January 16, 2001 office visit with Dr. Thompson, he gave her a take-home fecal occult blood test. Viewing the summary judgment evidence in the light most favorable to Boyd, she took the test home and read the directions.
12
The directions told users not to take the test during a menstrual cycle, if they were suffering from bleeding hemorrhoids, or if they had cuts on their hands. The directions stated that bleeding hemorrhoids would render the test inaccurate. Boyd claims that after reading the directions, because she was told she had bleeding hemorrhoids, she called Dr. Thompson’s office and was told not to take the test because it would be inaccurate and that Dr. Thompson would call her if she was to do anything different. Appellees claim that if Boyd had completed this test, she would have learned of her cancer. We are required to take Boyd’s affidavit testimony as true.
See, e.g., Am. Tobacco Co.,
Appellees also claim that Boyd should have known of her cancer because she is a nurse and because her family has a history of colon cancer. The summary judgment record before us reflects that Boyd is a psychiatric nurse and that she was concerned about her rectal bleeding, so she discussed it with her doctors. One of Boyd’s expert’s affidavit provides as follows:
Furthermore, both Dr. Kallam and Dr. Thompson deny knowing that Ms. Boyd had colon cancer or other serious disease prior to April 2002. If two doctors did not know about a serious disease in a patient after seeing a patient multiple times, it is absurd to hold a patient to a higher level of knowledge in this regard. Accordingly, Ms. Boyd had no reason to seek a third opinion or institute additional investigation into the cause of her complaints on her own until she did in 2002.
Appellees have cited no authority for the proposition that we should hold a patient who is a nurse or a patient with a family history of a certain type of injury to the level of knowledge of the doctor caring for the patient. Nor have we located any such authority. Moreover, it seems illogical to hold that Boyd, a psychiatric nurse, had a reasonable opportunity to learn of her colon cancer when Appellees, who possessed superior medical training concerning cancer and who also possessed the same information as Boyd concerning her family history, did not learn of her cancer. Consequently, we decline to hold that as a matter of law Boyd’s psychiatric nursing experience and family history of colon cancer somehow provided her with a reasonable opportunity to learn of her cancer or of Appellees’ alleged wrongs.
Appellees further argue that Boyd possessed a reasonable opportunity to learn of her cancer because she could have demanded a colonoscopy — which she ultimately did, and which led to her colorectal cancer diagnosis — sooner. We decline to hold that a patient’s ongoing ability to request or demand any diagnostic test translates to a reasonable opportunity to learn of an undiagnosed medical condition. To hold otherwise would put a patient in charge of her own medical care, demanding for herself whatever diagnostic testing she desired.
Finally, applying the
Sax
balancing test to the present facts, because Boyd’s claims against Appellees for negligence occurring after August 30, 2000, remain pending in the trial court, application of article 4590i, section 10.01’s limitations provision to Boyd’s pre-August 30, 2000 negligent failure to diagnose claims, misdiagnosis claims, and negligent failure to order diagnostic testing claims is arbitrary when balanced against the purpose of the statute. Application of the statute of limitations to these claims does not dispose of Boyd’s entire lawsuit, does not prevent Appellees from possible exposure to liability on Boyd’s timely filed claims, and therefore does not appear to promote the statute’s purpose of lowering medical malpractice insurance premiums.
Compare Shah,
Having concluded that, viewing the summary judgment evidence in the light most favorable to Boyd, a fact issue exists concerning whether she had a reasonable opportunity to discover her injury and Ap-pellees’ alleged wrongs — the failure to diagnose her cancer, the misdiagnosis that her symptoms were attributable to hemor
3. Boyd Filed Suit Within a Reasonable Time
In her second issue, Boyd claims that she filed suit against Appellees within a reasonable time after learning of her alleged injury. A plaintiff who raises a genuine issue of material fact as to the applicability of the open courts provision to avoid limitations may nonetheless fail to obtain relief under the open courts provision if he does not use due diligence and sue within a reasonable time after learning about the alleged wrong.
See Shah,
Here, Boyd filed suit approximately four months after she learned of her injury— colorectal cancer. We have not located, and Appellees have not cited, any authority for the proposition that Boyd’s four-month delay in fifing suit is unreasonable. We sustain Boyd’s second issue.
VI. Conclusion
Having sustained Boyd’s second issue and her first issue in part, we reverse the trial court’s partial summary judgment for Appellees on Boyd’s negligent failure to diagnose claims, misdiagnosis claims, and negligent failure to order diagnostic testing claims based on the November 16, 1998, October 25, 1999, January 12, 2000, and March 3, 2000 office visits. We remand those claims to the trial court.
We affirm the trial court’s partial summary judgment concerning Boyd’s negfi-gent-failure-to-screen-based-on-age claims and concerning the December 4, 1996 office visit because the negligent failure to screen based on age is the only negligence alleged to have occurred at that office visit. We also affirm the trial court’s partial
Notes
. The trial court also previously granted a partial summary judgment for Obstetrical and Gynecological Associates of Arlington on the ground that Drs. Kallam and Finke and Nurse Jefferies were no longer employed by this entity at the time of their alleged negligence
. Appellees moved for summary judgment based on article 4590i, section 10.01, which was subsequently repealed. See Act of May 5, 1995, 74th Leg., R.S., ch. 140, § 10.01, repealed by Act of June 2, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 204, § 10.09, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 847, 884 (current version at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 74 (Vernon 2004)). The old law continues in effect for application to cases like this one, filed before the new Act’s September 1, 2003 effective date. We hereinafter cite the old law as article 4590L
. Appellees did not move for summary judgment on Boyd's claims alleging negligence occurring after August 30, 2000.
. We disagree with the cases holding that a plaintiff bears the burden of pleading, but not of proof, concerning an open courts violation.
See, e.g., Simmons v. Healthcare Ctrs. of Tex., Inc.,
. Because Appellees premise most of the arguments in their briefs on the O’Reilly opinion, we address it in detail.
. The Texas Constitution’s due course of law open courts provision provides rights in addition to those provided by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
Lucas,
. Boyd claims Appellees were negligent on the following dates: Dr. Kallam — December 4, 1996 and November 16, 1998; Dr. Thompson — October 25, 1999 and January 12, 2000; Dr. Finke and Nurse Jefferies — March 3, 2000.
. Boyd's pleadings allege that Dr. Finke was negligent in her approval of and supervision of Nurse Jefferies’ negligent misdiagnoses or misinterpretation of Boyd’s rectal bleeding and symptoms as hemorrhoids, including conveying to Boyd that she suffered only from this nonthreatening condition. Boyd’s pleadings also allege that Dr. Finke was negligent in failing to order diagnostic testing.
. The tolling provision of article 4590i, section 4.01 is not at issue here.
. Boyd's contentions that Appellees should have ordered colorectal cancer screening for reasons other than that she was over fifty years old, i.e., based on her symptoms, fall within her negligent failure to diagnose claims and negligent failure to order diagnostic testing claims. These claims are discussed in section V.C.2 infra.
. The parties do not draw a distinction, if one exists, between a "reasonable opportunity to discover
the alleged -wrong
” and a "reasonable opportunity to discover
the alleged injury,”
and none is necessary in this case because Boyd's summary judgment evidence raises genuine issues of material fact concerning both.
See, e.g., Shah,
. Because Appellees moved for summary judgment strictly on limitations grounds, we consider the summary judgment evidence as it pertains to only that issue.
. Although Boyd has raised a fact issue in this summary judgment proceeding on the reasonable -opportunity-to-discover-the-wrong-before-limitations-expired open courts requirement, she still bears the burden of proof on this issue at trial.
See Edgewood Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Meno,
