This is an appeal by the defendant from an order of the United States District Court denying defendant’s motion for summary judgment, but allowing immediate appeal for the reason that there is substantial ground for a difference of' opinion on a controlling question of law, it being considered by the district judge that an immediate appeal from the order might materially advance the ultimate determination of the case.
The crucial issue is whether or not the two-year Ohio statute of limitations-[Section 2305.10, Rev.Code of Ohio] bars an action for damages caused by beryl-liosis, a disease of slowly insidious development in the respiratory tract.
The complaint of the appellee, filed on April 29, 1959, alleges that between the-years 1941 and 1949 the appellant carelessly and negligently expelled into the atmosphere about its plant in Lorain, Ohio, dust, particles, powders and gases in such quantities that the air for many miles around its plant became contaminated, polluted and injurious to those-who had to breathe it. The complaint avers that, during such period, the plain *798 tiff was exposed to the noxious, toxic and corrosive particles, dust, powders and gases emanating from the plant of appellant, thereby causing the insidious development of berylliosis in plaintiff; but that the disease did not manifest itself, was not diagnosed as such, nor did it become known to appellee until March of 1958.
Appellee complains further that she suffered extreme pain and that the disease is permanent. Wherefore, she sues for $75,000.
The Brush Beryllium Company filed a motion for summary judgment on the ground that the action, being one for bodily injury, was not brought within two years after the alleged cause of action arose. The motion averred that under the governing law of Ohio the two-year statute of limitation for bodily injury begins to run at the time when the injury was inflicted, even though the fact of injury remains unknown to the person injured.
The motion for summary judgment filed by appellant pointed out that the limitation of action under the law of Ohio was applied to the disease of berylliosis, as is evidenced by Ohio decisions in Irene Wilkins v. Brush Beryllium Company, involving this same defendant. No. 704946, Common Pleas Court of Cuya-hoga County (no opinion), affirmed without opinion by the Court of Appeals of Cuyahoga County in Cause No. 24693. The plaintiff there (Irene Wilkins) averred that her motion to certify to the Supreme Court of Ohio was overruled by that court in Cause No. 35976.
The appellant in this case attached to its motion for summary judgment the relevant pleadings, journal entries and briefs filed or entered in the Wilkins case, certified according to Section 1738, Title 28, U.S.C.A. From these documents, it appears that the Wilkins case, in which the action was barred by the statute of limitations of Ohio, is not distinguishable from the case at bar.
But, because of the so-called Ohio '“syllabus rule,” we are not bound to accept the Wilkins ease as controlling law. In State ex rel. Canada v. Phillips,
We shall now consider the published opinions of the Supreme Court of Ohio cited by the appellant.
The headnote in DeLong v. Campbell,
It should be noted that, in the opinion in the DeLong case, Judge Stewart pointed out that the plaintiff’s right of action accrued at the time she could bring an action against the doctor, which was when he negligently left a sponge within the wound caused by the operation.
In the case at bar, the cause of action did not arise for many years after the plaintiff had been long subjected to the noxious gases. She could not have brought an action, because the disease of berylliosis did not develop until after more than two years had expired following the time when she was last subjected to the deleterious fumes.
*799
An earlier Ohio case, Gillette v. Tucker,
In Bowers v. Santee,
Appellant cites two additional cases to the effect that the ignorance of a plaintiff as to his rights does not affect the running of the statute against him. State v. Standard Oil Company,
Accepting with full faith and: credit the doctrine of Erie R. R. Co. v. Tompkins,
Therefore, upon the highest authority, we consider that the two-year-statute of limitations does not apply t©' the situation in this case. In Urie v. Thompson,
Pointing out that there was no suggestion that Urie should have known of his having silicosis at any earlier date, the Justice quoted from a California case to the effect that no specific date of contact can be charged as being the date of injury, inasmuch as the injurious consequences of exposure are the product “of a period of time rather than a point of time,” in consequence of which the afflicted person can be held to be injured only when the accumulated effects of the deleterious substance manifest themselves. See also United States v. Reid, 5 Cir.,
In United States v. Reid, supra, the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit,
We are in accord with the foregoing expression.
The order of the district court entered on October 19, 1959, denying appellant’s motion for summary judgment is affirmed; and the cause is directed to be tried upon its merits.
