In this divеrsity case, we must determine whether the trial court properly applied the Alabama fraudulent concealment tolling statute (Ala.Code § 6-2-3 (1975)). We affirm.
FACTS
Carol and Donald Sellers, husband and wife, were married in 1970 and live in Alabama. In April, 1972, Carol’s doctor prescribed for her use and inserted a Daikon Shield to prevent pregnancy. In late February, 1973, while the Daikon Shield wаs in place, Carol was notified by her doctor that she was pregnant. From that time over the next several years, Carol had gynecological problems which included an abortion, periodic bleeding, severe pelvic pain, several operations, a hysterectomy, and removal of her fallopian tubes and ovaries.
Shortly after the A.H. Robins Company (Robins) introduced the Daikon Shield in the marketplace, users began to complain about uterine infections, septicemia, septic abortions, and other serious gynеcological problems. In 1974, while the Food and Drug Administration conducted hearings, Robins distributed nationwide to doctors a “Dear Doctor” letter recommending that the Shield’s use be discоntinued.
In December, 1980, Carol Sellers read an article in the Mobile Press Register, a local newspaper, about the Daikon Shield, and the fact that it had allegedly caused sеrious injury to thousands of women. Before reading the article, Carol had not made any causal connection between the Shield and the injuries she had sustained. After reading the article, Carol and her husband filed this lawsuit in June, 1981; subsequently they amended their complaint in October, 1981. Carol’s medical injuries were first sustained in 1973.
On a summary judgment motion by Robins, the district court found that Carol’s negligence, misrepresentation, and fraud claims were barred by Alabama’s one year statute of limitations; her warranty claims were barred by Alabama’s four year statute of limitations. The court also found that Carol’s claims for wanton and willful misconduct were barred by Alabama’s six year statute of limitations. On the fraud claim, the district court stated that Alabama Code section 6-2-3 only suspends the running of the statute of limitations until a plaintiff of due diligence discovers or should have discovered his injury. The district court held that Carol Sellers should have known in 1973 of the cаusal connection between her medical injuries and the insertion of the Daikon Shield. The district court granted the motion for summary judgment.
The sole issue is whether the trial court erred in granting Rоbins’s summary judgment motion by holding that plaintiffs’ claims were barred by the relevant statutes of limitations, and that defendant’s actions did not constitute fraudulent concealment sufficient to toll the stаtute.
The relevant Alabama Statute states that:
In actions seeking relief on the ground of fraud where the statute had created a bar, the claim must not be considered as having accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved рarty of the fact constituting the fraud, after which he must have one year in which to prosecute his action.
Ala.Code § 6-2-3 (1975). Although this statute speaks of actions based on fraud,
While the аbove code section speaks of “actions seeking relief on the grounds of fraud,” it has been applied to other torts not arising in fraud in appropriate cases, and applies to a fraudulent concealment of the existence of a cause of action. Hudson v. Moore,239 Ala. 130 ,194 So. 147 .
A plaintiff using section 6-2-3 to toll the statute of limitations bears the burden of proving fraudulent concealment. See
Mann v. Adams Realty Co.,
Carol Sellers has not established an issue of material fact that would tend to show that Robins had fraudulently concealed her cause of action. Instead, she prоvided numerous exhibits relevant to whether Robins fraudulently induced her to use the Shield, an issue not before the court. She presented over one thousand pages of documents, nonе of which addressed the issue of whether Robins purposely prevented her from pursuing her claims. These documents have little relevance. To defeat the motion for summary judgment, Cаrol presents advertisements for the Daikon Shield taken from women’s magazines and medical journals, and Robins’s internal memoranda suggesting misrepresentations. Carol presented Robins’s “Dear Doctor” letter which informed doctors of medical problems associated with the Shield. This letter is directly in opposition to Carol’s allegations of fraudulent concealment.
In the recently decided Ninth Circuit case,
Sidney-Vinstein v. A.H. Robins,
We agreе with the reasoning of the Ninth Circuit, but do not rely upon the 1974 Robins letter because the evidence does not reflect that Mrs. Sellers’ doctors received that letter. By the time her Geоrgia physicians became aware of the controversy regarding the Shield, Mrs. Sellers had moved
In the absence of fraudulent concealment it is рlaintiff’s burden, within the statutory period, to determine whether and whom to sue. Once a plaintiff knows that harm has been done to him he must, ... determine within the period of limitations whether to sue or not, which is precisely the decision that other tort plaintiffs must make.... [F]ailure of the [defendant] to ascertain and publish the fact of its negligence is hardly sufficient to constitute fraudulent concealment.
(quoting Davis v. United States,
The Alabama Supreme Court reached the same conclusion in
Tonsmeire v. Tonsmeire,
In the absence of a confidential relationship, we know of no duty imposed by law obligating an alleged tort feasor to make known to one possibly injured by his аcts the existence of a possible cause of action.
To establish fraud by silence, facts should be averred from which a duty to speak arises — it should appear that thе parties were not dealing at arms length. Williams v. Bedenbaugh,215 Ala. 200 ,110 So. 286 ; Maloney v. Fulenwider,213 Ala. 205 ,104 So. 396 .
Carol’s cause of action was tolled until such time as she discovered, or should have discovered, through the exercise of due diligenсe, the facts constituting the fraud. She was a young woman with no history of gynecological problems. She received the Shield; a few months later she began to experience gross gynecological abnormalities. At no point, however, did Carol ask her doctors what caused her medical problems. A person exercising due diligence would have beеn prompted to inquire about the cause of such grave ailments.
Carol Sellers argues that the panel should ignore the reasoning of the Ninth Circuit and embrace, instead, the approach expressed by this circuit in
Knaysi v. A.H. Robins,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we find that no issue of material fact exists as to whether Robins actively and fraudulently concealed Carol Sellers’ cause of actiоn. We affirm the decision of the district court granting Robins’s summary judgment motion.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
We are cognizant, however, that Alabama is not a “discovery” state for purposes of personal injury and medical and professional malpractice suits. In the absence of fraudulent concealment, the cause of action begins to run when it accrues, whether or not the injured party has discovered the tort or injury.
Garrett v. Raytheon Co., Inc.,
