This is an appeal by a plaintiff-patient from a summary judgment for defendant-physician in a malpractice action based on an occurrence during an operation for a kidney ailment. The allegation is that the surgeon "without further authorization” did "cut, sever and then closed up veins leading down from her right leg.” Thereafter by an amendment denominated Count II she alleged fraudulent conduct by the doctor in that he did not disclose to her that he had severed the vein and further failed to note such vein severance as a part of her medical history in the hospital records.
The operation occurred November 19, 1966, with plaintiff being discharged from further treatment on December 7, 1966. This suit was filed December 4, 1969, and after deposing plaintiff the defendant filed a motion for summary judgment based on the applicable two-year statute of limitation
(Code Ann.
§ 3-1004);
Breedlove v. Aiken,
Plaintiff also sought at that stage to keep her action in court by the amendment which added Count II to the *290 complaint alleging fraud through wilful non-disclosure and the omission of any entry on the hospital charts concerning the alleged unauthorized severance of the vein leading to the leg.
We recognize the correctness of the rulings in
Tabor v. Clifton,
None of these cases apply to the instant situation because plaintiff by her own testimony (record pages 149, 150 and 151) acknowledged that as soon as she was conscious after the kidney surgery of November 19, 1966, she realized there was something wrong with her leg and that she continued to suffer thereafter from thrombophlebitis.
A plaintiff must exercise reasonable diligence to learn of the existence of a cause of action.
Breedlove v. Aiken,
Plaintiff sought by her affidavit to fill the holes but in doing so she relies upon hearsay evidence, relating what was told to her by a doctor who treated her in December, 1967, and who purportedly then informed her of the discovery that the vein had been cut and that he had found suture material therein. No affidavit was obtained from this physician and he was not summoned to testify, so that plaintiff relies solely upon hearsay.
Code Ann.
§ 81A-156 (e) provides that evidence, whether by deposition or by affidavit "... shall show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify to the matters stated therein.” In
Matthews v. Wilson,
The recent case of
Parker v. Vaughn,
Plaintiff is unable to excuse her failure to file suit within the statutory period on the basis of the alleged fraud in non-disclosure by the doctor to the patient and by the absence of an entry in the hospital records. "Fraud which must have been discovered if usual and reasonable diligence had been exercised, is not a good reply to the statute of limitations.”
Sutton v. Dye,
Where the evidence produced in a motion for summary judgment entitles the party to judgment through piercing the allegations of the pleadings and showing that there is no general issue of material fact, the summary judgment motion should be sustained.
Crutcher v. Crawford Land Co., Inc.,
Judgment affirmed.
