The appellant, Charles M. Deer, plaintiff below, seeks to reverse an order of the District Court which sustained the motion of the New York Central Railroad Company, defendant-appellee, for summary judgment, and directed that plaintiff take nothing by his suit and that costs be assessed against him.
It appears from the plaintiff’s complaint, and from the affidavits filed in support of and in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, that plaintiff had been an employeе of the appellee railroad since 1926. That on November 12, 1945, he was engaged in his employment at the Beech Grove Repair Shops, at Beech Grove, Indiana. On that date an accident, which appellant states was caused by the negligence of defendant-appellee, its servants and agents, occurred at the Beech Grove Shops. A 300-pound chain hoist fell some six or eight feet striking appellant on the head, knocking him to the floor and rendering him temporarily unconscious. He suffered a gash and a bump on his head. He was treated by the company nurse for about three or four days succeeding the accident. Prior to that time the appellant had a very heavy head of hair. On about January 12, 1946, two months after the accident, appellant’s hair started to come out whenever he combed it or ran his hands through it. On January 16, 1946, he consulted his family physician. He told the doctor of the accident in November and he was informed that his hair nerves had been paralyzed. At that time his family doctor referred him to a specialist. By February 6, 1946, he had lost all of his hair on his head and body. During the Easter season of 1946, аppellant suffered several- seizures or convulsions. He went to a hospital for about one week and was out of work for about two months. However, he subsequently returned to his employment in June of 1946. It also appears thаt appellant after the accident suffered continuously from headaches. He continued to work regularly for the ap-pellee railroad until June 24, 1950, on which date he fainted on the job. He has not worked since. It has dеveloped that he has a brain tumor and is totally and permanently disabled and that his condition is the result of the accident on November 12, 1945. The action, under review, was instituted on August 13, 1951, more than five years after the accident. It was bаsed upon the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq.
Section 6 of that Act, 36 Statutes 291, 45 U.S.C.A. § 56 et seq. provides:
“No action shall be maintained under this chapter unless commenced within three years from the day the cause of actiоn accrued.”
Since the action here in question was brought about five years and nine months after the accident which caused the injuries complained of, the decisive question in this case is: Did- the District Court err in sustaining appellеe railroad’s motion for summary judgment because the action was not commenced within three years after the date upon which the injuries complained of occurred?
Appellant contends that his cause of aсtion is not outlawed under the terms of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act because it did not accrue until he learned on June 24, 1950 that he had a brain tumor and was totally and permanently disabled.
For many years the general rule apрlied in cases based on common law principles of liability has been that the statute of limitations begins to run when there is a breach of a contract, or when the negligence or other tort complained of, occurs.
Wilcox v. Plummer,
Thereupon, on January 27, 1825, the plaintiffs sued the attorney, and on his death the suit was revived against his personal representative by scire facias.
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiffs, subject to the opinion of the court, on the plea of the statute of limitations which had been interposed as a defense. The time allowed by the limitation statute was three years after the cause of action accrued. The judges of the Circuit Court of the United States in and for the District of North Carolina divided in opinion and directed that the difference be certified to thе Supreme Court.
That Court said, 29 U.S. on page 179:
“There were two counts in the declaration: the one laying the breach in not suing at all, until the note became barred, thus treating as a mere nullity the suit in which the blunder was committed; and the other, laying the breach in the сommission of the blunder; but both placing the damages upon the barring of the note by the act of limitation. As this event happened on the 22d of November, 1822, this suit is in time, if the statute commenced running only from the happening of the damage. But if it commenced running, either when the suit was commenced against the maker, or a reasonable time after, or at the time of Banks’s insolvency, or at the time when the blunder was committed; in any one of those events, the three yeаrs had run out. And thus, the only question in the case is, whether the statute runs from the time the action accrued, or from the time that the damage is developed or becomes definite? And this we hardly feel at liberty to treat as an open quеstion.
“ * * * The ground of action here, is a contract to act diligently and skilfully; and both the contract and the breach of it admit of a definite assignment of date. When might this action have been instituted is the question; for, from that time, tht statute must run. * * *
“The оpinion of this court will have to be certified in the language of the defendants’ supposed bill of exceptions, to wit, ‘that on the first count in the declaration, the cause of action arose at the time when the attorney ought to have sued the indorser, which was within a reasonable time after the note was received for collection, or at all events, after the failure to collect the money from the maker. And that on the second count, his cause of action arose at the time of committing the blunder in issuing the writ in the names of wrong plaintiffs’.”
Annotations on when the statute of limitations begins to run in actions for malpractice against physicians, surgeons and dentists will be found in
The general principle announced in Wilcox v. Plummer, has been applied to actions under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, the Suits in Admiralty Act, 46 U.S.C.A. § 741 et seq., and the Longshoremen’s and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C.A. § 901 et seq.
Reading Co. v. Koons,
In McMahon v. United States,
In Pillsbury v. United Engineering Co.,
The appellant likewise places great reliance upon the case of Urie v. Thompson,
“In the latter sort of case some injury and therefore a cause of action or claim ordinarily results immediately, so that for limitation purposes the situation logically differs from that of a mere exposure to disease which may or may not result in an injury and a cause of action.”
It has been held in many cases that a motion for summary judgment should be sustained when the undisputed facts show that under the law the statute of limitations bars the action, or when the equitable doctrine of laches is applicable. See R. F. C. v. Goldberg, 7 Cir.,
In view of the foregoing authorities, we are constrained to hold that the District Court properly held that appellant’s cause of action was barred under the limita *629 tion contained in sec. 6 of the Federal Employers’ Liability Act.
The judgment of the District Court is therefore
Affirmed.
