372 N.E.2d 619 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1976
These appeals raise the sole question of whether a minor injured in an accident prior to January 1, 1974, who reached the age of 18 years prior to January 1, 1974, must file a personal injury action two years after January 1, 1974, or may wait until two years have expired after his twenty-first birthday.
Appellant claims the latter is true because R. C.
We disagree and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The sole assigned error is that the judgment is contrary to law. The relevant dates and ages are:
February 6, 1971 — Plaintiff was 18 years of age.
February 6, 1973 — Plaintiff was 20 years old.
January 1, 1974 — Effective date of amendment to R. C.
February 6, 1974 — Plaintiff was 21 years old.
February 5, 1976 — Complaint filed and plaintiff was 22 years, 11 months old.
February 6, 1976 — Plaintiff becomes 23 years of age.
Prior to the enactment of its amendment January 1, 1974, R. C.
R. C.
"An action for bodily injury or injuring personal property shall be brought within two years after the cause thereof arose."
Plaintiff was a minor at the time his cause of action arose and was therefore under a disability.
R. C.
"Unless otherwise specifically provided in sections
R. C.
"All persons of the age of twenty-one years or more, who are under no legal disability, are capable of contracting and are of full age for all purposes."
By amendment, effective January 1, 1974, twenty-one was changed to eighteen.
Two statutes which were in effect on the date of the amendment to R. C.
"A statute is presumed to be prospective in its operation unless expressly made retrospective."
R. C.
"(A) The reenactment, amendment, or repeal of a statute does not * * *
"(1) Affect the prior operation of the statute or any prior action taken thereunder * * *." *162
Appellant argues that because the amendment is silent on retrospective application and therefore presumed to be prospective, it should follow that he has two years after he reaches age 21, which is longer than two years after the disability is removed. We disagree. The appellant is entitled to prospective application, to be certain, but that requirement is fulfilled when two years elapse after his disability is removed.
It appears to this court that the appellant has failed to differentiate between substantive law and remedial law when he claims that R. C.
In the case of Gregory v. Flowers (1972),
"Except where constitutional provisions expressly forbid, the Legislature has power to make, amend, and repeal laws relating to the remedy, and make the same applicable, not only to existing causes of actions, in which suits have not been instituted, but even in pending suits. Section
The appellant has cited, in his brief, the case of Nokes v.Nokes (1976),
In Nokes, supra, at page 8, the Court said:
"Even though R. C.
In the Nokes case, the trial court, on August 9, 1972, granted to the wife certain substantive and vested rights for the support of the children. The legislature could not by the amendment of R. C.
Coming now to the case at bar, the substantive and *164
vested right of the appellant to bring his action was in no way destroyed by the amendment of R. C.
After appellant became an adult, by operation of the amended statute, he was charged with the same responsibilities and duties to file his action within a 2 year period of time, the same as any other adult. In this sense, we do consider R. C.
Appellees are not claiming that the 2 year statute of limitation commenced to run when appellant became 18 years of age so as to bar him at age twenty. By such amendment and by the application of R. C.
For the foregoing reasons, both assigned errors are overruled, and the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Richland County is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
DOWD and TURPIN, JJ., concur.
TURPIN, J., of the Court of Common Pleas of Stark County, sitting by designation in the Fifth Appellate District. *165