Relators seek a writ of prohibition claiming improper venue in respondent Circuit Court of St. Louis City, Missouri, and therefore a lack of jurisdiction to proceed in a wrongful death action filed against relators in that court. We make the preliminary writ of prohibition absolute.
Helen L. Bates, decedent, resided in Cape Girardeau County (Cape). Drs. Dzur and Bowman, also residents of Cape, medically treated decedent at Southeast Missouri Hospital, similarly located in Cape. On December 30, 1979, decedent was transferred from Southeast Missouri Hospital to Barnes Hospital in the City of St. Louis, where she subsequently died on January 2, 1980.
Larry G. Points, a natural child of decedent, brought an action against Southeast Missouri Hospital and the two doctors in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis alleging malpractice and negligence committed in Cape eventually caused the death of his mother in the City of St. Louis. “(A)n action by statutory beneficiaries for death by reason of malpractice is an action for wrongful death and not an action for malpractice.”
Gramlich v. The Traveler’s Ins. Co.,
A cause of action for wrongful death under § 537.080
et seq.,
RSMo Supp. 1979 “accrues” in two separate and distinct senses. As to
time,
for purposes of calculating the statute of limitations, the cause of action “accrues” to the statutory beneficiaries when the death occurs.
Gramlich, supra.
With respect to venue, however, the cause of action “accrues” at the place where the wrong complained of was committed.
See State ex rel. Gerber v. Mayfield,
Insofar as all defendants reside in Cape Girardeau County and the wrongful acts complained of occurred exclusively in that county, venue in the City of St. Louis is improper. In Missouri, improper venue is a jurisdictional defect.
State ex rel. Hails v. Laskey,
