Defendant doctor treated plaintiff for various injuries incurred in an automobile accident. Following his discharge by defendant, another doctor discovered that plaintiff had suffered a fractured skull which necessitated surgical repair and which, according to plaintiff, resulted in permanent damage. Plaintiff brought this suit charging defendant with malpractice for failure to diagnose and treat the fracture. The suit was filed 25 months after plaintiff’s discharge from defendant’s care, and 23 months following his discovery of the fracture. At the conclusion of the opening statements, the trial judge directed a verdict in defendant’s favor. He did so on the ground that plaintiff’s statement of his case and of the facts which he expected to prove 1 would not, as a matter of law, support his theory that defendant fraudulently concealed the cause of action, thereby tolling the 2-year statute of limitations applicable to malpractice actions against physicians. 2
In this appeal, plaintiff attacks the trial judge’s *679 direction of the verdict on 2 grounds: First, he says that the statute of limitations does not begin to run against actions for malpractice until the patient discovers the malpractice. Second, he says that where a fiduciary or confidential relationship exists, such as exists between doctor and patient, even mere silence where there is a duty to speak may constitute fraudulent concealment. Thus, on either or both grounds, plaintiff urges reversal. As to the first, he maintains suit was brought within 2 years of his discovery of the alleged malpractice. As to the second, he maintains his opening statement was sufficient to support proofs of defendant’s repeated assurances that plaintiff’s head pains would soon disappear, which assurances were made when defendant knew or should have known of the skull fracture.
This Court has had occasion in the past to consider what acts constitute fraudulent concealment of a cause of action against a doctor for malpractice.
Kroll
v.
Vanden Berg,
In the case at bar, plaintiff was admitted to a hospital in Alpena for treatment of injuries received in an automobile accident. Dr. Hier examined plaintiff and diagnosed his injuries as lacerations of the forehead and contusions of the chest. He sutured the forehead, and on the following day X-rays were taken of the chest area, but none was taken of the head notwithstanding plaintiff’s complaints of head pains. The doctor assured plaintiff that the headaches would subside in the near future. The next day the doctor again assured plaintiff that the headaches would subside in due time and released him *681 from the hospital with instructions to’ have the sutures on his forehead removed by his family physician. Such were the facts alleged in plaintiff’s declaration and repeated in substance in the opening statement which the trial judge found legally insufficient to constitute fraudulent concealment.
Whatever may be said regarding the medical treatment of plaintiff by the defendant doctor, and it must be kept in mind that we are not yet concerned with the question of malpractice, the trial judge was right in concluding that plaintiff’s allegations of fact did not support his claim that his cause of action was fraudulently concealed from him by Dr. Hier, thereby tolling the statute of limitations.
It was in
De Haan
v.
Winter,
In
Weast
v.
Duffie,
“The fraudulent concealment which will postpone the operation of the statute must be the concealment of the fact that plaintiff has a cause of action. If there is a known cause of action there can be no fraudulent concealment which will interfere with the operation of the statute, and in this behalf a party *682 will be held to know wbat he ought to know, pursuant to the rule hereinbefore stated (i. e., by the exercise' of ordinary diligence).
“It is not necessary that a party should know the-details of the evidence by which to establish his cause of action. It is enough that he knows that a cause of action exists in his favor, and when he has this knowledge, it is his own fault if he does not avail himself of those means which the law provides for prosecuting or preserving his claim.”
The
De Haem
description of fraudulent concealment was applied in
Buchanan
v.
Kull,
These cases serve only to emphasize the point that it is the cause of action which must be fraudulently concealed by failing to disclose the fact of injury resulting from the malpractice, by diverting the patient from discovering the malpractice or the party responsible therefor, or by other means the effect of which is to conceal from the patient his right to sue. In the case at bar, plaintiff’s own allegations negate his charge that Dr. Hier fraudulently concealed plaintiff’s cause of action. Assuming there was negligence constituting malpractice by the doctor, his concurrent actions as alleged by plaintiff hardly were calculated to draw the veil of secrecy over the act, for Dr. Hier directed plaintiff to his family physician for the purpose of removing the sutures. Were his purpose one of concealment, it is hardly likely that he would have referred plaintiff to one who could be expected to discover the malpractice, as ultimately occurred. Dr. Hier’s referral of plaintiff to his family physician distinguishes this case from Kroll v. Vanden Berg, 336 *683 Mich 306, in which the Court said that had the jury found that the doctor knew the needle was left in the patient’s abdomen and failed to disclose such fact (p 311) “though in the confidential relationship of surgeon and patient,” it could have found such withholding of knowledge was a fraudulent concealment within the meaning of the statute. We can find no purpose to conceal anything in what Hr. Hier is alleged to have done.
Having concluded that defendant did not fraudulently conceal plaintiff’s cause of action and, therefore, that the 2-year statute of limitations applicable to malpractice actions was not tolled, we must determine whether this action was commenced within the time limitation of that statute.
4
The issue is crucial to plaintiff because his suit was started by filing the summons about a month more than 2 years after he was discharged from Hr. Hier’s care. Relying upon
De Haan
v.
Winter,
Plaintiff, on the other hand, insists that in malpractice eases the cause of action accrues only upon discovery by the patient that he has a cause of action, and he maintains that we have so held, citing
Kroll
v.
Vanden Berg,
Whatever else may be said for or against the last, treatment rule of the
De Haan Case,
followed also in
Buchanan
v.
Kull,
Affirmed. Costs to defendant.
Notes
Court Rule No 37, § 2 (1945).
CLS 1956, §§ 609.13, 609.20 (Stat Ann 1959 Cum Supp §§ 27.605, 27.612).
31 Mich L Rev 875, 901.
For an excellent summary of the subject, see Shartel and Plant, The Law of Medical Practice, § 3-29, pp 155-157, and authorities cited therein, particularly 5 11 of Detroit LJ 202 (Í942).
