Charlotte Fritz 1 appeals from a summary judgment dismissing her dental malpractice action against Robert E. McGrath. The issues are: (1) whether there are disputed issues of material fact which would preclude summary judgment as a remedy; and (2) if not, whether the trial court erred when it *683 concluded that Fritz’s injury had been "discovered” more than three years before the action was commenced, thus barring the suit under the applicable statutes of limitation, secs. 893.04 and 893.54(1), Stats. Fritz does not seriously press the first issue, and we are satisfied that there is no issue of disputed fact material to the dispositive issue in the case. We are also satisfied that, as a matter of law, Fritz must be held to have discovered her injury more than three years prior to commencement of the, action. We therefore affirm the judgment.
In summary judgment cases, we follow well-known and well-documented procedures.
In re Cherokee Park Plat,
In this case, Fritz’s complaint states a cause of action against McGrath for dental malpractice, and McGrath’s answer joins the issue. In support of his motion, McGrath submitted the affidavit of his attorney setting forth Fritz’s responses to requests for *684 admission. In those responses, Fritz conceded the following facts.
McGrath performed periodontal surgery on Fritz on March 17, 1982. On January 20, 1983, she saw Dr. Michael Kotkins, a psychologist, and complained of a "personality change,” headaches, crying spells, restlessness, difficulty in eating, and a variety of other symptoms. She stated that these symptoms began after her dental surgery, and, when asked to give a history of her problem, she stated that "[a] nerve was severed at the time of [the dental] surgery,” and that the surgery "resulted] in severe complications” and continuing pain.
On April 5, 1983, Fritz saw Dr. Y.H. Gabriel, a neurosurgeon, about her problems. She again described her symptoms as beginning immediately after the McGrath dental surgery, and she complained of tingling and pain in the area of the surgery, the upper right side of her mouth, as well as pain and increased discomfort when eating and chewing. Dr. Gabriel’s "impression” was that Fritz was suffering from "[c]hronic pain syndrome with dysesthesias and pain in the right side of the face related to dental surgery.” Gabriel’s notes outline proposed treatment alternatives and state that "[a]ll these factors were discussed with the patient....” McGrath also asserts that a note entered by Dr. Kotkins during a visit with Fritz on the following day confirms that Gabriel advised Fritz of his "impression,” but the record contains only an illegible photocopy of Kotkins’s note.
Fritz submitted an affidavit in opposition to the motion in which she states that "[a]t no time ... was [she] advised by any dentist or doctor that negligence may have been involved with respect to the manner in which Dr. McGrath performed the periodontal sur *685 gery in question,” and that Dr. Gabriel, while telling her "there may be a 'possibility’ that [she] sustained nerve damage during the periodontal surgery ..., did not relate all of [her] problems to the ... surgery, or relate in any manner that it was his opinion that there had been malpractice on the part of Dr. McGrath.” (Emphasis in original.) She also attached a copy of a December 28, 1983, letter from another physician she had consulted indicating a "dismissal diagnosis” of, among other things, "right facial pain syndrome, indeterminate basis.”
In June, 1984, Fritz contacted an attorney to inquire about the possibility of a negligence action against McGrath. The attorney secured her medical records and consulted an "expert,” who gave an opinion that there was a basis for a malpractice claim against McGrath. Fritz filed the action on July 17, 1986. McGrath moved for summary judgment on grounds that the action was barred by secs. 893.04 and 893.54(1), Stats. The latter statute provides that actions for personal injuries must be commenced within three years or be barred, and the former states that the "period of limitation ... is computed from the time that the cause of action accrues until the action is commenced.” The trial court concluded that the cause of action accrued, and the statute of limitations began running, as of April 5, 1983, when Dr. Gabriel "confirm[ed] ... that the pain [was] related to the [McGrath] surgery ....”
McGrath’s affidavit and the attached admissions state a
prima facie
defense to the action. Fritz argues, however, that her affidavit raises disputed issues of material fact. She does not elaborate, but states only that "[t]he disputed issue ... involves the determina
*686
tion of when [she] first received competent medical advice as to the nature of her injury, the cause of her injury, and the respondent’s part in that cause.” Generally, we do not consider arguments broadly stated but never specifically argued.
State v. Beno,
The trial court’s ruling was based on its interpretation of Wisconsin cases defining when a cause of action for personal injuries "accrues” within the meaning of sec. 893.04, Stats. We, of course, are not bound by the trial court’s legal conclusions. We examine the issues
de novo. Muggli Dental Studio v. Taylor,
In
Hansen v. A.H. Robins, Inc.,
The general rule was amplified a few years later in
Borello v. U.S. Oil Co.,
In
Borello,
the plaintiff purchased a new furnace for her home in December, 1977, and within a few weeks began complaining of a bad odor from the unit. She wrote to the manufacturer stating that the problems she had been experiencing with her previous furnace — problems which are not discussed in the opinion — had been aggravated, not alleviated, by the new unit, and that she was suffering from dizziness, a burning sensation in her nose, headaches and chest pain.
Id.,
The supreme court held that the date of the plaintiffs "discovery” of the cause of action, and thus its accrual date, was the October, 1979, diagnosis.
Borello,
We acknowledge the rule of
Borello
that a plaintiffs subjective, unconfirmed "hunch” or belief, without more, does not constitute "discovery” of the injury within the rules just discussed, and that there must be "information available ... of the nature of [the] injury, the cause of [the] injury, and the defendant’s part in that cause.”
Borello,
Fritz’s discovery admissions establish that there was much more here than just her own suspicion or belief as to the role McGrath may have played in causing her problems. From the very beginning, she was satisfied that the dental surgery was the sole cause of her oral and facial problems. Beyond that, she acknowledged that Dr. Gabriel’s notes indicate that his "impression” after her first visit was that her symptoms were related to the McGrath surgery. Those notes also indicate that Gabriel discussed "[a]ll these factors ... with [Fritz] very freely.”
*689
Fritz’s counteraffidavit is largely nonevidentiary. It contains considerable hearsay discussion regarding other doctors’ statements to her,
2
and because the affidavits must contain
evidentiary
facts, sec. 802.08(3), Stats., hearsay evidence is not properly before the court on the motion for summary judgment.
Ranous v. Hughes,
We do not believe, as Fritz’s argument suggests, that a party must be specifically advised by an expert that, in the expert’s opinion, he or she received negligent treatment from a physician before the injury may be considered to have been "discovered.” All that is required is that the plaintiff knew or should have known that the injury existed and that it may have been caused by the defendant’s conduct.
Borello,
Second,
Borello
is, as we have said, distinguishable. In that case the plaintiff, in the court’s words, had been "repeatedly told by physicians that her symptoms and disabilities
could not be the result
of the [defective] furnace.”
Id.,
Nor is this a case, again like
Borello,
where "the cause and effect relationship is not readily apparent
...Id.,
On these facts, we believe that Fritz received information from Dr. Gabriel which, together with other facts known to her, provided "a basis for objectively concluding” that the McGrath surgery "was probably the cause of her symptoms.”
Borello,
By the Court — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Charlotte Fritz’s husband, Russell, is also a party to the action. We use the collective "Fritz” for simplicity.
Fritz’s affidavit is replete with nonevidentiary hearsay statements. Examples include: "Dr. Reeves ... stated that he could not come up with a definitive diagnosis ...” (emphasis in original); "Dr. Campbell[] also could not give me an opinion ..."; "[t]he diagnosis ... following my examinations at the Mayo Clinic was .."I received many and various other diagnoses of my condition ... that my problems were psychological in origin .."I was informed [by my attorney] that he consulted with an expert and he informed me that based upon the expert’s opinion .."I was informed as late as December, 1983, that there was no dental explanation or reason for my problems.”
The affidavit contains many nonevidentiary conclusory statements, such as: "The allegation that I ... should have discovered my injury ... is untrue”; "Since ... I... had great trust and confidence in the doctors [at] the Mayo Clinic due to its nationwide reputation ... I was left only with my ... opinion that the periodontal surgery ... was the cause of my problems”; "my lay opinion ... was in no manner supported by any of the physicians and dentists by whom I was examined at the Mayo Clinic”; "Prior to[,] on or about October 1,1984,1 had not received any objective support for my subjective lay opinion that Dr. McGrath was responsible for my problems, and that I had a right of action therefor.”
See, e.g., Hansen v. A.H. Robins, Inc.,
