Rebecca GRAY, Administratrix of the Estate of Troy R. Lozano, Appellant,
v.
COMMONWEALTH of Kentucky, TRANSPORTATION CABINET, DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS; and Commonwealth of Kentucky, Board of Claims Appellees.
Court of Appeals of Kentucky.
*62 Fred E. Fischer, Mike Kelly, Louisville, for Appellant.
Carl J. Bensinger, Margie Lynn Loesеr, Louisville, for Appellee.
Before WILHOIT, C.J., and COMBS and DYCHE, JJ.
OPINION
WILHOIT, Chief Judge.
This is an appeal from an order affirming the Board of Claims' dismissal of the appellant's claim as barred by the statute of limitations. The decedent, Troy R. Lozano, died July 18, 1993, as a result of injuries sustained in a single-vehicle accident that day. The appellant, Rebecca Gray, was appointed administratrix of her son's estate on October 7, 1993, and filed a claim with the Board of Claims on October 5, 1994. The Board dismissed the claim as time-barred pursuant to the motion of the appellee, Department of Highways. The circuit court affirmed the dismissal and this appeal followed.
KRS 44.110 provides as follows:
(1) All claims must be filed with the Board of Claims within one (1) year from the time the claim fоr relief accrued.
. . . .
(3) The claim for relief for personal injury shall be deemed to accrue at the time the personal injury is first discovered by the claimant or in the еxercise of reasonable care should have been discovered; however, no action for personal injury shall be commenced beyond two (2) years frоm the date on which the alleged negligent act or omission actually occurred.
The appellant asserts that pursuant to KRS 44.110(3), the wrongful death claim should be deemed to accrue on the date the personal representative is appointed because the claim could not have been discovered until the party entitled to prosecute the claim legally existed. She contends that the earliest possible date that she could have discovered the wrongful death claim was the date she was appointed administratrix of her son's estate, October 7, 1993; therefore, the October 5, 1994, filing of the claim was timely.
The "discovery rule," as applied to civil actions filed in a court of law, tolls the running of the statute of limitations in situations where the cause of action is not reasonably discoverable until the plaintiff knows, or in the exercise of reasonable care should know, that the injury has occurred. Michels v. Sklavos, Ky.,
"A cause of action will not accrue under the discovery rule until the plaintiff discоvers or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered not only that he has been injured but also that his injury may have been caused by the defendаnt's conduct.
Johns-Manville,
The appellant contends that KRS 44.110(3) allows a personal representative one year from the date of her appointment to file a claim in the Board of Claims because she, as personаl representative, could not have discovered the claim until she legally existed. A comparable argument was made, albeit unsuccessfully, by the plaintiff in Carden v. Louisville & N.R. Co.,
The plaintiff in Carden argued that the statute of limitations for wrongful death did not cоmmence until his appointment as administrator because no person competent to bring the action existed until his appointment. In rejecting this argument the Court statеd as follows:
The statute under which this suit was instituted provides "that actions under it must be commenced within twelve months after cause of action shall have accrued." There is nothing in these words which imply, in addition, the existence of a person legally competent to enforce it by suit . . . . if it was the intention to provide that the statute should only run where there is both a right of action and a person to assert it, why not insert a provision to that effect in general terms?
Carden,
In Conner v. George W. Whitesides Co., Ky.,
KRS 413.180(2) provides that if the personal representаtive is not appointed within a year after death but is appointed after that time, the one year anniversary of death is considered the date of appointment, and the personal representative has one year from the one year anniversary of death to commence a cause of action. The nеt effect of this statute in this case is to provide two years from the date of death to appoint a personal representative and commence а cause of action for wrongful death.
Conner,
The Board of Claims Act is a limited waiver of sovereign immunity. KRS 44.072. KRS 44.110 establishes a condition precedent to filing a claim against the Commonwealth. Commonwealth, Transp. Cab., Dep't of Hwys. v. Abner, Ky.,
We are of the opinion that "claimant," as used in KRS 44.110, refers to the person himself who has suffered the actual injury rather than to a personal representative. We find no legislative intent in KRS 44.110 that the appointment of the personal representative modify the limitations period for wrongful death claims against the Commonwealth.
The circuit court judgment is affirmed.
DYCHE, J., concurs.
COMBS, J., dissents and files a separate opinion.
COMBS, Judge, dissenting.
I сan find no rationale or justification for refusing to extend the survival statute (KRS 413.180) as interpreted by Conner, supra, to cases involving the Board of Claims. The doctrine of sovereign immunity, having been wаived by the General Assembly by KRS 44.110 in limited fashion to allow claims against the Commonwealth, should not preclude application of the "savings statute" to the case at bar.
Although (amazingly) appellant did not rely upon either KRS 413.180 or Conner, I can find no rational basis for creating two differently affected classes of plaintiffs/personal representatives in wrongful death cases: one group having as long as two years in which to file suit and another cut short and enjoying less than a full year (as in this case) in which to bring an action. Sovereign immunity does not demand nor justify such an unequal result.
