Case Information
*1 Filed 9/25/14
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
HANH NGUYEN, a Minor, etc., H038934
(Sаnta Clara County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 110CV185748) v.
WESTERN DIGITAL CORPORATION,
Defendant and Respondent.
In this case, we determine which statute of limitations applies to an action alleging pre-birth injuries due to exposure to hazardous materials or toxic substances that occurred more than 20 years ago. Plaintiff Hanh Nguyen (sometimes Plaintiff) contends that such claims are subject to the two-year limitations period in Code of Civil Procedure section 340.8 for actions “for injury or illness based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance,” which she asserts is subject to tolling for minority or mental incapacity. (Unless otherwise stated, all further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.) Defendant Western Digital Corporation (WDC) argues that such claims are subject to the six-year limitations period in section 340.4 for actions based on birth and pre-birth injuries, which is not subject to tolling for minority or mental incapacity.
Plaintiff was born with agenesis of the corpus callosum (a birth defect affecting the structure of the brain) and other birth defects. She alleges that her birth defects were caused by her mother’s occupational exposure and her (Hanh’s) in utero exposure to hazardous and toxic chemicals at WDC. Plaintiff also alleges that her parents did not *2 know that her birth defects were caused by exposure to hazardous chemicals at WDC until December 2008, when family members heard on the radio that Plaintiff’s attorneys were investigating cases of birth defects caused by chemical exposures in the semiconductor industry.
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of dismissal after the trial court sustained WDC’s demurrer to the third amended complaint without leave to amend on the ground that the action was barred by the statute of limitations for pre-birth injuries in section 340.4. Plaintiff contends the applicable statute of limitations is section 340.8, the limitations period for causes of action based on exposure to hazardous substances (which is subject to tolling for minority and mental incapacity) and that the trial court erred when it applied the limitations period for pre-birth injuries in section 340.4 (which is not subject to such tolling). Plaintiff also contends that (1) she has pleaded sufficient facts to support delayed accrual of her claims until December 2008, or alternatively, until at least December 1998; and (2) WDC is equitably estopped from relying on a statute of limitations defense because it knew the chemicals used in its facility caused reproductive harm, and because it fraudulently concealed the causal connection between the chemical exposure and Plaintiff’s injuries.
Construing both section 340.4 and section 340.8, we hold that claims based on birth or pre-birth injuries that are due to exposure to hazardous materials or toxic substances are subject to the limitations period in section 340.8. We also hold that even though section 340.8 did not take effect until almost 10 years after Plaintiff was born, it applies in this case because the allegations of the third amended complaint support a clаim of delayed accrual until December 31, 1998. And since Plaintiff’s claims did not accrue until that date, they were not barred by the six-year limitations period in section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries) on January 1, 2004, when section 340.8 (toxic exposures) went into effect. Moreover, since Plaintiff’s claims were subject to the limitations period in section 340.8 when it took effect, she is entitled to tolling for minority that applies to *3 section 340.8 claims. Thus, her action filed on October 25, 2010, when she was 16 years old, was timely. We will therefore reverse the judgment and direct the trial court to vacate its previous order and enter a new order overruling the demurrer to Plaintiff’s third amended complaint.
F ACTS
[1]
Hanh Nguyen was born on August 11, 1994. She was 16 years old when she filed her original complaint in October 2010 in Santa Clara County Superior Court. [2] In the original and the first amend complaint, Hanh was represented by her mother and guardian ad litem, Lan Tran. Hanh’s older sister, Kim Nguyen, appeared as guardian ad litem in the second and third amended complaints. Hanh’s father, Liem Nguyen, was named as a plaintiff in earlier complaints, but is not a party to the third amended complaint. (For clarity, and meaning no disrespect, we will refer to the members of the Nguyen and Tran family by their first names. Sometimes, we will refer to Lan Tran and Liem Nguyen jointly as “Parents.” We will refer to Hanh and Liem jointly as “Plaintiffs” when discussing the pleadings that named both of them as plaintiffs.) *4 Hanh’s mother, Lan, worked for WDC at its Santa Clara manufacturing facility from approximately 1987 until 1998. Lan worked in “clean rooms” and elsewhere at WDC “where she used and/or was exposed for prolonged periods to teratogenic, [ [3] ] and reproductively toxic chemicals” that WDC used to assemble and to manufacture its products. “Teratogenic chemicals are known to cause severe harm to unborn children.” Lan worked at WDC while she was pregnant with Hanh. During Lan’s pregnancy, Hanh “was ‘present’ in ‘clean rooms’ and elsewhere” at WDC “where she was exposed during the crucial months of growth in her mother’s womb, for prolonged periods to teratogenic and reproductively toxic chemicals.”
“Upon information and belief,” the third amended complaint lists chemicals or classes of chemicals that were commonly used in the semiconductor industry. “Due to the nature of semiconductor manufacturing, multiple chemicals are used at the same time and in the same space, such that exposure to individual chemical substances cannot be separated or singled out in a meaningful way; the impact of exposure must take into account both individual chemicals and . . . exposure to numerous chemicals simultaneously.”
The third amended complaint alleges that the “ ‘clean rooms’ ” were only clean for WDC’s products, not its employees. There was no ventilation system to protect workers from inhaling fumes emitted by the chemicals, which remained in the re-circulated air in the clean rooms. And the protective clothing the employees wore protected the products frоm the workers and their clothing, but it did not protect the workers from the chemicals. Lan absorbed chemicals that were in the workplace into her body through her skin and by inhalation. The exposure to these chemicals alone or in combination caused Hanh to sustain “birth defects” and “severe and permanent injuries, including . . . agenesis of the *5 corpus callosum.” [4] The chemicals listed in the complaint were a substantial factor in causing Hanh’s injuries.
Based on the scientific literature and government bulletins that were available beginning in the early 1980’s, WDC knew or should have known of the reproductively toxic nature of the chemicals used in its facility. In the 1980’s, chemical manufacturers warned semiconductor companies about the toxicity associated with their chemical products. The third amended complaint includes citations to several journal articles, scientific symposiums and presentations, and government bulletins that were published between 1981 and 1996 regarding animal studies on chemicals used in the semiconductor industry. The complaint describes: (1) a 1981 article in the journal Toxicology, which reported that toxicology studies on mice had “demonstrated that ethylene glycol monomethyl ether, . . . , caused an increased incidence of fetal malformations and fetal death”; (2) a 1982 study done by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health on the effects of 2-ethoxyethanol on pregnant rats that allegedly demonstrated a relationship between exposure to thе chemical and miscarriages, skeletal and cardiovascular malformations, and fetal death, the results of which were published in the journal Drug and Chemical Toxicology; (3) a 1983 article in the journal Toxicology describing “the adverse effects of ethylene glycol ethers on the male reproductive system”; and (4) a 1984 article that was a “compilation of over forty scholarly articles addressing the toxicity and reproductive hazards associated with certain glycol ethers,” which was published in Environmental Health Perspectives.
The third amended complaint also describes three epidemiological studies that examined the incidence of miscarriage among women who worked in the semiconductor *6 industry. These studies include: (1) a 1988 study involving employees at Digital Equipment Corporation, the results of which were reported in the Journal of Occupational Medicine; (2) a 1989 study done at the University of California at Davis on behalf of the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) that “evaluated thousands of workers at 14 different companies nationwide” and “generated 11 papers published in the peer reviewed medical literature,” including three articles in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine; and (3) a study done at Johns Hopkins University on behalf of IBM Corporation, the results of which were published in Occupational Hygiene and the American Journal of Epidemiology in 1996.
In 1983 and again in 1994, the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) sponsored two symposiums that included presentations on the reproductive effects of glycol ethers. Based on animal studies, a May 1983 NIOSH bulletin recommended that two of the chemicals Hanh’s mother was exposed to (2- methoxyethanol and 2-ethoxyethanol) “be regarded in the workplace as having the potential to cause adverse reproductive effects in male and female workers.” A 1982 alert from the California Hazard Evaluation System and Information Service (HESIS) warned that two glycol ethers were known to cause birth defects. HESIS fact sheets issued in 1987 and 1989 “explained that low-level exposure to certain glycol ethers can lead to birth defects.” Those fact sheets also recommended methods for reducing worker exposure. WDC was aware of these studies, articles, bulletins, and alerts before Hanh was conceived. However, none of this information was known to—or even accessible to—Parents before December 2008.
As a semiconductor manufacturer, WDC “knew or should have known of the hazardous nature of the . . . chemicals and processes used in the ‘clean rooms’ and other areas of its . . . facility.” “[A]s a matter of good occupational medicine practice,” WDC had a duty to investigate and understand the reproductive hazards associated with each substance used, and substitute safer substances or provide personal protective equipment *7 and engineering controls. WDC had a statutory duty to disclose material faсts relating to the toxicity of many of the chemicals used in its workplace under the California Hazardous Substances Information and Training Act (Lab. Code, § 6360 et seq.; see also Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, § 339). WDC “concealed and/or misrepresented the . . . reproductively toxic nature of chemicals used [to manufacture] its products,” and “failed to warn . . . its employees” of the toxic nature of the chemicals used. WDC also failed to disclose that very low levels of exposure were reproductively toxic. WDC and other semiconductor manufacturers “affirmatively misled and withheld relevant information from their employees and other persons present at their facilities including employees’ unborn children by disregarding and/or downplaying the adverse reproductive, developmental and long-term health implications of multiple exposures to” these chemicals.
“On information and belief,” Plaintiff alleges that WDC offered health services to its employees, including Lan. These health services included “a detailed review of [her] medical and reproductive history and industrial hygiene assessment and monitoring.” The health care providers included “nurses and physicians affiliated with and/or employed by” WDC who concealed and suppressed material facts from Lan regarding the “reproductively toxic” [5] nature of the chemicals she worked with and “misrepresented by omission that [Lan’s] workplace was safe.”
The third amended complaint alleges that Parents “undertook а reasonable investigation to discover the cause of Hanh’s injuries.” Parents asked Hanh’s treating physicians what the cause was and her doctors said they “were unaware of any cause.” Parents had Hanh undergo a “lymphocyte karyotyping study, which did not reveal a *8 genetic cause of the hydrocephalus [ [6] ] or absent corpus collosum [ sic ].” Hanh underwent “other medical tests, including CT scans, MRI [ ’ ] s, and electroencephalograms, none of which determined the cause of her injuries.” “At no time prior to December 2008, did any” of Hanh’s doctors “ever inform, advise, suggest or otherwise imply that parental occupational exposure . . . was a potential contributing cause of [Hanh’s] injuries and birth defects. Parents reasonably relied on the skill and judgment of Hanh’s doctors and had “no reason to further investigate, inquire into or suspect any occupational cause of [Hanh’s] condition . . . .”
The third amended complaint also alleges that “In or after December 2008,” when Hanh was 14 years old, unnamed members of her family “heard on the radio that attorneys were investigating cases of birth defects caused by chemical exposures in the semiconductor industry.” Lan and Kim contacted the attorneys and retained them to investigate whether Hanh’s injuries “were caused by parental occupational exposure to . . . toxic chemicals” at WDC. Through that investigation, Parents “learned for the first time, in or after December 2008,” that (1) the manufacturing chemicals at WDC were “reproductively toxic”; (2) Lan’s “exposure levels were sufficiently high to cause . . . birth defects”; and (3) Hanh’s injuries were caused by chemical exposures at WDC. “At no time prior to retaining [counsel],” did Parents or Kim suspect that Hanh’s injuries were caused by chemical exposures at WDC.
P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY
Pleadings Filed in Alameda and Orange Counties [7]
In December 2009, Hanh (by and through her guardian ad litem Lan) and Liem filed a complaint in Alameda County. WDC demurred to the original Alameda County complaint on a variety of grounds, including that it was barred by the statute of limitations. WDC also filed a motion to transfer the action to Orange County since its principal place of business was in Orange County. Instead of opposing the demurrer, Plaintiffs filed a first amended complaint.
The court granted the motion to transfer and the case was transferred to Orange County in May 2010. WDC demurred to the first amended complaint in Orange County. Three days earlier, Plaintiffs had dismissed the entire action.
First Pleading Filed in Santa Clara County and Demurrer to that Complaint
Hanh and Liem filed their original Santa Clara County complaint on October 25, 2010. The only named defendant was WDC. The complaint contained causes of action on behalf of Hanh for negligence, strict liability, willful misconduct, misrepresentation, premises liability, and products liability. It also contained causes of action on behalf of Liem for negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
WDC filed a demurrer, which argued that the complaint failed to state a cause of action because it failed to specify the chemicals at issue and failed on other grounds. WDC did not rely on a statute of limitations defense at that timе. Plaintiffs opposed the demurrer. Lan filed an application to be appointed Hanh’s guardian ad litem, which alleged that Hanh sustained “[p]ersonal injuries and mental disability as a result of [her] *10 mother’s exposure to chemicals during and prior to pregnancy” and was “mentally disabled,” “unable to care for herself,” and “depends on her parents 100%.”
The court sustained the demurrer with leave to amend on the grounds that (1) the complaint did not specify the chemicals that caused Hanh’s injuries; (2) the cause of action for misrepresentation did not specifically plead fraud; and (3) Liem had failed to state necessary elements to support his emotional distress claims.
First Amended Complaint and Demurrer to First Amended Complaint
In July 2011, Plaintiffs filed their first amended complaint, which contained the same causes of action as the original complaint. WDC demurred again, raising the same issues as before, this time including its statute of limitations defenses. WDC argued that Hanh’s claims were barred by the six-year limitations period in section 340.4 for birth and pre-birth injuries because the complaint was not filed within six years of Hanh’s birth. With respect to Liem’s claims for emotional distress, WDC argued that those claims were barred by the two-year limitations period in section 335.1. WDC also argued that Plaintiffs had failed to plead sufficient facts to demonstrate delayed accrual under the discovery rule.
In opposition, Hanh argued that her claims were subject to the two-year limitations period in section 340.8 for injuries cаused by exposure to hazardous materials, not the limitations period (§ 340.4) for injury caused before or during birth. She also argued that her claims were timely under section 340.8 based on both tolling for minority and insanity (§ 352) and delayed accrual under the discovery rule, and that even if her claims were subject to section 340.4, they were not time-barred under the discovery rule. Liem argued that his claims were timely under the discovery rule.
In December 2011, the court sustained the demurrers with leave to amend based on the statute of limitations. The court found that pursuant to “section 340.4, [Hanh’s] *11 lawsuit is time-barred as there are insufficient allegations of delayed discovery.” The court also found that Liem’s emotional distress claims were time-barred.
Second Amended Complaint and Demurrer to Second Amended Complaint
Hanh and Liem filed their second amended complaint in December 2011. The second amended complaint alleged, in paragraph 62, that “the health service providers affiliated with and/or employed by [WDC] falsely represented to Lan Tran that there was no causal connection between her occupational chemical exposure and [Hanh’s] injuries.” Paragraph 63 alleged that Lan “relied on the advice and information provided by reproductive health service providers affiliated with and/or employed by [WDC] to her detriment.” (These allegations from paragraph 62 and 63 were deleted from the third amended complaint.)
WDC demurred to the second amended comрlaint. It attacked Plaintiffs’ causes of action on statute of limitations grounds and raised other challenges to Liem’s emotional distress claims. WDC again argued that Hanh’s claims were time-barred under section 340.4 and that Plaintiffs could not plead delayed discovery because Lan suspected, years before Plaintiffs filed suit, that the chemicals she worked with caused Hanh’s injuries. WDC relied on the allegations that Lan spoke with an unidentified person “affiliated with and/or employed by” WDC about whether the chemicals may have been the cause of Hanh’s injuries. WDC argued: “it is clear . . . that plaintiffs were on inquiry notice that chemical exposure may have been the cause” more than six years before they filed suit. In addition, WDC claimed that “the studies and scientific literature purportedly linking chemical exposure to birth defects that their lawyers located in 2009 had been publically available since the 1980s” and that this material would have been available to Hanh’s doctors or to any lawyer that Parents “would have retained in the 1990s, just as they were available to plaintiffs’ lawyers in 2009.” WDC also claimed that the second amended complaint did not allege who Lan spoke to at WDC, that person’s qualifications or *12 authority to opine on chemical exposures, whether that person even worked for WDC, or when the conversation took place. WDC argued that Lan “presumably” spoke with the WDC-affiliated person “in or before 1998” when she was still employed by WDC and that Plaintiffs’ allegаtions of fraudulent concealment were inadequate to save their claims because they were not pleaded with particularity.
Plaintiffs opposed the demurrer, arguing that (1) Hanh’s claims were not time- barred under section 340.8, (2) they had sufficiently pleaded delayed accrual under the discovery rule, and (3) WDC’s misrepresentations prevented Parents from suspecting wrongdoing sooner.
The court sustained the demurrer to Hanh’s causes of action with leave to amend. The court found that Hanh’s claims were time-barred. Based on the allegations (1) that health care providers affiliated with WDC had falsely misrepresented that there was no causal connection between Lan’s work and Hanh’s injuries, and (2) that Lan stopped working for WDC in 1998, the court concluded that the alleged representations by the health care providers “would have happened no later than 1998. At that time, Lan would have had at least a suspicion that there could be a causal connection between her occupational chemical exposures and Hanh’s injuries, and the statute of limitations would have begun to run.” The court also found that Hanh’s fraudulent concealment allegations were not pleaded with sufficient particularity. The court sustained the demurrers to Liem’s claims for emotional distress without leave to amend on grounds unrelated to the statute of limitations.
Third Amended Complaint and Demurrer to Third Amend Complaint
Hanh filed her third amended complaint in April 2012. Liem’s emotional distress claims were deleted from this iteration of the complaint. As we have noted, the third amended complaint also dropped the allegations in paragraphs 62 and 63 of the second *13 amended complaint regarding Lan’s contact with health care providers affiliated with WDC.
WDC demurred again, arguing that the entire action was time-barred under section 340.4. Noting the omission of paragraphs 62 and 63, WDC argued that Hanh was bound by her prior pleading under the “ ‘sham-pleading doctrine.’ ” WDC also argued that the third amended complaint did not add the particularity necessary to plead fraudulent concealment.
Plaintiff opposed the demurrer, arguing that (1) the appropriate statute of limitations is the two-year period for injuries due to exposure to hazardous substances in section 340.8; (2) her pleading sufficiently pleaded delayed discovery as well as fraudulent concealment; and (3) WDC was estopped from relying on the statute of limitations. With respect to the estoppel argument, Plaintiff specifically argued that (1) WDC knew the chemicals it used were hazardous, (2) it actively concealed the hazard from Lan, and (3) when Parents inquired into possible causes of Hanh’s injuries, WDC represented that the chemicals did not cause Hanh’s injuries.
The court sustained WDC’s demurrer to the third amended complaint without leave to amend. The court observed that the third amended complaint omitted facts that “previously demonstrated the inapplicability of the . . . discovery rule” and hеld that it could disregard that omission. The court held that since the omitted allegations demonstrated that Lan “at least had a suspicion that there could have been a causal connection between her occupational exposure and [Hanh’s] injuries no later than 1998,” the action was time-barred.
Under the sham pleading doctrine, admissions in a complaint that “has been
superseded by an amended pleading remain within the court’s cognizance and the
alteration of such statements by amendment designed to conceal fundamental
vulnerabilities in a plaintiff’s case will not be accepted.” (
Lockton v. O’Rourke
(2010)
*14
D ISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We perform an independent review of a ruling on a demurrer and decide de novo
whether the challenged pleading states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
(
Committee for Green Foothills v. Santa Clara County Bd. of Supervisors
(2010)
“It is not the ordinary function of a demurrer to test the truth of the plaintiff’s
allegations or the accuracy with which he [or she] describes the defendant’s conduct. A
demurrer tests only the legal sufficiency of the pleading.” (
Committee on Children’s
Television, Inc. v. General Foods Corp.
(1983)
On appeal, we will affirm a “trial court’s decision to sustain the demurrer [if it]
was correct on any theory. [Citation.]” (
Kennedy v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.
(1996)
II. Statute of Limitations Governing Hanh’s Claims
Hanh contends the court erred when it held the applicable statute of limitations is the six-year period in section 340.4, which applies to personal injury claims based on birth and pre-birth injuries. Hanh asserts that the applicable statute of limitations is the two-year period in section 340.8, which applies to injuries “based upon exposure to a hazardоus material or toxic substance.” (§ 340.8) Hanh argues that “[o]n their face,” both section 340.4 and section 340.8 “appear to govern an action for birth or pre-birth injuries caused by exposure to hazardous materials or toxic substances” and that section 340.8, the later-enacted, more specific statute, controls over the earlier-enacted, more general provision in section 340.4. (For clarity, we will sometimes use the parenthetical “(pre-birth injuries)” after references to section 340.4 and the parenthetical “(toxic exposures)” after references to section 340.8.)
A. General Principles Regarding Statutes of Limitations
As the Supreme Court explained in
Pooshs v. Phillip Morris USA, Inc
. (2011)
“There are several pоlicies underlying such statutes. One purpose is to give
defendants reasonable repose, thereby protecting parties from ‘defending stale claims,
where factual obscurity through the loss of time, memory or supporting documentation
may present unfair handicaps.’ [Citations.] A statute of limitations also stimulates
plaintiffs to pursue their claims diligently. [Citations.] A countervailing factor, of
course, is the policy favoring disposition of cases on the merits rather than on procedural
grounds.” (
Fox v. Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc
. (2005)
“Critical to applying a statute of limitations is determining the point when the
limitations period begins to run. Generally, a plaintiff must file suit within a designated
period after the cause of action
accrues
. (. . . § 312.) A cause of action accrues ‘when
[it] is complete with all of its elements’—those elements being wrongdoing, harm, and
*17
causation.” (
Pooshs
,
supra
,
“The most important exception to [the] general rule regarding accrual of a cause of
action is the ‘discovery rule,’ under which accrual is postponed until the plaintiff
‘discovers, or has reason to discover, the cause of action.’ [Citation.] Discovery of the
cause of action occurs whеn the plaintiff ‘has reason . . . to suspect a factual basis’ for the
action.” (
Pooshs
,
supra
,
B. Section 340.4 – Statute of Limitations for Birth or Pre-Birth Injuries Section 340.4 provides: “An action by or on behalf of a minor for personal injuries sustained before or in the course of his or her birth must be commenced within six years after the date of birth, and the time the minor is under any disability mentioned *18 in Section 352 shall not be excluded in computing the time limited for the commencement of the action.”
Section 352, in turn, provides in relevant part: “(a) If a person entitled to bring an action, mentioned in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 335) is, at the time the cause of action accrued either under the age of majority or insane, the time of the disability is not part of the time limited for the commencement of the action.” Thus, under the plain language of section 340.4, an action for personal injuries to a minor sustained before or in the course of his or her birth is not tolled by the child’s minority or insanity.
Section 340.4 was enacted in 1992; it became operative on January 1, 1994. (Stats. 1992, ch. 163 §§ 16, 161.) Section 340.4 contains language very similar to that of the second clause of former Civil Code section 29, which was enacted in 1941. (Stats. 1941, ch. 337, § 1.) More importantly, as discussed in section III, post , the limitations period in section 340.4 is subject to the discovery rule. ( Young , supra , 41 Cal.3d at pp. 892-893 [former Civil Code section 29].)
C. Section 340.8 – Statute of Limitations for Injury or Illness Based on Exposure to Toxic Substances
Section 340.8 provides in relevant part: “(a) In any civil action for injury or illness based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance, the time for commencement of the action shall be no later than either two years from the date of injury, or two years after the plaintiff becomes aware of, or reasonably should have become aware of, (1) an injury, (2) the physical cause of the injury, and (3) sufficient facts to put a reasonable person on inquiry notice that the injury was caused or contributed to by the wrongful act of another, whichever occurs later. [¶] [¶] (c) For purposes of this section: [¶] (1) A ‘civil action for injury or illness based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance’ does not include an action subject to Section 340.2 [(the limitations period for actions based upon exposure to asbestos)] or 340.5 [(the *19 limitations period for actions based on professional negligence of a health care provider)]. [¶][¶] (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit, abrogate, or change the law in effect on the effective date of this section with respect to actions not based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance.”
Section 340.8, signed into law on October 12, 2003, became effective on January 1, 2004. (Stats.2003, ch. 873, p. 6398; Cal. Const., art. IV, § 8, subd. (c).)
D. Section 352 Tolling for Minority and Insanity Applies to Section 340.8
We turn to the question whether section 352 tolling applies to section 304.8 (toxic
exposures). “The primary duty of a court when interpreting a statute is to give effect to
the intent of the Legislature, so as to effectuate the purpose of the law. (
People v.
Woodhead
(1987)
Unlike section 340.4, which expressly states that section 352 tolling for minority
and insanity does not apply to actions for pre-birth and birth injuries, section 340.8 is
silent regarding section 352 tolling. To determine whether section 352 applies to section
340.8, we start with the language of section 352, which expressly limits its tolling
provision to actions “mentioned in Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 335).” (§ 352.)
The reference to “Chapter 3” in section 352 is to chapter 3 (civil actions other than for the
*20
recovery of real property) of title 2 (the time of commencing civil actions) of part 2 (civil
actions) of the Code of Civil Procedure. Chapter 3 includes sections 335 through 349¾.
“Title 2 of part 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure prescribes the limitations periods during
which ‘[c]ivil actions, without exception,’ must be commenced after they accrue, ‘unless
. . . a different limitation is prescribed by statute.’ (§ 312.) Chapter 3 of that title and
part . . . sets forth the limitations periods for actions other than for the recovery of real
property. (§§ 335-349[¾].) Section 352 appears in chapter 4 of that title and part, which
sets forth certain general provisions applicable to limitations periods, including grounds
for tolling. (See, e.g., §§ 351-356.)” (
Barker v. Garza
(2013)
E. Analysis
The operative pleading discloses three possible accrual dates: (1) August 11, 1994 (Hanh’s date of birth); (2) no later than December 31, 1998 (the last possible date Lan could have asked medical personnel affiliated with WDC whether Hanh’s injuries could have been caused by exposure to hazardous chemicals at WDC); and (3) December 2008 (when Hanh’s family members learned that her attorneys were investigating cases involving birth defects due to chemical exposures in the semiconductor industry). We will examine each of these accrual dates as they relate to the limitations periods in sections 340.4 and 340.8 to determine whether there are any possible analyses under which Hanh’s claims may be timely.
1. Assuming accrual on Hanh’s birth date (August 11, 1994), her claims were time-barred
When Hanh was born on August 11, 1994, section 340.8 (toxic exposures) had not yet been enacted. Actions for pre-birth injuries, however, were subject to the limitations period in section 340.4. Under section 340.4, Hanh was required to bring her claims no later than six years from the date of her birth, or by August 11, 2000. As noted earlier, the section 340.4 limitations period is not tolled by minority or mental incompetency. (§ 340.4) Therefore, assuming accrual on Hanh’s birth date, and unless the limitations period was tolled for a reason other than minority or mental incompetency, Hanh’s original complaint, filed on October 25, 2010, was untimely by more than 10 years under section 340.4.
2. Assuming delayed accrual until December 31, 1998, Hanh’s claims were timely under section 340.8
As we have noted, section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries) is subject to delayed accrual under the discovery rule. ( Young , supra , 41 Cal.3d at pp. 892-893.) Assuming delayеd accrual until December 31, 1998—the last possible date that “health service providers affiliated with . . . [WDC] falsely represented to Lan . . . that there was no causal connection between [Lan’s] occupational chemical exposure and [Hanh’s] injuries”— Hanh was required to file suit under section 340.4 within six years of the delayed accrual date, or no later than December 31, 2004. Thus, assuming delayed accrual until December 31, 1998, Hanh’s complaint, filed in October 2010, was untimely under section 340.4 by more than 5 years. But, as we will explain below, continuing to assume delayed accrual until December 31, 1998, Hanh’s claims were timely under section 340.8 (toxic exposures).
Hanh contends “because section 340.8 [(toxic exposures)] did not become
operative until January 1, 2004, it will apply only if Hanh’s cause[s] of action [were] not
already time-barred under section 340.4 when section 340.8 became operative.” Statutes
*22
generally operate only prospectively, and “[a] new statute that enlarges a statutory
limitations period [only] applies to actions that are not already barred by the original
limitations period at the time the new statute goes into effect.” (
Andonagui v. May Dept.
Stores Co
. (2005)
Assuming delayed accrual under the discovery rule until December 31, 1998, Hanh’s claims were subject to the six-year limitations period in section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries). Under that statute, she had until December 31, 2004 to file suit. Section 340.8 (toxic exposures) went into effect prior to that date, on January 1, 2004. Therefore, assuming delayed accrual until December 31, 1998, and that the new statute (section 340.8) applies to Hanh’s claims, Hanh would be entitled to rely on the longer limitations period in section 340.8 (toxic exposures) since Hanh’s claims had not yet expired when section 340.8 took effect. And although section 340.8 (toxic exposures) contains a two- year statute of limitations, it effectively provides for a “longer limitations period” since, unlike section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries), it is subject to tolling for minority and insanity (§ 352).
3. Assuming delayed accrual until December 2008, Hanh’s claims were timely under both sections 340.4 and 340.8 Turning to the third possible accrual date, December 2008 (when Hanh’s family members heard about her attorney’s investigations on the radio): assuming delayed accrual under the discovery rule, both section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries) and section 340.8 (toxic exposures) were in effect at that time. Under section 340.4, Hanh was required to file suit within six years of discovery, or nо later than December 2014. Under section 340.8, Hanh was required to file suit within two years of discovery, or no later than December 2010. Thus, if the accrual of Hanh’s causes of action was delayed until December 2008, then her complaint, filed in October 2010, was timely under both section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries) and section 340.8 (toxic exposures) without any tolling for minority or mental incompetency.
In summary, our analysis reveals two ways in which Hanh’s claims may have been timely filed. First, if the accrual of Hanh’s causes of action was delayed under the discovery rule until December 31, 1998, and if her claims are subject to section 340.8, then she would be able to state a cause of action, since her claims had not expired when section 340.8 took effect on January 1, 2004. And by operation of section 352, Hanh’s claims were tolled until August 11, 2012, when she turned 18. Under this analysis, Hanh’s complaint filed in October 2010, was timely. Second, if the accrual of Hanh’s claims was delayed until December 2008 when her family members heard about her attorney’s investigations on the radio, then her causes of action were timely under both section 340.4 and 340.8 and we need not determine which statute of limitations is controlling in this case.
III. Hanh’s Claims Are Subject to the Limitations Period in Section 340.8 (Toxic Exposures)
We next address the question whether, as of January 1, 2004 (the effective date for
section 340.8), Hanh’s claims were subject to the limitations period in section 340.4 (pre-
*24
birth injuries) or section 340.8 (toxic exposures). This is a question of statutory
construction, which we review de novo. (
People ex rel. Lockyer v. Shamrock Foods
(2000)
Section 340.4 applies to “an action by or on behalf of a minor for personal injuries sustained before or in the course of his or her birth.” In Young , the Supreme Court explained that former Civil Code section 29 (the predecessor to section 340.4), “enacted in 1872, abolished the common law rule that an unborn child has no independent existence and, therefore, no right of action for injuries suffered before its birth. [Citation.] That section created the statutory authorization for a child to recover for such injuries in the event of its subsequent birth. [Citation.] As originally enacted, it applied to all actions which might be brought after birth and thus did not provide any single statute of limitations for these actions. The applicable statutes of limitations were set forth in other statutes, depending on the nature of the cause of action. Furthermore, section 352, also enacted in 1872, established a general rule that the statute of limitations *25 for most actions was tolled during the plaintiff’s minority.” ( Young , supra , 41 Cal.3d at p. 892, footnotes omitted.)
In 1941, shortly after an appellate court suggested in dictum “that an action for
prenatal injuries would be tolled during the child’s minority,” the “Legislature amended
[former Civil Code] section 29 to state expressly that section 352 tolling did not apply to
actions brought under that statute” and that the limitations period for such actions was six
years. (
Young
,
But “the six-year rule was not absolute” and courts have held that “ ‘the time
limitation contained in [former Civil Code] section 29 was intended by the Legislature as
a procedural statute of limitations subject to being extended by any legal ground not
specifically excluded in the section itself’ [citation] – including the common law delayed-
discovery rule.” (
Young
,
supra
, 41 Cal.3d at pp. 892-893, quoting
Myers v. Stevenson
(1954)
Hanh argues that the plain meaning of the “clear language” in section 340.8 supports the conclusion that it applies in this case. Section 340.8 applies to “ any civil action for injury or illness” and actions for wrongful death “based upon exposure to a *26 hazardous material or toxic substance.” (§ 340.8, subds. (a), (b); italics added.) Subdivision (a) of section 340.8 provides that “any civil action for injury or illness based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance” is subject to a two-year limitations period. It also provides for two alternative accrual dates: “either two years from the date of injury, or two years after the plaintiff becomes aware of, or reasonably should have become aware of, (1) an injury, (2) the physical cause of the injury, and (3) sufficient facts to put a reasonable person on inquiry notice that the injury was caused or contributed to by the wrongful act of another, whichever occurs later.” Thus, subdivision (a) of section 340.8 expressly provides that injury claims based upon toxic exposures are subject to the discovery rule. Subdivision (b) of section 340.8 sets forth the same two-year limitations period for wrongful death actions “based upon exposure to a hazardous material оr toxic substance” and provides that such wrongful death actions are also subject to the discovery rule.
As we have noted, section 340.8 applies to “
any
civil action for injury or illness
based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance.” (§ 340.8, subd. (a);
italics added.) “As our Supreme Court has stated, ‘[t]he word “any” means without limit
and no matter what kind.’ (
Delaney v. Superior Court
(1990)
When section 340.8 was enacted in 2004, personal injury claims were subject to different limitations periods based in part on the age of the plaintiff at the time of injury. (See §§ 335.1 (adults and minors), 352 (tolling for minority), 340.4 (birth and pre-birth *27 injuries).) The use of the broad term “any” in section 340.8, subdivision (a) indicates that the statute was intended to have a broad application and that it applies to any claim for “injury or illness based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance,” regardless of the plaintiff’s age at the time of injury.
Subdivision (c)(1) of section 340.8 sets forth two exceptions to the limitations period in section 340.8, subdivisions (a). It provides that the phrase a “civil action for injury or illness based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance,” which is used in subdivision (a) of the statute “does not include an action subject to Section 340.2” (the statute of limitations for injury, illness, or wrongful death based on exposure to asbestos) “or [Section] 340.5” (the statute of limitations for actions based on the professional negligence of a health care provider). While subdivision (c)(1) expressly excludes those two types of claims from section 340.8’s reach, it does not mention actions for birth or pre-birth injuries “based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance.”
Hanh relies on the well-settled rule that “[t]he Legislature . . . is deemed to be
aware of statutes and judicial decisions already in existence, and to have enacted or
amended a statute in light thereof.” (
People v. Harrison
(1989)
WDC notes that there is no express language in section 340.8 stating that it
operates to change, supersede or limit section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries). In arguing that
section 340.4 applies to this case, WDC relies on the following language from
Zamudio
,
supra
,
The uncodified section of the chaptered bill that added section 340.8 provides: “It
is the intent of the Legislature to codify the rulings in Jolly v. Eli Lilly & Co. . . .
Jolly , Norgart , and Clark applied the common law discovery rule. ( Jolly , supra , 44 Cal.3d at pp. 1110-1114; Norgart , supra , 21 Cal.4th at pp. 404-407 [court assumes discovery rule may govern accrual of a wrongful death action]; Clark v. Baxter HealthCare Corp ., supra , 83 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1057-1060.) Thus, the Legislature *29 stated, in the uncodified portion of the statute, that one of its purposes in enacting section 340.8 was to codify the discovery rule in cases involving exposures to hazardous materials and toxic substances.
While the Legislature did not expressly state that it enacted section 340.8 in
denigration of—or as an exception to—section 340.4, we think such a conclusion is
necessarily imрlied from the broad language of section 340.8. (
Zamudio
,
supra
,
Moreover, subdivision (d) of section 340.8 provides: “Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit, abrogate, or change the law in effect on the effective date of this section with respect to actions not based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance.” This language supports the conclusion that section 340.8 was intended to change existing law regarding the limitations periods for actions “based upon exposure to a hazardous material or toxic substance,” but not other types of actions.
WDC argues that “applying Section 340.8 to [Plaintiff’s] claims without any
indication the Legislature intended it would lead to absurd results. Under [Plaintiff’s]
theory, a prenatal injury resulting from chemical expоsure would carry a 20-year statute
of limitations, whereas a prenatal injury resulting from a drug, or a medical device, or
other exposure would have a six-year statute of limitations. There is absolutely no
evidence that the Legislature intended to carve out a particular subset of pre-birth
*30
personal injury cases and dramatically extend the statute of limitations for those cases.”
We are not persuaded that our construction of section 340.8 will lead to absurd results.
As the Supreme Court stated in
Young
, the six-year rule in section 340.4 is not absolute
since claims for birth and pre-birth injuries are subject to delayed accrual under the
discovery rule. (
Young
,
supra
,
In
Young
, the issue was which statute of limitations applies to “an action for
injuries incurred during birth as a result of medical malpractice”: former Civil Code
section 29 (the limitations period for actions based on pre-birth and birth injuries) or
section 340.5 (the limitations period for medical malpractice actions). (
Young
,
supra
,
The
Young
court observed that “[o]n their face, both [statutes] appear to govern
this case” since the plaintiff alleged “ ‘personal injuries sustained prior to or in the course
of . . . birth’ ” (former Civ. Code, § 29) “based on the negligence of the attending
*31
physicians at the birth” (§ 340.5). (
Young
,
supra
, 41 Cal.3d at pp. 891-892.) The court
held that “of these two inconsistent statutes, section 340.5 must prevail. [¶] The general
rule is that ‘when a general and particular provision are inconsistent, the latter is
paramount to the former.’ (§ 1859.) At first glance, that rule does not offer any guidance
here. The two statutes on their face are equally specific. Section 29 governs all actions
for prenatal and birth injuries, regardless of their cause. Section 340.5 governs all actions
for injuries caused by medical malpractice, regardless of the nature of the injury. [¶]
However, section 340.5 is a later-enacted statute, intended to cover all personal injury
claims arising from medical malpractice. That statutе was adopted as a response to a
perceived ‘major health care crisis in the State of California attributable to skyrocketing
malpractice premium costs and resulting in a potential breakdown of the health delivery
system . . . .’ ” (
Young
, at p. 894.) The court reasoned that the “legislative response to
this perceived crisis included changes in the rules applicable to personal injury actions by
malpractice victims” and that the plain legislative intent “was to treat all malpractice
victims differently from other personal injury victims.” (
Ibid.
) Since section 340.5 was
“part of an interrelated legislative scheme enacted to deal specifically with all medical
malpractice claims[,]” “it is the later, more specific statute which must be found
controlling over an earlier statute, even though the earlier statute would by its terms cover
the present situation.” (
Young
, at p. 894; see also
Woods v. Young
(1991)
Like the statutes at issue in
Young
, at first glance, both sections 340.4 and 340.8
appear to govern this case. Section 340.4 applies to actions for birth and pre-birth
injuries; section 340.8 applies to actions based on exposure to hazardous materials and
toxic substances. Unlike the medical malpractice statute in
Young
, however,
section 340.8 is not part of an “interrelated legislative scheme enacted to deal with”
*32
claims involving exposure to hazardous material and toxic substances. (
Young
,
supra
,
Both parties have asked us to take judicial notice of legislative history materials regarding section 340.8. WDC argues that neither the language of section 340.8 nor its legislative history mention section 340.4 or claims arising from pre-birth or birth injuries and that “[n]othing in the statute or its legislative history states that the Legislature intended [s]ection 340.8 to have any effect whatsoever on the applicability of section 340.4.” Plaintiff responds that since section 340.8 is unambiguous, we need not resort to its legislative history to interpret it. She also asserts that even if we consider the legislative history, it does not support WDC’s interpretation of section 340.8. Finally, Plaintiff contends that WDC “has not submitted the complete legislative history of section 340.8” and asks us—in the event we grant WDC’s request for judicial notice—to take judicial notice of additional legislative history materials attached to her request of judicial notice.
Since our analysis is based on the plain text of section 340.8, we need not resort to legislative history materials as an aid to construction. But even if we consider the legislative history as the parties suggest, it does not contain anything that persuades us that our analysis of section 340.8 is incorrect. [11] Like the uncodified portion of the *33 legislation quoted above, (Stats. 2003, ch. 873, § 2), the legislative history indicates that the Legislature wanted to expressly provide that the discovery rule applies in cases alleging injury due to exposure to toxic substances and to disapprove of specified case law on the issue of inquiry notice and media reports. The legislative history does not mention section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries), section 352, or the age of the plaintiff. Nothing in the legislative history states that by enacting section 340.8 (toxic exposures) the Legislature intended to create an exception to section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries). But, more importantly, the legislative history does not indicate that in enacting a new statute of limitations for civil actions for injury or illness based on exposures to toxic substances, the Legislature intended that a different limitations period apply if the exposure occurred before or during the plaintiff’s birth. In other words, there is no indication that the Legislature intended, and it makes no sense, for there to be a different discovery rule (e.g., regarding inquiry notice and media reports) depending on whether the toxic exposure occurred before of after birth. Nothing in the legislative history suggests that the Legislature intended that section 340.4 (prebirth injuries), rathеr than section 340.8 (toxic exposures), should apply to prenatal toxic exposure cases, or that section 352 should not apply to such cases.
We hold that assuming delayed accrual until December 31, 1998, such that Hanh’s claims “were alive” on January 1, 2004, when section 340.8 took effect, Hanh’s claims were then governed by section 340.8, and are not time-barred. We turn next to the July 2003 hearing on the bill. Both parties’ requests for judicial notice are hereby granted. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (c); 459.)
Upon examining the legislative history materials the parties submitted, we noted that they did not include all of the legislative history available on the Official California Legislative Information website. (See http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/bilinfo.html [as of Sept. 12, 2014].) On our own motion, to obtain a complete legislative history, we have taken judicial notice of the materials that are on that website that were not included in the parties’ submissions.
question whether Hanh has pleaded sufficient facts under the discovery rule to demonstrate delayed accrual until December 31, 1998.
IV. The Allegations of the Third Amended Complaint Support a Finding of Delayed
Accrual Under the Discovery Rule Until December 31, 1998
“The discovery rule provides that the accrual date of a cause of action is delayed
until the plaintiff is aware of her [or his] injury and its negligent cause. [Citation.] A
plaintiff is held to her [or his] actual knowledge as well as knowledge that could
reasonably be discovered through investigation of sources open to her [or him].” (
Jolly
,
supra
,
Jolly
“sets forth two alternate tests for triggering the limitations period: (1) a
subjective test requiring actual suspicion by the plaintiff that the injury was caused by
wrongdoing; and (2) an objective test requiring a showing that a reasonable person would
have suspected the injury was caused by wrongdoing. [Citation.] The first to occur
*35
under these two tests begins the limitations period.” (
Kitzig v. Nordquist
(2000)
“ ‘Resolution of the statute of limitations issue is normally a question of fact.’
(
Fox
,
supra
,
“[B]y discussing the discovery rule in terms of a plaintiff’s suspicion of ‘elements’
of a cause of action, [the Supreme Court] was referring to the ‘generic’ elements of
wrongdoing, causation, and harm.” (
Fox
,
supra
,
“In order to rely on the discovery rule for delayed accrual of a cause of action, ‘[a] plaintiff whose complaint shows on its face that his claim would be barred without the benefit of the discovery rule must specifically plead facts to show (1) the time and manner of discovery and (2) the inability to have made earlier discovery despite reasonable diligence.’ [Citation.] In assessing the sufficiency of the allegations of delayed discovery, the court places the burden on the plaintiff to ‘show diligence’; ‘conclusory allegations will not withstand demurrer.’ ” ( Fox , supra , 35 Cal.4th at p. 808.) “Simply put, in order to employ the discovery rule to delay accrual of a cause of action, a potential plaintiff who suspects that an injury has been wrongfully caused must conduct a reasonable investigation of all potential causes of that injury. If such an investigation would have disclosed a factual basis for a cause of action, the statute of limitations begins to run on that cause of action when the investigation would have brought such information to light. In order to adequately allege facts supporting a theory of delayed discovery, the plaintiff must plead that, despite diligent investigation of the circumstances of the injury, he or she could not have reasonably discovered facts supporting the cause of action within the applicable statute of limitations period.” ( Id. at pp. 808-809.)
“ ‘A demurrer based on a statute of limitations will not lie where the action may
be, but is not necessarily, barred. [Citation.] In order for the bar . . . to be raised by
demurrer, the defect must clearly and affirmatively appear on the face of the complaint; it
is not enough that the complaint shows that the action may be barred. [Citation.]’
[Citation.]” (
Geneva Towers Ltd. Partnership v. City and County of San Francisco
*37
(2003)
We agree with the trial court’s finding that Lan “would have at least had a suspicion that there could have been a causal connection between her occupational chemical exposures and Plaintiff’s injuries no later than 1998.” The only relevant dates alleged in the third amended complaint are that Lan worked for WDC “[f]rom approximately 1987 until 1998” and that Hanh was born on August 11, 1994. Since the third amended complaint does not allege the exact date that Lan stopped working for WDC—only the year—for the purpose of our analysis we shall assume that Lan worked there until December 31, 1998, the last day of 1998. Hanh does not allege when she was diagnosed with agenesis of the corpus callosum, when Parents spoke with her doctors about possible causes of her injuries, when the diagnostic tests listed in her pleading were done, or when Hanh’s doctors told Parents they were unaware of the cause of Hanh’s injuries.
Hanh alleges, on information and belief, that WDC offered health services, including reproductive health services, to its employees and that the “health service providers included nurses and physicians affiliated with and/or employed by” WDC (hereafter WDC Health Care Providers). These services included “a detailed review of Lan’s medical and reproductive history and industrial hygiene assessment and monitoring.” Hanh does not allege when this occurred. At some undisclosed time, WDC Health Care Providers “falsely represented to Lan . . . that there was no causal connection between her occupational chemical exposure and Hanh’s . . . injuries.” Reasonable inferences from these facts are that while Lan was still employed by WDC (which was no later than December 31, 1998), Lan asked WDC Health Care Providers about a possible causal connection between Hanh’s injuries and Lan’s work exposure. These allegations support the conclusion that Parents were aware of Hanh’s injuries and suspected both *38 wrongdoing and the alleged cause of her injuries when Lan went to WDC Health Care Providers and asked whether Hanh’s birth defects were related to chemical exposures at work. Thus, this case involves something more than injury alone; Lan actually suspected her exposure to hazardous chemicals—a type of wrongdoing—had caused Hanh’s injuries.
WDC does not dispute that the third amended complaint supports a claim of delayed accrual until December 31, 1998. WDC asserts that “the conversation between Lan . . . and a [WDC] health care provider took place while Lan . . . was employed at [WDC], at some time between August 11, 1994 ([Hanh’s] date of birth) and 1998, when Lan . . . left her employment at [WDC]” and that Lan “suspected that her exposure to chemicals may have caused [Hanh’s] alleged injuries at the latest in 1998.”
Since the allegations of the third amended complaint support a claim of delayed accrual until December 31, 1998, Hanh’s claims were not barred by the six-year limitations period in section 340.4 (pre-birth injuries) on January 1, 2004 when section 340.8 (toxic exposures) went into effect. Since her claims had not yet expired, she was entitled to rely on the statute of limitations in section 340.8, which included tolling for minority. Thus, Hanh’s action filed on October 25, 2010, when she was 16 years old, was timely. In light of our conclusions, we will not reach Hanh’s contentions that she has pleaded sufficient facts to support delayed accrual until December 2008 under the discovery rule or that WDC is estopped from relying on a statute of limitations defense.
D ISPOSITION
The judgment of dismissal is reversed. The case is remanded to the superior court with directions to vacate its order sustaining WDC’s demurrers without leave to amend and to enter a new order overruling the demurrers to Hanh’s third amended complaint. Hanh is awarded her costs on appeal.
_______________________________ Márquez, J.
WE CONCUR:
_____________________________________________ Bamattre-Manoukian, Acting P.J.
______________________________
Grover, J.
Nguyen v. Western Digital Corporation
No. H038934 *40 Trial Court: Santa Clara County Superior Court
Superior Court No.: 1-10-CV-185748 Trial Judge: The Honorable
Patricia M. Lucas Attorneys for Plaintiff and Appellant WATERS KRAUS & PAUL HANH NGUYEN, a Minor, etc.: Michael B. Gurien Attorneys for Defendant and Respondent ARNOLD & PORTER WESTERN DIGITAL CORPORATION: Maurice A. Leiter Nguyen v. Western Digital Corporation
H038934
Notes
[1]
In reviewing the propriety of the trial court’s order sustaining WDC’s demurrer,
we accept as true all factual allegations properly pleaded in the complaint. (
Gu v. BMW
of North America, LLC
(2005)
[2] As we shall explain under “Procedural History,” before filing her action in Santa Clara County Superior Court, plaintiff filed an original and a first amended complaint in Alameda County Superior Court alleging the same claims. When describing the pleadings, we will use the designations assigned to the complaints in Santa Clara County (i.e., original, first amended, second amended, etc.), keeping in mind thаt Plaintiff made two prior attempts to plead in Alameda County.
[3] “Teratogenic” means “tending to cause developmental malformations . . . .” (Webster’s 3d New Internat. Dict. (1993) p. 2358, col. 1.)
[4] “Agenesis” means the “[a]bsence or failure of formation of any part” of the body; the “corpus callosum” is the “great commissural plate of nerve fibers” that connects the two hemispheres of the brain. (PDR Medical Dictionary (2d ed. 2000) pp. 34, col. 2 & 412, col. 2.)
[5] This is the phrase Plaintiff uses in her third amended complaint.
[6] Hydrocephalus is a “condition marked by an excessive accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid resulting in dilation of the cerebral ventricles and raised intracranial pressure.” (PDR Medical Dictionary (2d ed. 2000) p. 839, col. 2.)
[7] WDC’s request for judicial notice of court documents filed in Alameda and Orange Counties (WDC’s exhibits 2 through 5) is hereby granted. (Evid. Code, §§ 452, subd. (d), 459.)
[8]
The discovery rule is also referred to in the case law and in the parties’ briefs as
the “delayed discovery rule.” (See e.g.,
Fox
,
supra
,
[9] When Olivas v. Weiner was decided, the age of majority was 21. (Fam. Code, § 6502.)
[10]
This rule does not apply “where its operation would contradict a discernible and
contrary legislative intent.” (
In re Michael G
.,
supra
,
[11] The legislative history materials the parties provided include the original text of Senate Bill 331, amended versions of the bill, the Senate Judiciary Committee Analysis for a May 2003 hearing on the bill, and the Assembly Judiciary Committee Analysis for a
