On May 21, 1986, appellee-plaintiffs filed their complaint, seeking to recover for the personal injuries that they allegedly sustained in an automobile collision which had occurred on May 21, 1984. Appellant-defendant answered and, among his other defenses, raised the two-year statute of limitations as barring appellees’ action. Appellant subsequently moved for summary judgment as to his statute of limitations defense. His motion was denied, but the trial court certified its order for immediate review. Appellant’s application for an interlocutory appeal to this court was granted in order to determine the effect of the 1985 enactment of existing OCGA § 1-3-1 (d) (3) upon appellant’s statute of limitations defense.
Under the terms of former OCGA § 1-3-1 (d), May 21, 1984, the date that the automobile collision occurred, would be counted in the computation of the period of limitations, and the two-year period would thus have ended on May 20, 1986. See generally
Reese v. Henderson,
“Statutes of limitation look only to remedy and not to substantive rights, and, unless the cause of action is barred at the time of the passage of the act extending the statute of limitation, it will be effective. [Cits.] ‘No man has a vested right not to pay a tax or other obligation which he really owes. So that an extension of the time within which the obligation may be enforced, or the entire abolition of the limitation, is within rightful legislative power.’ [Cit.]”
Dixie Constr. Co. v. Williams,
Judgment affirmed.
