MEMORANDUM
This matter is before the Court on defendant’s summary judgment motion. The plaintiff, Jennifer Hoult, alleges nine years of sexual abuse and violence, from age four in 1965 to age thirteen in 1974, by her father, the defendant, David Parks Hoult. As a result, plaintiff alleges that she has suffered serious psychological and physical injuries. However, plaintiff claims that she repressed all memory of the abuse until October 1985, when she began to regain some memory of the events through psychotherapy. On July 22, 1988, plaintiff filed a five-count complaint for assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligence, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and breach of fiduciary duty. Defendant moves for summary judgment against the plaintiff due to the expiration of the three-year statute of limitation for tort claims in Massachusetts. For the reasons set forth below, defendant’s motion for summary judgment should be denied.
I.
The statute of limitations for a tort claim in Massachusetts is three years. Mass. Gen.L. ch. 260, § 2A (1991). When a plaintiff is a minor child when the injury occurs, however, this three-year limitation does not start to run until after the plaintiff has reached the majority age of eighteen. Mass.Gen.L. ch. 260, § 7 (1959); Mass.Gen.L. ch. 281, § 85P (1985). In the instant action, plaintiff reached the age of majority on July 31, 1979, and filed this action nearly nine years later on July 27, 1988. In his motion for summary judgment, defendant argues that the complaint should have been filed within three years of plaintiff’s majority. He further argues that the statutory provisions that toll the running of the statute of limitations beyond the date of emancipation, such as *144 imprisonment or mental illness, do not apply nor have been raised by the plaintiff.
In Massachusetts, once a defendant pleads the statute of limitations defense, the plaintiff bears the burden of proving facts that take the case “outside the impact of the three-year statute of limitations.”
Franklin v. Albert,
As noted above, the governing statute of limitations mandates that a tort action “shall be commenced only within three years ... after the cause of action accrues.” Mass.Gen.L. ch. 260, § 2A (1991). Because the Massachusetts legislature has not provided a statutory definition of when a cause of action accrues, this determination “has long been the product of judicial interpretation.”
Franklin,
381 Mass, at 617,
Massachusetts courts have applied the discovery rule in a number of contexts, such as claims for legal malpractice,
Hendrickson v. Sears,
In applying the discovery rule principles to
Riley,
the court reasoned that a cause of action will accrue when a plaintiff actually knows, or should have known, of the cause of action. Because the plaintiff introduced evidence to show that he did not have actual knowledge of the cause of action prior to his 1984 conversation with the other former patient, the court focussed on whether Riley should have known of his cause of action prior to that time.
Id.
at 245,
Based on this standard, the court held that the trial court should not have granted summary judgment because a genuine issue of material fact existed as to when the plaintiff had known, or should have known, that he may have been injured by the defendant.
Id.
at 247,
Applying the court’s reasoning in Riley to this case, the defendant’s motion for summary judgment should be denied. As in Riley, the plaintiff in this action involves prior sexual abuse which plaintiff did not connect to her psychological injuries until after the three-year statute of limitations had expired. In order to determine if plaintiffs can bring a cause of action beyond that date, this Court must analyze when the cause of action accrued. As noted above, a cause of action will accrue when the plaintiff actually knew, or should have known, of the cause of action. In opposition to the defendant's motion, the plaintiff has submitted transcripts from her own deposition. These excerpts indicate that, prior to her October 1985 therapy session, she had no recollection of the years of abuse. Deposition testimony by her therapist Eileen Jacobsen also supports the contention that the plaintiff had no memory of the abuse prior to October 1985. Jacobsen indicated that the plaintiff had been her patient for one year before the plaintiff experienced her first memory of being sexually abused by her father. This unrebutted evidence indicates that the plaintiff had no actual knowledge of the sexual abuse prior to October 1985.
Given that there is a genuine issue as to whether the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the cause of action prior to the therapy session in October 1985, this Court must focus on whether the plaintiff should have known of her cause of action prior to that time. Applying the reasonable person test, this Court holds that a reasonable person in plaintiff’s position would not have been able to discern the harm, or its cause, before her October 1985 session with her therapist. In so holding, the Court notes that the facts of the instant action are more compelling than
Riley.
Unlike Riley, plaintiff Hoult could not even consciously remember the sexual abuse itself, in addition to being unable to causally connect these prior injuries to her present psychological problems. Thus, this case is one of those instances the Supreme Judicial Court referenced in
Riley
in which the injury caused by the defendant “by its very nature prevents the discovery of its cause.”
Id.
at 246,
This Court holds that the discovery rule should be applied to tort claims by victims of incest who have no memory of the sexual abuse until after the expiration of the statute of limitations. With respect to this discovery rule, plaintiff has presented evidence to the Court indicating that she had no knowledge of the cause of action, nor should she have known. Because there exists a genuine issue of material fact as to when plaintiff knew or should have-known of the cause of action, defendant’s motion for summary judgment should be denied.
