This case, like Kossick v. United Fruit Co.,
The instant action against the United States in the District Court for the Southern District of New York for negligence of the doctors and nurses at the Hospital was not begun until April 4, 1963. The appeal is from an order granting the Government’s motion for summary judgment under 28 U.S.C. § 2401 (b) providing that “A tort claim against the United States shall be forever barred unless action is begun within two years after such claim accrues * * To avoid the apparent time bar Kossick relies on combining 28 U.S.C. § 2674, the basic provision in the Tort Claims Act making the United States liable “in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances,” with New York decisions, particularly Borgia v. City of New York,
In Tessier v. United States,
We are persuaded of the correctness of the Quinton decision. Whether § 2401(b) is regarded as a “true” statute of limitations or as “a direct limitation to the court’s jurisdiction” as we have characterized “the built-in time-bar of the Suits in Admiralty Act,” 46 U.S.C. § 745, American Foreign SS. Corp. v. United States,
Here Kossiek must have discovered the grievous injury inflicted upon him very shortly after the administration of the enema on August 29, 1950. Although he could have begun a suit at that time, we do not say that for purposes of § 2401(b) the two-year period began to run so soon. Courts have long since rejected the mechanical concept that in all cases the limitations period necessarily starts the very moment that a suit can be brought. See Note, Developments in the Law — Statutes of Limitations, 63 Harv.L.Rev. 1177, 1200, 1204, 1213-19 (1950). There is much good sense in Chief Judge Desmond’s observation in the Borgia case that “It would be absurd to require a wronged patient to interrupt corrective efforts by serving a summons on the physician or hospital superintendent * * * ”
We add that we seriously doubt whether in applying the New York two year statute of limitations for malpractice, § 50(1) of the Civil Practice Act and § 214(6) of the new Civil Practice Law and Rules, the New York courts would reach any different result in a case like Kossick’s. None of the New York “continuous treatment” cases that have been cited to us presented the question whether merely occasional hospital visits at substantial intervals, and these for examination or minor treatment to alleviate sequelae of the injury rather than for further cure, would prevent accrual of the claim.
3
On the facts before the District Court, Kossick’s case did not rise even to that level; the affidavits on the Government’s motion for summary judgment served July 3,1963, showed that the last of Kossick’s visits to the Hospital, in February, 1961, more than two years before suit, was brief and was an examination only, and that subsequent visits to a Public Health Service outpatient clinic in Brooklyn were for ailments unconnected with the malpractice. These later visits plainly would not qualify under the Borgia doctrine,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In fact the Borgia case related to § 50-e of the General Municipal Law, McKinney’s Consol.Laws, c. 24 requiring notice of a claim to be filed against a city within 90 days after the claim accrued. But tbe Court of Appeals made clear that it would apply the same rule if it were “passing on a true Statute of Limitations problem * *
. Section 2401(b) derives from Section 420 of the Federal Tort Claims Act, 60 Stat. 842, 845 (1946), -which barred a claim unless action was begun within one year. The period was increased to two years by 63 Stat. 62 (1949). The relationship was obscured by the rearrange-meat in the 1948 Judicial Code, but we have been wisely instructed not to consider such changes as significant. Fourco Glass Co. v. Transmirra Prod. Corp.,
. Gross v. Wise,
