Plаintiff Kenneth Lundy appeals a summary judgment dismissing his diversity action against Union Carbide Corporation and Harrisons & Crosfield, Inc., for injuries allegedly sustained while working with asbestos products that were manufactured and distributed by the defendants. The sole issue before us is whether the district court acted properly in finding that Lundy’s action was barred by Oregon’s two-year statute of limitation. 1 Because Lundy presented evidence showing a genuine issue of material fact concerning the time the action accrued, we reverse the judgment and remand the cause for trial.
Lundy worked for the Borden Chemical Company in Springfield, Oregon, between 1964 and 1977. The complaint alleged that Lundy contracted asbestosis during this time due to his constant on-the-job exposure to asbestos manufactured by Union Carbide Corporation and distributed by Harrisons & Crosfield, Inc. 2
Lundy began having some chest pain and breathing difficulty in Januаry 1975. An X ray taken at the time revealed some “pleural density” in the chest. . Several months later, Lundy was hospitalized for respiratory problems, and some fluid had to be drawn off his chest cavity. Dr. Vitums, a chest specialist, remarked at the time that Lundy had some pleural scarring not present before. Lundy was then treated for tuberculosis, as he had reacted positively to a skin test. Dr. Vitums saw Lundy again on October 27, 1975. According to the doctor’s report, Lundy asked then whether there could be a relationship between the pleural scarring and his exposure to asbestos 5 to 10 years previously. However, the doctor apparently felt that Lundy’s problems could have been due to smoking and exposure to formaldehyde fumes. 3
In December 1975, Lundy retained an attorney to investigate the feasibility of filing a claim for occupational disease. The attornеy wrote to Dr. Vitums requesting a diagnosis of Lundy’s disease. Dr. Vitums responded that exposure to asbestos could cause pleural scarring but that such a connection could not be determined without a pleural or lung biopsy. The doctor recommended against a biopsy, however, because *396 of Lundy’s near-normal pulmonary functioning and the “lack of definite documentation of asbestosis.” Dr. Vitums concluded by noting that Lundy’s symptoms could reflect “numerous causes.” The attorney then wrote to Lundy, stating that the doctor’s report did not establish the cause-effect relationship necessary to support a claim. The letter indicated that a сopy of Dr. Vitums’ report was enclosed, but Lundy denies having received it. Lundy further denies having heard from either the attorney or Dr. Vitums that the pleural scarring could have been caused by his exposure to asbestos. Lundy claims that the first time he became seriously aware of asbestos-related medieal problems was after a diagnosis by Dr. Dalgren in September 1977 that Lundy might have been suffering from ammonia and/or asbestos disease. In January 1978 the diagnosis was refined to asbestosis only. Lundy filed his complaint in July 1979.
The sole issue in this appeal is whether the district court properly applied the governing meaning of the word “accrued” in Oregon’s two-year statutе of limitation
4
to the facts of this case in granting a summary judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s case on the limitation ground. Although this is a diversity action and Oregon’s statute of limitation applies, the federal rules govern the use of summary judgment.
Bieghler v. Kleppe,
In granting summary judgment for the defendants, the district court found language from the Oregon Supreme Court’s decision in
Schiele v. Hobart Corp.,
Lundy sued for permanent injury due to asbestosis. It seems to us that Lundy presented suffiсient evidence to permit a trial on when he knew he had a permanent *397 injury due to asbestosis caused by the defendant. We disagree with the district court’s finding that Lundy knew in December 1975 he had a “severe permanent lung сondition.”
The district court based its finding principally on the following excerpts from Lundy’s deposition testimony pertaining to the time he first experienced symptoms in January 1975:
Q. They did an X-ray, didn’t they?
A. They did several of them.
Q. Right. And they found you had some type of an abnormality in thе lower two-thirds on the right side of your chest, what the radiologist calls apparent pleural thickening. Is that what you’re talking about?
A. I’m not sure what the language was at that time. I wouldn’t — I have to assume that this is what — what was written. I don’t recall it from memory.
Q. I’m not asking you about the technical thing.
A. Pleural density in the lower two-thirds of the right side of the chest. Areas of apparent pleural thickening are demonstrated.
I think this is — I have no reason to doubt that’s what it is.
Q. And that’s when you became aware that you had some permanent changes in your chest X-ray that were showing up, right?
A. That’s the first I knew that — in fact I think I asked him if it was a permanent thing and I think they informed me that it was some sort of a — wasn’t something that was going away next weеk.
We feel that the district court interpreted Lundy’s testimony out of context in asserting it as the basis for charging Lundy with knowledge of the permanency of his condition in December 1975. Nothing in the record remotely suggests that Lundy was apprised during the relevant period that his condition was permanent. To the contrary, Dr. Vitums’ medical report in October 1975 indicated that the plaintiff’s condition “should improve without medication.” Under these circumstanсes, it cannot be said as a matter of law that Lundy knew he had a permanent condition at the time fixed by the district court. 6
Even if the plaintiff could be charged with knowledge of the permanency of his condition in December 1975, the summary judgment must be reversed for another reason. The record amply reflects the possibility that Lundy did not know what was causing his illness. Lundy had promptly sought medical attention from the beginning. By December 1975, after seеing several doctors, all that Lundy knew with any degree of certainty was that his chest X rays revealed some pleural scarring that the doctors attributed to tuberculosis or pneumonia, among other causes. Lundy himself rаised the possibility that the scarring could have resulted from his exposure to asbestos, but Dr. Vitums apparently did not think this probable. Viewed in the light most favorable to Lundy, therefore, the evidence supports an inference that in December 1975 Lundy had no real knowledge of the cause of his medical problems.
We therefore hold that the district court’s grant of summary judgment based on the limitation ground was improper in view of the factuаl dispute as to whether Lundy knew or should have known in December 1975 that his permanent condition was caused by asbestos.
See Williams v. Bor
*398
den, Inc.,
Reversed and Remanded.
Notes
. The defendants also argue that Lundy’s notice of apрeal was not timely filed. This court first construed the late filing as a motion for extension of time. The defendants argued that this was improper in light of
Pettibone v. Cupp,
. Borden Chemical Company is not a defendant in this action.
. Dr. Vitums’ medical log for that date states in relevant part:
He relates some new history and the possibility of these chest x-ray changes, i.e., that of some asbestos exposure five to ten years ago in his work. It was used as a catalyst. He refuses chest x-ray follow-up today. The seсond problem is that of emphysema and exposure to formaldehyde fumes at his work. He apparently has stopped smoking now, at least this is what he tells me. In the last week the formaldehyde fume exposure has caused him more shortness of breath and wheezing. Indeed today there is the prolongation of the expiratory flow with end expiratory wheezing heard. If indeed this patient has stopped smoking he should improve withоut any medication just due to discontinuance of exposure to the formaldehyde fumes.
. The applicable Oregon statute of limitation states, in part, “[A]ctions shall only be commenced within the periods prеscribed in this chapter, after the cause of action shall have accrued,” and “[a]n action ... for any injury to the person . .. shall be commenced within two years.” Or.Rev.Stat. §§ 12.010, 12.110(1) (1981).
. Similar interpretations of the word “aсcrued” in Oregon’s statute of limitation have been applied to cases involving other tort claims. See,
e.g., Dowers Farms, Inc. v. Lake County,
. Although our conclusion here rests on the federal rules governing the use of summary judgment, it is also very much in spirit with
Schiele.
The plaintiff in that case suffered for
two years
before she was diagnosed as suffering from exposure to polyvinyl chloride fumes on the job.
