210 N.W. 622 | Minn. | 1926
The cause of action, if any, accrued before the passage of chap. 113, p. 102, L. 1925, which amended sec. 9193, G.S. 1923, relating to limitations of actions in certain cases, so as to read in part as follows:
"The following actions shall be commenced within two years.
1. For libel, slander, assault, battery, false imprisonment, or other tort, resulting in personal injury, and all actions againstphysicians, surgeons, dentists, hospitals, sanitariums, formalpractice, error, mistake, or failure to cure, whether based oncontract or tort."
The italics indicate the new matter introduced by the amendatory act. Section 2 reads:
"This act shall take effect and be in force three months from and after its passage and approval."
If this law applies to causes of action accrued before its enactment but not then barred by the six year limitation of sec. 9191, G.S. 1923 (which formerly applied to actions such as this under the rule of Brown v. Heron Lake,
1. It is impossible to discern any other purpose for postponing the effect of the act than to make it applicable to existing causes of action. That conclusion necessarily follows the obvious fact that, if such were not its purpose, the delay was wholly without purpose. *59
In other words, the only way in which the suspensory section can be made purposeful is to hold the amendment applicable to all causes of action existing at the time, and that the delay was to allow the timely commencement of actions thereon. Such is generally the only purpose of suspending the effect of amendments of statutes of limitation. It is difficult to discover any other. Burwell v. Tullis,
There is nothing to the contrary in State ex rel. Anderson v. General A.F. L. Assur. Corp.
2. Statutes of limitation have to do not with the obligation but the remedy. They "are to be applied to all cases thereafter brought, irrespective of when the cause of action arose, subject, of course, to the universally recognized rule that they cannot be used to cut off causes of action without leaving reasonable time within which to assert them." Osborne v. Lindstrom,
For present purposes we assume that causes of action for tort are protected by constitutional guaranties. That subject is discussed somewhat in Mulvey v. City of Boston,
Our cases most closely in point are the following: State v. Messenger, supra, holding 60 days sufficient for the filing of claims for damages arising from the establishment by statute of a public highway; Stine v. Bennett, supra, four months and a half sufficient to enforce foreign judgment; Archambau v. Green,
In Mulvey v. City of Boston, supra, an amendatory act was sustained against the objection that, while it reduced the limitation from six years to two, it allowed only 30 days wherein to commence suit on existing claims.
Among the cases cited to the contrary are Parmenter v. State,
Order reversed. *62