*703 OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiff mother and guardian, Tina LaBello, on behalf of Donald LaBello, age 12, sues the Albany Medical Center Hospital and others for injuries allegedly inflicted in November 1982. The case turns on the accrual date for a medical malpractice claim predicated on prenatal injuries allegedly negligently caused by defendants. The issue, as particularized and applied, is whether this infant’s cause of action accrued when the alleged negligent act or omission occurred, or, rather, on the date he was born.
The Appellate Division, in a split decision, reversed Supreme Court and held that the governing event for accrual is the "act, omission or complained of failure,” as explicitly prescribed in CPLR 214-a. Supreme Court had granted plaintiff’s motion to strike defendants’ Statute of Limitations defenses, but the Appellate Division’s reversal denied that motion and certified to us the question whether it erred.
We answer the Appellate Division’s question in the affirmative and, thus, reverse its order and reinstate the decision of Supreme Court. We hold that an infant plaintiff’s medical malpractice cause of action, premised on alleged injurious acts or omissions occurring prior to birth, accrues on the earliest date the injured infant plaintiff could juridically assert the claim and sue for relief, that is, the date of being born alive.
This medical malpractice action emanates from prenatal care rendered to the infant plaintiff’s mother between November 9, 1982 and November 11, 1982. Defendants allegedly failed to assess the significance of an ultrasound report and an amniocentesis test, and permitted the mother to continue the pregnancy beyond full term. Donald LaBello was born on November 30, 1982, with severe and permanent injuries.
This action was started on November 23, 1992, slightly over 10 years after the asserted negligence, but just under 10 years from the date of birth. Defendants’ answer included two affirmative defenses under the Statute of Limitations (CPLR 214-a, 208). Supreme Court granted plaintiff’s motion to strike the affirmative defenses. The court struck the CPLR 214-a affirmative defense, reasoning that accrual occurred on the date of plaintiff’s birth, since "prior to his birth * * * an action could not have been maintained on his behalf.” Further, the court found that on November 30, 1982, the date of birth and, hence, the date on which the infant could first *704 legally commence an action, the infancy disability toll inured to his protection and benefit. Thus, under CPLR 208, the plaintiff was required to commence his action within 10 years of accrual, namely, by November 30, 1992. Supreme Court, therefore, held that the action, commenced on November 23, 1992, was timely, and, consequently, it also dismissed defendants’ CPLR 208 affirmative defense.
The Appellate Division reversed, with two Justices dissenting, and denied plaintiff’s motion, finding that accrual struck as of the time of the alleged negligent act or omission and that the inability to sue until birth was irrelevant (
We conclude that a cause of action for medical malpractice premised on faulty prenatal care and consequent injuries accrues at live birth. Our policy determination in this regard is derived from statutory interpretation and harmonization. It rests on this Court’s well-settled principles that (1) an infant plaintiff has no right of action unless born alive
(Endresz v Friedberg,
Our reasoning and result develop from
Woods v Lancet
(
Endresz v Friedberg
(
"Translated into tort law, this means that there is but a 'conditional prospective liability * * * created when an unborn child * * * is injured’ through the wrongful act of the defendant, and such liability attaches only upon fulfillment of the condition that the child be born alive. (Keyes v. Construction Serv.,340 Mass. 633 , 636.)” (Endresz v Friedberg,24 NY2d 478 , 485-486, supra [emphasis added].)
Notwithstanding this precedential landscape, defendants argue that the impediment to a legally cognizable assertion of a cause of action until birth is irrelevant to accrual of the claim. Thus, legal distinction between accrual of a cause of action and the right to sue on, or the very existence of, that cause of action is asserted and, indeed, divided the rulings of the courts below and the Appellate Division itself. Our precedents, on careful analysis, do not support such a distinction between " 'hav[ing] a cause of action’ ” and " 'hav[ing] the right to sue’ ”
(see, Jacobus v Colgate,
In
Jacobus v Colgate
(
*705 " 'A cause of action is the right to prosecute an action with effect’ (Patterson v. Patterson,59 N. Y. 574 , 578; People ex rel. Pells v. Supervisors of Ulster Co.,65 N. Y. 300 , 308). It is not possible for one at the same time to have a cause of action and not to have the right to sue’ (Walters v. City of Ottawa,240 Ill. 259 , 263)” (emphasis added).
*706
This result also runs afoul of our most recent precedential guidance that (1) the "Statute of Limitations does not run until there is a legal right to relief’; (2) "accrual occurs when the claim becomes enforceable”; and (3) a tort is enforceable when all its elements can be truthfully alleged in a complaint
(Kronos, Inc. v AVX Corp.,
Defendants would reject application of the Kronos reasoning because: first, CPLR 214-a expresses accrual of medical malpractice claims as of the time of the negligent act or omission, a statutory explication not operative in Kronos; and, second, in any event, being born alive is not an "element” of the medical malpractice tort, as unascertainable damages is in Kronos (see, id., at 94).
This argument is unavailing. CPLR 214-a does not encompass and did not contemplate the circumstance at issue. This case presents one of those interstices between statutory and common-law precedential lines of authority. To be sure, CPLR 214-a states the accrual-upon-act-or-omission rule and admits of only two exceptions — continuous treatment and foreign object (CPLR 214-a). We do not, by our ruling today, create a new exception. Rather, we take the statute on its own terms and apply it to this unenvisaged circumstance.
The statute expresses and presumes physical existence and juridical capacity to sue (see, CPLR 214-a [stating "action * * * based upon the discovery of a foreign object in the body of the patient” (emphasis added); continuous treatment "shall not include examinations undertaken at the request of the patient” (emphasis added)]). CPLR 214-a simply does not cover accrual for nonjuridical, inchoate plaintiffs. Thus, this Court needs to fill the gap by traditional interpretation and common-law development and application.
Unavailing, too, is defendants’ proposed alternative distinction of Kronos by claiming that an element of the tort claim is not in question here (see,
Kronos, Inc. v A VX Corp.,
CPLR 208 also supports our resolution of this case and issue. CPLR 208 provides in relevant part:
"If a person entitled to commence an action is under a disability because of infancy * * * at the time the cause of action accrues * * * the time within which the action must be commenced shall be extended” (emphasis added).
If accrual occurs before birth, as defendants argue, they alternatively add that the infancy toll would not apply at all. Prior to birth, the allegedly injured fetus would not be legally recognized, nor "entitled to commence an action.” Thus, defendants reason that no infancy toll is available, because no disability existed "at the time the cause of action accrue[d],” given that no infant was in being at that time. The result would engender a strange twist of fate, cancelling CPLR 208’s infancy toll for prepartum injured plaintiffs who are born alive. This argument should not succeed as a matter of sound policy and statutory interpretation. Therefore, we conclude that the Legislature intended for the infancy toll to be applicable and fully available in circumstances such as are presented in the instant matter, as of the time of live birth.
We agree with Supreme Court that the incapacity to sue, because of a plaintiff’s lack of legal identity and a defendant’s *708 freedom from legally cognizable liability, is not just some limitation on the right to bring a lawsuit. It logically and realistically bears on the decision of this Court to fix the right accrual date. When the plaintiff person came to be, so did the fairest and most certain date for measuring a definitive accrual event. That also grants the right to relief and reasonable repose, consistent with this Court’s precedential building blocks of related authority and helpful guidance.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, the certified question answered in the affirmative, and the Supreme Court order granting plaintiffs motion to strike defendants’ third and fourth affirmative defenses reinstated, with costs.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Simons, Titone, Smith, Levine and Ciparick concur.
Order reversed, with costs, plaintiffs motion to strike the third and fourth affirmative defenses granted and certified question answered in the affirmative.
