MEMORANDUM
Plaintiff, a citizen of Virginia, brings this products liability action against the manu *286 facturers of certain power shovels to recover for various respiratory diseases and hearing loss allegedly sustained during plaintiff’s operation and maintenance of the machines.
Jurisdiction vests in this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332.
The matter is before the Court on defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment. Defendants argue that plaintiff’s claims relating to his respiratory injuries are barred by the applicable Virginia statute of limitations. 1
For the reasons which follow, the Court concludes that the defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment is well taken.
Plaintiff filed this action on November 3, 1980 against Bucyrus-Erie Co. (“Bucyrus-Erie”) and Northwest Engineering Co. (“Northwest”), each of which are corporations organized under the laws of a state other than Virginia, and each of which has its principal office in Wisconsin.
Plaintiff alleges that he was an employee of Luck Quarries, Inc., in Burkeville, Virginia from April 2, 1962 until November 17, 1978. During this employment, plaintiff operated and maintained two power shovels, one of which was designed, manufactured, marketed, distributed and sold by Bucyrus-Erie, and the other by Northwest.
Plaintiff claims that the design and location of the operator’s station on these shovels are such that the operator is exposed to high levels of noise and dust from the engine, clutch, fans and other parts of the machine. He asserts that the station is so placed as to have exposed him to concentrations of the dust in the atmosphere surrounding the machines. Plaintiff also alleges that the clutch, drum and winch linings on the shovels contained asbestos and that he was exposed to asbestos dust from these surfaces while operating or maintaining the machines.
Plaintiff claims that he has suffered silicosis, industrial bronchitis, shortness of breath, shortening of lifespan and increased probability of cancer as a result of his exposure to silica and stone dust in the air around the shovels and asbestos dust from parts of the machines. The asserted grounds for defendants’ liability are breach of express and implied warranties, negligent design, manufacture and sale, strict liability, negligent failure to warn, and malice or reckless disregard by the defendants of his rights.
The Virginia statute of limitations provides that actions for personal injuries must be brought within two years after the cause of action has accrued. Va.Code § 8.01 — 243 A. Section 8.01-230, added to the Code in 1977, specifies that for purposes of the statute of limitations, an action for personal injuries is deemed to accrue and the period begins to run “from the date the injury is sustained. . . . ”
The Court’s task, then, is to determine whether there is any genuine issue as to the date on which plaintiff’s respiratory injuries were sustained. In resolving this question, the Court is cognizant of the fact that the defendants bear the burden of proving facts necessary to establish the applicability of the statute of limitations under Virginia law.
Locke v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
The Court’s inquiry in this diversity action is guided by the decision of the Supreme Court of Virginia in Locke v. JohnsManville Corp., supra. There, the plaintiff brought a products liability action against several companies which mined, manufactured and sold asbestos insulation materials. Plaintiff, an industrial electrician who had worked with asbestos insulation from 1948 to 1972, claimed that inhalation of asbestos fibers and dust during that period had caused him to develop mesothelioma, a cancerous tumor of the lung. The Virginia Supreme Court held that the action filed on July 24, 1978 was timely.
The Locke court faced, as does this Court, the problem of determining the date of injury for a condition which does not arise *287 at a specific point of time, but results over a period of time. The difference between this case and Locke, however, is that in Locke all exposure to the dust had ended six years before the plaintiff brought his action, whereas here there was a two-week period within two years of the filing of this suit during which plaintiff was exposed to the silica and asbestos dusts while operating the shovels. 2 This Court must determine, using the Locke approach, the date of injury for plaintiff’s respiratory diseases, as well as the relevance, if any, of the two weeks of exposure within the limitations period.
The
Locke
court construed the word “injury” in § 8.01-230 to mean “positive, physical or mental hurt to the claimant, not legal wrong to him in the broad sense that his legally protected interests have been invaded.”
The “crucial question,” said the Locke court, is “[w]hen was the plaintiff hurt?” Holding that the answer lies in the medical evidence, the court set up the following rule:
[T]he cause of action accrued and the statute of limitations began to run from the time plaintiff was hurt. The “time plaintiff was hurt” is to be established from available competent evidence, produced by a plaintiff or a defendant, that pinpoints the precise date of injury with a reasonable degree of medical certainty.
Concluding, on the basis of the expert medical opinion, that the cancerous tumor did not begin to form contemporaneously with exposure to the asbestos dust, the court in
Locke
found that the 1948-1972 period of exposure bore no medical relationship to when, or even if, the disease developed. Since the injury did not “spring up at the infliction of the wrongful act” (the time when the dust was inhaled), the fact that the plaintiff’s exposure ended in 1972 did not bar the 1978 action.
On the other hand, the
Locke
court had no evidence pinpointing the beginning of the mesothelioma tumor. The record did, however, reflect that the plaintiff was in excellent health and physical condition until November of 1977, when he began to experience some impairment of lung function. Chest x-rays on April 14, 1978 were normal. The first clinical or other medical evidence of mesothelioma “or any other lung-related abnormality or disease” came in a May 22, 1978 x-ray which revealed “an abnormality.”
In reaching this decision,
Locke
specifically rejected any rule which would commence the running of the statute of limitations on the date of discovery of the injury, or on the date when the injury should have been discovered in the exercise of reasonable diligence. The court also stated that it was not postponing the beginning of the limitations period until the time of diagnosis of the injury or disease. Rather, if expert medical testimony demonstrates that the injury occurred before the time when the disease manifested itself by symptoms, the statute begins to run from the earlier date.
In the instant case, there is no conclusive medical evidence in the record which pinpoints the precise date of the occurrence of plaintiff’s bronchitis, asbestosis and silicosis diseases. The evidence does reveal, however, that the plaintiff has had a long history of lung-related problems.
*288 A medical history taken by a physician on July 26, 1958, before plaintiff began working with the defendants’ machines, indicated that the plaintiff had had asthma and “pulmonary disease” for a long time, and that he had been having chest pains and coughing up pus. The reporting doctor’s clinical impression was that plaintiff suffered from “chronic pulmonary disease.” 3 A May 27, 1965 x-ray report of a physician stated that plaintiff’s right lung showed “extensive bullous emphysema at the base with old pleurisy.” 4 An x-ray diagnosis by another doctor on April 7, 1975 described pleural thickening in plaintiff’s right chest area and concluded that plaintiff suffered from pneumoconiosis. 5 Another x-ray report dated August 30, 1978 described “significant” pleural thickening and pulmonary densities in both sides of plaintiff’s chest. 6
Plaintiff underwent extensive examination during a visit to Chippenham Hospital from November 26 to December 7, 1978. A November 15 preliminary report by Dr. Rodney H. Smith related that plaintiff was “progressively more short of breath over the last year and a half” (which would refer to May of 1977, approximately), and that plaintiff had coughed up green sputum streaked with blood in August 1977. Dr. Smith’s impression was the plaintiff suffered from either silicosis or asbestosis. 7 November 26 and November 27 x-ray reports described dense pleural thickening. 8 Upon plaintiff’s discharge on December 7, 1978, his final diagnosis was reported as industrial bronchitis along with “asbestos-related pleural thickening,” said to be “most likely asbestosis.” 9
This diagnosis was repeated in a May 24, 1979 report by Dr. Richardson Grinnan, 10 who described plaintiff’s primary respiratory problem as industrial bronchitis, with silicosis and/or asbestosis likely.
Plaintiff, relying on the Grinnan report and the November 26-December 7, 1978 hospital visit, argues that the possibility of industrial bronchitis, silicosis and asbestosis was not indicated until the hospital stay, which occurred within two years of this suit. The hospital treatment did mark the first time that any diagnosis of these particular diseases was made.
Locke
made it clear, however, that the date of diagnosis, or even the date of symptoms, is irrelevant if medical evidence pinpoints the occurrence of the injury at another time.
The only medical evidence in the record which attempts to date the occurrence of plaintiff’s injury is the affidavit, offered by the defendants, of Dr. Charles Donlan, Jr., a Virginia specialist in pulmonary medicine, who is certified as a “B” reader by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health. 11 Based on an examination of documents including those described above and of x-ray films dated August 30 and November 26, 1978, and April 24 and May 14, 1979, Dr. Donlan concludes that as of November, 1980 plaintiff “was suffering from no pulmonary disease or process which was not evident in August 1978 or before. . .
Certainly, plaintiff was suffering from respiratory ailments long before November 3, 1978, two years before this suit was filed. Although Dr. Donlan’s affidavit does not “pinpoint” the occurrence of plaintiff’s injuries with any degree of specificity, it does establish that all of the respiratory injuries of which plaintiff complains occurred more *289 than two years before this suit was filed, and that no injury occurred within the limitations period. Since plaintiff’s counsel conceded at oral argument that he had no evidence to controvert the findings reported in Dr. Donlan’s affidavit, there is no disputed issue of fact on this question and the Locke rule would appear to require summary judgment for the defendants with respect to plaintiff’s respiratory claims.
First, however, the Court must determine the relevance of the approximately two-week period within two years of this suit during which plaintiff was exposed to silica and asbestos dust while operating the machines. Of course, the general rule in Virginia is that the limitations period begins to run when the initial injury, even if relatively slight, is sustained, and the manifestation of more substantial injuries at a later date does not extend the limitations period.
Virginia Military Institute v. King,
A reading of the Locke holding, and of that court’s treatment of the cases which preceded it, reveals that the time of a defendant’s wrongful or negligent act, or of a plaintiff’s exposure to an outstanding wrong committed by the defendant, is not relevant in and of itself. It becomes relevant to the running of the limitations period only incidentally: i. e. only if the wrongful act or exposure to it causes some injury to the plaintiff. Moreover, the actual dates of the defendants’ acts or of exposure are reliable indicators of the date of injury only if the act or exposure and the injury occur contemporaneously. Thus, even if there is a wrongful act by the defendant or exposure to it by the plaintiff within two years of suit, it is relevant only if it causes injury or damage. If the plaintiff’s injury was “complete” more than two years before the suit, his claims based on that injury are time-barred. 12
Locke
first discussed a number of earlier cases in which the defendant’s wrongful act occurred at an early point in time, and the plaintiff was exposed to this wrong until an identifiable time when injury occurred.
Louisville and Nashville R. Co. v. Saltzer,
The other two cases relied on by
Locke
to support its rule that injury can be said to occur after the time of defendant’s wrongful act or after plaintiff’s exposure to it were
Sides v. Richard Machine Works, Inc.,
Locke
then went on to distinguish other cases, which originally had seemed to set up a last exposure or time of the wrongful act rule for when the statute of limitations begins to run, as “factually inapposite.”
One of these cases involved a disease suffered by the plaintiff in the instant action. In
Street v. Consumers Mining Corp.,
The three other cases in this vein discussed by
Locke
were
Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority v. Laburnum Construction Corp., supra, Hawks v. Dehart,
The court in each case had held that the time of discovery of plaintiff’s injury, and the difficulty of such discovery, are irrelevant. In
Laburnum,
the wrongful act of the defendant was the use of defective materials and improper workmanship in installing a gas pipe in a building owned by the plaintiff in 1943. The plaintiff was “exposed” to this wrong from 1943 through the time of an explosion in 1948 caused by gas leaking from the pipe. The court held that the plaintiff’s action to recover for the damage from the explosion was untimely, since the damage caused by the explosion was only consequential, not direct, damage, and the cause of action accrued when the defective work was done in 1943.
Locke
construed this to mean that the “hurt” alleged was the harm done to the pipe line upon installation in 1943, which was not discovered until the 1948 explosion. This injury, said
Locke,
was “complete” no later than 1943.
The plaintiff in
Hawks
brought a medical malpractice action against her doctor, claiming that he negligently left a surgical needle in her neck in a 1946 operation. Plaintiff was exposed to this needle until it was removed on October 17, 1963. Plaintiff’s suit was in March of 1964. The court stated the rule that the limitations period begins to run “when the wrong is done...” and held that the claim was barred.
Lastly, King was a suit against a firm of architects for improper design of a building. *291 The court held that the cause of action accrued in February of 1968 when the plans for the building were finally approved, and not when the defects in the structure were discovered in December 1969. Thus the June 1974 action was barred by the applicable five-year statute of limitations. Again, Locke saw the injury as “complete” in 1968 because the plaintiff had suffered harm when the erroneous drawings were submitted, despite the fact that plaintiff was exposed to the wrong through the time of the suit.
In the instant action, the defendants’ allegedly wrongful acts — breach of warranties, negligent design, manufacture and sale, negligent failure to warn, and indifference to the rights of others — all occurred when the machines were manufactured, sold, or delivered to plaintiff’s employer, many years before this suit. Plaintiff’s exposure to these threats continued until November 17, 1978, providing the two weeks of exposure within two years of this suit. After Locke, and especially under Locke’s treatment of Street, these two weeks of exposure are relevant only if plaintiff was caused some injury during that period. If plaintiff’s injuries were “complete” before that time, and further exposure caused no injury, his claims are barred by the statute of limitations.
Again, the only evidence in the record on this point is Dr. Donlan’s affidavit. His conclusion that as of November, 1980 plaintiff was suffering from no pulmonary disease or process which was not present by August 1978 or before indicates that plaintiff’s injuries were “complete” more than two years before this action was brought, and that no injury was caused plaintiff by the two weeks of exposure. As noted, plaintiff’s counsel has conceded that there is no evidence to controvert this conclusion. Although plaintiff’s claims for any injury caused during the two-week period, such as an aggravation of his respiratory problems, would be timely, the record reveals that no such injury occurred. With no conflict in the medical evidence on this point, partial summary judgment must be awarded the defendants.
The case of
Farley v. Goode,
Concluding that the action was not barred by the two-year limitations period of § 8.01-243(A), the court stated:
We hold under these facts that when malpractice is claimed to have occurred during a continuous and substantially uninterrupted course of examination and treatment in which a particular illness or condition should have been diagnosed in the exercise of reasonable care, the date of injury occurs, the cause of action for that malpractice accrues, and the statute of limitations commences to run when the improper course of examination, and treatment if any, for the particular malady terminates.
Farley was not referred to in the Locke opinion. It is, however, readily distinguishable both from Locke and from the instant case. The Farley rule seems to be limited to actions, such as malpractice cases, which involve continuous treatment or the continuous provision of services over a period of time. Even if the rule could be extended to other than malpractice actions, plaintiff herein has not alleged any continuous series of wrongs by the defendants. Moreover, Farley does not differ from Locke’s rule on the relevance of the dates of a defendant’s wrongful acts or of plaintiff’s exposure to them, for in Farley each wrongful act did cause injury to the plaintiff: the periodon *292 tal disease invplved develops slowly and becomes progressively worse if untreated. 13 Here there was no injury caused by plaintiff’s last exposure to the defendants’ allegedly wrongful acts. Lastly, Locke’s treatment of Street, which involved one of the very injuries at issue in this case, leaves little room for doubt that where the plaintiff’s injuries are “complete” more than two years before suit, the action is untimely. 14
An appropriate order shall issue.
Notes
. Defendants do not assert that plaintiffs hearing loss claim was untimely.
. Plaintiff was exposed to these dusts while operating or maintaining these machines from April 2, 1962 until November 17, 1978. This suit was filed on November 3, 1980.
. Exhibit C.1 to Memorandum in Support of Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (hereinafter referred to as “Defendants’ Memo”).
. Exhibit C.2 to Defendants’ Memo.
. Exhibit C.3 to Defendants’ Memo.
. Exhibit C.4 to Defendants’ Memo.
. Exhibit C.5 to Defendants’ Memo.
. Exhibits C.7 and C.8 to Defendants’ Memo.
. Exhibit C.6 to Defendants’ Memo.
. Exhibit C.ll to Defendants’ Memo.
. Dr. Donlan states that by virtue of his certification as a “B” reader, he is engaged by NIOSH in the interpretation of chest x-rays of workers exposed to occupational dusts.
. In
Locke
itself, the dates of exposure were entirely irrelevant because the cancerous tumor involved there does not arise contemporaneously with exposure to asbestos dust. In fact, there is no injury until some time elapses, and some people exposed to the fibers may never develop a tumor.
.
. The Court also rejects the argument of plaintiffs counsel, made at the hearing on this motion, that the date of injury under
Locke
is the date at which plaintiff’s injuries become provable in court. Although it is true that the “time plaintiff was hurt” is to be established by evidence which “pinpoints the date of injury with a reasonable degree of medical certainty,”
