OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff’s complaint, filed at 5:00 p. m. on November 21, 1969, seeks damages for personal injuries resulting from injection of what apparently was insulin instead of preoperative medication on November 22, 1963. The complaint contains four counts, the first count setting forth an alleged implied contract of hospitalization and treatment “in a good and workmanlike manner,” as to which contract plaintiff claims a breach by the alleged improper injection. The second count alleges warranties to the plaintiff that the drug to be injected would be fit for the purpose for which it was intended to be used merchantable and genuine, and that there was a breach of these implied warranties by the alleged injection. The third count alleges the injection of “an inherently dangerous substance.” The fourth count is simply one on behalf of the husband for loss of consortium and medical expense, and incorporates the first three counts.
The statute of limitations in Vermont for a suit for personal injuries is, of course, three years, 12 V.S.A. § 512 (4),
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while the statute for breach of contract and breach of implied warranty is six years, 12 V.S.A. § 511. Under the Ver
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mont law of the past a cause of action for medical malpractice or negligence has, as it used to be said, “sounded in tort” and accrued when the negligence occurred. Murray v. Allen,
It is also true that the Vermont Supreme Court has recently evidenced upon several occasions its readiness to reexamine in the light of modern conditions and new legal developments some of the legal maxims and shibboleths of the past. O’Brien v. Comstock Foods, Inc.,
It is unnecessary, however, to reach the question whether today’s Vermont Supreme Court would overrule, in the light of recent trends and its own new cases, the holding in Murray v. Allen, supra, that a cause of action for malpractice accrues at the time of the alleged negligence and not at the time the injury is discovered. It is unnecessary because there is nothing to indicate in the complaint, here sought to be dismissed, that plaintiff did not in fact discover that the wrong substance had been injected into her at the time of its injection or shortly thereafter. While the plaintiffs’ memorandum of law suggests that “It may well be that the first clear knowledge of the noxious agent arose on the occasion of defendant’s judicial admission in this court on July 7, 1970,” the pleadings contain no allegations of nondiscovery.
Likewise, plaintiffs’ suggestion that this case may be within 12 V.S.A. § 518(a) (extending the period of limitation to twenty years in the case of non-discovery of injury) cannot be followed for two reasons: The effective date of that act was March 16, 1967, more than three years after the alleged wrongful act herein; moreover, this statute refers only to “ionizing radiation” injuries or injuries from “other noxious agents medically recognized as having a prolonged latent development.” There is no allegation in the instant case from which plaintiff could argue that the substance allegedly injected here was such a “noxious agent.”
Thus we are faced directly with the question whether Vermont would recognize, and permit, a suit for breach of contract or breach of warranty in this situation, one involving the alleged injection of the wrong substance into a person for preoperative anesthesia purposes.
The problem here is not exactly a new one. A case from the Year Books of King Edward III sustained a writ when it was set forth that the defendant undertook to cure the plaintiff’s horse of sickness and did his work so negligently that the horse died. Y.B. 43 Ed. III 33, pl. 38. See Holmes, The Common Law (Little, Brown & Co., 1943), History of Contract, pp. 275 et seq.; see also Y.B. 48 Ed. III 6, pl. 11 (action against a sur *300 geon alleging that he undertook to cure the plaintiff’s hand and that by his negligence the plaintiff’s hand was maimed; writ failed for omitting to allege place of the undertaking).
And as the plaintiff here has pointed out, a number of jurisdictions in this country have recognized a cause of action in contract between a patient and his doctor or hospital. E. g., Stewart v. Rudner,
A detailed analysis of the cases, annotations and other literature written on exactly the point before us indicates no more than that American jurisdictions differ on the question whether a simple contract action will lie against a doctor or hospital for negligently inflicted personal injury, and if so, what the measure of damages will be. For every case in which a contract action is allowed, another can be found where it is denied. In Kozan v. Comstock,
The persuasiveness of the reasoning in the Kozan case, supra, and the wording of the Vermont statute of limitations have convinced this Court that the Vermont Supreme Court would not presently recognize a cause of action in simple contract for medical malpractice on these facts. The 1959 practice act amendments encompassing 12 V.S.A. § 511 eliminated reference to causes of action in tort, contract and replevin, and apparently left the determination of the applicable statute of limitations to the nature of the injury claimed. Unless this case falls within the exception to 12 V.S.A. § 512(4), it is governed by the three year limitation applicable to suits for “injury to the person suffered by the act or default of another.” 12 V.S.A. § 512(4).
On the issue of warranty, we start with the proposition that the administration of anesthesia involves primarily a rendering of service but in a very indirect and technical way may also involve or entail the sale of goods.
We are well aware, of course, of the decision in Perlmutter v. Beth David Hospital,
Even if those warranties were to be recognized, however, they could not afford Mrs. Mauran relief in this case. This is not a case in which a drug is claimed to have been defective or inherently dangerous. In such a ease we anticipate relief for breach of warranty would lie. Here, however, it is claimed only that the wrong drug was administered. Put another way, while we view it is likely that the Vermont Supreme Court will in the future hold that the dispensing of drugs by a hospital carries with it the usual implied warranties of quality and merchantability, we do not think it possible that the state court would hold that a hospital in all cases warrants against the negligence of its employees. To do so would be to impose upon a hospital absolute liability for negligence, a standard of care not yet countenanced in Vermont law.
Whether the administration of a drug is considered a sale, in which case the warranties now codified in 9A V.S.A. §§ 2-313, 2-314, 2-315, would clearly apply, or whether it is regarded as a service, the plaintiff’s claim here is not that her injuries resulted from a breach of warranty undei either theory. Accordingly, the complaint, except those portions which seek to recover extra medical expenses occasioned by the delay in plaintiff’s operation, must be dismissed as untimely. The claim for medical expenses must be dismissed here for failure to meet the jurisdictional amount requisite to suit in a federal court. The plaintiff will, of course, be able to pursue her contract remedies for those extra expenses in a Vermont state court.
Notes
. “Actions for the following causes shall be commenced within three years after the cause of action accrues, and not after:
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(4) Injury to the person suffered by the act or default of another, except as otherwise provided in this chapter [.]”
