The appeals in the above four cases are from orders of trial courts dismissing malpractice actions pursuant to the Utah Health Care Malpractice Act. In each case the claim for relief alleged arose prior to the effective date of the Malpractice Act, and an action was filed within the time permitted by the appropriate statute of limitations. No notice of intent to sue under § 78-14-8 of that Act was filed prior to the commencement of the actions.
1
Each case
*788
was dismissed by the trial court for failure of the plaintiff to file a notice. The dismissals were based upon this Court’s decision in
Vealey v. Clegg,
Utah,
The cases were briefed separately by the parties and were consolidated by order of the Court for purposes of oral argument. On September 19, 1979, the Court decided
Foil v. Ballinger,
A claim made in one or more of the above cases, and not addressed in Foil, is that the 1979 amendment is unconstitutional because it violates Article VI, § 26 of the Utah Constitution, which provides: “No private or special law shall be enacted where a general law can be applicable.” The contention is that the amendment, which provides that the notice to sue provision was not applicable to causes of action arising prior to enactment of the Health Care Malpractice Act and which in effect overruled Vealey v. Clegg, is special legislation.
That contention cannot withstand analysis. In
Utah Farm Bureau Insurance Co. v. Utah Insurance Guaranty Association,
Utah,
The amendment does not rest on an arbitrary classification; it makes no invidious discrimination, and it applies uniformly to all within the class. The amendment merely differentiates between those classes of persons to whom the notice of intent to sue provision applies and those to whom it does not apply based on the effective date of the Malpractice Act. It is within the power of the Legislature to make such a classification when enacting clarifying legislation designed to avoid hardship and injustice. The principle of notice and fair play are sufficient to justify the classification in this case. Indeed it would be anomalous to hold that legislation designed to clarify a previous enactment is special legislation unless the earlier enactment were also special legislation. See also
State v. Kallas,
The further contention is made that the 1979 amendment violates Article VI, § 23 of the Utah Constitution. That provision provides: “[N]o bill shall be passed containing more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title.” The title synopsis of the amendment provides as follows:
An act amending Sections 78-14 — 4 and 78-14-8, Utah Code Annotated 1953, as enacted by Chapter 23, Laws of Utah 1976; relating to Health Care Malpractice; providing that the legal disability of an individual shall not act to extend the statute of limitations set forth in that section; providing that notices of intent to bring malpractice actions be signed by the plaintiff or his attorney; providing that the notice may be served by certified mail; and extending the time for commencement of actions where the notice is served less than 90 days prior to the expiration of the statute of limitations.
Specifically, it is contended that this synopsis does not include the provision of the amendment which deals with the notice requirement. The contention is made that the title of a bill must describe each and every change in the law which is contained in the Bill. The contention is untenable; it would create the possibility of great mischief in the legislative process. The Legislature would be required to draft titles with as much care as they must expend on the substance of the laws passed, and if they did not, legislative enactments would constantly be attacked in the courts. The Legislature should not be burdened with an overly-rigid interpretation of a basically salubrious constitutional principle, and the law does not so require. Obviously a fair synopsis serves a useful purpose of alerting legislators to the content of a bill, especially in a legislature with limited sessions and limited staff personnel. But fair notice of the content of a bill is all that is constitutionally required.
The legal issue in this case is controlled by
Edler v. Edwards,
If, therefore, by any reasonable construction, the title of the act can be made to conform to the constitutional requirement, it is the duty of the courts to adopt this construction rather than another . . In case of doubt it must be assumed that the Legislature understood and applied the title so as to comply with the constitutional provision, and not contrary thereto.34 Utah at 19 ,95 P. at 368 .
Dispositive of this issue is the rule stated in
Edler
that it is sufficient for the title of an act amending a previous act simply to specify the section to be amended without indicating the subject matter of the section. “ ‘Under such a title any legislation is proper which is germane to the section specified.’ ”
In addition, several of the defendants in these actions contend that retroactive application of the amendment deprives them of a vested interest and hence is unconstitutional. They cite
Ireland v. Mackintosh,
Based on the foregoing and the holding in Foil v. Ballinger, supra, the judgments in No. 15984, No. 16252, No. 16266, and No. 16329 are reversed and the cases remanded for further proceedings. Costs to Appellants.
Notes
. In Case No. 15984 the claim arose October 12, 1974. The complaint alleges that the injury was not discovered until December 30, 1975. A complaint was filed September 9, 1977. On July 19, 1978, the trial court dismissed the complaint against the University of Utah Medical Center and E. D. Slawson and against the defendant Ha'rrison Lazarus with prejudice for failure to file a notice of intent to sue. The appeal is from judgment of dismissal.
In Case No. 16266 the alleged injuries occurred April 18, 1975, and the complaint was filed April 18, 1977. It was subsequently dismissed without prejudice and refiled January 17, 1978. A motion to dismiss based on the statute of limitations was denied March 15, 1978, on the ground that the action had been filed within one year of a voluntary dismissal pursuant to Rule 41, U.R.C.P., and that the refiling was permitted by the tolling provision of § 78-12 — 40. However, the case was dismissed for failure to file a notice of intent to sue without prejudice to plaintiff’s right to refile. A notice of intent to sue was served on Health Services Corporation and Intermountain Health Care, Inc., on May 4, 1978, and on defendant Peter S. Quintero on May 5, 1978. On September 28, 1978, a guardian ad litem was appointed to represent the plaintiff, who, for the first time, alleged mental incompetency. On the same date plaintiff filed a third complaint, Civil No. C-78-6121. Motions for summary judgment were granted December 21, 1978. In granting summary judgment the trial court wrote a memorandum opinion, for which we are indebted. The trial court expressly ruled that § 78-12 — 40 was not applicable because failure to file a notice of intent to sue made the filing of the complaint void ab initio and hence an action had not been timely “commenced” as required by the one-year tolling statute, § 78-12 — 40.
Foil v. Ballinger,
Utah,
Case No. 16252 is an action for damages for wrongful death. The death occurred February 15, 1976. On February 9, 1978, plaintiffs filed a complaint. It was dismissed without prejudice for failure to file a notice of intent to sue. Plaintiffs thereafter served a notice and refiled their action within one year from the dismissal. Thereafter, another trial judge granted a summary judgment in favor of Rumel Chest Clinic and Quinton S. Harris on the ground that no action had been properly “commenced” within *788 the two-year limitation period and that the savings provision of § 78-12-40 was not therefore applicable. Defendants Harold V. Little and Quinton S. Harris obtained an order of dismissal with prejudice December 18, 1978, after an earlier action had been dismissed without prejudice by a different trial judge for failure to serve a notice. The appeal is from the judgments of dismissal.
In Case No. 16329 a complaint was filed January 24, 1978, based on injuries alleged to have occurred in January and February 1976. On January 27, 1978, a notice of intent to sue, along with a summons and a complaint which had been filed January 24, 1978, was served on Dr. T. Kenneth Orton. On December 20, 1978, a judgment of dismissal as to Orton was entered. The suit against Dr. James N. Wilfert, who was served with a notice of intent to sue and the summons and complaint on January 24, 1978, was also dismissed December 20, 1978. The ground for the dismissals was that the action against the two had not been properly commenced because of failure to file the notice of intent 90 days before the complaint was filed. On January 22 and 24, 1979, the district court granted plaintiffs motions for Rule 54(b) determinations of finality of the judgments. An appeal was filed from the judgments in favor of Orton and Wilfert.
. Defendants also cite
Greenhalgh v. Payson City,
Utah,
