The trial court dismissed this personal injury action arising from an automobile collision because plaintiff Phyllis Mitchell served defendant Joy Hamilton over three months after the statute of limitation expired. Mitchell claimed that both she and her minor daughter, Kiara, were injured in the May 30, 1994 incident. 1 She sought to recover damages for her own injuries and medical expenses incurred by her daughter. As Kiara’s next friend, Mitchell also made a personal injury claim on the child’s behalf. The trial court found Mitchell failed to show she made diligent efforts to serve Hamilton. We affirm the court’s dismissal of Mitchell’s claims for personal injury and for Kiara’s medical expenses; however, we reverse the dismissal of Kiara’s claims because the statute of limitation is tolled during her minority.
1. Mitchell’s claims are governed by a two-year statute of limitation, which expired May 30, 1996. OCGA § 9-3-33; see
Davis v. Desa Intl.,
“The burden is on the plaintiff to ascertain a defendant’s residence, and that obligation does not arise only upon expiration of the statute of limitation. [Cit.]”
Devoe v. Callis,
The record shows Mitchell made no further attempts at service until July 2, 1996, after she obtained a different address for Hamilton from the phone book. The summons and request for service she mailed to the clerk of superior court on July 2 were returned on July 22, apparently because no copy of the complaint was enclosed. By the time the sheriff could again attempt service on July 24, Hamilton had moved again. Mitchell’s counsel learned of this new problem on July 30, but she apparently made no further efforts at service for almost a month. Around August 26, the attorney called Hamilton’s phone number and learned she had moved to a different apartment in the same complex. She mailed the clerk a request for service on August 26. Even then, she did not know Hamilton’s actual apartment number and requested the sheriff ask the apartment’s resident manager for it. Mitchell has given no explanation for the month-long gaps between her May, July and late August attempts at service, and she has not explained her failure to include a copy of the complaint with her July summons. See
Devoe,
2. The trial court’s finding also authorized it to dismiss Mitchell’s claims for medical expenses Kiara incurred as a result of the collision. Under OCGA § 19-7-2, the right to recover a minor’s medical expenses in a tort action is vested solely in the child’s parents. See
Jarrell v. State Merit System,
3. The trial court erred, however, by dismissing those personal injury claims belonging to Kiara Mitchell, who was 12 years old when her mother filed this suit on her behalf. The statute of limitation does not run against an unemancipated minor even though the child is represented by a next friend or guardian ad litem. See OCGA § 9-3-90;
Barnum v. Martin,
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
Although Mitchell’s complaint states that the accident occurred May 31, 1994, her brief acknowledges May 30, 1994 as the correct date.
