Lead Opinion
The King can do no wrong, but will he do right by our orphans?
When the children did find out, they sued the State of Iowa for damages relating to their lifelong battle with speech problems. The State filed a motion to dismiss. The State claimed it had not waived its sovereign immunity for the plaintiffs’ injuries. The district court overruled the motion. We likewise conclude the State waived its sovereign immunity and affirm.
I. Principles of Review
At the outset, it is important to point out the procedural posture of this case, because it affects our recitation of the facts. We review a district court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss for correction of errors at law. Brubaker v. Estate of De-Long,
II. Background Facts and Proceedings
In 1939, Professor Wendell Johnson of the University of Iowa (f/k/a “The State University of Iowa”) designed a study to
To test Professor Johnson’s theory, six nonstuttering children at the Home were told they were stutterers or were in danger of becoming stutterers. These children (or their respective estates) are the plaintiffs in the underlying action.
For over sixty years, no one told the children about the true nature of the study. In June 2001, however, a newspaper discovered the truth and published a story about the Monster Study.
In April 2003, the plaintiffs sued the State in the district court for intentional infliction of emotional distress, fraudulent misrepresentation, breach of fiduciary duty, invasion of privacy, and civil conspiracy. The plaintiffs claimed the State’s tor-tious actions continued to the present day because it concealed the study from them over the years.
The State filed a motion to dismiss. It maintained the plaintiffs’ claims failed because the alleged injuries occurred when the State was sovereignly immune, i.e., before the effective date of the Iowa Tort Claims Act. The district court, however, summarily concluded the petition “[e]on-tain[ed] claims upon which relief may be granted” and denied the motion. The State applied for interlocutory review, which we granted. We will restrict our analysis to the pertinent argument in this case: Whether the State has waived its sovereign immunity for this claim under the Iowa Tort Claims Act.
III. Analysis
At the time the State first injured the plaintiffs in 1939, it was immune from suit under the common-law doctrine of sovereign immunity. See Montandon v. Hargrave Constr. Co.,
The whole doctrine of governmental immunity from liability for tort rests upon a rotten foundation. It is almost incredible that in this modern age of comparative sociological enlightenment, and in a republic, the medieval absolutism supposed to be implicit in the maxim, “the King can do no wrong,” should exempt the various branches of the government from liability for their torts, and that the entire burden of damage resulting from the wrongful acts of the government should be imposed upon the single individual who suffers the injury, rather than distributed among the entire community constituting the government, where it could be borne without hardship upon any individual, and where it justly belongs.
Id. at 349-50,
As presently written, the Iowa Tort Claims Act contains a statute of limitations that bars certain stale claims. The Act states:
Every claim and suit permitted under this chapter shall be forever barred, unless within two years after such claim accrued, the claim is made in writing to the state appeal board under this chapter.
Iowa Code § 669.13 (2005) (emphasis added). Precedent clearly holds a claim does not “accrue” until the plaintiff “discovers the injury or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered it.” Vachon v. State,
The State urges us, however, to go beyond the statutory text to divine legislative intent. It asks us to travel forty years into the past to resurrect a “sunrise” provision the legislature repealed long ago. For as originally enacted, the Iowa Tort Claims Act contained the following language:
[A] ‘claim’ includes only such claims accruing on or after January 1,1963....
1965 Iowa Acts ch. 79, § 2(5), repealed by 1969 Iowa Acts ch. 81, § 2. Based upon this repealed “sunrise” provision — as well as a long-repudiated judicial construction of the verb “to accrue” as “to occur” — the State concludes the Iowa Torts Claim Act is intended to bar all claims for injuries that occurred before January 1, 1963. The Iowa Tort Claims Act, the State paradoxically concludes, means what it does not say; indeed, the State interprets the Act to say what the legislature explicitly said it does not say when it repealed the relied-upon language in 1969. The State effectively asks us to reenact statutory language the legislature repealed long ago. We will not do so. See Doe v. Ray,
However, even if the repealed language of the Iowa Tort Claims Act were somehow still enforceable, it would not bar the plaintiffs’ claims. We need not bog ourselves down in all the intricacies of the State’s historical-statutory analysis. The linchpin of the State’s argument is its interpretation of the verb “to accrue,” and in what follows, we focus upon it.
As originally enacted, the Iowa Tort Claims Act only waived the State’s sovereign immunity for those claims “accruing on or after January 1, 1963.” 1965 Iowa Acts ch. 79, § 2(5), repealed by 1969 Iowa Acts ch. 81, § 2. It also imposed a statute of limitations: once a claim “accrued,” the plaintiff had two years or until January 1, 1967 to file a claim with the state appeal board, whichever was later. 1965 Iowa Acts ch. 79, § 13, repealed by 1969 Iowa Acts ch. 81, § 2.
After surveying a century’s worth of Iowa cases, the State concludes the verb “to accrue” in 1965 meant “to occur” or “to happen.” See, e.g., Ogg v. Robb,
This reasoning is flawed on several levels. At the most basic level, one wonders: What if the legislature hadn’t repealed the sunrise provision? Would the State’s argument have any merit? Surely not: there can be no question that if the legislature had not repealed the sunrise provision, the present definition of “to accrue,” which incorporates the discovery rule, would not bar the plaintiffs’ claims. Paradoxically, then, the State relies on repealed language which, even if it were still in force, would not bar the plaintiffs’ claims.
It is apparently the mere fact of the repeal that matters so much to this analysis. The State focuses upon the repeal because the State believes it tells us something about what the legislature meant when it enacted the Iowa Torts Claims Act in 1965. See Doe,
Even if we were to pretend it were sometime between 1965 and 1969 and assume the legislature intended to give the verb “to accrue” a single, immutable meaning for all time,
If we take a step back and look at the relevant statutory language in its entirety, the legislature demonstrated it knew there was a difference between “occur” and “accrue:”
“Claim” means any claim against the state of Iowa for money only, on account of damage to or loss of property or on account of personal injury or death, caused by the negligent or wrongful actor omission of any employee of the state while acting within the scope of his office or employment, under circumstances where the state, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant for such damage, loss, injury, or death, in accordance with the law of the place where the act or omission occurred,. However, “claim” includes only such claims accruing on or after January 1, 1963....
1965 Iowa Acts ch. 79, § 2(5), repealed by 1969 Iowa Acts ch. 81, § 2 (emphasis added). Clearly, the legislature’s use of the verb “occurred” in the sentence immediately before the last sentence, above, shows the legislature must have meant something other than “to occur” when it used the verb “accruing.” Otherwise, it simply would have used the word “occurring.”
In the coming decades, we would incorporate the discovery rule into the Act because it ivas the comet interpretation of the statute. Moreover, there was nothing revolutionary about the cases in which we did so, Vachon and Callahan; neither expressly overruled any prior cases. The Iowa Tort Claims Act was a relatively new statute — a blank slate. Simply because we were not presented with the opportunity to construe the use of the verb “to accrue” in the Act between 1965 and 1969 does not mean it did not include a discovery rule.
Had we been given the chance, it is likely we would have — or at the very least should have — given the statutory phrase the meaning the plaintiffs suggest. It is the proper interpretation of the statute, according to this court in Vachon in 1994. It is also the proper interpretation according to the United States Supreme Court in 1979. United States v. Kubrick, 444 U.S. Ill, 123-24,
In sum, there is no reason why we should judicially reenact statutory language the legislature expressly repealed and then engraft upon that statute a construction of a word that we would not adopt today had we been presented with the opportunity back in 1965. It is not our role to narrow the waiver of immunity granted by our legislature through our power to interpret statutes. See Doe,
IV. Disposition
The district court is affirmed. This matter is remanded to the district court for
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See generally Michael A. Olsen, The King Can Do No Wrong, But Will He Do Right By Our School Children?, 1995 BYU Educ. & L.J. 55 (1995).
. The surviving plaintiffs are Mary Nixon, Kathryn Meacham, and Hazel Dornbush. The deceased plaintiffs are Phillip Spieker, Betty Romp, and Clarence Fifer, who are represented by Tonya Tolbert, Russell Ehrhardt, and Susan Dawson, respectively.
. We will not broaden our analysis to entertain arguments involving statutory construction of terms relevant to a statute-of-limitations analysis because this is a waiver of immunity case, not a statute of limitations case. Any attempt to make this a statute of limitations issue is past the State’s original motion to dismiss on grounds of governmental immunity.
. Both provisions of the statute show the legislature intended the repealed Act to be retroactive. Only the extent of the retroactivity is at issue.
. Any reliance upon on our language in Graham v. Worthington,
. Given that the verb "to accrue” is a term of art, see, e.g., Dean v. Iowa-Des Moines Nat’l Bank,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I dissent. The majority believes the only consequential issue in this case is whether the statute of limitations for claims against the State, Iowa Code section 669.13, bars the plaintiffs’ claims. They have given little consideration to the State’s argument that the plaintiffs’ claims were barred long before suit was filed in 2003, and that events occurring after these claims were barred cannot serve to resurrect them. I am convinced this court’s long-standing rules of statutory interpretation and well-established legal principles governing the revival of barred claims compel the conclusion that the plaintiffs’ claims are barred as a matter of law.
A. Points of disagreement The majority relies on section 669.13 and the discovery rule to conclude the plaintiffs’ suit is not time barred. I would agree that if one limits one’s consideration to the application of section 669.13, the plaintiffs’ claims are not barred. But the State contends the plaintiffs’ claims were barred long before this action was filed. It asks the court to examine prior law that it says cut off the plaintiffs’ right to bring this suit decades ago. The majority unfairly characterizes the State’s contention as asking the court to go back forty years and reenact a repealed sunrise provision in the original legislation. The majority refuses to do so. They also claim that the repealed provision would not have barred the plaintiffs’ claims anyway, even if the court were to consider it. I will address each aspect of the majority’s analysis separately-
B. Proper analytical framework. I begin with the majority’s description of the State’s request that the court examine pri- or statutes to determine the viability of the plaintiffs’ claims. Contrary to the majority’s statement that the State wants the court to reenact a repealed statute, the State is merely requesting the court to properly analyze the issue presented by the State’s statute-of-limitations defense. That defense requires the court to examine not only the current statute of limitations, but any prior applicable limitations period that may have already expired. See Frideres v. Schiltz,
In Frideres, this court answered certified questions concerning a newly-enacted statute of limitations applicable to claims of sexual abuse. Id. at 263 (referring to Iowa Code section 614.8A (1993)). We stated the following general principles with respect to statutes of limitations:
“ ‘A general rule with respect to statutes of limitations is that the period of limitation in effect at the time suit is brought governs in an action even though it may lengthen or shorten an earlier period of limitation.... However, another general rule ... is that if plaintiffs suit was barred by the running of a statute of limitations prior to the extension of the limitation period, the subsequent statute cannot revive defendant’s liability.’ ”
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“This general rule has been followed and further explained by this court and federal courts applying Iowa law. Previously, we have held that the statute of limitations in effect at the time the cause of action accrues is controlling and that the repeal or amendment of a statute of limitations cannot act retrospectively to revive actions previously barred undera prior statute in the absence of express legislative intent.”
Id. at 266 (citations omitted.) (emphasis added). Applying these principles, this court held that the new statute of limitations for sexual abuse contained in Iowa Code section 614.8A did “not apply retroactively to revive claims that have been barred by an applicable statute of limitations in existence prior to the enactment of section 614.8A.” Id. at 267. We noted that “[i]n determining whether a claim has been barred by an applicable statute of limitations, ... application of the discovery rule must be made as a necessary step in that resolution.” Id. We clarified, however, that the discovery rule did not operate retroactively:
Our common law discovery rule thus applies to claims filed prior to the enactment of section 614.8A, and the statutory discovery rule of section 614.8A applies to actions filed thereafter. Claims barred by preexisting staUutes of limitation are not revived by either discovery rule.
Id. (emphasis added).
The majority does not address the principles of law discussed in Frideres, and certainly does not undertake to apply them to this case. I think this law must be applied to fully and fairly analyze the State’s defense. As the following discussion explains, these principles require that the district court’s denial of the State’s motion to dismiss must be reversed.
C. Sovereign immunity and statute of limitations when tort committed. To determine whether the plaintiffs’ claims are barred by a preexisting statute of limitations, we must go back in time. I begin with the state of the law when the alleged torts were committed.
The plaintiffs seek to recover damages for torts allegedly committed by the State in 1939. As the majority acknowledges, at that time the State was immune from suit. See Montandon v. Hargrave Constr. Co.,
D. State Tort Claims Act and its retro-activity provision. The State Tort Claims Act was enacted in 1965, more than twenty-three years after the plaintiffs’ claims were time barred. See 1965 Iowa Acts ch. 79 (codified at Iowa Code ch. 25A (1966), now Iowa Code ch. 669 (2003)). This act
1. Principles guiding proper analysis of retroactivity provision. It is helpful at the outset to review pertinent rules of statutory interpretation so a proper focus can be maintained in analyzing the meaning of this statute. The polestar in interpreting the act is the legislature’s intent. State v. Dann,
One aspect of the historical context of a statute is the accepted, contemporaneous meaning of words or phrases used in the statute. Thus, we have long held that “[t]he legislature is presumed to know the usual meaning ascribed by the courts to language and to intend that meaning unless the context shows otherwise.” State v. Shafranek,
Similarly, the legislature has specifically provided that a court, in interpreting ambiguous statutory provisions, should consider “[t]he common law or former statutory provisions, including laws upon the
2. Contemporaneous context of retro-activity provision. The majority states, “Precedent clearly holds a claim does not ‘accrue’ until the plaintiff ‘discovers the injury or by the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered it.’ ” (Citation omitted). While this statement may be true in 2005, in 1965 precedent clearly held that a claim accrued at the time of injury. See, e.g., Eppling v. Seuntjens,
Prior to 1965, this court had never applied the discovery rule outside the legislatively authorized area of equitable fraud, mistake, and trespass, see Iowa Code § 614.4 (1962), and the statutory discovery rule had been strictly limited to the types of claims expressly listed in the statute. See, e.g., Cole v. Hartford Accident & Indent. Co.,
This court’s refusal to apply the discovery rule outside section 614.4 prior to 1967 is even more significant when one examines the statutes of limitation that were being interpreted by our decisions. From
When one focuses on the proper time-frame, it is readily discernible that the word “accruing” had a well-defined meaning in 1965: it meant when the injury occurred. Consequently, if we remain true to our longstanding principles of statutory interpretation, we must conclude that when the legislature stated that only “claims accruing on or after January 1, 1963” were included in the waiver of immunity, the legislature did not intend to revive claims for torts committed prior to January 1,1963.
In fact, that was exactly the interpretation this court gave to the statute one year after its enactment. In Graham, v. Worthington,
By its terms the Iowa Tort Claims Act became effective March 30, 1965. This then means claims which may have accrued anytime within two years and three months before its effective date are embraced within the terms of the enactment.
The question now presented is whether disbursement of funds for torts committed prior to the effective date of the Act would constitute payment of money, the subject matter of which was not provided for by any previously enacted law.
Id. at 855-56,
Later in the same opinion, we considered “whether chapter 25A operates equally upon all within the same class and with uniformity.” Id. at 863,
[The law] accords to all damaged or injured by the tort of an officer, agent or employee of the state subsequent to January 1, 1963, a prescribed method and means by which to secure a judicial or quasi-judicial determination of their grievances, denying this right to no person within that designated general field or classification.
Id. at 864,
It is significant that this interpretation of the language at issue was made only one year after the statute was adopted. Certainly this court’s understanding of the well-defined meaning of the statutory term “accruing” would have been much clearer in 1966, than it is now after having been muddied by the intervening years of applying the discovery rule in ever-growing contexts. See generally Wiltgen v. United States,
In summary, when the legislature abrogated sovereign immunity in 1965, it did so only for torts that were committed on or after January 1, 1963. Therefore, the plaintiffs’ claims, based on torts committed in 1939, remained barred notwithstanding the enactment of the Iowa Tort Claims Act. That brings me to the 1969 repeal of the retroactivity provision.
E. Repeal of retroactivity provision. Four years after the State Tort Claims Act was adopted, the legislature amended the statute in two relevant particulars. First, the general assembly deleted the words “or prior to July 1, 1967, whichever is later” in the statute of limitations, with the explanation that this amendment “deletes unnecessary and confusing language.” S.F. 376, 63rd G.A., 1st Sess. Explanation (Iowa 1969); see also 1969 Iowa Acts ch. 81, § 4(2). At the same time, the legislature deleted the sentence in the definition of “claim” that stated “ ‘claim’ includes only such claims accruing on or after January 1, 1963.” 1969 Iowa Acts ch. 81, § 2. The senate bill approved by the general assembly explained that the deleted sentence “is no longer necessary in view of the statute of limitations set forth in section 25A.13.” S.F. 376, 63rd G.A., 1st Sess. Explanation (Iowa 1969).
These legislative explanations' — -that the amendments were mere housekeeping to rid the statute of unnecessary provisions— are entirely consistent with my interpretation of the statute. By 1969 when these provisions were deleted, all claims accruing/occurring after January 1963 that had not already been pursued in court were barred. That conclusion is required by the statutory provision stating that “[e]very claim against the state permitted under this Act shall be forever barred, unless [filed within two years or prior to July 1, 1967].” Thus, there was no reason for the legislature to continue to address claims within this transition period: these claims had either been pursued in court or they were “forever barred.”
More importantly, the repeal of the ret-roactivity provision did not affect claims based on torts committed before January 1, 1963, such as those of the plaintiffs. First, the 1969 housekeeping amendments evidence no intent to effect a substantive change in the law, namely, to revive previously barred claims. Cf Frideres,
In addition, at the time the retroactivity provision was repealed, the State had a
In conclusion, the contemporaneous law and our rules of statutory interpretation unequivocally establish that the legislature intended that claims based on events occurring before January 1, 1963 were excluded from the act and forever barred. Therefore, the plaintiffs’ claims were not revived by the State Tort Claims Act. In addition, contrary to the majority’s characterization of the State’s position, it is not necessary to resurrect the repealed retro-activity provision in order to conclude the State has a viable statute-of-limitations defense. The retroactivity provision did not breathe life into the plaintiffs’ time-barred claims when it was enacted, and the plaintiffs’ claims remained just as dead after the retroactivity provision was repealed as they were before.
F. Application of Frideres principles to present case. I now return to the real issue in this case. That issue rests on the following principle: notwithstanding the general rule that the statute of limitations in effect when suit is filed governs, “ ‘ “if plaintiffs suit was barred by the running of a statute of limitations prior to the extension of the limitation period, the subsequent statute cannot revive defendant’s liability.” ’ ” Frideres,
G. Conclusion. When I apply the governing legal principles to this case, I can reach only one conclusion: the plaintiffs’ claims are time barred. I cannot understand why the majority believes these well-established principles regarding statutory interpretation and the revival of barred actions have no application to the suit before us. I suspect it is because they believe the debate in this case concerns “the king’s liability for his past indiscretions,” which they claim “still simmers within our court today.” I, for one, have no quarrel with the legislature’s decision to waive the State’s immunity. My quarrel is with the majority’s refusal to apply the law just because they disagree with the policy decisions made by prior legislatures and prior justices on this court. Under those prior statutes and prior decisions, the plaintiffs’ claims were barred. I dissent from the majority’s unprincipled revival of those claims. I would reverse the district
CARTER, J., joins this dissent.
. Additionally, the existence of sovereign immunity did not toll the statutory limitations period. See Monroe v. Trustees of the Cal. State Colls.,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. The resolution of this case turns on the intent of our legislature, which the majority circumvents by applying legal principles developed after the enactment of the statute from which the intent must be derived. See City of Cedar Rapids v. James Props., Inc.,
Generally, if a statute creates substantive law, it is applied only prospectively. State ex rel. Turner v. Limbrecht,
Yet, we do not need to focus on the rules of law developed to ascertain the retroactive scope of the statute because our legislature specifically included a provision in the statute addressing its retroactive effect. Christy v. Miulli,
The statute initially defined a “claim” to mean:
any claim against the state of Iowa for money only, on account of damage to or loss of property or on account of personal injury or death, caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any employee of the state while acting within the scope of his office or employment, under circumstances where the state, if a private person, would be liable to the claimant for such damage, loss, injury, or death.
1965 Iowa Acts ch. 79, § 2(5). This section then concluded the definition with the important language at the heart of this dispute: “However, a ‘claim’ includes only such claims accruing on or after January 1, 1963.” Id. Significantly, the legislature also established a statute-of-limitations period in the Act. This section provided:
Every claim against the state permitted under this chapter shall be forever barred, unless within two (2) years after such claim accrued or prior to July 1, 1967, whichever is later, the claim is made in writing to the state appeal board under this Act and a suit is begun under this Act.
Id. § 13.
There is no dispute that the legislature desired to place a limitation on the retroactive effect of the statute by defining viable claims with reference to the beginning date of January 1, 1963. This date was two years and three months before the effective date of the statute, March 30, 1965. Thus, the retroactive effect of the statute was two years and three months. The statute-of-limitation provision included in the Act then required any claim to be brought within two years or prior to July 1, 1967, whichever was later. Id. Therefore, under the statute, all claims within the retroactive period of time were required to be brought before July 1, 1967, and claims that “accrued” after needed to be brought within two years.
The need for interpretation is illustrated by the positions taken by the parties. The State claims the January 1, 1963 date was a “sunrise” provision that barred all claims that occurred before that date. The appel-lees claim it only barred claims discovered prior to July 1,1963. Both positions hinge on the intended meaning of the word “accrued.” The dispute turns on the shifting manner in which the law has used the term to express its principles. This transfiguration explains much of the debate today, which requires its meaning to be explored in a historical context.
The term “accrue” is largely embedded in the law governing limitations on actions. In this context, a general rule emerged from our early cases that a cause of action accrued when the injured party had a right to institute and maintain a lawsuit. Chrischilles v. Griswold,
The case of Ogg v. Robb illustrates this predominant view of our law dating back nearly a century. In Ogg, the plaintiff suffered burns on his arms as a result of x-rays taken by a doctor after he broke his wrist. Ogg,
At this time, the only exception to this rule involved cases in which the tortfeasor fraudulently concealed the cause of action from the injured person. See id. at 152,
Around the same time as the law pertaining to the accrual of a cause of action was taking its early shape, our legislature began to carve its own exceptions to the application of the statute of limitations for specific types of cases. In 1860, the legislature first declared that actions for fraud would not accrue until “discovery of the fraud by the party aggrieved.” Iowa Code § 2741 (1860). The legislature later added actions for trespass to property to the exception, see 1868 Iowa Acts ch. 167, § 9, and, still later, in 1873, added actions grounded on mistake, see Iowa Code § 2530 (1873). See Beerman v. Beerman,
Clearly, the legislature understood that a cause of action accrued even without knowledge of the injury under the general statute of limitations, and it sought to eliminate this harsh and “undiscriminating application of the statute of limitations” in three types of cases by creating the exceptions. Id. at 52,
And it seems quite clear that this relief was intended for the one specific purpose of helping out of a dilemma those litigants who, had they appeared in court under the old law, could not have saved their rights by showing that they had not discovered the mistake within the fixed period of the statute of limitations. To such litigants, and none others, the Legislature granted relief. To litigants generally no extension of time was mentioned or intended.
Id. Thus, it is abundantly clear our legislature understood the general rule was that a cause of action accrued under a statute of limitations when the injury occurred. Absent a defendant’s fraudulent concealment of a cause of action from a plaintiff, this court rejected the argument that a cause of action should not accrue until the plaintiff discovered the injury, see Ogg,
While this state seemed content with the law governing the accrual of a cause of action well into the twentieth century, the law in other states began to apply the “discovery rule” to the general statute of limitations. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 899, cmt. e, at 445. Under the discovery rule, actions were deemed not to accrue until the plaintiff discovered the injury or should have discovered it in the exercise of reasonable diligence. Id.; see, e.g., Urie v. Thompson,
In Chrischilles, we reiterated that our longstanding approach to the accrual of a cause of action did not recognize ignorance of a right of action to “prevent the running of the statute of limitations.” Chrischilles,
Today, of course, we are committed to the principle that a statute of limitations in civil cases begins to run when the plaintiff acquires actual or constructive knowledge of the injury. Rieff v. Evans,
Although the disputed statute in this case is not a statute of limitations, the historical background of the concept of accrual within the context of statutes of limitations is important to the proper determination of what the legislature meant when it used the term “accrues” in the definition of “claim” in 1965 when the Iowa Tort Claims Act was enacted. See 2B Norman J. Singer, Statutes and Statutory Construction § 49:01, at 8-9 (2000 rev.) [hereinafter Singer] (stating courts must consider the historical framework of a statute); see also Doe v. Ray,
Our legislature is presumed to know the usual judicial meaning of language and to intend the language it uses in its statutes to have that meaning. State v. Shafranek,
At the time the Iowa Tort Claims Act was enacted in 1965, this court had consistently used the term “accrue” within the context of the statute of limitations to refer to the time of injury, without regard to the time the injury was discovered. See, e.g., Ogg,
I recognize that by 1965, other states around the nation were beginning to apply the discovery rule to the accrual of a cause of action in the context of the statute of limitations. See Chrischilles,
Of course, the retroactivity provision was repealed in 1969, and since that time, the only mechanism under the Act to govern the time limitation for the filing of a claim was the two-year statute of limitations under section 25A.13. The majority asserts that the repeal means the statute must be treated as if it never existed, and any intent the provision may have expressed when enacted is no longer valid. This view, of course, permits the majority to use the statute of limitations as a means to resolve the dispute freed from all the history behind the statute that unmistakably expresses an intent to exclude appel-lees’ claim. Yet, the repeal of a statute does not simply erase the slate. Instead, our role is to discern the intent of the legislature behind the repeal, not assume it has a single meaning under all circumstances. The act of repealing a statute has no value in the analysis without determining the intent of the legislature behind the repeal.
Any claim that our legislature intended to capture plaintiffs claim by repealing the retroactive provision in 1969 cannot withstand scrutiny. Such an argument is not only speculative, but it is based upon the faulty premise that our legislature would have read Chrischilles to broadly trans
As mentioned, Chrischilles was not a broad pronouncement, and we did not extend the discovery rule to the statute of limitations under the Iowa Tort Claims Act until 1994. See Vachon,
In partially abrogating sovereign immunity in 1965, our legislature did not intend to apply the discovery rule to the retroac-tivity provision of the Act. Thus, torts committed by the State before 1963, even though the injury was undiscovered, were not “claims” subject to the Act. See Iowa Code § 24A.2(5) (“However, ‘claim’ includes only such claims accruing on or after January 1, 1963.”). Even though we eventually applied the discovery rule to the statute of limitations under the Act in 1994, this event did not bring claims that were previously excluded from the Act’s coverage by virtue of the retroactivity provision back within the scope of the Act. Cf. Frideres v. Schiltz,
I would conclude the legislature never intended claims for torts occurring before 1963 to be subject to the Iowa Tort Claims Act. The only way to conclude otherwise is to essentially ignore the critical issue of the retroactive application of the statute, which the majority has done. By doing this, the majority also ignores our legislature’s intent and has engaged in the very legislating it expressly disavows.
If the 1965 statute were enacted today, I would have no quarrel with the majority in this case. While our role to ascertain legislative intent would remain the same, our approach to the law today would clearly signal a legislative intent to include appel-
CARTER, J., joins this dissent.
. The three statutory exceptions are not helpful to appellees in this case. The only statutory exception that could possibly be applicable to the claims recited in the petition in this case is the fraud exception, as appellees asserted a claim of fraudulent misrepresentation. See Iowa Code § 614.4 (providing that cause of action for fraud does not accrue until the plaintiff discovers the fraud). But see Koppes v. Pearson,
