Plaintiff-appellant, Betty J. Olsen, seeks to recover for injuries sustained while visiting her physician, defendant-appellee, Francis L. Richards. The district court sustained Richards’ demurrеr on the ground Olsen’s cause is time barred and, after Olsen refused to plead further, dismissed the action. Olsen assigns the dismissal of her action as error. We affirm.
Olsen’s petition was filed on May 22,1987, and avers that on May 26, 1983, she went to Richards’ office “for a scheduled examination and sinus treatment”; that Richards seated her “in a large antique chair consisting of a double-wide steel headrest on top”; and that “ [p]rior to the examination and treatment... Richards situated his hands on the headrest and suddenly and forcefully slammed the hеadrest down” on Olsen’s neck, thereby “causing severe pain and damage to the back of [Olsen’s] neck.”
The sole issue is whether, as Olsen contends, the 4-year statute of limitаtions relating to ordinary negligence, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-207 (Reissue 1985), applies or whether, as Richards urges, either the 2-year malpractice statute of limitations, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-208 (Rеissue 1985), or the 2-year professional negligence statute of limitations, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-222 (Reissue 1985), controls. Obviously, if the ordinary negligence statute of limitations governs, Olsen’s actiоn is not time barred; however, if either the malpractice or professional negligence statute of limitations covers the situation, Olsen’s action is so barred.
Olsen’s thesis is that her action is regulated by § 25-207 *300 because she has alleged an act of “ordinary negligence.” Richards’ theory is that as the act of adjusting the examination chair was an integral part of his examination of Olsen as his patient and arose out of the same circumstances as any other act performed by a physician in the course of such an examination аnd treatment, one or the other of the shorter statutes of limitations rules the outcome.
In
Swassing v. Baum,
“A ‘professional’ act or service is one arising out of a vocation, calling, occupation, or employment involving specialized knowledge, labor, or skill, and the labor or skill involved is predominantly mental or intellectual, rather than physical or manual. * * * In determining whether a particular act is of a professional nature or a ‘professional service’ we must look not to the title or character of the party performing the act, but to the аct itself.” ... It is thus irrelevant, in determining whether [the employee] was performing a professional service at the time of the alleged negligence, to show what the title of her position with [the physician] was, or what her status was denominated. The court must look to the nature of the act itself and the circumstances under which it was performеd.
(Emphasis in original.)
Swassing
v.
Baum
at 656,
The Swassing court concluded:
The performance of the blood test was an essential and integral part of the rendition of professional services by [the physician] to [the plaintiff]. When [the plaintiff] presented herself to [the physician] ... for examination *301 and diagnosis, a professional relationship, in this case, doctor-patient, was created. This prоfessional relationship was the stimulus for the performance of the blood typing test on [the plaintiff], and the test and the interpretation of its results all occurred during the course of the professional relationship.
Id.
In
Stacey v. Pantano,
We do not think that the advice and the statements of a physician as to the naturе and cause of a patient’s condition, as a part of the necessities of treating and consulting with the patient, are separable. They are the essentials to the performance of the physician’s whole duty to the patient. We do not think that the Legislature, when it enacted the special limitation statute of 2 years оn malpractice intended to separate certain portions of the whole physician-patient relationship and apply a confusing standard of 2 and 4 years to different portions of that relationship, or to require the courts to make such a nebulous and difficult fact separation and determination.
(Emphasis
supplied.)Id.
at 697,
More recently, we have held that the professional negligence statute of limitations applies to a claim against a physician for misrepresentation of the effeсts of x-ray treatment for chronic asthma, saying, “[A]ny professional misconduct or any unreasonable lack of skill or fidelity in the performance of professional оr fiduciary duties is ‘malpractice’ and comes within the professional or malpractice statute of limitations.”
Colton v. Dewey,
A similar faсt situation to the present case was considered in
Stanley
v.
Lebetkin,
[The plaintiff’s] allegations establish that the duty the defendant is charged with violating arose from the physician-patient relationship and was substantially related to his treatment of the plaintiff. Had the plaintiff not consulted the defendant in his capacity as a physician, therе would have been no reason for her to be on his examining table in the first place. It was only his awareness of her complaints, acquired in the course of that relаtionship, when coupled with his knowledge as a physician, which would give rise to a duty to assist her on or off the table, or to keep her “under constant surveillance in view of her complaints” (emphasis supplied). Such acts, if negligent, constitute malpractice..
Id.
at 855,
It can only be inferred from Olsen’s averments that when the alleged act of negligencе occurred, Richards was positioning Olsen for the purpose of rendering her a service in his role as her physician.
As in
Swassing
v.
Baum,
Thus, the 4-year ordinary negligence statute of limitations does not apply to the action Olsеn has pled. Inasmuch as her action is time barred irrespective of which, if not both, of the two shorter statutes govern, we need not and therefore do not concеrn ourselves with the nicety of distinguishing between the spheres within which each of those statutes operates.
If a petition alleges a cause of action ostensibly bаrred by the statute of limitations and fails to allege some excuse tolling the operation and bar of the statute, the petition fails to allege sufficient facts to сonstitute a cause of action and is subject to a demurrer.
Ames
v.
Hehner,
Affirmed.
