OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment entered against plaintiffs. The trial court found that plaintiffs’ survival and wrongful death suits, filed three months after the deceased’s death, were barred by statutes of limitations. We affirm.
Plaintiffs are Betty Parr Russell (individually and as independent executrix of the estate of Donnon O’Neal Russell), Norma Lynn Coker, Gail Lee Harrah, Jeannie Ma *244 rie Bourgoin, and Dennis O’Neal Russell. We refer to them as plaintiffs.
Defendants in this appeal are Ingersoll-Rand Company, McKenzie Equipment Company, Schramm, Inc., Cooper Industries, Inc., Joy Manufacturing Company, IC Group, Inc., and Sullair Corporation. When necessary to distinguish them from other defendants in the trial below, we refer to them collectively as the “Ingersoll-Rand defendants.”
Donnon Russell worked as a sandblaster and painter for about 19 years. In 1981, Mr. Russell discovered he had silicosis, a lung disease, and that he probably developed it from working as a sandblaster. In December 1982, he filed suit against several corporations that manufactured or distributed the products his employer used in sandblasting. Mr. Russell did not sue the Ingersoll-Rand defendants. Mr. Russell died in January 1988.
In March 1988, Betty Parr Russell, individually and as executrix of her husband’s estate, filed a fourth amended original petition. In that petition, she added survival and wrongful death causes of action, additional plaintiffs, and the Ingersoll-Rand defendants.
I. Standard of review
When the Ingersoll-Rand defendants moved for summary judgment, they were required to prove conclusively all the essential elements of their defenses, leaving no unresolved fact issues.
Montgomery v. Kennedy,
By moving for summary judgment on grounds of limitations, the Ingersoll-Rand defendants assumed the burden of showing, as a matter of law, that the suit was barred by limitations.
Delgado v. Burns,
II. The statute of limitations
In points one through five and point eight, plaintiffs argue that the Ingersoll-Rand defendants did not show, as a matter of law, that plaintiffs did not sue them within the limitations period.
The issue presented in this case is: When do the statutes of limitations begin to run on survival and wrongful death suits? Plaintiffs contend the death of Mr. Russell revived the causes of action against the Ingersoll-Rand defendants, even though limitations had run against Mr. Russell. The Ingersoll-Rand defendants claim that if it was too late for Mr. Russell to sue them, it was too late for Mr. Russell’s estate and his statutory heirs to sue them.
Until fairly recent times, the right of action for personal injuries did not survive the death of the injured person. 4 F. Harper, F. James & 0. Gray,
The Law of Torts
§ 24.1 (2d ed. 1986) (hereinafter Harper). Actions that survived the death of the victim were created by legislation; they were not part of the common law.
See Moreno v. Sterling Drug Co.,
The Texas scheme for death actions includes a survival cause of action and a wrongful death cause of action.
Landers v. B.F. Goodrich Co.,
Plaintiffs contend subsection (b) of section 16.003, entitled “Two-Year Limitations Period,” controls the statutes of limitation *245 in both survival and wrongful death suits. That subsection states:
A person must bring suit not later than two years after the day the cause of action accrues in an action for injury resulting in death. The cause of action accrues on the death of the injured person.
Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.003(b) (Vernon 1986) (emphasis' added).
Plaintiffs argue that the plain language of section 16.003(b) says the limitations period begins to run when the cause of action accrues — upon the death of the injured person. They maintain, therefore, that they filed the survival action (and the wrongful death suit) within the limitations period (three months after Mr. Russell died).
The Ingersoll-Rand defendants say that plaintiffs’ suits are derivative of Mr. Russell’s injury. Mr. Russell discovered his injury in 1981, and died in 1988. If we assume Mr. Russell had a four-year limitations period in which to sue those defendants, 1 it expired sometime in 1985. At the time of his death, therefore, Mr. Russell could not have sued the Ingersoll-Rand defendants. Defendants claim that the same statutes of limitations that could have been asserted against Mr. Russell can be asserted against his estate and beneficiaries. If he could not file a suit against them at the time of his death, his estate and survivors are also barred from filing suit.
Plaintiffs contend we should resolve the issues by looking to chapter 16 in the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Defendants argue that plaintiffs rely on the wrong statute. Instead of chapter 16 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, defendants contend we should look to chapter 71, which states in part:
This subchapter applies only if the individual injured would have been entitled to bring an action for the injury if he had lived.
Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 71.003(a) (Vernon 1986) (emphasis added).
The problem confronting this Court is how to harmonize sections 16.003(b) and 71.003(a) of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, and how these sections affect both survival and wrongful death causes of action. Although the parties argue the two as one, we will discuss them separately.
A. The survival action
Recall that the purpose of the Texas Survival Act is to continue the decedent’s cause of action beyond his death to redress decedent’s estate for decedent’s injuries.
Landers,
(a) A cause of action for personal injury to the health, reputation, or person of an injured person does not abate because of the death of the injured person....
Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 71.021 (Vernon 1986). The intent of the section is to abrogate the common law rule that the death of the party extinguished the cause of action.
Plaintiffs argue that
Bradley v. Etessam,
Plaintiffs also cite
Bradley v. Burnett,
We agree with both cases. In Etessam, the wife filed suit against the defendant for her injuries within the time limits for her personal injuries. According to section 71.021(a), her death did not abate the cause of action for her personal injuries. Within two years of her death, her husband added a survival action. According to subsection (b) of section 16.003, he had two years following her death to file the survival suit.
In Burnett, the widow filed suit against the defendant for decedent’s injuries within the time limits for decedent’s own suit. According to section 71.021(a), the decedent’s death did not abate the cause of action for his personal injuries. According to subsection (b) of section 16.003, the widow had two years following her husband’s death to file the survival suit.
In both cases, the suit (whether the original or the survival suit) was filed within two years of the decedent’s last treatment. Because the statute had not run against the decedent’s suit, it did not run against the survivor’s suit.
Here, the statute had run against the decedent’s suit against the Ingersoll-Rand defendants before plaintiffs filed their survival suit against them. We hold that a survival cause of action is purely derivative, and the Ingersoll-Rand defendants had a limitations defense against the plaintiffs. It would be strange, indeed, to hold otherwise: If Mr. Russell was not interested in suing the Ingersoll-Rand defendants during his lifetime, there is no reason his estate should be able to revive the cause of action after limitations to collect compensation for Mr. Russell’s injuries.
We recognize that in Moreno, the supreme court made the statement:
Article 3202 3 was meant solely to prevent the potential anomaly of limitations running before death.
Our holding is in harmony with policy statements from the
Moreno
case. The court observed in
Moreno
that the primary purpose of statutes of limitation is to compel the exercise of a right of action within a reasonable time so that the opposing party has a fair opportunity to defend while witnesses are available.
*247 Our opinion today is also in harmony with all the decisions from the courts of appeals that have addressed the question. Based on the case law from the courts of appeals, we have no authority to reach any other conclusion than we reach today. If the courts of appeals have misunderstood the legislature or the Supreme Court, it is for them to correct us. We overrule plaintiffs’ points of error about the survival action.
B. The wrongful death action
Recall that the purpose of the Texas Wrongful Death Act is to compensate decedent’s beneficiaries for their loss of future care, maintenance, and support.
Castillo v. Hidalgo County Water Dist. No. 1,
Section 71.002:
(a) An action for actual damages arising from an injury that causes an individual’s death may be brought if liability exists under this section.
(b) A person is liable for damages arising from an injury that causes an individual’s death if the injury was caused by the person’s or his agent’s or servant’s wrongful act, neglect, carelessness, uns-killfulness, or default.
Section 71.003:
(a) This subchapter applies only if the individual injured would have been entitled to bring an action for the injury if he had lived.
Section 71.004:
(a) An action to recover damages as provided in this subchapter is for the exclusive benefit of the surviving spouse, children, and parents of the deceased.
(Emphasis added.) Defendants contend the phrase “if he had lived” renders the action derivative. Plaintiffs contend the same phrase merely requires an actionable tort for a recovery.
The parties’ interpretations reflect the two lines of authority on whether a wrongful death action is genuinely derivative, or whether it must merely be based on an actionable tort. See generally, Harper § 24.7. Some states regard the wrongful death suit as derivative. Those states construe the clause “if death had not ensued” (or as in our statute, “if he had lived”), as rendering the action genuinely derivative. Id. If the statute of limitation runs against the decedent at the time of his death, those states hold the beneficiaries may not bring a suit for wrongful death. Id.
Other states regard the wrongful death suit as a new and independent cause of action. Those states interpret the clause “if death had not ensued” as requiring simply an actionable tort as the basis. Id. Even if the statute of limitations has run against the decedent at the time of his death, those states hold that it does not bar the cause of action for wrongful death.
The Texas Supreme Court recently held that section 16.003(b) provides that a cause of action for wrongful death accrues when the injured person dies.
Moreno,
We deal with the converse of the Moreno problem here: not how late a wrongful death beneficiary may wait to file the action, but how soon the beneficiary may file the action.
We have already established that at his death, Mr. Russell could not have sued the Ingersoll-Rand defendants. Because Mr. Russell could not bring an action against them, defendants argue, under section 71.-003, neither could plaintiffs bring a wrongful death action. Defendants assert that the wrongful death action is derived from Mr. Russell’s suit, and is therefore barred by the same limitations period that would have barred a suit by Mr. Russell.
Plaintiffs concede that Texas courts have held that if a decedent’s personal injury
*248
claim would have been barred by a statute of limitations, the wrongful death claim is barred by the same statute of limitations. In
Davenport v. Phillip Morris, Inc.,
Plaintiffs argue that
Etessam,
In Burnett, the Dallas Court of Appeals held that the wrongful death suit grew out of the same transaction as the original suit. Again, we agree with Burnett. If at the time of Mr. Russell’s death, he had not filed suit against the Ingersoll-Rand defendants, but limitations had not yet run, plaintiffs could have brought a wrongful death claim against them. Or, as in Burnett, if limitations had not expired after Mr. Russell’s death, plaintiffs could have filed a survival action, and later amended it to include a wrongful death claim. We have, however, already held that plaintiffs could not bring a survivor’s suit against the Ingersoll-Rand defendants, because the limitations period had expired.
The courts of appeals cases we have reviewed treat the Texas wrongful death action as a derivative action. 4 No court has, however, reconciled sections 16.003(b) and 71.003(a) of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. These sections, on their face, seem to be irreconcilable. We believe that they can be reconciled, by reading section 71.-003(a) to apply to the right to file a wrongful death suit, and 16.003(b) to govern the time period for filing the suit. The plaintiffs in this case never had the right to file a wrongful death suit.
We overrule plaintiffs’ points as to the wrongful death claim.
III. Constitutionality of Chapter 16
In points six and seven, plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because the application of the statute of limitations in chapter 16 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code is unconstitutional and contrary to public policy.
When a party challenges a statute on grounds of constitutionality, we begin our analysis by presuming the statute is valid.
Sax v. Votteler,
In
Moreno,
the court held section 16.-003(b) was not unconstitutional.
Notes
. In the last amended pleading, plaintiffs alleged causes of action against the Ingersoll-Rand defendants for: strict liability (two-year statute), negligence (two-year statute of limitation), misrepresentation (two-year statute), and breach of warranty (four-year statute).
. The malpractice action was governed by a two-year statute of limitation, as set out in Tex. Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4590i, § 10.01 (Vernon 1985).
. The predecessor to Tex.Civ.Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.003 (Vernon 1986).
. Defendants cite a federal case very similar to this one, which also supports their argument. In
Terry v. Tyler Pipe Indus.,
