40708. SHESSEL v. STROUP et al.
40708
Supreme Court of Georgia
May 22, 1984
Rehearing Denied June 12, 1984
(316 SE2d 155)
GREGORY, Justice
Murray & Temple, Keith A. Royal, William D. Strickland, for appellee.
GREGORY, Justice.
Brenda Stroup and her husband, Ronald Stroup, brought a malpractice action against Herbert L. Shessel, a medical doctor. They alleged he negligently performed a sterilization procedure on Brenda Stroup with the result she later became pregnant and gave birth to a child. Dr. Shessel contended the action was barred by the limitation period in
The issue to be decided is whether
The record shows Dr. Shessel performed a sterilization procedure on Mrs. Stroup which he referred to as a “bilateral tubal fulguration” and which she called a “bilateral tubal ligation.”1 This was done April 3, 1978. Mrs. Stroup first discovered she was pregnant on or about May 1, 1981, considerably more than two years after the procedure which she alleged was negligently performed. A normal child was born several months later in 1981. Suit was filed November 16, 1982, over four years after the alleged negligent act. The Stroups sought damages for her pain and suffering, costs of the future care and maintenance of the child, medical expenses, loss of consortium, and litigation expenses.
Dr. Shessel filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings relying upon
We dealt with the Limitations of Actions for Medical Malpractice Act, supra, in several cases before our opinion in Clark v. Singer, supra. Three years after its enactment we decided Hamby v. Neurological Assoc., 243 Ga. 698 (256 SE2d 378) (1979). The appellant complained that the two-year limitation for medical malpractice loss of consortium,
Now we have at hand a case in which there is an alleged negligent act constituting medical malpractice in which the negligence produced no injury until more than two years after the alleged negligence occurred. Just as a wrongful death action may not be brought until death occurs, a personal injury claim may not be brought until there is injury.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Clarke, J. who concurs specially and Marshall, P. J., Weltner and Bell, JJ., who dissent.
DECIDED MAY 31, 1984 — REHEARING DENIED JUNE 19, 1984.
Doster, Allen, King & Young, Simuel F. Doster, Jr., for appellant.
Bray, Hilslip, Comer & Simmons, C. Crandle Bray, for appellees.
CLARKE, Justice, concurring specially.
I am able to concur in the judgment because the majority opinion is narrow in its application. I believe
My understanding of the majority reasoning is that a statute of limitations may not bar a cause of action before the cause of action accrues. That is to say that in a tort case all of the elements of the tort must exist prior to the running of the statute of limitations. One of the essential elements of a tort is an injury. We have held that a cause of action accrues, however, before all or even the greater part of the damage has been sustained and that any appreciable and actual harm establishes a cause of action upon which suit may be brought. Jankowski v. Taylor, Bishop & Lee, 246 Ga. 804 (273 SE2d 16) (1980). It may be argued that the failed tubal ligation surgery was an appreciable injury, but this argument lacks validity because the appellee underwent the original operation by consent. The consent of the appellee was in fact a contract, and a claim for expenses of that surgery would sound in contract rather than in tort.
It is the result of the alleged negligence which gives rise to a tort action. In this case, the result is the pregnancy complained of. Until
WELTNER, Justice, dissenting.
I dissent, because the circumstances of this case, as I understand them, come squarely within the provisions of
I am authorized to state that Presiding Justice Marshall joins herein.
