Thе plaintiff in error commenced an action against the defendant, to recover for an injury claimed to have resulted from the negligent and unskillful attendancе and treatment, as a physician, rendered by defendant under employment to render such service for fee or reward. The date of the professional services resulting in the injury complained of, was March 22, 1892. The petition was filed and the summons issued, which was subsequently served, on March 21, 1896. The statements of fact in the petition wеre full and ample, confessedly stating a cause of action against the defendant, if commenced in time to save it from the running of the statute of limitations. The court below sustained a demurrer to the petition, and dismissed it, on the ground that the action was barred by lapse of time; and plaintiff prosecutes error here sеeking a reversal of that judgment, and a judgment overruling the demurrer,and requiring defendant to answer the claim preferred in the petition.
The demurrer raises the question.of the statute of limitations, and that is the only question in the case. Was the demurrer improperly sustained, or was the action not barred, by lapse of time after the right of action accrued?
The claimed right of action and recovery is based on
It is conceded in argument that the general impression with the profession has been, that actions for malpractice belonged to and were governed by the provisiоns of sec. 4982, and that they were assigned to that section almost, if not quite universally, by the courts. This impression and practice of the courts, it is urged however, is not right; that thе profession has been wrong, and the courts wrong; that by reason of the-essential elements of malice and willful negligence, constituting malpractice, it of right bеlonged to, and ’should have been assigned to the group made up of libel, slander, assault, battery, malicious prosecution and false imprisonment, provided for in sec. 4983, Rev, Stat., and to^which^it was assigned, specially, by the amendment of that'section^in May, 1894.
We are unable”to agree with this proposition, but are clearly of opinion, the cause of action in question was covered
Upon consideration of the whole matter, and believing ■the law to be as here indicated, we find the demurrer was improperly sustained and the petition improperly dismissed, for which error the judgment is reversed, with costs, but no penalty; and the demurrer to the petition is overruled and cause remanded for further proceeding according to law.
