As the district court has already noted, this case presents a most unfortunate situ
I.
Although the government originally filed a motion for summary judgment, it subsequently requested that the court convert the motion to a motion to dismiss for want of subject matter jurisdiction. The district court, following guidance given by this court in
Crawford v. United States,
We summarize only the pertinent facts; we rely upon the discussion in the district court’s opinion for further detail.
Barnhart v. United States,
No. IP 88-274-C (D.Ind. Nov. 28, 1988). We of course would reverse the district court’s grant of the government’s motion to dismiss if there were any set of facts upon which relief might be granted.
Conley v. Gibson,
Barnhart began his long history of treatment by the VA in the late 1960s after experiencing a psychotic episode. He was diagnosed as schizophrenic and was given substantial doses of Thorazine, along with a number of other neuroleptic drugs, on an ongoing basis for ten or more years. During that period he was treated by physicians at VA hospitals in Indiana (Indianapolis), Kentucky (Louisville and Lexington) and California (San Diego). During the mid-1970’s Barnhart apparently began to experience involuntary muscle spasms typical of tardive dyskinesia. Although in 1980 physicians at the San Diego facility considered the possibility that these spasms might indicate early tardive dyskinesia, Barnhart and his mother were not informed of that possibility. By 1983 the VA openly acknowledged in its records that Barnhart had “severe” tardive dyskinesia. The government does not dispute that the first time Barnhart was informed of his condition was after he was seen privately by a neurologist, who on July 13,1983, sent Barnhart’s attorney a letter relaying a diagnosis of “severe tardive dyskinesia from major tranquilizer therapy.” 1
The more general allegations about the impact of the disease on Barnhart’s ability to bring any kind of legal action are somewhat undercut by the fact that Barnhart did in fact bring a suit, within the necessary period of time, against the manufacturer of one of the drugs he took. To the extent that tardive dyskinesia involves a denial process that renders patients incapable of recognizing that they have the disease at all, Barnhart must have been able to overcome that process in time to sue the manufacturer.
Thus the only assertions relevant here are those that provide some explanation why Barnhart’s condition made him specifically unable to proceed against the VA. The physician’s discussion of Barnhart’s particular fears regarding the VA is framed in terms of Barnhart’s underlying emotional problem rather than in terms of the specific effects of tardive dyskinesia:
The patient’s emotional problems have remained severe since the diagnosis of tardive dyskinesia, and would in themselves render him unable to bring an action on his own behalf. While I have diagnosed his schizophrenia as “in remission,” this merely means that the more extreme manifestations of hallucinations and delusions are no longer present. As in almost all such cases, the underlying disorder remains in a crippling form.... First, Steve remains in his own words “very paranoid.” ... In regard to the Veteran’s Administration, he has been especially fearful and para-noid_ In addition, ... [h]e has been afraid to bring a legal action against the VA for fear that in retaliation the VA would reject him from all treatment or injure [him] while in treatment. These fears are a product of Steven’s financial dependency on the VA, his paranoid character and his actual negative experienceswith the VA.... Clearly, while Steve may be labeled as “schizophrenia in remission” he is an emotionally crippled person lacking the autonomy or strength to carry on any kind of stressful or frightening activity on his own behalf. This is of course consistent with the fact he receives a 100% psychiatric disability from the VA.
Supplemental Report at 7-9. If we separate for a moment symptoms that are described as associated with Barnhart’s preexisting emotional condition from those described as characteristic of tardive dys-kinesia, it would seem from the physician’s report that the symptoms specifically responsible for Barnhart’s reluctance to sue the VA (most notably, his paranoid symptoms) derive more from his preexisting emotional condition than from tardive dys-kinesia. However, because we review a motion to dismiss, we will consider also the possibility that Barnhart’s fear of proceeding against the VA was at least partially a result of the tardive dyskinesia as well.
II.
The Federal Tort Claims Act opens an exception to the general rule that the United States is immune from suit, permitting recovery against the federal government for torts committed by agents of the government. However, this limited waiver of immunity is subject to a number of conditions, some of which are set out in 28 U.S.C. section 2401:
(a) Every civil action commenced against the United States shall be barred unless the complaint is filed within six years after the right of action first accrues. The action of any person under legal disability or beyond the seas at the time the claim accrues may be commenced within three years after the disability ceases.
(b) A tort claim against the United States shall be forever barred unless it is presented in writing to the appropriate Federal agency within two years after such claim accrues....
Barnhart has arguably met the requirement of section 2401(a). If we take as given that he first learned of his disability in 1983, then the cause of action began to accrue at that time — and he filed his complaint in the district court in March of 1988, easily within the six-year statute of limitations. However, Barnhart did not file a claim with the VA until 1987, four years after the time the claim accrued and two years after the period of limitations specified by section 2401(b) expired.
Although section 2401(a) contains an exception for persons suffering under a “legal disability,” section 2401(b) contains no similar provision. However, we noted in
Crawford
that it is difficult to draw any conclusion from this omission, for subsection (r) refers to a lawsuit in court and “the tolling provision in (a) may simply have been included to avoid the absurdity of telling a person who as a matter of law cannot sue that he must sue or lose his rights.”
Barnhart’s argument for tolling the administrative statute of limitations rests on an established exception to the so-called “discovery” rule. The “discovery” rule decrees that a cause of action under the Federal Tort Claims Act begins to accrue when a plaintiff discovers or should have discovered the cause of his or her injury.
Drazan v. United States,
As noted, we will proceed under an assumption that seems somewhat dubious from the record — that Barnhart’s specific reluctance to proceed against the VA resulted in some way from his tardive dys-kinesia (and not from paranoia attributable to his ongoing emotional illness). The question we confront is whether, even adopting the interpretation of the “discovery” rule followed by the Eighth, Ninth and Tenth Circuits, the sort of mental disability under which Barnhart suffers would suffice to toll the statute of limitations. The cases permitting such tolling to date have dealt with mental incapacity rendering plaintiffs incapable of “discovering” or understanding the causes of their injuries.
Clifford
and
Washington
involved plaintiffs who were comatose, while
Zeidler
involved a plaintiff who had had two lobotomies. Before
Zeidler,
the Tenth Circuit had already ruled that “insanity” would not toll the statute of limitations.
Casias v. United States,
If Barnhart was able to proceed against the manufacturer of the drug that injured him at an earlier time, he clearly had “discovered” the cause of his injury— and understood it well enough to seek redress. Even if the injury caused by the VA’s alleged malpractice caused Barnhart to develop a specific fear of the VA, thereby preventing him from suing the VA within the applicable time period, the injury clearly did not prevent him from discovering and understanding the cause of that injury. That Barnhart did proceed with a different legal action puts to rest any issue as to his general capacity to bring a legal action.
Cf. Crawford,
We do not here foreclose the possibility that a mental disability preventing a plaintiff from discovering or understanding the cause of an injury (or rendering him or her entirely incapable of bringing a legal action) might toll the statute of limitations in similar cases. However, where the disability at most erodes or impairs a plaintiffs desire to proceed with a recognized cause of action, we can find no support for permitting an exception.
Affirmed
Notes
. Tardive dyskinesia is characterized by varying degrees of loss of voluntary musculature. In
. As we have noted, Barnhart exhibits symptoms of an organic brain disease associated with tardive dyskinesia, tardive dementia. This brain disease is newly discovered and not widely accepted in the medical community at this time; for our purposes, we may take as true that Barnhart suffers the symptoms described and that they derive from his tardive dyskinesia condition, whether or not they can be denominated a separate disease.
.
See also McDonald v. United States,
. We similarly do not reach the issue whether legal incapacity sufficient to toll the section 2401(a) statute of limitations might toll the 2401(b) statute, because there is no sound basis in the documents submitted for concluding that Barnhart was in any way
legally
incapable prior
