This is a medical malpractice case. Plaintiffs Robert and Cynthia Street brought suit against Dr. A.W. Morris and the City of Anniston, d/b/a Anniston Memorial Hospital, to recover damages for injuries caused by an incorrect pathology report. In April of 1974, Ms. Street had a black mole removed and sent to Anniston Memorial Hospital for analysis. The hospital rendered a report, printed on stationery bearing Dr. Morris's name and dated April 15, 1974, which indicated that the mole was nonmalignant. On February 12, 1978, Ms. Street had a lump removed from her right breast which proved to be a malignancy known as melanoma or "black-mole" cancer. The original slide of the tissue and mole excised in 1974 was re-examined and found to be, in fact, malignant. This action was *28 commenced on August 11, 1978, within six months of the date of the discovery of the melanoma, but more than four years after the erroneous pathology report was issued.
The Streets sued under Code 1975, §
Subsequent to the filing of the complaint, it was discovered that Dr. A.W. Morris had ended his employment with Anniston Memorial Hospital prior to the time of the misdiagnosis. The hospital had continued to utilize his stationery, but a Dr. Kreing Ratanaboul had actually performed the pathological examination of the excised mole. The complaint was amended to add him as a party-defendant. Dr. Morris himself then brought a cross-complaint under the Medical Liability Act seeking to recover damages from the City of Anniston for injuries to his reputation caused by the City's negligence in allowing Dr. Ratanaboul to utilize the stationery of his predecessor.
The defendants moved for summary judgment, contending that these claims were barred by any one of several arguably applicable statutes of limitations:
(1) Code 1975, §
(2) Code 1975, §
(3) Code 1975, §
(4) Code 1975, §
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Anniston Memorial Hospital against the Streets and Dr. Morris, and dismissed the hospital and Dr. Ratanaboul from the action. Shortly after this appeal was filed, Ms. Street died of cancer.
We direct our attention first to the question of whether the plaintiffs' claims are barred by Code 1975, §
At the time of the original misdiagnosis, Title 7, § 25 (1), Code of Alabama 1940 (Recompiled 1958), the predecessor statute to our current Medical Liability Act, was in effect. It read, in pertinent part:
All actions against physicians and surgeons, and dentists for malpractice, error, mistake, or failure to cure, whether based on contract or tort, must be commenced within two years next after the act or omission or failure giving rise to the cause of action, and not afterwards. Provided that if the cause of action is not discovered and could not reasonably have been discovered within such period, then the action may be commenced within six months from the date of such discovery or the date of discovery of facts which would reasonably lead to such discovery, whichever is earlier, provided further that in no event may the action be commenced more than six years after such act. [Emphasis added.]
Under this statute, then, the Streets had six years in which to discover and bring this cause of action. However, in 1975, Code 1975, §
For the reasons discussed herein, we conclude that the legislature, by enacting Code 1975, §
It is true as a general rule that statutes will not be construed to have retrospective effect unless the language of the statute expressly indicates the legislature so intended.Baker v. Baxley,
The question, then, becomes one of legislative intent. Was Code 1975, §
Although Walker specifically held only that the grace period provision of Code 1975, §
[T]he best reasoned discussions, maintain that it is competent for the legislature to modify the terms of prescription at pleasure, and where the prescription has not been completed when the law was changed, the past shall be effaced and the substituted law shall determine the time that bars a recovery. It is certainly allowable, and perhaps would be altogether just that effect should be given to the time past, whenever a change is made in the statute of limitations, so that the term may not be protracted; but if no such provision is made in the new law, we cannot perceive by what authority the courts can give to both statutes a proportional operation. The latter, if not an express, will operate an implied repeal of the former, and thus destroy its effect in toto. . . .
True, the enlarging or lengthening of the term may introduce some seeming incongruities, but these, according to a modification of facts, affect the plaintiff and defendant about equally. Walker, page 633.
Further, if Code 1975, §
Plaintiffs contend, however, that Code 1975, §
Code 1975, §
Plaintiffs attempt to distinguish their case from those cited by pointing out that Raytheon, Hudson and Sellers all involved the introduction of a foreign agent into the body of the plaintiff, while the instant case merely involved an omission on defendant's part. In Sellers, a bulldog clamp was left in the plaintiff's body after an operation; in Hudson, a gauze sponge was not removed during an operation; in Raytheon, the plaintiff's injuries resulted from exposure to radiation. This distinction is unpersuasive, however. Raytheon, Hudson and similar cases were not premised on any physical trespass to the plaintiffs' bodies, but on the occurrence of a legally cognizable injury, no matter how slight, which resulted immediately upon the taking place of the negligent act or omission. In these cases, the Court held that, although the actual injury initially incurred was so slight that it was not discovered until years later, the cause of action accrued, nevertheless, at the time of the act or omission complained of.
Because Code 1975, §
AFFIRMED.
TORBERT, C.J., and MADDOX, JONES and BEATTY, JJ., concur.
