Affirmеd by published opinion. Judge K.K. HALL wrote the opinion, in which Judge MURNAGHAN and Judge LUTTIG joined.
OPINION
Susan Vogel appeals an order of the district court granting summary judgment to the defendant hospital in Vogel’s action for violation of the Emergency Medicаl Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA), 42 U.S.C. § 1395dd, and dismissing without prejudice her medical malpractice claim against the dеfendant doctor. Because we find that the EMTALA claim is barred by the statute of limitations, we affirm.
I.
Kara Jae Vogel, seventeen years old and mentally retarded because of Down’s Syndrome, went to Fairfax Hospital on June 20, 1990, to hаve a tube put in her right ear. This procedure was performed on an outpatient basis by Dr. Richard Linde, an otolаr-yngologist.
In the recovery room, Kara’s mother, Susan Vogel, noticed that Kara was moaning and exhibiting signs of extremе pain. She did not know what was wrong, but after some pleading
Kara was released the next morning. She was suffering from a dislocation of her cervical spine, and because the condition was not immediately diagnosed and treated, she had to hаve two cervical vertebrae fused. Her mother alleges that Dr. Linde somehow injured Kara during the surgery and then negligently failed to diagnose her condition.
In April, 1992, Kara invoked a Virginia administrative procedure for medical malpractice claims
Fairfax Hospital moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and Linde moved to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. These motions were denied. Fairfax then moved for summary judgment based on the statute of limitations. Finding that the express statute of limitations in EMTALA is not tolled by infancy or incompetеncy, the district court granted Fairfax’s motion. The court then declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction оver the medical malpractice claim against Dr. Linde, and it dismissed the rest of the case without prejudice.
Vоgel appeals. The Hospital and Linde noted cross-appeals, though they merely assert alternativе bases to affirm.
In EMTALA, Congress attempted to prohibit the so-called “dumping” of indigent persons facing “emergency medical conditions.” Brooks v. Maryland General Hospital,
No aсtion may be brought under this paragraph more than two years after the date of the violation with respect to which the action is brought.
42 U.S.C. § 1395dd(d)(2)(C). The complaint was filed here two years and ten months after the date of the alleged violation. Under the plain language of the statute, the claim is barred.
Vogel nonetheless urges us to toll the statutе of limitations from the date of the violation until she was appointed committee for Kara on accоunt of Kara’s infancy and incompetency. We cannot do so. Exceptions to the running of a limitations period because of the would-be plaintiffs disability, though common, are nonetheless exceptions. The blaekletter rule, recognizеd by the Supreme Court since at least 1883,
It is our duty to apply, rather than аttempt to improve, upon, the clear commands of Acts of Congress. Vogel’s EMTALA action is time-barred.
The judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Both Dr. Linde and hospital personnel apparently feared that Vogel's insurance would not pay for an unnecessаry admission, but they relented when Mrs. Vogel guaranteed that she would pay for the stay personally.
. Va.Code Ann. §§ 8.01-581.1 et seq.
. "[W]e review judgments, not opinions." Hyatt v. Sullivan,
. In Vance v. Vance,
The exceptions from the operation of statutes of limitations, usually accorded to infants and married women, do not rest upon any general doctrine of the law that they cannot be subjected to their action, but in every instance upon express language in those statutes giving them time, after majority or after cessation of cover-ture, to assert their rights.
