Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the Court,
We granted the application for writ of error in this ease to decide whether the statute of limitations contained in section 10.01 of the Medical Liability and Insurance Improvement Act (Medical Liability Act)
In May 1988, Dr. Bruce Weiner performed surgery on Emmanuel Wasson, who was then fifteen years old. The surgery required insertion of surgical pins into Wasson’s right femur. On his last visit in June 1988, Was-son complained to Weiner of constant pain in his hip and of his need for crutches. In August 1988, Wasson saw another physician, who took x-rays of his hip. The x-rays showed that one of the surgical pins was protruding into Wasson’s right hip joint. Wasson later underwent two additional surgeries, but they did not relieve his constant pain. Wasson turned eighteen on December 16, 1990, and a few months later underwent surgery for the total replacement of his right hip.
On August 25,1992, Wasson filed suit against Weiner, alleging that Weiner’s negligence caused the painful destruction of his right hip joint and necessitated the hip replacement surgery. Weiner moved for summary judgment on two grounds. Weiner first urged that section 10.01 of the Medical Liability Act, which establishes a two-year statute of limitations for health care liability claims, barred Wasson’s claim. Weiner also argued that even if the limitations period was tolled during Wasson’s minority, Wasson’s claim was nevertheless barred because Was-son failed to file suit within a “reasonable time” after attaining majority. The trial court granted Weiner’s motion for summary judgment without specifying the grounds. The court of appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded the case for further proceedings, holding that our opinion in Sax compels the conclusion that section 10.01 of the Medical Liability Act is unconstitutional as applied to minors.
I
We begin our inquiry by reviewing the history of the medical malpractice statute of limitations in Texas. In 1975, as part of the Professional Liability Insurance for Physicians, Podiatrists, and Hospitals Act, the Legislature enacted article 5.82, section 4, of the Texаs Insurance Code, which purported to restrict the period available for minors to bring medical malpractice actions. See Sax,
Notwithstanding any other law, no claim against a [health care provider] ... may be commenced unless the action is filed within two years of the breach or the tort complained of or from the date the medical treatment that is the subject of the claim or the hospitalization for which the claim is made is completed, except that minors under the age of six years shall have until their eighth birthday in which to file, orhave filed on their behalf, such claim. Except as herein provided, this section applies to all persons regardless of minority or other legal disability.
Tex.Ins.Code art. 5.82, § 4 (emphasis added) (hereinafter, article 5.82). When article 5.82 was repealed on August 29, 1977, the Legislature replaced it with section 10.01 of the Medical Liability Act, which provides:
Notwithstanding any other law, no health care liability claim may be commenced unless the action is filed within two years from the occurrence of the breach or tort or from the date the medical or health care treatment that is the subject of the claim or the hospitalization for which the claim is made is completed; prоvided that, minors under the age of 12 years shall have until their Hth birthday in which to file, or have filed on their behalf, the claim. Except as herein provided, this subchapter applies to all persons regardless of minority or other legal disability.
Tex.Rev.Civ.StatAnn. art. 4590i, § 10.01 (emphasis added) (hereinafter, section 10.01). As we have observed before, other than specifying different ages by which minors must bring claims, section 10.01 and article 5.82 are substantially the same. See Sax,
In 1983, this Court unanimously held that article 5.82 was unconstitutional as applied to minors under the open courts provision of article I, section 13 of the Texas Constitution.
Thus, we first considered whether article 5.82 “effectively abrogated” a child’s right to bring a medical malpractice cause of action. Under article 5.82, the limitations period was tolled until a child reached age six, and upon reaching age six, a child, like an adult, was required to bring suit within two years. We observed, however, that a child lacks legal capacity to bring suit dining minority unless the minor’s legal disability has been removed. Although parents, guardians, or next friends may as adults be legally capable of bringing suit on a child’s behalf during minority, we held that the possibility that an adult might act on the child's behalf did not vindicate the total abrogation of the child’s cause of action. Sax,
We then considered whether the legislative purpose of article 5.82 outweighed the deprivation of a child’s rights under the open courts provision. Although the Legislature enacted article 5.82 for the legitimate purpose of restraining the escalating cost of liability insurance for health care providers, we concluded that the means used to achieve this purpose were not “reasonable when they [were] weighed against the effective abrogation of a child’s right to redress.” Sax,
II
Applying the principles articulated in Sax to this case, the court of appeals held that section 10.01, like its predecessor article 5.82, is unconstitutional as applied to minors because it purports to cut off Wasson’s cause of action before he reaches majority, an age at whiсh he may lawfully sue on his own behalf.
Weiner contends that Sax does not control this case, pointing to the following excerpt from the Court’s opinion in an attempt to distinguish it:
If the parents, guardians, or next friends of the child negligently fail to take action in the child’s behalf within the time provided by article 5.82, the child is precluded from asserting his cause of action under that statute. Furthermore, the child is precluded from suing his parents on account of their negligence, due to the doctrine of parent-child immunity. Felderhoff v. Felderhoff,473 S.W.2d 928 (Tex.1971).
Sax,
Jilani did not change the law governing parent-child immunity articulated in Felder-hoff. To the contrary, the Jilani court applied the Felderhoff test.
Additionally, arguing that Wasson had a parent who was capable of bringing suit within the two-year limitations period. Weiner urges us to either overrule Sax, or limit the holding to its facts. We decline to do so.
In Sax, a unanimous Court explicitly considered and rejected the argument that the ability of child’s parent to bring suit on behalf of the child was a reasonable substitute — the same argument made by Weiner in this case. See Sax,
In short, Weiner presents no arguments that were not considered in Sax, nor does he demonstrate that Sax was wrongly decided. Of course, we have, on occasion and
Although the dissenting justices agree with Weiner that Sax can be limited to its facts, we are unpersuaded. Based on the same principles we relied upon in Sax, just two years ago this Court held that even the commencement of a lawsuit by a mental incompetent and his wife did not affect the tolling of limitations during the period of the mental incompetent’s legal disability. Ruiz v. Conoco, Inc.,
Access to the courts does not alone provide a legally incapacitated person a viable opportunity to protect his legal rights. The disability of a person of unsound mind is not only the lack of access to the courts, but also the inability to participate in, control, or even understand the progression and disposition of their lawsuit.... [T]he purpose and scope of the tolling provision as applied to minors and persons of unsound mind, extends beyond merely ensuring their access to the courts.
Id. at 755 (citations omitted) (emphasis added). Thus, consistent application of our legal principles dictates that the failure of a parent to bring suit on behalf of a minor, a person under legal disability, does not affect the tolling of limitations. See Ruiz at 756 (“[I]f ... [the guardian ad litem,] having instituted an action within the statutory period, discontinues it, the rights of the infant are not prejudiced thereby, and he may still take advantage of his disability, the action not being barred until the lapse of the statutory period after he comes of age.”) (quoting M.C. Dransfield, Annotation, Appointment of Guardian for Incompetent or for Infant as Affecting Running of Statute of Limitations Against Ward, 86 A.L.R.2D 965, 976 (1962)).
Weiner notes that this Court has previously decided thе constitutionality of section 10.01 on an “as applied” or case-by-case basis, see Nelson v. Krusen,
Having determined that section 10.01 is unconstitutional as applied to minors, we must now determine the limitations period that applies to a minor’s medical malpractice claims. Wasson argues that he is entitled to pursue his lawsuit within two years after attaining majority under sections 16.001 and 16.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Weiner, on the other hand, argues that a minor has only a “reasonable time” after attaining majority in which to file suit, relying in part on this Court’s decision in Nelson v. Krusen,
The reasonable-time rule is a court-made standard, which has heretofore been applied only in a limited number of cases involving adult plaintiffs who, because of the nature of their claim, did not have a reasonable opportunity to discover their injuries and bring suit within a prescribed limitations period. See Nelson v. Krusen,
Rather than fashioning a rule of our own making and applying it to minor plaintiffs, we think it is more appropriate to look to the general limitations provisions enacted by the Legislature. Sections 16.001 and 16.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code together provide a general statute of limitations for minors’ personal injury claims.
We therefore hold that Wasson had two years after attaining age eighteen to bring suit for the acts of medical malpractice allegedly committed during his minority. We affirm the judgment of the court of appeals and remand this cause to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
OWEN, J., joined by PHILLIPS, C.J., and HECHT, J., dissents.
Notes
. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4590Í, § 10.01 (Vernon Supp.1994).
. When a trial court grants summary judgment without specifying the grounds, the summary judgment must be affirmed on appeal if any of the theories advanced are meritorious. Carr v. Brasher,
. The open courts provision states:
All courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.
Tejí Const, art I, § 13.
. Under both Jilani and Felderhoff, the parent-child immunity doctrine prevents suits by a child against a parent with respect to "alleged acts of ordinary negligence which involve a reasonable exercise of parental authority or the exercise of ordinary parental discretion with respect to provisions for the care and necessities of the child.” Jilani,
. These provisions date back to at least 1911. See Sax,
. Section 16.003 provides:
(a) A person must bring suit for ... personal injury ... not later than two years after the day the cause of action accrues.
Tex.Civ.Peac. & Rem.Code § 16.003.
. Section 16.001 provides:
(a) For purposes of this subchapter, a person is under a legal disability if the person is:
(1) younger than 18 years of age, regardless of whether the person is married; or
(2) of unsound mind.
(b) If a person entitled to bring a personal action is under a legal disability when the cause of action accrues, the time of the disability is not included in a limitations period.
TexCiv.Prac. & Rem.Code § 16.001.
.We note that when faced with the unconstitutionality of medical malpractice statutes similar to § 10.01, several other states have also applied the general tolling statute. See Whitlow v. Board of Educ.,
Dissenting Opinion
joined by PHILLIPS, Chief Justice, and HECHT, Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. I would hold that as applied to the facts of this case, section 10.01 of the Medical Liability and Insurance Improvement Act does not violate the open
My principal concern is that the Court has taken such an expansive view of the scope of the open courts provision that no statute of limitations aimed at limiting the claims of minors can pass constitutional muster. The Court has tied the hands of the Legislature far beyond what was ever envisioned by the drafters of our Texas Constitution. It does so based on what I believe is an incorrect application of Sax v. Votteler,
The Legislature had the Sax decision before it in 1993 when it renewed and extended section 10.01 of article 4590i until the year 2009. See Medical Liability and Insurance Imрrovement Act, 73rd Leg., R.S., ch. 625, § 3, 1993 Tex.Gen.Laws 2347, 2347. When the Legislature enacted the changes to the statute held unconstitutional in Sax, it articulated strong policy considerations underpinning those changes. We should not presume, because of the result in Sax, that the newer statute is unconstitutional. Rather, we should apply the principles articulated in Sax and examine the newer statute and the rationale supporting its enactment, as applied to the facts of this case. Under the facts of this case, section 10.01 is constitutional. I would reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the case to the trial court for any further development of facts in light of this holding.
I
At the time Weiner performed surgery on Emmanuel Wasson in May of 1988, Wasson was fifteen years old. Weiner last treated Wasson in June of 1988. In that same year, it is undisputed that Wasson was aware not only that the results of this treatment were unsatisfactory to him, but that he had a claim against Weiner. By August of 1988, Wasson was aware of each and every injury for which he now seeks recovery. Wasson and his mother knew that he would have to undergo total hip replacement and believed this was a direct result of negligent medical treatment by Weiner. In fact, Wasson’s mother filed a grievance against Weiner with the Medical Grievance Committee in 1988. Prior to May of 1990, within the two-year limitation period prescribed by section 10.01, Wasson’s mother retained an attorney to represent her son. Yet suit was not filed until August of 1992, more than four years after Weiner last saw Wasson. No explanation has been provided for this delay.
Weiner invoked the statute of limitations applicable to claims for medical malpractice, section 10.01 of article 4590L
II
The Court’s basis for striking down the statute before us is the open courts provision of the Texas Constitution. Tex. Const, art. I, § 13. Over the years our Court gradually has expanded the reach of this provision.
A detailed history of the origins of the open courts provision and of our earliest decisions construing it can be found in LeCroy v. Hanlon,
Just recently, this Court acknowledged that historically, the courts of Texas did not have an expansive view of the open courts provision. Trinity River Auth. v. URS Consultants, Inc.,
If ... the act of which the injury was the natural sequence was a legal injury, — by which is meant an injury giving cause of action by reason of its being an invasion of a plaintiffs right, — then, be the damage however slight, limitation will run from the time the wrongful act was committed, and will bar an action for any damages resulting from the act.... [A] mere want of knowledge by the owner of injury to his property does not prevent the running of the statute.
Id. at 236,
The import of this recognition in Trinity is that there can be no doubt that the Texas courts in the Kennedy era never contemplated that the open courts provision of our Constitution precluded the Legislature from implementing a statute of limitations applicable to the claims of minors.
As an historical note, the 1869 Reconstruction Constitution contained not only the open courts provision (as is the case with all six Texas Constitutions), but also included article XII, section 14, which afforded express protection for the rights of infants, married women, and insane persons. Limitations was not permitted to run until at least seven years after the removal of their “respective legal disabilities.” If the open courts provision was intended to provide essentially the same protection, the inclusion of this provision would have been unnecessary. However, I would not base the result in this case on such a slim reed, particularly in light of the subsequent decisions of our Court which have added more substance and contours to the open courts provision.
One of the earliest decisions of this Court to address the open courts provision in a context broader than physical access to the courts or unreasonable bond requirements was Middleton v. Texas Power & Light Co.,
The United States Supreme Court affirmed Middleton, concluding that there had beеn no deprivation of due process or liberty under the United States Constitution. Middleton v. Texas Power & Light Co.,
This Court next had occasion to consider article I, section 13, in two cases involving attempts by municipalities to limit their liability for defects in streets and sidewalks. The first was Hanks v. City of Port Arthur,
It was not until Lebohm v. City of Galveston,
In Lebohm, we capsulized the import of the open courts section of our state constitution as follows:
Thus it may be seen that legislative action withdrawing common-law remedies for well established common-law causes of action for injuries to one’s “lands, goods, person or reputation” is sustained only when it is reasonable in substituting other remedies, or when it is a reasonable exercise of the police power in the interest of the general welfare. Legislative action of this type is not sustained when it is arbitrary or unreasonable.
Id. at 955.
In applying these principles to the charter provision in Lebohm, we held that no broad policy or general welfare considerations were advanced to justify the city’s complete bar of claims as a reasonable exercise of the police power. We observed that we “could think of none inasmuch as the effect of the provision extends only to the city limits of the City.” Importantly, however, we noted:
In this connection, we are not to be understood as holding that the Legislature could not by general law abolish all causes of actions against cities for injuries growing out of simple negligence in the maintenance of streets.
Id.
We thus recognized in Lebohm that there may be instances in which the state can abolish common-law causes of action altogether if broad public policy or general welfare considerations exist. We adhered to this statement of the law in Waites v. Son-dock,
The decision in Sax, which the Court today finds dispositive, likewise relied on Lebohm, and quoted the passage from Lebohm which recognizes that even if no reasonable remedy is substituted, the Legislature may nevertheless withdraw common-law remedies in the exercise of the police power for the general welfare as long as the legislative action is not arbitrary or unreasonable. Sax,
We hold, therefore, that the right to bring a well-established common law cause of action cannot be effectively abrogated by the legislature absent a showing that the legislative basis for the statute outweighs the denial of the constitutionally-guaranteed right of redress. In applying this test, we consider both the general purpose of the statute and the extent to which the litigant’s right to redress is affected.
Id, at 665-66 (emphasis added).
However, subsequent decisions hаve focused more on the last sentence of the foregoing passage, “the extent to which the litigant’s right to redress is affected,” rather than focusing on whether the abolition of a common-law cause of action was a reasonable exercise of police power. Most notably, in the case of Lucas v. United States,
[wjhile Sax does not necessarily compel an incorrect analysis, in practice it has resulted in an almost exclusive focus on “the extent to which the litigant’s right to redress is affected,” with an almost total disregard of “the general purpose of the statute.”
Id. at 716.
He noted that in Sax and its progeny, this Court has emphasized the nature and extent of the restriction on common-law causes of action to the virtual exclusion of other factors. “[T]he Court’s ‘first concern’ has been the absence of adequate substitute remedies.” Id. at 717. Thе shortcoming of such an approach is that it leaves judges with unfettered discretion to rely on their own personal predilections in determining whether the substituted remedy is reasonable, without considering the right of the Legislature to exercise its police power and to weigh the competing considerations for itself. The reasonableness of the substituted remedy has been balanced against the reasonableness and necessity of the legislation and its underlying purposes. See generally Lucas,
Chief Justice Phillips advocated that the Court return to the language of Lebohm and separate the issue of a reasonable alternative remedy from the issue of a reasonable exercise of police power:
If the Legislature has provided or left in place a reasonable alternative remedy, judicial scrutiny is at an end, and properly so. The Legislature should have absolute discretion to substitute one adequate remedy for another, without its choice being subjected to judicial re-evaluation. If the Legislature has not provided or left in place a reasonable alternative remedy, however, the Constitution requires a second, separate inquiry. The courts must independently determine if thе legislative action constitutes a reasonable exercise of the police power.
Lucas,
Chief Justice Phillips correctly concluded that the determination of whether there had been a reasonable exercise of police power would not be satisfied by a mere finding that
A “reasonable exercise of the police power in the interest of the general welfare” thus requires that the statute address an important, not merely a legitimate, state interest, that such interest be perceived and articulated by the state, and that the remedies provided bear a real relationship to the social evil being addressed.
Id.
I would apply the test found in Lebohm and in Chief Justice Phillips’ dissent in Lucas, which is not at odds with the test set out in Sax. To do otherwise is to restrict the Legislature unduly in carrying out its obligations under our Constitution: to exercise its police power where necessary to “amelio-rat[e] a rationally perceived social evil.” Id. Today’s decision gives undue and overriding emphasis to the nature and extent of the restriction of common-law causes of action. The Court concludes that the minor’s cause of action has been totally abrogated and that no reasonable substitute has bеen provided. The Court concludes without discussion that section 10.01 is not a reasonable exercise of the police power.
I turn to the questions to be answered under the test set forth in Lebohm and in Sax: 1) if a common-law cause of action has been restricted or withdrawn by the Legislature, does section 10.01 substitute a reasonable remedy, and 2) if no reasonable remedy was substituted, is section 10.01 nevertheless a reasonable exercise of police power by the Legislature.
Ill
A
The linchpin of the Court’s holding today is that because of Wasson’s legal disability as a minor, he could not bring suit in his own right until he reached majority. Accordingly, the Court concludes that the open courts provision would be violated if section 10.01 cut off his cause of action before he had the legal capacity to bring suit. There is no contention that Wasson otherwise would have been incompetent to bring suit.
It is beyond dispute that the Legislature has the power to remove the legal disability of a minor such as Wasson. The legal disability is itself a statutory creation, Tex.Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code § 16.001, and in numerous areas, our laws recognize that even before legal majority is attained, older minors may be entrusted with certain decisions, and they are aсcountable for their actions. Children as young as fifteen may be certified for criminal punishment as adults. Tex.Pam.Code § 54.02. At age twelve, the Family Code allows a minor to choose his or her managing conservator “by writing filed with the court,” subject to court approval. Tex.Fam.Code § 14.07(a). Similarly, a minor twelve years and older may select his or her own guardian of their person or estate subject to court approval. Tex.PROB.Code § 118(a). In many instances, requiring a minor to bring a medical malpractice claim by age fourteen would not be unreasonable or arbitrary, particularly in light of the ways in which the law differentiates between children of various ages.
An argument can be mounted that section 10.01 removed the legal disability of minors age twelve and over for purposes of bringing a medical malpractice action. The text of section 10.01 suggests such a construction: “minors under the age of 12 years shall have until their 14th birthday in which to file, or have filed on their behalf, the claim.” Tex. Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 4590i, § 10.01 (Vernon Supp.1994) (emphasis added).
The Court in Sax did not consider whether there had been a removal of disability by the Legislature for purposes of instituting medical malpractice actions. Sax appears to have assumed that minors could not bring suit on their own behalf. See Barlow v. Humana, Inc.,
However, I do not believe it is reasonable to construe section 10.01 as lowering the age of a minor’s disability. The practical problems inherent in such a construction include the fact that the legal disability was not expressly removed for purposes of entering into a contract, which presumably would be necessary to enable a minor personally to
Nevertheless, the fact that the Legislature could have removed the legal disability of a minor such as Wasson and accordingly, could have removed any open courts question is highly significant. The Legislature unmistakably indicated in section 10.01 that as between the public policies underlying the disability statute, Tex.Civ.PRAC. & Rem.Code § 16.001, and those leading to the passage of section 10.01, the interests served by section 10.01 are paramount. In view of the fact that the Legislature easily could have overridden its own disability statute, this Court should give considerable deference to the Legislature’s determination that it is reasonable to require suit to be brought on behalf of a minоr twelve years or older within the time specified in section 10.01. We did not consider this point in Sax.
Moreover, the statute before the Court in Sax, article 5.82 of the Insurance Code, differs from section 10.01 in at least one important respect. The age limit within which a minor or someone on his or her behalf was required to file suit was increased from eight to fourteen years of age. This age was not chosen at random by our Legislature. The Legislature considered the opinions of a number of experts as to when a minor could verbalize inner problems and could directly communicate that he or she was experiencing a health problem. The Legislature also considered the age by which an impairment to the development of the child could be recognized. See Debate on Tex.H.B. 1048 on the Floor of the House, 65th Leg., R.S. 138-41 (March 22, 1977) (transcript available from House Committee Services) (statement of Representative Bock explaining expert opinions considered by the House State Affairs Committee in arriving at the age of fourteen). In enacting section 10.01, the Legislature rejected the lower age of eight set forth in the Sax statute. In most cases, by the time a child attains the age of twelve, a competent parent or legal guardian should be аble to determine if an injury to the child has occurred as a result of negligent medical treatment.
Requiring suit to be brought on behalf of the minor is a reasonable substitute for removing the right of a fifteen year old to bring suit in his or her own capacity after reaching majority, provided that the minor has a legally competent parent or legal guardian who has no conflict of interest that would preclude him or her from acting in the best interests of the minor. Compare Greathouse v. Fort Worth & Denver City Ry. Co.,
I recognize that in Sax, the Court declined to accept suit by a parent or guardian as a reasonable substituted remedy. On this point, I fundamentally disagree with the assumption in Sax that competent parents cannot be trusted to act in the best interest of their child.
based upon a logical belief that the ties of the natural relationship of parent and child ordinarily furnish strong assurance of genuine efforts on the part of the custodians to provide the child with the best care and opportunities possible, and, as well, the best atmosphere for the mental, moral and emotional development of the child.
Mumma v. Aguirre,
This conclusion in Sax is one aspect of our decision which should be recоnsidered. In cases involving guardians for the mentally incompetent, this Court has intimated that the rights of one under a legal disability might be cut off by the action or inaction of a legal guardian. Most recently, in Ruiz v. Conoco, Inc.,
This does not mean that an action commenced by, or on behalf of, a legally disabled individual can never be given preclu-sive effect.
In Tinkle v. Henderson,
Earlier decisions in our state recognized that in some instances, rights of the mentally incompetent can be lost due to the passage of time, notwithstanding the legal disability. In McLendon v. Comer,
Our Court indicated in Latcholia v. Texas Employers Ins. Ass’n,
More recently, at least one court of appeals has held that the notice provisions under our previous Workmen’s Compensation Act applied to a minor, and the minor’s claim for common-law negligence was barred because the minor did not give notice. Whitehead v. American Indus. Transp., Inc.,
[W]e would be required to find that persons under eighteen, regardless of their age or experience, are incapable as a matter of law of making an intelligent choice concerning their right to compensation for injuries. This we are unwilling to do. The Legislature may exempt all persons under eighteen years from the waiver provisions of the Act if it desires, but the Constitution, in our judgment, does not require it.
Id. at 275.
The notice requirements of the Texas Tort Claims Act, Tex.Civ.PRAC. & Rem.Code § 101.101(a)-(c), were likewise found applicable to a claimant rendered physically and mentally incompetent where a guardian of her estate had been appointed. Rath v. State of Texas,
In other jurisdictions, the general rule is that if the disability statute is a general one, and the statute of limitations is likewise a general one, limitations will not run against a minor or an incompetent simply because a parent or next friend could have brought suit. See, e.g., Young v. Key Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
A different result may obtain if a plaintiff demonstrates that he or she had no parent or legal guardian who was competent to bring suit, or that his or her parents or legal guardian had a conflict of interest that prevented them from acting in the minor’s best interests. In such circumstances, the statute of limitations may well be unconstitutional as applied to such a plaintiff. But requiring a competent parent or legal guardian to bring suit does not constitute “an impossible condition” prohibited by the open courts provision.
The concept of an “impossible condition” was explained in Nelson v. Krusen,
Under standard principles of statutory construction, this Court must construe the statute to render it constitutional, if possible. See Key Western Life Ins. Co. v. State Bd. of Ins.,
In passing upon the constitutionality of а statute, we begin with a presumption of validity. It is to be presumed that the Legislature has not acted unreasonably or arbitrarily; and a mere difference of opinion, where reasonable minds could differ, is not a sufficient basis for striking down legislation as arbitrary or unreasonable. The wisdom or expediency of the law is the Legislature’s prerogative, not ours.
Garcia,
In the case before the Court today, Was-son was fully cognizant of his injury and of his potential claim, as was his mother. There is no indication that his mother or his father could not have instituted suit within the limitations period. Under these circumstances, the substituted procedure in section 10.01 which requires suit to be brought on behalf of Wasson within certain time limits is reasonable.
B .
The inquiry is not at an end even if one were to conclude that the legislative scheme of allowing suit to be brought on behalf of a minor is not a reasonable substitute for limiting a minor’s right to sue. The Legislature has the power to abrogate common-law causes of action altogether in the proper exercise of its police power. See discussion of Middleton and Lebohm, supra. I would hold that the exercise of legislative power was constitutional here.
The Legislature articulated its findings and the basic purposes of article 4590i in
Significantly, the statute at issue in Sax contained no such findings. The Court in Sax did not consider these public policy concerns or whether the legislative scheme bears a real relationship to the social evils being addressed. Taken in tandem with the Legislature’s adoption of a higher threshold age at which limitations begins to run, the legislative findings support the constitutionality of this statute, and there is a valid basis for drawing distinctions between the statute under scrutiny in Sax and section 10.01.
Admittedly, the findings and stated purposes of article 4590i are many of the same policy matters considered and rejected by the Court in Lucas v. United States, supra. In Lucas, our Court held that the caps on the dollar amounts recoverable under sections 11.02 and 11.03 of article 4590i violated the open courts provision.
In the context of persons catastrophically injured by medical negligence, we believe it is unreasonable and arbitrary to limit their recovery in a speculative experiment to determine whether liability insurance rates will decrease.... In any event, we hold it is unreasonable and arbitrary for the legislature to conclude that arbitrary damages caps, applicable to all claimants no matter how seriously injured, will help assure a rational relationship between actual damages and amounts awarded.
The statute of limitations in section 10.01 does not work such a hardship. The minor is entitled to recover for all injuries. There is a demonstrable nexus between limiting the time in which suit for malpractice must be brought and the goals articulated by the Legislature, which include availability and affordability of adequate professional liability insurance and hence, the availability and affordability of health care services. It is within the authority of the Legislature to make reasoned adjustments in the legal system, and we so held in Morrison v. Chan,
While a number of other decisions of our Court and the cоurts of appeals have considered whether a statute can cut off the claims of a minor, the propriety of Legislature’s purported exercise of its police power was not presented. See, e.g., McCrary v. City of
Looking to other jurisdictions, many courts have upheld statutes of limitation applicable to the claims of minors against due process and open courts challenges. See Barlow v. Humana, Inc.,
Although I would not hold that section 10.01 could never be unconstitutional in its application, it is not unconstitutional as applied in this case. A statute need not be declared unconstitutional simply because it might be unconstitutional as applied to the facts of another case. See Nelson,
It is not necessary to decide whether the exercise of the Legislature’s police power would be proper as applied to different facts, such as a case where the minor’s parent was incompetent. In this regard, it should be noted that the result I would reach as to Wasson is not necessarily at odds with Tinkle, supra, which held section 10.01 unconstitutional as applied to the mentally incompetent. It was noted in that decision that no guardian had been appointed, and the court did. not engage in any analysis of the police power of the Legislature to abrogate common-law causes of action.
IV
A fundamental tenet in our jurisprudence is the recognition of the need for consistency and predictability in the decisions of our courts. This Court should be loath to overrule its prior decisions, particularly where an opinion has been cited and relied upon as frequently and as recently as has Sax. Our Court should not succumb to a temptation to continually revisit prior decisions as new fact situations arise or the concerns of the public shift. The Court similarly stresses the importance of stare decisis, but misapprehends the application of that doctrine to the case before us. The Court concludes that in order to uphold the constitutionality of section 10.01, it is compelled to “overrule Sax or to somehow limit the holding of that case to its facts.”
The Court concludes that Wasson and his parents, and those similarly situated, may justifiably rely on Sax and wait well beyond the statutory limitation period before bringing suit. In support of this premise, the Court cites Justice Scalia’s concurring opinion in Quill Corp. v. North Dakota,
Congress has the final say over regulation of interstate commerce, and it can change the rule of Bellas Hess [the Supreme Court’s longstanding decision] by simply saying so. We have recognized that the doctrine of stare decisis has “special force” where “Congress remains free to alter what we have done.”
That principle applies with force here. Sax was decided before section 10.01 was renewed and extended by the Texas Legislature. The statute of limitations at issue in Sax has been altered by the Texas Legislature. Under such circumstances, it is not reasonable for any party to ignore a statute on the basis of a prior decision of this Court. Section 10.01 has never been held unconstitutional as applied to minors by this or any other court since its enactment in 1977, until today’s decision. It is dangerous precedent indeed to hold that reliance by a party on his or her extrapolation of what this Court has held in other cases is a justification for striking down an otherwise valid act of the Legislature.
⅜ ⅜ ⅝ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
Because I would conclude that section 10.01 of the Medical Liability Act does not violate the open courts provision of the Texas Constitution under the facts of this case, I respectfully dissent.
