Statute of Repose

  • Read more: Undiagnosed Cancer under Alabama’s Statute of Repose

    Undiagnosed Cancer under Alabama’s Statute of Repose

    By Alex Stein Alabama Code Section 6–5–482(a) that extends to “all actions against physicians, surgeons, dentists, medical institutions, or other health care providers for liability, error, mistake, or failure to cure, whether based on contract or tort” prescribes, (inter alia) that – “in no event may the action be commenced more than four years after such…

  • Read more: Fraudulent Concealment by Nonfeasance as an Exception to the Statute of Repose

    Fraudulent Concealment by Nonfeasance as an Exception to the Statute of Repose

    By Alex Stein As a general rule, malpractice suits against physicians and hospitals must be filed within the repose period that starts running on the day of the alleged malpractice. Expiration of that period kills the plaintiff’s suit regardless of whether she was able to file it on time. Unlike statutes of limitations, this absolute time-bar does not…

  • Read more: “Medical Malpractice” vs. General Negligence: The Case of Falling Accidents

    “Medical Malpractice” vs. General Negligence: The Case of Falling Accidents

    By Alex Stein As I wrote previously – see here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here – whether a tort action sounds in “medical malpractice” as opposed to general negligence, or vice versa, can be crucial. Suits sounding in “medical malpractice” must satisfy special requirements that include shortened limitations periods, statutes of repose,…

  • Read more: Fraudulent Concealment and the Statute of Repose

    Fraudulent Concealment and the Statute of Repose

    By Alex Stein Anyone interested in the tobacco litigation and/or medical malpractice must read Hess v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., — So.3d —- (Fla. 2015). Stemming from the Engle class action, this decision of the Florida Supreme Court advances the understanding of statutes of repose and how they apply, inter alia, in medical malpractice cases.

  • Read more: Do Medical-Malpractice Time Bars Apply to Hospitals’ Indemnification Suits Against Doctors?

    Do Medical-Malpractice Time Bars Apply to Hospitals’ Indemnification Suits Against Doctors?

    By Alex Stein The South Carolina Supreme Court has recently decided that a hospital’s indemnification suit against doctors whose malpractice made it pay compensation to the aggrieved patient is subject to the same time bars as patients’ actions against defaulting physicians. Columbia/CSA-HS Greater Columbia Healthcare System, LP v…., — S.E.2d —- (2015), 2015 WL 249536 (S.C….

  • Read more: Medical Malpractice and the “Continuous Act” Exceptions to the Statute of Repose

    Medical Malpractice and the “Continuous Act” Exceptions to the Statute of Repose

    By Alex Stein Cefaratti v. Aranow, — A.3d —- (Conn.App. 2014) is a textbook decision on the “continuous act” exceptions to the statute of repose. This decision of the Connecticut Appeals Court draws an important – but oft-missed – distinction between “continuous wrong” and “continuous treatment.” Back in 2003, the plaintiff underwent open gastric bypass surgery…

  • Read more: Medical Malpractice in Reproductive-Choice Procedures

    Medical Malpractice in Reproductive-Choice Procedures

    By Alex Stein Malpractice suits filed in connection with reproductive-choice procedures often present unique problems. The suit filed by Jami Conner against her former gynecologist, Dr. Bryan Hodges, is a case in point. The plaintiff, a mother of two children, decided that she did not want to have more children. To avoid future pregnancy, she asked…

  • Read more: Medical Malpractice: FTCA’s Trap for the Unwary

    Medical Malpractice: FTCA’s Trap for the Unwary

    By Alex Stein Anyone interested in medical malpractice must read the First Circuit’s decision in Sanchez v. United States, 740 F.3d 47 (1st Cir. 2014). Mr. Sanchez’s wife died in a Massachusetts hospital shortly after delivering her third child by c-section. She died from arguably preventable hemorrhaging. Mr. Sanchez and his lawyer thought that they had a…

  • Read more: Unconstitutional Time Bars in Washington

    Unconstitutional Time Bars in Washington

    By Alex Stein Schroeder v. Weighall — P.3d —-, 2014 WL 172665 (Wash. 2014), is the second Washington Supreme Court’s decision that voids the Legislature’s time bar for medical malpractice suits.  The first decision, DeYoung v. Providence Medical Center, 960 P.2d 919 (Wash. 1998), voided an eight-year repose provision for violating the constitutional prohibition on special…

  • Read more: Caveat Veterans: Limitations and Repose in Medical Malpractice Actions under FTCA

    Caveat Veterans: Limitations and Repose in Medical Malpractice Actions under FTCA

    By Alex Stein To be able to sue the government under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), an aggrieved person must first present his claim to the appropriate agency within two years of the claim’s accrual. 28 U.S.C. § 2401(b). When the agency fails to make a final disposition within six months, the claim is deemed…