Condon v. Silva, N.C. 93-2007 (2001)
This text of Condon v. Silva, N.C. 93-2007 (2001) (Condon v. Silva, N.C. 93-2007 (2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The history of his mental condition over the years prior to the time he brought this suit is a far from pretty one. He claims that a combination of many emotional reactions to the abuse he alleges constituted a powerful psychological bar to his bringing the lawsuit. Even assuming that the affidavits of the experts, who examined him or his medical records, are valid and do contain admissible evidence, none of them asserts that he did not or could not bring this suit because of repressed recollections. Nor does he, himself, make any claim of amnesia, temporary or otherwise.
Such being the case, as this Court has ruled in Heroux and White, the Opinion of the Supreme Court in Kelly v. Marcantonio does not control the disposition of this motion.
This Court declines to add any particular mental condition other than repressed recollection to the general concept of unsound mind in §
Accordingly, the plaintiff's motion is denied.
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