Crownover v. Gleichman

554 P.2d 313
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 20, 1976
Docket75-543
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 554 P.2d 313 (Crownover v. Gleichman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crownover v. Gleichman, 554 P.2d 313 (Colo. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

554 P.2d 313 (1976)

Ernest CROWNOVER and Ernest Crownover, surviving spouse of Ardyce Crownover, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Theodore K. GLEICHMAN, M.D., Defendant, and
Thomas Kennedy, M.D., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 75-543.

Colorado Court of Appeals, Div. II.

July 8, 1976.
Rehearing Denied July 29, 1976.
Certiorari Granted September 20, 1976.

*314 Mellman, Mellman & Thorn, P. C., Douglas W. Johnson, Denver, for plaintiff-appellant.

Paul D. Renner, Denver for defendant-appellee.

Selected for Official Publication.

COYTE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Ernest Crownover, appeals from the entry of summary judgment in favor of defendant, Thomas Kennedy, M. D., in an action for wrongful death. He contends that his action was not barred by the two-year statute of limitations for wrongful death actions, § 13-21-204, C.R.S. 1973. We affirm.

Plaintiff originally filed his complaint on September 12, 1973, naming Dr. Theodore K. Gleichman as a defendant. Then, as a result of information obtained through discovery proceedings, plaintiff, on October 24, 1974, filed a motion to join Dr. Thomas Kennedy as a party defendant in an action. That motion was granted, and on November 13, 1974, he was personally served with summons and an amended complaint.

Subsequently, in response to defendant's motion, the trial court entered summary judgment for defendant Kennedy on the ground that plaintiff had failed to initiate the action against defendant within the period specified in the applicable statute of limitations. Pursuant to C.R.C.P. 54(b), plaintiff appeals that judgment. The original action naming Dr. Theodore K. Gleichman as party defendant is still pending and is not before us on this appeal.

We note initially that while suit was instituted as early as September of 1973, Dr. Kennedy was not then named as party defendant; hence, the mere initiation of the law suit did not toll the statute of limitations as to the claims against him. See Hellerstein v. Mather, 360 F.Supp. 473 (D. Colo.1973).

The chronology of plaintiff's action is as follows: On or about July 19, 1971, the defendant examined X-rays of deceased but, it is alleged, negligently failed to discover a cancerous growth shown thereon; on April 26, 1972, an operation was performed on her, at which time a number of then untreatable malignancies were discovered in her body; she died on January 7, 1973; and, on November 13, 1974, this defendant was served in this wrongful death action.

The gravamen of plaintiff's argument on appeal is that the two-year statute of limitations for wrongful death actions, § 13-21-204, C.R.S.1973, commences to run on the date of death, and that consequently plaintiff's amended complaint against defendant was filed and served in a *315 timely manner. As authority for that argument, plaintiff relies on Fish v. Liley, 120 Colo. 156, 208 P.2d 930, which held that our wrongful death statute is not a "survival" statute, rather it creates a new cause of action. Thus plaintiff concludes that his cause of action for wrongful death did not accrue, and hence the statute of limitations could not commence to run, until the death had occurred. We disagree.

Section 13-21-204, C.R.S.1973, provides that:

"All actions provided for by sections 13-21-201 to XX-XX-XXX shall be brought within two years from the commission of the alleged negligence resulting in the death for which suit is brought." (emphasis supplied)

In construing such statutory language, the Supreme Court, in Franzen v. Zimmerman, 127 Colo. 381, 256 P.2d 897, held that plaintiff could not maintain a cause of action for damages for the death of her husband since suit was not commenced within two years after the commission of the alleged tort which eventually resulted in the death of the injured husband. See also Fish v. Liley, supra. Consequently, based upon the plain statutory language and the cases interpreting same, we hold that the statute of limitations in a wrongful death action begins to run on the date the damage or injury arising from the commission of the alleged negligence from which death later results becomes known or by reasonable care could have been discovered.

Plaintiff contends that this interpretation of § 13-21-204, C.R.S.1973, results in an anomalous situation; that is, where the statute of limitations begins to run prior to death, the cause of action could be barred before it ever arose. This he argues thwarts the obvious legislative intent to give survivors of a deceased, a cause of action for the death. Whatever the merits of this argument if directed at obtaining a legislative change in the statute, we find it without significance in the instant case. Also, as we rule below, the statute of limitations began to run as of April 26, 1972, thus a significant period for the limitation of plaintiff's lawsuit was available to plaintiff after his spouse's death on January 7, 1973.

Plaintiff argues that the recent decision in DeCaire v. Public Service Co., 173 Colo. 402, 479 P.2d 964 dictates a contrary result in the instant case. We disagree.

In that wrongful death action, the trial court held that the statute barred recovery for the carbon monoxide caused death of plaintiff's child because the last act of the defendant Public Service Company relating to gas leakage from a heating system (i.e., its last inspection of the defective heating system) occurred on December 16, 1962, the lethal leakage occurred on October 30, 1963, and the action was commenced October 22, 1965, two years and ten months after the date of the alleged negligent acts. On appeal, the Supreme Court held that the action was timely brought and stated that:

"No claim or right of action existed by virtue of the negligent act alone. It arose when the negligence resulted in the injury which caused the death." (emphasis supplied)

In further expanding on this theory, the court stated that negligence as used in the statute of limitations means the negligent act or acts which result in or give rise to the death claim. Hence, the rule of De-Caire, is that the statute of limitations begins to run when a party has been injured or damaged by negligent acts which simultaneously or later result in death. Plaintiff therefore reasons that, in the instant case, the injury suffered was death and that the statute of limitations commenced to run therefrom. We cannot concur in plaintiff's reasoning.

We find no inconsistency between the statement of our Supreme Court in DeCaire and our position in the instant suit. Here, if, for purposes of a wrongful death action, plaintiff's deceased were damaged by the alleged negligence of defendant, that damage occurred as of the date that the undiscovered malignancies became not amenable to treatment and hence fatal. That occurred, at the latest, on April 26, 1972, that *316 being the date that Ardyce Crownover learned of the deadly character of the previously undiscovered malignancies. Hence, at the latest, plaintiff was required to institute suit on April 26, 1974. And since the amended complaint against defendant was filed on November 14, 1974, commencement of suit was untimely and the action was barred.

This interpretation is consistent also with the language of § 13-21-202, C.R.S.1973.

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