HUGHES, J.
hWe granted the plaintiffs’ writs in these consolidated cases to review the appellate court’s interpretation of Medical Malpractice Act (“MMA”) provision LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b) (formerly LSA-R.S. 40:1299.47(A)(2)(b)),
directing |2that a request for review of a malpractice claim “shall be deemed filed on the date of receipt of the request stamped and certified by the division of administration.” • The Louisiana . Division of Administration (“DOA”) maintains and the appellate court agrees that Section 1231.8(A)(2)(b) requires that a request for review to be “stamped and certified” by the DOA prior to being considered “received.” This construction renders the plaintiffs’ electronically-transmitted requests untimely, as prescribed, despite having been filed via facsimile transmission before midnight on the last day of the prescriptive period, though after the DOA’s regular business hours. For the reasons that follow, we
conclude that when LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b)- is read in conjunction with Louisiana’s Uniform Electronic Transmission Act (“UETA”), .LSA-R.S. 9:2601 et seq., it is clear that the plaintiffs’ facsimile-transmitted requests for review were “received” by the DOA when transmitted into the DOA’s facsimile transmission system on the last day of the prescriptive period, and the plaintiffs’ requests for reviéw were not prescribed.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The plaintiffs in
In Re: Medical Review Panel Claim of Rose Tillman
filed a petition in the 24th Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, on August 13, 2013, alleging: that they were the surviving children of Rose Tillman; that they had requested a review of a medical malpractice complaint against West Jefferson Medical Center, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8; and that they were filing suit for the purpose of obtaining discovery in the matter. In 2014 several peremptory exceptions pleading the objection of prescription were filed, ^contending that the plaintiffs’ request for review of their medical malpractice claim was deemed filed on May 23, 2013 and, as such, was prescribed as the filing date was more than one year after Ms. Tillman’s death.
The following are the undisputed, salient facts of the
Tillman
case. Ms. Tillman died on May 22, 2012 due to the alleged malpractice of the defendants in prescribing a medication (Dilantin) to Ms. Tillman, which carried the risk of serious complications, and in failing to discontinue the medication after she began experiencing an adverse reaction, to it. The plaintiffs’ request for review of their medical malpractice claim was transmitted to the DOA via facsimile transmission on May 22, 2013, after the 5:00 p.m. closure of the DOA office, and the DOA stamped the facsimile transmission as filed on the following business day, May 23, 2013. The plaintiffs’ request was acknowledged by the Patient Compensation Fund (“PCF”) Medical Malpractice Compliance Director, Susan Gremillion, via a letter dated May 31, 2013, as having been filed on May 22, 2013,
and a subsequent November 10, 2014 letter from Ms. Gremillion “corrected” the filing date to “5/23/2013.”
The DOA’s website, at that time, informed the public that “faxed filings ... received after 5:00 p.m. will not be stamped until the next working date.”
The district court denied the exceptions of prescription, concluding that the DOA’s internal policy of “forward-stamping requests faxed after business hours is unauthorized by statute.” The appellate court granted writs and reversed the district court.
See In Re: Medical Review Panel Claim of Rose Tillman,
15-0178 (La.App. 5 Cir. 4/22/15) (unpublished). In so ruling, the appellate court hrelied on the language of LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b) (“The request for review of a malpractice claim ... shall be deemed filed on the date of receipt of the request stamped and certified by the division of administration _”) to conclude that the plaintiffs’ faxed request for review was not deemed filed until the DOA “stamped and certified” it on May 23, 2013.
Id.
at 2. Concluding the request was untimely, the appellate court ordered the district court to enter a judgment in favor
of the defendants and dismiss the plaintiffs’ case with prejudice.
Id.
On application of the plaintiffs, this court granted a writ of certiorari.
See In Re: Medical Review Panel Claim of Rose Tillman,
15-1114 (La.10/2/15), 178 So.3d 576.
In Re: Medical Review Panel Proceedings for the Claim of Peighton Miller v. Tulane-Lalceside Hospital
was filed on June 20, 2013 by the defendant, Tulane-Lakeside Hospital, in the 24th Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson, for the purpose of obtaining discovery in the matter. Thereafter, in 2015, peremptory exceptions pleading the objection of prescription were filed, contending that the plaintiffs’ request for review of their medical malpractice claim was deemed filed on April 5, 2013 and, as such, was prescribed as the filing date was more than one year from the alleged malpractice or discovery thereof.
The following are the undisputed, salient facts of the Miller case. On April 1, 2012, plaintiff Lauren Reyes sought care at Tulane-Lakeside Hospital for the birth of her child, Peighton Miller, who was born on April 2, 2012; during delivery Peighton sustained a braxial plexus injury to the nerves in her right shoulder. Ms. Reyes and Peighton were discharged from the hospital on April 4, 2012. The plaintiffs’ request for review of their medical malpractice claim was transmitted to the DOA via facsimile transmission on April 4, 2013, after the 5:00 p.m. closure of the DOA office. The DOA stamped the facsimile transmission as filed on the | ¿following business day, April 5, 2013.
The DOA’s website, at that time, informed the public that “faxed filings .., received after 5:00 p.m. will not be stamped until the next working date.”
The district court denied the exceptions of prescription, holding that the DOA received the plaintiffs’ complaint by facsimile transmission on April 4, 2013, and “Plaintiffs should not be penalized by the fact that the complaint was not actually stamped as filed until the next day.” The district court further- specifically found that “prescription began to run in this matter on April 4, 2012, the date the Court determined that Plaintiffs discovered the alleged medical malpractice.” The appellate court granted writs and reversed the denial of the exceptions of prescription.
See In Re: Medical Review Panel for the Claim of Peighton Miller v. Tulane-Lakeside Hospital,
15-0270, 15-0271 (La.App. 5 Cir. 5/28/15) (unpublished). The appellate court ruled, as in
In Re: Medical Review Panel Claim of Rose Tillman,
that pursuant to LSA-R.S. 40:1231:8(A)(2)(b) the filing date was the date the plaintiffs’ faxed request for review was “stamped and certified” by the DOA on April 5, 2013, which was on the day after it was faxed.
Id.
at 2. Concluding the request for review was untimely, the appellate court ordered the district court to enter a judgment in favor of the defendants and dismiss the plaintiffs’ case with prejudice.
Id.
at 2-3. On
application of the plaintiffs, this 1,¡court granted writs of certiorari.
See In Re: Medical Review Panel for the Claim of Peighton Miller v. Tulane Lakeside Hos
pital, 15-1263, 15-1264 (La.10/2/15), 178 So.3d 577.
The assignments of error asserted by the plaintiffs in these consolidated cases essentially contend that: (1) the appellate court erred in construing LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b) as clear and unambiguous when it is silent- as to the express treatment of fax-filings, and the statement therein that a request for review of.a malpractice claim is “deemed filed on the date of receipt of the request stamped and certified by the division of administration” is vague and susceptible of different meanings; (2) the appellate court’s construction of LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b) to allow the DOA to determine the filirig date of a request for review based solely on when a DOA employee stamps a fax-filing, not when the request was actually received, conflicts with the UETA, LSA-R.S: 9:2601 et seq.; (3) the DOA’s “internal office policy” of stamping fax-filings received -after 5:00 p.m. as filed on the next business day, with no express legislative authority to do so, impermissibly shortens the prescriptive period for filing a medical malpractice complaint; and (4) allowing the DOA such authority constitutes an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority.
LAW AND ANALYSIS
The facts are not in dispute in these consolidated cases, which present purely legal issues related to whether the DOA acted in accordance with applicable law in stamping the fax-filed requests for review of the plaintiffs’ medical'malpractice claims as filed on the business day following facsimile transmission of the requests. As only questions of law are presented, review by this court is de novo.
See Thibodeaux v. Donnell,
08-2436 (La.5/5/09), 9 So.3d 120, 122-23;
Holly & Smith Architects, Inc. v. St. Helena Congregate Facility, Inc.,
06-0582 (La.11/29/06), 943 So.2d 1037, 1045.
|7Pursuant to LSA-C.C, art. 3492, delic-tual actions are subject to a liberative prescription of one year, and prescription commences to run from the day the injury or damage is sustained. In addition, LSA-R.S. 9:5628 provides that actions against certain health care providers, arising out. of patient care, must be filed within one year from the date of the alleged act, omission, or neglect, or within one year from the date of. the discovery of the act, omission, or neglect; in all events, such claims must .be filed at the latest within three years from the date of the alleged act, omission, or neglect.
See Milbert v.
Answering Bureau, Inc.,
13-0022 (La.6/28/13), 120 So.3d 678, 684.
Civil Code Articles 3454 and 3456 govern the computation of a prescriptive period, providing:
Art. 3454. Computation of time
In computing a prescriptive period, the day that , marks the commencement of prescription is not counted. Prescription accrues
upon the expiration of the last day of the prescriptive period,
and if that day is a legal holiday, prescription accrues upon the expiration of the next day that" is not a legal holiday.
Art. 3456. Computation of time by years
|sIf a prescriptive period consists of one or more years, prescription accrues
upon the expiration of the day of the last year
that corresponds with the date of the commencement of prescription.
(Emphasis added.),
Before a medical malpractice suit can be filed, the- claimant must file a com? plaint seeking review of the complaint by a medical review panel, pursuant to the MMA.
See Milbert v. Answering Bureau, Inc.,
120 So.3d at 684;
Borel v. Young,
07-0419 (La.11/27/07), 989 So.2d 42, 61 (on rehearing);
LeBreton v. Rabito,
97-2221 (La.7/8/98), 714 So.2d 1226, 1230-31. This court previously recognized, in
Borel v. Young
and
LeBreton v. Rabito,
that the legislature, in enacting the MMA, took special cognizance of the need to fully protect plaintiffs from the detrimental effect of liberative prescription, allowing for suspension of the time within which suit must be filed during the pendency of the review process and for ninety days following notification to the claimant or his or her attorney of the panel opinion.
See also
LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(a) (formerly LSA-R.S. 40:1299.47(A)(2)(a)).
At issue in the instant case is the meaning to be attributed to MMA Section 1231.8(A)(2)(b), as it affects the timeliness of a medical review panel request fax-filed on the last- day of the prescriptive period. Section 1231.8(A)(2)(b) -provides:
The request for review of a malpractice claim under this Section
shall be deemed filed on the date of receipt of the request stamped and certified by the division of administration
or on the date of mailing of the request if mailed to the division of administration by certified or registered mail only upon timely compliance with the provisions of ^Subparagraph (l)(c) or (d)' of this Subsection. Upon receipt of any request, the division of administration shall forward a copy of the request to the board within five days of receipt.
(Emphasis added.)
The DOA interpreted this provision to mean that a fax-filed request for review of
a medical malpractice claim, is only “deemed filed,” after receipt, on the date on which the DOA has “stamped and certified” the request as filed, regardless of when the fax-filed request was’actually received in the DOA’s office, and.this construction was upheld by the appellate court. The plaintiffs, contend that the DOA should consider a fax-filed request for review as filed on the date it is actually received in the DOA’s office, by reference to the date of transmission indicated on. the fax machine’s automatic time and.date recording system; to do otherwise, .the plaintiffs contend, impermissibly shortens the one-year prescriptive period and runs afoul of the UETA, LSA-R.S. 9:2601 et seq.
The starting point in the interpretation of any statute is the language of the statute itself.
M.J. Farms, Ltd. v. Exxon Mobil Corporation,
07-2371 (La.7/1/08), 998 So.2d 16, 27.
See also Kelly v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Company,
14-1921 (La.5/5/15), 169 So.3d 328, 335 (“[W]e begin as we must with the words of the statute itself.”). The text of a law is the best evidence of legislative intent LSA-R.S. 24:177(B)(1).
As stated in LSA-C.C. art, 9, when a law is clear and unambiguous, and its application does not lead to absurd consequences, the law shall be applied as written and no further interpretation may be made in search of the intent of the legislature.
See also
LSA-R.S. 1:4 (“When the wording of a Section is clear and free of ambiguity, the letter of it shall not be disregarded under the pretext of pursuing its spirit.”). When the language of the law is susceptible of different meanings,, it must be interpreted as having the meaning that best conforms to the purpose -of the law. LSA-C.C. art. 10. When the words of a law are ambiguous, 1intheir meaning must be sought by examining the context in which they occur and the text of the law as a whole. LSA-C.C. art. 12. Laws on the same subject matter must be interpreted in reference to each other. LSA-C.C. art. 13.
The statutory provision at issue in the instant case, LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b),' provides that a request fór review of a malpractice claim that is mailed by registered or certified mail is considered as filed on the date'of mailing; however, as to any other method of delivery,
Paragraph (A)(2)(b) states that the request “shall be deemed filed on the date of receipt of the request stamped and certified by the division of administration.” We conclude that the quoted section of Paragraph (A)(2)(b) is ambiguous, as applied to a fax-filed request for review, since it can mean either: (1) that a Section 1231.8(A)(2)(b) request is to be considered as filed on the date that it is actually, received in the DOA’s office and, then, the DOA has only the ministerial task of stamping and certifying on what date the request was actually received; or (2) that .a Section 1231.8(A)(2)(b) request cannot be considered as received by the DOA until the day that it is “stamped and certified” as received by a DOA employee. The district court decisions in these two consolidated cases ruled that the pertinent language in Section’ 1231.8(A)(2)(b) meant
the former, while the appellate court decisions adopted the latter construction. Furthermore, the DOA’s internal policy also adopts the latter interpretation, as evidenced by the statement on its public website indicating that requests could be sent via fax, but if received after 5:00 p.m. the date stamped would be the next business day.
[nOur review of the provisions of the UETA, LSA-R.S. 9:2601 through LSA-R.S. 9:2620 leads us to conclude that the UETA encompasses the electronic transmission of legal documents, via facsimile, by parties to governmental agencies. Except as otherwise provided,
the UETA “applies to electronic records[
] and electronic signatures relating to a transaction.1 [
]” LSA-R.S. 9:2603(A). A fax-filed request for review of a medical malpractice claim falls within the broad definition of an “electronic record,” since, pursuant to the definitions set forth in LSA-R.S. 9:2602(7), (10), and (13), it is “a record ... sent 11⅞... by electronic means,” consisting of “information” in the form of “data [and] text” that is “stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable.” Further, a fax-filed request for review of a medical malpractice claim is related to a “transaction,” since, pursuant to the definitions set forth in LSA-R.S. 9:2602(12) and (16), it is
“an action” “between two or more persons” (the plaintiffs and the governmental agency, the DOA), which relates “to the conduct of ... governmental affairs” (as it is the statutory duty of the DOA pursuant to LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b) to process a plaintiffs request and forward ,it to the PCF Oversight Board). Therefore, we conclude that the electronic transmission, via facsimile machine, of a request for review of a medical malpractice claim is subject to the provisions of the UETA.
UETA Section 2615(B) states that “[u]n-less otherwise agreed between the sender and the recipient, an electronic record is received when it: (1) Enters an information processing system[
] that the recipient has designated or uses for the purpose of receiving electronic records or information of the type sent and from which the recipient is able to retrieve the electronic record. (2) Is in a form capable of being processed by that system.” An electronic record is received under LSA-R.S. 9:2615(B) “even if no individual is aware of its receipt.” LSA-R.S. 9:2615(E). Comment (e) to Section 2615 further states: “Subsection E makes clear that receipt is not dependent on a person having notice that the record is in the person’s system. Receipt occurs when the record reaches the designated system whether or not the recipient ever retrieves the record. The paper analog is the recipient who never reads a mail notice.”
Thus, the import of these UETA provisions is that the electronic transmission of a record, such as the plaintiffs’ fax-filed requests for review of 113their medical malpractice claims, occurs when the electronic record “[ejnters an information processing system” (which, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 9:2602(11), includes “an electronic system for ... receiving ... information” and thus encompasses a facsimile machine) that the recipient has “designated or uses for the purpose of receiving electronic records or information of the type sent and from which the recipient is able to retrieve the electronic record ... even if no individual is aware of its receipt.”
See
LSA-R.S. 9:2615(B), (E).
We note that the UETA also states, in Section 2618(B), that “[t]o the extent a governmental agency uses electronic records ... the governmental agency ... may specify ... [t]he
manner
and format in which the electronic records must be ...
received
— ” (Emphasis added.) Nevertheless, Section 2603(D) also provides that a transaction subject to the UETA is also subject to “other applicable substantive law.”
The Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), LSA-R.S. 49:950 et seq., requires an agency that engages in rulemaking to follow certain procedures for the adoption of rules.
See
LSA-R.S. 49:952-953. Al
though we do not find it |14necessary to decide herein whether the decision of an agency, such as the DOA, in order to specify a manner of receiving an electronic transmission different than that prescribed in UETA Section 2615, must do so via the rulemaking procedures set forth in the APA, we note that the defendants in this case suggest that such was done, citing La. AdmimCode, Title. 1, Part III, § 307. Sec-: tion 307 provides, in pertinent part: “Unless otherwise provided by law, all pleadings, documents or other items shall be deemed filed on the date received by the clerk of court if received by 5 p.m. Items filed after 5 p.m. shall be deemed filed on the next business day.” However, LAC 1:111.307 is a provision applicable only to “the Division of Administrative Law” (see LAC 1:111.101
), which is an adjudicative agency that was created within the Department" of State Civil Service, by LSA-R.S. 49:991.
‘ In contrast, the DOA is a separate agency within the' office of the governor (see LSA-R.S. 36:4
). Therefore, LAC 1:111.307 does not apply to the
| ^instant case, which does not involve adjudications within the Department of State Civil Service, Division of Administrative Law.
Regardless, even if the DOA had properly promulgated a rule to deviate from UETA Section 2615, which directs that an electronic transmission is “received” when it enters the information processing system designated' by the recipient, here the DOA’s facsimile machine, any such rule that effectively shortens a .tort victim’s one-year prescriptive period would be invalid, as a usurpation of the legislative power.
Rules and regulations promulgated by an agency may not exceed the authorization delegated by the legislature.
See State v. Alfonso,
99-1546 (La.11/23/99), 753 So.2d 156, 161-62;
State v. Taylor,
479 So.2d 339, 341 (La.1985) (“The general rule is that the legislative power cannot be delegated.... However, this court, has recognized that the legislative branch has the authority to delegate to administrative boards and agencies of the state the power to ascertain and determine the facts upon which the laws are to be applied and enforced.”);
Schwegmann Brothers Giant Super Markets v. McCrory,
237 La. 768, 787-88, 112 So.2d 606, 613 (1959) (“It is now well settled that the .Legislature may make the operation or application of a statute contingent upon the existence of certain conditions, and may delegate to some executive or administrative board the power to determine the existence of such facts and to.carry out the terms of the statute. So long as the regulation or action of the official or board authorized by statute does not in effect determine what the law shall be, or involve the exercise of primary and independent discretion, but only determines within prescribed limits some fact upon which the law by. its own terms operates, such regulation- is administrative and not legislative in its nature.”).
See also
LSA-R.S. 49:963 (“The. validity or applicability of a rule may be-determined in an action for declaratory judgment in the district court of the parish in which, the agency is located.... The court shall 11fideclare the rule invalid or inapplicable if it finds that it violates constitutional provisions or exceeds the statutory authority of the agency or was adopted without substantial compliance with required rulemak-ing procedures.”).'
The DOA has established a procedure that allows a plaintiff to, file a request for review of a malpractice claim, via facsimile transmission after DOA office hours. However, the DOA’s policy of thereafter stamping and certifying such a fax-filed request as having been filed on the succeeding business day effectively circumvents the directive of LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(a), that “[t]he
filing
of the request for a review of a claim
shall suspend
the time within which suit must be instituted ...” (emphasis added), as well as avoiding the UETA’s Section 2615 rule that receipt occurs when the record reaches the designated system. Furthermore, in the instant consolidated cases, since the plaintiffs’ fax-filed requests weré transmitted on the last day of the applicable prescriptive period but prior to the expiration of that day, the DOA’s failure to deem the fax-filing as filed on the day it entered the DOA’s facsimile system served to shorten the one-year prescriptive period provided to the plaintiffs by LSA-R.S. 9:5628 and LSA-C.C. arts. 3454, 3456, and 3492, supra (i.e., the one-year prescriptive period does not accrue until the
expiration of
the last day of the year). As the legislature could not have intended to delegate to the DOA the power to shorten the applicable one-year prescriptive period, the MMA. provisions cannot be interpreted in such a way.
Accordingly, in light of the foregoing, we construe LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b) to mean that a fax-filed request for review of a medical malpractice claim is “received” by the DOA on the date when it enters the fax system designated by the DOA for receiving electronic records or information of the type sent and from which the DOA is able to retrieve the electronic record, as stated in LSA-R.S. 9:2615. The task of stamping and certifying required of the DOA by LSA-R.S. 40:1231.8(A)(2)(b) is ministerial, such that the DOA is only 117authorized to ascertain from the facsimile machine-generated records the actual date and time that the request for review entered the DOA’s fax machine system and to record that information on the face of the request.
It was undisputed in the instant consolidated cases that the plaintiffs transmitted their requests for review to the DOA’s designated fax machine on the last day of the prescriptive period and that the requests were available for retrieval on the transmission dates. Because the plaintiffs’ requests for review of their medical malpractice claims were received by the DOA, via the designated fax system, pxior to midnight on the last day of the prescriptive period, they were received prior to the expiration of the last day of the prescriptive period, in accordance with LSA-R.S, 9:5628 and LSA-C.C. arts. 3454, 3456, and 3492, supra, and were timely filed. Therefore, the appellate court decisions erred in sustaining the defendants’ peremptory exceptions pleading the objection of prescription.
DECREE
NO.2015-CC-1114
In the case of
In Re: Medical Review Panel Claim of Rose Tillman,
the judgment of the appellate 11scourt is reversed and the district court judgment, denying the defendants’ peremptory exceptions, pleading the objection of prescription, is reinstated; we remand the matter to the 24th Judicial District Court for the Parish of Jefferson for further proceedings.
REVERSED; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT REINSTATED; REMANDED TO DISTRICT COURT.
NO.2015-CC-1263 CONSOLIDATED WITH NO.2015-CC-1264
In the case of
In Re: Medical Review Panel Proceedings for the Claim of Peighton Miller v. Tulane-Lakeside Hospital,
the judgment of the appellate court is reversed and the matter is remanded to Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal, with instructions to rule on the pretermitted assignment of error.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
CRICHTON, J., concurs in the result and assigns reasons.
Li concur in the result reached by the majority in this case. However, I write separately to state that I find the plaintiffs request for a medical review panel is indeed timely, for the reasons set forth by the trial court. The trial court correctly found that then-La. R.S. 40:1299.47(A)(2) is not ambiguous, although it does not address the filing of a request via facsimile after business hours, nor does the statute provide that a fax-filed request must be filed within business hours. Notwithstanding the statute’s silence on the issue, La. C.C. art. 3456 provides that | ⅞⅛ cases where the prescriptive period consists of one or more years, “prescription accrues upon the expiration of the day of the last year that corresponds with the date of the commencement of prescription.” When
the plaintiffs in the Tillman
case fax-filed a request for a medical review panel with the Division of Administration prior to midnight on May 22, 2013, one year after the decedent’s death on May 22, 2012, that request was timely. Any forward date-stamping by the Division of Administration, such as in this case, is contrary to the intent of the statutes at issue.
I also do not find the Louisiana Uniform Electronic Transactions Act applicable in this case, contrary to the majority’s finding that a request for a medical review panel constitutes a “transaction” .... relating to “the conduct of ... governmental affairs.”
See,
La. R.S. 9:2602. In my view, and as simply stated above, the plaintiffs took the necessary steps in this case to suspend the running of prescription, and the trial court correctly overruled the defendants’ Peremptory Exception of Prescription.
GUIDRY, J., concurs in the result for the reasons assigned by Justice CRICHTON.