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Statute of Limitation: The Time Limits to Bring a Case




Statute of Limitations


When an individual suffers injury in a car accident, incident on someone else's property, or due to the neglect of another individual, he or she may face a lengthy recovery time. Serious injuries can severely disrupt a person's life, requiring hospitalization, loss of wages and work time, and rehabilitation. Medical bills can pile up on the individual and he or she may face serious financial difficulty following the incident.

Under The "statute of limitations," any lawsuit arising from an accident or injury must be filed within a certain time limit or the injured person's legal claim will be barred and his or her right to sue will be lost forever.

Every state has enacted its own statute of limitations, requiring any personal injury suit be filed in court within a set time after the incident or injury. The specific limit prescribed by each state ranges from one year (in Kentucky and Tennessee) to six years (in Maine and North Dakota).








Different Time Limits for Different Types of Claims


In some states, the type of personal injury claim may also affect the time limit. For example, certain defamation cases and claims involving minors (persons under age 18) may be granted longer time limits, while medical malpractice statutes of limitations may grant shorter time limits.

Typically, the statute of limitations in a lawsuit for injuries to a minor does not begin to run until he or she reaches the age of 18. For example, suppose Pat is injured in a car accident on his 17th birthday. In a state that has a two-year statute of limitations for personal injury lawsuits, Pat will have three years to file suit for injuries suffered in that accident.

The "Discovery of Harm" Rule


While a statute of limitations may declare that a personal injury lawsuit must be filed within a certain amount of time after an accident or injury, that time period usually does not begin to run until the moment when the person filing suit knew (or should reasonably have known) that they had suffered harm, and the nature of that harm.

An example of this "discovery of harm" rule is a medical malpractice claim in which a surgeon mistakenly left a temporary bandage in the abdomen of a patient, but the error was not discovered until years later, during another surgical procedure. In such a case, the patient had no reason to know of what happened, and this lack of knowledge could not be called unreasonable under the circumstances.

Most likely, the statute of limitations would not begin to run until the day on which the first surgeon's mistake was "discovered" by the patient, rather than from the day on which the first surgeon actually made the mistake.

Remember that the delay in discovery must be one that is reasonable under the circumstances. So, if the patient in the above example was experiencing abdominal pain after the first surgery but refused to seek medical treatment for a number of years, his or her lawsuit may very well be barred by the statute of limitations.

Also, the "discovery of harm" rule will almost never arise in the most common types of injury claims -- those after car accidents and slip and fall incidents. This is because such occurrences usually leave nothing to "discover" in terms of the source and nature of any harm suffered.

However, the discovery rule may apply in some wrongful death cases.

The Statute of Limitations in Your State


As mentioned above, every state has enacted its own statute of limitations, requiring any personal injury suit be filed in court within a set time after the incident or injury. The specific limit prescribed by each state is identified in the chart below, along with a link to the relevant state law.

State
Statute of
Limitations
State Law
Alabama2 yearsAla. Code Sec. 6-2-38
Alaska2 yearsAlaska Stat. Sec. 9.10.070
Arizona2 yearsAriz. Rev. Stat. Sec. 12-542
Arkansas3 yearsArk. Stat. Sec. 16-114-203
California2 yearsCal. Code of Civ. Proc. Sec. 335.1
Colorado2 yearsColo. Rev. Stat. Sec. 13-80-102
Connecticut2 yearsConn. Gen. State. Sec. 52-584
Delaware2 yearsDel. Code Ann. Title 10, Sec. 8119
District of Columbia (D.C.)3 yearsD.C. Code Ann. Sec. 12-301
Florida4 yearsFla. Stat. Ann. Sec. 95.11
Georgia2 yearsGa. Code Ann. Sec. 9-3-33
Hawaii2 yearsHaw. Rev. Stat. Sec. 657.7
Idaho2 yearsIdaho Code Sec. 5-219
Illinois2 yearsIll. Ann. State. Ch. 735, Art. 5, Sec. 13-202
Indiana2 yearsInd. Code Ann. Sec. 34-11-2-4
Iowa2 yearsIowa Code Ann. Sec. 614.1
Kansas2 yearsKan. Stat. Ann. Sec. 60-513
Kentucky1 yearKy. Rev. Stat. Sec. 413.140
Louisiana1 yearLa. Civ. Code Ann. Art. 3492
Maine6 yearsMaine Rev. Stat. Ann. Title 14, Ch. 205, Sec. 752
Maryland3 yearsMd. Ann. Code Sec. 5-101
Massachusetts3 yearsMass. Gen. Laws, Art. 260, Secs. 2A, 4
Michigan3 yearsMich. Comp Laws Sec. 600.5805(9)
Minnesota2 yearsMinn. Stat. Ann. Sec. 541.05, 541.07
Mississippi3 yearsMiss. Code Ann. Sec. 15-1-49
Missouri5 yearsMissouri Ann. Stat. Title 35, Sec. 516.120
Montana3 yearsMont. Code Ann. Sec. 27-2-20427-2-207
Nebraska4 yearsNeb. Rev. Stat. Sec. 25-207
Nevada2 yearsNev. Rev. Stat. Sec 11.190
New Hampshire3 yearsN.H. Rev. State. Sec. 508.4
New Jersey2 yearsN.J. Stat. Ann. Sec. 2A:14-2
New Mexico3 yearsN.M. Stat. Ann. Sec. 37-1-8
New York3 yearsN.Y. Civ. Prac. R. Sec. 214
North Carolina3 yearsN.C. Gen. Stat. Sec. 1-52
North Dakota6 years (2 in wrongful death)N.D. Cent. Code Sec. 28-01-16, 28-01-18
Ohio2 yearsOhio Rev. Code Sec. 2305.10
Oklahoma2 yearsOkla. Stat. Ann. Title 12, Sec. 95
Oregon2 yearsOre. Rev. Stat. Sec. 12.110
Pennsylvania2 years42 Pa. Con. Stat. Sec. 5524
Rhode Island3 yearsR.I. Gen. Laws Sec. 9-1-14
South Carolina3 yearsS.C. Code Ann. Sec. 15-3-530
South Dakota3 yearsS.D. Comp. Laws Ann. Sec. 15-2-14
Tennessee1 yearTenn. Code Ann. Sec. 28-3-104
Texas2 yearsTex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Sec. 16.003
Utah4 yearsUtah Code Ann. Sec. 78-12-28
Vermont3 yearsVt. Stat. Ann. Title 12, Sec. 512
Virginia2 yearsVa. Code Sec. 8.01-243
Washington3 yearsWa. Rev. Code Ann. Sec. 4.16.080
West Virginia2 yearsW. Va. Code Sec. 55-2-12
Wisconsin3 yearsWisc. Stat. Ann. Sec. 893.54
Wyoming4 yearsWy. Stat. Ann. Sec. 1-3-105

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