Death does not extend the time to file a personal injury lawsuit against a public body, held Oregon's Court of Appeals. In yesterday's opinion, the court addressed the interplay between the statute of limitations for lawsuits against public bodies with the statute that keeps alive personal injury claims despite the injured person's death. These are called "continuation actions," because the claim for injury continues after the death of a person.
The source is ORS 30.075(1), which allows the personal representative of the estate to continue or start a lawsuit against the wrongdoer "if the decedent might have maintained an action, had the decedent lived[.]" The confusion came from the last sentence, which requires that the lawsuit be filed within the general two year statute of limitations (ORS 12.110), "or within three years by the personal representatives if not commenced prior to death."
Public bodies have their own statute of limitations - not the general SOL -- even though it also establishes a two-year deadline. ORS 30.275(9) says that its two-year time deadline applies, regardless of any other "statute" of "limitation." In yesterday's case, the lawyer filed the lawsuit 14 days after the two-year anniversary of the injury. He argued that the law allowing up to three years to file continuation actions is not a statute of "limitation." Instead, he urged, it established an extra year, kind of like when minors get extra time to file a lawsuit.
Oregon's Court of Appeals disagreed. The three-year deadline for continuation actions is, in fact, another statute of limitations, which is trumped by the special law for public bodies.
So, when you have a personal injury claim against the government, you can't let death get in the way of filing within two years.
Jeff Merrick, Oregon Trial Attorney
Injury & Employment Law
503-665-4234
The above is not legal advice. I cannot give you sound advice without knowing more information. It is intended to raise some issues for you to discuss with your own lawyer.




