Parton v. City of Huntsville
Parton v. City of Huntsville
Opinion
The primary issue presented on this appeal is whether a minor, allegedly injured while a patient in a city-operated hospital, is required to file a notice of claim with the City within six months, and, if so, whether that requirement denies equal protection of the law.
Plaintiff/appellant Phillip Neil Parton was born prematurely. While in the City-operated Huntsville Hospital, he claims that he suffered total blindness in one eye, and partial blindness in the other eye, because of the negligence of one of the hospital's nurses. He sued the City of Huntsville to recover for his alleged injury.
The City of Huntsville moved for summary judgment in its favor claiming that the plaintiff failed to comply with Alabama's notice of claim statutes. Sections
Our "notice of claims" statutes require that all claims against a municipality "for damages growing out of torts shall be presented within six months from the accrual thereof or shall be barred." Section
The issue presented here for our review is not the sufficiency or timeliness of the notice filed by the plaintiff, since the record shows, without contradiction, that no claim was filed with the clerk-treasurer of the City of Huntsville until March 9, 1978, or nearly 24 months after the allegedly negligent injury occurred. Parton claims he was not required to file his claim within six months. He attacks the notice of claim statutes frontally, arguing: (1) that the statutes deny equal protection of the law to those plaintiffs negligently injured by a municipality; (2) that the statutes deny due process to a minor who is unable to comply with them; and (3) that section
Admittedly, the courts in those states, construing statutes abolishing governmental immunity, found that the legislature of each state had intended to put all tortfeasors on an equal footing; therefore, each court found that the diverse treatment of private tortfeasors and government tortfeasors was arbitrary and unrelated to the purpose of the legislation. We fail to find that Alabama's legislative scheme to eliminate the defense of governmental immunity in certain areas gave to an injured claimant an unconditional right to sue. In fact, legislative intent is to the contrary; included in the overall scheme where conditions, limitations, and requirements on the part of the injured claimant. In short, the Alabama legislature created aconditional right to sue in limited circumstances. Cf. Jacksonv. City of Florence,
We are constrained to hold that Alabama's statutory scheme is to create liability in limited circumstances, and that the *Page 901
notice requirements of sections
The legislature has a wide discretion to enact laws which affect some groups of citizens differently than others. A statutory discrimination will not be set aside if any state of facts reasonably may be conceived to justify it. McGowan v.Maryland,
All persons injured through the negligence of a city or town have been granted the right to bring suit. Section
While it is true that the courts of many states have held that a notice requirement does not apply to minors unable to give notice, "many courts, probably a majority, adhere to the view that, unless the statute expressly so provides, the infancy of the claimant is no excuse for failure to give notice within the time prescribed." 18 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations § 53.149 (3rd ed. 1977).
Alabama can be counted in this putative majority. In City ofBirmingham v. Weston,
". . . [T]he act now before us contains no exemption in favor of minors or persons mentally or physically incapacitated to give the notice. It applies to all persons alike unless this court shall write into it such an exception, which, under the guise of judicial interpretation, we do not feel warranted in doing. To do so would be legislation not interpretation." Id. at 567, 172 So. at 646. See also Dixon v. City of Mobile,
280 Ala. 419 ,194 So.2d 825 (1967).
Neither section
Appellant contends that the legislature surely intended to amend section
AFFIRMED.
TORBERT, C.J., and JONES, SHORES and BEATTY, JJ., concur.
"LIMITATION PERIODS FOR PRESENTATION OF CLAIMS AGAINST MUNICIPALITIES.
All claims against the municipality (except bonds and interest coupons and claims for damages) shall be presented to the clerk for payment within two years from the accrual of said claim or shall be barred. Claims for damages growing out of torts shall be presented within six months from the accrual thereof or shall be barred. (Code 1907, § 1191; Code 1923, § 1907; Code 1940, T. 37, § 476.)
* * * * * *
§
11-47-192 . FILING OF STATEMENT AS TO MANNER OF INJURY, DAMAGES CLAIMED, ETC.No recovery shall be had against any city or town on a claim for personal injury received, unless a sworn statement be filed with the clerk by the party injured or his personal representative in case of his death stating substantially the manner in which the injury was received, the day and time and the place where the accident occurred and the damages claimed. (Code 1907, § 1275; Code 1923, § 2031; Code 1940, T. 37, § 504.)"
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Phillip Neil Parton v. the City of Huntsville, Etc.
- Cited By
- 14 cases
- Status
- Published