One of the first things that must be determined in any potential tort claim is whether the statute of limitations bars the claim. An otherwise legitimate lawsuit may be invalid simply because the injured party waited too long to file the claim. In the State of Louisiana, the statutory period in which a claim must be filed is referred to as the “prescriptive period.” If a case is “prescribed”, it is beyond the statutory period. Louisiana has a one-year prescription period for tort claims, which “commences to run from the day injury or damage is sustained.” La. Civ. Code art. 3492.
However, there are some exceptions to this strict prescriptive period. One such exception is referred to as the “Theriot test,” which originated in the 1979 Louisiana Supreme Court case Allstate Ins. Co. v. Theriot. In Theriot, the Louisiana Supreme Court stated that where a “subsequent claimant is a different person than the original plaintiff then to interrupt prescription (1) the first suit must … be based upon the same factual occurrence as is the subsequent claim by amended petition or intervention;” and “(2) the subsequent claimant must also be closely connected in relationship and identity of interest with the original plaintiff.”
In the recent Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals case Southern Pain & Anesthesia, et al v. RF Medical, the court further clarified what is necessary to stop prescription under the Theriot test. In RF Medical the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on the grounds that the prescriptive period had run, and the Court of Appeals recently affirmed by refusing to allow the Theriot exception. The facts of the case are rather simple; Dr. Paul Hubbell unsuccessfully performed an annuloplasty procedure on Toni Peavy in February 2004. The procedure used the defendants’ medical product “discTRODE” and resulted in significant injury to Mr. Peavy. Mr. Peavy subsequently filed a lawsuit against Dr. Hubbell and the product manufacturer defendants. While Mr. Peavy’s suit was pending, Dr. Hubbell filed a separate lawsuit against the product manufacturers.