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Current Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 1993
Abstract The time limit for bringing a claim for medical negligence is within 3 years of actual or implied knowledge of a significant injury, coupled with knowledge of possible negligence by the proposed defendant. Time does not run at all for a person under 18 or under a mental disability, which is why claims for perinatal injury can be made decades
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Abstract The time limit for bringing a claim for medical negligence is within 3 years of actual or implied knowledge of a significant injury, coupled with knowledge of possible negligence by the proposed defendant. Time does not run at all for a person under 18 or under a mental disability, which is why claims for perinatal injury can be made decades
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Fraud and the Statutes of Limitations
The Cambridge Law Journal, 1931The recent case of Lynn v. Bamber has revived an interesting and undecided point upon the Statute of Limitations and has given McCardie J. an opportunity of exploring with his usual thoroughness a somewhat difficult region of law. In Lynn v. Bamber the plaintiff bought from the defendant young plum trees warranted to be ‘Purple Pershores.’ Some years ...
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Is There a Statute of Limitations in Ethics?
2020Does ethics authorize us to stop feeling guilt and self-reproach at a certain point with regard to our misdeeds of long ago? Can we take the view that those ethical and moral transgressions were done by someone else for whom our present self need no longer take responsibility?
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