WOLLHEIM, J.
Plaintiff appeals a judgment dismissing his Federal Employers' Liability Act (FELA) claims, against defendant Union Pacific Railroad Company for strict liability and negligence, based on hip injuries allegedly sustained on the job. The trial court granted defendant's motion for summary judgment after determining that, because plaintiff became aware of his work-related injuries more than three years before he filed the claims, they were barred by the three-year statute of limitation period. 45 U.S.C. § 56. The trial court also denied plaintiffs motion to amend his complaint to allege that his hip injuries had worsened within the three years preceding the filing of the complaint. We conclude, without further discussion, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying plaintiffs motion to amend the complaint. See Ballard v. City of Albany, 221 Or.App. 630, 638, 191 P.3d 679 (2008) (applying abuse of discretion standard of review). However, we also conclude that the trial court erred in granting defendant's motion for summary judgment based on the statute of limitations, and we therefore reverse and remand.
Plaintiffs complaint alleged that plaintiff began working for defendant in May 1967. Over the years, he held several different positions, including brakeman, trainman, and conductor. The complaint alleged that, during his employment with defendant, plaintiff was exposed to hazardous working conditions and that, as a result, plaintiff experienced "repetitive trauma from working on unsafe walkways causing injury to the muscles, tendons, nerves and bones of the legs, shoulders and hips; arthritis; right shoulder bursitis; strains and sprains[.]" Plaintiff alleged that he became aware of the injuries caused by those hazardous conditions in approximately August 2007.
The record on summary judgment shows that plaintiff's job involved walking on rough and uneven surfaces. In the 1990s, plaintiff began to notice occasional "normal stiffness" after working a long day. Plaintiff could not recall specifically if he had any hip symptoms before the year 2000. By 2004, however, plaintiff had begun to notice some regular stiffness in many areas, including his hips. Beginning in December 2004, plaintiff also noticed aching in his hips.
In July 2005, plaintiff was promoted from brakeman to conductor, a position that required a substantial increase in walking over particularly difficult surfaces. Plaintiff testified by deposition that, at the end of every work day, he would notice stiffness and soreness in his hips. He testified that, at the end of the work week, he would be very tired, but that his symptoms would improve over the weekend, and he could "look forward to the beginning of the next week with less stiffness."
Beginning in February or March 2007, approximately six months before plaintiffs retirement in August at age 61, he began to experience chronic significant hip pain that would not resolve with rest over the weekend and that interfered with his ability to work. Plaintiff first sought medical attention in August 2007, complaining that for the previous six months he had experienced left hip pain. In October 2007, Dr. Keeve recorded that plaintiff had reported that he had had problems with his left hip "primarily in the last 6 months." On November 17, 2008, plaintiff filed his complaint alleging claims under FELA.
Under FELA, "[n]o action shall be maintained * * * unless commenced within three years from the day the cause of action accrued." 45 U.S.C. § 56. In support of its motion for summary judgment, defendant argued that plaintiffs claims were untimely, because plaintiffs claims accrued in 2004, more than three years before the action was commenced, when plaintiff began to experience pain and stiffness in his hips that he associated with work.
After a hearing, the trial court agreed with defendant that plaintiffs claims had accrued outside the three-year limitation period and granted defendant's motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff then filed a motion to amend the complaint, accompanied by a proposed amendment that alleged that "[t]he accumulated effects of [plaintiffs] hip symptoms worsened, became aggravated and became permanent in January 2007." The trial court denied the motion to amend, explaining that two months before the scheduled trial date is not the time to allege a new legal theory:
After the trial court ruled on plaintiffs motion to amend, plaintiff voluntarily dismissed his shoulder-related claims and the trial court signed a general judgment of dismissal.
In his first assignment of error, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in ruling that plaintiffs claims for injury to his hip were untimely as a matter of law. Summary judgment is appropriate if there are no material issues of fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. ORCP 47 C. Plaintiff concedes that the record on summary judgment shows that he was aware as early as 2004 that his work was causing stiffness and pain in his hips, but he contends that a worker's knowledge of symptoms connected to physically demanding work does not necessarily equate with knowledge of an injury. In plaintiffs view, the record shows that, until 2007, those symptoms resolved with rest and therefore did not constitute an "injury" for the purpose of the accrual of a FELA claim. Plaintiff asserts that there is evidence from which a jury could find that it was not until February or March 2007 that plaintiff could reasonably have known that he had a work-related hip condition. Plaintiff contends that, on this record, it is a question of fact whether, more than three years before the filing of the claim, plaintiffs hip condition had advanced beyond transitory symptoms to the point where he had reason to know that he had been "injured" and was not simply experiencing the normal stiffness and soreness associated with working at a physically demanding job.
Defendant contends that the statute of limitations begins to run under FELA when the worker has pain and attributes that pain to work. In this case, defendant asserts, it is
In McCoy, we explained that
102 Or.App. at 623-24, 796 P.2d 646 (emphasis added). We explained that, "[o]rdinarily, the question of whether and when an employee knew or should have known that he had an occupational disease is one of fact for the jury. However, when the evidence is such that a reasonable factfinder could only answer the question one way, it is for the court to decide."
Id. at 624, 796 P.2d 646. Thus, the first question that we must address on appeal is whether the record on summary judgment permits only one conclusion: that plaintiff reasonably should have known, more than three years before he filed his FELA claims, that his hip symptoms were a manifestation of the accumulated effects of traumatic exposure at work, Urie, 337 U.S. at 170, 69 S.Ct. 1018, so as to constitute an "injury" for purposes of FELA.
It is beyond dispute that plaintiff was aware in 2004 that he was experiencing aching and stiffness as a result of his work; however, we agree with plaintiff that the evidence in the record on summary judgment creates a question of fact as to when plaintiff first became aware that his symptoms were a manifestation of the accumulated effects of traumatic exposure to work so as to constitute an "injury" and not just the ordinary symptoms of physically demanding work. In McCoy, we described some of the factors that should be considered in determining whether the worker "possesses sufficient critical facts from which the injury and its cause * * * should be plainly known." 102 Or.App. at 623, 796 P.2d 646. Those include whether the worker has experienced disability; whether the condition has been diagnosed; and whether the worker has had off-the-job exposures. Id. Here, plaintiff never experienced disability or saw a doctor for hip pain, and no condition was diagnosed before 2007.
Reversed and remanded.