If you were injured but did not realize it right away, you may still have the right to file a personal injury claim. The law recognizes that some injuries are not immediately obvious, and a legal doctrine called the discovery rule exists specifically to protect people in your situation. The clock on your claim may not have started when the incident happened. It may have started when you first discovered, or reasonably should have discovered, that you were hurt.
The discovery rule is a legal doctrine that delays the start of the statute of limitations until the injured person knows or reasonably should have known about their injury. It is one of the most important protections available to personal injury claimants who did not connect their symptoms to an incident right away.
Without the discovery rule, the statute of limitations would begin running on the date of the incident itself, regardless of whether you had any reason to know you were hurt. According to the Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School, the discovery rule tolls, or pauses, the limitations period until the plaintiff discovers or should have discovered the injury through reasonable diligence. This doctrine applies in a wide range of personal injury cases, including medical malpractice, toxic exposure, defective products, and certain accident-related injuries where symptoms develop gradually.
Late discovery is most common in cases where injuries develop slowly, are internal, or are caused by something that was not immediately obvious.
Medical injuries are among the most common late discovery situations. A surgical error may not cause obvious symptoms for months. A misdiagnosis may go undetected until a condition worsens. In these cases, the discovery rule often applies from the point when the patient first connected their condition to the medical treatment they received.
Injuries caused by exposure to toxic substances, including asbestos, chemicals, or environmental contaminants, frequently develop over years or even decades. Mesothelioma, for example, can take 20 to 50 years to develop after asbestos exposure, according to the American Cancer Society. The discovery rule is well established in toxic exposure cases precisely because the connection between exposure and illness is rarely immediate.
Injuries caused by defective products are not always apparent at the time of use. A defective medical device may cause internal damage that is only discovered during a later procedure. A contaminated product may cause illness that takes time to diagnose. In product liability cases, the discovery rule typically begins running when the injured person connects their injury to the product.
The discovery rule does not protect you indefinitely. Courts apply an objective standard: when should a reasonable person in your position have discovered the injury?
This is an important distinction. The clock does not wait for absolute certainty. If you had symptoms that a reasonable person would have investigated, and those symptoms were connected to a prior incident or exposure, a court may find that the limitations period began at that point even if you had not yet received a formal diagnosis. This is why acting quickly once you suspect an injury is connected to an incident or product matters. Consulting a personal injury attorney as soon as possible protects your ability to file within the applicable window.
Many people assume they have missed their window without ever speaking to a lawyer. That assumption costs people valid claims every year.
The application of the discovery rule is fact-specific and varies by state, by type of claim, and by the specific circumstances of when you discovered your injury. A personal injury attorney can evaluate when your limitations period actually began, whether any other exceptions apply, and whether you still have time to file. The only way to know for certain whether your claim is still viable is to have it evaluated by an attorney.
If you recently discovered an injury and are not sure whether you still have the right to file, Monument Legal is ready to help. We offer free case reviews with no obligation. The sooner you reach out, the more options you have.
The discovery rule is a legal doctrine that delays the start of the statute of limitations until the injured person knew or reasonably should have known about their injury. According to the Legal Information Institute at Cornell Law School, the rule tolls the limitations period until the plaintiff discovers the injury through reasonable diligence. It is most commonly applied in cases where injuries are not immediately apparent.
Whether the discovery rule applies depends on your state, the type of claim, and the specific facts of your situation. The rule is not universal and its application varies significantly by jurisdiction. The only way to know for certain is to speak with a personal injury attorney who can evaluate your case against the laws in your state.
The only reliable way to know whether your claim is still within the statute of limitations is to consult a personal injury attorney as soon as possible. According to the Legal Information Institute, limitations periods differ by jurisdiction and cause of action. An attorney can tell you exactly how much time you have based on your specific circumstances and state law.