Sanchez v. United States , 740 F.3d 47 ( 2014 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 13-1333
    ANGEL SANCHEZ, Individually and as
    Administrator of the Estate of Rafaela Sanchez,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Torruella, Howard, and Kayatta,
    Circuit Judges.
    Paul F. Kenney, with whom Kristen A. Barnes and Kenney &
    Conley, P.C. were on brief, for appellant.
    George B. Henderson, II, Assistant United States
    Attorney, with whom Carmen M. Ortiz, United States Attorney, was on
    brief, for appellee.
    Timothy C. Kelleher III, Cooley Manion Jones LLP, Thomas
    R. Murphy, Law Offices of Thomas R. Murphy, LLC, Thomas M. Bond,
    The Kaplan/Bond Group, Sara J. Trezise and Trezise Law Group on
    brief for Massachusetts Academy of Trial Lawyers, amicus curiae.
    January 14, 2014
    KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.      Plaintiff Angel Sanchez, a
    widower and the executor of his wife's estate, sued his wife's
    doctors for medical malpractice.   As it turned out, those doctors
    were federal employees, against whom claims are forever barred
    unless brought within the two-year limitations period Congress
    allowed under the Federal Tort Claims Act ("FTCA"), as opposed to
    the three-year period allowed by Massachusetts law for medical
    malpractice claims.   As it also turned out, those doctors' status
    as federal employees was not readily apparent to one who undertook
    no   investigation.   Mr.   Sanchez's   lawyers   both   made   no   such
    investigation and waited more than two years before presenting his
    claim.   Based on our prior, controlling holding in a closer case,
    Gonzalez v. United States, 
    284 F.3d 281
     (1st Cir. 2002), we affirm
    the district court's decision that it had no choice but to dismiss
    this lawsuit.
    I. Background
    The accuracy of the allegation that the doctors were
    negligent is not yet at issue in this stage of this lawsuit.
    Otherwise, the material facts of this case, especially those
    relating to the procedural history and posture of the suit, are
    undisputed.   Cf. Merlonghi v. United States, 
    620 F.3d 50
    , 54 (1st
    Cir. 2010).
    -2-
    Dr. Rafaela Sanchez1 died on April 24, 2009, two days
    after she delivered her third child, by caesarean section, at North
    Shore Medical Center-Salem Hospital ("NSMC").2      The doctors who
    treated her at NSMC, Drs. Kristin Cotter and Kalinda Dennis, worked
    for Lynn Community Health Center ("LCHC"), where Dr. Sanchez had
    received prenatal care.   Angel Sanchez contends that the treating
    doctors knew or should have known that his wife had at least one of
    two potentially dangerous conditions, placenta previa3 and placenta
    accreta,4 and so required special care in the removal of her
    placenta, and probably a hysterectomy, to minimize the risk of
    hemorrhage.   Plaintiff claims that Dr. Cotter left the hospital
    after the delivery, leaving Dr. Sanchez in the care of Dr. Dennis,5
    1
    Rafaela Sanchez was an anesthesiologist.
    2
    The allegation in the complaint that Dr. Sanchez was
    admitted to the hospital on April 22, 2010, but died April 24,
    2009, appears to be a scrivener's error.
    3
    Placenta previa is "the condition in which the [placenta]
    is implanted in the lower segment of the uterus, extending to the
    margin of the internal cervical os [(opening)] or partially or
    completely obstructing the os." Stedman's Medical Dictionary 1389
    (Maureen Barlow Pugh et al. eds., 27th ed. 2000).
    4
    Placenta accreta is "the abnormal adherence of the
    chorionic villi [(tiny vascular projections from the membrane
    between fetus and mother)] to the myometrium [(the muscular wall of
    the uterus).]"    Stedman's Medical Dictionary 1175, 1389, 1962
    (Maureen Barlow Pugh et al. eds., 27th ed. 2000). Essentially,
    parts of the placenta attach too strongly to the uterine wall. See
    Domann v. Vigil, 
    261 F.3d 980
    , 982 n.2 (10th Cir. 2001).
    5
    Plaintiff claims that Dr. Dennis was only a medical
    resident; the government disagrees. The point is immaterial to
    this appeal.
    -3-
    and that neither doctor performed a hysterectomy until after
    hemorrhaging began.     When the bleeding persisted (or resumed), Dr.
    Sanchez died.
    Mr. Sanchez retained legal counsel at some point prior to
    February 2010.    Counsel waited until April 11, 2012--35 ½ months
    after Dr. Sanchez's death--to file suit on Mr. Sanchez's behalf
    against Dr. Cotter in Massachusetts state court.           Nine days later,
    they filed an amended complaint, adding Dr. Dennis as a defendant.
    Unbeknownst to Mr. Sanchez and his counsel, as employees of LCHC
    both   doctors   were   deemed   to    be   federal   employees   under   the
    Federally Supported Health Centers Assistance Act of 1992, Pub. L.
    102-501, 
    42 U.S.C. § 233
    .             As we have explained before, see
    Gonzalez v. United States, 
    284 F.3d 281
    , 286, 288, 291 (1st Cir.
    2002), and explain again below, tort claims against such doctors
    for malpractice within the scope of their employment are claims
    against the United States, barred if not properly pursued within
    two years of their accrual (as opposed to three years under
    Massachusetts law, see Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, § 2A).
    The United States removed the case to federal court, and
    substituted itself as the defendant. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 2679
    (d). The
    district court dismissed the suit for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction after finding it time-barred.            Mr. Sanchez appeals.
    -4-
    II. The Federal Tort Claims Act
    Federal courts lack jurisdiction over claims against the
    United States unless the government has waived its sovereign
    immunity. See, e.g., F.D.I.C. v. Meyer, 
    510 U.S. 471
    , 475 (1994).
    Absent waiver, this immunity applies to tort claims against federal
    employees for conduct within the scope of their employment. Cf. 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1346
    (b)(1), 2679; Merlonghi v. United States, 
    620 F.3d 50
    , 54 (1st Cir. 2010).      The FTCA is "a limited waiver" of that
    immunity, Abreu v. United States, 
    468 F.3d 20
    , 23 (1st Cir. 2006),
    giving federal courts jurisdiction over civil claims against the
    government for death or injury "caused by the negligent or wrongful
    act or omission of any employee of the Government . . . under
    circumstances where the United States, if a private person, would
    be liable to the claimant in accordance with the law of the place
    where the act or omission occurred."         
    28 U.S.C. § 1346
    (b)(1).
    The FTCA's limited waiver of immunity comes with an
    expiration date.    Specifically, an FTCA claim is "forever barred
    unless it is presented in writing to the appropriate Federal agency
    within two years after such claim accrues or unless action is begun
    within   six   months   after"   the    agency   denies   the   claim.   
    Id.
    -5-
    § 2401(b).6   The FTCA's two-year bar for presenting claims creates
    a trap for the unwary who fail to recognize its applicability to a
    specific case and thus fail to act at all within two years of
    accrual, or who sue in time but fail to first present the claim to
    the appropriate federal agency.    In 1988, Congress provided leeway
    for individuals in the latter category.          See Federal Employees
    Liability Reform and Tort Compensation Act of 1988 ("Westfall
    Act"), Pub. L. 100-694, 
    102 Stat. 4563
    . Under the Westfall Act, if
    a tort case is filed in federal court or removed from state court
    and the United States is substituted as the defendant, see 
    28 U.S.C. § 2679
    (d)(1)-(3), the claim will be deemed timely under
    section 2401(b) if "(A) the claim would have been timely had it
    been filed on the date that the underlying civil action was
    commenced, and (B) the claim is presented to the appropriate
    Federal agency within sixty days after the dismissal of the civil
    action."   
    28 U.S.C. § 2679
    (d)(5).      Congress has not otherwise seen
    fit to alter the two-year bar (in a way material to this suit)
    6
    We read this disjunctive language as setting out two
    deadlines, both (not just either) of which must be satisfied.
    Otherwise, there would effectively be no deadline at all. See
    Ellison v. United States, 
    531 F.3d 359
    , 361-62 (6th Cir. 2008).
    The requirement that an FTCA claim be administratively exhausted
    derives independently from 
    28 U.S.C. § 2675
    (a), which provides that
    an FTCA "action shall not be instituted . . . unless the claimant
    shall have first presented the claim to the appropriate Federal
    agency and his claim shall have been finally denied by the agency
    in writing . . . ."
    -6-
    since doubling its length in 1949.         See 81 Cong. Ch. 92, § 1, 
    63 Stat. 62
     (1949).
    It is undisputed that, in this case, Drs. Cotter and
    Dennis   were   federal   employees   at   the    time   of   their   alleged
    malpractice, the FTCA applies to the claims brought against them
    (now against the United States), and Mr. Sanchez did not present
    his claim to any federal agency, or file suit, within two years of
    his wife's death.       The district court therefore dismissed this
    lawsuit, finding that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear
    a case against the United States not allowed under the FTCA.
    III. Analysis
    Mr. Sanchez argues that under the "discovery" rule, his
    claim did not accrue until May 27, 2010, at the earliest.
    Alternatively, he argues that the running of the two-year period
    was equitably tolled long enough to salvage this case.                 Having
    rejected such arguments in Gonzalez on facts more favorable to a
    tardy plaintiff, and otherwise finding no basis in the law to reach
    a contrary result in this case, we must also reject Mr. Sanchez's
    arguments and affirm the judgment of dismissal.
    A.          Exhaustion or timeliness?
    Questions of exhaustion and timeliness pose similar
    potential   bars   to   this   lawsuit.    They    may   both   be    seen   as
    jurisdictional bars. See, e.g., Román-Cancel v. United States, 
    613 F.3d 37
    , 42 (1st Cir. 2010) (timeliness); Barrett ex rel. Estate of
    -7-
    Barrett, 
    462 F.3d 28
    , 37 (1st Cir. 2006) (exhaustion); Acosta v.
    U.S. Marshals Serv., 
    445 F.3d 509
    , 513 (1st Cir. 2006)(same);
    Gonzalez v. United States, 
    284 F.3d 281
    , 287, 291 n.11, 293 (1st
    Cir. 2002) (treating timeliness as jurisdictional in affirming
    dismissal of an unexhausted claim, and concluding that section
    2679(d)(5) did not apply).         Alternatively, either or both may be
    seen as nonjurisdictional, but essential, claim-processing rules.
    See, e.g., Kwai Fun Wong v. Beebe, 
    732 F.3d 1030
    , 1039 (9th Cir.
    2013) (en banc) (concluding that section 2401 constitutes a non-
    jurisdictional claim-processing rule); Glade ex rel. Lundskow v.
    United States, 
    692 F.3d 718
    , 723 (7th Cir. 2012) (exhaustion
    requirement is not jurisdictional and may be waived).             In either
    event, we certainly have some "leeway to choose among threshold
    grounds for denying audience to a case."           Sinochem Int'l Co. Ltd.
    v.   Malaysia   Int'l   Shipping    Corp.,   
    549 U.S. 422
    ,   431   (2007)
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Determining that this lawsuit should have been dismissed
    without prejudice due to failure to exhaust would be the narrowest
    approach to disposing of this appeal, because it is undisputed that
    Mr. Sanchez has never presented his claim to the Department of
    Health and Human Services.     See McNeil v. United States, 
    508 U.S. 106
    , 113 (1993); Celestine v. Mount Vernon Neighborhood Health
    Ctr., 
    403 F.3d 76
    , 84 (2d Cir. 2005) (affirming a dismissal where
    failure to exhaust barred the claim "and would continue to bar it
    -8-
    even if any possible unjust effects of disparities between state
    and federal statutes of limitations were remedied by equitable
    tolling."). Mr. Sanchez would then presumably present the claim to
    the agency within sixty days of final entry of the judgment of
    dismissal; the agency would deny the claim as untimely, and Mr.
    Sanchez would file suit anew. At that point, the FTCA's exhaustion
    requirement arguably would have been satisfied, leaving only the
    question of timeliness.      With the aid of the Westfall Act, Mr.
    Sanchez would then present exactly the same arguments that he now
    presents, asking us to find that this suit was commenced within two
    years of when his claim accrued.
    Little commends such an approach unless it is truly
    necessary.   Nor     does   any   party   request   it,   each   presumably
    recognizing that it would add expense and delay without offering
    any countervailing pragmatic benefit.        Accordingly, as we did in
    Gonzalez, we find it most appropriate to forgo the question of
    administrative exhaustion and go straight to the question of
    timeliness upon which the final disposition of this case will
    necessarily turn.7
    7
    In light of our decision to reach the timeliness question
    first, we need not address whether exhaustion is waivable or
    whether the government has waived that argument on appeal. Cf.
    Dávila-Álvarez v. Escuela de Medicina Universidad Cent. del Caribe,
    
    257 F.3d 58
    , 67 (1st Cir. 2001) (holding that the government waived
    the exhaustion requirement).
    -9-
    B.         When did the claim accrue?
    The parties agree that our review of the district court's
    ruling under Rule 12(b)(1)8 is de novo, as the relevant facts are
    not disputed. See Donahue v. United States, 
    634 F.3d 615
    , 623 (1st
    Cir. 2011) (noting that while appellate review of dismissals under
    Rule 12(b)(1) "sometimes requires deference to the trial court," an
    appeal   involving    "only   the   objective   reasonableness   of   the
    plaintiffs' failure to discern at an earlier time both their injury
    and its likely cause" is reviewed de novo).
    As noted above, the FTCA limitations period expires two
    years after the claim accrues.       
    28 U.S.C. § 2401
    (b).   A cause of
    action generally accrues when the plaintiff is injured.          Donahue,
    634 F.3d at 623.     Nevertheless, in FTCA medical malpractice cases,
    the "discovery rule" may delay accrual until a plaintiff knows (or
    reasonably should know) both that he is injured and what caused his
    injury; it does not, however, postpone accrual until a potential
    8
    Although Plaintiff argues in seeking equitable tolling that
    the timeliness of his complaint is not jurisdictional, he does not
    appear to object to Rule 12(b)(1) as the vehicle for the dismissal
    here.   Even if the motion should have been brought under Rule
    12(b)(6), however, it would then have been converted to a motion
    for summary judgment, Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(d). See Cruz-Vázquez v.
    Mennonite Gen. Hosp., Inc., 
    717 F.3d 63
    , 68 & n.6 (1st Cir. 2013)
    (where motion should have been considered under Rule 12(b)(6), not
    12(b)(1), reviewing the record under the summary judgment
    standard). Given that the facts are undisputed and both sides were
    heard and presented evidence on the timeliness issue, we cannot see
    how the result would have changed had plaintiff asked the court to
    proceed under Rule 56. Cf. Ramírez-Carlo v. United States, 
    496 F.3d 41
    , 46 (1st Cir. 2007) (reviewing a grant of summary judgment
    as to the timeliness of an FTCA claim).
    -10-
    plaintiff also learns that his injury was negligently inflicted.
    See id.; see also United States v. Kubrick, 
    444 U.S. 111
    , 122-23
    (1979). The discovery rule incorporates an objective standard. To
    delay commencement of the running of the statute of limitations,
    "the   factual   basis   for   the   cause    of   action   must   have   been
    inherently unknowable [that is, not capable of detection through
    the exercise of reasonable diligence] at the time of injury."
    Gonzalez, 
    284 F.3d at 288-89
     (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also Ramírez-Carlo v. United States, 
    496 F.3d 41
    , 47
    (1st Cir. 2007).     "Once a plaintiff knows of the injury and its
    probable cause, he/she bears the responsibility of inquiring among
    the medical and legal communities about whether he/she was wronged
    and should take legal action."        Gonzalez, 
    284 F.3d at
    289 (citing
    Kubrick, 
    444 U.S. at 123
    ).
    It is beyond reasonable dispute that the claim here
    accrued well before April 11, 2010.          Dr. Sanchez died on April 24,
    2009, after giving birth.        Her injury was then, by its nature,
    complete and obvious.      The cause--post-partum bleeding–-was both
    known and chronicled contemporaneously.            The death of a generally
    healthy woman in childbirth is sufficiently rare in this country
    today so as to make most reasonable people ask why it happened.
    Mr. Sanchez is apparently just such a reasonable person, who wisely
    and understandably turned to experts in an effort to answer that
    -11-
    question, retaining his present law firm sometime prior to February
    2010.9
    The decision to retain malpractice counsel following a
    mother's death in childbirth is a telling sign that a reasonable
    person would have concluded that "reasonable diligence" was called
    for in order to determine whether there was negligence.   Gonzalez,
    
    284 F.3d at 289-90
     (claim accrued at the latest when plaintiff
    retained counsel); see also Ramírez-Carlo, 
    496 F.3d at 48
    .    Here,
    moreover, there was much information available to Plaintiff and his
    counsel to raise further cause for diligent inquiry. The operative
    and discharge reports10 identified the risk factors known before the
    first surgery (placenta previa and possible placenta accreta),
    explained what steps were taken, and expressly attributed Dr.
    Sanchez's hemorrhage to "DIC"--that is, disseminated intravascular
    9
    Neither Mr. Sanchez nor his counsel have volunteered the
    precise date counsel was retained.      At oral argument, counsel
    indicated that he was on board by no later than roughly two months
    before he received, in February 2010, 427 pages of hospital records
    in response to his request.
    10
    The government, which offered these reports, averred only
    that it had received them from Plaintiff's counsel. Plaintiff does
    not dispute that they were part of the 427 pages of reports
    Plaintiff received in February 2010. (The records that Plaintiff
    says were incomplete were the intraoperative, not postoperative,
    reports.) Plaintiff also offers no evidence as to when his counsel
    obtained the Amended Surgical Pathology Report.
    -12-
    coagulation, a dangerous bleeding condition.11                   Those reports,
    combined with the Amended Surgical Pathology Report that was
    completed and available in May 2009, provide evidence that Dr.
    Sanchez suffered from both placenta previa and placenta accreta,
    the risky conditions on which plaintiff's complaint was premised.
    Mr.    Sanchez     notes   that   the   autopsy    report    was   not
    available until May of 2010.           The autopsy report, though, largely
    confirmed information in or suggested by the already available
    records: it listed as the cause of death postpartum DIC of unknown
    cause, and both placenta previa and placenta accreta as "final
    diagnoses."       In short, it revealed no new cause of injury.
    Mr. Sanchez also argues that the claim did not accrue
    until April 2012, when he received legible copies of the final six
    pages of medical reports including the handwritten intraoperative
    reports.    He does not adequately explain, however, either what
    efforts    were    made   to   get   them   sooner,   or   how   their   absence
    precluded him from timely filing his claim.                   Cf. T.L. ex rel.
    Ingram v. United States, 
    443 F.3d 956
    , 964-65 (8th Cir. 2006)
    (noting that a cause of action may not accrue until critical
    medical records are received, but declining to toll the limitations
    11
    Disseminated intravascular coagulation is "a hemorrhagic
    syndrome that occurs following the uncontrolled activation of
    clotting factors and fibrinolytic enzymes throughout small blood
    vessels . . . resulting in tissue necrosis and bleeding." Stedman's
    Medical Dictionary 371 (Maureen Barlow Pugh et al. eds., 27th ed.
    2000).
    -13-
    period where the plaintiff did not show that only the missing
    records   held   the   critical   information).   He   points   to   no
    information in these records that is both newly revealed and
    reasonably necessary to ascertaining the cause of the injury.        In
    sum, in this case arising out of an unexpected nosocomial death,
    witnessed by identifiable professionals who chronicled the injury,
    its cause, and their own acts, the claim accrued at the latest by
    the date prior to February 2010 when Mr. Sanchez retained counsel
    to investigate a malpractice claim. Whether it accrued earlier, we
    need not decide.
    C.         Is equitable tolling available under the FTCA?
    There exists a long running debate over whether the
    concept of equitable tolling can be used to delay the running of
    the timeliness requirements that are conditions to the FTCA's
    waiver of sovereign immunity. Rather than focusing directly on the
    language and history of the FTCA as one might expect, courts have
    generally approached this question indirectly, asking whether the
    applicable time limit is "jurisdictional" and, if so, deeming
    equitable tolling to be unavailable.     See, e.g., Kwai Fun Wong v.
    Beebe, 
    732 F.3d 1030
    , 1035-47 (9th Cir. 2013); Arteaga v. United
    States, 
    711 F.3d 828
    , 832-3 (7th Cir. 2013); see generally John R.
    Sand & Gravel Co. v. United States, 
    552 U.S. 130
    , 133-38 (2008)
    (discussing the relationship between absolute or "jurisdictional"
    deadlines and equitable tolling). Most recently, the Supreme Court
    -14-
    has given added credence to this approach.         See Sebelius v. Auburn
    Reg'l Med. Ctr., 
    133 S.Ct. 817
    , 824 (2013) ("[W]ere we to type the
    governing statute 'jurisdictional'" there could "be no equitable
    tolling." (citation omitted)).
    This   circuit   has   previously   opined   that   the    FTCA's
    timeliness     requirements     are     jurisdictional.          See,    e.g.,
    Román-Cancel v. United States, 
    613 F.3d 37
    , 42 (1st Cir. 2010)
    (explaining that "[c]ompliance with the FTCA's temporal deadlines
    is both mandatory and jurisdictional").          We have also nevertheless
    assumed that equitable tolling can be applied to those deadlines.
    See Ramírez-Carlo v. United States, 
    496 F.3d 41
    , 48-49 & n.3 (1st
    Cir. 2007); Rakes v. United States, 
    442 F.3d 7
    , 25 (1st Cir. 2006).
    But see McIntyre v. United States, 
    387 F.3d 38
    , 61 & n.8 (1st Cir.
    2004) (questioning whether equitable tolling applies to FTCA).             We
    are not, it seems, the only circuit to have proceeded in this
    manner.   See T.L. ex rel. Ingram v. United States, 
    443 F.3d 956
    ,
    961 (8th Cir. 2006).
    The observation in Sebelius and like cases that labeling
    these deadlines "jurisdictional" would preclude application of
    equitable tolling suggests that something must eventually give in
    our circuit's jurisprudence.           The Supreme Court's most recent
    guidance on what is "jurisdictional" suggests that we may have
    erred in presuming that subject matter jurisdiction hinged on
    compliance with the FTCA's deadlines for presenting claims.               See
    -15-
    generally Gonzalez v. Thaler, 
    132 S. Ct. 641
    , 648 (2012) (pressing
    "a strict distinction between truly jurisdictional rules . . . and
    nonjurisdictional claim-processing rules" (citations and quotation
    marks omitted)).    If we did so err, however, it does not follow
    that we also erred in presuming that equitable tolling can stay the
    running of the FTCA's deadlines.      To the contrary, classifying the
    deadlines as non-jurisdictional enhances the case for finding
    equitable tolling to be available.       See Kwai Fun Wong, 732 F.3d at
    1038 (FTCA deadlines are not jurisdictional and equitable tolling
    is available), overruling Marley v. United States, 
    567 F.3d 1030
    (9th Cir. 2009).
    To   decide    the   case   now     before   us,   we   need   not
    definitively unravel this skein. Rather, we can approach this case
    as we approached our decision in Gonzalez, giving the plaintiff the
    benefit of assuming that equity can toll the running of the FTCA's
    limitations period if a factual basis for tolling exists.
    D.        Has plaintiff established a factual basis for invoking
    equitable tolling?
    The trap for the unwary into which Mr. Sanchez has fallen
    arises because doctors who work at facilities that may appear to be
    nongovernmental    may   nevertheless    be   deemed   federal    employees
    because of the manner in which their employers receive federal
    funds.   See 
    42 U.S.C. § 233
    (g).      The risk of encountering such a
    trap need be taken seriously.            A publicly-searchable federal
    database suggests that, for 2014, there are thirty-one entities
    -16-
    like LCHC in Massachusetts and seventy-seven in the First Circuit.
    U.S. Dep't of Health and Human Servs. Health Res. and Servs.
    Admin.,       Search      current      deemed      entities,
    http://bphc.hrsa.gov/ftca/healthcenters/ftcahcdeemedentitysearch.
    html (last visited Dec. 16, 2013).    Understood in this context,
    Gonzalez instructs that lawyers handling medical malpractice cases
    cannot simply assume without investigation that the longer of the
    two potentially applicable limitations periods controls.   Instead,
    they need make inquiry (or, perhaps, simply sue within two years of
    accrual).12   See Gonzalez, 
    284 F.3d at 291
     (noting that "[n]o
    evidence has been presented that [plaintiff] or her attorneys made
    any inquiry whatsoever as to the status of the defendants as
    federal employees.").   As the Seventh Circuit recently explained,
    It's not asking too much of the medical
    malpractice bar to be aware of the existence
    of federally funded health centers that can be
    sued for malpractice only under the Federal
    Tort Claims Act . . . and if a member of that
    bar is not aware and misleads a client, . . .
    the lawyer may be liable for legal malpractice
    but the government can still invoke the
    statute of limitations.
    Arteaga v. United States, 
    711 F.3d 828
    , 834-35 (7th Cir. 2013)
    (citations omitted).
    12
    Massachusetts attorneys have added incentive to consider
    a two-year deadline. Massachusetts requires claims against it to
    be presented to the appropriate entity within two years of accrual,
    see 
    Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 258, § 4
    , and does not toll that period
    simply because a plaintiff is unaware that their doctor may have
    been a public employee. See Krasnow v. Allen, 
    29 Mass. App. Ct. 562
    , 566-70 (1990).
    -17-
    Good lawyers, like good doctors, make mistakes.            Mr.
    Sanchez's   counsel   either   were   unaware   of   the   FTCA   two-year
    deadline, or simply assumed without asking that none of the
    possible defendants were federal employees.          Counsel do not say
    which it was. Given what otherwise appears to be a firm dedication
    to their client's case, one suspects it was the former.            In any
    event, neither inaction born of ignorance nor recklessness in the
    face of a known risk could provide a basis for establishing
    diligence given the holding in Gonzalez.        And "due diligence is a
    sine qua non for equitable tolling." Donahue v. United States, 
    634 F.3d 615
    , 629 (1st Cir. 2011).
    Mr. Sanchez also argues that any inquiry regarding the
    employment status of the doctors would have been unavailing.           He
    contends that LCHC never informed him of its federal status, that
    his wife's records did not reveal that the doctors were federal
    employees, and that the Department of Health and Human Services
    relied on internal records, not publicly available information, to
    certify the status of LCHC and the doctors for litigation purposes.
    The government contends that, if plaintiff had used it, a website
    and hotline for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
    Health Resources and Services Administration would have adequately
    informed him that LCHC and its employees were federally funded and
    might be covered by the FTCA.     As Mr. Sanchez notes, however, in
    2009 and 2010, that website would not have informed him that the
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    specific doctors who treated his wife were deemed to be federal
    employees, and not every clinic that receives federal funds (or was
    listed on that website) was necessarily covered by section 233. In
    addition, we observe that the information regarding FTCA coverage
    and the hotline was hardly conspicuous on the site.
    Even so, the information on the website, had counsel
    availed themselves of it, would certainly have put them on at least
    heightened inquiry notice regarding the treating doctors' deemed-
    federal status.         Moreover, a Lexis or Westlaw search for Lynn
    Community Health Center would have revealed Harrison v. United
    States,    
    284 F.3d 293
        (1st   Cir.   2002),   a   2002   FTCA    medical
    malpractice case against another of LCHC's doctors. Simply put, no
    reasonably diligent lawyer who checked any of these sources of
    information would have let two years pass without doing much more.
    Mr. Sanchez has also offered no evidence that a phone
    call or letter to LCHC inquiring about its (or its doctors') status
    would have been ignored, or would have generated a misleading
    response.    We have examined the record for any indication that the
    doctors,    LCHC,   or    the    government     gave   plaintiff    any    false
    information or delayed unduly in answering important requests so as
    to thwart, intentionally or otherwise, efforts by plaintiff to
    ascertain whether this suit belonged in federal court.                   We have
    found none.
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    We agree that the federal government could do more to
    publicize or alleviate the statute of limitations trap created by
    section 233.    Be that as it may, the absence of due diligence here
    is no less patent, and likely more so, than in Gonzalez.             As we
    noted above, and as was not the case in Gonzalez, a doctor from
    LCHC had already been identified as a federal employee in an FTCA
    suit. Both Gonzalez and Harrison were decided in 2002, well before
    the events in question here.         If, on these facts, we were to find
    the statutory deadlines tolled, then it would follow that Gonzalez
    was wrong.
    Understandably, finding Gonzalez to be wrongly decided is
    precisely what plaintiff invites us to do.          Departing from circuit
    precedent,     however,   can   be    justified    only   by   "supervening
    authority" (such as a ruling of the Supreme Court or this Court en
    banc), Muskat v. United States, 
    554 F.3d 183
    , 189 (1st Cir. 2009),
    or "in those relatively rare instances in which authority that
    postdates the original decision, although not directly controlling,
    nevertheless offers a sound reason for believing that the former
    panel, in light of fresh developments, would change its collective
    mind."   United States v. Pires, 
    642 F.3d 1
    , 9 (1st Cir. 2011)
    (citation and quotation marks omitted).           The latter justification
    is narrowly construed, Igartúa v. United States, 
    626 F.3d 592
    ,
    603-04 (1st Cir. 2010), and imposes an "exacting standard,"
    Sánchez ex rel. D.R.-S. v. United States, 
    671 F.3d 86
    , 96 (1st Cir.
    -20-
    2012); see also San Juan Cable LLC v. P.R. Tel. Co., Inc., 
    612 F.3d 25
    , 34 (1st Cir. 2010) (noting that the contrary conclusion of
    another circuit court does not "divest [a panel] opinion of its
    customary stare decisis effect within the circuit").
    To suggest that the development of the law in other
    circuits, had it been known to the Gonzalez panel, would have
    caused it to change its collective mind, Mr. Sanchez relies on
    cases from two other circuits:            Santos ex rel. Beato v. United
    States, 
    559 F.3d 189
     (3d Cir. 2009), and Valdez ex rel. Donely v.
    United States, 
    518 F.3d 173
     (2d Cir. 2008).              Plaintiff is correct
    that these and subsequent cases from those two circuits reject the
    proposition that by failing to ask specifically about possible
    federal employment, counsel necessarily fail the due diligence
    test.     Neither circuit, however, blesses complete inaction.                 In
    Santos, for example, counsel actually ran a public records search
    on the relevant doctors' employer.              Santos, 
    559 F.3d at 200
    . In
    Phillips v. Generations Family Health Ctr., 
    723 F.3d 144
     (2d Cir.
    2013), the Second Circuit recently distinguished a case in which
    counsel did "literally nothing to investigate the defendant's
    status"    and    adopted    an     approach    to   equitable    tolling    that
    incorporates,      among    other    factors,    the   prior     knowledge   and
    experience of counsel. 
    Id. at 152-56
    . That approach runs the risk
    of effectively holding better, more knowledgeable practitioners to
    a higher standard of care.          This seems a bit odd, but we need not
    -21-
    consider    it    further   because   Mr.    Sanchez's   counsel   offers   no
    significant evidence of their medical malpractice experience. More
    importantly, whether one views the approaches taken by those two
    circuits as appropriate or not, they hardly paint a picture of a
    rush to the exit so as to allow us to overrule our own controlling
    precedent here.
    Statutes of limitations balance a desire to decide claims
    on their merits against a desire to provide repose and avoid the
    unfairness of litigating stale claims encumbered by faded memories.
    Under federal law, Congress strikes the chosen balance, leaving
    perhaps some room for equitable dispensation where due diligence
    could not have saved a claim.         Here, with no good explanation for
    the complete failure to try to ascertain which limitations period
    applied, no pertinent precedent allows the individual dispensation
    requested.       We note, however, that while Mr. Sanchez has thus lost
    his claim against his wife's doctors, he may not have yet lost
    altogether his chance to recover full compensation for that loss
    from any professionals responsible for the effects of the judgment
    in this case.
    IV. Conclusion
    For these reasons, the judgment of the district court is
    affirmed.
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