Extending RCW 4.16.340: Childhood Sexual Abuse Statute of Limitations Applies to Continuing Abuse into Adulthood

Extending RCW 4.16.340: Childhood Sexual Abuse Statute of Limitations Applies to Continuing Abuse into Adulthood

Introduction

M.R. v. State of Washington was decided by the Washington Supreme Court on May 8, 2025. Petitioner M.R. sued the State, Yakima Valley Community College and her former coach Cody Butler, alleging a pattern of sexual misconduct that began when she was a minor and continued into her adult years. The key legal issue was whether the special three‐year statute of limitations set forth in RCW 4.16.340 for “childhood sexual abuse” claims remains available to victims whose abuse commenced during childhood but extended beyond the victim’s eighteenth birthday. The trial court denied summary judgment, applying the child‐abuse limitations period to the entire continuum of abuse. The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that RCW 4.16.340 does not cover acts occurring after age 18. In a 7–2 decision the Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals and restored the trial court’s ruling.

Summary of the Judgment

The Supreme Court held that RCW 4.16.340’s special limitations regime applies to all civil claims “based on intentional conduct … for recovery of damages for injury suffered as a result of childhood sexual abuse,” including misconduct that began while the victim was under eighteen and that continued into her adulthood. Reading subsections (1), (2) and (5) of the statute together, the Court concluded:

  • The “all claims or causes of action” language in RCW 4.16.340(1) is expansive and includes any tort or contract claim whose predicate is an act of intentional childhood sexual abuse.
  • “As a result of childhood sexual abuse” does not demand proof of causation separate from the predicate abuse. Instead, it requires only that the injury for which recovery is sought flow from the intentional sexual abuse when the victim was under eighteen.
  • Subsection (2) expressly contemplates “continuing sexual abuse or exploitation incidents” and allows the victim to compute the “date of discovery” from the last act in a common scheme or plan by the same perpetrator—regardless of whether some acts occur after the victim turns eighteen.

Accordingly, the Court reversed the Court of Appeals and held that M.R.’s claims remain timely under the child–abuse statute of limitations.

Analysis

Precedents Cited

The Court relied on a line of Washington decisions interpreting RCW 4.16.340’s scope and discovery rule:

  • Tyson v. Tyson, 107 Wn.2d 72 (1986) – the decision that prompted the 1988 enactment of RCW 4.16.340, because Tyson had held that intentional torts were not subject to the discovery rule.
  • C.J.C. v. Corporation of the Catholic Bishop of Yakima, 138 Wn.2d 699 (1999) – held that “all claims or causes of action based on intentional conduct” includes negligence claims when the “predicate conduct” is childhood sexual abuse.
  • DeYoung v. Providence Medical Center, 136 Wn.2d 136 (1998) – recognized the breadth of RCW 4.16.340 as a special statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse injuries.
  • Wolf v. State, 2 Wn.3d 93 (2023) – reaffirmed that “the gravamen of the claim” must be childhood sexual abuse and that RCW 4.16.340 provides the remedial mechanism so long as the predicate is childhood abuse.

Legal Reasoning

Interpreting the statute de novo, the Court emphasized its “fundamental objective … to ascertain and carry out the Legislature’s intent.” It concluded the text is unambiguous:

  1. Subsection (1) applies to “all claims or causes of action” “based on intentional conduct” that caused an injury “as a result of childhood sexual abuse.” The breadth of “all claims” signals legislative intent to cover any tort theory built on the underlying abuse.
  2. Subsection (2) acknowledges that childhood abuse may be part of a “series of continuing sexual abuse or exploitation incidents” and allows tolling until discovery of the last act in that scheme— without regard to the victim’s age at each act.
  3. Subsection (5) defines “childhood sexual abuse” by reference to criminal statutes (chapter 9A.44 RCW and RCW 9.68A.040) and age under eighteen. That definition limits the predicate acts but does not confine the statute to injuries discovered before age 18.
  4. Legislative history shows the Legislature sought to protect victims whose trauma and memories may surface long after they reach majority. Nothing in the debate signals an exclusion of continuing schemes that extend past age 18.

Impact

This decision clarifies that Washington’s childhood‐abuse statute of limitations cannot be evaded by defendants who groom victims as minors and continue the abuse into adulthood. Future civil actions will:

  • Treat any continuous scheme of sexual misconduct by the same perpetrator—starting before age 18—as one unbroken series for tolling and discovery purposes.
  • Permit claims under any tort theory (assault, negligence, emotional distress, discrimination) so long as the “gravamen” is intentional childhood sexual abuse.
  • Eliminate the need for fact finders to segment injuries or independently prove causation for each abusive incident once the initial abuse occurred before eighteen.

The decision thus strengthens remedies for survivors and underscores that legislative protections for childhood sexual abuse focus on the nature of the wrongful conduct—regardless of when the harm ripens.

Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Statute of Limitations Tolling: Normally, a plaintiff must sue within a fixed period. “Tolling” pauses that clock until a triggering event—in child‐abuse cases, discovery of the injury.
  • Discovery Rule: The clock runs when the plaintiff knows (or should know) both the harm and its cause. RCW 4.16.340 modifies this for childhood abuse so discovery can occur at any age.
  • Continuing Tort/Scheme: When wrongful acts form a single, ongoing pattern, the law treats them as one case for limitations purposes. Subsection (2) adopts this for childhood sex abuse.
  • Gravamen: The core wrongdoing on which a claim rests. Here, the gravamen must be the childhood sexual abuse, even if the harm manifests later.

Conclusion

The Washington Supreme Court’s decision in M.R. v. State unambiguously holds that RCW 4.16.340’s extended statute of limitations covers all civil claims rooted in childhood sexual abuse—including those abusive acts that continue after the victim turns eighteen. By giving full effect to subsections (1) and (2), the Court safeguarded the Legislature’s intent to remove procedural barriers for survivors whose trauma and related injuries may unfold over decades. Going forward, courts and litigants must treat abusive schemes spanning a victim’s minority and adulthood as one continuous wrong for purposes of tolling and discovery, ensuring perpetrators cannot escape liability by stretching their misconduct past the age of majority.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Supreme Court of Washington

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