Adrienne Titus, Personal Representative of the Estate of Joel Titus v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections; John Does 1-6; and Golden Heart Emergency Physicians, PC, Adrienne Titus, Personal Representative of the Estate of Joel Titus v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections

496 P.3d 412
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 2021
DocketS17794, S17813
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 496 P.3d 412 (Adrienne Titus, Personal Representative of the Estate of Joel Titus v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections; John Does 1-6; and Golden Heart Emergency Physicians, PC, Adrienne Titus, Personal Representative of the Estate of Joel Titus v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Adrienne Titus, Personal Representative of the Estate of Joel Titus v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections; John Does 1-6; and Golden Heart Emergency Physicians, PC, Adrienne Titus, Personal Representative of the Estate of Joel Titus v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections, 496 P.3d 412 (Ala. 2021).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

ADRIENNE TITUS, Personal ) Representative of the Estate of Joel ) Supreme Court Nos. S-17794/17813 Titus, ) (Consolidated) ) Appellant, ) Superior Court No. 4FA-18-02180 CI ) v. ) OPINION ) STATE OF ALASKA, ) No. 7558 – October 8, 2021 DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS; ) JOHN DOES 1-6; and GOLDEN ) HEART EMERGENCY ) PHYSICIANS, PC, ) ) Appellees. ) ) ) ADRIENNE TITUS, Personal ) Representative of the Estate of JOEL ) TITUS, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) v. ) ) STATE OF ALASKA, ) DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, ) ) Respondent. ) )

Appeal in File No. S-17794 and Petition for Review in File No. S-17813 from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Fourth Judicial District, Fairbanks, Earl A. Peterson, Judge.

Appearances: Jeffrey J. Barber, Barber & Associates, LLC, Anchorage, for Appellant/Petitioner. Laura L. Farley, Farley & Graves, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellee Golden Heart Emergency Physicians, PC. Aisha Tinker Bray, Assistant Attorney General, Fairbanks, and Clyde “Ed” Sniffen, Jr., Acting Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee/Respondent State of Alaska.

Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, and Carney, Justices. [Borghesan, Justice, not participating.]

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION The personal representative of an estate brought a medical malpractice claim against a company that provided the decedent emergency room medical care shortly before his death. The superior court granted summary judgment dismissing the estate’s claim against the company, reasoning that the estate’s board-certified expert was not qualified to testify about the relevant standard of care. We reverse the superior court’s decision. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Joel Titus was arrested and taken to Fairbanks Correctional Center (FCC) in September 2016. Titus’s blood alcohol content upon arrival was .390%. Titus was transported to Fairbanks Memorial Hospital, where an emergency room doctor evaluated him then discharged him to FCC. Titus had a seizure the next day. He was transported back to the hospital, where another emergency room doctor administered care. The doctor ordered a blood test and gave Titus fluids and medication for alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Titus was

-2- 7558 discharged to FCC with follow-up instructions to FCC for treating his alcohol withdrawal symptoms. FCC staff began administering the care instructed by the emergency room doctor; Titus was housed alone in an observation cell, and staff checked on him “approximately every 30 minutes.” Titus was found unresponsive on the cell floor that evening. After FCC staff were unable to revive Titus, he was taken to the hospital and pronounced dead. An autopsy revealed that cardiovascular disease likely caused the death but that “[t]he possibility of an alcohol withdrawal seizure” could not be “completely excluded.” B. Proceedings Adrienne Titus, personal representative of Titus’s estate, sued the State of Alaska, Department of Corrections and Golden Heart Emergency Physicians, PC, the company providing emergency room services at the hospital, alleging, among other things, medical malpractice by the Golden Heart doctors. Golden Heart moved for summary judgment, relying on the affidavit of a doctor board certified in emergency and addiction medicine stating that the doctors had not breached the relevant standard of care. The estate opposed summary judgment with Dr. Lisa Lindquist’s affidavit stating that the Golden Heart doctors breached the standard of care. The Department did not oppose or otherwise respond to Golden Heart’s summary judgment motion. Dr. Lindquist is not an emergency room doctor or certified in emergency medicine, but according to her affidavits she has experience and training relevant to the underlying facts and circumstances of this malpractice action. She was certified by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology; she learned about alcohol withdrawal in medical school; she participated in emergency medicine clinical rotations; she was the current psychiatry department chair at an Anchorage medical center; and she had “experience working in hospital emergency rooms as a physician to provide emergency

-3- 7558 room treatment for alcohol withdrawal patients” and as a consultant to emergency room physicians. Dr. Lindquist stated that all physicians learn basic treatment of alcohol withdrawal: All physicians throughout the scope of their medical school education receive specific education on the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. In the scope of medical education this is provided within classroom education and within the scope of clinical rotations within emergency medicine, psychiatry, family medicine and internal medicine. . . . The standard of treatment of severe alcohol withdrawal is independent of the location or medical specialty wherein the patient first presents to medical care. Dr. Lindquist also described having experience working alongside emergency room doctors: In my current practice . . . I continue to interface directly with physicians and patients within the emergency department. Emergency Medicine physicians are able to consult me for assistance in the management of patients being admitted for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. . . . . . . I have experience working in hospital emergency rooms as a physician to provide emergency room treatment for alcohol withdrawal patients. I am knowledgeable about the standard of care specific to providing emergency room medical treatment of alcohol withdrawal patients. The superior court granted Golden Heart summary judgment. The court explained that because “the events giving rise to this claim concern . . . the decedent’s care at [a] hospital emergency room by emergency room physicians, the appropriate standard of care is the degree of care normally exercised by an emergency room physician.” The court held that Dr. Lindquist was not qualified to opine on the relevant standard of care because “the issue . . . is the standard of care for an emergency room

-4- 7558 physician; a psychiatrist, who is not board[]certified as an emergency room physician, is not qualified to give testimony about the relative standard of care for an emergency room physician.” The estate appealed the grant of summary judgment to Golden Heart. After summary judgment was granted to Golden Heart, The estate sought a motion in limine prohibiting the Department from introducing any evidence “blaming, inferring, or implying that . . . Golden Heart . . . did anything improper.” The estate argued that the Department was estopped from asserting Golden Heart’s negligence because the Department had failed to oppose summary judgment and it would be “manifestly unfair . . . to allow [the Department] to blame the empty chair . . . to avoid liability.” The Department responded that it was permitted to seek fault allocation to Golden Heart under Alaska’s statutory comparative fault framework. The superior court denied the estate’s motion in limine, and the estate petitioned for review of the court’s order. We granted the petition for review and consolidated the matters. III. DISCUSSION This appeal’s resolution turns on the superior court’s summary judgment decision.

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