Bailey v. Haynes

856 So. 2d 1207, 2003 WL 22326608
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 10, 2003
Docket2003-C-1209
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 856 So. 2d 1207 (Bailey v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Haynes, 856 So. 2d 1207, 2003 WL 22326608 (La. 2003).

Opinion

856 So.2d 1207 (2003)

Stacy M. BAILEY, Individually and on behalf of her minor child, Tyrell Jevon Manuel
v.
William Mark HAYNES, M.D.

No. 2003-C-1209.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

October 10, 2003.

*1208 Writ denied.

CALOGERO, C.J., and KIMBALL, J., would grant the writ.

JOHNSON, J., would grant the writ and assigns reasons.

JOHNSON, J., would grant the writ for the following reasons.

The Louisiana legislature passed the Medical Malpractice Act of 1975, and other relevant legislation, in response to increasing costs of medical malpractice insurance.[1] LSA-R.S. 9:5628 establishes a prescriptive period pertaining to medical malpractice. Part A of the statute requires that suit against a healthcare provider be brought within one year of the alleged tortious act or within one year of the date of discovery of the cause of action so long as the action is filed within three years from the date of the alleged tortious act. Part B says that the prescription also applies to minors and interdicts.

While the legislation manifests a clear intent to limit the vulnerability of healthcare providers to malpractice lawsuits, the Louisiana Supreme Court has created some balance by stating that the law does not impose upon a layman the obligation to self-diagnose. Campo v. Correa, 01-2707 (La.2002), 828 So.2d 502; Cordova v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., (La.1980), 387 So.2d 574.

Louisiana courts have used two main approaches to determine when a plaintiff has acquired constructive knowledge in medical malpractice prescription cases where the plaintiff's child was injured during delivery and was later diagnosed with cerebral palsy, pursuant to LSA-R.S. 9:5628.

The first line of cases, which are analogous to the case at hand, ruled that medical malpractice suits were filed timely where the plaintiff was aware that the child was injured at delivery but was ignorant of the cause of action at such time and only acquired constructive knowledge upon obtaining subsequent information from a healthcare provider, which suggested the possibility that the child's condition was related to malpractice and plaintiff filed her suit within one year of such discovery and within three years from the date of the alleged act. Adams v. Louisiana Medical Mutual Insurance, (La.App. 2 Cir.2000), 756 So.2d 708; LeCompte v. State of Louisiana—Department of Health and Human Resources—South Louisiana, (La.App. 1 Cir.1998), 723 So.2d 474; Welch v. St. Francis Medical Center, Inc., (La. App. 2 Cir.1988), 521 So.2d 758; Poole v. Physicians & Surgeons Hospital, et al., 516 So.2d 1185 (La.App. 2 Cir.1987).

The court in Adams v. Louisiana Medical Mutual Insurance reversed the lower court's ruling sustaining the defendant's exception of prescription because the court ruled that prescription began to run with the diagnosis and information from a doctor, not at the time of the child's birth, despite the child being born premature and having many serious medical problems which included treatment for seizures. The court's findings included medical records from the delivery that referred to "unknown causes" for the child's seizures. Social security benefits were sought by the mother on behalf of the child where the *1209 mother referred to the child's health problems being caused by prematurity, not by medical negligence. Further, a doctor who saw the child at eleven months stated in his report that the parents did not know the cause of the child's seizures. An affidavit by the delivering physician also indicated that the parents were justified in failing to suspect malpractice since the doctor told the parents that the emergency procedures were necessary because the baby was premature. Id. at 718.

Similar to the plaintiffs in Adams, Stacey Bailey was never told the specific cause of her child's difficult birth nor did she have any reason to believe that the difficulty arose from medical negligence. She relied on and trusted her doctor's competence so much so that Stacey Bailey continued to bring her son, Tyrell, to Dr. Haynes after Tyrell's birth. This sixteen year old mother's belief in her doctor's competence was reasonable, given the absence of an event during the delivery that would have sparked an awareness of a cause of action. To the contrary, it would be unreasonable if she continued to bring her child to Dr. Haynes if she felt he was negligent in the delivery of her child and the cause of her child's severe developmental problems.

LeCompte v. State of Louisiana—Department of Health and Human Resources—South Louisiana, involved plaintiffs whose child was diagnosed with cerebral palsy at seven months old, in May 1986, but who argued that they did not become aware of a medical malpractice claim until the mother saw a commercial that indicated that doctors are sometimes responsible for cerebral palsy, more than one year later. The court sustained the lower court's judgment to grant defendant's exception of prescription because the court reasoned that the afterbirth complications of the child "coupled with the general statement by a physician as to the cause of cerebral palsy provided the LeComptes with constructive knowledge to start the running of prescription in May 1986," the date of the diagnosis. Similarly, Stacey Bailey's prescription date should begin to run on July 18, 1996, the time that her child was diagnosed with cerebral palsy.

Poole v. Physicians and Surgeons Hospital is the most factually similar case to the case at hand, with the exception that the plaintiff mother in Poole was a 32 year-old college graduate, rather than a sixteen year old high school student like Stacey Bailey. In Poole, the claimant mother was found by the court not to have had either actual or constructive knowledge of her cause of action prior to one year before the institution of her suit. Like Stacey Bailey, the claimant mother in Poole had a difficult labor and delivery, her child experienced seizures immediately following birth and was subsequently transferred for thirteen days to a special unit at the Schumpert Hospital in Shreveport, the same facility to which Ms. Bailey's child was transferred. Unlike Stacey Bailey, however, Mrs. Poole was thirty-two years old, a college graduate, had a relative advise her to have the baby tested three months after delivery, and had a nurse friend advise her on fetal monitoring.

The court in Poole declined to dismiss the claimant's action based on prescription, despite the mother's education, available resources, and the severity of the child's symptoms at birth because the court found that plaintiff's failure to file suit within one year of her delivery was not the result of either willful ignorance or neglect but for the following three reasons:

(1) plaintiff believed that her difficult labor could have resulted from her "v" shaped pelvis; (2) plaintiff had confidence *1210 in her treating physician; and (3) no physician or health care worker suggested to plaintiff that negligence might have been involved in her child's birth. Poole at 1189. These three factors are applicable to the case at hand.

First, Stacey Bailey entered the hospital at 42 weeks pregnant and was treated for latent pregnancy to which she could have reasonably attributed her difficult delivery, rather than medical malpractice. Second, she trusted her physician so much so that she continued to bring her child to the same doctor after the delivery. Third, no healthcare worker ever told Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
856 So. 2d 1207, 2003 WL 22326608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-haynes-la-2003.