Boudreaux v. State

687 So. 2d 596, 1997 WL 14834
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 15, 1997
Docket97-C-0076
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 687 So. 2d 596 (Boudreaux v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boudreaux v. State, 687 So. 2d 596, 1997 WL 14834 (La. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

687 So.2d 596 (1997)

Suzanne BOUDREAUX
v.
STATE of Louisiana, etc.

No. 97-C-0076.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

January 15, 1997.
Writ Denied April 18, 1997.

*597 Harry D. Hoskins, III, Hoskins & Hoskins, L.C., New Orleans, for Relator.

Gregory C. Weiss, Ann Marie LeBlanc, Weiss & Eason, L.L.P., New Orleans, for Respondent.

WALTZER, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Suzanne Boudreaux sued the State of Louisiana, through the Department of Health and Hospitals, d/b/a Charity Hospital of Louisiana at New Orleans and/or Medical Center of Louisiana at New Orleans (the Hospital), for alleged medical malpractice arising out of the failure of the Hospital's Emergency Room personnel to diagnose and treat Boudreaux's heart attack. A medical review panel found malpractice. Five years after the acts complained of, plaintiff amended her petition to add a claim under the federal "anti-dumping statute," the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act, 42 U.S.C. sec. 1395dd (EMTALA). The trial court granted the Hospital's motion for partial summary judgment dismissing the cause of action under EMTALA. Boudreaux seeks reversal of that judgment pursuant to this Court's supervisory jurisdiction. We find no error in the trial court's partial summary judgment and deny relief.

FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR: Finding that plaintiff had to prove the Hospital failed to properly screen because of plaintiff's inability to pay.

Subsections (a) and (b) of EMTALA require hospitals with emergency departments upon request to provide presenting patients an appropriate medical screening examination, ancillary routine emergency services and necessary stabilizing treatment. In addition to civil penalties, subsection (d)(2) provides for civil enforcement by injured patients, authorizing an award of "those damages available for personal injury under the law of the State in which the hospital is located" and equitable relief. 42 U.S.C. sec. 1395(dd) subsection (d)(2)(C) limits recovery to actions brought no more than two years after the date of the violation. Subsection (f) provides that this law does not preempt any State or local law requirement except to the extent that the requirement directly conflicts with a requirement of that section.

While it may be argued that EMTALA creates a federal malpractice action, the federal jurisprudence clearly establishes that EMTALA was enacted in response to the concern that hospitals were dumping medically indigent patients either by refusing to provide emergency medical treatment or by transferring indigent patients without having stabilized their emergency conditions. The Act was not designed to provide a federal remedy for misdiagnosis or general malpractice. Brooks v. Maryland General Hospital, 996 F.2d 708 (4th Cir.1993).

The basis of the malpractice claimed by plaintiff and found by the medical review panel consists of the Hospital's failure to diagnose and treat Boudreaux's heart attack. No evidence was offered on the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment that this failure to diagnose was intentional "dumping" based on indigence rather than negligent malpractice. Indeed, it seems nonsensical to argue that the Hospital made the medical decision in this case based on indigence since Charity Hospital is, by definition, organized to provide medical services to the indigent and is not advantaged by practicing "dumping."

Plaintiff relies on Griffith v. Mt. Carmel Medical Center, 831 F.Supp. 1532 (D.Kan. 1993). In that case, however, plaintiff's wife testified that plaintiff's lack of insurance may have motivated the scheduling of his emergency EEG examination, and the court found a clear question of fact as to whether Mount Carmel's decision not to admit Mr. Griffith was motivated by the fact that he was uninsured.

Boudreaux contends, in effect, that she can prevail under EMTALA if she can prove that she was treated differently from ANY other patient on any basis at all, and that she need not show that the Hospital was guilty of discrimination based upon her medical indigence. This interpretation necessarily implies that EMTALA creates a federal malpractice cause of action, since a patient could argue an EMTALA right whenever the hospital can be shown to have treated another *598 patient in accordance with the applicable standard of care. Thus, according to Boudreaux's analysis, the fact that some patients are not victims of malpractice creates the "differential treatment" necessary to support EMTALA liability for any malpractice victim. This is an untenable construction of the federal statute and is wholly inconsistent with its legislative intent.

This assignment of error is without merit.

SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR: Holding that subjective awareness of an emergency medical condition must be shown to prevail on an EMTALA failure to stabilize claim.

This argument is without merit absent a showing that the Hospital failed to stabilize Boudreaux because of her medical indigence. It appears that Boudreaux was discharged for the same reason she was not given emergency medical treatment, that is, because the medical personnel negligently misdiagnosed her condition. This is the essence of the medical malpractice claim on which Boudreaux prevailed before the Medical Review Panel and which is pending in the trial court.

THIRD ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR: Granting a partial summary judgment was improper under Everything on Wheels Subaru v. Subaru South, Inc. and Pape v. ODECO.

Boudreaux's third assignment of error attacks the trial court's authority to grant partial summary judgment dismissing her EMTALA claim. Article 1915 A(3) of the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure provides that a final judgment may be rendered and signed by the court, even though it may not grant the successful party all of the relief prayed for, or may not adjudicate all of the issues in the case, when the court grants a motion for summary judgment as provided by Articles 966 through 969 of the Code of Civil Procedure. In 1993 the Louisiana Supreme Court held that a trial court, in considering an exception of no cause of action in multi-claim litigation in which the court might rule in favor of the exceptor on less than all claims, must first determine whether (1) the petition asserts several demands or theories of recovery based on a single cause of action arising out of one transaction or occurrence, or (2) the petition is based on several separate and distinct causes of action arising out of separate and distinct transactions or occurrences. If the former, the court should overrule the exception of no cause of action when the petition states a cause of action as to any demand or theory of recovery. If the latter, the court should maintain the exception in part, but the partial judgment rendered by the court is not a partial final judgment which is appealable in the absence of irreparable injury. Any party may apply for supervisory writs by showing that an immediate review may materially advance the termination of the litigation. Otherwise, the causes of action affected by the interlocutory judgment may be reviewed on appeal after the trial on the merits disposes of all issues and parties. Everything on Wheels Subaru, Inc. v. Subaru South, Inc., 616 So.2d 1234, 1242 (La.1993).

During the three years that followed, the courts of appeal have frequently applied this holding in various factual contexts.

The First Circuit upheld partial summary judgment finding an insurer obligated to defend its insured in Dennis v. Finish Line, Inc., 93 0638 (La.App. 1 Cir.

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Bluebook (online)
687 So. 2d 596, 1997 WL 14834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boudreaux-v-state-lactapp-1997.