C.E. v. Prairie Fields Family Medicine

287 Neb. 667
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 2014
DocketS-13-455
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 287 Neb. 667 (C.E. v. Prairie Fields Family Medicine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.E. v. Prairie Fields Family Medicine, 287 Neb. 667 (Neb. 2014).

Opinion

Nebraska Advance Sheets C.E. v. PRAIRIE FIELDS FAMILY MEDICINE 667 Cite as 287 Neb. 667

C.E., appellant, v. Prairie Fields Family Medicine P.C., appellee. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed March 14, 2014. No. S-13-455.

1. Summary Judgment: Appeal and Error. An appellate court will affirm a lower court’s grant of summary judgment if the pleadings and admitted evidence show that there is no genuine issue as to any material facts or as to the ultimate infer- ences that may be drawn from the facts and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 2. ____: ____. In reviewing a summary judgment, an appellate court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against whom the judgment was granted, and gives that party the benefit of all reasonable inferences deducible from the evidence. 3. Summary Judgment: Final Orders. A summary judgment order that completely disposes of the subject matter of the case and leaves nothing for the court’s deter- mination is final. 4. Appeal and Error. Absent plain error, an appellate court considers only an appellant’s claimed errors that the appellant specifically assigns in a separate “assignment of error” section of the brief and correspondingly argues in the argu- ment section. 5. Negligence: Proof. Identifying a defendant’s tortious conduct is crucial to a causal inquiry, but proving tortious conduct is a separate requirement from prov- ing causation. 6. Summary Judgment: Proof. A party moving for summary judgment has the bur- den to show that no genuine issue of material fact exists and must produce suf- ficient evidence to demonstrate that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. If the movant meets this burden, then the nonmovant must show the existence of a material issue of fact that prevents judgment as a matter of law. 7. Summary Judgment: Evidence. In the face of direct, uncontroverted evidence supporting judgment for the movant, a nonmovant’s equivocal statements or speculative assertions do not create a material issue of fact on a disputed ground for summary judgment. The evidence must be sufficient to support an inference in the nonmovant’s favor without the fact finder engaging in guesswork. 8. ____: ____. When the parties’ evidence would support reasonable, contrary infer- ences on the issue for which the movant seeks summary judgment, it is an inap- propriate remedy. 9. Negligence. Where reasonable minds could draw different conclusions from the facts and circumstances presented, a defendant’s negligence presents a triable issue of material fact. 10. Summary Judgment. At the summary judgment stage, the trial court determines whether the parties are disputing a material issue of fact. It does not resolve the factual issues. 11. Summary Judgment: Trial. Summary judgment is an extreme remedy and should not be used to deprive a litigant of a formal trial if there is a genuine issue of material fact. Nebraska Advance Sheets 668 287 NEBRASKA REPORTS

12. Negligence: Proof. A person who alleges negligence of another bears the burden to prove such negligence by direct or circumstantial evidence.

Appeal from the District Court for Dodge County: Geoffrey C. Hall, Judge. Reversed and remanded for fur- ther proceedings. Christopher A. Pfanstiel and W. Gregory Lake, of Lewis, Pfanstiel & Reed, L.L.C., for appellant. Earl G. Greene III and Michael T. Gibbons, of Woodke & Gibbons, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee. Heavican, C.J., Wright, Connolly, McCormack, Miller- Lerman, and Cassel, JJ. Connolly, J. SUMMARY C.E. appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment to Prairie Fields Family Medicine P.C. (Prairie Fields). C.E. brought claims of intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress and invasion of privacy. She alleged that a Prairie Fields employee disclosed her positive blood test results for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to a third party, which information then spread throughout the Fremont, Nebraska, community where C.E. did business and had friends. The district court dismissed C.E.’s invasion of privacy claim because it was time barred. Later, it sustained Prairie Fields’ summary judgment motion on C.E.’s claims for intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The summary judg- ment order is the only ruling assigned as error on appeal. The issue is whether C.E. raised a genuine issue of material fact that someone at Prairie Fields disclosed information from her private medical records. We conclude that she did and that the district court erred in sustaining Prairie Fields’ motion for sum- mary judgment. BACKGROUND In 2010, C.E. went to a diagnostic laboratory in Omaha, Nebraska, to have a physical examination for a life insurance Nebraska Advance Sheets C.E. v. PRAIRIE FIELDS FAMILY MEDICINE 669 Cite as 287 Neb. 667

application, and the laboratory took a blood sample. The labo- ratory sent the blood sample to another laboratory, which sent the test results directly to C.E.’s physician at Prairie Fields in Fremont. Although C.E. was unsure of the exact date, some- time in September 2010, Prairie Fields arranged for C.E. to come in for a consultation. When C.E. arrived on a Thursday at about 3 or 4 p.m., Kristy Stout-Kreikemeyer, whom C.E. knew from high school, showed C.E. to a room. C.E. said that when she asked about her test results, Stout-Kreikemeyer looked in C.E.’s file, flushed, and responded that she could not say any- thing. The record shows that a physician’s assistant told C.E. about her positive HIV test. C.E. said that she was told the test was inconclusive; she agreed to another test. C.E. testified that the next day, Friday, at about 7 p.m., Jonathan Karr, the father of one of C.E.’s daughters, called her or sent text messages to ask how she was because he had heard from his friend Jamie Goertz that she had “‘Aids, full blown-out Aids.’” C.E. said Karr sent her the text message that he had received from Goertz. But Karr did not know who had given Goertz that information. C.E. had known Goertz since 2001, but she had not recently kept in contact with Karr or Goertz. C.E. said that she called Goertz to find out his source but that Goertz denied knowing anything about her medical condition and denied contacting Karr. Because C.E. had seen Goertz’ text message to Karr, she believed that Goertz was lying to protect someone. C.E. had known Goertz since 2001 through his former wife, because C.E. had babysat their children. On Monday, C.E. called her doctor at Prairie Fields to find out how this information could have been disclosed and asked him to question his staff. The doctor called C.E. later that week and said that none of his staff knew anything about the disclo- sure. But he assured C.E. that he had locked up her file and directed more training for his staff on privacy laws. In February 2012, C.E. filed her complaint. C.E. included Stout-Kreikemeyer as a defendant and alleged that she had disclosed C.E.’s test result to a third party. In July, the court sustained Prairie Fields’ motion to dismiss C.E.’s invasion of privacy claim because the applicable statute of limitations Nebraska Advance Sheets 670 287 NEBRASKA REPORTS

barred the claim.1 In September, Stout-Kreikemeyer testified in a deposition that although she knew C.E. in high school, she did not know Goertz or Karr. In October, in response to interrogatories, C.E. admitted that she was not sure whether Stout-Kreikemeyer was the person who had disclosed the infor- mation. She also admitted during her subsequent deposition that she did not know for certain whether Stout-Kreikemeyer or someone else at Prairie Fields had disclosed the information. C.E. believed it could have been Stout-Kreikemeyer because she had seen a social contact between her and Goertz on an Internet social media service. But C.E. testified that she knew someone at Prairie Fields had disclosed the information.

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Bluebook (online)
287 Neb. 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ce-v-prairie-fields-family-medicine-neb-2014.