Columbia Valley Healthcare System L.P. D/B/A Valley Regional Medical Center v. A.M.A., a Minor, by and Through His Mother, Ana Ramirez, as Next Friend and Ana Ramirez, Individually

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 2022
Docket20-0681
StatusPublished

This text of Columbia Valley Healthcare System L.P. D/B/A Valley Regional Medical Center v. A.M.A., a Minor, by and Through His Mother, Ana Ramirez, as Next Friend and Ana Ramirez, Individually (Columbia Valley Healthcare System L.P. D/B/A Valley Regional Medical Center v. A.M.A., a Minor, by and Through His Mother, Ana Ramirez, as Next Friend and Ana Ramirez, Individually) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas 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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Columbia Valley Healthcare System L.P. D/B/A Valley Regional Medical Center v. A.M.A., a Minor, by and Through His Mother, Ana Ramirez, as Next Friend and Ana Ramirez, Individually, (Tex. 2022).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 20-0681 ══════════

Columbia Valley Healthcare System, L.P. d/b/a Valley Regional Medical Center, Petitioner,

v.

A.M.A., A Minor, by and through his mother, Ana Ramirez, as next friend and Ana Ramirez, Individually, Respondents

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Thirteenth District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued February 23, 2022

JUSTICE YOUNG delivered the opinion of the Court.

Before respondent A.M.A. was born, nurses had observed his heartrate dropping to dangerous and even nondetectable levels for extended periods before they summoned the obstetrician. A.M.A. was deprived of oxygen for these periods because, as became apparent upon his delivery, the umbilical cord had become tightly wrapped around his neck. A.M.A. survived but was soon diagnosed with cerebral palsy. Following trial, a jury awarded a substantial amount for A.M.A.’s future healthcare expenses. At petitioner’s request, the district court applied the periodic-payments statute in the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code to the award of future medical expenses. We recently addressed that statute in Regent Care of San Antonio, L.P. v. Detrick, 610 S.W.3d 830 (Tex. 2020). But because we decided that case after the district court rendered judgment, neither the court nor the parties had the benefit of its guidance. We conclude that the district court erred in how it structured the periodic payments and remand to that court for further proceedings that will allow it, in light of Regent Care and today’s decision, to render a judgment that complies with the periodic-payments statute.

I Ana Ramirez, A.M.A.’s mother, went to Valley Regional Medical Center for premature labor—she was 33-weeks pregnant—after her water broke on a Friday evening.1 Her obstetrician, Dr. Martinez, instructed the nurses to monitor the baby’s heartbeat, then went home for the night, leaving the mother and her unborn baby in the nurses’ hands over the weekend. A.M.A.’s heartbeat in utero dropped for about two minutes shortly after midnight on Sunday. Twenty minutes later, his heartbeat dropped for seven minutes. Finally, after another twenty minutes, the baby’s heartbeat dropped to the point where the nurses could not detect it. Even then, the nurses did not call Dr. Martinez— they waited for another twenty minutes.

1 The petitioner is Columbia Valley Healthcare System, L.P. d/b/a Valley Regional Medical Center. We refer to it as “Valley Regional.”

2 After the nurses called the doctor, it took him about nineteen minutes to arrive at Valley Regional. His ability to act was impeded because no ultrasound had been done, even though he had ordered a “stat” ultrasound when the nurses called him. The ultrasound technician arrived only after Dr. Martinez did. Once the ultrasound was started, the doctor saw that there was minimal heart activity, ordered an emergency c-section, and proceeded immediately to the operating room. After further logistical delays, including obtaining Ramirez’s signature on additional forms, A.M.A. was finally delivered. The umbilical cord had become tightly wrapped around his neck. Because of the lack of oxygen to his brain, A.M.A. was later diagnosed with cerebral palsy. Ramirez sued Valley Regional on behalf of A.M.A., alleging that the nurses’ delay caused A.M.A.’s cerebral palsy. At the close of evidence, Valley Regional’s proposed jury charge asked the court to question the jury about A.M.A.’s life expectancy and about the annual amount of any future healthcare expenses. The trial court denied Valley Regional’s proposed charge and Valley Regional objected to the denial. The jury found for A.M.A. and awarded $10,330,000, divided as follows: $62,000 for past healthcare expenses, $9.06 million for future healthcare expenses until A.M.A. turns 18, and $1.208 million for future healthcare expenses after he turns 18. Before trial, Valley Regional had moved the trial court to structure any jury award of future medical expenses as periodic payments under the periodic-payments statute, which is codified as Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 74, Subchapter K.

3 When properly invoked, the periodic-payments statute requires the trial judge to order that the award for future healthcare expenses be paid “in whole or in part in periodic payments rather than by a lump sum payment.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 74.503(a). About a month after the jury trial concluded, the trial judge held a hearing to determine how to form the court’s judgment, including how to structure periodic payments and how to ensure that any required periodic payments would be made. Valley Regional’s principal position was that, under the statute and the Constitution, separate questions about life expectancy or annual medical expenses should have been submitted to the jury. Despite the lack of separate questions, however, evidence presented at the trial had addressed these topics. A.M.A.’s expert, Dr. Willingham, testified that A.M.A.’s life expectancy was thirty-two years. Valley Regional’s experts testified that A.M.A.’s life expectancy was likely up to seven or eight years-old, but that he was “highly unlikely” to live past age ten. Each party presented annual healthcare costs that tracked their different life-expectancy evidence. Valley Regional presented evidence of annual healthcare costs of $604,000 per year and for its expert’s opinion that A.M.A. had five years of life remaining. A.M.A.’s expert submitted life-care plans that included annual medical costs to age eighteen, and from that age to “end of life” at age thirty-two. A.M.A. noted some of this evidence at the hearing and in subsequent briefing about the structure of the periodic payments. The district court found A.M.A.’s first proposed judgment insufficiently clear and directed A.M.A. to revise it. The district court repeatedly offered

4 Valley Regional the chance to provide its own proposed judgment, including how it would structure the periodic payments, but Valley Regional agreed only to offer objections to A.M.A.’s proposed judgment, which it did. About three weeks later, the trial court held a hearing on A.M.A.’s second proposed judgment, which included modifications and clarifications to the proposed structure for periodic payments. A.M.A. then submitted its third proposed judgment and Valley Regional submitted its objections. The trial court signed A.M.A.’s proposal as its final judgment, which ordered the award structured as follows: (1) five periodic payments of $604,000 from a funded bank account, to begin on A.M.A.’s “fourth birthday, which will be on October 27, 2018, and the payments shall continue on his birthday each year through his 8th birthday on October 27, 2022,” and (2) a lump-sum payment of the remaining $7,310,000 to a special-needs trust, which allows funds to be used to maintain good health, safety, and well-being, in addition to medical expenses. In the event of A.M.A.’s death, the special-needs trust mandates that any remaining principal and income in the trust revert to his heirs, which would be his father and mother. The district court also awarded prejudgment and postjudgment interest. After the trial court signed the judgment, Valley Regional requested findings of fact and conclusions of law concerning the periodic payments. The district court denied that request. Valley Regional also challenged the judgment through a series of other motions, each of which the trial court denied. Valley Regional perfected a timely notice of appeal and brought its case to the Thirteenth Court of Appeals. In multiple issues, it raised

5 three main challenges to the district court’s judgment.

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Columbia Valley Healthcare System L.P. D/B/A Valley Regional Medical Center v. A.M.A., a Minor, by and Through His Mother, Ana Ramirez, as Next Friend and Ana Ramirez, Individually, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbia-valley-healthcare-system-lp-dba-valley-regional-medical-center-tex-2022.