Coon v. Medical Center, Inc.

797 S.E.2d 828, 300 Ga. 722, 2017 WL 875036, 2017 Ga. LEXIS 170
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 6, 2017
DocketS16G0695
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 797 S.E.2d 828 (Coon v. Medical Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coon v. Medical Center, Inc., 797 S.E.2d 828, 300 Ga. 722, 2017 WL 875036, 2017 Ga. LEXIS 170 (Ga. 2017).

Opinion

NAHMIAS, Justice.

Amanda Rae Coon lives in Alabama but received treatment from a hospital owned by The Medical Center, Inc. in Georgia. After the hospital mishandled the remains of her stillborn baby, Coon filed this lawsuit. Among other claims, she sought to recover damages for the negligent infliction of emotional distress. The trial court ultimately entered an order granting summary judgment to the hospital. The court applied Georgia’s common-law “physical impact rule” to reject Coon’s negligent infliction of emotional distress claim, rather than applying case law from the Alabama courts that allows such claims based on the mishandling of human remains. Coon appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed, although the seven judges disagreed about the choice-of-law analysis. See Coon v. The Medical Center, Inc., 335 Ga. App. 278 (780 SE2d 118) (2015).

We granted Coon’s petition for certiorari primarily to review the Court of Appeals’ analysis of the choice-of-law issue. The principal opinion of that court held that Georgia law governs Coon’s claims based on the public policy exception to the rule of lex loci delicti for choosing which state’s law applies to a tort claim. See Coon, 335 Ga. App. at 282-283. In dissent, Presiding Judge Barnes disagreed about the application of that exception. See id. at 288-291. We conclude that Judge McMillian’s special concurrence identified the choice-of-law [723]*723rule that actually applies in this context: where a claim in a Georgia lawsuit is governed by the common law, and the common law is also in force in the other state, as it is in Alabama, the common law as determined by Georgia’s courts will control. See id. at 286-287. Because the Court of Appeals reached the right result, we affirm its judgment.

1. (a) The pertinent facts — when the evidence in the record is viewed in the light most favorable to Coon as the party opposing summary judgment — and the procedural history of the case in the trial court are recounted in the Court of Appeals’ principal opinion as follows:

Amanda Rae Coon lives in Opelika, Alabama. On February 8, 2011, Coon, who was 37[-]weeks pregnant, went for a routine prenatal examination at her obstetrician-gynecologist’s office in Columbus, Georgia. During the examination, Coon learned that her unborn baby did not have a heartbeat.
The following day, Coon was admitted to a Columbus hospital owned by The Medical Center, Inc. (the “hospital”), where her labor was induced and she delivered a stillborn baby girl. After the delivery, the hospital’s bereavement coordinator spoke with Coon and her father, who informed the coordinator that the remains of the baby were to be released to a funeral home in Opelika. The bereavement coordinator completed a mortuary permit and supporting documents that included the pertinent funeral home information and placed these documents with Coon’s patient chart.
The stillborn baby initially remained with Coon in her hospital room, but Coon’s mother later informed the bereavement coordinator that Coon was tired and asked that the baby be removed. The coordinator placed Coon’s baby in a separate holding room on the same floor until someone could take the baby to the hospital morgue. In addition to Coon’s baby, there was a smaller stillborn baby boy, who was less than 20 weeks in gestation, already in the holding room.
When the bereavement coordinator placed Coon’s baby in the holding room with the smaller baby, the hospital floor was in the middle of the evening shift change. Anurse whose shift had just begun volunteered to transport both babies from the holding room to the morgue. Under a hospital policy put into effect two days earlier, identification tags were to be placed on the arm and leg of a stillborn baby and on the [724]*724outside of the cadaver bag before being delivered to the morgue. The nurse filled out the three tags for both of the babies.
The nurse had not yet had an opportunity to affix the identification tags when a hospital security guard came to the floor and asked the nurse if she was ready for him to escort her to the morgue with the babies. Because the babies were not yet prepared for transport to the morgue, the security guard decided to assist the nurse with the placement of the identification tags. The security guard had never tagged a deceased baby, and his job duties did not include tagging the remains of deceased patients or preparing them for transport to the morgue.
When the security guard began assisting the nurse, they mixed up the identification tags. The nurse tagged the smaller baby with the identification tags for Coon’s baby, and the security guard tagged Coon’s baby with the identification tags for the smaller baby. The security guard placed a tag on the outside of the cadaver bag for Coon’s baby, but chose not to “fool” with the tags on the baby’s body because he did not want to remove any of the baby’s clothing. The nurse repeatedly told the security guard that he needed to place identification tags on the body of Coon’s baby, but he chose not to do so.
The nurse and security guard transported the stillborn babies to the morgue with the wrong identification tags and logged in the remains. Because of the incorrect identification tags, the hospital mistakenly released the wrong baby to the Opelika funeral home.
On February 12, 2011, Coon, her family members, and other mourners attended a funeral at an Opelika cemetery for a deceased stillborn baby whom they believed was Coon’s. Coon and her family members did not view the baby’s remains before or during the funeral service after the funeral director advised against it, given the condition of the remains. [1] The costs of transporting the baby from the hospital to the funeral home were paid by Coon’s husband through the military, and Coon’s aunts paid for the funeral service and donated the burial plot.
[725]*725On February 23, 2011, the hospital discovered that it had released the wrong baby to the Opelika funeral home. The hospital contacted the director of the Opelika funeral home, informed him of the mistake, and requested contact information for Coon’s family The funeral director advised the hospital to contact Coon’s father rather than Coon herself because “mentally, she [would] just not [be] able to take it” if she learned of the mistaken identification.
Later that day, the hospital’s chief executive officer contacted Coon by telephone and informed her that the hospital had released the wrong baby for burial. The following day, the baby who had been mistakenly released to the funeral home was exhumed from the Opelika cemetery. The funeral home director then traveled to Columbus to deliver the exhumed baby to a different, funeral home and to retrieve Coon’s baby from the hospital.
After the exhumed baby’s remains were handed over to the representative of another funeral home, the Opelika funeral director retrieved a cadaver bag from the hospital morgue that had an identification tag for Coon’s baby on the outside of it. Yet, when the director returned to his funeral home in Opelika, he discovered that the cadaver bag contained nothing but a blanket, and he had to return again to the hospital morgue to obtain Coon’s baby, whom hospital employees had left in a holding room in the morgue.

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Bluebook (online)
797 S.E.2d 828, 300 Ga. 722, 2017 WL 875036, 2017 Ga. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coon-v-medical-center-inc-ga-2017.