Deborah Mason Hawkins, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Wayne Hawkins v. Rodney A. Martin, M.D., and Baptist Memorial Hospital

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 23, 2014
DocketW2013-02102-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Deborah Mason Hawkins, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Wayne Hawkins v. Rodney A. Martin, M.D., and Baptist Memorial Hospital (Deborah Mason Hawkins, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Wayne Hawkins v. Rodney A. Martin, M.D., and Baptist Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Deborah Mason Hawkins, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Wayne Hawkins v. Rodney A. Martin, M.D., and Baptist Memorial Hospital, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON February 19, 2014 Session

DEBORAH MASON HAWKINS, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE OF WAYNE HAWKINS, DECEASED v. RODNEY A. MARTIN, M.D. AND BAPTIST MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Shelby County No. CT00320410 John R. McCarroll, Jr., Judge

No. W2013-02102-COA-R3-CV - Filed June 23, 2014

This appeal involves compliance with the statutory requirements for a health care liability action. The plaintiff filed a health care liability lawsuit. The attorney for the plaintiff inadvertently failed to provide the defendant health care providers with medical authorizations that complied with T.C.A. § 29-26-121(a)(2)(E). The defendants filed a motion to dismiss. The trial court granted the defendants’ motion, finding no extraordinary cause to justify noncompliance with the statutory requirement. The plaintiff filed his first appeal. The appellate court vacated the trial court’s decision and remanded the case for the trial court to consider the totality of the circumstances, including those of the attorney. After additional discovery on remand, the trial court again held that the plaintiff had not established extraordinary cause for noncompliance with the statutory requirement, and so dismissed the lawsuit. The plaintiff again appeals. After a careful review of the record, we find no abuse of the trial court’s discretion and affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed

H OLLY M. K IRBY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Darrell J. O’Neal, Memphis, Tennessee, for Plaintiff/Appellant Deborah Mason Hawkins

J. Kimbrough Johnson, Memphis, Tennessee, for Defendant/Appellee Rodney A. Martin, M.D.

Brett A. Hughes and Kannon C. Conway, Memphis, Tennessee, for Defendant/Appellee Baptist Memorial Hospital OPINION

F ACTS AND P ROCEEDINGS B ELOW

This is the second appeal in this case. See Hawkins v. Martin, No. W2011-02318-COA-R3- CV, 2012 WL 3007680 (Tenn. Ct. App. July 24, 2012) (involving the failure to provide HIPAA-compliant medical authorizations as required under Tennessee Code Annotated § 29- 26-121(a)). The facts pertinent to this appeal are generally undisputed.

Plaintiff/Appellant Deborah Mason Hawkins (“Plaintiff”) was married to Wayne Hawkins. After Mr. Hawkins’ death, Ms. Hawkins was named as administratrix of his estate. In December 2009, Ms. Hawkins retained attorney Darrell J. O’Neal to file a health care liability claim against her late husband’s health care providers.

At the time Ms. Hawkins retained Mr. O’Neal, he was practicing law as a solo practitioner. He also served as a reservist in the Army National Guard. In January 2010, Mr. O’Neal received notice that he was scheduled to undergo military training in February 2010 in preparation for deployment to Iraq. As scheduled, Mr. O’Neal underwent the February 2010 training. At some point after that, Mr. O’Neal learned that he would not be deployed to Iraq, but would instead be deployed to Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, Mr. O’Neal continued preparation for filing Ms. Hawkins’ health care liability action. He first consulted with an expert to evaluate the validity of the contemplated lawsuit. After that, on March 9, 2010, Mr. O’Neal’s office sent notice of a potential claim to Defendant/Appellees Baptist Memorial Hospital and Rodney A. Martin, M.D. (collectively “Defendants”), among others. The pre-lawsuit notice included all of the information required under Tennessee Code Annotated § 29-26-121(a)(2), except it did not include medical authorization forms that complied with HIPAA,1 so as to permit the Defendants to obtain relevant medical records.

On June 25, 2010, Mr. O’Neal filed the instant lawsuit on Ms. Hawkins’ behalf in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, Tennessee. The complaint alleged that the Defendants’ medical malpractice injured the Plaintiff’s late husband and caused his death. The complaint stated that the Plaintiff had complied with the requirements of Section 29-26-121. Attached to the complaint was a certificate of good faith, as required by Tennessee Code Annotated § 29-26- 122, as well as copies of the pre-suit notice letters mailed to the Defendants in March 2010.

1 HIPAA is an acronym for the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104–191, 110 Stat.1936 (codified throughout Titles 18, 29 and 42 of the United States Code and in 45 C.F.R. § 164) (2013).

-2- In August 2010, the Defendants filed motions to dismiss the Plaintiff’s complaint. The motions asserted that the Plaintiff failed to provide the Defendants with HIPAA-compliant medical authorizations as required under Section 29-26-121(a)(2)(E). In response, the Plaintiff argued that, if in fact she failed to strictly comply with the statutory requirement to include a HIPPA-compliant medical authorization form with her initial pre-suit notice letters, she substantially complied with the statutory requirements, and at any rate the Defendants suffered no prejudice.

In the meantime, attorney O’Neal was deployed to Afghanistan for his military service. The trial court found that he was a significant witness and continued the matter until Mr. O’Neal’s return from his military service. Eventually, on September 8, 2011, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing at which Mr. O’Neal testified.

In his testimony, Mr. O’Neal first outlined his routine when a client brings him a potential health care liability claim. Normally, Mr. O’Neal explained, he gets two medical authorizations from the client, one to obtain medical records for expert review and another to send to potential defendants if the expert determines that the case is valid.

In this case, Mr. O’Neal said, after he sent the case to an expert for evaluation, his “life took an unusual turn.” He testified that, “around January,” he received a notice that he was going to be deployed to Iraq. The next month, in February, Mr. O’Neal learned that he would not be deployed to Iraq after all. He explained:

[I]n January, I got my notice that I was going to be deployed. In February, I got a remission notification. Remission means that the Army came back and said guess what, you don’t have to go to Iraq, but we’ve got another place you might like even better. So they decided they were going to send me to Afghanistan. So once I received – about that time the file actually came back to my office from my expert, and basically my expert tells me that it’s a valid case. So what I do is I take – usually what I do, when I receive a case and it’s time to start doing work . . . . [I]n this particular case, [] I . . . drafted up the good faith certificate, the notice and the authorization, and I put that in a package, and I sent it off, one to the doctor who was the named defendant, and then I sent one off to Baptist Hospital. . . . So those went off.

Later testimony in the hearing clarified that Mr. O’Neal’s legal assistant mailed the documents in question. She was not present to testify. In the hearing, Mr. O’Neal said he believed that the statutorily required authorization had been included in the package his office sent to the Defendants. He conceded, however, that

-3- while a letter and his legal assistant’s affidavit in the package referenced other items that were enclosed, they did not mention enclosure of the HIPAA authorizations. Mr. O’Neal commented that he is normally “meticulous in how I do this . . .

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Deborah Mason Hawkins, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Wayne Hawkins v. Rodney A. Martin, M.D., and Baptist Memorial Hospital, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deborah-mason-hawkins-individually-and-as-administ-tennctapp-2014.