Despres v. Moyer

2003 ME 41, 827 A.2d 61
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 19, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2003 ME 41 (Despres v. Moyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Despres v. Moyer, 2003 ME 41, 827 A.2d 61 (Me. 2003).

Opinion

DANA, J.

[¶ 1] Terri Despres appeals from the judgment of the Superior Court (York County, Brennan, J.) granting David Moyer’s motion for a partial summary judgment and granting his motion to report the case to this Court to decide:

Whether the foreign object exception to the statute of limitations set forth in 24 M.R.S.A. § 2902 1 works to circumvent the usual three year statute of limitations when the foreign object in question was not placed in the patient by the physician sued.

Despres asserts there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Moyer, an oral surgeon, placed in her body the foreign object that was later removed from her sinus, and that being so, we should vacate the partial summary judgment and not decide the reported question. Moyer moves to dismiss Despres’s appeal. We consolidated the Superior Court’s order of report and Despres’s appeal, along with Moyer’s motion to dismiss, and we affirm the partial summary judgment entered by *63 the Superior Court and proceed to answer the reported question.

[¶ 2] We agree with Moyer’s assertion that there is no genuine issue of material fact in this case because Despres’s statements in her response to Moyer’s statement of material facts do not supply references to competent evidence to controvert Moyer’s assertion that: (1) he did not put anything into Despres’s sinus, and (2) no item originating with Moyer migrated into Despres’s sinus. Because we agree that Despres’s statement, asserting that she did not put anything into her sinus, is insufficient to controvert Moyer’s material facts, we find no genuine issue of material fact and therefore affirm the Superior Court’s grant of a partial summary judgment to Moyer. We address the reported question and conclude that the foreign object exception to the statute of limitations set forth in 24 M.R.S.A. § 2902 does not work to circumvent the usual three-year statute of limitations when the foreign matter at issue was not placed in the patient by the physician sued.

I. CASE HISTORY

[¶ 3] The parties agree that on July 31, 1996, Dr. Jay Beauchemin extracted a molar from Despres’s upper right jaw. A fistula or hole developed between the socket from which the tooth was extracted and Despres’s sinus. Despres also developed a dry socket. Beauchemin treated Despres for her dry socket and fistula until August 29, 1996, when he referred her to Moyer for further treatment. Moyer first saw Despres on September 3,1996.

[¶ 4] The parties disagree as to what happened next. On September 9, 1996, Moyer removed material from Despres’s sinus. Despres contends that, as Moyer’s contemporaneous notes indicate, he removed five pieces of gauze, including a dry socket dressing. Moyer asserts that he removed four pieces of “gauze,” which were actually elongated, twisted, rolled pieces of toilet paper or tissue paper, and one dry socket dressing. Moyer states that the dry socket dressing he removed from Despres’s sinus was not the type used in his office and he does not know from where it, or any of the “gauze,” came. He states that after he cleaned Despres’s tooth socket, he inserted into it a fully intact piece of the specific type of radio-paque dry socket dressing used in his office.

[¶ 5] When Despres returned the next day, however, the dressing appeared to be gone and a Panorex x-ray failed to reveal any dressing in her sinus. After Moyer cleaned and examined the tooth socket, he closed the fistula. On September 16 and 19, Moyer replaced some of the sutures inserted on September 10.

[¶ 6] The parties agree that Moyer continued to treat Despres until her last office visit on October 24,1996; he then referred her for further treatment to Dr. Paul Klu-ger, an ear, nose, and throat specialist, whom she first saw on November 4, 1996; on November 8, Despres had a CT scan of her sinus; and on December 10, 1996, Kluger performed a surgical procedure on Despres’s sinus and removed gauze and other material from her right maxillary sinus.

[¶ 7] Exactly three years after the surgery, on December 10, 1999, Despres filed a notice of claim against Moyer for professional negligence, pursuant to 24 M.R.S.A. § 2903 (2000). Moyer moved for a summary judgment, which the Superior Court denied. He then filed a motion for reconsideration or, in the alternative, a motion to report the case to this Court. After a hearing, the Superior Court granted the summary judgment “to the extent that [the court] finds that Respondent did not place anything in Claimant’s sinus and the *64 matter subsequently removed from Claimant’s sinus did not originate with the Respondent.” The court also granted Moyer’s motion pursuant to M.R.App. P. 24(c) to report the case to us to resolve the above legal issue.

[¶ 8] Despres appealed and Moyer moved to dismiss her appeal as interlocutory.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Summary Judgment

[¶ 9] Before we consider the reported question, we must consider whether the court’s grant of a summary judgment was proper. If there are factual circumstances that are unresolved, it is premature for us to answer the reported question.

[¶ 10] We review a grant of a summary judgment de novo, considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the party against whom judgment has been entered to determine whether the parties’ statements of material fact and the record evidence they reference reveal a genuine issue of material fact. Bay View Bank, N.A., v. The Highland Golf Mortgagees Realty Trust, 2002 ME 178, ¶ 9, 814 A.2d 449, 451-52. “A genuine issue exists when sufficient evidence requires a factfinder to choose between competing versions of the truth at trial.” MP Assocs. v. Liberty, 2001 ME 22, ¶ 12, 771 A.2d 1040, 1044. “A material fact is one having the potential to affect the outcome of the suit.” Id. ;

[¶ 11] We review the trial court decision for errors of law. Petillo v. City of Portland, 657 A.2d 325, 326 (Me.1995). The opposing party to a summary judgment motion is given the benefit of “any inferences which might reasonably be drawn from the evidence.” Jenness v. Nickerson, 637 A.2d 1152, 1154 (Me.1994) (quoting 2 Field, McKusick & Wroth, Maine Civil Practice § 56.4 at 39 (2d ed.1970)); see also, Curtis v. Porter, 2001 ME 158, ¶ 9, 784 A.2d 18, 22 (‘When facts or reasonable inferences are in dispute on a material point, summary judgment may not be entered.”). The summary judgment process “is not a substitute for trial. If material facts are disputed, the dispute must be resolved through fact-finding, even though the nonmoving party’s likelihood of success is small.” Id. ¶ 7.

[¶ 12] While the statements of material facts and the responses thereto reveal differences of opinion as to what happened or might have happened, Despres has not produced admissible evidence to support her contention that genuine issues of material fact

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2003 ME 41, 827 A.2d 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/despres-v-moyer-me-2003.