Donna Cooper v. Dr. Mason Wesley Mandy

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 17, 2020
DocketM2019-01748-COA-R9-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Donna Cooper v. Dr. Mason Wesley Mandy (Donna Cooper v. Dr. Mason Wesley Mandy) 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.

Bluebook
Donna Cooper v. Dr. Mason Wesley Mandy, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

11/17/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE June 3, 2020 Session

DONNA COOPER ET AL. V. DR. MASON WESLEY MANDY ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Williamson County No. 2018-191 James G. Martin, III, Judge

No. M2019-01748-COA-R9-CV

The principal issue in this interlocutory appeal is whether intentional misrepresentations made by health care providers to induce a prospective patient to engage the health care providers’ services are within the purview of the Tennessee Health Care Liability Act (“the Act”), Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-101 to -122. The complaint filed by the patient, Donna Cooper (“Mrs. Cooper”), and her husband alleges that Dr. Mason Wesley Mandy (“Dr. Mandy”) and Rachelle Norris (“Ms. Norris”) with NuBody Concepts, LLC, intentionally misrepresented that Dr. Mandy was a board-certified plastic surgeon and, based on their misrepresentation, Mrs. Cooper gave Dr. Mandy her consent to perform the surgery. Following “painful, disastrous results,” the plaintiffs asserted four claims: (1) intentional misrepresentation; (2) medical battery; (3) civil conspiracy; and (4) loss of consortium. Defendants filed a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 12 motion to dismiss for failure to comply with the pre- suit notice and filing requirements of the Act, specifically Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 29-26-121 and -122. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss, finding the Act did not apply. This interlocutory appeal followed. We hold that Mrs. Cooper is entitled to proceed on her claims of intentional misrepresentation and civil conspiracy because the alleged misrepresentations were inducements made prior to the existence of a patient-physician relationship; thus, the claims were not related to “the provision of . . . health care services.” See Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-101(a)(1). We also affirm its ruling on the medical battery claim because a physician’s misrepresentation of a material fact, if proven, may vitiate consent, and, without consent, the very act of touching Mrs. Cooper may constitute an unlawful and offensive act that is not related to the provision of health care services. See Holt v. Alexander, No. W2003-02541-COA-R3-CV, 2005 WL 94370, at *6 (Tenn. Ct. App. Jan. 13, 2005). Further, we affirm the trial court’s ruling on Mr. Cooper’s claim for loss of consortium because, as the trial court held, his claims relate to Dr. Mandy’s and Ms. Norris’s false representations of Dr. Mandy’s credentials, not to a provision of, or a failure to provide, a health care service. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court in all respects and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Tenn. R. App. P. 9 Interlocutory Appeal; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed and Remanded

FRANK G. CLEMENT JR., P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT J. joined. RICHARD H. DINKINS, J., not participating.

J. Eric Miles and Matthew Buchbinder, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Mason Wesley Mandy, M.D., and Middle Tennessee Surgical Services, PLLC.

R. Dale Bay, Paul Jordan Scott, and Kaycee L. Weeter, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, NuBody Concepts, LLC.

G. Kline Preston, IV, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Donna Cooper and Michael Cooper.

OPINION

Mrs. Cooper and her husband, Michael Cooper (“Mr. Cooper”), (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) filed two complaints against Dr. Mandy, Nubody Concepts, LLC, (“NuBody”), and Middle Tennessee Surgical Services, PLLC, (“MTSS”)1 (collectively, “Defendants”). Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed the first complaint, filed on September 30, 2015, after Defendants filed Tenn. R. Civ. P. 12 motions to dismiss for failure to comply with the pre-suit notice and filing requirements of the Act. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26- 121 and -122. Plaintiffs commenced this action by timely filing their second complaint on April 18, 2018, which was substantially similar to the first. Because this appeal arises from a decision on a Rule 12.02 and 12.03 motion to dismiss, we derive the facts from the second complaint, which was the pleading at issue in this appeal.

Acting upon advertising and marketing information disseminated by NuBody, Mrs. Cooper visited the offices of NuBody in Brentwood, Tennessee on September 17, 2014, where she met with a NuBody representative and Dr. Mandy to discuss possible breast reduction surgery.2 Mrs. Cooper alleges that Dr. Mandy and Ms. Norris, a Nubody employee, told her Dr. Mandy was a board-certified plastic surgeon with years of experience in performing breast reduction surgeries. Mrs. Cooper further alleges that she relied on these representations when entering into the agreement on September 19, 2014, to have Dr. Mandy perform her breast reduction surgery. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Cooper

1 The complaint alleges that Dr. Mandy was “an employee or agent” of Nubody and “an owner and employee of Defendant, Middle Tennessee Surgical Services, LLC,” at all times material to this action.

2 The complaint alleges that Nubody is a Nevada Limited Lability Company which “advertises it provides cosmetic surgical procedures via television, internet, social media and print media. It advertised and represented that Defendant, Dr. Mandy, was a board-certified general surgeon.”

-2- remitted the agreed-upon fee of $4,000. Dr. Mandy performed the surgery on October 2, 2014, at MTSS.

The complaint alleges the procedure was “unnecessarily painful, that it was done in a barbaric fashion in unsterile conditions and that it has left her disfigured and with grotesque and painful bacterial infections.”3 It states:

Defendants falsely represented that Defendant Dr. Wesley Mandy, was a board-certified plastic surgeon with years of experience who was experienced in performing the breast reduction procedure she had agreed to permit him to perform prior to entering into the agreement and prior to consenting to have the procedure. In fact, Dr. Mandy was not board-certified in any field at the time.

The complaint alleges it was not until after her surgery that Mrs. Cooper discovered Dr. Mandy had never been board certified in any field, and “had she known that Defendant, Dr. Wesley Mandy, was not a board-certified plastic surgeon she would not have consented to the breast reduction surgery.” If not for Defendants’ false representations, Mrs. Cooper claims she never would have entered into the contract for Dr. Mandy to perform the surgery.

Plaintiffs asserted claims for (1) intentional misrepresentation, (2) medical battery, (3) civil conspiracy, and (4) loss of consortium. Plaintiffs sought compensatory damages for each Plaintiff in an amount in excess of $500,000 as well as punitive damages in an amount in excess of $1,000,000. With regard to the medical battery claim, the complaint stated: “Defendants performed a surgical procedure on her without her effective consent which constitutes a medical battery.” As for the civil conspiracy claim, the complaint stated: “Defendants worked together in concert through fraud and misrepresentation to jointly profit from the breast reduction procedure performed on Plaintiff, Donna Cooper.”

Dr. Mandy and MTSS responded to the complaint by filing a joint motion to dismiss arguing that Plaintiffs failed to substantially comply with the following requirements of the Act: (1) provide a HIPPA-compliant medical records authorization with their pre-suit notice letter; (2) demonstrate compliance with Tenn.

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Donna Cooper v. Dr. Mason Wesley Mandy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donna-cooper-v-dr-mason-wesley-mandy-tennctapp-2020.