Donna Waldrup v. Stephanie Eads

180 So. 3d 820, 2015 WL 7729353
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedDecember 1, 2015
Docket2014-CA-01085-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 180 So. 3d 820 (Donna Waldrup v. Stephanie Eads) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donna Waldrup v. Stephanie Eads, 180 So. 3d 820, 2015 WL 7729353 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

MAXWELL, J.,

for the Court:

¶ 1. A medical-malpractice claim must be “filed within two (2) years from the date the alleged act, omission or neglect shall or with reasonable diligence might have been first known or discovered];.]” 1 Donna Waldrup filed her wrongful-death claim based on Stephanie Eads’s medical negligence more than two years after Waldr- *822 up’s mother died. Waldrup claimed the four-month delay in her mother’s official autopsy report tolled the two-year statute of limitations, making her claim timely. But the undisputed evidence shows Waldr-up and her siblings suspected Eads had committed medical negligence the day their mother died. And the autopsy report revealed nothing about Eads’s involvement in their mother’s-care they had not already known. So the statute of limitations was not tolled by the pending autopsy report.

¶ 2. Because the two-year limitations period had run by the time Waldrup filed her complaint, we affirm the dismissal of this claim on summary judgment.

¶ 3. But we do not affirm the award of sanctions based on Waldrup’s untimely filing. While Waldrup’s claim was ultimately unsuccessful, it cannot be said to have had “no hope of success.” 2 We thus reverse the award of sanctions and render a judgment in Waldrup’s favor on that issue.

Facts and Procedural History

I. Mary Lindsey’s Death

¶ 4. When Lindsey died, she was a sixty-four-year-old patient at Grace Health and Rehab of Grenada. She suffered from a condition that had left her paralyzed from the waist down. She complained of constant pain and also struggled with constipation. According to her daughter, Waldr-up, an x-ray earlier that year had shown Lindsey “was full of poop.” Her son Tracey Smith also testified Lindsey’s stomach was noticeably swollen. Apparently, Lindsey had been hospitalized at least once earlier in the year.

¶ 5. Waldrup lived in Grenada and was primarily responsible for her mother’s care. In the months leading up to Lindsey’s death, Waldrup expressed. dissatisfaction with the care Grace provided. She also looked into moving Lindsey to a nursing home in Carthage, where Tracey lived.

¶ 6. But before Waldrup could move her mother, on November 6, 2010, Lindsey began to ask for an ambulance to take her to the hospital. But Grace did not take her. Lindsey called Waldrup crying, saying she wanted to go to the hospital. Lindsey threw up in the middle of the night. And late the next morning, November 7, 2010, she died.

¶7. The deputy coroner was called to the nursing home. The nurse on duty’s notes showed the coroner told her no autopsy would be performed because the county would not pay for one in this situation. So the coroner left. But when Waldrup and other 'family members arrived at Grace, the coroner returned. -The family asked to speak with him outside the presence of Grace administrators and staff. The family told the coroner Lindsey’s death was “mysterious” and insisted an autopsy should be performed. While the coroner later testified the decision to perform an autopsy was his alone, to satisfy himself of the cause of death, he put on the autopsy-request form “[t]he family of deceased are troubled about the care that was given to [the] deceased.”

¶ 8. The autopsy was performed six days later, on November 13, 2010. But the final autopsy report was not signed until March 17, 2011. The medical examiner determined the cause of death was septic peritonitis, or “sepsis.” Apparently, Lindsey’s colon had perforated and fecal matter had seeped into her gut, causing the deadly infection.

*823 II. Waldrup’s Wrongful-Death Suit

¶9. The statute of limitations for a wrongful-death suit is governed by the underlying legal theory, in this case medical malpractice. The statute of limitations for medical malpractice ■ is two years. Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-36(2) (Rev.2012). But no action “may be begun unless the defendant has been given at least sixty (60) days’ prior written notice of the intention to begin the action.” Miss Code Ann. § 15-1-36(15).

¶ 10. On October 7, 2012, a year and eleven months after Lindsey’s death,, Waldrup, as representative of Lindsey’s wrongful-death beneficiaries, sent the mandatory notice-of-suit letter to Dr. Joseph Roberts — the physician primarily responsible for Lindsey’s care at Grace. By statute, this notice tolled the running of the statute of limitations for sixty days. Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-36(15) (“If the notice is served within sixty (60) days prior to the expiration of the applicable statute of limitations, the time for the commencement of the action shall be extended sixty (60) days from the service of the notice for said health care providers and others.”). And on December 7, 2012, Waldrup filed a wrongful-death suit against Dr. Roberts.

¶ 11. Five days later, on December 12, 2012, Waldrup sent a notice-of-suit letter to Eads — the nurse practitioner responsible for Lindsey’s care. The same day, Waldrup amended her complaint against Dr. Roberts to add Eads as a-defendant. (Waldrup later testified she had always intended to name Eads ás a defendant, along with Dr. Roberts. - And the' fact Eads was not given notice in October 2012 and named in the complaint filed on December 7, 2012, was an oversight or mistake.)

¶ 12. In response, Eads’s attorney sent Waldrup’s counsel a letter on January 15, 2013. This letter informed Waldrup’s counsel that the two7year statute of limitations had started to run against Eads on November 7, 2010 — the day Lindsey died. And because Waldrup had failed to send the mandatory sixty-day presuit notice before the statute of limitations expired, Waldrup’s complaint against Eads was untimely.

¶ 13. Waldrup’s counsel replied by arguing the earliest the limitations period began to run was March 17, 2011 — the date the autopsy report was signed. So the statute had not, yet run. Counsel’s letter dáted February 12, 2013, asserted, “As of today’s date, we have filed suit against your client in Grenada Circuit Court.” But this was incorrect, since the suit was filed two months earlier.

III. Motion to Dismiss

¶ 14'. Eads waived service of process in late March 2013. She then responded to the complaint with a- motion to dismiss. This motion urged the complaint was filed outside the two-year statute of limitations and had to be dismissed. Alternatively, the complaint- must — at a minimum — be dismissed without prejudice for failure to comply with the-'sixty-day presuit-notice requirement of section 15-1-36(15).

¶ 15. While tjiis motion was being briefed and argued before the circuit court, both sides submitted evidence outside the pleadings. And the circuit court ruled the motion to dismiss had thus converted into a motion for summary judgment. Waldrup’s counsel suggested that discovery was necessary , to , determine when the family reasonably discovered medical negligence had occurred.

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180 So. 3d 820, 2015 WL 7729353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donna-waldrup-v-stephanie-eads-missctapp-2015.