Earnest Edwin Gilchrist v. Juan T. Aristorenas, M.D

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 24, 2008
DocketW2007-01919-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Earnest Edwin Gilchrist v. Juan T. Aristorenas, M.D (Earnest Edwin Gilchrist v. Juan T. Aristorenas, M.D) 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
Earnest Edwin Gilchrist v. Juan T. Aristorenas, M.D, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON January 24, 2008 Session

EARNEST EDWIN GILCHRIST v. JUAN T. ARISTORENAS, M.D.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for McNairy County No. 4825 J. Weber McCraw, Judge

No. W2007-01919-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 24, 2008

This appeal arises from a medical malpractice claim. The defendant physician performed an operation on the plaintiff patient. Complications occurred during the surgery; as a result, the patient required several more procedures and spent approximately three weeks in the hospital. The patient hired an attorney, who obtained an opinion letter from a physician expert, in which the expert opined that the defendant physician breached the standard of care during the patient’s initial operation. After securing the expert opinion, the patient filed this lawsuit against the defendant physician for medical malpractice. After the case had been pending for several years, the attorney for the defendant physician took the deposition of the patient’s expert. At the deposition, the patient’s expert changed his opinion, and testified that he believed that the defendant physician’s care of the patient was not below the standard of care. The next day, the defendant physician filed a motion for summary judgment. Several months later, the patient filed a motion under Tenn. R. Civ. P. 56.07 requesting a continuance of the summary judgment motion because he had been unable to engage another expert. The trial court denied the plaintiff’s motion for a continuance and granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant physician. The patient appeals. On appeal, the plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in denying his request to continue the motion for summary judgment. We affirm, finding no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s denial of the request for a continuance, and thus in the grant of summary judgment in the defendant’s favor.

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

HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.

John Marshall Jones, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellant Earnest Edwin Gilchrist

Craig P. Sanders and Timothy G. Wehner, Jackson, Tennessee, for the appellee Juan T. Aristorenas, M.D. OPINION

This case is an unfortunate cautionary tale for plaintiffs’ attorneys. Plaintiff/Appellant Earnest Edwin Gilchrist (“Gilchrist”) had been experiencing abdominal pain and loss of weight for several weeks, so he sought treatment at the office of Defendant/Appellee Juan T. Aristorenas, M.D. (“Dr. Aristorenas”). Dr. Aristorenas examined Gilchrist, determined that he had gallbladder disease, and recommended surgical removal of his gallbladder. On July 15, 1999, Dr. Aristorenas performed the surgery, a laparoscopic cholecystectomy, at Methodist Healthcare-McNairy Hospital (“McNairy Hospital”) in Selmer, Tennessee. The surgery was projected to take about forty-five minutes.

Complications arose during the surgery, and it ended up taking much longer than was originally anticipated. After the surgery, Dr. Aristorenas transferred Gilchrist from McNairy Hospital to the care of Dr. Michael Ibach, a gastroenterologist at Jackson Madison County General Hospital. Because of the complications that occurred during Dr. Aristorenas’ surgery, Dr. Ibach performed a procedure to drain bile from Gilchrist’s abdomen. Dr. Ibach’s efforts were apparently unsuccessful, so Gilchrist was air-lifted to the University of Tennessee Bowld Hospital in Memphis. At Bowld Hospital, Gilchrist underwent another procedure to remove more bile from his abdomen and repair his bile duct. Gilchrist was released from the hospital several weeks later on August 5, 1999. It took nearly five months for Gilchrist to recover sufficiently to be able to care for himself.

After Gilchrist was released from the hospital, he contacted an attorney who, in turn, sought an expert medical opinion from Mark Miller, M.D. (“Dr. Miller”), a general surgeon in Memphis, Tennessee. Dr. Miller reviewed Gilchrist’s medical records from Dr. Aristorenas and McNairy Hospital. After doing so, on June 6, 2000, Dr. Miller sent a letter to Gilchrist’s attorney stating his opinion that Dr. Aristorenas’ care of Gilchrist had been below the applicable standard of care. Dr. Miller indicated that Dr. Aristorenas made several mistakes during the laparoscopic surgery, including inadvertently cutting a portion of Gilchrist’s bile duct. He stated, “[T]he fact that the injury occurred is problematic but the more serious problem is the delay in determining [the] injury. The fact that the case was ended and the [procedure] was completed with the unrecognized damage to the common duct falls well below the required standard of care.” Dr. Miller said that once a surgeon experiences unusual difficulty with a laparoscopic procedure, he should “proceed to an open procedure to facilitate completion of the operation for the patient’s safety.” Dr. Miller observed, “It appears, from the records, that the case lasted anywhere from 7 to 8 hours. . . . To extend beyond 7 hours is well outside the realm of the standard of care.” In addition, Dr. Miller said that Dr. Aristorenas’ decision to transfer Gilchrist to Dr. Ibach’s care was “inappropriate.” He stated, “A consultation from a Gastroenterologist would be beneficial but transfer of care was not indicated.”

After receipt of Dr. Miller’s letter, Gilchrist filed a lawsuit against Dr. Aristorenas on June 26, 2000 in the Twenty-Sixth Judicial District of Tennessee. This lawsuit was voluntarily non- suited, and then re-filed in McNairy County on September 26, 2000. The complaint stated a claim for medical malpractice against Dr. Aristorenas arising out of the July 15 surgery, echoing the assertions in Dr. Miller’s opinion letter. For his injuries, Gilchrist sought damages in the amount

-2- of $2,250,000. Dr. Aristorenas filed an answer, denying any negligence and raising several affirmative defenses.1

The depositions of both Gilchrist and Dr. Aristorenas were taken in August 2001. Three years later, on September 21, 2004, an agreed scheduling order was entered. Under the scheduling order, the deadline for Gilchrist to disclose his expert witness was September 30, 2004. On October 31, 2005, an amended scheduling order was entered that extended this deadline to February 3, 2006. On February 2, 2006, Gilchrist sent his expert witness designation to Dr. Aristorenas, identifying Dr. Miller as his expert. The parties then scheduled Dr. Miller’s deposition.

The attorney for Dr. Aristorenas took Dr. Miller’s deposition on January 22, 2007. To the astonishment and dismay of both Gilchrist and his attorney, Dr. Miller almost totally recanted the opinion he had expressed in his June 2000 letter to Gilchrist’s attorney. In response to questions regarding Dr. Aristorenas’ actions before and after the July 15 surgery, and regarding the prolonged duration of the surgery, Dr. Miller testified:

Q (by counsel for Dr. Aristorenas): Okay. So other than intraoperative failure . . . to recognize the common bile duct injury, all of Dr. Aristorenas’ other treatment of Mr. Gilchrist, preoperatively and postoperatively, was appropriate and within the standard of care? A: I believe so, yes. Q: Okay. And the length of time of the procedure, you’ve told us that’s a surgeon’s judgment call? A: (Witness nods head affirmatively.) Q: And you personally wouldn’t have gone that long, but you’re not saying that was a deviation in and of itself? A: That’s correct. Q: Okay. All right. When did you learn that the hospital in McNairy didn’t have a gastroenterologist? A: I’m not sure whether I just—when—initially when I looked at everything, just wasn’t thinking along those lines, just didn’t occur to me.

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Earnest Edwin Gilchrist v. Juan T. Aristorenas, M.D, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earnest-edwin-gilchrist-v-juan-t-aristorenas-md-tennctapp-2008.