EDWARD F. STRINGER, IV v. JONATHAN A. SEAY

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 1, 2022
DocketA22A0742
StatusPublished

This text of EDWARD F. STRINGER, IV v. JONATHAN A. SEAY (EDWARD F. STRINGER, IV v. JONATHAN A. SEAY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EDWARD F. STRINGER, IV v. JONATHAN A. SEAY, (Ga. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

SECOND DIVISION RICKMAN, C. J., MILLER, P. J., and PIPKIN, J.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

November 1, 2022

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A22A0741. DODGE COUNTY HOSPITAL AUTHORITY v. SEAY et al. A22A0742. STRINGER v. SEAY et al.

PIPKIN, Judge.

In these consolidated appeals, Appellants Dodge County Hospital Authority

d/b/a Dodge County Hospital and Edward F. Stringer, IV, M.D. appeal the denial of

their motions to dismiss the complaint filed by Appellee Jonathan A. Seay as Executor

of the Estate of Pamela M. Beauchamp. We agree with Appellants that this action

sounds in professional malpractice rather than simple negligence and, thus, that Seay’s

failure to file an expert affidavit with his complaint was fatal to this action.

Consequently, it was error for the trial court to deny the motions to dismiss, and we

reverse. “A motion to dismiss based upon the lack of an expert affidavit is a motion to

dismiss for failure to state a claim under OCGA § 9-11-12 (b) (6).” (Citation and

punctuation omitted.) Brown v. Tift Health Care, Inc., 279 Ga. App. 164, 164 (630

SE2d 788) (2006). “On appeal, this Court reviews the denial of a motion to dismiss de

novo, construing the pleadings in the light most favorable to the plaintiff with any

doubts resolved in [his] favor.” Siska v. McNeil, 346 Ga. App. 429, 431 (816 SE2d

423) (2018).

The facts underlying this action are largely undisputed. On January 30, 2016,

Pamela M. Beauchamp sought treatment at Dodge County Hospital for rectal pain, and

Dr. Stringer consulted on the case. The physician examined Beauchamp and

determined that she had an abscess that required surgery to prevent the development

of necrotizing fasciitis; during that procedure, Dr. Stringer discovered a rectal mass

and performed a biopsy. Beauchamp eventually developed necrotizing fasciitis, and

Dr. Stringer transferred Beauchamp to Doctors Hospital in Augusta, Georgia, where

Shawn Fagan, M. D. began treating her. Several days after Beauchamp’s transfer, Nick

Lancia, M. D., contacted Dr. Stringer with the results of the biopsy, which showed that

Beauchamp had moderately differentiated rectal adenocarcinoma. According to the

complaint, Beauchamp remained under the care of Dr. Fagan, but the pathology report

2 “was not used” in her treatment for six months, until June 30, 2016, at which point Dr.

Fagan advised Beauchamp that she had cancer. Despite subsequent medical

intervention, including surgeries, hospitalizations, chemotherapy, and radiation

therapy, Beauchamp died of rectal cancer in November 2017.

In January 2021, just days after being appointed executor of Beauchamp’s estate,

Seay filed this action against Appellants Dr. Stringer and Dodge County Hospital,1

ostensibly alleging simple negligence against both parties. Specifically, the complaint

alleges that Dr. Stringer discussed the pathology findings with Dr. Lancia but that Dr.

Stringer never “transferred, communicated, discussed, mailed, faxed, or in any other

manner revealed (or attempted to reveal) to the Doctors Hospital or . . . Dr. Fagan or

anyone else that [Beauchamp] had cancer.” According to the complaint, “[a]ny

ordinary person would have contacted the treating physician to inform him of the

results of the biopsy,” and Dr. Stringer was “negligent in not consulting with Dr. Fagan

about the pathology findings of cancer,” which, the complaint contends, caused

Beauchamp’s death. As to Dodge County Hospital, the complaint alleges that the

hospital was negligent in the hiring, training, supervision, and retention of its

1 Seay also asserted a claim against Dr. Fagan and a claim for wrongful death against all defendants; both claims were dismissed, and neither ruling has been appealed.

3 employees responsible for maintaining patient records, including Dr. Stringer;

according to the complaint, the hospital received the pathology report from Dr. Lancia

on February 4, 2016, but never delivered the report to Doctors Hospital.

Both Appellants answered and moved to dismiss, arguing that Seay’s claims

sounded in professional negligence and, thus, that his failure to include an expert

affidavit as required by OCGA § 9-11-9.1 was fatal to the action. Specifically,

Appellants alleged that, while Seay may have couched his claims as a mere

administrative oversight, in substance the allegation was that Dr. Stringer “failed to

timely diagnose [Beauchamp] with cancer and/or to communicate her cancer diagnosis

to her treating physician,” which, Appellants asserted, involves the exercise of medical

knowledge, skill, or judgment. Thus, according to Appellants, the claims asserted in

the complaint “squarely f[e]ll within the ambit of medical malpractice” and were

required to be supported by an expert affidavit. Dodge County Hospital argued further

that Seay’s claims against the hospital required an expert affidavit because they were,

in effect, derivative of Seay’s professional negligence claims against Dr. Stringer or

those working at his direction.

In response, Seay argued that his action properly alleged simple negligence

because, he said, Dr. Stringer “did not have to make a medical decision” since Dr.

4 Lancia had already determined that Beauchamp had cancer. Seay posited that Dr.

Stringer “only had to carry out a routine act of informing the patient of the diagnosis.”

The crux of the case, Seay claimed, involves “the failure of Dr. Stringer or any

professional . . . [to] communicate a diagnosis of cancer [made] by another doctor,”

which, Seay maintained, was “merely [a] clerical, administrative, or routine” act. Seay

also explained that his claims were against Appellants both individually and

collectively; the complaint, according to Seay, further alleged that Beauchamp’s death

may have been ultimately caused by a unnamed hospital employee who negligently

failed in the “clerical” duty to transmit the pathology report to Doctors Hospital.

The trial court denied the motion, concluding that, while any claim that Dr.

Stringer had failed to appropriately review the pathology report and diagnose

Beauchamp sounded in professional negligence, reading Seay’s complaint with all

inferences in his favor, the complaint could be construed as alleging simple negligence

against Dr. Stringer and Dodge County Hospital. Specifically, the trial court

determined that the complaint could be

construed as alleging that Dr. Stringer, having received the biopsy report, correctly diagnosed [Beauchamp’s] cancer, appreciated the need for the treating physician to receive the report, and then by an act of ordinary or simple negligence, failed to correctly transmit the report to Dr. Fagan.

5 With respect to Dodge County Hospital, the trial court concluded that Seay’s complaint

could be construed to “allege[] that some non-professional employee failed to perform

his or her clerical duty to transmit [Beauchamp’s] records to Dr. Fagan.”

The trial court granted certificates of immediate review to Dr. Stringer and

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EDWARD F. STRINGER, IV v. JONATHAN A. SEAY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-f-stringer-iv-v-jonathan-a-seay-gactapp-2022.