Ellis Ex Rel. A.M.G. v. United States

673 F.3d 367, 2012 WL 676361, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 4306
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 2, 2012
Docket10-50845
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 673 F.3d 367 (Ellis Ex Rel. A.M.G. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis Ex Rel. A.M.G. v. United States, 673 F.3d 367, 2012 WL 676361, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 4306 (5th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

EMILIO M. GARZA, Circuit Judge:

In this Federal Tort Claims Act case arising out of medical malpractice that led to the death of Melissa Busch (“Ms. Busch”), the United States Government (“Government”) and Ms. Busch’s family members Patricia Ann Ellis, Coralon Busch, and Ms. Busch’s children (together, “Plaintiffs”) cross-appeal the district court’s judgment.

The district court refused to reduce the Plaintiffs’ damages award by amounts the Government claimed NE Methodist Hospital (“NE Methodist”) or Ms. Busch were liable. The district court also limited Plaintiffs’ recovery for household services to the Texas Medical Liability Act’s $250,000 noneconomic damages cap. We AFFIRM in part and REVERSE and REMAND in part.

I

A

This case arises out of repeated medical misdiagnoses that led to the untimely *370 death of Melissa Busch. The Government’s conceded medical malpractice spanned two years, from 1997, when Ms. Busch complained of lingering foot pain to doctors at the Brooke Army Medical Center (“BAMC”) at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas, to 1999, when doctors at NE Methodist, a private, non-governmental medical institution, also in San Antonio, diagnosed Ms. Busch with the synovial foot cancer that eventually killed her.

Ms. Busch’s family’s negligence claim against BAMC stems from two visits Ms. Busch made to BAMC on January 8 and 9, 1997. Ms. Busch had first visited BAMC for care to her left foot in August 1996 after she hurt it while playing with her children. She returned to BAMC in January 1997 because the pain and swelling in her left foot persisted despite her compliance with treatment. A physician’s assistant at BAMC first gave Ms. Busch an X-ray and a bone scan. After both tests ruled out a stress fracture, the physician’s assistant instructed Ms. Busch to pursue an orthopedic consultation. Although the assistant did not tell her so, the orthopedic consultation was intended to further investigate the cause of the pain and swelling; the consult likely would have revealed cancer if present. Ms. Busch sought an orthopedic appointment with BAMC, but BAMC employees told her no appointments were immediately available. They placed her on a waiting list and told her they would contact her to set up an appointment. But they did not, and Ms. Busch did not receive an orthopedic consultation. 1

By the end of that month, Ms. Busch divorced her husband and as a result, lost access to military health benefits. She was ineligible to visit BAMC for further treatment. She did not return to BAMC or seek medical advice or treatment from BAMC again.

Eight months passed. Ms. Busch re-injured her left foot in September 1997 after a pipe fell on her foot while she was at work. She visited the ER at NE Methodist for treatment. NE Methodist’s doctors failed to advise her that they observed a “retained foreign body” in her X-ray. Ms. Busch made no mention to NE Methodist physicians that BAMC had previously advised an orthopedic consultation.

Increased swelling in her foot compelled Ms. Busch’s return to the NE Methodist ER only three days later. Ms. Busch complained of “continued redness, pain, and swelling” in her left foot. The doctor who treated her at the ER could not recall later if she consulted the radiological report or viewed the X-rays of Ms. Busch’s foot from Ms. Busch’s visit to NE Methodist three days before. The ER doctor did recall that Ms. Busch failed to “relate any information about a prior injury or prior swelling.”

The ER doctor suspected that Ms. Busch had a skin infection on her left foot that necessitated a quick follow-up appointment. The doctor advised Ms. Busch to follow up with a visit to a private physician or return to the ER within seventy-two hours and gave Ms. Busch the names of physicians to contact. But Ms. Busch failed to obtain follow-up care for her foot even though pain and swelling persisted. The doctor later testified, “We can only tell them [to follow up]. We can’t take them to their appointment.”

Over the next year and a half, Ms. Busch continued to see private doctors for medical care unrelated to her foot. She *371 became pregnant in 1998 and delivered a healthy child that October.

Ms. Busch did not again seek treatment for her foot until January 8, 1999. A physician’s assistant initially saw her and referred her to a podiatrist. The podiatrist located a tumor in Ms. Busch’s foot, and after further examination diagnosed Ms. Busch with synovial sarcoma, a rare, serious cancer. Due to delays in diagnosis, treatment was aggressive. Doctors amputated Ms. Busch’s left leg within a month. Ms. Busch ended a pregnancy shortly after her amputation so that she could begin chemotherapy. Her efforts to evade the cancer were futile. Over the next several years, the cancer recurred despite repeated bouts of chemotherapy and radiation. It invaded Ms. Busch’s bones and lungs. It killed her in October 2005. Ms. Busch was only thirty-three. Among her survivors were her husband, Coralon Busch, whom she married in 1999; their two children; two children from her first marriage; and Ms. Busch’s mother, Patricia Ellis.

B

Before her death, Ms. Busch sued NE Methodist in Texas state court in 1999, see Busch v. Lopez, et al., No. 99-CI-16625 (Dist. Ct., Bexar County, Tex. 1999), alleging negligence because NE Methodist never told her that X-rays taken in September 1997 revealed a retained foreign body in her left foot. Ms. Busch and NE Methodist settled Ms. Busch’s claim without a trial in March 2002. Ms. Busch sued the Government under the Federal Tort Claims Act in August 2003, charging negligence based on BAMC’s failures to schedule an orthopedic consultation in January 1997 and warn Ms. Busch of the potential urgency of her condition, both of which in turn caused a two-year delay in her cancer diagnosis and treatment. 2

After Ms. Busch’s death in October 2005, Ms. Busch’s mother substituted as plaintiff in Ms. Busch’s federal lawsuit, and transformed Ms. Busch’s negligence claim into one for wrongful death. Ms. Busch’s mother, along with Ms. Busch’s husband and minor children, also separately sued the Government. The district court consolidated these cases. The Government designated NE Methodist and physicians treating Ms. Busch there as responsible third parties under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 33.004, contending that the district court should mitigate the Government’s liability by the percentage of fault properly allocated to NE Methodist.

The district court reached the merits of Plaintiffs’ consolidated claims in a four-day bench trial. The district court held the Government liable for Ms. Busch’s death, finding that although a BAMC employee recognized that Ms. Busch had a potentially serious medical problem and directed her to seek an orthopedic consultation, BAMC employees negligently failed to arrange the appointment for her or inform her of the urgency of the consult.

The district court refused to mitigate the Government’s liability by the responsibility allocable to NE Methodist; it held that the Government failed to show that NE Methodist shouldered any responsibility for Ms. Busch’s condition. The district court further held that Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
673 F.3d 367, 2012 WL 676361, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 4306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-ex-rel-amg-v-united-states-ca5-2012.