Estate of Maxey v. Darden

187 P.3d 144, 124 Nev. 447, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 43, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 47
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 2008
Docket47737
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 187 P.3d 144 (Estate of Maxey v. Darden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Maxey v. Darden, 187 P.3d 144, 124 Nev. 447, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 43, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 47 (Neb. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Hardesty, J.:

In this appeal, we consider, for the first time, multiple sections of Nevada’s Uniform Act on Rights of the Terminally 111 (the Act), codified in NRS 449.535 through 449.690. The Act authorizes the use of three procedures by which terminally ill patients or their families can legally implement their wishes with regard to withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining treatment. First, an individual may execute a declaration directing an attending physician to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatment under certain circumstances. 1 Second, an individual may execute a declaration designating another person to make decisions on the individual’s behalf regarding withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining treatment. 2 Third, in the absence of either an express declaration or a declaration designating another person to make life-sustaining treatment decisions, a terminally ill patient’s attending physician may withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatment from the patient upon receiving surrogate consent from certain members of the patient’s family. 3

Here, after their mother died, appellants Richard Kaminski and Steven Kaminski, M.D., brought an action for medical malpractice wrongful death, among other claims, against respondent Jon Darden, M.D., an emergency care physician; multiple corporate entities; and other defendants not parties to this appeal. The Kaminskis maintained below, as they do on appeal, that Dr. Darden improp *450 erly withheld treatment from their mother, Avis Maxey, in reliance on an invalid surrogate consent. The Kaminskis appeal from the district court’s partial summary judgment in favor of Dr. Darden and appellants EmCare of Nevada, Inc.; EmCare Physician Services, Inc.; EmCare, Inc.; SEC/EmCare Emergency Care, Inc.; and EmCare Silver (collectively, corporate entities) on three grounds. First, they argue that Dr. Darden was not Avis’s attending physician for purposes of the Act and that he therefore lacked authority to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining treatment. Second, they argue that the surrogate consent form signed by Avis’s ex-husband was attested improperly and was thus invalid to authorize Dr. Darden to withhold life-sustaining treatment under the Act. Third, they argue that Dr. Darden did not exercise reasonable medical care when he classified Avis as terminally ill.

With regard to appellants’ first two appellate arguments, although we conclude that Dr. Darden was Avis’s attending physician under the Act and that he therefore had the authority to make decisions concerning withholding life-sustaining treatment from Avis, summary judgment nevertheless was not appropriate here because genuine issues of material fact exist with respect to the validity of the surrogate consent to withhold treatment. In particular, the record does not reveal whether the surrogate consent was attested by two witnesses with personal knowledge, gained in the purported surrogate’s presence, of his signature on the consent form and his intent to consent to withholding life-sustaining treatment from Avis.

As for appellants’ third argument on appeal, the Act immunizes physicians from civil and criminal liability for decisions made in accord with reasonable medical standards. In this case, genuine issues of material fact remain concerning whether the attending physician’s decisions were made in compliance with that standard. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment and remand this matter to the district court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

It is undisputed that, in July 2002, 72-year-old Avis Maxey ingested approximately 200 prescription pills in an apparent suicide attempt. Her ex-husband, Theodore Maxey, with whom she still resided, discovered her unconscious and breathing shallowly. However, Theodore waited several hours before calling Avis’s daughter-in-law, Deborah Kaminski. Theodore told Deborah that although Avis had attempted suicide, he did not want to call an ambulance because he believed Avis wanted to kill herself, and he did not want to disregard Avis’s wishes. Thereafter, paramedics were called and found Avis alive but comatose. An incident report, *451 filled out by the paramedics who responded, indicates that although Theodore advised the paramedics that he had “power of attorney” and did not want them to attempt to resuscitate Avis, the paramedics determined “that a suicide attempt cancels out [any] power of attorney’ ’ and therefore began efforts to resuscitate her.

Avis was admitted to the emergency room at Desert Springs Hospital in Las Vegas approximately 30 minutes later, at 3:36 p.m. Dr. Darden was the emergency room doctor on duty at that time. Nurse Shannon Thompson also was on duty, and she assisted Dr. Darden in caring for Avis. At approximately 3:45, Dr. Darden responded to Avis’s bedside and intubated her. During this process, Theodore signed a Patient Classification Order, provided by the hospital, classifying Avis as a “Class III” patient. A Class III patient’s treatment is limited to “[diagnostic and therapeutic efforts” which will “increase comfort with no attempt to prolong life.’ ’ 4 Dr. Darden also signed the order, but Nurse Thompson did not. At approximately 3:55, Dr. Darden extubated Avis at Theodore’s request but provided her with an oxygen mask. Nurse Thompson made the following notation in Avis’s chart: “15:55 [Patient] Cat. Ill per husband’s req.” At approximately 4:05, Dr. Darden removed the oxygen mask at Theodore’s request. Nurse Thompson made the following notation in her nursing notes, “16:05 . . . [oxygen] mask removed per husband’s request.”

At approximately 4:35 p.m., Dr. Kenneth Mower relieved Dr. Darden and responded to Avis’s bedside. Between 5:45 and 7:05 p.m., Avis’s respirations decreased from 4-6 per minute to 3 per minute. At approximately 7:20, Dr. Mower ordered Nurses Thompson and Rochelle Read to medicate Avis for pain by administering 100 milligrams of morphine to her in “short intervals.” Dr. Mower pronounced Avis dead at approximately 7:50 p.m. Hospital personnel subsequently notified Avis’s primary care physician, Dr. Judith Ameriks, of Avis’s death. Dr. Ameriks responded that she would sign Avis’s death certificate in the morning.

Less than one month later, the Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners began investigating the circumstances surrounding Avis’s death. A board investigator interviewed Drs. Darden and Mower. Dr. Darden explained that Theodore had told him that Avis did not wish to be resuscitated and that, although he had not verified Avis’s wishes by checking for the existence of any advance directive or living will or by speaking to any of her other family members, he ordered her extubated and administered only pallia *452 live care. The board eventually revoked Dr. Mower’s medical license, finding that he committed malpractice by administering morphine to Avis because she was not terminally ill. 5

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Bluebook (online)
187 P.3d 144, 124 Nev. 447, 124 Nev. Adv. Rep. 43, 2008 Nev. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-maxey-v-darden-nev-2008.