Estate of Stephen Stiles v. Nasim Yacob Md

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 2017
Docket332933
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Stephen Stiles v. Nasim Yacob Md (Estate of Stephen Stiles v. Nasim Yacob Md) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Stephen Stiles v. Nasim Yacob Md, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PATRICIA T. ESCH personal representative of UNPUBLISHED ESTATE OF STEPHEN STILES, June 13, 2017

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 332933 Kent Circuit Court NASIM YACOB, MD, JIM MCFADDEN, RN, LC No. 16-000859-NH MINERVA BOOKER, RN, ESTHER WEST, RN, CLAIRE EVERSON, LPN, DORIS LEMMEN, LPN, CORIZON HEALTH INC., DAVID SOVA, DO, and WEST MICHIGAN URGENT CARE INC.,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: GADOLA, P.J., and TALBOT, C.J., and GLEICHER, J.

PER CURIAM.

The question before us is whether the plaintiff estate lost the right to bring a state court medical malpractice action when a federal district court denied its motion to amend its § 1983 complaint to add a state-law medical malpractice claim. Defendants vigorously opposed the addition of a state-law malpractice claim, contending that it fundamentally differed from the § 1983 action and would “confuse” the jury. In state court, defendants made a 180-degree turn, arguing that plaintiff’s med mal complaint should have been filed in a joint action in the federal court given the similarity of the two claims. The state court accepted this argument and summarily dismissed the state court action. We reverse and remand for continuation of the proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

At approximately 4:30 a.m. on May 31, 2011, Stephen Stiles was booked into the Kent County Jail. Stiles informed the deputy that he had a seizure disorder and that the police had confiscated his antiseizure medication, Dilantin, during his arrest. During medical intake, Stiles advised Nurse Jim McFadden that he suffered from epilepsy and grand mal seizures, required medication to control the condition, and had suffered a seizure two weeks earlier. Stiles further reported that he had consumed alcohol that evening. Despite receiving this information,

-1- McFadden did nothing to prioritize review of Stiles’s medical chart. He placed it in a pile of other reports, which sat for several hours without being reviewed by medical personnel.

The jail passed out medication to inmates at 8:00 a.m. However, Stiles did not receive a dose of Dilantin at that time because Nurse Esther West did not contact Stiles’s pharmacy until 10:42 a.m. to verify his prescription. West did not thereafter contact the supervising physician for authorization to immediately provide Dilantin to Stiles. Between 2 and 3 p.m., Stiles advised a deputy and LPN Doris Lemmen that he needed his medication and was concerned he may suffer a seizure. At 6:45 p.m., LPN Claire Everson noticed the medication verification in Stiles’s file and advised Dr. David Sova. Sova authorized provision of the medication to Stiles. Finally, at 8:10 p.m., Everson and a deputy made rounds to pass out medication to prisoners. They went to Stiles’s cell and found him “lying on the top bunk of his bed, unconscious and unresponsive.” Stiles had suffered a grand mal seizure and died.

Mary Owens secured court assignment as the personal representative of Stiles’s estate. On May 2, 2013, Owens filed suit in federal district court. In an amended complaint, Owens named as defendants Dr. Nasim Yacob, Dr. Sova, McFadden, Nurse Minerva Booker, Everson, and Corizon Health, Inc. Owens elucidated the facts learned during discovery regarding who interacted with Stiles and when, what they knew about Stiles’s medical needs, and the timeline of verifying and attempting to provide Stiles’s medication. Owens raised claims of deliberate indifference to Stiles’s medical needs, gross negligence, and failure to supervise and train claims under 42 USC 1983.

On December 10, 2014, Patricia Esch replaced Owens as personal representative. On February 20, 2015, Esch filed a second amended complaint, adding as defendants Lemmen and West and alleging that Stiles “was denied reasonable and adequate medical care” while in the Kent County Jail, resulting in his death. Specifically, plaintiff noted that the information shared with McFadden and included in Stiles’s chart should have raised a red flag with the jail’s medical staff. It should have been obvious to the medical defendants, plaintiff contended, that Stiles had a severe medical condition and needed immediate provision of his antiseizure medication. Plaintiff accused the various medical professionals stationed in the jail of acting in willful and wanton disregard of Stiles’s constitutional rights and with deliberate indifference toward Stiles’s right to receive basic and adequate medical care. The conduct of these individuals was the proximate cause of Stiles’s death, plaintiff contended.

Plaintiff subsequently sought leave to amend to add a state-law medical malpractice claim and to add West Michigan Urgent Care (WMUC) as a party defendant. Plaintiff asserted that during discovery, she identified and deposed several nurses and other medical professionals employed by Corizon who worked at the jail. Only after deposing nurses West and Lemmen did plaintiff believe she “had a viable medical malpractice claim.” Plaintiff indicated that she filed a notice of intent to file a medical malpractice claim upon defendants, as required by MCL 600.2912(b), on December 15, 2014. She then waited the requisite 182 days to seek leave to amend the complaint. Amendment would not cause undue delay, plaintiff insisted, because all the individuals named in the proposed amendment had already been deposed. Moreover, “Plaintiff’s medical malpractice claims emerge from the same nucleus of facts surrounding Plaintiff’s claims against the current medical personnel Defendants.” As such, “it only makes sense to litigate these claims in a single action.” “Likewise,” plaintiff continued, “the facts

-2- supporting Plaintiff’s basis for adding the medical malpractice claim against the medical personnel Defendants stem from the same incident.”

Defendants challenged plaintiff’s attempt to add a medical malpractice count. First, defendants attacked the timeliness of the request. The discovery period was about to close. And plaintiff “identif[ied] the possibility of adding a medical malpractice claim a year ago after taking the depositions of” West and Lemmen. Plaintiff then waited four months to file a notice of intent and an additional two months to file a motion to amend the complaint. Defendants raised complaints of undue delay and failure to cure pleading deficiencies through previous amendments. Defendants further contended that amendment would be futile because the statute of limitations had run on the medical malpractice claim.

Of import to this appeal, defendants asserted that they would be prejudiced by the amendment in the following manner:

If plaintiff is permitted to add a medical malpractice claim against Defendants at this late stage, substantial discovery will need to be revisited, and there will be significant delay. Medical malpractice is an entirely different claim. The parties’ current retained experts will need to re-review the case and give revised opinions. Furthermore, the parties will need to identify and retain brand new standard of care experts. Some, if not all, expert depositions will have to be completed if the Court decides this Motion. Additionally, the parties will need to retake fact witness depositions. . . . The case essentially would be starting over from the very beginning in many ways. [Underlining in original, italics added.]

Defendants further contended that trying the federal § 1983 claim along with the state-law medical malpractice claim “would confuse the jury,” because the federal claim “requires a subjective standard that requires considering a Defendant’s mental state (as with deliberate indifference and gross negligence claims)” while the state-law medical malpractice claim is judged by an objective standard. Defendants concluded:

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Estate of Stephen Stiles v. Nasim Yacob Md, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-stephen-stiles-v-nasim-yacob-md-michctapp-2017.