Everman, Everman v. Sarasota County Public Hospital District, D/B/A Sarasota Memorial Hospital

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJuly 8, 2026
Docket2D2024-2678
StatusPublished

This text of Everman, Everman v. Sarasota County Public Hospital District, D/B/A Sarasota Memorial Hospital (Everman, Everman v. Sarasota County Public Hospital District, D/B/A Sarasota Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Everman, Everman v. Sarasota County Public Hospital District, D/B/A Sarasota Memorial Hospital, (Fla. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF FLORIDA SECOND DISTRICT

JANET EVERMAN, individually and as personal representative of the Estate of Joseph Everman, deceased,

Appellant,

v.

KENNEDY, WHITE & RIGGS ORTHOPEDIC ASSOCIATES, LLP; LAM NGUYEN, M.D., P.A.; NGOC-LAM NGUYEN, M.D.; and SARASOTA COUNTY PUBLIC HOSPITAL DISTRICT, d/b/a Sarasota Memorial Hospital,

Appellees.

No. 2D2024-2678

July 8, 2026

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Sarasota County; Stephen M. Walker, Judge.

Samuel Alexander and Michael J. Ellis of Alexander Appellate Law, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellant.

Dinah S. Stein and Dean Kandi of Hicks, Porter & Stein, P.A., Miami; and Ralph L. Marchbank, Jr., and Mark S. Tomlinson of Dickinson & Gibbons, P.A., Sarasota, for Appellees Kennedy, White & Riggs Orthopedic Associates, LLP, Lam Nguyen, M.D., P.A., and Ngoc-Lam Nguyen, M.D.

No appearance for remaining Appellee. SILBERMAN, Judge. Janet Everman, individually and as personal representative of the Estate of Joseph Everman, appeals a final judgment entered in favor of Ngoc-Lam Nguyen, M.D.; Lam Nguyen, M.D., P.A.; and Kennedy, White & Riggs Orthopedic Associates (Kennedy White), as well as an earlier dismissal of counts V and VI of her third amended complaint against Kennedy White. We affirm the final judgment entered in favor of Ngoc- Lam Nguyen, M.D., and Lam Nguyen, M.D., P.A., without discussion.1 However, we agree with Ms. Everman that the trial court erred in dismissing counts V and VI based on its finding that she did not comply with the presuit requirements of Florida's Medical Malpractice Act contained in section 766.104, Florida Statutes (2021). Because both claims arise from ordinary negligence, the presuit requirements of section 766.104 do not apply. We therefore reverse the dismissal of those two counts. I. BACKGROUND Ms. Everman's husband, Joseph Everman, underwent back surgery at Sarasota Memorial Hospital, and by all accounts, surgery went well. Mr. Everman's surgery was performed by Dr. Ashvin Patel, an employee of Kennedy White. Two days after his surgery, Mr. Everman was transferred to the Inpatient Rehabilitation Center at Sarasota Memorial Hospital. Later that afternoon, Mr. Everman's abdominal incision became extremely painful and began draining and dehiscing (separation of the skin). The nursing staff contacted Kennedy White for guidance on treating the incision and to alert Dr. Patel to the declining condition of Mr. Everman. Dr. Patel and Dr. Ngoc-Lam Nguyen, also an

1 Sarasota Memorial Hospital, a party in the trial court, is not

involved in this appeal. See Fla. R. App. P. 9.020(g)(2). 2 employee of Kennedy White, were the on-call doctors most responsible for monitoring Mr. Everman postoperation. When Mr. Everman's nurse telephoned the office of Kennedy White, the after-hours phone greeting informed her that if she had an urgent message for the on-call physician and needed to speak with the physician to remain on the line and speak with the answering service. Kennedy White's answering service, Callstar, Inc., answers phone calls for a variety of businesses such as medical offices, legal offices, tradesmen, and real estate offices. Its operators have no specialized medical licenses, medical training, or specialized knowledge pertaining to medicine, but rather must have a high school diploma or GED. Kennedy White controlled what Callstar's operators told callers and how messages were delivered. Kennedy White accepted the standard account setup that Callstar provides to clients rather than choosing to alter and customize the account. The design of the standard account setup was done by a nonmedical individual at Callstar. When Mr. Everman's nurse contacted the office of Kennedy White, Callstar's operator answered the call and went through the script that was authored by the nonmedical staff of Callstar. The nurse left a detailed message advising that Mr. Everman's incision was dehiscing, draining, and distended, but the Callstar operator typed out "COND" in the message to Dr. Nguyen. The text of the message simply stated: "*68* HOSP ORTHO PATEL FACILITY SMH 4 IN PT REHAB CAMI 9419177810 PT JOSEPH EVERMAN COND." Dr. Nguyen received the message but took no action based on the information contained in the message. Mr. Everman's nurse was not told that the message to the doctor would simply say "COND."

3 In the early morning hours of the following day, Mr. Everman's condition worsened, and it was determined that he was in septic shock. Unfortunately, Mr. Everman passed away two days later. II. COUNTS V & VI In count V of Ms. Everman's third amended complaint, she alleged a negligence claim against Kennedy White. She claimed that Kennedy White's nonmedical staff owed Mr. Everman "a duty of ordinary care that complied with industry business standards in the management of a medical practice." Further, "[t]his function of the business lies outside of the provision of medical care and falls within the management and administration of the business, which is conducted by non-medical employees." She alleged that Kennedy White's telephone system was implemented and managed by nonclinical employees who possess no medical licenses, medical training, or specialized knowledge pertaining to medicine. Additionally, Kennedy White's medical providers had no role in the decision-making pertaining to the answering service or the after- hours message as it was the responsibility of nonmedical staff. Ms. Everman asserted that Kennedy White breached its duty of ordinary care by failing to educate and train its doctors and midlevel providers about the contents of the after-hours phone message; failing to train its doctors that callers who leave a message with the answering service believe they have an urgent medical issue and need to speak with the on-call doctor immediately; failing to require Callstar's operators to ask nurses if they would like a callback; and failing to ensure Callstar's staff knew that all calls to them are urgent in nature based on their practice's after-hours phone greeting. She contended that Kennedy White's nonmedical staff was negligent in creating its on-call and surgery schedule for its doctors.

4 In count VI, Ms. Everman alleged a vicarious liability claim against Kennedy White. She asserted that the nonmedical business managers and employees of Kennedy White selected Callstar as its agent to answer after-hours phone calls. Callstar's acts or omissions were done in the course and scope of its agency with Kennedy White, and Kennedy White is vicariously liable for the negligence of Callstar. Further, the actions of Callstar were controlled by or subject to the control of Kennedy White. She claimed that Callstar owed Mr. Everman a duty of ordinary care as it related to the performance of its answering service duties. Callstar breached its duty of ordinary care by (1) failing to notate and transmit to the on-call doctor the message left by Mr. Everman's nurse; (2) "[p]araphrasing only messages left by nurses to single words or abbreviations of words and failing to tell the nurse their message is not being passed on as stated by the caller"; (3) "[f]ailing to notate all calls to the answering service as urgent"; and (4) failing to ask nurses if they would like a call back. Kennedy White moved to dismiss counts V and VI of the complaint based on its argument that both claims arise out of the rendering of or the failure to render medical services, care, or treatment, and therefore, the failure of Ms. Everman to comply with the requirements of section 766.104 required dismissal. The trial court found Kennedy White's arguments persuasive and dismissed counts V and VI with prejudice. III.

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Bluebook (online)
Everman, Everman v. Sarasota County Public Hospital District, D/B/A Sarasota Memorial Hospital, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everman-everman-v-sarasota-county-public-hospital-district-dba-fladistctapp-2026.