Feldman v. Thompson

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 18, 2020
Docket2017-002522
StatusUnpublished

This text of Feldman v. Thompson (Feldman v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feldman v. Thompson, (S.C. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE. IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 268(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Gregory J. Feldman, MD, Joseph A. Boscia, III, MD, and Upstate Lung & Critical Care Specialists, PC, Appellants,

v.

Ray E. "Chuck" Thompson, and Charles M. Fogarty, MD, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2017-002522

Appeal From Spartanburg County R. Keith Kelly, Circuit Court Judge

Unpublished Opinion No. 2020-UP-311 Submitted October 1, 2020 – Filed November 18, 2020

AFFIRMED

Franklin Milton Mann, Jr., of Franklin Milton Mann Jr. Attorney at Law, of Spartanburg, for Appellants.

Michael B.T. Wilkes and Ellen S. Cheek, both of Wilkes Law Firm, PA, of Spartanburg, for Respondent Charles M. Fogarty.

Matthew Holmes Henrikson, of Henrikson Law Firm, LLC, of Greenville, for Respondent Ray E. Thompson. PER CURIAM: The circuit court found the statute of limitations barred claims against Ray Thompson and Charles Fogarty for abuse of process and granted summary judgment on that basis. We affirm for two reasons. First, there is no dispute that the Appellants—Gregory Feldman, Joseph Boscia, and Upstate Lung & Critical Care Specialists—had the essential information for their abuse of process claim more than three years before they filed this suit. Second, the fact that one of the Respondents (Thompson) allegedly committed misconduct during discovery in previous litigation does not equitably bar the respondents from using the statute of limitations as a defense.

FACTS

This is the sequel to a medical malpractice case in which the roles were reversed. Feldman and Boscia are pulmonologists and partners in Upstate Lung. Thompson is a lawyer and sued them in 2006 for medical malpractice on behalf of William Casey. Casey was originally a defendant in this case but was later dismissed by agreement.

Fogarty is a pulmonologist and Feldman's former business partner. He helped Thompson and Casey in the malpractice suit but did not testify when that case was tried.

The malpractice case alleged Feldman and Boscia breached the standard of care when Casey went to the hospital for chest pain and ended up having two surgeries because Feldman and Boscia believed he inhaled a foreign object. Nobody disputes the second surgery resulted in a significant complication that put Casey in critical condition and intensive care. Casey claimed this caused permanent brain damage and left him permanently disabled.

The malpractice case was tried over roughly two weeks in May 2010. The jury returned a defense verdict.

In October 2010, about five months after the jury's verdict, Appellants filed this case. The basic theory of this suit is that Fogarty and Feldman are professional rivals and that Fogarty allegedly either conspired or cooperated with Thompson in the malpractice case for the ulterior purpose of ruining Feldman's businesses and career. The complaint alleges a number of deceptive actions including someone arranging for Casey to obtain an MRI under a fictitious name and date of birth, providing "bogus" expert witness testimony, lying under oath, and leaking information about the malpractice action to a local newspaper.

The real bone of contention is the theory that Casey suffered brain damage. Feldman—the person spearheading this suit—maintains this sort of thing is anatomically impossible and such a claim is patently frivolous. Appellants' claims rely heavily on three different versions of a medical note that Fogarty drafted following a July 21, 2005 office visit in which Fogarty opined that Casey suffered an air embolism during Feldman's treatment, leading to Casey's injury and accounting for his alleged cognitive complaints. Appellants alleged the note was evidence of Fogarty's effort to orchestrate the medical malpractice suit and use it to destroy Feldman's career. Appellants received copies of the note from Casey's file no later than July 3, 2006.

The circuit court dismissed the case based on the statute of limitations at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage. However, this court reversed in an unpublished opinion noting the complaint did not indicate when Feldman, Boscia, and Upstate Lung knew or should have known Casey's medical malpractice action supposedly had an improper objective.

After the case was remitted, the parties agreed to a discovery plan requiring everyone to simultaneously produce file documents from Casey's malpractice action. These documents included multiple emails from 2007 showing Feldman conducted significant research into claims he could potentially bring against Thompson and Fogarty including abuse of process and civil conspiracy. For example, in an August 11, 2007 email, Feldman wrote "As for abuse of Process that is already fact (He had no right to speak to Press about trial matter [. . .] Violation of Civil Procedure)[.]" Feldman also sent himself an email on August 17, 2007, containing legal research he performed on the statute of limitations for defamation claims and other causes of action in disputes between doctors.

Other communications revealed Feldman wanted to pursue retaliatory litigation during the malpractice case and his attorneys advised him to refrain from doing so until after the malpractice case concluded. After asking his attorneys about this multiple times, Feldman and his personal lawyer ultimately confirmed with the malpractice insurer (the JUA) that Feldman and his colleagues would not file a retaliatory suit until after the malpractice case concluded, unless the JUA agreed. In his deposition, Feldman stated he believed Fogarty improperly fabricated the air embolism theory of injury and wrote it in the July 21 office note in order to enable Casey to file a fraudulent lawsuit. According to Feldman, Fogarty committed "the highest degree of fraud" in writing the note because, in Feldman's opinion, Casey did not have a brain injury, but Fogarty wrote in Casey's chart that he had "undoubtedly" suffered an air embolism. Feldman stated Fogarty "fabricated [the] medical record with legal intent, not medical intent" with the goal of Casey's attorney, Thompson, using that record to file a fraudulent lawsuit.

In December of 2016—almost six years after this suit began—Thompson and Fogarty moved for summary judgment arguing the abuse of process claim was barred by the statute of limitations. They claimed the emails and deposition testimony showed Feldman plainly believed he and his colleagues had such a claim more than three years before this case began. They claimed the court could look to several events as triggering the limitations period, but argued the period had to start no later than August 11, 2007, based on Feldman's email explicitly mentioning an abuse of process claim.

Feldman, Boscia, and Upstate Lung argued the statute of limitations did not begin running until 2008. This is when they say depositions in the medical malpractice case disclosed wrongful actions by Thompson and Fogarty. They also claimed equitable tolling and equitable estoppel prevented the statute of limitations from barring their claim because of Casey's "secret" MRI and other unidentified, but supposedly "outrageous[]," conduct.

The circuit court agreed with Thompson and Fogarty and found the statute of limitations barred the abuse of process claim and neither equitable tolling nor equitable estoppel applied. This appeal followed.

ISSUES ON APPEAL

1. Whether the circuit court erred in finding the statute of limitations barred abuse of process claim.

2. Whether the circuit court erred in finding equitable tolling and equitable estoppel did not apply. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Feldman v. Thompson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feldman-v-thompson-scctapp-2020.