In re Knutson

237 B.R. 886, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1062, 1999 WL 670715
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 15, 1999
DocketBankruptcy No. 92-22741
StatusPublished

This text of 237 B.R. 886 (In re Knutson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Knutson, 237 B.R. 886, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1062, 1999 WL 670715 (Miss. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID W. HOUSTON, III, Bankruptcy Judge.

On consideration before the court is an objection filed by the debtor, Dr. Richard A. Knutson, to the claim of Charles and Alice West; response thereto having been filed by the Wests; and the court, having heard and considered same, hereby finds as follows, to-wit:

I.

In early November, 1989, Charles West was seriously injured in a “horse roping” accident where he fractured both of his legs. He was admitted to the Delta Regional Medical Center and treated by Dr. Knutson, a licensed orthopedic surgeon. Dr. Knutson placed Mr. West’s left leg in a cast and performed surgery on the right leg attempting to stabilize the fracture through the use of two metal plates. This surgery occurred on November 6, 1989. Sometime thereafter, Mr. West, who was described as being extremely disoriented and claustrophobic, fell from his hospital bed and refractured his right leg. So that there would be no infection resulting from the first surgery, Dr. Knutson waited until December 14, 1989, to perform a second surgery on Mr. West’s right leg to repair the damage caused ostensibly by the hospital fall. During this surgery, Dr. Knut-son used a longer plate to stabilize the refracture.

On June 28, 1990, as evidenced by a contract of employment, Mr. West employed the services of Attorney Willard Mcllwain to represent him in a lawsuit against those persons or entities that might be responsible for the injuries that he sustained when he refractured his right leg, specifically Delta Regional Medical Center and Dr. Knutson. Mcllwain subsequently filed a lawsuit against Delta Regional Medical Center alleging that the hospital and/or its employees were negligent in not preventing Mr. West from falling from his hospital bed. At that time Dr. Knutson was still the treating physician for Mr. West and was not named as a defendant in the lawsuit.

Mcllwain contends that he thought initially that Dr. Knutson had acted properly in treating Mr. West in the first surgery. On March 20, 1991, during the course of the litigation against the hospital, Mcll-wain received responses to interrogatories that he had propounded to the hospital. These responses indicated that the hospital would contend that Dr. Knutson had inappropriately set Mr. West’s right leg in the first surgery. The hospital asserted that the right leg had not been stabilized as a result of Dr. Knutson’s initial surgical procedures, and, therefore, this condition caused or substantially contributed to the refracture which occurred after the fall. At this point, Mcllwain was clearly placed on notice that a potential claim existed in favor of his client against Dr. Knutson.

Shortly after receiving the interrogatories, Mcllwain wrote a letter to Dr. Knut-son on March 28, 1991, indicating that the hospital was attempting to “pass the buck” and blame Mr. West’s refracture on Knut-son’s method of treatment. Mcllwain testified that thereafter he visited with Dr. Knutson and was assured that the medical procedures that he had employed were proper.

The lawsuit went to trial in September, 1992. Dr. Knutson was called by Mcll-wain as an expert witness to testify on behalf of Mr. West. Mcllwain testified in the hearing before this court that' Dr. Knutson, while on the witness stand in the circuit court trial, changed his testimony and conceded that his initial treatment of Mr. West had been improper. Mcllwain indicated that this was the first time that he had actual notice of any inappropriate treatment by Dr. Knutson coming directly from Dr. Knutson.

[888]*888The transcript of Dr. Knutson’s trial testimony indicates that he did indeed change his opinion on cross-examination by Attorney Carl Hagwood, who was representing the hospital. Excerpts from the transcript are set forth as follows:

Direct examination of Dr. Knutson by Mr. Mcllwain.

Q. (Witness goes back to the witness box.) Dr. Knutson, as the consequence of this surgery, do you believe that this particular fracture was made stable to a reasonable degree of medical certainty?
A. Yes, sir, when I finished the procedure, I was confident that it was quite stable at that time.
Q. This was the surgery performed on November 6,1989?
A. That is correct.

Trial transcript at page 6. (Court’s Exhibit No. 1)

Cross-examination of Dr. Knutson by Mr. Hagwood.

A. (Witness left the witness stand and stood before the jury.) This is the bottom portion of the plate. We have no evidence of any screw holes as I had thought they were when we talked on Saturday. The distal portion or top portion of the shaft has three screws: one there, one there, and one there, (shows on drawing.) Those are only able to be there based upon a previous screw head.
Q. In other words, you are doing it and I want to circle these to be certain. Based on those evidence of that, that you changed your position?
A. Correct.

Trial transcript at page 73. (Court’s Exhibit No. 1)

Q. In fact, doctor, if you put a 7 hole plate on here where you originally told me on Saturday, of course, if doesn’t go up above the break does it because the distance, doctor, from above the notch to above the spiral fracture, I measured it and got 205 cm and that little plate is 119. Would you like to measure it?
A. I have already. I assume your numbers are correct. My measurements were 175 or 180.
Q. There is no way that a 7 hole plate, 119 millimeters long is going to cover a spiral fracture that distance is it, whether it be 175, 180 or 205, is it?
A. That is correct.

Trial transcript at page 74. (Court’s Exhibit No. 1)

At the bankruptcy court hearing, Dr. Knutson testified that he had met with Mcllwain on only one “meaningful” occasion prior to the trial to discuss his testimony. That occurred on the Friday morning before the trial commenced the following Monday morning. He indicated that at some time during the trial that he met with Mcllwain and co-counsel, Attorney Victor McTeer, to further discuss his testimony.

At the bankruptcy court hearing, Attorney Murray Akers, who was qualified as an expert witness insofar as medical malpractice investigations are concerned, testified that he had had a meeting with Mcllwain shortly after Mcllwain received the hospital’s interrogatory responses. Akers was also aware of the aforementioned letter that Mcllwain had written to Dr. Knutson on March 28, 1991, since he also represented Dr. Knutson. Akers indicated that he asked Mcllwain why he had not named Dr. Knutson as a defendant in the lawsuit. He was informed by Mcll-wain that his clients, Mr. and Mrs. West, specifically instructed him not to sue Dr. Knutson. Akers also testified that in his customary manner of investigating a medical malpractice claim, that the first person that he would target is the treating physician. In this case, that would be Dr. Knutson.

II.

The critical issue in this proceeding is whether the two year statute of limitations, § 15-1-36(1), Miss.Code Ann., applicable to medical malpractice actions, now [889]*889bars the claim of Mr. and Mr. West against Dr. Knutson. This statute provides as follows:

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Related

Kilgore v. Barnes
508 So. 2d 1042 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1987)
Smith v. Sanders
485 So. 2d 1051 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1986)
Fortenberry v. MEMORIAL HOSP. AT GULFPORT
676 So. 2d 252 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
237 B.R. 886, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 1062, 1999 WL 670715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-knutson-msnb-1999.