In the Matter of the Professional Liability Claim of Brian Snavely (D)

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 4, 2015
DocketCA-0015-0207
StatusUnknown

This text of In the Matter of the Professional Liability Claim of Brian Snavely (D) (In the Matter of the Professional Liability Claim of Brian Snavely (D)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Professional Liability Claim of Brian Snavely (D), (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

15-207

IN THE MATTER OF THE PROFESSIONAL LIABILITY CLAIM OF BRIAN SNAVELY (D), ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. C-2014-3917 HONORABLE PATRICK LOUIS MICHOT, DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, John D. Saunders, and David Kent Savoie, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Alan K. Breaud Breaud & Meyers 600 Jeferson Street – Suite 1101 Lafayette, LA 70501 Telephone: (337) 266-2200 COUNSEL FOR: Defendants/Appellees - Margaret Rice, M.D., APMLLC, and Rice Medical Management, LLC

Joseph Lomax Jordan, Jr. 1817 W. University Avenue Lafayette, LA 70506 Telephone: (337) 233-9984 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellant - Linda Snavely THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

Linda Snavely appeals a trial court judgment dismissing her Dilatory

Exception of Insufficiency or Improper Service of Process (Exception of

Insufficiency) and granting the exception of prescription filed by Appellee

Margaret Rice, MD. The exceptions originated in a medical malpractice

proceeding where Ms. Snavely claimed that Dr. Rice negligently treated her

deceased son, Brian Snavely. After Ms. Snavely filed a request to convene a

medical review panel with the Louisiana Patient’s Compensation Fund, Dr. Rice

filed a Petition to Have Docket Number Assigned in district court in Lafayette

Parish. She also filed an exception of prescription, arguing that Ms. Snavely’s

claim was prescribed on its face since it was filed more than a year after the

alleged malpractice had occurred. Ms. Snavely, claiming that the Petition to Have

Docket Number Assigned and exception were improperly served, filed the

Exception of Insufficiency. The trial court denied Ms. Snavely’s exceptions as to

Dr. Rice and granted Dr. Rice’s exception of prescription. For the following

reasons, we affirm.

I.

ISSUES

1. Whether Dr. Rice’s failure to personally serve Ms. Snavely with her Petition to Have Docket Number Assigned and exception of prescription constitutes insufficient service of process.

2. Whether Ms. Snavely’s claim is prescribed under La.R.S. 9:5628.

3. Whether the trial court improperly failed to provide Ms. Snavely with an opportunity to amend her complaint to cure prescription. II.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

These proceedings arise out of the death of Ms. Snavely’s adult son,

Brian Snavely, on August 18, 2012. Brian was Dr. Rice’s patient from November

2005 until his death. She was providing pain management treatment to Brian for

injuries sustained in a 1999 industrial accident and a 2010 motorcycle accident.

Dr. Rice was familiar with Brian’s medical history, which included chronic back

pain, polycystic kidney disease, and history of pulmonary emboli.

Brian severely fractured his wrist in the motorcycle accident and was

scheduled to undergo surgery on his wrist on August 1, 2012. He complied with

his surgeon’s suggestion that he discontinue using chronic pain medication. On

July 30, 2012, Ms. Snavely, who helped care for Brian as he underwent medical

treatment, noticed that Brian was “acting oddly and perhaps hallucinating.” She

took Brian to the emergency room at Our Lady of Lourdes Regional Medical

Center. There he was diagnosed with “Drug Withdrawal Syndrome 292.0” and

admitted to Acadia Vermillion Hospital for a controlled detoxification in

anticipation of rescheduling the surgery.

On August 13, 2012, Brian appeared at Dr. Rice’s offices. He told her

that he had been discharged from Acadia Vermillion Hospital and discussed his

pending wrist surgery. On that day, Dr. Rice prescribed Brian the following: 6

30mg Oxycodone daily, 4 350mg Soma daily, and 3 Xanax daily. On August 18,

2012, Brian died. His death certificate was released on August 23, 2012, and listed

the immediate cause of death as poly drug toxicity.

On October 5, 2012, Ms. Snavely substituted herself as plaintiff in a

lawsuit against the insurer of the other driver in Brian’s motorcycle accident. On

2 June 17, 2013, Dr. Rice delivered a copy of her medical record for Brian to Ms.

Snavely after the record was subpoenaed by another party in that suit. Around

August 6, 2013, counsel for Ms. Snavely “became curious” about some of the

information in those records and asked an expert toxicologist-pharmacologist to

review some of the records. About a week later, the expert gave his opinion that

Dr. Rice had breached the applicable standards of care.

Ms. Snavely filed a request for a medical panel review 1 with the

Louisiana Patient’s Compensation Fund on June 24, 2014, naming, among others,

the appellee, Margaret Rice, MD, a Professional Medical Limited Liability

Company (the Rice PMLLC), and Rice Medical Management, LLC as

respondents. The filing was signed by Ms. Snavely’s attorney and accompanied by

a verification signed by him stating that he was Ms. Snavely’s attorney in this

matter. The complaint alleged that the respondents had breached the applicable

standards of care and that doing so caused, contributed to, or played a significant

part in Brian’s death. Dr. Rice then filed a Petition to Have Docket Number

Assigned. Ms. Snavely was not personally served with that Petition; it is unclear

whether service was made on her attorney. Later, Dr. Rice, the Rice PMLLC, and

Rice Medical Management, LLC, filed an exception of prescription asking that Ms.

Snavely’s claims be dismissed. Dr. Rice argued that since any malpractice must

have occurred by the time of Brian’s death on August 18, 2012, the claim, filed

more than a year after that date, was prescribed on its face. Service of the

exception was requested and made on Ms. Snavely’s attorney.

1 The full title of Ms. Snavely’s filing is “Request for Medical Review Panel to be Empaneled and to Convene for the Purpose of Consideration of Medical Malpractice Complaint Against a Qualified Healthcare Provider and and [sic] for the Interruption of Prescription of Claims Against Persons or Entities not Qualified for the Benefits of the Louisiana Malpractice Act and Complaint Filed under the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act.”

3 In response to the exception of prescription, Ms. Snavely filed several

exceptions, including the Exception of Insufficiency. She argued that the

proceedings were absolutely null because Dr. Rice had failed to personally serve

her with her Petition to Have Docket Number Assigned and exception of

prescription. Ms. Snavely also filed a memorandum in opposition to exception of

prescription arguing that the claim was not prescribed under the discovery rule.

She contended that she could not have discovered the malpractice before receiving

the expert’s email in July or August 2013. Since the claim was filed within a year

of that time, it was not prescribed.

The trial court sustained Ms. Snavely’s exceptions as to the Rice

PMLLC and Rice Medical Management, LLC, since those parties had not been

named in the Petition to Have Docket Number Assigned. 2 The trial court

dismissed the exceptions as to Dr. Rice and sustained the exception of prescription

filed by Dr. Rice. Ms. Snavely timely appealed the trial court’s judgment as to her

Exception of Insufficiency and Dr. Rice’s exception of prescription.

III.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Issue 1

Denial of Exception of Insufficiency

Ms.

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