Jane Doe 30's Mother v. Bradley

64 A.3d 379, 2012 WL 5949216, 2012 Del. Super. LEXIS 507
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 19, 2012
DocketC.A. Nos. N10C-05-023 JRS, N10C-10-317 JRS
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 64 A.3d 379 (Jane Doe 30's Mother v. Bradley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jane Doe 30's Mother v. Bradley, 64 A.3d 379, 2012 WL 5949216, 2012 Del. Super. LEXIS 507 (Del. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

SLIGHTS, J.

I.

A duly licensed physician and serial child predator established a medical practice in Lewes, Delaware in 1994 and thereafter perpetrated unimaginable abuse on a significant segment of his pediatric patient population. This reign of abuse continued until his arrest on December 16, 2009. After a thorough investigation by law enforcement, and a skilled prosecution by the Department of Justice, the physician, Earl B. Bradley, M.D., was convicted of multiple criminal offenses, including rape and sexual exploitation of children, and sentenced to fourteen consecutive life terms of incarceration plus an additional one hundred and sixty four years. The Supreme Court of Delaware affirmed the convictions and sentences on September 6, 2012.

Dr. Bradley has no assets. His medical malpractice insurance provides no coverage for the damages caused by his physical and sexual abuse of his patients. There is, therefore, no prospect that Dr. Bradley will ever provide any monetary compensation to his many victims, much less adequate compensation.

Since January, 2010, approximately forty (40) separate lawsuits have been filed against Dr. Bradley and his medical practice alleging, inter alia, intentional assault and battery. These complaints also asserted claims against additional defendants, including Beebe Medical Center, Inc. (“Beebe”), The Medical Society of Delaware (“The Medical Society”), James P. Marvel, Jr., M.D., Carol A. Tavani, M.D., Lowell F. Scott, M.D. and his medical practice, John J. Ludwicki, M.D., The Pediatric and Adolescent Center in Lewes, Chartered, and Nicholas Berg, M.D. (col[382]*382lectively “the individual defendants”) (all defendants, collectively, “the Covered Defendants”). The claims against Beebe sounded in negligence and were based on agency and negligent credentialing and supervision. The claims against all of the Covered Defendants alleged failures either to report Dr. Bradley to appropriate regulatory/law enforcement authorities or to take other steps to protect Dr. Bradley’s patients from his ongoing physical and sexual abuse.

On May 4, 2010, a proposed class action complaint was filed against Dr. Bradley and the Covered Defendants in a case styled Jane Doe 30 v. Bradley et al., C.A. No. N10C-05-023 JRS (“the Complaint”). After motion practice and briefing, the Court certified this class action by bench ruling on March 14, 2011, followed by a written order on April 5, 2011.

The parties have engaged in substantial informal discovery and some formal discovery, including the exchange of thousands of pages of documents and several depositions of health care providers. Several of the Covered Defendants (other than Beebe) have prosecuted motions to dismiss the class action complaint on grounds that the class plaintiffs have failed to state legally viable claims against them. These motions were thoroughly briefed and argued and yielded two lengthy decisions in which the Court raised serious questions regarding the legal bonafides of the class plaintiffs’ claims against the Medical Society of Delaware and the individual defendants.1

Shortly after this litigation commenced, Beebe indicated its desire to initiate settlement discussions with the class plaintiffs. Through counsel, Beebe promptly accepted responsibility for its role (albeit indirect role) in the tragic events leading to the class plaintiffs’ claims. Soon after, Beebe and class plaintiffs engaged retired Delaware Supreme Court Justice Joseph T. Walsh to serve as a mediator. The remaining Covered Defendants joined the mediation later in the process and Jed D. Melnick, Esquire, an experienced mediator, was engaged to assist Justice Walsh with respect to the settlement discussions involving these defendants. After more than seventeen (17) months of regular and intensive mediation sessions, Justice Walsh, with Mr. Melnick’s assistance, successfully mediated the proposed settlement of the class action which the parties now present to the Court for approval. The proposed settlement, to be described in more detail below, calls for the Covered Defendants collectively to pay $122,150,000.00 in cash to be allocated to class members after the deduction of attorneys fees and expenses. In addition, the proposed settlement calls for designated health care services to be rendered by Beebe and its affiliates to class members with an aggregate value of up to $1,000,000.00.

After carefully considering the parties’ written submissions and the evidence presented at the fairness hearing, the Court is satisfied that the settlement is fair, reasonable and adequate. The Court is further satisfied that an award of legal fees in the amount of $27,708,750.00 is appropriate and that class counsel should be reimbursed for past and future costs and expenses in the amount $2,106,248.00.

II.

A. The Class Action Complaint

Dr. Bradley worked for Beebe when he first came to Delaware in 1994. He left [383]*383the hospital in 2002 to start his own medical practice but retained hospital privileges at Beebe until the time of his arrest. It is alleged that Dr. Bradley abused hundreds of pediatric patients either at Beebe or within his medical practice over the course of the fifteen years he practiced in Delaware. The abuse ranged from inappropriate touching and unnecessarily intrusive physical examinations to rape. Some of the abuse was captured on film by an elaborate video taping system Dr. Bradley installed in his medical office. The victims ranged from infants to prepubescent children.2 The abuse has been characterized as “unprecedented” in scope and severity, made all the worse by Dr. Bradley’s position of trust and the very young age of his victims, some of whom were infants.

Class plaintiffs alleged that Beebe was grossly negligent when it hired, credentialed, supervised and retained Dr. Bradley, first as an employee and then as a member of its medical staff. In this regard, class plaintiffs allege that Beebe would have discovered that Dr. Bradley was engaging in inappropriate behavior towards his patients had Beebe properly investigated certain reports and properly promulgated and implemented safety procedures within the hospital.3

In addition to the claims of active negligence against Beebe, it is alleged that Beebe and the other Covered Defendants, at various times and through various means, became aware of information that should have put them on notice that Dr. Bradley was abusing his patients.4 It is further alleged that this knowledge triggered a legal duty, imposed by statute and also recognized at common law, to report Dr. Bradley’s conduct to law enforcement and/or appropriate regulatory authorities.5 According to the Complaint, the Covered Defendants’ failure to fulfill their reporting duty and thereby prevent Dr. Bradley’s further abuse proximately caused each member of the class to suffer varying degrees of injury.6

Finally, the class plaintiffs allege that certain of the Covered Defendants negligently referred patients to Dr. Bradley even after they knew or should have known that Dr. Bradley was abusing patients. They allege both common law and statutory medical negligence arising from these alleged improper referrals.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A.3d 379, 2012 WL 5949216, 2012 Del. Super. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jane-doe-30s-mother-v-bradley-delsuperct-2012.