Johnson v. Shafor

22 So. 3d 935, 2008 La.App. 1 Cir. 2145, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1454, 2009 WL 2252827
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 29, 2009
Docket2008 CA 2145, 2008 CA 2146
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 22 So. 3d 935 (Johnson v. Shafor) 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
Johnson v. Shafor, 22 So. 3d 935, 2008 La.App. 1 Cir. 2145, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1454, 2009 WL 2252827 (La. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

KUHN, J.

l/fhis appeal arises from consolidated medical malpractice suits filed against St. Tammany Parish Hospital Service District No. 2, doing business as Slidell Memorial Hospital (“SMH”), and other qualified health care providers under the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act, La. R.S. 40:1299.41, et seq. 1 The petitions in both suits alleged that SMH committed mal *937 practice between January 5 and January 14, 2003. The first suit was dismissed as to SMH due to insufficient service of process. In the second suit, the claims asserted against SMH were dismissed with prejudice via a May 1, 2008 judgment, which granted SMH’s peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription. Plaintiffs have appealed this latter judgment. Pursuant to Louisiana Revised Statutes 13:5107, we find that the filing of the first suit did not interrupt or suspend the running of prescription as to plaintiffs’ malpractice claims against SMH, a political subdivision. Thus, the trial court property determined that plaintiffs’ medical malpractice claims against SMH had prescribed by the time the second action was filed.

I. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Pursuant to Louisiana Revised Statutes 40:1299.41 et seq., plaintiffs, Cheryl Mooney Johnson, Roy W. Mooney, Lola M. Mooney, Julie Mooney Toney, Jerry Wayne Mooney, Charles Morice Mooney, Jeffery Allen Mooney, John Oliver Mooney, and Patricia A. Mooney Perriloux, all individually and on behalf of the Estate of Wilmer R. Mooney, Sr.; and Jerry Lee Graham Mooney, widow of |4Wilmer R. Mooney, filed a complaint with the Louisiana Division of Administration (“DOA”) on January 5, 2004, requesting that a medical review panel be convened to review the treatment provided by Drs. Robert V. Sha-for, Sanjay Raina, Sibaji Shome, and SMH and its employees to Wilmer R. Mooney, Sr. 2 The medical review panel issued its opinion on September 11, 2006, and plaintiffs’ counsel received notice of the opinion via certified mail on September 18, 2006.

On December 8, 2006, plaintiffs filed a petition for damages, bearing docket number 2006-16069 “J”, which asserted survival and wrongful death claims based on the alleged negligence of defendants, SMH, Shafor, Raina, and Shome. Therein, plaintiffs requested that service on defendants be withheld. On August 16, 2007, SMH filed a declinatory exception raising the objections of insufficiency of service of process and insufficiency of citation. Shafor and Raina also filed a declinatory exception raising the objection of insufficiency of service of process. Following a December 13, 2007 hearing, the trial court maintained these exceptions in open court. By judgment dated January 8, 2008, the trial court ordered the dismissal without prejudice of plaintiffs’ claims against SMH, Shafor, and Raina.

Plaintiffs filed another suit on December 13, 2007, naming as defendants SMH, Sha-for, and Raina, which set forth identical allegations to those contained in the first petition regarding the negligence of these defendants. This suit bore the docket number 2007-16729 “G”. In response to this second petition, SMH filed a | ^peremptory exception raising the objections of prescription and peremption on January 10, 2008. On March 4, 2008, the trial court granted the plaintiffs’ motion to transfer and consolidate the two suits and ordered the transfer of the suit bearing docket number 2007-16729 “G” to docket number 2006-16069 “J.” 3 On May 1, 2008, the trial court granted SMH’s exception raising the objection of prescription and ordered that plaintiffs’ claims against SMH “originally filed in Docket No. 2007-16729 “G[,]” which was subsequently transferred ... and consolidated with the in *938 stant proceedings [in docket number 2006-16069] are hereby dismissed in their entirety with prejudice^]” Plaintiffs have appealed this judgment, urging the trial court erred in concluding that their claims against SMH have prescribed.

II. ANALYSIS

Louisiana Revised Statutes 9:5628(A) states, in pertinent part:

No action for damages for injury or death against any physician, ... hospital or nursing home duly licensed under the laws of this state, ... whether based upon tort, or breach of contract, or otherwise, arising out of patient care shall be brought unless filed within one year from the date of the alleged act, omission, or neglect, or within one year from the date of discovery of the alleged act, omission, or neglect; however, even as to claims filed within one year from the date of such discovery, in all events such claims shall be filed at the latest within a period of three years from the date of the alleged act, omission, or neglect.
(Emphasis added).

The prescriptive period for a medical malpractice claim commences upon the occurrence of the injury when the damages are immediately apparent. In re Medical Review Panel Proceedings of Ouder, 07-1266, p. 3 (La.App. 1st Cir.5/2/08), 991 So.2d 58, 60. In this case, plaintiffs allege that Mr. Mooney’s | (ideath was caused by the defendants’ negligence during Mr. Mooney’s hospitalization between January 5, 2003, and January 14, 2003. The parties do not dispute that the plaintiffs had one year from January 14, 2003, the date of Mr. Mooney’s death, to file their medical malpractice claims.

Pursuant to La. R.S. 40:1299.47, all medical malpractice claims against qualified health care providers must be reviewed by a medical review panel before suit can be instituted against them. The procedure is initiated by filing a request for review of the claim by a medical review panel with the DOA, which forwards the request to the Patients’ Compensation Fund. La. R.S. 1299.47 A. Louisiana Revised Statutes 40:1299.47 A(2)(a) provides, in pertinent part:

The filing of the request for a review of a claim shall suspend the time within which suit must be instituted, ... until ninety days following notification, by certified mail, ... to the claimant or his attorney of the issuance of the opinion by the medical review panel....

In the present case, plaintiffs filed their request for the formation of a medical review panel with the DOA on January 5, 2004, and the opinion of the medical review panel was delivered to counsel for plaintiffs on September 18, 2006. Therefore, the ninety-day suspension of prescription lapsed on December 17, 2006, and prescription began to accrue again. Because plaintiffs’ complaint was filed with the DOA on January 5, 2004, and the complaint alleged malpractice from January 5, 2003 through January 15, 2003, approximately ten days remained in the prescriptive period when prescription began to accrue on December 18, |72006. 4 Thus, because the petition in docket number 2007-16729 was not filed until December 13, 2007, it is prescribed on its face.

Ordinarily, the party pleading prescription bears the burden of proving *939 the claim has prescribed.

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 3d 935, 2008 La.App. 1 Cir. 2145, 2009 La. App. LEXIS 1454, 2009 WL 2252827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-shafor-lactapp-2009.