Keith v. MANORCARE, INC.

2009 NMCA 119, 218 P.3d 1257, 147 N.M. 209, 2009 WL 3444791
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 14, 2009
Docket28,008
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2009 NMCA 119 (Keith v. MANORCARE, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith v. MANORCARE, INC., 2009 NMCA 119, 218 P.3d 1257, 147 N.M. 209, 2009 WL 3444791 (N.M. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

FRY, Chief Judge.

{1} Defendant ManorCare, Inc., appeals from a $53.2 million jury verdict entered against it in a wrongful death action brought by Plaintiff Lori Keith as the personal representative of the estate of Barbara Barber, the decedent. Ms. Barber was a resident at the ManorCare Camino Vista nursing home and died at the home in December 2004. Plaintiff sued, alleging that Defendant had negligently caused Ms. Barber’s death. On appeal, Defendant argues that the district court erred by: (1) entering a finding that Defendant was the employer of the staff of the nursing home where Ms. Barber resided, (2) declining to allow the jury to apportion fault to the physician who treated Ms. Barber, (3) declining to allow separate trials for liability and punitive damages, (4) excluding one of Defendant’s expert witnesses, and (5) declining to reduce the $50 million punitive damages award as unconstitutionally excessive. We conclude that the district court erred in determining prior to trial and on the basis of disputed facts that Defendant was the employer of the staff at the facility where Ms. Barber resided and that this error requires a new trial. Because this issue is dispositive, we do not address any of Defendant’s remaining arguments,

BACKGROUND

{2} Plaintiff brought this action following the death of Barbara Barber, a resident of the ManorCare Camino Vista (Camino Vista) nursing home facility in Albuquerque, New Mexico. On December 20, 2004, Ms. Barber was found unresponsive in her bed by a nurse working at the Camino Vista facility. Ms. Barber was pronounced dead shortly after the staffs discovery of her body. Plaintiff alleged that Ms. Barber died of gastrointestinal bleeding that was negligently left untreated by the nursing staff at the Camino Vista facility. Plaintiff sought compensatory damages for Defendant’s alleged negligence as well as punitive damages for Defendant’s alleged wanton, willful, and reckless conduct.

{3} In its answer to Plaintiffs complaint, Defendant noted that its subsidiary, Four Seasons Nursing Centers, Inc. (Four Seasons), was the owner and operator of the Camino Vista facility, not Defendant. Specifically, while Defendant admitted that it “owns the stock of a corporation that owns the stock of another corporation that wholly owns the stock of [Four Seasons]” and that Four Seasons was doing business as HCR ManorCare Camino Vista, it denied that it “owned, operated or managed the nursing home.” Defendant also denied Plaintiffs allegation that it “was acting through its employees, agents, apparent agents or contractors who were acting within the scope of their employment, agency, apparent agency or contract in the services they provided to [Ms.] Barber while she was a patient at [Camino Vista] nursing home.”

{4} The issue of whether Defendant was the employer of the Camino Vista nursing staff does not appear to have come up again in any way until after Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment on Plaintiffs punitive damages claim. In that motion, Defendant noted that Plaintiff had made a direct punitive damages claim against it as well as a vicarious liability claim based upon the actions of the nurses at Camino Vista and argued that there was no evidence that either Defendant or the nurses had any malicious intent. Thus, Defendant argued, Plaintiff could neither establish vicarious liability for punitive damages based on the actions of the nursing staff nor show that Defendant directly engaged in the type of conduct needed to prove a punitive damages claim. In response, Plaintiff argued that a “corporation may be liable for punitive damages for the wrongful acts of employees who are acting within the scope of employment and who are employed in a managerial capacity” when the corporation ratifies an employee’s conduct, and, under Clay v. Ferrellgas, Inc., 118 N.M. 266, 270, 881 P.2d 11, 15 (1994), when “the actions of the employees in the aggregate demonstrate a cumulative effect that proves the requisite culpable intent.”

{5} To address these arguments, Defendant argued in its reply that the cumulative conduct of the Camino Vista staff could not be used against it because none of the staff members were its employees. In support of this argument, Defendant submitted a number of documents showing that the employees whose conduct Plaintiff sought to cumulate were actually employees of Heartland Employment Services, Inc. (Heartland), who were working for Four Seasons at the Camino Vista facility, not for Defendant Manor-Care, Inc.

{6} At the hearing on Defendant’s motion, Plaintiff argued that Defendant had improperly raised the absence of an employment relationship and asked the court to stop Defendant from raising the issue again. Plaintiffs counsel argued, “I believe they are es-topped, both from their conduct up until this point, and from the documents I will now submit,” from arguing that Defendant was not the employer of the nursing staff. Plaintiff submitted the following to the court: a ManorCare, Inc., annual report that made references to “the employees of ManorCare” at its 276 nursing homes and indicated that ManorCare, Inc., is also “referred] to as ManorCare or HCR ManorCare”; documents from the personnel file of Nola Jami-son showing many internal references to the facility as “HCR ManorCare”; a cost report for the Camino Vista facility submitted to a state agency that was signed by Barry Lazarus, who Plaintiffs counsel represented was an executive “for the entire company”; a number of other documents used at the Camino Vista facility that utilized the name “HCR ManorCare” and indicated that the Camino Vista staff members were employees of HCR ManorCare; and excerpts from the depositions of Richard Parades, who Plaintiffs counsel represented was “the mid-stage division head of ManorCare,” and Brian Gal-pin, who Plaintiffs counsel represented was the “nursing home administrator at [Camino Vista].” Plaintiffs counsel explained the significance of the deposition excerpts as demonstrating the chain of command among various executives and administrators.

{7} In response, Defendant relied on the documents it had submitted with its reply showing that: the employees at the facility, including Jamison and Galpin, were employed by Heartland and that the facility was owned by Four Seasons; Ms. Barber had contracted with Four Seasons, not with Defendant, for her care at the facility; and Four Seasons was a subsidiary of one of Defendant’s subsidiaries.

{8} The court then advised the parties that it would not “consider any issues that were raised in the reply brief that were not raised in the original motion, but [that] insofar as that may become an issue down the road, [it was] going to find that all of these folks were employees of ManorCare.” In making this finding, the court did not consider the evidence Defendant had submitted with its motion and relied solely on Plaintiffs evidence and the one exhibit Defendant had been allowed to introduce at the hearing that showed Defendant’s corporate structure. The court then proceeded to deny Defendant’s motion for summary judgment because factual issues existed regarding the elements of Plaintiffs claims for punitive damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 NMCA 119, 218 P.3d 1257, 147 N.M. 209, 2009 WL 3444791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-v-manorcare-inc-nmctapp-2009.