Kennedy v. W. Res. Senior Care

2024 Ohio 5565, 252 N.E.3d 112, 177 Ohio St. 3d 403
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 2024
Docket2023-0372
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ohio 5565 (Kennedy v. W. Res. Senior Care) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. W. Res. Senior Care, 2024 Ohio 5565, 252 N.E.3d 112, 177 Ohio St. 3d 403 (Ohio 2024).

Opinion

[This opinion has been published in Ohio Official Reports at 177 Ohio St.3d 403.]

KENNEDY, EXR. OF THE ESTATE OF GERRES, APPELLANT, v. WESTERN RESERVE SENIOR CARE ET AL., APPELLEES. [Cite as Kennedy v. W. Res. Senior Care, 2024-Ohio-5565.] Medical malpractice—Out-of-state defendant—R.C. 2305.15(A)—Dormant Commerce Clause of United States Constitution—R.C. 2305.15(A) does not violate dormant Commerce Clause as applied to a physician who moved out of Ohio to practice medicine in another state—Judgment reversed and cause remanded to trial court. (No. 2023-0372—Submitted July 9, 2024—Decided November 27, 2024.) APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Portage County, No. 2021-P-0055, 2023-Ohio-264. __________________ STEWART, J., authored the opinion of the court, which FISCHER, DEWINE, BRUNNER, and DETERS, JJ., joined. KENNEDY, C.J., concurred in judgment only. DONNELLY, J., dissented and would dismiss the appeal as having been improvidently accepted.

STEWART, J. {¶ 1} R.C. 2305.15, commonly referred to as “the tolling statute,” states that if a person who is subject to a lawsuit leaves the State, the statutory periods for commencing that lawsuit do not begin to run—that is, those statutory periods are tolled—while the person remains out of the State. See R.C. 2305.15(A).1 In this

1. R.C. 2305.15 was amended by the General Assembly while this action was pending. See 2024 Am.H.B. No. 179 (effective Oct. 24, 2024). This opinion analyzes the constitutionality of the tolling statute as it existed before the 2024 amendments took effect. See Am.Sub.S.B. No. 281, 149 Ohio Laws, Part II, 3791, 3804. All references to R.C. 2305.15 in this opinion refer to the pre-amendment version of the statute. SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

case, we are asked to determine whether the tolling statute violates the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution. See U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 3. For the reasons that follow, we hold that it does not. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Eleventh District Court of Appeals and remand this matter to the trial court for further proceedings. BACKGROUND {¶ 2} This case concerns a wrongful-death claim involving allegations of medical malpractice. In September 2014, appellant, Claudia Kennedy, executor of the estate of Donald R. Gerres, filed a medical-malpractice action against appellees, Western Reserve Senior Care, Dr. Sataya Acharya, and others (collectively, “the healthcare providers”), on behalf of Gerres’s estate. See Kennedy v. Robinson Mem. Hosp., Portage C.P. No. 2014 CV 00764 (Sept. 23, 2014). Kennedy asserted that the healthcare providers’ substandard medical care wrongfully caused Gerres’s death in October 2013. Id. Kennedy voluntarily dismissed the action without prejudice in January 2019, see Kennedy, Portage C.P. No. 2014 CV 00764 (Jan. 28, 2019), and refiled suit within one year. The healthcare providers moved for judgment on the pleadings in the refiled action, arguing that the four-year statute of repose for medical claims barred Kennedy’s refiled action from proceeding. Kennedy opposed the motion, arguing, among other things, that Ohio’s saving statute, R.C. 2305.19, saved the refiled action from expiring under the four-year statute of repose for medical claims because she had originally commenced the action within four years of Gerres’s death—in other words, she had filed the original medical-malpractice action within the four-year repose period. The trial court denied the motion, finding that the saving statute applied to preserve the refiled action. {¶ 3} Just over a year after the trial court denied the healthcare providers’ motion for judgment on the pleadings, this court issued its decision in Wilson v. Durrani, 2020-Ohio-6827. In Wilson, this court reached the opposite conclusion of

2 January Term, 2024

the trial court in this case, holding that the saving statute does not operate to preserve claims that were filed within the four-year repose period when those claims were voluntarily dismissed and then refiled after the statute of repose’s four- year timing limitation has expired. Id. at ¶ 18-38. {¶ 4} Following this court’s decision in Wilson, the healthcare providers in this case sought leave from the trial court to move for summary judgment, again pointing to the statute of repose as a bar to Kennedy’s refiled action. The trial court denied the healthcare providers’ motion on the basis that the case had been pending for almost three years and was scheduled for a jury trial in less than a month. The healthcare providers filed a motion for a directed verdict on the last business day before the trial began, again arguing that this court’s decision in Wilson controlled and therefore Kennedy’s refiled medical-malpractice action was barred by the statute of repose and not saved by the saving statute. Following Kennedy’s opening statements, the trial court granted the healthcare providers’ motion for a directed verdict. {¶ 5} Kennedy appealed the trial court’s judgment to the Eleventh District. 2023-Ohio-264 (11th Dist.). On appeal, Kennedy argued that regardless of whether the saving statute applied to preserve her refiled medical-malpractice action, another statute, R.C. 2305.15(A), preserved her action against Dr. Acharya. The version of R.C. 2305.15(A) that was in effect when Kennedy commenced her original medical-malpractice action in 2014 and her refiled action in 2019 and when the Eleventh District issued its judgment in this matter stated:

When a cause of action accrues against a person, if the person is out of the state, has absconded, or conceals self, the period of limitation for the commencement of the action as provided in sections 2305.04 to 2305.14, 1302.98, and 1304.35 of the Revised Code does not begin to run until the person comes into the state or

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

while the person is so absconded or concealed. After the cause of action accrues if the person departs from the state, absconds, or conceals self, the time of the person’s absence or concealment shall not be computed as any part of a period within which the action must be brought.

(Emphasis added.) Am.Sub.S.B. No. 281, 149 Ohio Laws, Part II, 3791, 3804. Kennedy argued that R.C. 2305.15(A) tolled the four-year statute of repose for her claim against Dr. Acharya because Dr. Acharya had moved to Pennsylvania after Gerres’s death and had continued to live outside Ohio when both the original medical-malpractice action and the refiled action were brought and that Dr. Acharya remained outside Ohio while the refiled action was pending before the trial court. {¶ 6} While Kennedy’s direct appeal was pending before the Eleventh District, this court issued its decision in Elliot v. Durrani, 2022-Ohio 4190. In Elliot, we held that R.C. 2305.15(A) tolls the running of the four-year medical- malpractice statute of repose set forth in R.C. 2305.113(C) when a defendant has fled the country. Elliot at ¶ 1. The Eleventh District recognized our decision in Elliot as relevant to the present case. See 2023-Ohio-264 at ¶ 35-38 (11th Dist.). Nevertheless, the court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of Kennedy’s refiled action on the theory that application of the tolling statute to the medical- malpractice action against Dr. Acharya, whom it determined had left the State for legitimate business purposes to seek employment in Pennsylvania, violates the dormant Commerce Clause by interfering with the right of Congress to regulate commerce. Id. at ¶ 39. In reaching that conclusion, the court of appeals primarily relied on Bendix Autolite Corp. v. Midwesco Ents., Inc., 486 U.S. 888 (1988), in

4 January Term, 2024

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Bluebook (online)
2024 Ohio 5565, 252 N.E.3d 112, 177 Ohio St. 3d 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-w-res-senior-care-ohio-2024.