Kumari v. Hospital Com. for Livermore etc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 6, 2017
DocketA148351
StatusPublished

This text of Kumari v. Hospital Com. for Livermore etc. (Kumari v. Hospital Com. for Livermore etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kumari v. Hospital Com. for Livermore etc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed 7/6/17 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FIVE

VEENA KUMARI et al., Plaintiffs and Appellants, A148351 v. THE HOSPITAL COMMITTEE FOR (Alameda County THE LIVERMORE-PLEASANTON Super. Ct. No. RG15755853) AREAS, Defendant and Respondent.

On October 29, 2013, while she was hospitalized after giving birth, Veena Kumari fell and broke her right shoulder. On February 19, 2014, Kumari sent ValleyCare Health System (ValleyCare) a detailed letter describing her injury and the basis for her “medical negligence” claim. Kumari requested $240,000 and advised ValleyCare she would “move to the court” if she did not receive a check within 20 days. ValleyCare denied Kumari’s claim. On January 23, 2015—more than a year after her injury—Kumari and her husband (collectively, plaintiffs) sued ValleyCare for medical negligence and loss of consortium.1 The trial court granted ValleyCare’s summary judgment motion, concluding Kumari’s letter constituted a notice of intent to sue pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section

1 Plaintiffs’ complaint named defendant by its fictitious name, “ValleyCare Health System.” An amended complaint substituted in defendant’s true name, “The Hospital Committee for the Livermore-Pleasanton Areas. We refer to defendant as ValleyCare. 1 3642 which did not extend the statute of limitations. The court concluded the complaint was time-barred and entered judgment for ValleyCare. Plaintiffs appeal, contending Kumari’s letter was not a notice of intent to sue within the meaning of section 364. We disagree and affirm. In doing so, we reject plaintiffs’ claim that an author’s subjective motivation for writing a letter to a health care provider is relevant when determining whether that letter is a notice of intent to sue under section 364. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On October 28, 2013, Kumari gave birth via Cesarean section at a ValleyCare hospital in Pleasanton. The next day, Kumari fell as she was walking along a hospital corridor, fracturing her right shoulder. Kumari’s Letter and ValleyCare’s Response In February 2014, Kumari sent ValleyCare a letter “regarding the personal injury accident that occurred” on October 29, 2013, the day after she delivered her baby. The letter stated the “accident was a result of medical negligence” by a nurse assigned to Kumari. The letter described the “elaborate sequence of events,” specifically that a “nurse took [Kumari] out for the first walk in the corridors of the hospital,” and left her “unattended walking.” Kumari felt “dizzy and collapsed on the floor; this caused my right shoulder fracture (diagnosed by MRI in the hospital). . . . I strongly feel that the nurse should not have left me unattended, especially when my hemoglobin level was considerably low.” Kumari’s letter explained that the pain caused by the accident prevented her from working, bonding with her baby, and caring for herself. Kumari described the medical

2 All undesignated statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure. “Section 364 requires that a plaintiff give a health care provider 90 days’ prior notice before commencing an action for professional negligence.” (Jones v. Catholic Healthcare West (2007) 147 Cal.App.4th 300, 305 (Jones).) Section 364, subdivision (d) tolls the statute of limitations for 90 days if the notice of intent to sue is served on the health care provider within the last 90 days of the applicable statute of limitations. (Woods v. Young (1991) 53 Cal.3d 315, 325 (Woods).)

2 treatment she was receiving from an orthopedist and physiotherapist; she sought “compensation of 140,000 dollars + non-economic damages of $100,000 + the medical expenses” and payment for physical therapy. The letter concluded: “I would therefore request you to send me a check of 240,000 dollars within 20 days of receipt of this letter. I personally do not wish to go through the legal route, but if this doesn’t work I will move to the court after 20 days. I would also request you to keep all the relevant documents, cctv footage or preserve anything relevant as proof of the accident.” In March 2014, ValleyCare’s insurer acknowledged receiving the letter, and asked Kumari to complete medical authorization forms so it could “review the claim.” Several weeks later, the insurer reiterated its request for Kumari to complete authorizations from the treatment providers identified in Kumari’s letter. Kumari completed the authorizations. In August 2014, the insurer denied Kumari’s claim, concluding “a review of the matter found that the nurse . . . did not breach the standard of care prior to your fall. Therefore, we will not make any offer of settlement on behalf of ValleyCare.” Plaintiffs’ Counsel’s Letter and the Litigation Plaintiffs hired a lawyer. On October 27, 2014, their attorney sent ValleyCare a letter “pursuant to . . . section 364” stating the nurse’s “negligent actions” caused Kumari’s injuries and that Kumari’s husband had a loss of consortium claim. The letter stated “after the expiration of 90 days from the date of this notice, [plaintiffs] intend to file an action.” On January 23, 2015, plaintiffs filed a complaint against ValleyCare for medical negligence and loss of consortium. ValleyCare moved for summary judgment. It argued the complaint—filed after the one-year statute of limitations in section 340.5 expired—was time-barred. ValleyCare also argued Kumari’s letter was an “intent to sue letter” within the meaning of section 364 because it described “the legal basis for her claim (personal injury due to medical negligence) and provided a detailed inventory of the nature of her injuries and losses (broken shoulder resulting in wage loss, pain and suffering and out of pocket expenses for medical care . . . .)” Additionally, ValleyCare claimed the letter evinced an intent to sue by advising ValleyCare that Kumari was “prepared to move forward in ‘the

3 court’ through ‘the legal route’ if her letter proved unsuccessful.” Finally, ValleyCare contended neither Kumari’s letter nor plaintiffs’ counsel’s letter extended the limitations period. In support of the motion, ValleyCare offered Kumari’s deposition testimony. Kumari testified that when she wrote the letter, she believed the nurse was negligent. She wrote the letter to obtain a settlement before hiring an attorney; she wanted to give ValleyCare an opportunity to settle the dispute before she filed a lawsuit. When she wrote the letter, Kumari’s state of mind was that she would “ ‘go through the legal route’ ” if ValleyCare did not send her a check. When ValleyCare’s insurer responded to her letter, Kumari knew the insurer was investigating her claim so it could respond to her demand for money. Plaintiffs’ opposition conceded the one-year statute of limitations began to run on October 29, 2013. Plaintiffs, however, argued the complaint was timely because: (1) Kumari’s letter was not a notice of intent to sue under section 364; and (2) plaintiffs’ counsel’s letter tolled the statute of limitations because it was sent within 90 days of the expiration of the limitations period. According to plaintiffs, Kumari’s letter did not constitute a notice of intent to sue because she did not intend for the letter to fall within section 364. Instead, her letter was an “informal” effort to try to resolve her concerns in “a friendly way.” When she wrote the letter, Kumari was not “aware of the existence of . . . Section 364, nor was she aware of any of its provisions requiring that notice be given prior to the filing of a legal action for medical negligence.” In a supporting declaration, Kumari averred she wrote the letter to see whether her concerns about her injury “could be resolved quickly by direct discussions” with ValleyCare.

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Kumari v. Hospital Com. for Livermore etc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kumari-v-hospital-com-for-livermore-etc-calctapp-2017.