Ladonna A. Reck, As Personal Representative of the Estate of Evelyn L. Holmes v. Harry Clifton Knight, M.D., Mona Siddiqui Saifullah, M.D., Community Health Network, Inc.

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 2013
Docket49A05-1208-CT-428
StatusPublished

This text of Ladonna A. Reck, As Personal Representative of the Estate of Evelyn L. Holmes v. Harry Clifton Knight, M.D., Mona Siddiqui Saifullah, M.D., Community Health Network, Inc. (Ladonna A. Reck, As Personal Representative of the Estate of Evelyn L. Holmes v. Harry Clifton Knight, M.D., Mona Siddiqui Saifullah, M.D., Community Health Network, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Ladonna A. Reck, As Personal Representative of the Estate of Evelyn L. Holmes v. Harry Clifton Knight, M.D., Mona Siddiqui Saifullah, M.D., Community Health Network, Inc., (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

DAVID L. BYERS ROBERT G. ZEIGLER Holwager, Byers and Caughey KAREN L. WITHERS Beech Grove, Indiana Zeigler Cohen & Koch Indianapolis, Indiana

May 17 2013, 8:03 am IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

LADONNA A. RECK, AS PERSONAL ) REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE ) OF EVELYN L. HOLMES, ) ) Appellant-Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) No. 49A05-1208-CT-428 ) HARRY CLIFTON KNIGHT, M.D., MONA ) SIDDIQUI SAIFULLAH, M.D., COMMUNITY ) HEALTH NETWORK, INC., and COMMUNITY ) HOSPITALS OF INDIANA, INC., ) ) Appellees-Defendants. )

APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT The Honorable S.K. Reid, Judge Cause No. 49D14-0901-CT-3010

May 17, 2013

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

BRADFORD, Judge Evelyn Holmes died on March 17, 2007, after suffering complications from a medical

condition known as Stevens-Johnson Syndrome. Appellant-Plaintiff Ladonna A. Reck, in

her capacity as personal representative for Holmes’s estate, subsequently filed a proposed

complaint alleging that Holmes’s complications and resulting death were caused by the

medical malpractice of Appellees-Defendants Harry Clifton Knight, M.D., and Mona

Siddiqui Saifullah, M.D., who were treating Holmes in their capacity as physicians at a

hospital owned and operated by Appellees-Defendants Community Health Network, Inc. and

Community Hospitals of Indiana, Inc.

Approximately two-and-a-half years after Reck filed her proposed complaint in

accordance with the Indiana Medical Malpractice Act, a medical review panel was formed

and deadlines for the parties’ evidentiary submissions were set. Reck, however, did not

comply with these deadlines or file any evidentiary submissions before the medical review

panel’s statutorily-imposed deadline for issuing its expert opinion had passed. Appellees

subsequently filed a motion for preliminary determination of law requesting the dismissal of

Reck’s proposed complaint with prejudice. Reck brings this appeal from the trial court’s

order denying Reck’s motion to correct error which was filed after the trial court granted the

Appellees’ motion and dismissed Reck’s proposed complaint. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Holmes died on March 17, 2007, after suffering complications from a medical

condition known as “Stevens-Johnson Syndrome.” Appellant’s App. p. 77. On January 21,

2009, Reck, as personal representative for Holmes’s estate, filed a proposed complaint with

2 the Indiana Department of Insurance in accordance with the Indiana Medical Malpractice Act

(the “Act”). The proposed complaint alleged that Holmes died as a result of negligent care

provided by Drs. Harry Clifton Knight, Brett Ryan Fink,1 and Mona Siddiqui Saifullah, all of

whom were employed by Community Health Network, Inc. and/or Community Hospitals of

Indiana.2 Over the course of approximately the next two-and-a-half years, the parties

engaged in written discovery.

On June 8, 2011, the formation of the medical review panel was completed. On that

date, the panel chairman sent an order to the parties which provided a schedule and deadlines

for the parties to file evidentiary submissions. The schedule provided that Reck’s evidentiary

submission was due July 28, 2011, with evidence from the Appellees due on August 29,

2011. The schedule also permitted Reck to file a reply submission on or before September

13, 2011. The medical review panel’s expert opinion was required to be handed down on or

before December 5, 2011, in order for the panel to be in compliance with the 180-day time

limit set by Indiana Code section 34-18-10-13.

Reck did not file any evidentiary submissions by the July 28, 2011 deadline. On

August 12, 2011, the chairman of the medical review panel wrote to Reck’s counsel

indicating that the panel had not received Reck’s submissions and requested that Reck’s

counsel “let [him] know when [counsel] expect[ed] to have it completed.” Appellant’s App.

1 Dr. Fink is listed on the original Proposed Complaint for Damages but is not listed on any other document filed before the medical review panel or the trial court.

We will collectively refer to the doctors and the hospital systems as “Appellees” throughout this 2

memorandum decision.

3 p. 86. Reck’s counsel did not respond to this letter, provide the panel with any explanation of

Reck’s inability to comply with deadline, or request an extension of time for Reck to file her

submissions. Reck did not file any submissions to the panel before the December 5, 2011

deadline for the medical review panel to issue its expert opinion passed.

On January 30, 2012, Appellees filed a “Motion for Preliminary Determination of Law

to Dismiss Plaintiff’s Proposed Complaint[,]” Appellant’s App. p. 70, in which they claimed

that Reck’s proposed complaint should be dismissed because Reck failed to timely file

submissions with the medical review panel and the 180-day limit for the panel to issue its

expert opinion had passed. The trial court scheduled a hearing on Appellees’ motion for

February 22, 2012.

On February 20, 2012, nearly seven months after her evidentiary submissions were

originally due, nearly three months after the 180-day statutory deadline for the medical

review panel to issue its expert opinion had passed, and just two days before the scheduled

hearing on Appellees’ motion to dismiss, Reck provided a copy of her evidentiary

submissions to Appellees without any explanation regarding the delay. On February 21,

2012, Reck filed a response to the Appellees’ motion to dismiss in which she “apologize[d]

for the late filing of [her] Panel Submission.” Appellant’s App. p. 89. Reck indicated that

her submissions were late because it took a great deal of time for her counsel to review all of

the voluminous medical records covering complex issues and to prepare her submission.

On February 22, 2012, the trial court conducted a hearing on Appellees’ motion to

dismiss, at which Appellees presented evidence establishing Reck’s non-compliance with the

4 submission schedule and the medical panel’s resulting inability to issue its opinion within the

180-day statutory deadline. Reck’s counsel acknowledged that he had failed to comply with

the submission schedule. Reck’s counsel further acknowledged that he did not respond to the

panel chairman’s letter regarding the approximate date that counsel believed he would submit

Reck’s evidentiary submissions to the medical review panel; that he did not, at any time,

request an extension from the medical review panel; and that he did not have a reason for not

asking for an extension.

Reck’s counsel also acknowledged that he did not write to Appellees’ counsel

requesting an extension of time to submit his evidentiary submissions prior to the July 28,

2011 deadline set forth by the medical review panel. Reck’s counsel merely claimed that

Reck’s failure to file a timely evidentiary submission should nonetheless be excused because

he and counsel for Appellees had allegedly agreed during a September of 2011 telephonic

conference that Reck should have an extension of time to file her submissions in light of the

complexity of the matter and the voluminous relevant medical records. However, when

pressed by the trial court about the details of this alleged agreement, Reck’s counsel could

not provide a date by which the parties agreed that Reck should submit her evidentiary

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