Laureen Olson v. Louisiana Patient's Compensation Fund Oversight Board

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 2020
Docket2019CA1300
StatusUnknown

This text of Laureen Olson v. Louisiana Patient's Compensation Fund Oversight Board (Laureen Olson v. Louisiana Patient's Compensation Fund Oversight Board) 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
Laureen Olson v. Louisiana Patient's Compensation Fund Oversight Board, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 CA 1300

LAUREEN OLSON

VERSUS

LOUISIANA PATIENT' S COMPENSATION FUND OVERSIGHT BOARD

Judgment Rendered: JUN 2 6 2020

On Appeal from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana Docket No. 652, 921

Honorable R. Michael Caldwell, Judge Presiding

J. Lomax Jordan, Jr. Counsel for Plaintiff/ Appellant, Lafayette, Louisiana Laureen Olson

Stephanie B. Laborde Defendant/ Appellee, Benjamin M. Chapman Louisiana Patient' s Compensation Jacob J. Chapman Fund Oversight Board Baton Rouge, Louisiana

BEFORE: WHIPPLE, C. J., GUIDRY, AND BURRIS, 133.

1 Judge William J. Burris, retired, serving pro tempore by special appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court. BURRIS, J.

The plaintiff, Laureen Olson, appeals from the trial court's May 17, 2019

judgment that sustained an exception of prescription filed by the Louisiana

Patient's Compensation Fund Oversight Board (" Board'. The judgment also

dismissed the claims made the subject of the Board' s exception for lack of subject

matter jurisdiction, which the trial court raised on its own motion. For the reasons

that follow, the appeal is dismissed.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In February 2011, Ms. Olson filed a medical malpractice action against her

allegedly negligent medical provider and its insurer in the 15th Judicial District

Court. The parties eventually reached a settlement; however, the Board objected,

and the trial court refused to approve the agreement. The settlement was

eventually perfected, after the Third Circuit Court of Appeal reversed the trial

court's ruling and held that the Board lacked standing to challenge the agreement.

See Olson v. Toce, 2017- 36 ( La. App. 3rd Cir. 6/ 7/ 17), 222 So. 3d 775, 781.

As a result of the Board' s objection to the settlement, Ms. Olson filed the

instant suit against the Board and its members seeking declaratory relief and

monetary damages. Ms. Olson alleged that the defendants violated the Medical

Malpractice Act and arbitrarily and capriciously failed to promptly and fairly settle

her malpractice claims. Ms. Olson subsequently amended her petition to assert a

cause of action for excess damages against the Louisiana Patient's Compensation

Fund and the medical provider, as a nominal defendant.

The Board filed an exception of prescription in March 2019, arguing that Ms.

Olson' s claim for excess damages was prescribed. Ms. Olson opposed the

exception. Following a hearing on May 6, 2019, the trial court sustained the

Board' s exception of prescription and further found, on its own motion, that it

lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Ms. Olson' s claim for excess damages as a

result of Ms. Olson' s failure to follow the mandatory procedures set forth in the

2 Medical Malpractice Act.2 A judgment memorializing both rulings was signed on

May 17, 2019. Ms. Olson filed the instant appeal, challenging both reasons for

dismissal. 3

On October 4, 2019, this court, ex proprio motu, issued an order directing

the parties to show cause why the appeal should not be dismissed, because the

judgment appears to be a partial judgment not designated as final for purposes of

an immediate appeal. The judgment does not contain the required designation of

finality required by La. Code Civ. P. art. 1915( B), and the record does not contain 4 the trial court's explicit reasons as to whether there is no just reason for delay.

The judgment pertinently states:

The Court, considering the law, evidence, and argument of the parties, and for the reasons provided in oral reasons for judgment provided at the hearing, ruled that the Exception of Prescription filed on behalf of the Louisiana Patient' s Compensation Fund Oversight Board is hereby SUSTAINED.

Further, on the Court' s own Motion, considering the law, evidence, and argument of the parties, and the reasons provided in the oral reasons for judgment provided at the hearing, the Court ruled that the Court lacked Subject Matter Jurisdiction over the claims subject to the Exception of Prescription.

Accordingly,

IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Plaintiff's claims asserted in her FirstAmended Petition for Damages for Breach of Duties and for Excess Damages in Medical Malpractice be and they are hereby DISMISSED.

Z Particularly, La. R.S. 40: 1231. 4( C) provides that, if the health care provider's insurer agrees to settle its liability on a claim against its insured, as the insurer did here, and the claimant demands an amount in excess thereof from the Patient's Compensation Fund for a complete and final release, as Ms. Olson does, then a petition " shall be filed by the claimant with the court in which the action is pending against the health care provider..." seeking approval of an agreed settlement and demanding payment of damages from the Patient's Compensation Fund. The trial court concluded that the 15th Judicial District Court has subject matter jurisdiction as the court in which the action was initially filed against the health care provider. 3 In her appeal brief, Ms. Olson also assigns error to the trial court's ruling on the Board' s exception of no cause of action; however, this judgment is not before the court and may not be considered as part of this appeal. 4 The show cause order was referred to this panel to consider in conjunction with the assigned appeal.

3 Y

In response to the show cause order, Ms. Olson asserts that all causes of

action against all defendants have now been dismissed; therefore, La. Code Civ.

P. art. 1915 should not apply. We decline to address the merits of Ms. Olson' s

arguments, because, after our thorough review of the record and examination of

the judgment at issue, we find the judgment lacks the requisite decretal language

and is, therefore, not final and appealable.

JURISDICTION

Appellate courts have a duty to examine subject matter jurisdiction sua

sponte, even when the parties do not raise the issue. Advanced Leveling &

Concrete Solutions v. Lathan Co., Inc., 2017- 1250 ( La. App. 1st Cir.

12/ 20/ 18), 268 So. 3d 1044, 1046. This court's jurisdiction extends only to final

judgments. Contin -U -Care Outreach Services, LLC v. Gee, 2018- 1530 ( La.

App. 1st Cir. 5/ 31/ 19), 278 So. 3d 1001, 1004.

Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure art. 2083( A) provides that a final judgment

is appealable in all causes in which appeals are given by law. Per La. Code Civ. P.

art. 1841, a judgment that determines the merits in whole or in part is a final

judgment; in contrast, a judgment that does not determine the merits but only

preliminary matters in the course of the action is an interlocutory judgment.

A valid judgment must be ' precise, definite, and certain." Advanced

Leveling & Concrete Solutions, 268 So. 3d at 1046. Moreover, a final

appealable judgment must contain decretal language, and it must name the party

in favor of whom the ruling is ordered, the party against whom the ruling is

ordered, and the relief that is granted or denied. These determinations should be

evident from the language of the judgment without reference to other documents

in the record. In the absence of a valid final judgment, this court lacks subject

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Related

Olson v. Toce
222 So. 3d 775 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2017)

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