LeBlanc v. Commonwealth
This text of 914 N.E.2d 937 (LeBlanc v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The plaintiffs’ complaint, brought pursuant to the Massachusetts Tort Claims Act (G. L. c. 258, § 2), alleged negligence and recklessness of the defendants, the office of the chief medical examiner (OCME) and two of its medical examiners, stemming from the provision of an autopsy report. The report caused the plaintiffs to believe that bodily remains previously delivered to them by the OCME were not those of their [420]*420son and to suffer severe emotional distress and great expense, as they exhumed the remains and conducted deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) tests to confirm identity. The plaintiffs now appeal from the judgment entered against them after a judge allowed the defendants’ motions to dismiss for failure to state a claim. We conclude that the defendants did not owe a duty to the plaintiffs and that the claims are exempt from the Tort Claims Act by G. L. c. 258, § 10(6).
Background. Because the case comes to us on review of motions to dismiss, our recitation is limited to the factual allegations of the plaintiffs’ complaint (as twice amended) and favorable inferences therefrom, all of which we assume to be true. See Iannacchino v. Ford Motor Co., 451 Mass. 623, 625 n.7 (2008).3 The plaintiffs’ son, Joseph LeBlanc, Jr. (Joseph Jr.), died in the crash of a small airplane in Danvers on May 21, 2001, along with the male pilot and a female passenger. Following an autopsy the next day by the defendant doctors Alexander Chirkov and Abraham Philip in the OCME headquarters in Boston, Joseph Jr.’s remains were returned to the plaintiffs and buried in Gloucester on May 26, 2001.
In the course of preparing suit against the estate of the pilot, the plaintiffs obtained a copy of the autopsy report from the OCME, which was received on February 27, 2002. The plaintiffs were shocked to read that Joseph Jr. was characterized as “uncircumcised,” knowing that he had been circumcised as a child. Fearful and distressed that at least part of the body returned to them was that of the pilot, and finding that the family of the pilot had cremated his purported remains, the plaintiffs made their concerns known to the OCME through their attorney, but claim they received no response. The plaintiffs had Joseph Jr.’s remains exhumed on June 26, 2002, and examined by a consultant in forensic medicine and pathology. They obtained DNA tests which confirmed that the remains were those of their son.
[421]*421Sometime after the DNA tests had been completed, the plaintiffs discovered that the autopsy report had been corrected to state that Joseph Jr. was circumcised.4 The OCME allegedly corrected the report after the inquiry by the plaintiffs’ attorney but before they obtained the judicial exhumation order. Claiming the correction of the report was not made known to them by the OCME before the exhumation, the plaintiffs filed a multi-count complaint in the Superior Court on January 22, 2004. As twice amended, the complaint alleged negligence by Drs. Chirkov and Philip in connection with the autopsy report; negligent supervision of those doctors by Dr. Richard Evans, the chief medical examiner; and reckless infliction of emotional distress by Drs. Chirkov and Philip. The gravamen of the plaintiffs’ complaint is that had they been notified of the correction of the autopsy report, they would not have sought exhumation and DNA testing, and would have been spared anguish and emotional distress as well as great expense.
A Superior Court judge concluded, inter alia, that the defendants had no legally cognizable duties to the plaintiffs, and allowed the defendants’ motions to dismiss. On appeal, where they challenge only the dismissal of the negligence-based claims,5 the plaintiffs principally argue that the OCME was in breach of the duty to correctly identify the proper remains.
Discussion. The duties of the OCME are determined by statute, G. L. c. 38. See generally Macrelli v. Children’s Hosp., 451 Mass. 690, 691-693 (2008). The jurisdiction of the OCME, as relevant in this case, includes deaths caused by accident or occurring in any private conveyance. G. L. c. 38, §§ 3(2), 3(14), & 4. Upon taking jurisdiction over such a death, the OCME shall transport the body for investigation and possible autopsy. G. L. c. 38, § 4. “After investigation or examination by the [OCME], the body shall be released to the person with the proper legal authority to receive it, including the surviving spouse, the next of kin, or any friend of the deceased, who shall have priority [422]*422in the order named.” G. L. c. 38, § 13, inserted by St. 1992, c. 368, § 2.
In establishing the functions of the OCME in cases requiring autopsy, the only express duty involving the next of kin appearing in the statute is that of releasing the body to a person with proper legal authority to receive it. It is implicit in that duty that there is a duty to properly identify the body. Accordingly, we consider whether any of the actions allegedly taken by the OCME in the identification and delivery of Joseph Jr.’s body were negligent.
As a result of the violence of the plane crash, Joseph Jr.’s body was in three separate bags. The autopsy report contained a notation that “[t]he penis is present and is uncircumcised.” We think it understandable that the plaintiffs, reading this report, and knowing that their son had been circumcised, could have been alarmed by concluding that at least some of the remains delivered to them were not those of their son, and that some of his remains had been cremated with the pilot’s remains.6’7
The plaintiffs’ complaint did not make any detailed allegations regarding how their attorney contacted the OCME, what he reported, or what action of the OCME he specifically may have requested, and there is no allegation that the plaintiffs informed the OCME that they would exhume Joseph Jr.’s remains for DNA testing. The plaintiffs maintain that “no one from the [OCME] notified [them] of the change to . . . the report, and that the notation ‘uncircumcised’ had been made in error.”8
In any event, the plaintiffs argue that having issued the autopsy report to them, the OCME should be held to have had a duty to inform them that the error in identification had been corrected, and that all the remains delivered were actually those of Joseph Jr. We first observe that the error in the report did not constitute an error of misidentification. The remains of the individual named by the autopsy report were correctly delivered to the [423]*423next of kin. The statute does not prescribe or limit the medical examiner’s duties with respect to the methods of investigation and examination. Accordingly, the OCME has discretion in the means and methods of determining the identification of a body. There is no allegation of any error in the identification procedure used in this case. We conclude the OCME properly discharged its duty to identify and release Joseph Jr.’s remains to the plaintiffs. ■
Moreover, nothing in G. L. c. 38 requires the OCME to notify the next of kin of autopsy results. General Laws c. 38, § 2, as amended by St. 1995, c. 38, § 56, declares that autopsy reports “shall not be deemed to be public records,” and authorizes the chief medical examiner to promulgate rules for their disclosure to “those who are legally entitled to receive them.” Pursuant to 505 Code Mass. Regs.
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914 N.E.2d 937, 75 Mass. App. Ct. 419, 2009 Mass. App. LEXIS 1278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leblanc-v-commonwealth-massappct-2009.