Luna v. St. Thomas Hospital

272 S.W.3d 577, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 749, 2007 WL 4322019
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 4, 2007
DocketM2006-01728-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 272 S.W.3d 577 (Luna v. St. Thomas Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luna v. St. Thomas Hospital, 272 S.W.3d 577, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 749, 2007 WL 4322019 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID R. FARMER, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and WALTER C. KURTZ, SP. J., joined.

In this medical malpractice action, the trial court awarded summary judgment to defendant hospital on the basis of the statute of limitations. It later denied plaintiffs motion to alter or amend the judgment. Finding that the plaintiff established the existence of a disputed material fact regarding when she should have discovered her cause of action against the hospital, we reverse and remand the mat *578 ter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Tracy M. Luna (Mrs. Luna) brought this medical malpractice action against St. Thomas Hospital (the hospital) on December 5, 2005, approximately two years after the death of her husband, James D. Luna (Mr. Luna), and approximately one year after filing suit against her husband’s two doctors. Mr. Luna entered the hospital on November 17, 2008, with a bleeding duodenal ulcer and remained there until his death on December 4, 2003. Mrs. Luna alleges that the negligence of the hospital’s residents unreasonably delayed treatment and caused her husband’s death. The dispute on appeal involves the application of the discovery rule to the instant facts and whether it tolled the running of the statute to allow Mrs. Luna to prosecute this second malpractice suit.

Following the death of her husband, Mrs. Luna requested copies of his medical records from the hospital in December of 2003. The records revealed that Mr. Luna was admitted to St. Thomas Hospital on November 17, 2003, because he was experiencing stomach pain and was vomiting blood. The next day, Dr. Ronald E. Pruitt (Dr. Pruitt), a gastroenterologist, performed an exploratory procedure and discovered a bleeding ulcer; he then cauterized the ulcer and injected an agent to stop the bleeding. On the evening of November 19, 2003, Mr. Luna experienced a bloody bowel movement, indicative of re-bleeding, and passed out from a severe drop in blood pressure. Over the next several hours, Mr. Luna received several transfusions. In the early morning hours of November 20, 2003, Mr. Luna experienced another bloody bowel movement. The medical records indicated that a Doctor Luther contacted Dr. Pruitt’s on-call partner at 6:00 a.m. and received permission to secure a surgical consult. The records also reflected that one hour later, the “Red Med Team” examined Mr. Luna and noted that they were awaiting a decision on surgery. Elsewhere in the paperwork, Dr. Jonathan A. Cohen, M.D. (Dr. Cohen), a surgeon, noted in his records that Dr. Pruitt called him at 11:30 a.m. on November 20, 2003, and asked him to have the surgical residents check on Mr. Luna and to be available for surgical backup. Dr. Pruitt had communicated that Mr. Luna was “presently hemodynamically stable” following the cautery of the ulcer, and the surgical residents had later reported to Dr. Cohen that Mr. Luna had received seventeen units of blood but was not presently bleeding. Dr. Cohen reported that he met with Mr. Luna at 1:30 p.m. that afternoon and concluded that he should wait until Mr. Luna began to re-bleed before operating on him. At approximately four o’clock that afternoon, Mr. Luna began to hemorrhage severely, which ultimately led to his death.

Mrs. Luna filed the first malpractice suit against Doctors Pruitt and Cohen on December 3, 2004. Her attorney reviewed the records with the assistance of a physician who concluded that Dr. Cohen’s November 20 decision to delay surgical intervention until Mr. Luna began to re-bleed was negligent.

Approximately three months after reviewing the doctors’ depositions in the first lawsuit, Mrs. Luna filed suit against the hospital on December 5, 2005. The hospital filed a motion for summary judgment on February 14, 2006 and included with it a statement of undisputed material facts and Mrs. Luna’s original complaint filed against Doctors Pruitt and Cohen. Mrs. Luna admitted each material fact submitted by the hospital, including the following:

1. James D. Luna died on December 4, 2003, two years and one day *579 before the Complaint in this matter was filed.
2. Mr. Luna died while a patient at St. Thomas Hospital.
3. On December 3, 2004, Tracy M. Luna, the Plaintiff in this matter, filed a “medical negligenee/wrongful death action” against Ronald E. Pruitt, M.D., and Jonathan A. Cohen, M.D. (hereinafter referred to as the “2004 Lawsuit”)....
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7. In December 2003, Mrs. Luna and some of her husband’s kin became concerned about why Mr. Luna had died in the hospital under the constant care of physicians and hospital staff personnel....
8. In December 2003, Mrs. Luna wanted to know if any of Mr. Luna’s healthcare providers were negligent in any way that caused or substantially contributed to his death....
9. As a result of her concerns that Mr. Luna’s healthcare providers may have been negligent, later in December 2003, Mrs. Luna sought and received from St. Thomas Hospital what she presumed to be most of Mr. Luna’s hospital records....
10. After reviewing Mr. Luna’s hospital records from St. Thomas and before filing the 2004 Lawsuit on December 3, 2004, Mrs. Luna determined that she had a cause of action against Dr. Pruitt and Dr. Cohen for negligence in treating Mr. Luna at St. Thomas Hospital....
11. Mrs. Luna did not file the present medical malpractice action against St. Thomas until December 5, 2005, more than one year after she sued Mr. Luna’s doctors, and more than two years after Mr. Luna died....
12.Paragraph 23 of the 2004 Lawsuit was directed at and intended to address the statute of limitations and “discovery rule” related to Mrs. Luna’s claims arising out of Mr. Luna’s death....

The hospital contended that Mrs. Luna’s request and receipt of her husband’s medical records established that she suspected someone at St. Thomas Hospital of negligence, thus causing the statute of limitations to run. Additionally, the hospital relied upon paragraph twenty-three (23) from Mrs. Luna’s complaint filed in the first lawsuit against the two doctors:

After Mr. Luna’s death, Mrs. Luna ... became concerned about why Mr. Luna had died in the hospital under the constant care of physicians and hospital staff personnel. [She] wanted to know if any of Mr. Luna’s healthcare providers were negligent in any way that caused or substantially contributed to his death.

Mrs. Luna filed a brief in opposition to the motion on March 31, 2006, and attached the sworn affidavit of her attorney and a selection of her husband’s medical records. She contended that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until she discovered or reasonably should have discovered both the injury and the identity of the tortfeasor. She further asserted that she had no reason to suspect the residents until she reviewed the doctors’ depositions in the latter part of 2005. Mrs. Luna submits that the depositions yielded information pointing to the residents’ negligence.

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272 S.W.3d 577, 2007 Tenn. App. LEXIS 749, 2007 WL 4322019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luna-v-st-thomas-hospital-tennctapp-2007.