Lynn Raiteri Ex Rel. Mary Cox v. NHC Healthcare

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 21, 2003
DocketE2003-00068-COA-R9-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lynn Raiteri Ex Rel. Mary Cox v. NHC Healthcare (Lynn Raiteri Ex Rel. Mary Cox v. NHC Healthcare) 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
Lynn Raiteri Ex Rel. Mary Cox v. NHC Healthcare, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE August 21, 2003 Session

LYNN RAITERI EX REL. MARY HELEN COX v. NHC HEALTHCARE/KNOXVILLE, INC., ET AL.

Interlocutory Appeal from the Circuit Court for Knox County No. 2-791-01 Harold Wimberly, Jr., Judge

Filed December 30, 2003

No. E2003-00068-COA-R9-CV

Lynn Raiteri, as the daughter and next friend of the late Mary Helen Cox (“Mrs. Cox”), sued NHC Healthcare/Knoxville, Inc. (“the defendant”), as well as others,1 for the wrongful death of Mrs. Cox, whose death allegedly resulted from improper care at the defendant’s nursing home. We granted the plaintiff’s Tenn. R. App. P. 9 application for an interlocutory appeal in order to review the trial court’s order granting the defendant’s motion to compel mediation and arbitration pursuant to the dispute resolution procedures contained in the defendant’s nursing home admission agreement. We reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 9 Interlocutory Appeal; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed; Case Remanded

CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which HOUSTON M. GODDARD , P.J., and HERSCHEL P. FRANKS , J., joined.

Richard C. May and Loring E. Justice, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Lynn Raiteri.

Dan D. Rhea and F. Michael Fitzpatrick, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellees, NHC Healthcare/Knoxville, Inc. and NHC Healthcare/Knoxville, LLC.

OPINION

1 For ease o f reference, we will refer to NH C H ealthca re/Knoxville, Inc., as if it were the sole defendant. The identity of the other defendants is not critical to the resolution of this appeal. We note in passing, however, that the brief filed in response to the appellant’s brief reflects that it was filed on behalf of the defendant mentioned in this footnote as well as the defendant NHC H ealthcare/Knoxville, LLC. We do not know the relationship between these two defendants; but it is not important to our disp osition of this appeal. I.

A.

Mrs. Cox, age 77, was admitted to St. Mary’s Hospital with chest pains and other symptoms. Her husband, Charles E. Cox (“Mr. Cox”), age 75, anticipated that his wife would receive physical therapy at St. Mary’s so she could regain some or all of her mobility; but apparently the hospital was not prepared to render these services to her. Since Mr. Cox was physically unable to lift and otherwise care for his wife at home, he made arrangements to admit her to the defendant’s nursing home.2 On December 20, 2000, Mr. Cox met at the nursing home with the defendant’s admissions coordinator. Mrs. Cox was not present at the meeting. The admissions coordinator asked Mr. Cox to sign the nursing home’s “Admission and Financial Contract” (“the admission agreement”) on his wife’s behalf, even though Mrs. Cox had not been diagnosed or adjudicated as mentally incompetent. He complied with her request. It was the intention of the parties that Mrs. Cox would receive physical therapy and vocational rehabilitation services at the nursing home.

Sometime shortly after his wife’s admission to the defendant’s facility, Mr. Cox also was admitted to the defendant’s nursing home. On March 8, 2001, Mr. Cox passed away. Mrs. Cox, while still a resident at the nursing home, died on April 19, 2001. Following her mother’s death, the plaintiff filed suit for Mrs. Cox’s wrongful death, alleging that the negligence, abuse, neglect, and fraud of the defendant caused her mother’s death. In her complaint, the plaintiff seeks compensatory and punitive damages. In response to the complaint, the defendant filed a motion seeking to compel mediation and arbitration.

B.

Before ruling on the defendant’s motion, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing. The defendant’s admissions coordinator was the only witness for the defendant. She testified that she met with Mr. Cox and that he read and signed the admission agreement as Mrs. Cox’s “legal representative.” While acknowledging that she handled some 360 admissions a year, she claimed that she remembered that Mr. Cox read the admission agreement. When asked if and how she could remember at the time of the hearing – on September 4, 2002 – that Mr. Cox had read the admission agreement some two years earlier, she responded, “I do because all of my admissions read the contract. I see to that.”

It is undisputed that Mr. Cox can read. Although the admission agreement specifically defines the term “legal representative” as “anyone authorized by the [patient] to act on the [patient’s]

2 W hen asked what her mo ther’s condition was in late 20 00, the plaintiff respond ed as follows:

It was no t good. The ma in problem was she had had a lo t of illnesses that they didn’t know what was wrong w ith her. . . . [S]he got to the p oint where she was so weak she co uld not move – well, she could move but she couldn’t stand up. She wasn’t mobile.

-2- behalf,” the admissions coordinator admitted that she did not receive any indication from either of the Coxes that Mr. Cox was authorized to sign on Mrs. Cox’s behalf. She stated that she did not know if Mr. Cox had his wife’s authorization to act on her behalf. She testified that she allowed him to sign the admission agreement simply because he was Mrs. Cox’s husband. The admissions coordinator went on to testify that she believed Mrs. Cox was competent when Mr. Cox signed the admission agreement. Despite Mrs. Cox’s unquestioned mental capacity, the admissions coordinator did not discuss the admission agreement with her; furthermore, she did not give Mrs. Cox a copy of that document. She stated that she did not know whether Mrs. Cox was ever made aware of the terms and conditions of the admission agreement. Significantly, the admissions coordinator acknowledged that Mrs. Cox “was capable of understanding it,” i.e., the admission agreement. One of her children described her as “fine mentally” and “very competent.”

The admissions coordinator confirmed that Mrs. Cox would not have been admitted if Mr. Cox had refused to sign the admission agreement or had refused to assent to the terms of the dispute resolution procedures in the agreement, which provisions included one waiving Mrs. Cox’s right to a jury trial. The admissions coordinator also testified that she informed Mr. Cox of his right to revoke the entire admission agreement within 30 days; however, the witness admitted that Mr. Cox could only revoke the entire agreement, not just the provisions dealing with the dispute resolution procedures. She claimed that she explained the admission agreement to Mr. Cox and encouraged him to ask questions; in response to a question, she stated that she did not tell Mr. Cox that he had the right to consult with an attorney before signing the admission agreement. The admissions coordinator also admitted that she told Mr. Cox that any claim would be settled quickly if it was handled via the dispute resolution procedures in the admission agreement.

At the evidentiary hearing, Mrs. Cox’s three children3 testified for the plaintiff. All three children stated that they believed their mother was fully competent when Mr. Cox signed the admission agreement.4 None of Mrs. Cox’s three children were aware of any document signed by Mrs. Cox or any other conduct on her part authorizing her husband to act on her behalf or to sign documents for her. The three children agreed that their mother was “sharp” mentally. It is clear from the testimony that the children considered her more mentally competent than her husband.

Contrary to the admissions coordinator’s testimony that Mr. Cox was aware of what he was doing, the plaintiff testified that her stepfather “was very upset, very agitated, [and] very confused” after he signed the agreement.

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Lynn Raiteri Ex Rel. Mary Cox v. NHC Healthcare, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-raiteri-ex-rel-mary-cox-v-nhc-healthcare-tennctapp-2003.