Maes v. EL PASO ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY GROUP

243 S.W.3d 695, 2007 WL 2456893
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 2007
Docket08-06-00071-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 243 S.W.3d 695 (Maes v. EL PASO ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY GROUP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maes v. EL PASO ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY GROUP, 243 S.W.3d 695, 2007 WL 2456893 (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

ANN CRAWFORD McCLURE, Justice.

Vincent and Cynthia Maes and The Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania appeal the dismissal of a health care liability suit against the El Paso Ortho-paedic Surgery Group (EPOSG). They also complain of the severance of this suit from the claims remaining in the trial court. For the following reasons, we affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Vincent Maes, a truck driver by trade, was involved in a head-on motor vehicle collision in Arizona in 2000. He was evaluated at the White Mountain Apache Regional Medical Center and diagnosed with lumbar spine and left knee strain. On October 9, Vincent visited Dr. Barry King at EPOSG. A series of x-rays and a neurological exam were normal. Dr. King prescribed medication and referred Vincent to physical therapy. In November, an MRI revealed the L5-S1 disc with posterior protrusion impinging on the left SI nerve. During the following months, Vincent complained of progressive leg pain and bladder dysfunction. He then received two epidural steroid injections, which provided little relief.

Vincent continued with physical therapy, but by December he was using a wheelchair. On July 6, 2001, Dr. Paul Cho, a neurosurgeon with EPOSG, performed a lumbar laminectomy and bilateral facetec-tomies with fusion. Following surgery, Vincent complained of left foot drop, left foot orthosis, lower extremity weakness, and urinary and sexual dysfunction. He was seen in clinic by Dr. Cho on nine separate occasions, diagnosed with depression and psychosomatism, and prescribed anxiolytics, antidepressants, and opioids. By December 2001, he had been diagnosed with T12-L1 incomplete paraplegia and T-10 paraplegia. 1

*697 The Maeses filed suit against Dr. Cho and EPOSG on July 7, 2003. 2 On March 18, 2004, they filed an expert report from Dr. James P. Bradley, who is board certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Medicine, and Critical Care Medicine. Dr. Bradley opined that the surgery did not ameliorate Vincent’s complaints from the motor vehicle accident and may have contributed to his right-side lower extremity and sexual difficulties. According to Dr. Bradley, Dr. Cho breached the standard of care because he failed to repeat the MRI of the lumbar spine and/or obtain a CT scan to rule out post-surgical lumbar pathology. Dr. Bradley’s report did not mention EPOSG either directly or indirectly.

The Maeses filed a second expert report on March 30, 2004, from Dr. Robert Wheeler Rand, who is board certified in neurosurgery. Dr. Rand opined that Vincent’s post-operative condition resulted from the surgery. The neurosurgical standard of care in lumbar fusion procedures is to avoid compression from direct injury to the nerve roots when pedicle screws are placed. 3 Since Vincent’s neurologic deficit increased and his symptoms deteriorated, Dr. Cho breached the standard of care by fading to order an essential neurological work up, including a repeat MRI and CT scan of the L5/S1. Dr. Rand explained that had further testing been performed in September 2001, an MRI or CT scan would have led Dr. Cho to recommend another surgery which, within reasonable probability, would have restored Vincent’s function at best, or at worst, would have kept him from deteriorating to further paraplegia.

Dr. Cho and EPOSG filed separate motions to dismiss. EPOSG argued the Maeses failed to serve the Group with an expert report and that the deadline to serve expert reports had long since passed. In separate orders, the trial court denied Dr. Cho’s motion and granted EP-OSG’s motion. The Maeses’ claims against EPOSG were dismissed with prejudice on August 17, 2004. In November 2005, the trial court severed the Maeses’ claims against EPOSG, allowing the dismissal order to become final.

Meanwhile, in April 2005, the Insurance Company of The State of Pennsylvania (ICTSP) intervened in the Maeses’ suit against Dr. Cho, alleging subrogation rights pursuant to a workers’ compensation policy with Vincent’s employer. In December 2005, after the suit against EP-OSG was severed, ICTSP amended its petition alleging direct negligence claims against Dr. Cho and vicarious liability claims against EPOSG. EPOSG filed a motion to strike the amended petition, but the record does not show whether the trial court ruled on it. Ultimately, the trial court overruled a motion for new trial and motion for reconsideration of the severance filed by ICTSP. A second motion was filed, but the only relief sought related to the severance order.

THE PLEADINGS

Both the original petition and the first amended petition, which was filed the *698 morning of the dismissal hearing, alleged direct liability and vicarious liability claims against EPOSG. The latter specifically alleged:

Defendant EL PASO ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY GROUP is a professional association and/or corporation and has been joined in this lawsuit.
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Defendant EL PASO ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY GROUP, hereinafter referred to as Defendant GROUP, is a professional association and/or corporation, organized to provide orthopaedic services to its patients, including physical therapy services. At all relevant times, the Defendant provided medical services by its agents and employees to the Plaintiff VINCENT MAES and they were acting within the course and scope of their employment.
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On or about October 9, 2000, Plaintiff was receiving treatment on the premises of Defendant GROUP.
Defendant GROUP by its agents is liable to Plaintiff for the negligence of its employees under the doctrine of respon-deat superior.
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Defendants GROUP and CHO were negligent in one or more of the following:

1. Failing to timely diagnose a spinal cord lesion;
2. Failing to perform appropriate diagnostic tests, such as a MRI Myelo-gram or CT scan after Plaintiff failed to progress in therapy and had continued complaints of pain;
3. Misdiagnosed Plaintiffs physical condition as mental one;
4. Failed to timely operate on the Plaintiffs spinal cord;
5. Failed to prevent spinal cord compression and ischemia in Plaintiffs thoracic cord;
6. Operated on the wrong section of Plaintiffs back;
7. Failed to timely and properly react to the Plaintiffs neurologic changes;
8. Defendant Cho practiced orthopedic medicine and surgery on Plaintiff at a time when Defendant Cho was not able to perform as a reasonable and prudent physician due to temporary incapacity, impairment, illness or disability, and Defendant EPOSG, knowing of Defendant Cho’s temporary problem, allowed him to do so;
9. Failed to inform the patient of pertinent finding and concerns regarding the cause of his neurologic problems; and

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W.3d 695, 2007 WL 2456893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maes-v-el-paso-orthopaedic-surgery-group-texapp-2007.