Nina Price v. Steven Clark

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 17, 2007
Docket2007-CA-01671-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Nina Price v. Steven Clark (Nina Price v. Steven Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nina Price v. Steven Clark, (Mich. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2007-CA-01671-SCT

NINA PRICE, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF ALL WRONGFUL DEATH BENEFICIARIES OF ALBERT B. PRICE, JR., DECEASED

v.

STEVEN CLARK, M.D., SAMUEL DUFF AUSTIN, M.D., BENNIE BARNETTE WRIGHT, JR., M.D., ESTATE OF BARRY STEPHEN SULLIVAN, M.D., CLEVE LAN D M EDICAL ALLIAN CE, LLP, C L EV E LA ND M E D IC AL C LIN IC , P LL C , CLEVELAND MEDICAL CLINIC, LTD AND CLEVELAND CLINIC, P.A.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/17/2007 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. CHARLES E. WEBSTER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: BOLIVAR COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: CHRISTOPHER MORGAN POSEY EDWARD A. WILLIAMSON JOHNNIE E. WALLS, JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JAMES LAWRENCE WILSON, IV TOMMIE G. WILLIAMS NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - MEDICAL MALPRACTICE DISPOSITION: ON DIRECT APPEAL: AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART. ON CROSS-APPEAL: AFFIRMED - 07/23/2009 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

CARLSON, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT: ¶1. This appeal involves various issues arising from medical-negligence/wrongful-death

litigation against various medical providers under both the Mississippi Tort Claims Act and

the medical-malpractice statute. We affirm in part and reverse in part the final judgment of

dismissal entered by the Circuit Court for the Second Judicial District of Bolivar County,

Judge Charles E. Webster presiding.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS IN THE TRIAL COURT

¶2. Albert Price, Jr., Nina Price’s (“Price”) husband, was diagnosed with a pituitary tumor

on April 9, 2004, just four months prior to his death on August 14, 2004. Upon the death of

her husband, Nina Price commenced this litigation via a duly-filed complaint alleging that

her husband’s primary-care physician, Dr. Steven Clark, had proximately caused her

husband’s injuries and wrongful death due to his negligent failure to timely diagnose the

pituitary tumor. Pursuant to a theory of respondeat superior, Price also named as defendants

in her original complaint Dr. Clark’s employers: Cleveland Medical Clinic, PLLC;

Cleveland Medical Alliance, LLP (“Alliance”); and Providence Healthcare d/b/a Bolivar

Medical Center (“Bolivar Medical Center”).1 Price further alleged that her husband’s

neurologist, Dr. Ravi Pande, of Greenwood Neurology Clinic, was negligent in failing to

diagnose the tumor, which proximately caused injuries to Mr. and Mrs. Price and the

wrongful death of Mr. Price.

1 It was later determined that Providence Healthcare was improperly identified, and that the proper name of the corporate entity that owned Bolivar Medical Center was PHC- Cleveland, Inc.

2 ¶3. Mr. Price had various health problems, receiving primary care from 1980 until the

time of his death in 2004 at what he believed to be the same medical clinic. However, this

clinic actually was a series of successive partnerships housed in the same facility. Alliance

was a limited-liability partnership formed on May 30, 1997, by the Board of Trustees for

Greenwood Leflore Hospital and physicians Charles F. Brock, M.D.; Benny B. Wright, Jr.,

M.D.; Samuel D. Austin, M.D.; and Barry S. Sullivan, M.D. Dr. Clark was an employee of

Alliance from December 20, 1999, through September 30, 2003. However, Price maintains

that at the time she filed the suit, she was unaware of any affiliation between Alliance and

Greenwood Leflore Hospital. Cleveland Medical Clinic, PLLC, was the successor clinic

organized and operated between October 1, 2003, and January 31, 2004, by physicians

Charles F. Brock, Jr., M.D.; James E. Warrington, Jr., M.D.; Benny B. Wright, Jr., M.D.; and

Steven Clark, M.D. After February 1, 2004, Cleveland Medical Clinic became an affiliated

entity of Delta Regional Medical Center. Bolivar Medical Center, formerly known as Bolivar

County Hospital, was the local hospital where Mr. Price received medical care.

¶4. The following is a procedural timeline of this case:

August 30, 2004 Price mailed notice-of-claim letters, as required by Mississippi Code Section 15-1-36(15), to the following defendants: Dr. Steven Clark, individually; Dr. Clark on behalf of Alliance; National Registered Agents on behalf of Bolivar Medical; Gerald Jacks, a registered agent of Cleveland Medical Clinic.

3 August 31, 2004 Price filed a complaint 2 against Dr. Steven Clark, Alliance, Bolivar Medical, Cleveland Medical Clinic, Dr. Ravi Pande, and John Does 1- 5. The basis of the complaint was negligence and gross negligence in failing to treat and diagnose the pituitary tumor. That same day, Price mailed Dr. Pande a notice-of-claim letter. December 7, The defendants were personally served with process. Dr. Clark was 2004 served individually and on behalf of Alliance, because Price mistakenly believed him to be a former partner of the now-dissolved limited-liability partnership. January 4, 2005 Dr. Pande filed a Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim Upon Which Relief Can Be Granted based on Dr. Pande’s alleged protected status under the MTCA as a employee of Greenwood Neurology Clinic, which was owned and operated by a public hospital, Greenwood Leflore Hospital. Dr. Pande later was dismissed from the suit by Agreed Order of Dismissal Without Prejudice filed on February 2, 2006. February 3, Price sent notice-of-claim letters to additional defendants pursuant to 2005 the MTCA. Price sent these letters to Delta Regional Medical Center (L. Ray Humphreys, CEO) due to its affiliation with Cleveland Medical Clinic and to Greenwood Leflore Hospital (Jerry Adams, Executive Director) due to its affiliation with Alliance and Greenwood Neurology Clinic.

2 Price actually filed two complaints on August 31, 2004. The second complaint was filed in the same cause number and added one additional defendant, Dr. Ravi Pande. The record reveals that the second complaint was intended as a substitute for the first complaint. Both complaints will be referred to collectively as the “original complaint.”

4 June 27, 2005 Without leave from the trial court, Price filed an “Amended Complaint” adding defendants Greenwood Leflore Hospital and Delta Regional Medical Center. The amended complaint retained all the previously named defendants, but renamed Cleveland Medical Clinic as “Cleveland Medical Clinic, PLLC.” The underlying basis of the complaint remained the same – negligence and gross negligence. Dr. Clark, Alliance, and Cleveland Medical Clinic, PLLC, were not served with a copy of the amended complaint. Greenwood Leflore Hospital eventually was dismissed by Agreed Order of Dismissal Without Prejudice filed on February 2, 2006. Delta Regional was dismissed from the suit by Agreed Order of Dismissal entered on March 13, 2006. November 2, Price filed a “Second Amended Complaint” that retained the 2005 previously named defendants and underlying basis for the complaint, but added PHC-Cleveland, Inc. d/b/a Bolivar Medical Center. PHC- Cleveland, Inc. d/b/a Bolivar Medical Center was incorrectly identified in the original complaint as “Province Healthcare Company.”Also on this day, summonses were issued for service on Delta Regional Medical Center, Greenwood Leflore Hospital, and PHC-Cleveland, Inc., by way of CT Corporation Service in Lakeland, Florida. December 27, Defendants, Dr.

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