Oakey v. Doctor on Call, LLC

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 26, 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Oakey v. Doctor on Call, LLC (Oakey v. Doctor on Call, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oakey v. Doctor on Call, LLC, (N.M. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

This decision of the New Mexico Court of Appeals was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Refer to Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished decisions. Electronic decisions may contain computer- generated errors or other deviations from the official version filed by the Court of Appeals.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

No. A-1-CA-39088

KATHLEEN M.V. OAKEY, Personal Representative of the Estate of Tawana Lucero, Deceased,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

DOCTOR ON CALL, LLC; DOCTOR ON CALL 2, LLC; DOCTOR ON CALL 3, LLC; DOCTOR ON CALL 4, LLC; DOCTOR ON CALL, P.C.; JOHN VIGIL, M.D.; JOHN TYSON, M.D.; and MAY MAPLE PHARMACY, INC.,

Defendants-Appellees.

APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY Joshua A. Allison, District Court Judge

Fine Law Firm Mark Fine Albuquerque, NM

Fuqua Law & Policy, P.C. Scott Fuqua Santa Fe, NM

for Appellant

Law Offices of Mary T. Torres Mary T. Torres Albuquerque, NM

Conklin, Woodcock & Ziegler, P.C. Christa M. Hazlett Kathy L. Black Albuquerque, NM

for Appellees

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ATTREP, Chief Judge.

{1} Plaintiff Kathleen Oakey, personal representative of the estate of Tawana Lucero (the Estate), brought claims against the “Doctor on Call” business entities1 and John Vigil, MD (collectively, Doctor on Call), as well as a prescribing physician and a pharmacy, alleging that Ms. Lucero’s death was caused by excess medication prescribed by a physician employed by Doctor on Call. The Estate appeals the district court’s final judgment in favor of Doctor on Call. We affirm.

DISCUSSION

{2} The Estate challenges: (1) the exclusion of an expert witness as a sanction for discovery violations; and (2) the grant of summary judgment on its claims for negligence per se, medical malpractice, negligent supervision, and vicarious liability. “[W]e review sanctions imposed by the trial court for discovery violations and violations of court orders for an abuse of discretion,” see Sanchez v. Borrego, 2004-NMCA-033, ¶ 10, 135 N.M. 192, 86 P.3d 617, and the grant of summary judgment de novo, see Lea Cnty. State Bank v. Markum Ranch P’ship, 2015-NMCA-026, ¶ 9, 344 P.3d 1089. The Estate, as the appellant, bears the burden of persuading us that the district court erred. See Farmers, Inc. v. Dal Mach. & Fabricating, Inc., 1990-NMSC-100, ¶ 8, 111 N.M. 6, 800 P.2d 1063 (stating that a trial court’s actions are presumed to be correct and that an appellant “must affirmatively demonstrate” the trial court erred). We address the Estate’s claims of error in turn.

I. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Excluding the Estate’s Expert Witness as a Sanction

{3} On Doctor on Call’s motion, the district court excluded one of the Estate’s experts for its failure to timely disclose discovery related to the expert. Based on the exclusion of the expert, the district court eventually granted summary judgment on the Estate’s medical malpractice and negligent supervision claims for failure of proof. The Estate contends that, because Doctor on Call suffered little prejudice from the late disclosure, the sanction was disproportionate to the offense and, because the exclusion of the expert “operated to terminate [the] medical malpractice and negligent supervision claims in their entirety,” the district court was required to find at least willful misconduct and explore less drastic alternative sanctions. The Estate additionally contends that the district court improperly “siloed” its other expert’s testimony that was offered to fill the

1The entities are Doctor on Call, LLC; Doctor on Call 2, LLC; Doctor on Call 3, LLC; Doctor on Call 4, LLC; Doctor on Call, P.C. gap left by the excluded expert. We discern no abuse of discretion in the district court’s expert witness rulings.

{4} The district court’s rulings were occasioned by the Estate’s failure to comply with an amended scheduling order extending certain pretrial deadlines (the Scheduling Order). The Scheduling Order came more than three years after the complaint was filed, after the Estate experienced multiple changes and disruptions in representation, after the first deadline to identify experts was extended and the second deadline expired, and after Doctor on Call filed a motion for summary judgment based on the Estate’s lack of an expert witness. New counsel then requested another extension of deadlines, which the district court partially granted, because, as the Estate acknowledged at the hearing on its request, “No expert, no case.” The district court extended the deadline for the Estate’s expert witness disclosure and further required the Estate to “provide any discovery supplementation regarding experts at the same time as the disclosure.” On the deadline, the Estate filed a disclosure identifying an expert who would testify regarding the prescribing physician’s actions and another expert who would testify as to Doctor on Call’s. But the Estate did not supplement discovery related to the Doctor of Call expert until a few weeks later (four days before the expert’s deposition)—and only after Doctor on Call filed a motion to strike the experts.

{5} The district court granted the motion in part, striking the Estate’s Doctor on Call expert, as a sanction for the Estate’s failure to comply with the Scheduling Order. The court also denied the Estate’s motion to supplement the disclosure of its remaining expert to include opinions about Doctor on Call. The district court judge observed that the extension to give the Estate “the opportunity” to have experts was “trampled” by its late supplementation of discovery responses in violation of the Scheduling Order. The district court concluded that the Estate’s production of hundreds of pages of documents very close in time to the expert’s deposition—even if some portion of those documents had been previously produced or the Estate believed them to be of little relevance— prejudiced Doctor on Call’s ability to prepare to question the expert. The court additionally concluded that the Estate offered no justification for its subsequent attempt to expand its other expert’s disclosure to include topics the excluded expert would have addressed. Given this context, we cannot say that the district court’s exclusion of the Doctor on Call expert and denial of the Estate’s motion to supplement the disclosure of the remaining expert was disproportionate to the Estate’s failure to comply with the Scheduling Order, see Gonzales v. N.M. Dep’t of Health, 2000-NMSC-029, ¶ 16, 129 N.M. 586, 11 P.3d 550 (affirming a discovery sanction when the sanction was “proportional to the offenses”), or was otherwise “without logic or reason, or clearly unable to be defended,” see Gonzales v. Surgidev Corp., 1995-NMSC-047, ¶ 30, 120 N.M. 151, 899 P.2d 594 (omission, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted).

{6} Nor does the ultimate consequence of the sanction—entry of summary judgment on the Estate’s medical malpractice and negligent supervision claims for lack of an expert—require a different result. A district court “may only impose the sanction of dismissal for failure to comply with a court order when the failure to comply is due to the willfulness, bad faith or fault of the disobedient party,” Gonzales, 1995-NMSC-047, ¶ 31 (emphasis, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted), and “meaningful alternatives must be reasonably explored before the sanction of dismissal is granted,” id. ¶ 33 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Cf. Freeman v.

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Bluebook (online)
Oakey v. Doctor on Call, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakey-v-doctor-on-call-llc-nmctapp-2023.