Outpatient Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A., Incorrectly Designated as Surgery Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A. v. Ester Garza

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 2008
Docket13-07-00411-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Outpatient Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A., Incorrectly Designated as Surgery Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A. v. Ester Garza (Outpatient Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A., Incorrectly Designated as Surgery Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A. v. Ester Garza) 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
Outpatient Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A., Incorrectly Designated as Surgery Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A. v. Ester Garza, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion





NUMBERS 13-07-00411-CV and 13-07-00762-CV



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS



CORPUS CHRISTI
- EDINBURG



OUTPATIENT CENTER FOR INTERVENTIONAL

PAIN MANAGEMENT, P.A., INCORRECTLY

DESIGNATED AS SURGERY CENTER FOR

INTERVENTIONAL PAIN MANAGEMENT, P.A., Appellant,



v.



ESTER GARZA, Appellee.

On appeal from the County Courts at Law No. 1 and No. 4

of Hidalgo County, Texas.



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Before Justices Rodriguez, Garza, and Vela

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez



Appellee, Ester Garza, filed two lawsuits against appellant, Outpatient Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A., (Outpatient Center) incorrectly designated as Surgery Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A., for damages she allegedly sustained when she fell from her wheelchair while at the facility. In this consolidated appeal, Outpatient Center, by a single issue in each appeal, complains that each trial court abused its discretion by denying Outpatient Center's motions to dismiss filed in the respective courts. We reverse and render in part and remand in part in each case.

I. Background

In her first lawsuit, (1) Garza alleged that Outpatient Center "by and through their actual and ostensible agents, employees, vice principals, and borrowed servants failed to use ordinary care in providing a safe environment free of premises defects for [Garza]. . . ." In her petition, Garza alleged that Outpatient Center breached its duty of care by, among other things, the following:

1) Fail[ing] to properly warn and train clinic personnel in the safe placement of patients, such as Plaintiff, in wheelchairs;



2) Fail[ing] to properly warn and train clinic personnel in the safe removal of patients from wheelchairs;



3) Fail[ing] to properly lock and secure the wheelchair Plaintiff was to be placed in before seating Plaintiff, who was an elderly individual, in the wheelchair;



4) Fail[ing] to use ordinary care in providing treatment and care for patients, such as Plaintiff;



5) Fail[ing] to properly supervise its employees and its premises; and



6) Fail[ing] to properly monitor its employees.



Garza did not file an expert report in this lawsuit.

Outpatient Center filed a motion to dismiss under section 74.351(b) of the Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code, asserting that Garza filed a health care liability claim but failed to serve it with an expert report within 120 days of filing her original petition. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 74.351(b) (Vernon Supp. 2007) (providing that when a health care liability claimant fails to serve the defendant health care provider with an expert report 120 days after the original petition was filed, upon defendant's motion, the trial court shall enter an order that: (1) awards attorney's fees and court costs to the defendant and (2) dismisses the claim with prejudice). In its motion, Outpatient Center specifically prayed that the trial court dismiss Garza's lawsuit with prejudice and award reasonable attorney's fees and costs of court "as sanctions prescribed by statute." Garza responded by asserting that her claim was not a health care liability claim, but was, in fact, a premises liability claim, which did not require an expert report.

In a hearing on the motion to dismiss, the trial court stated:

It says, "accidental fall." I can understand if somebody is walking and they trip on a defective sidewalk or a water spill or whatever so the first part of these facts I can understand where you are coming from and saying it is an accidental fall and it might be premises--and it says, "On the premises of the Surgery Center. . . . "



The trial court noted, however, that the facts also included the following:

[Garza] was injured during a visit to the defendant's facility as a result of a fall proximately caused by the negligence of one and/or more of the employees of [Outpatient Center]; [s]aid employees negligently failed to properly assist her in being placed in a wheelchair. As a result, Plaintiff Ester Garza fell to the hard floor landing on her knees. . . .



The trial court stated, "If an employee failed to assist her, that is an individual causing the injury, and that I think would fall under the medical statutory provisions requiring an expert report." The trial court then asked Garza, "And so which is it? Is it an accidental fall or is it a fall caused by an employee?" Garza informed the trial court that "given the opportunity to amend [her] petition," more details could be supplied making it "very clear to the [trial court] that it is a premises liability claim and a negligence claim and not one that is under the Health Care Liability Act." The trial court informed the parties that it would make its decision on March 23, 2007, but that, in the interim, Garza was to file her amended petition.

On March 22, 2007, Garza filed a notice of non-suit requesting that the trial court sign an order of non-suit without prejudice on all of her claims. (2) Outpatient Center responded with a letter to the trial court advising that its motion to dismiss and for attorney's fees survived Garza's notice of a non-suit. Nonetheless, the trial court entered an order of non-suit without prejudice on all of Garza's claims against Outpatient Center. Thereafter, Outpatient Center requested a ruling on its motion to dismiss and for attorney's fees. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss.

On June 19, 2007, Garza filed a second suit (3) against Outpatient Center. In this lawsuit, Garza claimed, among other things, that Outpatient Center was negligent under the "Texas Medical Liability Act" because, after Garza fell, (1) it did not "summon an ambulance immediately but placed her in a chair " and (2) it did not "instruct, supervise or train its employees to prevent falls when transferring patients to wheelchairs." On appeal, it is undisputed that Garza filed an expert report in this suit on October 18, 2007. Thereafter, Outpatient Center filed a motion to dismiss Garza's second suit, alleging Garza failed to timely serve an expert report. Following a hearing on the motion to dismiss, the trial court denied Outpatient Center's motion to dismiss.

II. First Lawsuit

A. Health Care Liability or Premises Liability Claim

In order to review the trial court's denial of Outpatient Center's motion in the first lawsuit, we must first determine whether Garza's claim was a health care liability or a premises liability claim.

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Outpatient Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A., Incorrectly Designated as Surgery Center for Interventional Pain Management, P.A. v. Ester Garza, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/outpatient-center-for-interventional-pain-management-pa-incorrectly-texapp-2008.