Paula Patterson, Jon Crumpler and Carey Crumpler. Individually and On Behalf of Their Mother, Anita Carey v. Claiborne Operator Group, LLC, and Paramount Healthcare Consultants, LLC, Both D/B/A Claiborne Rehabilitation Center

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 2023
Docket55,264-CA
StatusPublished

This text of Paula Patterson, Jon Crumpler and Carey Crumpler. Individually and On Behalf of Their Mother, Anita Carey v. Claiborne Operator Group, LLC, and Paramount Healthcare Consultants, LLC, Both D/B/A Claiborne Rehabilitation Center (Paula Patterson, Jon Crumpler and Carey Crumpler. Individually and On Behalf of Their Mother, Anita Carey v. Claiborne Operator Group, LLC, and Paramount Healthcare Consultants, LLC, Both D/B/A Claiborne Rehabilitation Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Paula Patterson, Jon Crumpler and Carey Crumpler. Individually and On Behalf of Their Mother, Anita Carey v. Claiborne Operator Group, LLC, and Paramount Healthcare Consultants, LLC, Both D/B/A Claiborne Rehabilitation Center, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Judgment rendered November 15, 2023. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.

No. 55,264-CA

COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA

*****

PAULA PATTERSON, JON Plaintiffs-Appellants CRUMPLER AND CAREY CRUMPLER, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF THEIR MOTHER, ANITA CAREY, DECEASED

versus

CLAIBORNE OPERATOR Defendants-Appellees GROUP, L.L.C., AND PARAMOUNT HEALTHCARE CONSULTANTS, L.L.C., BOTH D/B/A CLAIBORNE REHABILITATION CENTER

***** Appealed from the Second Judicial District Court for the Parish of Claiborne, Louisiana Trial Court No. 42671

Honorable Walter E. May, Jr., Judge

KOSMITIS BOND, APLC Counsel for Appellants By: Georgia Patricia Kosmitis

HUDSON, POTTS & BERNSTEIN, LLP Counsel for Appellees By: Gordon L. James Donald H. Zeigler III Sara G. White *****

Before STEPHENS, HUNTER, and ELLENDER, JJ. STEPHENS, J.

This is an appeal by plaintiffs in a medical malpractice action from the

trial court’s judgment granting a dilatory exception of prematurity filed by

defendants and denying plaintiffs leave to amend their petition. For the

reasons set forth below, we reverse the trial court’s judgment in part.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Mrs. Anita Carey was admitted to Claiborne Rehabilitation Center

(“CRC”), a nursing home/long term care rehabilitation center on May 21,

2021. While there, she is alleged to have sustained bed sores from not being

kept clean, dry, turned, and fed. Mrs. Carey was admitted to the hospital on

October 30, 2021. She was found to have an infected Stage IV pressure

injury with inflammation, infection, dehydration to the point of acute renal

failure and brain damage, malnutrition, and sepsis. Unable to recover from

her injuries, Mrs. Carey died on December 12, 2021.

On May 3, 2022, plaintiffs, Paula Patterson, John Crumpler, and

Carey Crumpler, Individually and on Behalf of Their Mother, Anita Carey

(“Mrs. Carey”) (collectively “plaintiffs”), filed a request to form a medical

review panel to review the conduct of Claiborne Operator Group, L.L.C. and

Paramount Healthcare Consultants, L.L.C., d/b/a Claiborne Rehabilitation

Center (“CRC”), concerning care and treatment received by Mrs. Carey

while in the nursing home/long term care facility. Two weeks later,

plaintiffs filed a petition for damages in the Second Judicial District Court,

seeking tort damages for acts not covered by the LMMA.

Plaintiffs have made, inter alia, allegations that CRC knowingly and

intentionally accepted more residents than their staff could care for, and that

this intentional failure to have a sufficient number of trained personnel to provide the basic necessities of food, water, bathing, and hygiene caused

Mrs. Carey to sustain damages, including the loss of dignity, loss of respect,

and abuse. According to plaintiffs’ petition, CRC knew they did not have

sufficient personnel per resident yet they continued to accept residents

knowing they were not able to meet their needs. It is plaintiffs’ position that

these “custodial claims” are not medical treatment and therefore fall outside

of the LMMA. Plaintiffs also argue that CRC’s knowledge that they were

understaffed is an intentional decision not to provide adequate basic care,

which constitutes intentional conduct as an utter disregard for their

residents’ rights.

CRC disputes all of plaintiffs’ allegations. On June 8, 2022, CRC

filed an exception of prematurity, claiming that they are members of the La.

Patients’ Compensation Fund, and all of plaintiffs’ claims against them were

premature and must first be presented to a medical review panel. Plaintiffs

opposed the exception, arguing that while some of their claims fell under the

LMMA, those raised in their petition filed in the district court should be

analyzed independently. The trial court granted the exception of

prematurity, finding that all of plaintiffs’ claims should be “handled in the

normal fashion.” The trial court denied plaintiffs’ request to amend their

petition. This appeal was filed by plaintiffs.

DISCUSSION

Plaintiffs’ Argument

According to plaintiffs, an analysis of the Coleman1 factors shows that

not all of their allegations are medical malpractice.

1 Coleman v. Deno, 01-1517, pp. 17-18 (La. 1/25/02), 813 So. 2d 303, 315-16. 2 (1) Providing food, water, hygiene, cleanliness, and assistance with turning and repositioning are not treatment related and injuries caused from the provision of these necessities do not result from the dereliction of any professional skill. Instead, these necessities are provided by unlicensed staff and are provided to all persons regardless of their medical condition;

(2) Medical evidence is not necessary to determine whether a patient is to be provided with these basic necessities or whether the failure to do so constitutes a breach of duty—all residents require the basic necessities of life;

(3) The omission or act of not providing water, food, hygiene, and bathing does not depend upon any assessment of the patient’s condition; all residents require these basic necessities of life and are to be provided these things;

(4) These basics do not require a physician’s order, but are to be routinely provided by nursing aides and are not required to be administered under the direction of a physician;

(5) Mrs. Carey would have suffered loss of dignity and harm from not being provided food, water, hygiene/bathing, and assistance regardless of her residence in the nursing home (and in fact, had she been at home, would have been a concern of Louisiana’s elder protective services); and

(6) The tort of placing profits above people and knowing they did not have sufficient staff members per patient to provide the basic necessities of life is intentional conduct; CRC knew that harm would result to residents as they continued to accept patients regardless of having insufficient staff to provide the basic necessities; this excludes these particular claims from protection of the LMMA.

Applying the Coleman factors, Louisiana courts have found various

acts of nursing home negligence to be outside of the LMMA, such as: failure

to clean and turn the patient and allowing her to lie in her own waste;

complaints arising from a failure to abide by the patient care plan; and, most

recently, dignity type claims such as the ones in this case.

According to plaintiffs, they have explicitly alleged custodial

negligence claims that this Court has previously found are not medical

malpractice. Plaintiffs averred that CRC did not care for Mrs. Carey’s

3 hygiene, but left her to sit in her own waste and develop E. Coli infections

caused by her excrement coming in contact with her ulcer and urethra.

Plaintiffs further contend that in their petition, they alleged that CRC failed

to abide by Mrs. Carey’s care plan by, inter alia, failing to reposition her,

and by providing inadequate hydration and nutrition.

The trial court did not address these allegations distinctly and

separately so as to resolve ambiguities in favor of plaintiffs. Instead, the

lower court did the opposite—it broadly construed the LMMA to encompass

all of plaintiffs’ allegations as a whole, concluding that “all of the factors

when you consider… Coleman versus Deno … what we’re dealing with,

here, is an effort to bootstrap this, uh, by making these allegations that really

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