Pioneer Community Hospital of Newton v. Tyteanna D. Roberts

214 So. 3d 259, 2017 WL 1091684, 2017 Miss. LEXIS 107
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 2017
DocketNO. 2015-IA-01874-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 214 So. 3d 259 (Pioneer Community Hospital of Newton v. Tyteanna D. Roberts) 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
Pioneer Community Hospital of Newton v. Tyteanna D. Roberts, 214 So. 3d 259, 2017 WL 1091684, 2017 Miss. LEXIS 107 (Mich. 2017).

Opinion

MAXWELL, JUSTICE,

FOR THE COURT:

¶ 1. The case before us involves timeliness of a wrongful-death action and the interplay between the wrongful-death statute 1 and the minors savings clause. 2 In 1999, this Court held “[tjhere is no question now that the savings clause, set out in [Section] 15-1-59 of the Mississippi Code, applies to a wrongful death action” brought under Section 11-7-13 of the Mis *261 sissippi Code. Thiroux ex rel. Cruz v. Austin ex rel. Arceneaux, 749 So.2d 1040, 1041 (Miss. 1999). But just three years later, this Court found reason not to apply the minors savings clause to the wrongful-death action filed in Curry v. Turner, 832 So.2d 508, 517 (Miss. 2002). Instead, this Court found the two statutes to be “at irreconcilable odds with one another where there exists a person qualified under the wrongful death statute to bring suit.”

¶ 2. In the present wrongful-death lawsuit, the defendants rely on Curry to claim the action is time-barred. They argue the minors savings clause did not apply because the minor beneficiaries had a maternal aunt who was “qualified under the statute to bring suit.” While this may be so, we find there is a material distinction between Cuiry and the case now before us. In Curry, not only was the minor beneficiaries’ mother qualified to bring suit, but she also in fact filed a wrongful-death action. Thus, under Section 11-7-13’s “one-suit” requirement, this Court found the minor beneficiaries could not rely on the application of the minors savings clause to file what essentially would be a second wrongful-death action.

¶3. But here, by contrast, the minor beneficiaries’ aunt never filed a wrongful-death action, though Section 11-7-13 authorized her to do so as the deceased’s sister. Instead, the first and only suit filed was by the deceased’s children. For this reason, to the extent Cuiry held that the mere existence of someone qualified to bring a wrongful-death suit created an irreconcilable conflict between Section 11-7-13 and Section 15-1-59 and precluded the application of the latter statute, we explicitly overrule this part of our holding. Instead, we hold that only when someone who is qualified to bring a -wrongful-death suit actually files a iwongful-death suit on the minor beneficiaries’ behalf will the minors savings clause not apply, because, once the suit is filed, the running of the statute of limitations is immaterial. 3

¶ 4. With that premise in mind, we find the minors savings statute clearly applied in this case. Under that statute, the deceased’s oldest child had two years from when she reached the age of majority to file a wrongful-death suit based on medical negligence. Because she timely filed within this two-year period, we affirm the denial of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and remand this case for further proceedings.

Background Facts and Procedural History

I. Tina’s Death

¶ 5. Tina Roberts died on July 23, 2010, shortly after being discharged from the emergency room at Pioneer Community Hospital of Newton (Pioneer Hospital). When Tina died, she was unmarried with two minor children—sixteen-year-old Tyte-anna (born July 30, 1993) and nine-year-old Breanna (born October 29, 2001).

II. Attempted Guardianships

¶ 6. A little more than two years later, on July 31, 2012, a lawyer claiming to “represent the surviving minor children of Tina Roberts” filed a notice-of-claim letter against Pioneer Community Hospital and emergency-room physician Dr. Bernard Boka. In this letter, counsel informed the potential defendants, “we are in the process of establishing guardianships for the minor children of Tina Roberts, deceased. Their maternal aunt, Theresa Ellis will be serving as their guardian[.]”

*262 ¶ 7. The next week, August 9, 2012, Tina’s sister Ellis filed two petitions for guardianship, one for Tyteanna and one for Breanna. 4 In both petitions, Ellis requested “that she be authorized to make a claim for and make settlement (upon further approval of this Court) for damages against any and all persons who may be liable as a result of the death of Tina Roberts[.]”

¶ 8. On August 29, 2012, the chancery court entered a judgment appointing Ellis guardian of Tyteanna. As part of its judgment, the chancery court expressly “authorized [Ellis] to prosecute a civil action on behalf of said minor against any and all persons who may be liable as a result of the death of Tina Roberts.” But according to the court’s later order, after eight months, “no oath [had] been filed and no letters of guardianship [had] been entered.” So on May 5, 2013, the chancery court dismissed Ellis’s guardianship action. No judgment was ever entered appointing Ellis guardian of Breanna. This guardianship action also was dismissed on May 5, 2013, for Ellis’s failure to take any further action.

III. Tyteanna’s Wrongful-Death Suit

¶ 9. Tyteanna turned twenty-one the following year, on July 30, 2014. In December 2014, she sent notice-of-claim letters to Pioneer Hospital and Dr. Boka, on behalf of herself and her younger sister, Breanna. Six months later, on May 4, 2015, she filed a complaint in the Newton County Circuit Court against Pioneer Hospital and Dr. Boka on her own behalf and as representative of Tina’s wrongful-death beneficiaries.

¶ 10. Simultaneously with their answer, the hospital and doctor moved to dismiss or, alternatively, for summary judgment. They acknowledged that, since Tina’s daughters were minors when Tina died, the applicable two-year statute of limitations 5 had been tolled by the minors savings clause. See Miss. Code Ann. ¶ 15-1-59 (tolling the applicable statute of limitations for any claimant “under the disability of infancy” when the cause of action accrued until “after his disability shall be removed”). But they still claimed the wrongful-death suit was time-barred, even though Tyteanna had reached the age of majority less than two years ago.

¶ 11. According to them, the applicable two-year statute of limitations was not tolled until Tyteanna turned twenty-one. Rather, it had begun to run as early as July 31, 2012—when her aunt Ellis’s attorney sent a notice-of-claim letter—and at the latest on October 29, 2012—when the order was entered appointing Ellis guardian of Tyteanna. At that point, they argued, Ellis became a “person in esse” acting on Tyteanna and Breanna’s behalf, just like the mother and administratrix in Curry. See Curry, 832 So.2d at 515. Thus, they reasoned, Ellis’s actions stopped the operation of Section 15-1-59. And because no complaint was filed within two years of October 29, 2012, the wrongful-death suit was untimely.

*263 ¶ 12. The circuit court disagreed and denied the motion for summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
214 So. 3d 259, 2017 WL 1091684, 2017 Miss. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pioneer-community-hospital-of-newton-v-tyteanna-d-roberts-miss-2017.