Powell v. Wurm

108 A.3d 552, 221 Md. App. 223, 2015 Md. App. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 29, 2015
Docket0782/13
StatusPublished

This text of 108 A.3d 552 (Powell v. Wurm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Wurm, 108 A.3d 552, 221 Md. App. 223, 2015 Md. App. LEXIS 6 (Md. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

KRAUSER, C.J.

The Maryland Health Care Malpractice Claims Act requires a “claimant or plaintiff’ to file, with his or her medical malpractice “claim or action,” “a certificate of a qualified expert” and a “report” from that expert. Md.Code Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 3-2A-04(b)(l)(i), (3)(i) (1974, 2013 Repl.Vol.) (“CJP”). Philip Powell, in his capacity as the personal representative of the Estate of Beatrice Powell, appellant, filed, in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County, a medical malpractice action against Alex Wurm, M.D., appellee. With that action he also filed, as directed by the foregoing section of *225 the Maryland Code, both a certificate of qualified expert and the report of the Estate’s medical expert.

The principal question before us 1 is whether the report of the Estate’s expert satisfied Maryland law. The circuit court believed that it did not and dismissed the Estate’s action. We disagree and shall reverse and remand this case for trial.

I.

On August 5, 2009, Dr. Wurm, a radiologist, 2 performed an “inferior [vena] cava filter placement” procedure on the now-deceased Mrs. Beatrice Powell to treat her chronic pulmonary emboli. 3 This surgical procedure involves the insertion of a “filter” into the “inferior vena cava,” a “vein formed by the union of the two common iliac veins” and which “empties into the right atrium of the heart.” Stedman’s Medical Dictionary (2001) 414.

During Dr. Wurm’s performance of that procedure, the filter “perforated the wall” of Mrs. Powell’s inferior vena cava and, as a result of that perforation, the filter was deposited, not in the inferior vena cava as intended, but in “an extravascular location.” Consequently, Mrs. Powell had to subsequently undergo additional surgery to remove the filter and repair the damage to her inferior vena cava. 4 Although Mrs. *226 Powell died a year later, it is not alleged that her death was a consequence of the procedure performed by Dr. Wurm.

On August 2, 2012, three years after the filter placement procedure in question and two years after Mrs. Powell’s death, the Estate filed a medical malpractice claim, with the Health Care Alternative Dispute Resolution Office, against Dr. Wurm, alleging that the doctor had failed to “exercise appropriate care and technique” during the filter placement procedure. That failure led, claimed the Powell Estate, to a piercing of the wall of the inferior vena cava and to the subsequent misplacement of the filter. In accordance with section 3-2A-04(b) of the Health Care Malpractice Claims Act, the Estate filed with its malpractice claim a “certificate of qualified expert,” signed by Robert Vogelzang, M.D., a radiologist, together with Dr. Vogelzang’s report.

Then, after waiving arbitration of its claim, the Estate filed a medical malpractice complaint against Dr. Wurm in the Prince George’s County circuit court. With its complaint, the Estate filed the certificate of qualified expert and the report from Dr. Vogelzang. The certificate stated that it was Dr. Vogelzang’s opinion, “to a reasonable degree of medical probability,” that Dr. Wurm, in performing the inferior vena cava filter placement, departed “from the standards of care in connection with such medical procedure” and that that “departure from the standards of care [was] the proximate cause of [Mrs. Powell’s] injuries.” The “specific departures from the standard of care are set forth,” indicated the certificate, “in the attached report.”

In that report, Dr. Vogelzang stated:

In my opinion, Dr. Wurm violated the applicable standards of care in the placement of an inferior vena cava filter in that he failed to exercise appropriate care and technique and thereby perforated the wall of the inferior vena cava and deposited the filter in an extravascular location, thus necessitating the subsequent surgery to remove the filter and repair the caval laceration.

Dr. Wurm moved to dismiss the Estate’s malpractice action on the grounds that the Estate’s medical expert report was *227 legally insufficient. In support of that claim, Dr. Wurm cited the following language from Walzer v. Osborne: “[T]he attesting expert report must explain how or why the physician failed ... to meet the standard of care and include some details supporting the certificate of qualified expert.” 395 Md. 563, 583, 911 A.2d 427 (2006). Since Dr. Vogelzang’s report, purportedly, “merely restate[d]” the allegations in his certificate and provided no additional details, the Estate’s expert report, insisted Dr. Wurm, was inadequate and the Estate’s malpractice claim must therefore be dismissed.

In its opposition to that motion, the Estate asserted that there was “no dispute that Dr. Wurm perforated” Mrs. Powell’s inferior vena cava and that discovery would be necessary to determine precisely which of Dr. Wurm’s actions or inactions had led to that perforation. To that opposition, it attached a “revised opinion letter” from Dr. Vogelzang, in which Dr. Vogelzang opined that Dr. Wurm had “failed to meet the standard of care” for placing an inferior vena cava filter by neglecting to use a “guidewire,” or using an “improper guidewire,” or by not injecting “contrast” to confirm the position of the filter.

This revised opinion letter, however, was submitted to the court after the statutory period for filing a certificate of qualified expert with the attesting expert report attached had expired. See CJP § 3-2A-04(b)(l)(i)-(ii) (requiring a plaintiff to file a certificate of qualified expert within 180 days from the date the complaint is filed in the Health Care Alternative Dispute Resolution Office). Acknowledging the lateness of this submission, the Estate requested that the circuit court grant it “an extension of time,” for “good cause shown,” to file its “certificate of a qualified expert,” under section 3-2A-04(b)(5) of the Act, so that it could supplement Dr. Vogelzang’s original report. 5

*228 With no mention of that revised opinion letter or its contents in its written opinion, the circuit court dismissed the action, concluding that, because Dr. Vogelzang’s report did not state “how” or “why” Dr. Wurm failed to meet the standard of care and did not contain any “supplemental information” or “details to support the certificate,” it had “fail[ed] to comply with the substantive requirements of Walzer” and was therefore “legally insufficient.” The insufficiency of the report, in turn, rendered the certificate of qualified expert “incomplete.”

II.

The Estate contends that its certificate of qualified expert and the attached report complied with the requirements set forth in the Health Care Malpractice Claims Act.

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Related

Carroll v. Konits
929 A.2d 19 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2007)
Walzer v. Osborne
911 A.2d 427 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2006)
Kearney v. Berger
7 A.3d 593 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 A.3d 552, 221 Md. App. 223, 2015 Md. App. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-wurm-mdctspecapp-2015.