Ragsdale v. Whitley

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 2, 2018
Docket17-860
StatusPublished

This text of Ragsdale v. Whitley (Ragsdale v. Whitley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ragsdale v. Whitley, (N.C. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA17-860

Filed: 2 January 2018

Cumberland County, No. 15 CVS 9497

KRISTA RAGSDALE, GUARDIAN AD LITEM FOR ALEC SEEBURGER, Plaintiff,

v.

DR. JOHN M. WHITLEY AND CUMBERLAND COUNTY HOSPITAL SYSTEM, INC., D/B/A CAPE FEAR VALLEY HEALTH SYSTEM, Defendants.

Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 16 May 2017 by Judge Beecher R. Gray

in Cumberland County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals

29 November 2017.

Coy E. Brewer, Jr. and Allen W. Rogers for plaintiff-appellant.

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, by Michael J. Crook and Patrick M. Meacham, for defendant-appellees.

ARROWOOD, Judge.

Krista Ragsdale (“Krista”), guardian ad litem for Alec Seeburger (“Alec”),

(“plaintiff”) appeals from an order granting summary judgment in favor of Dr. John

Whitley (“Dr. Whitley”) and Cumberland County Hospital System, Inc., d/b/a Cape

Fear Valley Health System (“defendants”). For the reasons stated herein, we reverse

the order of the trial court and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background RAGSDALE V. WHITLEY

Opinion of the Court

On 20 May 2015, Alec filed a complaint for medical malpractice against Dr.

Whitley and Cape Fear Valley Neurosurgery d/b/a Cape Fear Valley Health System

Specialty Group, LLC f/k/a Cape Fear Valley Health System, Inc. On

12 November 2015, Alec voluntarily dismissed the complaint pursuant to Rule 41 of

the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.

On 7 December 2015, plaintiff was appointed as guardian ad litem (“GAL”) for

Alec. In an order filed 31 December 2015, the trial court stated that “[i]t appears to

the Court from [Krista’s] affidavit and the statement from his treating physician that

Alec [] is incapable of conducting his own affairs and is entitled to the appointment

of a Guardian ad Litem.”

On 31 December 2015, plaintiff refiled the complaint against defendants. On

5 April 2016, plaintiff filed an amended complaint. Plaintiff alleged as follows: Alec

was born on 19 January 1996 and was until his eighteenth birthday on

19 January 2014, “a minor and was then, continuously has been and is presently

under a disability preventing him from initiating this civil action for medical

malpractice and professional negligence by the Defendants in this case.” Plaintiff

alleged that her claim was filed within the applicable statute of repose in that the

last act giving rise to the cause of action occurred on 12 February 2012, when

defendants’ negligent treatment of Alec was discovered. In February of 2011, Alec

began experiencing peripheral vision difficulties and was later diagnosed with having

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a large pituitary adenoma. A blood test to determine prolactin levels of the large

pituitary adenoma could determine whether it should be treated surgically or

medically. Plaintiff alleged that Dr. Whitley, Alec’s neurosurgeon, when evaluating

the need for and extent of brain surgery, and while treating Alec after surgery,

negligently failed to assess the nature of the adenoma by failing to order a blood test

to determine whether the pituitary adenoma could be treated medically instead of

surgically.

Alec underwent surgery with Dr. Whitley on 6 March 2011. The surgery

resulted in substantial swelling of Alec’s brain, proximately causing a severe stroke

and “severe, permanent, and debilitating neurological damage in addition to the

severe, permanent, and debilitating neurological damage previously caused by the

extensive and invasive brain surgery performed by Defendant Whitley.” Plaintiff

further alleged that surgery was unnecessary and inappropriate because Alec had a

prolactinoma which should have been treated medically rather than surgically. Dr.

Whitley’s failure to order a blood test was a departure from the required or expected

standard of care. Dr. Whitley continued to treat Alec until or about

12 February 2012, during which time Alec “experienced great pain and suffering,

inability to see or walk and substantial neurological deficits.”

Plaintiff alleged that in February of 2012, Alec began receiving medical

services from Dr. Gerald Grant (“Dr. Grant”). Dr. Grant ordered a blood test which

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established that Alec’s “tumor was a prolactinoma which was treatable medically.”

Plaintiff alleged that Dr. Whitley’s surgery and the delay in beginning appropriate

medical treatment of the tumor had proximately caused “severe and permanent

neurological and physiological damage” to Alec.

On 6 May 2016, defendants filed an answer to the amended complaint. On

27 February 2017, defendants also filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to

Rule 56 of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure.

In a 16 May 2017 order, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for

summary judgment and recited the basis of its determination:

IT APPEARING TO THE COURT that this is a medical malpractice action pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 90-21.12 and that the statute of limitations for this matter was governed by N.C.G.S. § 1-15(c) and § 1-17(b);

. . . that [Alec] was born on January 19, 1996;

. . . that the events giving rise to the Plaintiff’s Complaint occurred on or about March 7, 2011;

. . . that the Plaintiff was 18 years old as of January 19, 2014, and 19 years old as of January 19, 2015;

. . . that [Alec] filed the initial Complaint in his own name without the appointment of a guardian ad litem on May 20, 2015; the initial Complaint contained no allegations or representations that Plaintiff was incompetent, and that paragraph 10 of the initial Complaint stated, “This claim for relief is filed within the applicable Statute of Limitations because [Alec] until January 19, 2014 was a minor and the three year statute of limitations began running on that date.” Therefore, it

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appears to the Court that the initial Complaint was filed after the expiration of the applicable statute of limitations, and while the injured Plaintiff was under no judicially recognizable disability, nor incompetent.

. . . that Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed his Complaint without prejudice on November 12, 2015. At no time prior to the dismissal of the Complaint did the Plaintiff allege or represent to the Court that the Plaintiff was not competent.

. . . that the Plaintiff re-filed a Complaint on December 31, 2015, after the appointment of a guardian ad litem, and that, for the first time, Plaintiff alleged in the re-filed Complaint that he was under a disability. The Plaintiff never was adjudicated incompetent pursuant to the purposes and intent of N.C.G.S. Chapter 35A;

. . . that a judicial determination of the Plaintiff’s competency was never made pursuant to N.C.G.S. Chapter 35A and the Plaintiff failed to demonstrate or otherwise meet its burden of proof with regard to Plaintiff’s competency at the time of the filing of the original Complaint, at the time of the re-filing of the Complaint, and as of the time of the hearing on Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment;

. . . that the current action, like the initial Complaint, was filed after the expiration of the applicable statute of limitations, that the injured Plaintiff never has been adjudicated incompetent for the purposes of N.C.G.S. Chapter 35A, and that therefore there is no genuine issue of material fact as to whether the statute of limitations is a bar to the injured Plaintiff’s claims.

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Ragsdale v. Whitley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ragsdale-v-whitley-ncctapp-2018.