Ratcliff v. Graether

697 N.W.2d 119, 2005 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 68, 2005 WL 1124986
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 13, 2005
Docket03-1816
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 697 N.W.2d 119 (Ratcliff v. Graether) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ratcliff v. Graether, 697 N.W.2d 119, 2005 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 68, 2005 WL 1124986 (iowa 2005).

Opinion

LAVORATO, Chief Justice.

In this medical malpractice action, the plaintiff, Bruce L. Ratcliff, appeals from a district court ruling sustaining a motion for summary judgment filed by the defendants, John M. Graether, M.D. and Wolfe Clinic, P.C. At issue is whether the continuous treatment doctrine tolled the statute of limitations. Because we conclude the doctrine did not toll the statute, we affirm.

I. Background Facts.

Wolfe Clinic, P.C. sponsored an orientation seminar, which Ratcliff attended, that provided information on elective surgery designed to reduce or eliminate the need to wear eyeglasses or contact lenses. At that seminar, Norman F. Woodlief, M.D. of the clinic talked about various surgical *121 techniques that were available, which involved removing tissue from the cornea.

On April 30, 1996, Ratcliff pursued this treatment at which time Graether of the Wolfe Clinic performed surgery on Rat-cliffs right eye. That eye had a negative twelve diopters myopia reading prior to surgery.

On April 9,1997, Graether performed an “enhancement” surgery on the eye. Enhancement surgeries remove additional tissue and further flatten the cornea. Such surgeries are often performed becausé surgeons choose to err on the side of tm-dercorrection with the first surgery.

Ratcliff described how the enhancement surgery improved his vision:

[F]rom the moment it was uncovered the day following the surgery, the vision was clear and much improved over what I’d had prior to any surgery, and I felt that if I could get vision in my left eye - as good as what I was now seeing in the right eye that this would be a benefit.

On April 30 Graether performed LASIK surgery on Ratcliffs left eye, which had a negative ten diopters myopia reading. After this surgery, Ratcliff said his vision was “very clouded” and “terrible” compared to what had happened just less than a month before on the right eye.

On May 13 Graether told Ratcliff he might have overcorrected the left eye. A week later, Graether told Ratcliff that a cataract was forming on that eye, which was not present prior to the surgery. The cataract formation, according to Graether, was just a coincidence.

At some point in 1997, Graether stopped seeing patients in the Wolfe Clinic’s Cedar Falls office, where Graether had seen Rat-cliff. Graether chose to see patients only in the clime’s Marshalltown office. From that time forward, Todd W. Gothard, M.D. treated Graether’s Cedar Falls patients and kept Graether informed of their progress.

On December 23 Ratcliff saw Richard C. Mauer, M.D., an ophthalmologist and ophthalmic surgeon, because of the cataract formation. In his deposition, Ratcliff explained more fully why he saw Mauer and what Mauer told him:

I was still having a great deal of problem with my eye. I, frankly, had doubted their explanation of the cataract as being the cause, and so in the interim I had gone to Dr. Mauer for a second opinion as to the effect of the cataract. And I was told by Dr. Mauer that¡ yes, there was a very small, tiny cataract forming, but that it would not be perceptible to me at that stage, and he didn’t believe that the cataract would account for my visual problems.
[[Image here]]
Q. What did you tell Dr. Mauer? A. Well, to the best of my recollection, the general theme of it was that I had serious visual problems with the left eye and that both Dr. Graether and Dr. Gothard told me it was due to a cataract, and I didn’t think the timing made much sense, and I wanted his opinion.
[[Image here]]
Q. What did Dr. Mauer tell you he thought was wrong with your left eye when you saw him. in December of 1997? A. He told me that he thought that the surface, of my cornea was irregular., .
Q. And did he offer an opinion to you that that was probably related to the , LASIK surgery that you had had on your left eye? A. I think he was careful not to accuse anybody of anything. But that was clearly the message that I got.
Q. All right. So he made it clear to you that — or at least the impression that you had when you left his office in December of 1997 was that the LASIK *122 procedure that you had had on April 30 of 1997 had caused some irregularity in your cornea; correct? A. Yes, that’s correct.
[[Image here]]
Q. So in the December visit of 1997 with Dr. Mauer, you believe that your problem was vision in your left eye related to an irregularity of your cornea; correct? A. That’s correct.
[[Image here]]
Q. But in December of 1997, you left Dr. Mauer’s office with the impression that the April 30, 1997 LASIK procedure was the cause of your visual problems? A. Yes.

Mauer examined Ratcliff on several occasions from December 23, 1997 through February 14, 2002.

Ratcliff saw Gothard on November 18, 1998, and Gothard’s medical notes of that visit state:

[Ratcliff] apparently had gotten a second opinion sometime since the last visit when I saw him, with Dr. Mauer who told him he had no effect or very little effect from the cataract and that it was mainly a problem with the LASIK surgery that was causing his vision to be blurry....
[[Image here]]
He is absolutely convinced that the LASIK surgery on the OS has made the cataract and also made his vision blurry. I have told him that there is absolutely no known association between LÁSIK and cataract formation. He was extremely confrontational and said that there is no way that we can know for sure that this did not cause the cataract, or cause his vision to be blurry.... [H]e really has his mind made up already regarding the cause of his problem. He is very reluctant to get glasses. He says the surgery was an entire waste, and now he has poor vision. I’ve told him that he may have had a mild amount of myopic regression from the surgery, but I would be a little reluctant to perform any additional laser surgery at this juncture due to the fact that there is a cataract forming and the refraction has been changing.

On November 20, 1998, Graether wrote Ratcliff telling him that the cataract was “merely coincidence” and had nothing to do with the surgery to the eye. Graether also wrote that because of the developing cataract no further refractive surgery should be done to improve Ratcliffs vision., “[A]ny improvement,” wrote Graether, “would only be transient.”

In a letter dated February 22, 2002, Mauer opined that Ratcliffs poor vision was due to an irregular astigmatism. He attributed the condition to several factors, including the surgical procedures employed to treat Ratcliffs left eye.

II. Proceedings.

On November 16, 2000, Ratcliff sued Graether and Wolfe Clinic.

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Bluebook (online)
697 N.W.2d 119, 2005 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 68, 2005 WL 1124986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ratcliff-v-graether-iowa-2005.