Roth v. Joseph

2010 UT App 332, 244 P.3d 391, 670 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2010 Utah App. LEXIS 339, 2010 WL 4870967
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 26, 2010
Docket20090716-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2010 UT App 332 (Roth v. Joseph) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roth v. Joseph, 2010 UT App 332, 244 P.3d 391, 670 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2010 Utah App. LEXIS 339, 2010 WL 4870967 (Utah Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

VOROS, Judge:

T1 This medical malpractice case involves two questions, one involving the setting aside of a default certificate, the other the application of the limitations statute. Plaintiff Larry Roth filed a medical malpractice action against Dr. Ronald Joseph and St. Mark's Hospital (the Hospital), alleging that Dr. Joseph negligently failed to clearly identify for the surgeon a spot in Mr. Roth's colon that needed to be resected. 1 Mr. Roth filed his "notice of intent" against Dr. Joseph on May 9, 2007. The trial court determined that Mr. Roth's claim was barred by the statute of limitations because Mr. Roth discovered or should have discovered his legal injury more than two years earlier, not later than January 5, 2005. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

1. Mr. Roth's Surgery

2 Dr. Joseph performed a colonoscopy on Mr. Roth on April 28, 2004. At that time, he removed a large polyp and several smaller polyps from Mr. Roth's colon. He also tattooed above and below the polypectomy site with tattoo ink. The tattoos were intended to identify the area where the larger polyp had been removed in case a future surgery was needed. In his colonoscopy report, Dr. Joseph described the larger polyp as fifteen centimeters from the anal verge and also stated that it was located in the distal sigmoid colon. The pathology report indicated that the larger polyp was "moderately-differentiated adenocarcinoma" and that "the tumor invades into submucosa and probably touches cauterized surgical margin." Based on this report, Dr. Joseph referred Mr. Roth to Dr. Hugh Voorhees, a general surgeon, for a colon resection.

T3 On May 24, 2004, Dr. Voorhees performed surgery on Mr. Roth to resect his colon. Dr. Voorhees could not see the tattoos that Dr. Joseph had left. During the procedure, Dr. Voorhees attempted without success to contact Dr. Joseph, but he was able to reach Dr. Joseph's partner, Dr. Peder J. Pedersen. Dr. Pedersen went to the operating room to help Dr. Voorhees locate the tattooed polypectomy site. Before Dr. Ped-ersen arrived, Dr. Voorhees removed a twenty-five-centimeter portion of Mr. Roth's colon that he felt was the "most likely area." When Dr. Pedersen arrived, he too looked for the tattoos but could not find them. After surgery, Dr. Voorhees told Mr. Roth that he could not find the tattooed polypectomy site, but "he felt comfortable that they got everything anyway."

T4 On October 18, 2004, Mr. Roth had a follow-up visit with Dr. Joseph. Dr. Joseph did another colonoscopy and found that Dr. Voorhees had not removed the relevant seetion of the colon. According to Mr. Roth's affidavit, "Dr. Joseph ... express[ed] shock and surprise ... that the polypectomy site remained intact and [led Mr. Roth to believe] that [Dr. Joseph] had no idea that Dr. Voo-rhees did not resect the polypectomy." Dr. Joseph referred Mr. Roth to the University of Utah, where he had yet another colonosco-py on November 8, 2004. The surgeon there found two tattoos identifying the April 28 *394 polypectomy site. Mr. Roth was awake during this procedure and heard the doctors discussing the sear and the tattoos. On January 24, 2005, Mr. Roth underwent surgery yet again. Pathology results indicated that this surgery successfully removed the poly-pectomy site originally identified on April 28, 2004, by Dr. Joseph. The pathology studies revealed no malignancies.

2. -Mr. Roth's Pursuit of His Claim

T5 On January 5, 2005, Mr. Roth obtained his medical file from Dr. Voorhees and Dr. Joseph. That file included a note made by Dr. Voorhees and dated June 8, 2004 (the June 8, 2004 note), summarizing the May 24 surgery:

[Mr. Roth] underwent sigmoid colectomy with low anterior resection on 5/24/04. ... Dr. Ron Joseph had injected dye upstream and downstream but at the time of surgery was identified [sic]. A colonoscopy was requested during surgery and again, no dye was identified. I removed the area in question.... This is disconcerting because the area of previous biopsy is still not positively identified. Apparently, the new dye that they are using rather than the India ink has equivocal results. They are looking into that and ways of changing the tattooing that is being done....

T 6 The parties disagree as to whether the medical file also included a letter from Dr. Voorhees to Dr. Joseph. Dr. Voorhees insists that it did, but Mr. Roth maintains that this letter was not in his medical file when he received the file. The letter restated the fact that Dr. Voorhees found no dye during his resection.

17 On May 24, 2006, Mr. Roth filed a notice of intent against Dr. Voorhees. In that arbitration proceeding, separate from this lawsuit, Mr. Roth did not name Dr. Joseph. In January 2007, Dr. Joseph was deposed as a fact witness in the case against Dr. Voorhees. During his deposition, Dr. Joseph indicated that he had experienced difficulty with the brand of tattoo ink he had used on Mr. Roth, including disappearing or fading. Following this deposition, Mr. Roth began pursuing a claim against Dr. Joseph.

T8 Mr. Roth filed his notice of intent against Dr. Joseph on May 9, 2007, nearly a year after the deposition and over two years after receiving his medical file. In July 2007, Mr. Roth deposed Dr. Stephen Porter, who stated that Dr. Joseph's anatomical description of the location of the polypectomy site was in a different location than Dr. Joseph's centimeter description. Dr. Porter described the error as "a train wreck waiting to happen.”

3. Notice of Default Against the Hospital

T 9 Mr. Roth filed suit on January 17, 2008, and served both Dr. Joseph and the Hospital on March 25, 2008. Due to an inadvertent error by a paralegal in the office of the law firm representing the Hospital, the Hospital's answer was calendared as due in forty-five days rather than the thirty days stated in the summons. Consequently, the Hospital filed its answer on May 6, 2008, twelve days late.

€110 Three days before the Hospital filed its answer, the trial court clerk entered a default certificate-but not a default judgment-against the Hospital at Mr. Roth's request. A month later, Mr. Roth moved for a default judgment; a month after that, the Hospital moved to set aside the default certificate and to strike Mr. Roth's motion for default judgment. The trial court granted the Hospital's Motion to Set Aside the Default Certificate, denied Mr. Roth's Motion for Default Judgment, and allowed the Hospital's answer to stand.

T11 The parties exchanged initial discovery, and Mr. Roth was deposed. Dr. Joseph and the Hospital moved for summary judgment on the ground that Mr. Roth's claims were barred by the statute of limitations. See Utah Code Ann. § 78B-8-404(1) (2008). The trial court granted summary judgment. Mr. Roth appeals.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

«12 Mr. Roth appeals the trial court's grant of the Hospital's Motion to Set Aside the Default Certificate and denial of his Motion for Default Judgment. We review the trial court's decision to set aside a default for *395 abuse of discretion. See Davis v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 UT App 332, 244 P.3d 391, 670 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2010 Utah App. LEXIS 339, 2010 WL 4870967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roth-v-joseph-utahctapp-2010.