Russell Carter, V. Multicare Health System

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 30, 2024
Docket58608-8
StatusPublished

This text of Russell Carter, V. Multicare Health System (Russell Carter, V. Multicare Health System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Russell Carter, V. Multicare Health System, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

July 30, 2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II RUSSELL and MEGAN CARTER, and the No. 58608-8-II marital community composed thereof, and on behalf of their minor children, S.C. and E.C.,

Appellants,

v. PUBLISHED OPINION MULTICARE HEALTH SYSTEM, a Washington Nonprofit Corporation; Dr. ELIZABETH WOODS and JOHN DOE WOODS and the marital community composed thereof; STATE OF WASHINGTON, a sovereign state; DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL & HEALTH SERVICES; CHILD PROTECTIVE SERVICES, agencies of the State of Washington; NERISSA SHIRLEY & JOHN DOE SHIRLEY, wife and husband, individually and the marital community composed thereof,

Respondents,

CITY OF TACOMA, a municipality; TACOMA POLICE DEPARTMENT, an agent of the city of Tacoma; WILLIAM MUSE & JANE DOE KELLY, husband and wife, individually and the marital community composed thereof,

Defendants.

GLASGOW, J.—Dr. Elizabeth Woods and other Mary Bridge Children’s Hospital staff

suspected that Megan Carter was intentionally harming her daughter, EC, through medical child No. 58608-8-II

abuse. In 2018, Woods accused Megan1 of medical neglect, prompting Washington’s Department

of Children, Youth, and Families (the Department) to file a dependency petition. As a result, the

court separated Megan from her two children for 14 months. After a dependency trial, the

dependency court dismissed the dependency, finding no evidence of medical abuse or neglect and

concluding that Woods’ accusations were unsupported. In February 2020, Woods made another

report of suspected medical child abuse against Megan, this time to the King County Sheriff’s

Office.

In May 2021, Megan and her husband, Russel Carter, filed a lawsuit in Pierce County

Superior Court against Woods and against MultiCare Health System, the parent corporation of

Mary Bridge, relating to the 2018 report. The trial court dismissed the case because Woods and

MultiCare had statutory immunity protecting people who have made good faith reports of

suspected child abuse from liability. 2

The Carters sought reconsideration and to amend their complaint to add claims related to

the 2020 report to the sheriff’s office, but the trial court denied the motion and dismissed the

lawsuit entirely. The Carters did not appeal.

In November 2021, the Carters then filed another lawsuit in Thurston County Superior

Court against Woods and MultiCare.3 The Carters asserted their claims against Woods and

MultiCare now stemmed from Woods’ 2020 report to the King County Sheriff’s Office. The

Carters also amended their complaint to add claims against the Department and a caseworker for

negligent investigation. MultiCare and Woods filed a motion to dismiss the claims against them,

1 To avoid confusion, we refer to Megan Carter and Russell Carter by their first names. 2 For clarity, we refer to this prior Pierce County Superior Court case as Carter I. 3 For clarity, we refer to the Thurston County Superior Court case, appealed here, as Carter II.

2 No. 58608-8-II

which the trial court granted based on res judicata. The Department then filed a motion for

summary judgment, which the trial court granted based on the statute of limitations.

On appeal, the Carters argue that the trial court erred when it applied res judicata to bar

their claims against Woods and MultiCare. The Carters also argue that the trial court erred in

dismissing the claims against the Department, asserting that the claim for negligent investigation

is an ongoing tort, so the statute of limitations had not expired when they filed their tort claim.

We conclude that the Carters should have, with reasonable diligence, brought their claims

related to the 2020 report in Carter I, because the Carters had sufficient information to raise these

claims as early as February 2020, well before filing their initial lawsuit. Thus, we conclude that

res judicata bars these claims. With regard to the claims against the Department, we decline to

hold that the Carters’ claim of negligent investigation is a continuing tort. As a result, the trial

court properly dismissed the claims against the Department based on the statute of limitations. We

affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

The Carters have two children, SC and EC. EC was born prematurely and with health

complications. Megan, EC’s mother, was a former nurse and served as EC’s full-time caregiver.

In March 2018, EC was hospitalized at Mary Bridge for several significant medical issues.

EC remained hospitalized through May 2018. During EC’s hospitalization, Woods was Mary

Bridge’s Medical Director of the Child Abuse Intervention Department. Mary Bridge had a policy

requiring any staff member with reasonable cause to believe that a child had suffered abuse or

neglect to report it immediately.

3 No. 58608-8-II

On March 30, 2018, a Mary Bridge caseworker reported to the Department concerns about

Megan’s ability to safely parent EC. The hospital caseworker reported that EC had been admitted

for fungal sepsis, kidney infection, aspiration pneumonia, and a blood stream infection. EC had

previously been hospitalized with multiple infections and failure to thrive. The caseworker

reported that hospital staff members were concerned that Megan could not appropriately care for

EC and they were worried about “possible intentional harm being done to [EC].” Clerk’s Papers

(CP) at 217. The intake noted that prior reports had mentioned a concern that Megan had

Munchausen syndrome by proxy.4 The Department screened in the referral as “Risk Only.” Id.

At some point during EC’s hospitalization at Mary Bridge, Woods received a letter from

EC’s maternal grandfather expressing concern over what he characterized as Megan’s history of

medical child abuse. Mary Bridge medical providers held two meetings to discuss EC’s case,

including their concerns about Megan’s possible involvement in EC’s illnesses. As a result, Mary

Bridge placed EC in a room with video surveillance to monitor Megan and EC.

EC needed a specific dose of anticoagulant medication administered twice daily by

injection to prevent blood clots. Mary Bridge staff asked Megan to help to administer the injections

under nurse supervision in hopes of relieving EC’s discomfort. One of EC’s doctors approved this

plan.

In two videos, recorded on May 4, 2018, and May 6, 2018, Mary Bridge staff reported that

“Megan was seen . . . giving [EC] only a portion of the medication and emptying the syringe on

the bedsheets when the [nurse] was not looking.” CP at 230. On May 6, 2018, EC developed a

blood clot. A nurse expressed concern that Megan’s reaction to this diagnosis seemed oddly

4 “A psychological disorder that induces a caregiver, usu. a parent, to fabricate or cause a child’s medical problem and to seek medical treatment for the child on the basis of the fabrications or problem.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1222 (11th ed. 2019).

4 No. 58608-8-II

“‘joyful’” or “‘jovial.’” CP at 62, 231. Staff also reported that had EC been receiving the correct

amount of medication, she would not have developed blood clots. Staff again expressed concern

that Megan could have Munchausen syndrome by proxy.

After reviewing the footage and EC’s medical records, Woods formed the opinion that EC

was the victim of medical child abuse. Mary Bridge reported these concerns to local law

enforcement and the Department.

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