Tatum v. Shroff

153 So. 3d 561, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 2788, 2014 WL 6464631
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 2014
DocketNo. 49,518-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 153 So. 3d 561 (Tatum v. Shroff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tatum v. Shroff, 153 So. 3d 561, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 2788, 2014 WL 6464631 (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

GARRETT, J.

l,The plaintiff in this medical malpractice suit, Joel Tatum, appeals a trial court ruling which granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant, Dr. Pankajrai Shroff. We reverse the trial court judgment and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS

Frank Tatum, the plaintiffs father, became a patient of Dr. Shroff in 2003. Mr. Tatum’s medical history included diabetes, hypertension, osteoarthritis, cervical spinal stenosis, and deep vein thrombosis (DVT). On January 18, 2010, he saw Dr. Shroff, complaining of shortness of breath, intermittent confusion and edema of both legs. The doctor admitted Mr. Tatum to Caldwell Parish Hospital Service District No. 1, d/b/a Citizens Medical Center (CMC), for observation and monitoring. On January 22, 2010, the 79-year-old patient was found to be unresponsive, and a code was called. He was transferred to Rapides Regional Medical Center (RRMC), where he was pronounced dead later that afternoon. No autopsy was performed.

The plaintiff filed a medical malpractice complaint against CMC and Dr. Shroff, which asserted that they failed to timely diagnose and treat a pulmonary embolism and/or DVT and failed to provide treatment which met the applicable standard of care. The complaint was submitted to a medical review panel (MRP), pursuant to the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act. On November 10, 2011, the MRP issued an opinion unanimously finding that neither CMC nor Dr. Shroff breached the applicable standard of care. As to Dr. Shroff, the MRP concluded that blood gas, clinical and X-ray ^findings were consistent with his diagnosis of hypoventilation syndrome with right heart failure and that he ordered appropriate treatment. It found that prior to January 21, 2010, there were no clinical findings to suggest acute DVT, and that when symptoms suggestive of it manifested, Dr. Shroff ordered a venous Doppler test. According to the MRP’s opinion, the radiologist’s report indicated positive DVT' in the right leg, and Dr. Shroff ordered appropriate medication. The MRP further concluded that there was a “high likelihood” that the test findings were residual findings from a prior DVT because a D-dimer test performed at RRMC was nor[563]*563mal. The MRP found that such a finding “virtually excludes the probability” that Mr. Tatum had an acute pulmonary embolism because “a normal D-dimer study excludes acute PE and acute DVT with 95% sensitivity.”

In January 2012, the plaintiff filed suit against Dr. Shroff and CMC, asserting medical malpractice in their treatment of his late father. More specifically, he alleged that they failed to timely diagnose and treat a pulmonary embolism and/or DVT. Dr. Shroff filed an answer which incorporated a dilatory exception of vagueness and ambiguity and a motion to strike. He admitted that Mr. Tatum presented to his office on January 18, 2010, and that a venous Doppler study was performed on January 21. Dr. Shroff complained that certain paragraphs of the petition were vague and ambiguous, and he requested that they be stricken. Dr. Shroffs exception of vagueness and ambiguity and motion to strike were granted by consent judgment in March 2012.

| sIn September 2012, Dr. Shroff filed a motion for summary judgment. He asserted that the plaintiff had failed to identify any expert witness to refute the findings of the MRP. Relying upon the favorable MRP opinion and the plaintiffs failure to identify an expert witness, Dr. Shroff requested summary judgment dismissing him from the suit.1

In opposition, the plaintiff filed a letter affidavit dated December 27, 2012, from Dr. Michael Langan, a physician at Massachusetts General Hospital, who is affiliated with Harvard Medical School and board certified in internal medicine with an added qualification in geriatric medicine. In his affidavit, Dr. Langan recited a review of Mr. Tatum’s medical records from Dr. Shroffs office and from CMC. Among other things, these records showed a 2008 history of DVT in the right leg. The records from Mr. Tatum’s January 2010 hospitalization were discussed in detail, including the discharge summary in which Dr. Shroff stated that the cause of Mr. Tatum’s cardiopulmonary arrest was “either he may have had a massive pulmonary embolism, could have had cardiac ar-rhythmias, or he may have had a myocar- • diac infarction.”

Dr. Langan stated that it appeared obvious that Mr. Tatum’s death was attributable to a pulmonary embolism. He opined that Mr. Tatum’s admission symptoms, laboratory results and echocardiogram were most consistent with a pulmonary embolism. He stated that Dr. Shroff was negligent in Mr. Tatum’s care in the following ways:

|4(1) Failing to timely diagnose cardiac dysfunction as the cause of bilateral lower extremity edema, “[f]rom the beginning of his treatment to Mr. Tatum in 2003 until his death in 2010.” This included failure to refer Mr. Tatum to a cardiologist or order appropriate studies (echocardiogram, stress test, etc.) that, “more likely than not, would have revealed congestive heart failure with increased pulmonary artery pressures (cor pulmonale)”;
(2) Failing to correctly interpret numerous EKGs performed on Mr. Tatum;
(3) Failing to treat congestive heart failure in Mr. Tatum;
(4) Failing to treat Mr. Tatum with anti-coagulation for DVT.

Dr. Langan concluded by stating that “[m]ore likely than not, and with a reasonable degree of medical certainty, Dr. [564]*564Shroffs failure to timely diagnose and treat Mr. Tatum’s congestive heart failure resulted in his death.”

In February 2018, Dr. Shroff filed a motion to strike most or all of Dr. Lan-gan’s affidavit as being irrelevant or immaterial to the issues in the instant suit. In particular, he argued that, the plaintiff had failed to allege any malpractice prior to Mr. Tatum’s January 2010 admission to CMC and that any such claims of prior malpractice were not submitted to the MRP. The plaintiff opposed the motion to strike.

On October 3, 2018, the trial court issued a rather unusual written ruling which granted the motion to strike, ordering that all references in the affidavit pertaining to any suggested acts of malpractice prior to January 22, 2010, be stricken. It found that there were no allegations in the original petition or the MRP opinion as to any malpractice on any date other than January 22, 2010, and the provisions of La. R.S. 40:1299.47 required that the defendant be notified of the specific dates of malpractice. On October | ¡¡22, 2013, the plaintiff filed a motion for new trial. Pursuant to a consent judgment signed on January 21, 2014, the motion for new trial was granted in part and denied in part. Specifically, the court struck all reference to any suggested acts of malpractice prior to the hospital admission which began January 18, 2010. The affidavit was also stricken insofar as it attempted to raise allegations about that hospital admission not previously asserted to and reviewed by the MRP. The consent judgment did not contain any specific detail as to which portions of Dr. Langan’s affidavit were considered to be stricken or not stricken.

Against this procedural background, Dr. Shroff re-urged the motion for summary judgment. On April 14, 2014, the trial court issued brief written reasons granting the motion for summary judgment. After reviewing the affidavit of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
153 So. 3d 561, 2014 La. App. LEXIS 2788, 2014 WL 6464631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tatum-v-shroff-lactapp-2014.