Ternes v. GALICHIA

234 P.3d 820, 43 Kan. App. 2d 857
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJune 11, 2010
Docket101,666
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 234 P.3d 820 (Ternes v. GALICHIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ternes v. GALICHIA, 234 P.3d 820, 43 Kan. App. 2d 857 (kanctapp 2010).

Opinion

Hill, J.:

We consider here a medical malpractice action. Herman M. Temes dismissed his first lawsuit against Joseph P. Galichia, M.D., and then with another counsel refiled it about 4 months later. Ultimately, the district court dismissed his second lawsuit based on the 2-year statute of limitations. We reverse the district court’s dismissal because Galichia never raised the affirmative defense of the statute of hmitations during the 16 months he litigated the first lawsuit and also took clear, unequivocal steps, such as seeking a professional malpractice screening panel and participating in discovery, that constitute a waiver of that affirmative defense. We hold that once an affirmative defense is waived, it is gone and no longer available to the party waiving the defense.

Temes sues Galichia for malpractice.

Dr. Galichia carried out a heart catheterization on Temes on March 5, 2004. Afterwards, Temes claimed Galichia negligently lacerated his left main artery, left anterior descending arteiy, and circumflex coronary arteiy. These injuries forced Temes to undergo open heart surgery which resulted in acute renal failure and permanent renal injury.

Almost 2 years later — March 3, 2006 — Temes filed a medical negligence lawsuit against Galichia and an entity called The Galichia Medical Group, P.A. in Sedgwick County District Court. The record reveals service upon the professional association but no service on Galichia personally.

From the start of the lawsuit, Galichia was active. Galichia and his professional association were granted a 10-day extension to file an answer but never did file such a pleading. Counsel for Galichia entered their appearances in the lawsuit on November 28, 2006. Both parties asked the district court on June 28, 2006, to convene a medical malpractice screening panel. (It is not clear whether the screening panel actually met, but it was eventually dismissed.) Then, on January 2, 2008, Temes dismissed his lawsuit. His attorneys on the first lawsuit were Accident Recovery Team, P.A. and James A. Cline.

*859 A little more than 4 months after dismissing his lawsuit against Galichia, Temes filed a second petition in Sedgwick County District Court, making the same medical negligence claims but with different lawyers. Later, in August 2008, Galichia moved to dismiss the new petition on the grounds that the statute of hmitations barred the action.

Meanwhile, Temes filed a legal malpractice lawsuit against the Accident Recovery Team, P.A. and CHne. He alleged his former counsel negligently failed to obtain service of process on Galichia in his first lawsuit and his medical negligence claim against Galichia was now time barred by the statute of limitations. Then, both the Recovery Team and Cline intervened in the second Temes lawsuit against Galichia because they had learned Temes planned not to oppose GaHchia’s motion to dismiss based on the statute of hmitations.

Finally, in November 2008, the district court granted Galichia’s dismissal motion. The court specifically found that Temes’ second lawsuit against GaHchia was untimely and GaHchia was not prevented from raising the affirmative defense of statute of Hmitations. The intervenors bring this appeal. In turn, GaHchia argues the intervenors have no standing to appeal and therefore we have no jurisdiction to consider the case. He also contends the district court properly dismissed the second lawsuit due to the statute of Hmitations. We will address the standing to appeal issue first.

The district court properly allowed the attorneys to intervene; therefore, we have jurisdiction to decide the appeal.

Because Temes has folded his tents and withdrawn from the field of battle by not opposing Galichia’s motion to dismiss, GaHchia contends his former counsel, the Recovery Team and CHne, cannot intervene since there is no lawsuit remaining in which they can intervene. In other words, Temes’ acquiescence in the judgment of dismissal precludes the attorneys’ appeal, in GaHchia’s view. We do not agree. These facts illustrate the precise reason for intervention.

Our law permits parties to intervene in a pending lawsuit when they have an interest in the property or the transaction which is *860 the subject of the action. See K.S.A. 60-224(a)(2). Courts have specifically allowed parties to intervene in a lawsuit when disposition of the action may substantially impair or impede the intervenor’s ability to protect that interest unless the intervenor’s interest is adequately represented by existing parties. Here, of course, central to Temes’ claims against his former counsel is his contention that his action against Galichia is time barred. Therefore, Temes has no reason to oppose Galichia’s motion to dismiss and certainly Galichia was using the motion as his first line of defense in the malpractice action. Clearly, no party in the lawsuit represented the interests of the Recovery Team and Cline. In our view, the court properly allowed the lawyers to enter the case as interested parties. Several cases support our conclusion.

In Pickens v. Allstate Ins. Co., 17 Kan. App. 2d 670, 674-75, 843 P.2d 273 (1992), rev. denied 252 Kan. 1093 (1993), the court decided an insurer could intervene to protect its interests in a policyholder’s lawsuit against an uninsured motorist if the insurer’s rights are not adequately represented by the parties, because the insurer has a financial stake in the outcome. Obviously, the Recovery Team and Cline have a financial stake in Temes’ second lawsuit that is comparable to the insurer’s in Pickens.

Also, we are told in In re Petition of City of Shawnee for Annexation of Land, 236 Kan. 1, 11, 687 P.2d 603 (1984), that the factors found in the statute that permits intervention, K.S.A. 60-224(a), should be liberally constmed in favor of intervention. Those factors are: (1) timely application; (2) a substantial interest in the subject matter; and (3) lack of adequate representation of the intervenor’s interests. This is especially true when it is necessary to protect some right which cannot otherwise be protected including the right to appeal. Without intervention of the lawyers in this case there never could have been an appellate review of the order dismissing Temes’ lawsuit against Galichia on the grounds of the statute of limitations. Temes’ acquiescence in the judgment precluded the appeal without intervention. Also, we know that intervenors can appeal even if the original parties to a lawsuit do not.

To demonstrate this point, we turn to Hukle v. City of Kansas City, 212 Kan. 627, 512 P.2d 457 (1973). In Hukle, a landowner *861 sought a zoning change in order to erect a townhouse complex.

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Related

Ternes v. Galichia
305 P.3d 617 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2013)
Eddie C. Pratcher, Jr. v. Methodist Healthcare Memphis Hospitals
407 S.W.3d 727 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2013)
Mangus v. Stump
260 P.3d 1210 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
234 P.3d 820, 43 Kan. App. 2d 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ternes-v-galichia-kanctapp-2010.