Thorson v. Rice County District One Hospital

437 N.W.2d 410, 1989 Minn. LEXIS 66, 1989 WL 22467
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 17, 1989
DocketC7-88-1745
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 437 N.W.2d 410 (Thorson v. Rice County District One Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thorson v. Rice County District One Hospital, 437 N.W.2d 410, 1989 Minn. LEXIS 66, 1989 WL 22467 (Mich. 1989).

Opinion

KELLEY, Justice.

Petitioner Rice County District One Hospital seeks a writ of prohibition restraining the enforcement of an order issued by a Rice County district judge, who, in this medical malpractice case commenced by William and Nancy Thorson (respondents), granted to the plaintiffs an extension of time within which to provide the affidavit of expert identification required by Minn. Stat. § 145.682, subd. 4 (1988), notwithstanding that the time limit for doing so had long since expired. 1 Though we affirm the trial court’s extension order and discharge the writ of prohibition, we do so for reasons differing from those given by the trial judge.

On November 24, 1984, respondent William Thorson sustained serious injuries while cutting trees. Initially he was transported by ambulance from the accident scene to petitioner’s hospital. Dr. Ralph Duda, a physician then employed by petitioner, examined Thorson in the hospital’s emergency room. Later, after he had been transferred to the University of Minnesota Hospitals, Thorson underwent surgery by Dr. James Ogilvie. Notwithstanding his treatment, Thorson became a paraplegic. He and his wife in this lawsuit claim that Dr. Duda was negligent in the emergency room, and that as a result, that negligence was a substantial contributing cause of Thorson’s present disability.

Sometime before October 1985, respondents retained Minneapolis attorney Reed *412 Mackenzie to represent them in pursuing their claims against the hospital. Shortly thereafter, Mackenzie met with petitioner’s attorney. Together, the two attorneys reviewed an investigation of Dr. Duda’s actions, which apparently had been conducted internally by, or on behalf of, the hospital. While that investigation might have lent support to the conclusion that Dr. Duda may have been negligent, the more difficult issue of causation remained unresolved, to-wit, whether his actions, if negligent, had been a substantial contributing cause of William Thorson’s paraplegia. Each lawyer agreed to independently conduct further investigation but to exchange information as the independent investigation of each proceeded.

The next significant event occurred on November 24,1986, exactly two years after Thorson’s accident, when a summons and complaint together with the affidavit of expert review required by Minn.Stat. § 145.682 (1988) were served on petitioner. 2

Simultaneously with the timely service of its answer, the hospital also served interrogatories requesting the additional information required to be provided by a malpractice suit by plaintiff. Minn.Stat. § 145.682, subd. 2 and 4 (1988). The required information may be provided by either affidavit or in interrogatory answers, and relates to expert witness identity, opinions the named experts have respecting negligence and causation factors, and, the basis for the opinions. 3 During December 1986 and January 1987, the lawyers representing petitioner had several communications with Mackenzie. Other than answering the interrogatories on February 24— stating that no expert had been selected, no further answers nor any affidavit containing the statutorily required disclosures were filed by plaintiffs’ attorneys up until the time the cross motions now before us were made in the trial court.

In March 1987, Dr. Ogilvie informed Mackenzie that while, in his opinion, Dr. Duda’s emergency room treatment of Thor-son might have been incorrect or insensitive, he was unable to say that Thorson had sustained any additional injury as the result of that treatment. The record before us, consisting mainly of affidavits, is unclear as to whether Mackenzie at that time relayed these conclusions of Dr. Ogilvie to petitioner’s attorney. In fact, the record is silent with respect to any type of communication passing between Mackenzie and petitioner’s counsel until the former withdrew from representing the respondents. In the interim, in the latter part of May 1987, the 180-day period within which Minn.Stat. *413 §. 145.682, subd. 4 required the plaintiffs to furnish the required information expired. Preceding its expiration, no express agreement existed between counsel, authorizing, nor had Mackenzie filed, an appropriate motion with the trial court seeking, extension of the 180-day limit.

Early in September, Mackenzie advised William Thorson by letter he was no longer interested in proceeding further with the case, and suggested that another attorney might be willing to proceed with it, and that he, Mackenzie, would cooperate with any successor lawyer chosen by the respondents. This letter made no reference to the 180-day notice requirement, nor did it advise the Thorsons that the time period had already elapsed.

On September 25, 1987, respondents consulted their present counsel, Larry J. Rietz, relative to his willingness to further prosecute their claims. Within two days thereafter, Rietz contacted petitioner’s attorney by telephone. During the course of that telephone conversation, Rietz informed petitioner’s counsel that it was likely he would undertake representation of the Thorsons, and that he was proceeding to acquire the case file from Mackenzie. During this conversation, petitioner’s attorney reiterated an offer, which he had previously extended to Mackenzie, that he was interested in discussing settlement without incurring additional expenses relative to extensive discovery as soon as Rietz furnished him a medical report supporting Thorson’s causation claim. Nothing in the record before us suggests that the hospital’s attorney raised or suggested that the hospital then relied, or intended to rely, on the Minn.Stat. § 145.682, subd. 4, statutory defense.

Thereafter, Rietz kept petitioner’s counsel informed with respect to progress experienced by him in obtaining medical evidence to support the claim. In the initial telephone conversation in September, Rietz had indicated that he intended to proceed by first submitting records and x-rays to a radiologist whose opinion, together with those records, he would submit later to a neurosurgeon. To do so, he observed, might entail a passage of some extended period of time in order that the necessary arrangements could be made and he could receive back definitive reports. Petitioner’s attorney made no demurrer to that procedure. After he had received a favorable advisory opinion from a radiologist, Rietz, by letter on November 24,1987, provided petitioner’s attorney with a progress report indicating that he had forwarded his client’s medical records to a neurosurgeon together with the radiologist’s report, and that he would expect “to get back” to the attorney within 60 days. Later, when he learned the neurosurgeon would be unable to provide him with a written report within the 60-day period previously indicated, Rietz by telephone notified petitioner’s counsel of the expected delay. To this point petitioner’s attorney had never raised the issue of untimely failure to file the identification of expert affidavit, nor did he object when plaintiff’s counsel advised him in these communications of the progress of the investigation and the time schedule for its completion.

Dr. W.S. Pollard, the neurosurgeon to whom William Thorson’s medical records had been submitted, furnished Rietz with an opinion that Thorson’s injuries were causally related to Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
437 N.W.2d 410, 1989 Minn. LEXIS 66, 1989 WL 22467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorson-v-rice-county-district-one-hospital-minn-1989.