University of North Texas Health Science Center A/K/A University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth Health Systems v. Robyn Walton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 2020
Docket02-19-00193-CV
StatusPublished

This text of University of North Texas Health Science Center A/K/A University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth Health Systems v. Robyn Walton (University of North Texas Health Science Center A/K/A University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth Health Systems v. Robyn Walton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
University of North Texas Health Science Center A/K/A University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth Health Systems v. Robyn Walton, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-19-00193-CV ___________________________

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER A/K/A UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER AT FORT WORTH HEALTH SYSTEMS, Appellant

V.

ROBYN WALTON, Appellee

On Appeal from the 236th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 236-290069-17

Before Kerr, Birdwell, and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Wallach MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant University of North Texas Health Science Center a/k/a University

of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth Health Systems (UNTHSC)

appeals from the trial court’s denial of its plea to the jurisdiction alleging that Appellee

Robyn Walton did not provide the required statutory notice of her claim under Texas

Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 101.101. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code

Ann. § 101.101. UNTHSC argues in two issues that the trial court erred by denying

the plea to the jurisdiction because Walton (1) failed to provide UNTHSC with timely

written notice of her claim and (2) failed to establish UNTHSC had actual notice of

her claim.

Background

A. Procedural

Walton sued UNTHSC for medical malpractice. In her petition, she alleged the

following facts related to her care at UNTHSC. In March 2015, she sought treatment

at UNTHSC for upper thoracic syndrome and thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS). On

May 14, 2015, UNTHSC’s Dr. Albert Henry Yurvati performed thoracic outlet

surgery on Walton to treat her TOS. However, instead of partially excising her right

first rib—the standard of care for TOS—he partially excised the right second rib.

Walton continued to receive TOS treatment at UNTHSC through October 1, 2015.

When Walton’s treatment at UNTHSC failed to relieve her symptoms, she sought

treatment from another doctor outside of UNTHSC who, in December 2015,

2 performed thoracic outlet surgery to resect her first rib. That doctor also allegedly

removed “recurrent extensive and dense adhesions and scar tissue secondary to the

May 14, 2015, partial removal of a portion of the wrong rib by Dr. Yurvati.”

Walton sued UNTHSC on January 19, 2017. She alleged that Dr. Yurvati and

UNTHSC health care employees were negligent by (1) failing to properly treat her

upper thoracic syndrome and TOS; (2) misusing the surgeon’s scalpel and instruments

during the May 14, 2015 surgery; (3) negligently failing to perform the proper surgical

procedure to address her TOS; and (4) negligently failing to refer Walton to a surgeon

who was skilled and qualified in addressing her conditions. She also asserted that she

had provided presuit notice of her claim. UNTHSC filed its answer, including a plea

to the jurisdiction, and a motion to dismiss asserting that Walton had failed to provide

it with notice of her claim within six months of her May 14, 2015 injury, as required

by statute.

Walton filed an amended original petition and a response to the plea to the

jurisdiction. In her amended petition, she added allegations that UNTHSC employees

continued to unsuccessfully treat her conditions after her initial surgery until October

29, 2015. In her response to the plea to the jurisdiction, she argued that the date on

which the statutory notice requirement began was October 29, 2015, the last date of

UNTHSC’s ineffective course of TOS treatments. She argued that the statute called

for notice no later than six months from the day that the “incident giving rise to the

claim occurred” and that the incident in the case “is clearly UNTHSC’s failure to

3 properly treat [Walton’s] TOS from March of 2015 to October 29, 2015.” She

maintained that from March through October 2015, UNTHSC treated her TOS “with

trigger point injections, osteopathic manipulation, physical therapy, percussive

hammer treatments, surgical treatment, and prescription medications,” that

UNTHSC’s treatment “in its entirety” caused her further damage and injury, and that

the “incident giving rise to the claim” was therefore the entirety of the TOS treatment

that UNTHSC provided to her through October 29, 2015. She further asserted that

she gave UNTHSC actual notice of the claim in October 2015 when she told

UNTHSC’s Dr. William Crow that the wrong rib had been resected, and she argued

that Dr. Crow’s notation of “H/O resection of rib” in the “Problem List” section of

her medical records confirms that she told Dr. Crow of the surgical error.

UNTHSC filed a reply to Walton’s response, arguing that the “course of

treatment” provision in Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 74.251 did

not apply, that Walton had not complied with Section 101.101 of the Texas Tort

Claims Act, and that UNTHSC did not receive actual notice of her claim.

The trial court denied UNTHSC’s plea to the jurisdiction after a hearing.

UNTHSC now appeals.

B. Evidentiary

Walton sought treatment from Dr. Yurvati, a thoracic surgeon affiliated with

UNTHSC, on March 23, 2015, for complaints of deep venous thrombosis and TOS

in her upper right arm. After Dr. Yurvati took a history from Walton and conducted

4 a physical examination, he provided her with education on her deep venous

thrombosis and advised that she might need surgical resection of her first rib in May.

Ultimately, the decision was made to perform a thoracic outlet surgery with possible

resection of her right first rib, which Dr. Yurvati supposedly performed at Plaza

Medical Center of Fort Worth on May 14, 2015. The record does not reflect the

association, if any, between Plaza Medical Center, its employees, and UNTHSC. Dr.

Yurvati’s last treatment of Walton was on June 17, 2015.

After surgery, Walton continued to have signs and symptoms of TOS as well as

other musculoskeletal complaints. The records from UNTHSC reflect the dates that

Walton sought and obtained treatment postoperatively for these TOS complaints.

None of these records prior to October 29, 2015, contain any reference to any

complaints about wrong level rib surgery by Dr. Yurvati or improper care by other

UNTHSC employees.

Walton returned to UNTHSC on October 29, 2015, for ongoing treatment of

the TOS problems and saw Dr. Crow. In her affidavit, Walton claimed that she first

learned of the resection of her right second rib on October 23, 2015, when her

chiropractor showed it to her on an x-ray he had performed two days earlier. She

testified that she then saw Dr. Crow on October 29, 2015, and reported to him that

her first rib surgery had been done at the wrong level and “that all the injections,

therapy, and manipulation had only made my thoracic outlet problems worse.” She

further stated that Dr. Crow listened to her but did not respond to her statement.

5 The UNTHSC medical records from October 29, 2015, make no reference to any

complaint by Walton about her postsurgical care, about discovering that her surgery

was on the second rib and not the first, that she had seen a chiropractor for her

problem or that her injections, therapy, and manipulations had made her TOS worse.

It does reference a history of a rib resection, an uncontroverted fact, but it makes no

reference to any specific rib. However, the record of that date for her osteopathic

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University of North Texas Health Science Center A/K/A University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth Health Systems v. Robyn Walton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/university-of-north-texas-health-science-center-aka-university-of-north-texapp-2020.