Vargas-Colon v. Fundacion Damas, Inc.

864 F.3d 14, 2017 WL 3048759
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 2017
Docket16-1213P
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 864 F.3d 14 (Vargas-Colon v. Fundacion Damas, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vargas-Colon v. Fundacion Damas, Inc., 864 F.3d 14, 2017 WL 3048759 (1st Cir. 2017).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.

The case before us is, simply put,, a hot mess. The ongoing dispute has an evolving cast of characters and has featured stops in numerous federal and Puerto Rico courts. And, in its .present iteration, the briefing from all parties leaves much to be *17 desired. Yet, ■ after slogging our way through these muddied waters, a modicum of clarity has emerged. In the end, because plaintiffs—L.C.V., a minor represented by her mother, Lizbeth Vargas-Colón (Vargas), 1 and L.C.V.’s two brothers, Jaime Manuel Cedeño-Vargas and Jaime Alexander Cedeño-Vargas (collectively, the brothers)—have not presented us with a developed argument that convinces us to disturb the judgment of the district court, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

Although we could spill gallons of ink explaining the ins and outs of the extensive procedural history of the several cases in this saga,, we instead opt for a more efficient course: setting forth only those background facts necessary to put these appeals into-their proper context. At its core, this case is about a family’s dogged efforts to recover for alleged acts of medical malpractice. ’

A. First Medical-Malpractice Action

This case has its genesis in an undeniably tragic episode. In 2000, Vargas went to Hospital Damas in Ponce, Puerto Rico for the birth of L.C.V. Plaintiffs allege the following facts concerning L.C.V.’s birth. The birth by Cesarean section was delayed until several hours after Vargas first, arrived at Hospital Damas. During some or all of this period of delay, L.C.V.’s brain was not receiving a sufficient amount of oxygen. As a result, she suffered severe and permanent neurological defects, “has no hope of a normal life,” and will require lifelong, round-the-clock care for her conditions.'

In 2007, Vargas and her husband, Jaime M. Cedeño, 2 initiated a medical-malpractice action in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico on their own behalf and on behalf of L.C.V. (Case No. 07-1032). 3 The amended complaint asserted claims against Vargas’s doctor and “Hospital Damas or, alternatively, John Doe,Corporation d/b/a Hospital Damas.” It also alleged that “Hospital Damas is the owner and operator of a hospital of the same name, located in Ponce, Puerto Rico.” In August 2009, on the eve of trial and after the parties engaged in extensive discovery, the plaintiffs in Case No. 07-1032 settled with Hospital Damas, Inc. (HDI) and the defendant doctor. 4 The settlement, agreement—which listed. Vargas, Cedeño, and L.C.V. as settling plaintiffs and HDI and Vargas’s doctor as settling defendants—called for the defendants to pay the plaintiffs a total of $1.5 million in eight installments.

The district court entered a judgment approving the settlement and dismissing the complaint with prejudice. Additionally, as the parties agreed, the district court retained jurisdiction over the case to enforce the terms of the settlement agreement.

*18 B. HDI’s Bankruptcy Case

The defendants paid the plaintiffs the initial payment of $400,000 under the settlement agreement. But HDI failed to live up to its end of the bargain after that. Instead, it filed a petition for bankruptcy in September 2010 (bankruptcy case). In 2012, a group of medical-malpractice creditors of HDI—including L.C.V., Vargas, and Cedeño—moved to dismiss the bankruptcy petition, alleging (among other things) that the petition was filed fraudulently and in bad faith. These allegations were premised on the fact that the license to operate Hospital Damas and the certificate of need and convenience (CNC)—a document needed to operate a hospital in Puerto Rico—were actually held by Fun-dación Damas, Inc. (Fundación) and not by HDI, such that HDI was not lawfully operating Hospital Damas.

The bankruptcy court held a hearing on the motion, at which documentary and testimonial evidence was admitted and the medical-malpractice creditors and HDI argued their respective positions. The bankruptcy court denied the dismissal motion. The court found that Fundación “owns the real property on which the hospital facility known as Hospital Damas is located. Prior to 1987, it operated Hospital Damas. In 1987, Fundación ... incorporated [HDI] and then leased the hospital facility to [HDI].” It also found that Fundación “transferred the hospital operation to [HDI] ” in 1987 and that HDI “has been operating Hospital Damas since 1987.” The court determined that HDI “inadvertently failed to realize that there was a problem with its CNCs and licenses prior to the filing of the motion to dismiss.” The medical-malpractice claimants appealed the denial of their motion to the United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP) for the First Circuit.

Meanwhile, the bankruptcy case continued on, and the court eventually confirmed a reorganization plan for HDI. In exchange for the medical-malpractice claimants’ withdrawal of their objections to the plan and their appeal to the BAP, HDI and the medical-malpractice claimants filed a Joint Amended Plan of Reorganization (bankruptcy plan supplement) in the bankruptcy court. In pertinent part, the bankruptcy plan supplement provided that:

(C) ... [N]othing in this Consented Supplement, or in the Plan as confirmed[,] shall be construed as an impediment to any medical malpractice claimant, with or without judgment, to file before any court with jurisdiction a complaint, motion or legal action against Fundación or any other third party in order to pursue any action or collect from Fundación or any other third party any malpractice claim or deficiency thereof (amount not collected from [HDI]) for which said entity might be liable....
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(E) The Medical Malpractice Claimants that have judgment shall also be entitled to ... any reimbursement or replenishment due the Trust Fund[ 5 ] and to pursue any cause of action against Funda-ción, its Board of Directors, the Trust Fund or any other third party for the reimbursement or replenishment of the Trust Fund.
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(H) The confirmation of the Plan does not preclude the Medical Malpractice Claimants from pursuing their claims against third parties, including, without *19 limitation, Fundación as to if [sic] Fun-dación must replenish the Trust Fund. 6

The bankruptcy court ultimately confirmed the reorganization plan, as supplemented by the bankruptcy plan supplement.

The plaintiffs in Case No. 07-1032 received $244,988.86 from HDI in payment of their pro rata distribution of their proof of claim in the bankruptcy case, bringing the total amount received to $644,988.86— over $855,000 less than the $1.5 million to which they were entitled under the settlement agreement.

C. Unsuccessful Attempt to Amend Judgment in Case No. 07-1032

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Bluebook (online)
864 F.3d 14, 2017 WL 3048759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vargas-colon-v-fundacion-damas-inc-ca1-2017.