Vickie MacMillan Individually and as Mother and Next Friend of Tanya Lee, a Minor v. United States

46 F.3d 377, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2895, 1995 WL 61010
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 1995
Docket94-60276
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 46 F.3d 377 (Vickie MacMillan Individually and as Mother and Next Friend of Tanya Lee, a Minor v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vickie MacMillan Individually and as Mother and Next Friend of Tanya Lee, a Minor v. United States, 46 F.3d 377, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2895, 1995 WL 61010 (5th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Vickie MacMillan, acting on behalf of herself and as the next friend of her daughter, Tanya Lee, brought suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1345. MacMil-lan alleged that Air Force physicians negligently caused neurological damage to Tanya Lee when she was born. The government moved for summary judgment, contending that because the limitations period had run, the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the suit. The district court agreed and granted summary judgment in favor of the government. MacMillan appeals, but we affirm the district court’s decision.

I. BACKGROUND

On November 23, 1975, Tanya Lee was born to Vickie Lee (now Vickie MacMillan) at Keesler Air Force Base Hospital in Biloxi, Mississippi. The birth was rife with complications. MacMillan recalled that Tanya was “born with the cord around her neck” and appeared “blue black” just after she was born. The Air Force physicians conducting the delivery advised MacMillan that Tanya was “not breathing on her own” but instead was being “artificially ventilated.” In fact, the birth was so problematic that the infant Tanya was taken “out of the room very quickly after delivery,” and MacMillan was told that “the child would probably not live, [because she had been] deprived of oxygen for a long period of time.”

During the first twenty-four to forty-eight hours of Tanya’s life, the situation remained bleak. Dr. Long, the high-risk pediatrician, told MacMillan that Tanya “had experienced a couple of seizures, was on a life-support system, [and had] no response.” Dr. Long also informed MacMillan that Tanya was “oxygen-depressed” and that “if the child should live she would be severely retarded.” Furthermore, Dr. Long advised MacMillan, “[I]t doesn’t look great. Don’t get your hopes up. The child probably would not make it. If she should [survive], then she could be a vegetable.”

Fortunately, Tanya made some progress, and MacMillan noted that “after 48 hours *379 [Dr. Long] got a sign of life in [Tanya] where she responded to something.” Tanya eventually was weaned off of the ventilator, and about two weeks after she was born, Tanya was able to go home with her mother. When Tanya was released, Dr. Long informed Mac-Millan that “there would be no way to determine whether [Tanya] would experience any long-term effects from the events of labor until tests were done on her when she was a few months[ ] or several years old.” MacMil-lan also noted that Dr. Long told her that Tanya was “responding well.”

Despite her improvement, Tanya continued to experience seizures, and she was given phenobarbital to help control them. Additionally, MacMillan was instructed that Tanya would need to be seen at the high-risk clinic “on a regular, routine basis ... for a one-yéar period of time to monitor her, to see how she was progressing as a result of the problems she had at birth.” During these visits, the clinic performed tests on Tanya’s reflexes, growth, and measurements, and MacMillan recalled that “they all seemed to be progressing.” After about twelve months, Tanya was taken off the phenobarbital, and she was seen at the high-risk clinic for the “normal course of pediatric visits.”

Tanya’s subsequent development did not progress at a normal pace. She began walking “a little later than most kids,” and in 1977, because Tanya’s “speech was way behind,”. MacMillan enrolled her daughter in a speech therapy program. When Tanya entered school, her problems continued: “[e]very school year, [MacMillan] could see that there was a problem.” MacMillan stated that Tanya repeated the second grade and was an easily frustrated and “very, very shy child.”

Concerned that Tanya might be suffering from a learning disability, MacMillan implored her local school district to evaluate Tanya. After MacMillan’s entreaties went unanswered for several years, in July of 1988, she took Tanya to Dr. William Gaspar-rini, a clinical psychologist. Dr. Gasparrini conducted a psychological evaluation of Tanya.

In the report he issued to MacMillan, Dr. Gasparrini reported that “Tanya was described as being a blue baby at birth. There was no oxygen to her brain.” Dr. Gasparrini also noted that:

Tanya’s early development was not normal because of her medications and her medical problems. At a very young age she had a few epileptic seizures. She was on anti-epileptic medication until age one, but she has not had any more seizures since that time and has not required continuing treatment with medications.... 1 Labor and delivery were severe problems for Tanya.

After conducting a battery of tests, Dr. Gas-parrini concluded that “the most important primary diagnosis for Tanya Lee appears to be Mild Mental Retardation. She also shows a very significant affective disorder which could be diagnosed as Dysthymia.” In her deposition, MacMillan also agreed that “at least as of July 21, 1988,” after receiving Dr. Gasparrini’s report, she was “of the opinion that [Tanya’s] early development problems were related to her problems at birth and her phenobarbital.” Moreover, at this time, MacMillan admitted that she was not aware of anything that “would have explained the early developmental delays or the low IQs or the-shyness or the frustration level increases other than either the phenobarbital or the problems at birth.”

In December of 1988, the Biloxi school system finally acquiesced to MacMillan’s request for an evaluation of Tanya. The schools system referred Tanya to a school psychologist, Dr. Anthony W. Pollard. Dr. Pollard saw Tanya three times and issued a psychological assessment in early February of 1989. In the “reason for referral” section of the assessment, Dr. Pollard described the circumstances of Tanya’s birth, apparently *380 with some inaccuracies, 2 and noted that “it appears likely that Tanya suffered anoxia at birth and probably sustained some neurological damage as a result.”

In June of 1989, Victoria Henning, a graduate student at the University of Southern Mississippi, “perform[ed] diagnostic testing on Tanya Lee as part of [Henning’s] course requirements.” Although she did not suspect actual brain injury, after conducting tests, Henning “suggested that Tanya be evaluated by a neurologist.” MacMillan eventually took Tanya to a neurologist — Dr. Joe Jackson. After conducting an MRI and an EEG, Dr. Jackson informed MacMillan, in early July of 1989, that his examination revealed “old scarring of the brain, and he related it to her birth.”

On July 2, 1991, MacMillan filed an administrative complaint, and on September 3, 1992, MacMillan filed a complaint against the United States in the district court. The government responded with a motion for summary judgment, arguing that “the undisputed facts adduced through [MacMillan’s] deposition testimony and the two psychologists’ evaluation reports support the conclusion that [the district] Court lacks jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action because the statute of limitations has expired.” 3

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46 F.3d 377, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 2895, 1995 WL 61010, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vickie-macmillan-individually-and-as-mother-and-next-friend-of-tanya-lee-a-ca5-1995.