Walters v. Cleveland Regional Medical Center

307 S.W.3d 292, 53 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 450, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 209, 2010 WL 852162
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 2010
Docket08-0169
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 307 S.W.3d 292 (Walters v. Cleveland Regional Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walters v. Cleveland Regional Medical Center, 307 S.W.3d 292, 53 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 450, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 209, 2010 WL 852162 (Tex. 2010).

Opinion

Justice WILLETT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is one of two “surgical sponge” cases decided today regarding the time limits placed on medical-malpractice suits. 1 The issue here: did Tangie Walters raise a fact issue as to whether she could avail herself of the Open Courts provision 2 as *294 an exception to the two-year statute of limitations? 3 We answer the same way we did twenty-five years ago with regard to the claimant in Neagle v. Nelson: yes. 4 The Texas Constitution grants foreign-object claimants a reasonable opportunity to discover their injuries and file suit, 5 even if the two-year limitations period has run (though not, as in today’s companion case, 6 if the ten-year repose period has run). And here, Walters has raised a fact issue as to whether the Open Courts provision applies.

Sponge cases constitute a unique class of malpractice claims, thus meriting unique Open Courts treatment: (1) such injuries are notoriously hard to discover; (2) the existence of wrongdoing (and the identity of the wrongdoer) are usually undisputed; and (3) an absolute two-year cutoff would render superfluous the Legislature’s ten-year statute of repose.

Today’s result is consistent not only with Neagle, which held that the Open Courts provision barred application of a two-year statute of limitations in a sponge case, but also with the later-enacted repose statute, which declares ten years as the last-chance deadline for all malpractice cases, including, we hold today, foreign-object cases. 7 This outer-boundary deadline would be surplusage if the limitations statute were itself a no-exceptions cutoff.

Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and return this case to the trial court for further proceedings.

I. Background

In December 1995, Dr. Keith Spooner performed a tubal ligation on Tangie Walters immediately following the birth of a child. Dr. Spooner performed the procedure at Cleveland Regional Medical Center with the help of Shirley Kiefer, a surgical assistant. The official count of surgical items indicated that all sponges were accounted for, but a sponge of the type used in the procedure was found inside Walters some nine-and-a-half years later.

Following the surgery, Walters experienced abdominal cramping. A nurse told her the pain was from childbirth and having gas pumped into her abdomen. At her follow-up appointments with Dr. Spooner a few weeks after surgery, he told her the cramping she continued to experience resulted from uterine contractions that accompany nursing. Walters experienced intermittent pain thereafter, which she attributed to a preexisting health problem that had troubled her periodically. Her next doctor’s visit, prompted by abdominal pain, came in March 1998, approximately twenty-seven months after her surgery. From that point on, Walters visited family physicians for a litany of ailments: severe fatigue, insomnia, headaches, infections, uterine problems, bladder problems, urination issues, cysts, and chronic and increasingly severe pain in the area where the sponge was ultimately discovered. For those and other problems, Walters received a host of dif *295 ferent diagnoses: cystitis, an aphthous ulcer, boils, pharyngitis, fatigue, stomatitis, cholecystitis, and so on. Her doctors ordered numerous tests, including an x-ray, urine tests, and blood tests. The record indicates that while Walters endured intermittent pain during the years following her operation, especially during menstruation, the pain became progressively worse until the sponge was discovered.

In April 2005, Walters visited Dr. Mary Garnepudi, a gynecologist. Garnepudi discovered an unusual lump while examining Walters. Garnepudi referred Walters to a surgeon, who, with the help of a second surgeon, operated on Walters and found the sponge. It was lodged against Walters’s small intestine and encapsulated in fibrous tissue, suggesting the sponge had been there for years.

In August 2005, less than two months after the sponge was discovered, Walters sued Cleveland Regional Medical Center, Dr. Spooner, and Shirley Kiefer. Walters alleges the sponge was responsible for the near-decade of medical problems she experienced since the 1995 tubal ligation. The three defendants moved for summary judgment, contending Walters’s claim was barred by section 74.251(a) of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code, the two-year statute of limitations for healthcare-liability claims. The trial court agreed and granted summary judgment. The court of appeals affirmed, holding that Walters had not established that the limitations statute violated Open Courts. 8

II. Analysis

Under the Open Courts provision, “[a]ll courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.” 9 In Yancy v. United Surgical Partners International, Inc., we elaborated on what a claimant must show to establish an Open Courts violation:

Unlike the discovery rule, which defers accrual of a cause of action until the plaintiff knew or, exercising reasonable diligence, should have known of the facts giving rise to the claim, the open courts provision merely gives litigants a reasonable time to discover their injuries and file suit. Because the open courts guarantee does not toll limitations, courts must determine what constitutes a reasonable time for a claimant to discover her injuries and file suit. 10

In the summary judgment context, the burden is on the plaintiff asserting an Open Courts exception to the statute of limitations to raise a fact issue demonstrating that she did not have a reasonable opportunity to discover the alleged wrong and bring suit before the limitations period expired. 11

Following Neagle, our 1985 sponge case that upheld an Open Courts challenge to the two-year limitations period, we hold that Walters has at least raised a fact issue as to whether she discovered the sponge and brought her suit within a reasonable time.

A. Neagle v. Nelson

Neagle addressed errant sponges and the Open Courts guarantee, and nothing dispositive distinguishes Neagle from today’s case. The two cases share the same procedural posture: the claimant lost on summary judgment at the trial court, lost *296 again at the court of appeals, and appealed here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
307 S.W.3d 292, 53 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 450, 2010 Tex. LEXIS 209, 2010 WL 852162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-cleveland-regional-medical-center-tex-2010.