Woolwine v. Raleigh General Hospital

460 S.E.2d 457, 194 W. Va. 322, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 143
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1995
Docket22538
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 460 S.E.2d 457 (Woolwine v. Raleigh General Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolwine v. Raleigh General Hospital, 460 S.E.2d 457, 194 W. Va. 322, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 143 (W. Va. 1995).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This appeal involves a medical malpractice action that the Appellant filed in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County on October 19,1992. The complaint alleges that the Appellees negligently treated an injury sustained by the Appellant. Based on the Appellant’s attorney’s failure to meaningfully participate in discovery, and counsel’s disregard of an order permitting discovery, the circuit court granted the Appellees’ motions for summary judgment. The Appellant asserts that the grant of summary judgment was inappropriate. We disagree. For the reasons set forth below, we hereby affirm the circuit court’s order.

I.

The Appellant’s complaint alleges that the Appellees failed to properly diagnose a fracture in her middle finger. After answering the complaint, the Appellees propounded certain interrogatories to the Appellant in November 1992. These interrogatories requested, in part, information concerning the expert that the Appellant proposed to call in support of her malpractice claims. Among other things, the interrogatories requested (1) a name and address for the expert; (2) the subject matter on which the expert was to testify; (3) the facts and opinions on which the expert was to testify; and (4) a summary of the grounds for each opinion rendered by the expert.

Over six months later, on May 6, 1993, following a motion to compel filed by Raleigh General Hospital (hereinafter “the Hospital”) on February 16, 1993, it appears that the Appellant answered the interrogatories served by the Hospital. The answer relating *325 to the requested expert information, however, merely stated that “[p]ursuant to Hulmes ex rel. [by] Vest v. Catterson [,182 W.Va. 439, 388 S.E.2d 313 (1989) ] and W.Va.Code § 55-7B-6, said interrogatory is premature in the discovery process.” No response appears to have been immediately forthcoming to the expert interrogatories filed by the other Ap-pellees. Accordingly, on June 4,1993, Appel-lees Snidow and Gwinn served a motion to compel answers to their interrogatories. 1

While the record is slightly unclear, in September 1993, on the eve of the circuit court’s scheduling conference, it appears that the Appellant finally answered the interrogatories propounded by Raleigh Radiology Inc. and Doctors, Thompson, Snidow and Gwinn. The responses to requests for information about the Appellant’s expert, however, appear, as with the earlier answers to the Hospital’s interrogatories, to have merely stated that, pursuant to Hulmes and West Virginia Code § 55-7B-6, an answer was premature.

The circuit court held a scheduling conference on September 13, 1993. Thereafter, a scheduling order was entered that required the Appellant, inter alia, to “disclose expert witnesses by January 31, 1994.” The trial was set for May 17, 1994. The Appellant ultimately failed to comply with the January 31 disclosure deadline. 2 Given the lack of any apparent expert testimony to support the Appellant’s claim, the Appellees filed motions for summary judgment in mid-February of 1994. 3 A hearing on the motions for summary judgment was noticed by the Ap-pellees, again in mid-February 1994, for March 21, 1994.

The Appellant moved to continue the March 21 hearing in a motion that was filed on March 17, 1994. 4 On that same date, the Appellant filed a disclosure of his expert witness which stated as follows:

Now comes the plaintiff, Pamela Kay Woolwine, by her counsel ... and announces to this Court that the plaintiff *326 may call Grant R. Bakin, M.D., as an expert witness in this action.

(emphasis added).

The circuit court ultimately held the scheduled hearing on the motions for summary judgment. At the hearing, the circuit court noted the Appellant’s motion for a continuance and mentioned that the court had tried to contact Appellant’s counsel that morning in an attempt to ascertain why the motion for a continuance was not filed earlier. The circuit court went on to explain as follows:

Well, I believe that the hearing on the motion for summary judgment, to all the motions that are pending today, can go forward. I do not accept ... [counsel’s] late motion for a continuance as being a basis to simply blindly put it off. It’s difficult to imagine a trip to the Bahamas would suddenly materialize on a Thursday before you go and then take you out of the country; and given the history of this case, I think it needs to be attended to.

The circuit court also noted the Appellant’s belated designation of Grant Bakin as a possible expert in the case and expressed displeasure that the tentative disclosure lacked even so much as an address of where the physician might be located.

The circuit court recited many of Appellant’s counsel’s dilatory actions during discovery that are detailed above. The court also noted as follows:

For the sake of the record, I need I think to expand this a little bit to acknowledge that in at least one other case that I have attended to with ... [this attorney] as plaintiffs counsel, we’ve had a similar problem with a similar result, and perhaps others before other judges. I think one reference was made to that by Mr. File. 5
This is a pattern of conduct by plaintiffs counsel that is disturbing to the Court.... [W]ith that background, I find that plaintiffs counsel has, without good cause, refused to participate meaningfully in the efforts of all the defendants to conduct discovery in the case, in particular with respect to expert witnesses; that ... [counsel for the appellant] has failed to comply — and without good cause — to comply with this Court’s scheduling order, which was entered after a good deal of effort to obtain discovery information; that the compliance or purported compliance on March 16th, 17th, or 18th, whichever date it could be counted from, by disclosing just the name of the doctor and nothing else is insufficient.

(footnote and emphasis added).

The circuit court then ordered the action dismissed on March 24, 1994, pursuant to West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure 16 and 37. The Appellant filed a petition for appeal on July 26, 1994. 6

We granted the petition on October 5, 1994. On February 8, 1995, Appellant’s counsel requested a thirty-day extension of the briefing schedule. In response, the Clerk of the Court set down a modified briefing schedule on February 14, 1995, which *327 required the Appellant to file her brief no later than March 3, 1995. In a letter dated March 6, 1995, an associate of Appellant’s counsel notified the Court that counsel would not be filing a brief.

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Bluebook (online)
460 S.E.2d 457, 194 W. Va. 322, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolwine-v-raleigh-general-hospital-wva-1995.