Yamaguchi v. Queen's Medical Center

648 P.2d 689, 65 Haw. 84, 1982 Haw. LEXIS 194
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1982
DocketNO. 7281
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 648 P.2d 689 (Yamaguchi v. Queen's Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yamaguchi v. Queen's Medical Center, 648 P.2d 689, 65 Haw. 84, 1982 Haw. LEXIS 194 (haw 1982).

Opinion

*85 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

LUM, J.

Plaintiff-appellant Donald Yamaguchi appeals from summary judgment entered in favor of defendants-appellees The Queen’s Medical Center (“Queen’s Hospital”) and Dr. Richard S. Dodge, dismissing appellant’s medical malpractice action against them as barred by the statute of limitations applicable to medical tort proceedings contained in HRS § 657-7.3 (1976). From what we have ascertained to be the pertinent factual and legal issues concerning the statute, and from the state of the record herein, however, we conclude that summary judgment was improper and remand this case for trial.

I.

Appellant, then sixteen years of age, entered Queen’s Hospital on December 9, 1947 for treatment of an ailing right knee. Dr. Richard Dodge performed a surgical biopsy on the joint, 1 and the specimen obtained was diagnosed as malignant bone cancer by Dr. Sumner Price of the hospital’s pathology laboratory. Queen’s Hospital radiologists Drs. L. L. Buzaid and G. P. Van Nuys adminis *86 tered radiation therapy to the diseased area on eight separate occasions between 1948 and 1949.

Apparently unbeknownst to appellant, Queen’s Hospital pathologist Dr. W. Harold Civin, re-examining tissue taken from the knee, 2 disagreed with the original diagnosis and concluded in 1951, 1955 and again in 1958 that the abnormal mass in appellant’s knee was a benign tumor. Dr. Civin recorded his findings in three reports stored in the hospital’s files, and appellant alleges that neither the hospital nor any physician made an effort to inform him of the new diagnosis or to otherwise follow up on the matter.

Appellant did not learn of the alleged misdiagnosis until 1961 when physicians at the Mayo Clinic informed him that his condition had been erroneously assessed. 3 No signs of trouble appeared, however, until November, 1975, when appellant suffered a slight injury to his knee. Appellant’s physicians advised him the following month that he had developed malignant post-radiation cancer in his right thigh bone, and that amputation of his entire right leg was imperative. Appellant alleges that this was the first time he was informed of the potentially dangerous consequences of radiation treatment and of the fact that he had been administered an unnecessary and excessive dose of radiation in 1948 and 1949. 4

Appellant’s right leg was amputated in December, 1975, and he commenced his action six months later on June 30, 1976 against Queen’s Hospital, Dr. Dodge 5 and approximately fifty unidentified defendants for damages flowing primarily from the alleged negligent misdiagnosis and the unnecessary and negligently administered treatment. The circuit court granted appellees’ motions for *87 summary judgment in November, 1978, however, agreeing with them that the statute of limitations set forth in HRS § 657-7.3 had run on appellant’s claim.

Appellant’s principal contention on appeal is that the statute of limitations was tolled by appellees’ (essentially the hospital’s) failure to disclose information of alleged acts of negligence constituting the basis of his claim, or at least that an issue of material fact concerning appellees’ concealment of incriminating information remained, precluding summary judgment.

II.

The statute at the heart of this controversy, HRS § 657-7.3 (1976), provides that

(n)o action for injury or death against a chiropractor, clinical laboratory technologist or technician, dentist, naturopath, nurse, nursing home administrator, dispensing optician, optometrist, osteopath, physician or surgeon, physical therapist, podiatrist, psychologist, or veterinarian duly licensed or registered under the laws of the State, or a licensed hospital as the employer of any such person, based upon such person’s alleged, professional negligence, or for rendering professional services without consent, or for error or omission in such person’s practice, shall be brought more than two years after the plaintiff discovers, or through the use of reasonable diligence should have discovered, the injury, but in any event not more than six years after the date of the alleged act or omission causing the injury or death. This time limitation shall be tolled for any period during which the person had failed to disclose any act, error, or omission upon which the action is based and which is known or through the use of reasonable diligence should have been known to him or as provided in section [671-18].

(emphasis added). 6 Enacted in 1973, this legislation created a statute *88 of limitations specifically for medical malpractice actions which theretofore had been governed by the two-year statute of limitations set forth in HRS § 657-7 applicable to property damage and personal injury claims. 7 The statute also codified the rule this court adopted in construing HRS § 657-7 in Yoshizaki v. Hilo Hospital, 50 Haw. 150, 433 P.2d 220 (1967), that the statutory period does not begin to run on medical malpractice claims until the plaintiff discovers, or by acting reasonably should have discovered, “the injury.” Jacoby v. Kaiser Foundation Hospital, 1 Haw. App. 519, 523, 622 P.2d 613, 617 (1981). 8 At the same time, however, the legislature was not blind to the rising cost of malpractice insurance and problems of proof attendant with stale claims, both of which were subject to exacerbation under an open-ended “discovery rule.” See House Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 455, 7th Haw. Leg., 1st Sess., reprinted in House Journal 947 (1973); Senate Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 665, 7th Haw. Leg., 1st Sess., reprinted in Senate Journal 907 (1973). 9 It *89

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Bluebook (online)
648 P.2d 689, 65 Haw. 84, 1982 Haw. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yamaguchi-v-queens-medical-center-haw-1982.