Zachary Miller v. Laxeshkumar Patel, M.D.

CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 2023
Docket22S-CT-00371
StatusPublished

This text of Zachary Miller v. Laxeshkumar Patel, M.D. (Zachary Miller v. Laxeshkumar Patel, M.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zachary Miller v. Laxeshkumar Patel, M.D., (Ind. 2023).

Opinion

FILED Jun 29 2023, 2:58 pm

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court IN THE

Indiana Supreme Court Supreme Court Case No. 22S-CT-371

Zachary Miller, Appellant (Plaintiff below),

–v–

Laxeshkumar Patel, M.D.; John Schiltz, M.D.; Benjamin Coplan, M.D.; Community Physicians of Indiana, Inc.; and Community Howard Regional Health, Inc., d/b/a Community Howard Behavioral Health, Appellees (Defendants below).

Argued: December 15, 2022 | Decided: June 29, 2023 Corrected Appeal from the Howard Superior Court No. 34D01-1903-CT-651 The Honorable William C. Menges, Jr., Judge

On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals No. 21A-CT-2500

Opinion by Justice Massa Justices Slaughter and Molter concur. Chief Justice Rush concurs in part and dissents in part with separate opinion in which Justice Goff joins. Massa, Justice.

The decisive question presented is whether convictions entered after a guilty plea have the same preclusive effect in subsequent litigation as those entered after jury or court verdicts. Here, the Appellant Zachary Miller pleaded guilty but mentally ill to voluntary manslaughter, then sued his mental health providers in essence for not preventing his crime. The trial court entered summary judgment for the Providers, but the Court of Appeals endorsed Miller’s ambitious request to relitigate his mens rea by relying on authority from a neighboring state, and reversed. We affirm the trial court and hold in a matter of first impression that in Indiana, guilty pleas have the same preclusive effect as trial verdicts, and Miller thus is collaterally estopped from relitigating his legal responsibility—an issue that was necessarily settled by his plea.

Facts and Procedural History We return for round three of civil appeals arising from Miller’s killing of his grandfather. Starting with Miller v. Patel, 174 N.E.3d 1061 (Ind. 2021) (“Miller I”), this Court held that the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act’s (EMTALA) statute of limitations did not preempt a state rule allowing for amendments relating back to the original pleading, id. at 1067, which allowed Betty Miller, the decedent’s widow, to amend her complaint to add an otherwise time-barred EMTALA claim if it could be shown that it arose from the same conduct set forth in the original complaint. Id. at 1066. Next, in Coplan v. Miller, 179 N.E.3d 1006 (Ind. Ct. App. 2021), trans. denied (“Miller II”), the Court of Appeals, in reviewing another claim brought by Betty Miller, affirmed the denial of defendants’ motion for summary judgment under two statutory provisions that immunize mental health providers for failing to warn or take precautions to protect others from a patient’s violent behavior. Id. at 1008–09.

Finally, in this action, Miller himself seeks damages from those who provided him mental health treatment—Dr. Patel, Dr. Schiltz, Dr. Coplan, Community Physicians of Indiana, Inc., and Community Howard Regional Health, Inc., d/b/a Community Behavioral Health (collectively,

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 22S-CT-371 | June 29, 2023 Page 2 of 25 “Providers”)—prior to the murder. On March 16, 2018, while his criminal prosecution was pending, Miller filed a proposed complaint for damages with the Indiana Department of Insurance (“IDOI”), alleging that Providers’ care and treatment of him “failed to comply with the applicable standards of care.” Appellant’s App. Vol. II, pp. 18–24. Miller also asserted that “as a direct and proximate result” of Providers’ failure, he “suffered and will continue to suffer from permanent injuries and disabilities, great pain, emotional distress, mental trauma and loss of freedom.” Id. He also added a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress. During the IDOI proceedings, Providers served Miller with interrogatories. Miller responded to them, and explained that, because of Providers’ negligent conduct, he “killed his grandma’s dog and killed his grandfather,” and was incarcerated for murder charges. Id. at 27. He also stated that Providers caused injury to him by failing to admit him to the hospital, and if he had been admitted, his “grandma’s dog” and “grandfather would be alive” and he would not be in jail. Id. at 28. On March 3, 2019, Miller filed an anonymous complaint for damages with the trial court.

On August 21, 2020, Miller pleaded “guilty but mentally ill” to voluntary manslaughter. Id. at 14–15. He was later sentenced to the Indiana Department of Corrections for twenty years, twelve executed.

In December 2020, the Indiana Medical Review Board determined that “[t]he evidence supports the conclusion that the Defendants failed to comply with the appropriate standard of care as charged in the complaint, and the conduct complained of was a factor of the resultant damages.” Id. at 120. Soon after, Miller filed a motion for leave to amend the complaint in the trial court to identify the previously anonymous Providers. In his second amended complaint, Miller advanced the same allegations in his original complaint with IDOI.

Providers moved for summary judgment under Indiana Trial Rule 56(C), arguing that Miller’s alleged damages were not compensable under Indiana public policy, and that Miller was collaterally estopped from relitigating his responsibility for the crime. Miller responded with various exhibits, including an unsworn medical statement by Dr. Frank Krause, who stated that Miller was found to be “insane” on the date of the assault

Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 22S-CT-371 | June 29, 2023 Page 3 of 25 under Indiana Code Section 35-41-3-6. Appellant’s App. Vol. II, p. 59. Providers moved to strike Miller’s Trial Rule 56 exhibits. Following a hearing, the trial court granted Providers’ motion for summary judgment, and denied their motion to strike. Miller appealed, arguing he “should be allowed . . . to rebut the prima facie case and prove he was insane at the time of the assault,” and that “he did not commit an intentional act[.]”Appellant’s Br. at 32. In response, Providers pressed their same public policy and collateral estoppel arguments, while also adding that Miller’s appellate brief suffered from a number of Appellate Rule 46 defects, and thus certain issues were waived. Miller did not file a reply.

In a unanimous published opinion, the Court of Appeals reversed and remanded. Miller v. Patel, 189 N.E.3d 216 (Ind. Ct. App. 2022), vacated. The panel found that Providers failed to establish there were no genuine issues of material fact warranting summary judgment because it was “unclear” whether Miller was legally responsible for his act. Id. at 221. The panel endorsed the public policy accepted by the Court of Appeals in Rimert v. Mortell, 680 N.E.2d 867 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997), trans. denied, which prescribes that “a person cannot maintain an action if, in order to establish the cause of action, he must rely, in whole or in part, on an illegal or immoral act or transaction to which he is a party,” or “on a violation by himself of the criminal or penal laws[.]” Id. at 871–72. But in acknowledging Rimert, the panel also identified “an important limitation” within that policy: “the extent that a plaintiff was not responsible for the underlying criminal act, [such as] by reason of insanity.” Miller, 189 N.E.2d at 221 (citing Rimert, 680 N.E.2d at 874–75). The panel also found that collateral estoppel did not bar Miller’s action because the issue of whether he was criminally insane when he killed his grandfather was not fully and fairly litigated when he entered his plea agreement. See Miller, 189 N.E.3d at 226. The panel relied on a Supreme Court of Illinois opinion, Talarico v. Dunlap, 685 N.E.2d 325 (Ill.

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