Ann L. MILLER and Richard A. Miller, Appellants (Plaintiffs below), v. Glenn L. DOBBS, D.O. and Partners in Health, Appellees (Defendants below).
No. 15S05-1302-CT-91.
Supreme Court of Indiana.
July 30, 2013.
991 N.E.2d 562
Mark J. Crandley, Paul L. Jefferson, Indianapolis, IN, Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Indiana Department of Insurance.
MASSA, Justice.
In this case, the parties have spent five years disputing an issue which boils down to a seven-dollar fee paid three days late. The trial court found this delinquency fatal to the plaintiffs’ claim.1 We reverse.
Facts and Procedural History
On April 3, 2006, two weeks after her obstetrician, Dr. Glenn Dobbs, performed a cesarean section and tubal ligation on her, Ann Miller suffered a massive stroke that left her with permanent injuries. Nearly two years later, on March 18, 2008, the Millers’ attorney sent a proposed medical malpractice complaint to the Indiana Department of Insurance by certified mail. The $7.00 in statutory filing and processing fees were omitted from this mailing, but the proposed complaint was nevertheless file-stamped March 18. On March 31, 2008, the Millers filed their complaint against Dr. Dobbs and his medical group in the Dearborn Superior Court.
Meanwhile, the Department discovered the fee omission and sent the Millers’ attorney a letter on March 31 stating that the mandatory fees needed to be sent within 30 days and that the complaint would “not be considered filed with the Department until the filing fees ... [were] received.” Appellants’ App. at 234. Similar warnings appear in the Department‘s proposed complaint procedures (a copy of which the processor enclosed with the letter) and on the Department‘s website. Ind. Dep‘t of Ins., “Consumer Services: Medical Malpractice,” at http://www.in.gov/idoi/2614.htm. The Millers’ attorney received the letter on Friday, April 4, 20082 and sent a check to the Department by first-class mail that same day. On Monday, April 7, the Department received the check and re-file-stamped the proposed complaint April 7.
The proceedings in the trial court were stayed pending completion of the Medical Review Panel opinion, which was issued in July 2010. The defendants subsequently raised an affirmative defense of the statute of limitations3 and moved for summary judgment on that basis. In May 2011, the Millers moved to strike that motion, arguing the defendants waived it by failing to raise it before the Medical Review Panel issued its opinion. The trial court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment and denied the Millers’ motion to strike.
Standard of Review
We review a trial court‘s grant of summary judgment de novo, City of Indianapolis v. Buschman, 988 N.E.2d 791, 793 (Ind.2013), and we will affirm “only if there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Overton v. Grillo, 896 N.E.2d 499, 502 (Ind.2008); see also
The Defendants Did Not Waive Their Affirmative Defense.
As a threshold matter, the Millers argue the defendants should have raised their statute of limitations defense by moving for a preliminary determination of law during the pendency of the proceedings before the Medical Review Panel, and that because they did not, they waived the right to raise it as an affirmative defense in the trial court. We disagree.
The General Assembly has provided that the trial court, upon motion of a party to a medical malpractice action, may “preliminarily determine an affirmative defense or issue of law or fact that may be preliminarily determined under the Indiana Rules of Procedure.”
The statute of limitations unquestionably is an affirmative defense.
The Millers’ Proposed Complaint Was Timely Filed.
The defendants contend the Millers’ proposed complaint was untimely because, although the Department received the complaint itself before the end of the statutory period, it did not receive the requisite filing and processing fees until April 7, three days after the statutory period ended. Our reading of the relevant statute, however, leads us to the opposite conclusion.
According to the “Statute of Limitations” chapter of our Medical Malpractice Act, “a proposed complaint under
Both the overall structure of the MMA and public policy considerations support our conclusion today. First, the filing and processing fees are located in a different chapter of the statute entitled “Com-
sion to dismiss the Millers’ claims as untimely is inconsistent with the structure of the Act and with our public policy.
Finally, we have resolved the issue on this straightforward statutory ground, so we need not consider the Millers’ alternative arguments that their proposed complaint was filed timely because they (1) mailed the fees on the last day of the statutory period, or (2) mailed the fees within the thirty-day window the Department provided them in its letter.
Conclusion
Ultimately, as we read the statute, it does not mandate that the Millers’ claim is lost for want of this seven-dollar horseshoe nail.4 We therefore reverse the trial court‘s grant of summary judgment and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with our opinion.
DICKSON, C. J., RUCKER, DAVID, and RUSH, JJ., concur.
