[¶ 1] This appeal is the latest phase in the litigation initiated by former patients against the oral surgeons who inserted Vitek implants in the patients’ temporo-mandibular joints to relieve malfunctions.
1
Kahla Gerard, Mary Shane, and Joline York appeal from the summary judgment against them and in favor of Oral Surgery Associates, P.A., and the individual oral surgeons,
2
entered in the Superior Court
*1013
(Cumberland County,
Delahanty,
/.). Lynette Thompson appeals from the same summary judgment, which was against her and in favor of G.P. Raynald Roy, D.D.S., and his professional association. These patients contend that the Superior Court misinterpreted our 2003 decision in this case,
Brawn v. Oral Surgery Associates,
[¶ 2] Patricia Brawn, Vicki Fortier, Paul Molnar, Arline Trenholm, and Susan Weir appeal from an entry of judgment against them and in favor of OSA, entered in the Superior Court (Fritzsche, /.). Robin Du-til and Sandra Ellis appeal from the same judgment, which was against them and in favor of John Burns, D.D.S. These seven patients contend that Brawn I held that they have viable claims against the oral surgeons and that the Superior Court misinterpreted Brawn I in granting judgment to the surgeons on remand. We affirm the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 3] The history of this protracted litigation is briefly described in Brawn I. In four separate actions, twenty-five former patients sued the oral surgeons who surgically implanted the Vitek devices, and their spouses joined with loss of consortium claims. Only eleven of the patients are parties to this appeal. The surgeries for these eleven patients were performed in the mid-1980s, but their notices of claim were not filed earlier than 1993. Because the patients’ claims are for professional negligence, they come within the Health Security Act (HSA) and its three-year statute of limitations. 24 M.R.S. § 2902 (2005). Thus, a primary dispute between the parties concerns when the cause of action arose.
[¶ 4] As the health risks associated with the Vitek implants became recognized, in December 1990, the federal Food and Drug Administration distributed an “FDA Safety Alert” addressed to all oral and maxillofacial surgeons, warning of the dangers of the implants, recalling all unused Vitek implants, and recommending that all patients with the implants be evaluated, treated, and monitored. All of the patients in this appeal allege that they suffered from symptoms associated with the implants and mental distress from not being given information regarding the implants. These patients all eventually learned of the dangers of the implants either from receiving the FDA warning or from other sources, including from the oral surgeons. These patients allege that the oral surgeons downplayed or minimized their concerns and symptoms even after the FDA warning. The implants of all eleven patients in this appeal, with the exception of Weir, were removed between 1986 and 1995. These patients all filed notices of claim between 1993 and 1998 and, with the exception of Brawn, none of the patients whose implants were removed filed a notice of claim within three years of the implant removal.
[¶ 5] Of the eleven patients in this appeal, all but Thompson were also appellants in Brawn I. That case concerned two summary judgments that were entered by the court (Delahanty, J.) against the patients who sued OSA and Burns. Thompson was not covered by either summary judgment because the motions had not included her. This appeal concerns two *1014 judgments that were entered following remand in Brawn I.
[¶ 6] The summary judgment that was the primary subject of discussion in
Brawn I
was filed in April 2000 and was brought by OSA against the OSA patients on the patients’ fraudulent concealment claim. The patients had claimed that the surgeons fraudulently concealed their causes of action, and, therefore, they were entitled to rely on the six-year statute of limitations, 14 M.R.S. § 859 (2005), instead of the three-year HSA statute of limitations. By order dated June 20, 2001, the court granted the motion and entered judgment on all of the patients’ claims even though OSA had moved for summary judgment only on the fraudulent concealment claim. Because this summary judgment reached more than the fraudulent concealment claim, we discussed the remaining claims the patients had brought, and we placed them into five categories.
Brawn I,
[¶ 7] Following further discovery after Brawn I, the surgeons filed new motions for summary judgment against Gerard, Shane, York, and Thompson. 4 In a decision dated May 27, 2004, the court granted summary judgment in favor of the surgeons on the basis that the patients’ claims were barred by the statute of limitations because they waited more than three years after their implants were removed to file notices of claim. The court reasoned that the surgeons did not have a duty to advise the patients of the health risks of leaving the implants in place once the implants had been removed. Therefore, the statute of limitations began to run, at the latest, on the date the implants were removed. Because these four patients filed their notices of claim more than three years after having the implants removed, any claim for failing to warn them of the risk of leaving the implants in place was barred.
[¶8] The other summary judgment motion that was discussed in
Brawn I
was filed in January 2000 and involved seven patients: Brawn, Dutil, Ellis, Fortier, Molnar, Trenholm, and Weir, hereinafter referred to as the “seven patients.” By an order dated June 21, 2001, the court granted summary judgment to the respective surgeons because the seven patients “all learned of the dangers to their health more than three years before their notices of claim,” and their “ ‘breach of the duty to warn’ ” claims were therefore no longer viable.
Id.
¶3,
[¶ 9] The court (Fritzsche, J.) certified both summary judgments as final judgments pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 54(b)(1), and the eleven patients have appealed both judgments.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
[¶ 10] We review a summary judgment ruling de novo, “viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, to decide whether the parties’ statements of material fact and referenced record evidence reveal a genuine issue of material fact.”
Rice v. City of Biddeford,
B. Judgment Against Gerard, Shane, Thompson, and York
[¶ 11] An oral surgeon has “a duty to warn a patient of learned dangers of implanted devices.”
Brawn I,
[¶ 12] The only remaining cause of action left to these four patients after
Brawn I
is that described as a Category E claim: “a breach of the duty to adequately advise the patient as to the risks to his/her health of leaving the implants in place.”
[¶ 13] Gerard, Shane, Thompson, and York all became aware of the risks of leaving their implants in place at some point prior to having them removed. The court did not have to determine the exact date that these patients learned of the danger of leaving the implants in place because these patients all had them implants removed, and they waited more than three years after the removals to file notices of their claims. Gerard’s implants *1016 were removed on June 17, 1992. She filed her notice of claim on June 19, 1995. Shane’s implants were removed in October 1994, and she filed her notice of claim in December 1997. Thompson’s implants were removed in 1987, but she did not file a notice of claim until 1995. York’s implants were removed in February 1993, and she filed her notiee of claim in December 1997. The Superior Court did not err in concluding that the duty to warn claims of Gerard, Shane, Thpmpson, and York are barred by the statute of limitations.
[¶ 14] Brawn I disposed of any other claims that Gerard, Shane, and York may have had against the surgeons. 5 Therefore, the granting of the summary judgment motion against Gerard, Shane, and York was not in error.
[¶ 15] Thompson, who was not a party in Brawn I, does not argue that she has any claim other than a Category E claim that remains viable under the reasoning of Brawn I. As to her Category E claim, she is in the same position as Gerard, Shane, and York with regard to the surgeons’ duty to warn about the dangers of leaving the implants in place. Thus, the grant of summary judgment against her was also appropriate.
C. Judgment Against Brawn, Dutil, Ellis, Fortier, Molnar, Trenholm, and Weir
[¶ 16] As noted above, Brawn I did not expressly affirm the June 21,’ 2001, summary judgment against Brawn, Dutil, Ellis, Fortier, Molnar, Trenholm, and Weir. They all contend that they have viable Category E claims and that the Superior Court erred in ruling that we affirmed the June 21, 2001, summary judgment, which found against them on all of their claims.
[¶ 17]
Brawn I
affirmed- the June 21, 2001, summary judgment when it stated that the seven patients “learned of the risks associated with their implants more than three years before they filed their notices of claim,” and that the court correctly concluded that their “breach of the duty to warn” claims were no longer viable.
[¶ 18] Dutil had her implants removed in March 1992, but she did not file her notice of claim until July 1995. ; Ellis had her implants partially removed in 1986, and the remainder removed in 1992, but she did not file her notice of claim until July 1995. Fortier’s implants were removed in 1989, and her notice of claim was filed in 1995. Molnar had his implants removed in 1992, but he filed his notice of claim in 1998. Trenholm’s implants were removed in 1986, but her notice of claim was filed in 1993. It is readily apparent that more than three years transpired between the removal of the implants and the filing of notices of claim by Dutil, Ellis, Fortier, Molnar, and Trenholm.
[¶ 19] The situations of Brawn and Weir are slightly different from the other patients. Brawn’s implants were removed on October 2, 1995, and she filed her notice of claim within three years of the removal, on August 20, 1998. However, in her statement of material facts she states that she *1017 learned of the potential problems associated with the implants in May 1993. Thus, she waited more than three years after learning of the dangers of the implants before filing notice of her claim.
[¶20] Weir, unlike all of the other patients involved in this appeal, never had her implants removed, according to the OSA statement of material facts filed in January 2000. She filed her notice of claim on May 3,1994. The OSA statement of material facts states that Weir received a letter from the FDA in 1989 warning of defects regarding the implants. She did not controvert the statement, and it is deemed admitted. Thus, she waited more than three years after learning of the dangers of the implants before filing her notice of claim.
[¶ 21] As we said in
Brawn I,
the seven patients “learned of the risks associated with their implants more than three years before they filed their notices of claim,” and their “breach of the duty to warn” claims were therefore no longer viable.
The entry is:
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
. Our previous opinions in this case are:
Brawn v. Oral Surgery Associates,
. The individual surgeons are Lewis N. Esta-brooks, D.M.D., Carlton E. Fairbanks, D.M.D., Russell J. Collett, D.D.S., and David J. Moyer, D.D.S., M.D. The professional association and the individual surgeons are here *1013 inafter referred to jointly as '‘OSA.” References herein to "surgeons” also refer to the professional associations involved in this litigation.
. We did hold, however, that because they presented evidence of fraudulent concealment within three years of their surgeries, summary judgment was not proper against two patients, who are not parties to this appeal, on their Category B and C claims.
Brawn I,
. Motions were also filed against other patients and spouses, but only Gerard, Shane, Thompson, and York have appealed.
. Gerard argues that she still has a viable Category C claim. We stated in
Brawn I
that the court properly entered judgment against all of the patients’ Category C claims (except for two patients who are not involved in this appeal),
