¶ 1. (Jоseph) appeals from a summary judgment dismissing his negligence claim against Dr. Robert A. Fasano. Joseph's claim derives from the death of his father, Joseph S. Brusa, Sr.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2. On December 21, 2002, Brusa went to the emergency department at Mercy Health System in Janesville with complaints of left flank pain. Tests showed abnormal wall thickening of the descending colon. Dr. Alan Muraki concluded there may be inflammation or ischemia and recommended further correlation. On December 27, Brusa followed up with Dr. Robert Fasano, who diagnosed "probable diverticulitis" and recommended that he have a colonoscopy within four to five weeks.
¶ 3. Brusa returned to Dr. Fasano on January 21, 2003, with ongoing complaints. Dr. Fasano recommended a colonоscopy, which was performed in February. The colonoscopy revealed a tumor. Brusa had surgery to remove the tumor, which was cancerous, and then began chemotherapy on March 10. He continued his first round of chemotherapy until August. Brusa's cancer returned in September 2003.
¶ 4. In 2003, facing Brusa's cancer diagnosis, Brusa and his longtime girlfriend, Rebecca, decided to marry and try to have a child. Rebecca learned that she was pregnant in November 2003, and she married Brusa on March 10, 2004. Joseph was born July 9, approximately four months before Brusa died on November 19, 2004.
¶ 5. This lawsuit against Mercy Health System, Inc., Dr. Fasano and others was filed on October 5, 2004. 1 Brusa claimed damages for pain and suffering that occurred as a result of Dr. Fasano's negligent delay in correctly diagnosing colon cancer. Joseph sued to recоver for the loss of society and companionship of his father. Upon Brusa's death, the complaint was amended to state a claim on behalf of Brusa's estate.
¶ 6. Dr. Fasano moved for partial summаry judgment, asking the court to dismiss Joseph's claim. The circuit court granted the motion, holding that "it would be against public policy to allow a derivative claim for damages for someone who was not conceived and did not exist in any way at the time that the... initial claim for negligence arose." Joseph appeals.
DISCUSSION
¶ 7. Summary judgment is appropriate where the pleadings, together with any
¶ 8. The crux of the dispute is the right of a child to pursue a derivative medical malpractice claim for the death of the parent. The right to bring a derivative
claim for medical malpractice is determined by the claimant's status at the time of the victim's injury.
See Conant,
¶ 9. Much of the jurisprudence surrounding the date of injury in medical malpractice cases arises in the context of a statute of limitations dispute. Though that is not the issue here, thе cases demonstrate that courts have interpreted the date of injury differently over the years. At one time, the date of the misdiagnosis might have been considered to be the date of injury.
See, e.g., Elfers v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
¶ 10. This approach was rejected in
Paul,
¶ 11. The
Paul
court found the reasoning set forth in
St. George v. Pariser,
¶ 12. Jennifer Paul suffered from persistent headaches, for which she sought treatment from her doctors. No doctor accurately diagnosed her condition, which was a malformed blood vessel in her brain. Id., ¶¶ 4-5. Several years after seeking treatment for her headaches, the malformation in her brain ruptured and caused extensive hemorrhaging. Id., ¶ 5. Paul died one day after the rupture. Id. In determining when the injury occurred, the court stated that "a misdiagnosis, in and of itself, is not, and cannot, be an actionable injury .... The actionable injury arises when the misdiagnosis causes a greater harm than existed at the time of the misdiagnosis." Id., ¶ 25.
¶ 13. In Paul, the supreme court held that thе patient's injury for purposes of the statute of limitations did not occur on the day her condition was misdiagnosed; rather, the injury occurred either at the time that the patient's blood vessel ruptured or at the time that her condition could no longer be treated. Id., ¶ 45. The court did not set the date of injury as a matter of law, but recognizеd two possible alternatives.
¶ 14. Here, Brusa's date of injury has not been established and is not ascertainable from the record. An injurious change may have occurred shortly after Brusa first consulted with Dr. Fasano, it may have occurred four weeks later when Brusa was to have had a colonos-copy, it may have occurred at some later date, or it may be that Brusa's cancer was untreatable evеn before he
first consulted Dr. Fasano. Even if we accept Dr. Fasano's concession of negligence, which was offered only for the sake of argument on appeal, this question remains: When did Dr. Fasаno's misdiagnosis cause Brusa "greater harm" than existed on December 27, 2002? Where a genuine issue of material fact exists, summary judgment should not be granted.
See
Wis. Stat. § 802.08(2).
CONCLUSION
¶ 15. Joseph's derivative claim depends on whether he was conceived at the time of Brusa's injury; therefore, the circuit court's analysis, which focused on the date of the alleged misdiagnosis, was misguided. Furthermore, because the date of injury is not ascertainable as a matter of law, the court improperly granted summary judgment on the claim. Finally, questions of public policy in negligence actions are more appropriately addressed after a factual record has been made. For these reasons, we reverse the order for summary judgment and remand the matter for further proceedings.
By the Court. — Order reversed and cause remanded with directions.
Notes
In May 2006, the parties agreed to dismiss Dr. Alan Muraki from the case. The stipulation and order for dismissal was not filed prior to the circuit court's stay pending this appeal; accordingly, only Mercy, Dr. Fasano and Ohio Hospital Insurance Company (together, Dr. Fasano) are responding to the appeal.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2005-06 version unless otherwise noted.
Dr. Fasano has stipulated to the allegation of negligence for purposes of this appeal.
