¶ 2. The relevant facts are not in dispute. This case arises from the treatment of plaintiffs thyroid by defendant Dale Stafford, M.D. Doctor Stafford has long been a family practitioner at Berlin Family Health, which is owned by defendant Fletcher Allen Health Care (FAHC). From 1989 until 2004, Dr. Stafford provided treatment for plaintiff as her primary care physician. Following a 1991 motor vehicle collision, plaintiff sought treatment from Dr. Stafford for neck and back injuries. In the process of treating these injuries, Dr. Stafford received an x-ray report showing that plaintiff had an enlarged thyroid. After referral to an endocrinologist and the performance of several additional tests, including an ultrasound and a fine needle biopsy, plaintiff was diagnosed in 1992 with a benign enlargement of the thyroid consistent with a common goiter. The endocrinologist recommended another ultrasound in six months to assess any enlargement of the goiter.
¶ 3. Plaintiff saw Dr. Stafford on a number of occasions between 1992 and 2004. From August 1992 until April 1995, neither Dr. Stafford nor any FAHC staff recommended any further treatment plan to evaluate plaintiffs thyroid. In April 1995, Dr. Stafford performed thyroid function blood tests that returned normal results. Following a visit in October 2001, Dr. Stafford noted the continued presence of the enlarged thyroid and wrote that plaintiff had “[n]o desire for cancer screening studies or examinations.” In March 2004, after a new x-ray showed an increased mass, Dr. Stafford noted that plaintiff “continues to decline mammogram or other cancer screening intervention.”
¶ 4. Following another visit on October 4, 2004, Dr. Stafford noted that there “could be some other neck mass unrelated to the thyroid,” and ordered a set of thyroid laboratory tests and an ultrasound of plaintiffs thyroid. The ultrasound was ultimately performed on October 6 and revealed a nonuniform mass with six solid nodules on the right side of plaintiffs neck. A November 1, 2004, fine needle biopsy confirmed the presence of “papillarythyroid carcinoma” or thyroid cancer. On December 7, 2004, plaintiff underwent a total thyroidectomy or removal of her thyroid. During this surgery, her left vocal cord was damaged.
¶ 5. On October 16, 2007, plaintiff filed suit, alleging that Dr. Stafford failed to adequately diagnose and treat her thyroid cancer. She claimed medical malpractice under 12 V.S.A. § 1908, which sets out the elements of that tort. She alleged that the late discovery of her cancer resulted in more invasive surgery, prolonged hospitalizations, permanent physical disabilities, mental anguish, extreme financial expense, loss of enjoyment of life, and probably a significant reduction in her life expectancy. She also alleged that FAHC was responsible as Dr. Stafford’s employer.
¶ 6. Following their answer to plaintiffs complaint, defendants moved for summary judgment on June 1, 2009. This motion claimed that the medical malpractice three-year statute of limitations in 12 V.S.A. § 521 barred plaintiffs October 16, 2007, complaint because Dr. Stafford’s last act of alleged negligence occurred prior to October 4, 2004, the date on which he ordered additional tests and an updated ultrasound. Defendants’ motion was accompanied,
¶ 7. Prior to a decision on defendants’ summary judgment motion, plaintiff filed the following documents on August 6, 2009: (1) a reply memorandum opposing defendants’ motion for summary judgment, including a V.R.C.P. 15(a) motion to amend her complaint; and (2) an amended complaint and demand for trial by jury. Plaintiff did not file a statement of undisputed facts or a response to defendants’ statement. Plaintiff’s amended complaint added a second count (Count II) to her original complaint, claiming that the longer statute of limitations in 12 V.S.A. § 518(a) should be applied to plaintiffs case as opposed to the statute of limitations in 12 V.S.A. § 521. Section 518(a) concerns actions “to recover for ionizing radiation injury or injury from other noxious agents medically recognized as having a prolonged latent development.”
¶ 8. On October 21, 2009, the trial court issued a decision and order granting plaintiff’s motion to amend her complaint to add Count II, but granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment.
¶ 9. In response to the grant of summary judgment, plaintiff filed a Rule 59(a) motion for reconsideration of the court’s summary judgment order, asking the court to rule that plaintiffs original action had been timely filed under 12 V.S.A. § 518(a). Accompanying this motion was a second motion to amend plaintiffs already-amended complaint to add a new, third count (Count III). This new count alleged that plaintiffs original action was filed within the applicable period of limitations set forth in 12 V.S.A. § 521 under the common law doctrine of “continuing course of treatment.” Plaintiff argued that under this doctrine the statute of limitations did not accrue under 12 V.S.A. § 521 until the “treatment by [Dr. Stafford] . . . had terminated.” Since, under the facts alleged in Count III, Dr. Stafford continued to care for plaintiff until November 22,2004, plaintiff claimed that she had successfully filed her initial suit within the requisite three-year period. On February 10,2010, the trial court denied plaintiffs motion for reconsideration and her motion to amend and add Count III. This appeal followed.
¶ 10. We review orders for summary judgment de novo using the same standard as the trial court.
Madowitz v. Woods at Killington Owners’ Ass’n,
¶ 11. Plaintiff makes the following main arguments on appeal: (1) the trial court misapplied the summary judgment standard to defendants’ motion for summary judgment; (2) Counts II and III of plaintiff’s second and third amended complaints state a cause of action for which relief can be granted; and (3) the trial court abused its discretion by denying plaintiff’s Rule 59 motion for reconsideration and by denying her Rule 15(a) motion to amend her complaint and add Count III. We first consider the trial court’s grant of summary judgment and its denial of plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration and then address plaintiff’s motion to amend her complaint.
¶ 13. Count II of plaintiff’s amended complaint claims that the statute of limitations in 12 V.S.A. § 518(a), the so-called “latent injury” exception to 12 V.S.A. § 521, should be applied. Section 518(a) states that “[a]n action to recover for ionizing radiation injury or injury from other noxious agents medically recognized as having a prolonged latent development shall be commenced within three years after the person suffering the injury has knowledge or ought reasonably to have knowledge of having suffered the injury and of the cause thereof.” In Count II, plaintiff claims that the injury at issue in this case, the development and spread of thyroid cancer from the capsule of her thyroid gland, involves a type of slow-growing cancer with a “prolonged latent development” period. Plaintiff argues that the date of her injury was December 7, 2004, when she underwent surgery to remove both lobes of her thyroid gland and first suffered injury to her vocal cords. She claims that her suit was therefore properly filed within three years of her gaining knowledge of “having suffered the injury and of the cause thereof.” Id. In a later reply memorandum, plaintiff further elaborated her § 518(a) claim, arguing that the statute’s operative language, “ionizing radiation injury or injury from other noxious agents,” is not limited to any type of external exposure, but rather, encompasses the type of slow-growing thyroid cancer that enlarges and metastizes over time.
¶ 14. We hold that 12 V.S.A. § 521, as opposed to 12 V.S.A. § 518(a), controls this case and that therefore plaintiffs argument in Count II fails. In order for 12 V.S.A. § 518(a) to apply, plaintiffs cancer would have to be considered a “noxious agent.” We hold that a cancer is not, in-and-of itself, a “noxious agent” because,
¶ 15. Other courts that have used or interpreted the term “noxious agent” in medical cases have used it to refer to substances originating outside the body, which the body has been exposed to and that have acted upon the body. See, e.g.,
Dubose v. Kansas City S. Ry.,
¶ 16. The injury at issue in this case is an internal cellular growth and was not, itself, a “noxious agent.” Thus, 12 V.S.A. § 518(a) does not apply, and plaintiffs Count II fails. Since plaintiffs complaint was time-barred by 12 V.S.A. § 521 and was not covered by 12 V.S.A. § 518(a),
¶ 17. Finally, we consider plaintiffs motion for “reconsideration” under Rule 59(a) and to further amend her complaint under Rule 15(a). Plaintiff sought reconsideration of the grant of summary judgment. The amendment to the complaint sought to add a new theory, based on some additional facts, to overturn the court’s ruling that the three-year limitation period of 12 V.S.A. § 521 applied and barred plaintiffs claims. As we have noted in the past, a motion for reconsideration of a grant of summary judgment is more properly characterized as a motion to alter or amend a judgment under Rule 59(e). See
Murray v. St. Michael’s Coll,
¶ 18. Apparently, to invoke the rule that amendments to a complaint are freely given when justice requires,
Prive v. Vermont Asbestos Group,
Affirmed.
Notes
Plaintiff argues on appeal that the trial court committed reversible error by finding that “the last negligent act” occurred on March 4, 2004, as opposed to considering subsequent dates “up to and including November 4, 2004” when Dr. Stafford disclosed to plaintiff that she had thyroid cancer. The only facts before the court for decision on the motion for summary judgment were those contained in defendants’ statement of undisputed facts. These facts became binding on plaintiff when she failed to controvert them. V.R.C.P. 56(c)(2). The statement of undisputed facts contains no actions by Dr. Stafford after the examination and referral for further testing of October 4. Any actions of Dr. Stafford between October 4 and November 4 were not before the court to be considered in connection with the summary judgment motion.
