This appeal arises out of an action brought by plaintiff against Dr. Milton Arras, the county medical examiner, and Dr. Abram Brown, the county coroner. In her complaint, plaintiff asserted a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress as a result of an autopsy performed on her stillborn fetus. The trial court granted summary judgment to both defendants, and this appeal follows.
In August 1990, plaintiff had a miscarriage in approximately her twentieth week of pregnancy. In March 1991, plaintiff suffered another miscarriage while in her twenty-second week of pregnancy. Because of plaintiff’s history and because the second miscarriage appeared unexplained, Dr. Arras performed an autopsy on plaintiff’s stillborn fetus. Plaintiff contended in her complaint that Dr. Arras, in conjunction with Dr. Brown, performed the autopsy by mistake and without her permission, causing her mental distress, pain and anguish.
1. Plaintiff argues that summary judgment should not have been granted to defendants because Dr. Arras admitted that he performed the autopsy on the wrong fetus. The record does not support plaintiff’s argument. Dr. Arras explained in his deposition that some confusion arose because there was a four-week-old miscarried fetus in the morgue at the same time as plaintiff’s twenty-two-week-old fetus. After performing the autopsy on plaintiff’s fetus, he mistakenly put the name of the four-week-old fetus on the autopsy report. Dr. Arras further explained that the four-week-old fetus was too small to autopsy and that there was no mistake in his mind about which fetus he was to autopsy. Plaintiff attempted to rebut this evidence with her affidavit in which she stated that she was told the autopsy was supposed to have been performed on another fetus. However, plaintiff did not identify the source of this hearsay statement, and the statement referring to what she was told is not admissible evidence. See
Sarantis v. Kroger Co.,
2. Citing the Death Investigation Act, OCGA § 45-16-20 et seq. as authority, plaintiff also contends summary judgment was improper because the autopsy was performed without her permission. OCGA § 45-16-28 provides: “In the case of death of any person under such circumstances
as would not require a medical examiner’s inquiry under Code Section 45-16-24,
any physician who is duly licensed . . . shall be deemed to have been legally authorized to perform an autopsy upon the body of a deceased person when such autopsy has
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been consented to by the person assuming custody of the body for the purposes of burial. ...” (Emphasis supplied.) Defendants argue that the autopsy was specifically authorized under OCGA § 45-16-24 (a) (6), which requires that a medical examiner’s inquiry, including an autopsy (see OCGA § 45-16-27.1 (a)), be performed when any person dies “[a]fter birth but before seven years of age if the death is unexpected or unexplained.” Defendants also cite OCGA § 45-16-22 (c), which provides that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this article, it shall be in the sole discretion of the medical examiner to determine whether or not an autopsy ... is required.” Regardless of whether a stillborn fetus is included within the term “person” for purposes of the Death Investigation Act (see
Jackson v. State,
“In
Bridges v. Winn-Dixie Atlanta,
Judgment affirmed.
